Bible v. Schriro ( 2009 )


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  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    RICHARD LYNN BIBLE,                        
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    No. 07-99017
    v.
    CHARLES L. RYAN, Director of the                   D.C. No.
    CV-98-01859-PGR
    Arizona Department of
    OPINION
    Corrections,*
    Respondent-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    Paul G. Rosenblatt, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    March 26, 2009—San Francisco, California
    Filed July 1, 2009
    Before: Ronald M. Gould, Richard R. Clifton, and
    Jay S. Bybee, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Gould
    *Charles L. Ryan is substituted for his predecessor Dora B. Schriro as
    Director of the Arizona Department of Corrections. Fed. R. App. P.
    43(c)(2).
    8167
    8170                     BIBLE v. RYAN
    COUNSEL
    Daniel D. Maynard (argued), Maynard Cronin Erickson Cur-
    ran & Sparks, PLC, Phoenix, Arizona, for petitioner-
    appellant, Richard Lynn Bible.
    Terry Goddard, Kent Cattani, Robert J. Gorman, J.D. Nielsen,
    Jeffrey A. Zick (argued), Office of the Attorney General for
    Arizona, Phoenix, Arizona, for respondent-appellee, Charles
    L. Ryan.
    OPINION
    GOULD, Circuit Judge:
    On April 12, 1990, Appellant Richard Lynn Bible (“Bible”)
    was convicted of first-degree murder, kidnapping, and moles-
    tation of a nine-year-old girl. He received a death sentence.
    Bible now appeals the denial of his petition for writ of habeas
    corpus by the United States District Court for the District of
    Arizona. He asserts claims of constitutional error in both the
    guilt and the penalty phases of his trial. The district court
    issued a certificate of appealability on his claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel at the sentencing stage of his trial.
    Having carefully and independently evaluated the mitigat-
    ing evidence and the aggravating evidence, we conclude that
    Bible was not prejudiced by any of his counsel’s alleged
    errors during the sentencing phase of his trial. There is no rea-
    sonable probability that the sentencer would have reached a
    different result in the absence of the alleged errors. We affirm
    the district court’s denial of habeas relief.
    I
    A
    On June 6, 1988, around 10:30 a.m., the nine-year-old vic-
    tim, Jennifer Wilson, began riding her bicycle to a ranch a
    BIBLE v. RYAN                     8171
    mile away from where her family was staying in Flagstaff,
    Arizona. Her family passed her while driving to the ranch, but
    Jennifer never arrived. The family began to look for her and
    discovered her bicycle by the side of the road. Within an hour
    of her disappearance, Jennifer’s mother called the Flagstaff
    police to report her daughter missing. The Flagstaff police
    arrived and immediately called in a helicopter, set up road-
    blocks, and alerted the Federal Bureau of Investigation that
    Jennifer was missing. A massive police search ensued. But it
    was not successful.
    Jennifer’s mother told police that she saw a man driving a
    royal blue Blazer-type vehicle at a high rate of speed around
    the time her daughter went missing. Later that day, Bible
    arrived at his brother’s home near Sheep Hill driving a dark
    green or silver Blazer-type vehicle. Believing that Bible had
    been stealing from him, Bible’s brother called the police and
    described the vehicle. The detective who took Jennifer’s
    mother’s statement realized that her description of the
    “Blazer-type” vehicle and its driver substantially matched
    Bible and the vehicle described by Bible’s brother. Police
    next discovered that Bible had stolen a GMC Jimmy from a
    police impound lot near Sheep Hill the day before. Later that
    evening, police saw Bible driving the stolen GMC vehicle.
    When police tried to stop Bible, a high-speed chase ensued.
    The police pursued Bible until he rammed the GMC vehicle
    into a cattle guard, ran from the vehicle, and hid in the woods.
    Police located Bible using a tracking dog. He was hiding
    under a ledge covered in twigs, leaves, and branches. Police
    confiscated a knife on Bible’s person and a large folding knife
    where Bible was hiding. Within hours of his arrest and on the
    same day that Jennifer disappeared, Bible confessed to steal-
    ing the GMC vehicle. Police held Bible without bail and con-
    fiscated his clothing.
    In the stolen GMC, which had been used to deliver newspa-
    pers, police found a blanket, numerous round rubber bands
    but no rubber band bags, a piece of metal from the steering
    8172                    BIBLE v. RYAN
    column that had been cut open, a case of twenty 50-milliliter
    bottles of “Suntory” vodka with two bottles missing, some
    packets of Carnation “Rich” hot chocolate, a wrapped cigar
    broken in two places, and a “Dutchmaster” cigar wrapper and
    band in the ashtray. There was blood smeared inside and
    under the vehicle, but testing did not reveal whether it was
    human blood.
    For almost three weeks, Jennifer remained missing despite
    the massive yet fruitless search effort. Finally, hikers hap-
    pened upon Jennifer’s body on the top of Sheep Hill, not far
    from where she had been last seen. Jennifer’s naked body was
    hidden under branches and debris near a tree, with her hands
    bound behind her back with a shoelace. Police secured the
    area and processed the evidence found in the vicinity of Jenni-
    fer’s body. One of her sneakers was found without a shoelace
    near her body, and her panties were found in a nearby tree.
    The victim’s head and genital area were severely decom-
    posed, and she had multiple skull fractures and a broken jaw-
    bone indicating that blows to her head caused her death.
    Around Jennifer’s body lay distinctive items: an unwrap-
    ped, unsmoked cigar with two distinctive breaks in the same
    pattern as the cigar found in the GMC; an empty ten-pack box
    of Carnation “Rich” hot chocolate; two empty 50-milliliter
    “Suntory” vodka bottles; and a piece of metal that perfectly
    fit the GMC’s damaged steering column. Round rubber bands,
    identical to those found in the GMC, were everywhere—on a
    path near Jennifer’s body, on and under her body, in the tree
    where her panties were found, near her other clothing, in the
    leaves covering her body, in the tree above her body, under
    a tree where one of her shoes was found, and in a rubber band
    bag sitting five feet from her body.
    Near Jennifer’s body, there were several clusters of long
    golden brown hair that were similar to her hair. Many of the
    hairs were cut on one side and torn on the other. The investi-
    gator was able to duplicate this pattern by using the knives
    BIBLE v. RYAN                      8173
    found on Bible when he was arrested, as well as other knives.
    Mixed among the hair was a pubic-type hair that was similar
    to Bible’s pubic hair samples. Hair similar to Bible’s hair was
    also found on a sheet used to wrap Jennifer’s body and on her
    t-shirt. The police found fibers on top of Sheep Hill that were
    similar to the GMC seat covers and the blanket found in the
    GMC. In addition, fibers found in a lock of hair near Jenni-
    fer’s body were similar to fibers from Bible’s jacket. A blue
    or purple fiber on the shoelace binding Jennifer’s hands also
    matched the lining of Bible’s jacket.
    Several hairs on Bible’s clothing were similar to Jennifer’s
    hair and were also cut on one side and torn on the other.
    Police determined that hair found in the GMC was similar to
    Jennifer’s hair. Blood on Bible’s shirt matched Jennifer’s
    PGM 2+ subtype—a subtype shared by less than three percent
    of the population. Bible has a PGM 1+ so the blood could not
    have been his subtype.
    B
    While still in jail for stealing the GMC, Bible was charged
    with first-degree murder, kidnapping, and child molestation.
    After a six-week trial, the jury found Bible guilty on April 12,
    1990, of all charges. After the jury returned the verdict,
    Bible’s lead attorney, Francis Koopman (“Koopman”), moved
    for a pre-sentence psychological evaluation requesting Dr.
    Otto Bendheim be appointed for this purpose and a sentencing
    hearing date be set for at least sixty days later. The prosecutor
    did not oppose Dr. Bendheim’s appointment, but asked that
    Dr. Jeffrey Harrison be appointed as well. The court
    appointed both doctors to perform a mental evaluation and
    directed them to evaluate Bible’s mental condition at the time
    he committed the offenses and discuss the relation of any
    mental disease or defect to the offense. The court also sought
    the doctors’ opinions on Bible’s potential for rehabilitation
    and his feelings of remorse. After defense counsel stipulated
    8174                     BIBLE v. RYAN
    to the sixty-day deadline, the judge scheduled the sentencing
    hearing for June 12, 1990.
    Dr. Bendheim filed his report after interviewing Bible on
    three occasions and after reviewing “thousands of pages of [ ]
    material concerning [Bible’s] background and present prose-
    cution.” Dr. Bendheim’s findings supported the mitigating
    evidence advanced by the defense: As Dr. Bendheim saw it,
    Bible’s ability to conform his conduct to the law was substan-
    tially impaired by alcohol and drug use. During the inter-
    views, Bible had told Dr. Bendheim that he had been a heavy
    user of drugs until four days before the crime and that he had
    experienced serious withdrawal when he could not obtain
    drugs for those days. Although Dr. Bendheim did not deter-
    mine that Bible was legally insane, he opined that Bible suf-
    fered from some diminished capacity at the time of the
    offenses, “with not only curtailment of proper judgment but
    also perhaps an inability to resist impulses” due to prolonged
    drug and alcohol abuse. Dr. Bendheim went on to suggest that
    “[i]n the absence of serious and prolonged voluntary con-
    sumption of very dangerous drugs and alcohol and in the
    absence of the withdrawal symptom-atology . . . these
    offenses, more than likely would not have taken place.” And
    because of Bible’s addiction and the resulting withdrawal
    symptoms, “his general personality and character traits, made
    it more difficult for [him] to live within the requirements of
    the law.”
    Dr. Harrison opined that Bible had no “mental illness or
    mental disorder requiring treatment” but does have “a very
    serious characterological disturbance in the form of Antisocial
    Personality Disorder.” He noted that “Bible displays an
    absence of anger, depression and anxiety” and that “the most
    likely explanation for his violent tendencies is his drug addic-
    tion.” He concluded that Bible “clearly understood the wrong-
    fulness of the action at the time of the crime.”
    Bible’s second chair defense attorney Lee Brooke Phillips
    (“Phillips”) took the lead on Bible’s mitigation case. The
    BIBLE v. RYAN                          8175
    defense filed its sentencing memorandum on June 7, 1990.
    The defense argued, basing its contentions on Dr. Bendheim’s
    report, that Bible’s ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of
    his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of
    the law was substantially impaired within the meaning of an
    express statutory mitigating factor set forth in 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-703
    (G)(1). The defense also argued that there were non-
    statutory mitigating factors such as a difficult family history
    and a low risk of future criminal conduct (because he would
    spend the rest of his life in prison). The defense in the sen-
    tencing memorandum also argued that any lack of remorseful
    feelings could not be used against Bible because he had cho-
    sen not to admit guilt. Finally, defense counsel included a plea
    for mercy.
    The next day, Phillips filed a motion to continue the mitiga-
    tion aspect of the sentencing hearing. Phillips stated that he
    was prepared to proceed on June 12 as scheduled “so that the
    aggravation part of the hearing can go forward” but needed
    additional time for the mitigation phase because of Dr. Bend-
    heim’s report, which established “strong evidence of mental
    impairment or diminished capacity as a result of severe drug
    and alcohol addiction.” In addition, counsel stated that they
    had just discovered that Bible “suffered significant health
    problems as a child which could be the basis for his current
    mental condition.” In support of the motion, Mrs. Bible,
    Bible’s mother, gave an affidavit reciting that Bible had a dif-
    ficult birth and was a sickly child, and that she had not pro-
    vided Bible’s medical records to defense counsel earlier
    because she “did not realize that these were the types of medi-
    cal problems that [the defense] would be interested in.”
    Defense counsel also moved for the appointment of additional
    experts, specifically a psychiatrist, neuropsychiatrist or neu-
    rologist, and a toxicologist. During the hearing on the motion,
    Phillips clarified that he only wished to continue the expert
    witness testimony for one week because Dr. Bendheim was
    unavailable,1 but he was able to proceed with the aggravation
    1
    Dr. Bendheim later became available and testified at the hearing.
    8176                         BIBLE v. RYAN
    aspect and could present a majority of the mitigation wit-
    nesses. Further, the defense team explained that they had met
    with Bible three separate times for two hours each and had
    “gone over his complete medical history” but Bible said he
    was never hospitalized and “never had medical type problems
    that [counsel] were concerned about.”2 Mrs. Bible was inter-
    viewed after Bible’s conviction, but it was only in preparation
    for the sentencing hearing, when Mrs. Bible was asked again
    about her son’s medical history, that she mentioned his early
    childhood illnesses. The court denied the motion to continue
    and the motion for the appointment of additional experts, stat-
    ing that Bible “has failed to use due diligence in preparing for
    the sentencing hearing.”
    The sentencing hearing proceeded on June 12, 1990. The
    defense presented extensive mitigation testimony by calling
    thirteen witnesses during the three-day hearing. Bible’s family
    and friends testified that Bible had a close relationship to his
    family, that no abuse occurred during his childhood, and that
    he was an affectionate youth.3 Mrs. Bible testified that she and
    Bible’s father raised him, and he was the second of four chil-
    dren. Mrs. Bible testified that, following a difficult delivery,
    Bible’s lungs were so full of fluid that he was given an “ex-
    ceptional amount of oxygen.” She said that Bible was contin-
    ually ill as a child with fevers and allergies, and was
    hospitalized for bronchitis or pneumonia. Further, she testi-
    fied that Bible was a hyperactive child, and doctors prescribed
    amphetamines to control him. Mrs. Bible also stated that
    Bible complained of ringing in his ears and headaches but she
    never took him to a neurologist and he never underwent a CT
    scan.
    2
    Bible was only an infant or toddler when he was allegedly hospitalized.
    3
    Bible’s father, mother, sisters, brother, grandmother, ex-girlfriends,
    defense investigator, and friends, among others, testified on his behalf at
    the hearing.
    BIBLE v. RYAN                      8177
    Mrs. Bible testified that Bible kept in touch with her when
    he went to prison in 1981 for his previous sexual assault and
    kidnapping convictions, and that he wrote her letters express-
    ing his love for her and his family. After Bible was released
    from prison in 1987, he sought counseling but stopped the
    sessions for financial reasons. He also dated Josephine Sando-
    val for about a year. Sandoval testified that they had a normal
    relationship and Bible cared for and loved her young son.
    Sandoval then described Bible’s avid drug use, stating that he
    snorted cocaine and methamphetamines and may have used
    drugs intravenously (though she was never a witness to it).
    She also stated that when Bible used drugs, he was unpredict-
    able, but when he was not using drugs, he was a “pretty nice”
    guy.
    Bible’s father stated that he frequently took his sons hunt-
    ing and fishing, that Bible had enjoyed those activities, and
    that Bible never exhibited violence or aggression, nor was he
    cruel to animals. Bible’s brother echoed this testimony.
    Bible’s father also testified that Bible loved his nieces and had
    never lost his temper with them. Bible’s father opined that if
    Bible had committed the crimes charged, the only explanation
    was drug use.
    Bible’s younger sister also testified. She stated that she and
    Bible had been close and Bible had been protective of her.
    She said that Bible was appropriate with her children, that he
    liked children, and that he was a caring person. Several of
    Bible’s friends also testified that Bible was sweet, caring, and
    appropriate with children. Bible’s sister also described Bible’s
    drug use. According to her, before Bible went to prison for
    the 1981 sexual assault and kidnapping, Bible used drugs on
    weekends, but after his release he used drugs more heavily.
    Shortly before his arrest, Bible had told her he thought that he
    was having a nervous breakdown.
    The defense investigator, Vanessa Lawson, testified that
    she had found Bible socially appropriate, pleasant, coopera-
    8178                     BIBLE v. RYAN
    tive, and honest. He was remorseful toward the Wilson family
    and frightened about his future. She also testified that Bible
    had foiled an escape attempt while in jail because he feared
    for the safety of a prison guard.
    Dr. Bendheim, the defense expert, also testified. He said
    that Bible “conducted himself very well” during his inter-
    views and was “polite, courteous, [and] cooperative.” He also
    testified that (1) Bible had come from a good home, but he
    began using alcohol and drugs in his early teens; (2) he had
    abused drugs almost daily during the year before the murder;
    (3) he was suffering from withdrawal at the time of the crime,
    resulting in a state of diminished capacity; and (4) absent the
    effects of drugs and alcohol, Bible would not have committed
    the crimes.
    Dr. Bendheim stated that when drugs are used for many
    months or several years and then withdrawn, “the person suf-
    fers a great deal and tries to alleviate his suffering, often by
    totally inappropriate means, . . . his capacity to conduct him-
    self properly and decently is again diminished in many
    instances.” Dr. Bendheim opined that Bible would have been
    in a state of diminished capacity during this period of with-
    drawal. Bible told Dr. Bendheim that he had been heavily
    using drugs until four days before the crime, and “had serious
    withdrawal symptoms, sweats, sleeplessness, nervousness,
    agitation, and during that [time] he tried to find relief by eat-
    ing sweets, honey, peanut butter, things of that nature.” Dr.
    Bendheim accepted Bible’s account as a truthful description
    of withdrawal symptoms.
    Dr. Bendheim then stated that prolonged use of amphet-
    amines and cocaine can result in brain changes, and although
    not easy to detect, such changes can be detected with certain
    tools like brain scans or brain wave tests. Dr. Bendheim, how-
    ever, noted that a number of physicians specialize in with-
    drawal symptomatology and detoxification who have more
    experience in the area than himself. He said that additional
    BIBLE v. RYAN                            8179
    tests could determine Bible’s mental impairment or the effect
    that the severe drug use has had on his brain, and that he sup-
    ported defense counsel’s need for additional examinations.
    Dr. Bendheim stated that he “would suspect the possibility,
    even probability [of demonstrable brain change], but I can’t
    prove it without” tests.
    After defense counsel concluded, the prosecution called
    one rebuttal witness, Detective Mike Rice, who had inter-
    viewed Bible on the day of his arrest on June 6, 1988. Detec-
    tive Rice stated that Bible did not appear to be impaired
    during the interview and did not seem to be suffering from
    withdrawal. According to Detective Rice, Bible did not
    appear to have the “shakes” or chills, did not complain of
    headaches, and did not request food, water, or medical help.
    Bible told Detective Rice that it had been four or five days
    since he last used drugs.
    Phillips’s closing argument focused on Bible’s drug use
    and how that could have led to his impairment at the time of
    the murder. Phillips described Bible’s love for his family and
    urged the court not to be influenced by the public frenzy.
    In sentencing Bible, the judge found three aggravating cir-
    cumstances existed beyond a reasonable doubt:4 (1) that Bible
    previously had been convicted of a felony involving the use
    or threat of violence (the 1981 convictions of sexual assault
    and kidnapping); (2) that Bible had committed the murder in
    an especially cruel manner because the victim suffered men-
    tally and physically; and (3) that Bible was an adult and the
    4
    Arizona law at the time of Bible’s trial and sentencing required the
    judge presiding over the trial to decide whether to impose the death pen-
    alty. See 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-703
    (B) (1990). While the Supreme Court
    later struck down Arizona’s capital sentencing scheme in Ring v. Arizona,
    
    536 U.S. 584
     (2002), the holding in Ring that aggravating factors must be
    found by a jury rather than a judge “does not apply retroactively” to cases,
    like this one, that are “already final on direct review.” Schriro v. Summer-
    lin, 
    542 U.S. 348
    , 358 (2004).
    8180                    BIBLE v. RYAN
    victim was less than fifteen years of age at the time of the
    offense. The court then considered and rejected the mitigating
    circumstances regarding Bible’s drug use. It found that
    [N]either the defendant’s ability to appreciate the
    wrongfulness of his conduct [n]or to conform his
    conduct to the requirements of law were substan-
    tially impaired. Even the defense experts found that
    he appreciated the wrongfulness of his conduct. Doc-
    tor Bendheim only found that it would be more diffi-
    cult for the defendant to conform his conduct to the
    requirements of law, not substantial impairment.
    This difficulty was due more to his general personal-
    ity and character than to drugs.
    ...
    Even if the defendant had been experiencing a des-
    perate craving for drugs that day, Jennifer Wilson
    did not stand between him and his drugs, nor did she
    provide any means for him to obtain drugs. Her kill-
    ing had nothing to do with drugs.
    If the defendant’s condition were truly such that he
    would go into withdrawals so severe that he acted
    strange when deprived of drugs, then this would
    have manifested after his imprisonment in the
    County Jail on June 6. All the evidence is to the con-
    trary: there were no symptoms of withdrawal.
    This is not a mitigating circumstance.
    [T]he defendant was not intoxicated on June 6, 1988.
    Only two small bottles of vodka were missing from
    the carton. If the defendant consumed them, the
    amount of alcohol they contained would not suffice
    to make him intoxicated to the point where he would
    qualify for intoxication as a mitigating circumstance.
    BIBLE v. RYAN                      8181
    The defendant denies that he was intoxicated on any-
    thing else, claiming instead that he was experiencing
    withdrawals due to drug deprivation for several days.
    No one who had contact with him on June 6 reported
    that he acted intoxicated. They said he acted normal.
    This is not a mitigating circumstance.
    The trial judge found that Bible did not have a difficult
    family history and stated that the mutual love between him
    and his family did not qualify as mitigating. In addition, the
    trial judge determined that Bible was not remorseful and that
    he presented a high risk of future criminal conduct. Conclud-
    ing, the trial court stated that “even looking at the case in the
    light most favorable to” Bible, there were no mitigating cir-
    cumstances and no way to cumulate or aggregate them. The
    trial court then sentenced Bible to death.
    C
    Bible appealed his conviction and sentence. The Arizona
    Supreme Court affirmed the judgment on direct appeal. State
    v. Bible, 
    858 P.2d 1152
     (Ariz. 1993). The Arizona Supreme
    Court held that the trial court had erred in finding that Bible’s
    prior conviction was an aggravating factor because “neither
    the use nor the threat of violence was a necessary element
    for” either kidnapping or sexual assault. 
    Id. at 1207
    . Because
    two aggravating circumstances remained, however, and
    because the “trial court correctly characterized the lack of
    mitigating evidence,” it affirmed Bible’s sentence. 
    Id. at 1209, 1212
    . The Arizona Supreme Court reviewed the record and
    concluded that “nothing submitted to the trial court qualifies
    as more than de minimis evidence of mitigation” so there was
    “simply nothing to weigh or balance.” 
    Id. at 1212
    .
    The United States Supreme Court rejected Bible’s petition
    for a writ of certiorari. Bible v. Arizona, 
    511 U.S. 1046
     (1994)
    (mem.).
    8182                     BIBLE v. RYAN
    Bible filed a petition for state post-conviction relief
    (“PCR”) on November 29, 1996. In his PCR petition, Bible
    claimed that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at
    the penalty phase. He attached several affidavits, including
    one from a mitigation specialist, Mary Durand, who attested
    that Bible’s mitigation investigation was “totally inadequate”
    and did not meet the minimal requirements in a capital case
    because
    No multi-generational or trans-generational family
    history was done by the defense, no review of birth,
    school, mental health, medical or employment
    records was done by the defense, no review of law
    enforcement, court records or D.O.C. records, and no
    complete psychological or psychiatric examination
    was conducted. No mitigation specialist or expert
    was ever consulted to determine needs.
    Bible’s defense investigator, Lawson, agreed with Ms.
    Durand’s assessment; the mitigation investigation she con-
    ducted was “completely inadequate and fell well below the
    standard of effective representation.” Phillips attested that the
    sentencing preparation had not begun in 1988 as required by
    the ABA guidelines for counsel in capital cases; and that he
    had been unaware of the standards for presentation of mitiga-
    tion in capital cases. A psychologist, Richard Lanyon, also
    submitted an affidavit. Though Lanyon did not state that he
    had ever personally evaluated Bible, he attested that “neurop-
    sychological examination can document the effects of brain
    damage” and “certain factors indicate that a neuropsychologi-
    cal examination is warranted” such as “a difficult child birth,
    oxygen deprivation in childhood, one or more high fevers in
    childhood, headaches in childhood, and inhalation of vapors
    in childhood.” The affidavit did not state, however, that Bible
    suffered from any brain damage.
    The PCR court denied Bible’s claim of ineffective assis-
    tance of counsel at sentencing on November 24, 1997. It held
    BIBLE v. RYAN                       8183
    that Bible’s claim was speculative, stating “[t]here is . . . no
    credible assertion, supported by affidavit, showing what miti-
    gation evidence might have been discovered, or argument as
    to how the evidence might have resulted in a different sen-
    tence. An evidentiary hearing is not required where Petitioner
    stops short of revealing what relevant evidence would have
    been presented.”
    Bible filed a federal habeas petition in the District of Ari-
    zona on October 15, 1998. The district court denied Bible’s
    petition and granted a certificate of appealability on the issue
    of ineffective assistance of counsel at the penalty stage on
    July 25, 2007. The district court then denied Bible’s motion
    for reconsideration.
    On appeal, having considered the issue of ineffective assis-
    tance of counsel at the penalty stage, we reject this claim
    under the appropriate standard for reviewing the denial of a
    petition for habeas corpus under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    .
    II
    We review a district court’s denial of a habeas petition de
    novo. Mejia v. Garcia, 
    534 F.3d 1036
    , 1042 (9th Cir. 2008).
    Bible filed this petition after the effective date of the Antiter-
    rorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”).
    Thus, we apply AEDPA deference to any state court decision
    on the merits. 
    Id.
     We must deny a habeas petition unless the
    state court’s adjudication of the claims resulted in a decision
    that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application
    of, clearly established federal law as determined by the United
    States Supreme Court or was based on an unreasonable deter-
    mination of the facts in light of the evidence presented before
    the state courts. 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d). The Supreme Court
    need not apply a specific legal rule to an identical fact pattern
    as in the instant case for that rule to qualify as clearly estab-
    lished law. Panetti v. Quarterman, 
    127 S. Ct. 2842
    , 2858
    (2007). And Ninth Circuit precedent may provide persuasive
    8184                     BIBLE v. RYAN
    authority for purposes of determining whether a state court
    decision is an unreasonable application of Supreme Court pre-
    cedent. Mejia, 
    534 F.3d at 1042
    .
    III
    Bible contends that he received ineffective assistance of
    counsel at sentencing because his counsel did not diligently
    pursue mitigation evidence and provided little guidance to the
    mental health expert. Regardless of any mitigation case defi-
    ciencies, given the significant mitigating evidence actually
    presented, the speculative mitigating evidence counsel failed
    to introduce is insufficient to outweigh the powerful aggravat-
    ing circumstances surrounding Jennifer’s murder. We con-
    clude that the Arizona court’s determination that Bible
    suffered no prejudice was not unreasonable.
    [1] To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of coun-
    sel, Bible must show that (1) his trial counsel’s performance
    “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and (2)
    “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
    been different.” Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 688,
    694 (1984). A “[f]ailure to make the required showing of
    either deficient performance or sufficient prejudice defeats the
    ineffectiveness claim.” 
    Id. at 700
    . We “need not determine
    whether counsel’s performance was deficient before examin-
    ing the prejudice suffered by the defendant as a result of the
    alleged deficiencies.” 
    Id. at 697
    .
    Establishing prejudice in the death sentence context
    requires a showing that “there is a reasonable probability that,
    absent the errors, the sentencer . . . would have concluded that
    the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did
    not warrant death.” 
    Id. at 695
    . The defendant “ ‘bears the
    highly demanding and heavy burden [of] establishing actual
    prejudice.’ ” Allen v. Woodford, 
    395 F.3d 979
    , 1000 (9th Cir.
    2005) (quoting Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 394 (2000));
    BIBLE v. RYAN                     8185
    see also Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 691
     (“An error by counsel,
    even if professionally unreasonable, does not warrant setting
    aside the judgment of a criminal proceeding if the error had
    no effect on the judgment.”).
    [2] We conclude that, after considering the mitigating evi-
    dence, “both that which was introduced and that which was
    omitted or understated,” Mayfield v. Woodford, 
    270 F.3d 915
    ,
    928 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc), alongside the aggravating evi-
    dence, Bible cannot demonstrate that his counsel’s perfor-
    mance at sentencing prejudiced him. See Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 691
    . This is so because given the aggravating factors
    related to Jennifer’s murder, we cannot say that there is a rea-
    sonable probability that the sentence would have been differ-
    ent. The cruelty of the murder, in which Bible stripped and
    bound his child victim with her own shoelace, could not have
    been lost on the sentencing judge, and all theories of mitiga-
    tion were speculative or were patently insufficient to over-
    come these aggravating factors.
    Bible alleges that his attorneys were ineffective because
    they did not conduct an adequate investigation into Bible’s
    social and medical history. His argument is: if his counsel had
    investigated further, they would have learned that Bible had
    suffered from high fevers and other illnesses as a small child,
    and they could have relayed this information to Dr. Bendheim
    and others. Then, the evaluating doctors may have conducted
    further tests to determine whether Bible had brain damage as
    a result of his childhood illnesses.
    [3] Bible does not contend that he actually suffers from
    organic brain damage and he submitted no evidence of that;
    he merely argues that his childhood events are potential
    causes of brain dysfunction that can be an explanation for vio-
    lent behavior. Bible’s argument, as we see it, relies on specu-
    lation that he may have some type of organic brain
    dysfunction or disorder. This speculation is not sufficient to
    establish prejudice. See Gonzalez v. Knowles, 
    515 F.3d 1006
    ,
    8186                    BIBLE v. RYAN
    1015-16 (9th Cir. 2008) (“As to the failure to investigate men-
    tal health mitigation, Gonzalez does not contend that he actu-
    ally suffered from a mental illness; he merely argues that if
    tests had been done, and if they had shown evidence of some
    brain damage or trauma, it might have resulted in a lower sen-
    tence. Such speculation is plainly insufficient to establish
    prejudice.”); see also King v. Schriro, 
    537 F.3d 1062
    , 1074
    (9th Cir. 2008) (concluding that there was no prejudice where
    the petition did not contain information that would show what
    the results of a more complete social and medical history
    would have been); Raley v. Ylst, 
    470 F.3d 792
    , 802 (9th Cir.
    2006) (denying habeas relief where counsel’s experts had not
    conclusively opined the defendant had a mental defect and
    their testimony would have opened the door to other damag-
    ing evidence). Bible does not demonstrate that the results of
    further testing would have found a brain disorder. In his peti-
    tion to the PCR court, Bible submitted a brief affidavit from
    a psychologist who opined that a neurological examination
    could document the effects of brain damage, but did not
    express the opinion that Bible suffered from any effects from
    early illnesses. Bible has not shown that more tests would
    have discovered and disclosed mitigation evidence sufficient
    to establish prejudice.
    [4] Further, at sentencing his counsel introduced evidence
    of Bible’s potential brain damage from drug and alcohol
    abuse, and so any further evidence of this speculative brain
    damage would have been cumulative. The sentencing judge
    heard that Bible may have brain damage, as well as dimin-
    ished capacity, due to his extensive drug and alcohol abuse.
    Phillips presented evidence of Bible’s history of drug and
    alcohol abuse through the expert witness and testimony of
    family and friends. Phillips also elicited testimony from Mrs.
    Bible that her son had experienced a difficult childbirth,
    needed oxygen when he was born, and had a history of high
    fevers, though he never tied that evidence to any potential for
    brain damage. Cumulative evidence of diminished capacity,
    duplicating what was presented, does not create a reasonable
    BIBLE v. RYAN                      8187
    probability that the sentence would have been different. See
    Babbitt v. Calderon, 
    151 F.3d 1170
    , 1176 (9th Cir. 1998)
    (“Even if counsel’s actions were deficient, Babbitt cannot
    show prejudice. Again, the evidence he now seeks to intro-
    duce is largely cumulative of the evidence actually presented
    during the penalty phase.”). We conclude that there is no rea-
    sonable probability that the judge would have imposed a dif-
    ferent sentence in light of Bible’s speculative theory of
    possible brain damage from childhood illnesses. The sentenc-
    ing judge heard evidence of Bible’s potential brain damage
    and sentenced Bible to death in the face of that evidence. The
    Arizona Supreme Court, conducting an independent review of
    the evidence, stated that none of the evidence that Bible’s
    counsel presented qualified as more than de minimis evidence
    of mitigation. Bible, 
    858 P.2d at 1212
    .
    “In assessing prejudice, we reweigh the evidence in aggra-
    vation against the totality of available mitigating evidence.”
    Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 534 (2003); see also Brown
    v. Ornoski, 
    503 F.3d 1006
    , 1016 (9th Cir. 2007) (denying a
    petition for habeas relief based on extensive aggravating evi-
    dence); Allen v. Woodford, 
    395 F.3d at 1008-09
     (same). In
    Brown, the defendant had a prior conviction for rape of a
    young girl, had raped and murdered a young victim in the
    case, and had called the family after the event, tormenting
    them. Brown, 
    503 F.3d at 1016
    . In those circumstances, the
    additional evidence of the defendant’s abuse as a child, his
    dyslexia, and his attention deficit disorder were insufficient to
    undermine confidence in the sentence. 
    Id.
     In Allen, the defen-
    dant proffered many witnesses who would have testified
    about the poor conditions that he lived in as a child, the loss
    of his sister during childhood, his hard working nature, his
    involvement in the church, and the close family ties he had.
    
    395 F.3d at 1002-03
    . Allen’s evidence did not undermine our
    confidence when considered in light of the defendant’s “long
    history of orchestrating and committing violent robberies and
    burglaries,” his direction of the murder of a witness from
    prison, and his lack of remorse. 
    Id. at 1009
    . In Woodford v.
    8188                     BIBLE v. RYAN
    Visciotti, the Supreme Court held that the California Supreme
    Court’s decision—that Visciotti had suffered no prejudice
    from his counsel’s failure to investigate and present evidence
    of a difficult childhood, seizure disorders, psychological
    abuse, and brain damage because of overwhelming aggravat-
    ing factors—was not unreasonable. 
    537 U.S. 19
    , 26 (2002)
    (per curiam). The evidence of a minimal brain injury had been
    introduced to the jury, though Visciotti’s counsel had made
    some key concessions in closing argument. 
    Id. at 25
    . Never-
    theless, because of Visciotti’s cold-blooded execution-style
    crimes, the California Supreme Court’s decision that coun-
    sel’s deficiencies did not undermine confidence in the out-
    come was not unreasonable. 
    Id. at 27
    .
    [5] Bible, like the defendants in Brown, Allen, and Visciotti
    has a significant amount of aggravating circumstances that he
    would need to overcome. He had murdered a nine-year-old
    child in an especially cruel manner. While significant aggra-
    vating circumstances do not preclude a conclusion of preju-
    dice, we cannot conclude here that the Arizona court’s
    decision was unreasonable. Bible’s speculative evidence does
    not give rise to a reasonable probability that Bible’s sentence
    would have been different in light of the aggravating factors.
    It is possible that Bible may have brain damage from child-
    hood illnesses. But Bible’s possible brain damage due to drug
    addiction was presented at the sentencing hearing. None of his
    mitigation evidence, including his possible brain damage due
    to his extensive drug use, altered the judge’s sentence. We
    hold that the absence of evidence that was cumulative of what
    had already been presented and that was speculative in nature
    does not undermine our confidence in the outcome of Bible’s
    sentencing hearing. Under the applicable standard of review,
    we cannot properly say that the Arizona court’s decision that
    Bible suffered no prejudice was an unreasonable application
    of Strickland.
    BIBLE v. RYAN                             8189
    Based on the highly deferential AEDPA standard, Bible is
    not entitled to habeas relief on this claim.5
    AFFIRMED.
    5
    Bible also raises several other issues that have not been certified for
    appeal. These include whether Bible was denied a fair trial because of pre-
    trial publicity, trial publicity, and courtroom atmosphere, whether Bible
    was denied a fair trial because of the trial court’s denial of a motion to
    change venue, whether Bible received ineffective assistance of counsel at
    the jury voir dire and the guilt phase of the trial, whether the voir dire was
    insufficient, whether Bible’s Confrontation rights were violated, and
    whether there was sufficient evidence for the trial court to find the aggra-
    vating circumstance that Jennifer’s murder was especially cruel. After
    ordering the parties to brief all of the uncertified issues, we carefully
    examined each of them, applying the Miller-El v. Cockrell, 
    537 U.S. 322
    (2003) standard, which requires a petitioner to “ ‘demonstrate that reason-
    able jurists would find the district court’s assessment of the constitutional
    claims debatable or wrong.’ ” 
    Id. at 338
     (quoting Slack v. McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
    , 484 (2000)). We agree with the district court’s determination
    that these uncertified claims do not meet this standard.