Dunn v. Reeves ( 2021 )


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  •                   Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)            1
    Per Curiam
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    JEFFERSON S. DUNN, COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS v.
    MATTHEW REEVES
    ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED
    STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    No. 20–1084.   Decided July 2, 2021
    PER CURIAM.
    Willie Johnson towed Matthew Reeves’ broken-down car
    back to the city after finding Reeves stranded on an Ala-
    bama dirt road. In payment for this act of kindness, Reeves
    murdered Johnson, stole his money, and mocked his dying
    spasms. Years after being convicted of murder and sen-
    tenced to death, Reeves sought state postconviction relief,
    arguing that his trial counsel should have hired an expert
    to develop sentencing-phase mitigation evidence of intellec-
    tual disability. But despite having the burden to rebut the
    strong presumption that his attorneys made a legitimate
    strategic choice, Reeves did not call any of them to testify.
    The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals denied relief,
    stressing that lack of evidence about counsel’s decisions im-
    peded Reeves’ efforts to prove that they acted unreasonably.
    Reeves v. State, 
    226 So. 3d 711
    , 750–751 (2016).
    On federal habeas review, the Eleventh Circuit held that
    this analysis was not only wrong, but indefensible. In an
    unpublished, per curiam opinion that drew heavily on a dis-
    sent from denial of certiorari, the Eleventh Circuit reinter-
    preted the Alabama court’s lengthy opinion as imposing a
    simple per se prohibition on relief in all cases where a pris-
    oner fails to question his counsel. Reeves v. Commissioner,
    Ala. Dept. of Corrections, 
    836 Fed. Appx. 733
    , 744–747
    (2020). It was the Eleventh Circuit, however, that went
    astray in its “readiness to attribute error.” Woodford v. Vis-
    ciotti, 
    537 U. S. 19
    , 24 (2002) (per curiam). Federal habeas
    2                     DUNN v. REEVES
    Per Curiam
    courts must defer to reasonable state-court decisions, 
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    (d), and the Alabama court’s treatment of the
    spotty record in this case was consistent with this Court’s
    recognition that “the absence of evidence cannot overcome
    the strong presumption that counsel’s conduct fell within
    the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.” Burt
    v. Titlow, 
    571 U. S. 12
    , 23 (2013) (internal quotation marks
    and brackets omitted).
    I
    In November 1996, Reeves and some friends decided to
    “go out looking for some robberies. ” Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 719
     (internal quotation marks omitted). The group’s initial
    target was a drug dealer in a nearby town, but their car
    broke down and left them stranded on the side of the road.
    A few hours later, however, Johnson happened to drive by
    in his truck and offered to tow the disabled vehicle to
    Reeves’ house.
    After they arrived, Reeves, who was riding in the bed of
    the truck, stuck a shotgun through the rear window of the
    cab and shot Johnson in the neck. As Johnson sat slumped
    in the driver’s seat “bleeding heavily and making gagging
    noises,” Reeves directed the rest of the group to “go through
    Johnson’s pockets to get his money.” 
    Id., at 720
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Throughout the rest of the day,
    Reeves repeatedly “brag[ged] about having shot Johnson,”
    boasting that the murder “would earn him a ‘teardrop,’ a
    gang tattoo acquired for killing someone.” 
    Ibid.
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted). And at a party that night,
    Reeves invented a dance in which he “pretend[ed] to pump
    a shotgun” and “jerk[ed] his body around in a manner mock-
    ing the way that Willie Johnson had died.” 
    Ibid.
     (brackets
    and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Alabama charged Reeves with murder and appointed
    counsel for him. His attorneys took several steps to develop
    mitigating evidence, including exploring the possibility that
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)                   3
    Per Curiam
    Reeves was intellectually disabled. For example, they ob-
    tained extensive records of Reeves’ educational, medical,
    and correctional history. Counsel also requested funding to
    hire a neuropsychologist, Dr. John Goff, to evaluate Reeves
    and prepare mitigation evidence. And when the trial court
    initially rejected that request, counsel successfully sought
    reconsideration.
    After the court granted funding, Reeves’ attorneys man-
    aged to acquire additional mental-health records from the
    State, including documents related to a pretrial competency
    evaluation that featured a partial administration of an IQ
    test. 1 The totality of the evidence reflected that Reeves had
    a troubled childhood, suffered from numerous behavioral
    difficulties, and was within the “borderline” range of intel-
    ligence. While in school—before being expelled for violence
    and misbehavior—he had been referred to special services
    for emotional conflict and behavioral issues. But Reeves’
    records also showed that he had previously been denied spe-
    cial educational services for intellectual disability. Counsel
    also learned that Reeves had attended classes and earned
    certificates in welding, masonry, and automotive mechan-
    ics. And the psychologist who initially evaluated Reeves
    later opined that he was not intellectually disabled.
    At some point before trial, Reeves’ attorneys apparently
    elected to pursue other mitigation strategies instead of hir-
    ing Dr. Goff. The record does not reveal the exact reason
    for this decision—likely because Reeves did not ask them to
    testify. The record does show, however, that counsel pre-
    sented a holistic mitigation case. For example, counsel
    called several witnesses at sentencing—including Reeves’
    mother and the psychologist who performed the competency
    ——————
    1 Around the same time, one of Reeves’ attorneys withdrew from the
    case, explaining that Reeves “ha[d] been combative, argumentative[,]
    and ha[d] totally refused to assist [the attorney] in any manner.” Elec-
    tronic Case Filing in No. 1:17–cv–00061 (SD Ala.) (ECF), Doc. 23–1,
    pp. 3, 78. Another attorney replaced him.
    4                          DUNN v. REEVES
    Per Curiam
    evaluation—and elicited testimony about Reeves’ turbulent
    childhood, neglectful family, and educational difficulties.
    The jury, however, recommended a death sentence.
    Reeves later sought postconviction relief in state court,
    alleging almost 20 theories of error. Relevant here, he as-
    serted that he was categorically exempt from execution by
    reason of intellectual disability, see Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U. S. 304
     (2002), or at the very least that counsel should
    have hired Dr. Goff to develop mitigation along those lines
    for use at sentencing, see Porter v. McCollum, 
    558 U. S. 30
    (2009) (per curiam). At a 2-day hearing in state court,
    Reeves called two experts, including Dr. Goff. The doctor
    concluded that Reeves was intellectually disabled, explain-
    ing that the so-called Flynn Effect—a controversial theory
    involving the inflation of IQ scores over time—required ad-
    justing Reeves’ score downward into the 60s. 2 Dr. Goff also
    cited a number of behavioral assessments that supposedly
    showed Reeves’ shortcomings in adaptive functioning. For
    its part, the State offered the expert testimony of Dr. King,
    who administered his own evaluation and concluded that
    Reeves was not intellectually disabled. In fact, Dr. King
    pointed out that Reeves had a leadership role in a drug-
    dealing group and earned as much as $2,000 a week.
    Despite Reeves’ focus on his attorney’s performance, he
    did not give them the opportunity to explain their actions.
    Although all three of his lawyers apparently were alive and
    available, Reeves did not call them to testify.
    The trial court denied relief, and the Alabama Court of
    Criminal Appeals affirmed. First, it agreed that Reeves
    ——————
    2 According to some proponents of this theory, the Flynn Effect posits
    that IQ scores increase “by approximately 0.3 points per year,” which in
    turn “requires that the IQ test be ‘normed’ periodically so that the mean
    score on the test stays the same” and “that 0.3 points be deducted from
    [a] full-scale IQ score achieved on an IQ test for each year since the test
    was last normed.” Reeves v. State, 
    226 So. 3d 711
    , 730 (Ala. Crim. App.
    2016).
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)              5
    Per Curiam
    had failed to prove that he was actually intellectually disa-
    bled and thus exempt from execution. Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 744
    . The court specifically addressed Dr. Goff ’s reliance
    on the Flynn Effect, reiterating that this approach “has not
    been accepted as scientifically valid by all courts” and was
    “not settled in the psychological community.” 
    Id., at 739
    (internal quotation marks omitted). In fact, even Dr. Goff
    had “admitted that he did not use the ‘Flynn Effect’ for over
    20 years after it was first discovered.” 
    Ibid.
    Second, the court rejected Reeves’ claim that counsel
    should have hired an expert to develop mitigating evidence
    of intellectual disability. Stressing that an attorney’s deci-
    sion not to hire an expert is “typically [a] strategic deci-
    sio[n]” that will “not constitute per se deficient perfor-
    mance,” the court looked to the record to assess the
    “reasoning behind counsel’s actions.” 
    Id., at 750, 751
     (in-
    ternal quotation marks omitted). In this case, the court ob-
    served, “the record [was] silent as to th[ose] reasons” “be-
    cause Reeves failed to call his counsel to testify.” 
    Id., at 751
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Hence, he could not
    overcome the “presumption of effectiveness” that courts
    must afford to trial counsel. 
    Ibid.
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    Reeves sought certiorari, which we denied over a dissent.
    Reeves v. Alabama, 583 U. S. ___ (2017) (opinion of
    SOTOMAYOR, J.). The dissent acknowledged that the “ab-
    sence of counsel’s testimony may make it more difficult for
    a defendant to meet his burden” of proving deficient perfor-
    mance, but still would have reversed and remanded be-
    cause it understood the Alabama court to have applied “a
    categorical rule that counsel must testify in order for a pe-
    titioner to succeed on a federal constitutional ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel claim.” 
    Id.,
     at ___, ___ (slip op., at 2,
    9). Although the dissent cited no decision in which this
    Court reprimanded a state court for taking that approach,
    it reasoned that such a rule was contrary to decisions in
    6                          DUNN v. REEVES
    Per Curiam
    which this Court had “found deficient performance despite
    [attorney] testimony, based on a review of the full record.”
    
    Id.,
     at ___ (slip op., at 9). 3
    Reeves next sought federal habeas review. The District
    Court denied relief, but the Eleventh Circuit reversed in
    part. Like every court before it, the Eleventh Circuit first
    rejected Reeves’ claim that he was intellectually disabled.
    836 Fed. Appx., at 741. But, it held that his lawyers were
    constitutionally deficient for not developing more evidence
    of intellectual disability and that this failure might have
    changed the outcome of the trial.
    In reaching that result, the Eleventh Circuit explained
    that it owed no deference to the “unreasonable” decision of
    the Alabama court. §2254(d). Quoting at length from the
    earlier dissent from denial of certiorari, the panel reasoned
    that “a per se rule that the petitioner must present counsel’s
    testimony” was clearly contrary to federal law. Id., at 744–
    747. And, to demonstrate that the Alabama court had ap-
    plied such a rule, the Eleventh Circuit excised a single
    statement from a lengthy block quote: “ ‘[T]o overcome the
    strong presumption of effectiveness, a [state] petitioner
    must, at his evidentiary hearing, question trial counsel re-
    garding his actions and reasoning.’ ” Id., at 744 (emphasis
    deleted). The Eleventh Circuit then reasoned that the state
    court surely must have imposed this “categorical rule” be-
    cause its opinion also said that Reeves’ “ ‘failure to call his
    attorneys to testify was fatal to his claims.’ ” Ibid. (empha-
    sis deleted; brackets omitted). But that quote was not quite
    complete; the original sentence reads, “In this case, Reeves’s
    ——————
    3 We note that this dissent—unlike the Eleventh Circuit—considered
    the case before it entered the exceedingly deferential posture of federal
    habeas review. Moreover, the dissent did not conclude that Reeves was
    entitled to relief on the merits of his claim, but instead would have “re-
    mand[ed] so that the [Alabama court] could explain why, given the full
    factual record, Reeves’ counsel’s choices constituted reasonable perfor-
    mance.” 583 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 14).
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)               7
    Per Curiam
    failure to call his attorneys to testify is fatal to his claims of
    ineffective assistance of counsel.” Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 749
    (emphasis added).
    II
    This case presents a simple question: Did the Alabama
    court violate clearly established federal law when it re-
    jected Reeves’ claim that his attorneys should have hired
    an expert?
    In answering this question, we owe deference to both
    Reeves’ counsel and the state court. As to counsel, we have
    often explained that strategic decisions—including whether
    to hire an expert—are entitled to a “strong presumption” of
    reasonableness. Harrington v. Richter, 
    562 U. S. 86
    , 104
    (2011). Defense lawyers have “limited” time and resources,
    and so must choose from among “ ‘countless’ ” strategic op-
    tions. 
    Id.,
     at 106–107. Such decisions are particularly dif-
    ficult because certain tactics carry the risk of “harm[ing]
    the defense” by undermining credibility with the jury or dis-
    tracting from more important issues. 
    Id., at 108
    .
    The burden of rebutting this presumption “rests squarely
    on the defendant,” and “[i]t should go without saying that
    the absence of evidence cannot overcome [it].” Titlow, 571
    U. S., at 22–23. In fact, even if there is reason to think that
    counsel’s conduct “was far from exemplary,” a court still
    may not grant relief if “[t]he record does not reveal” that
    counsel took an approach that no competent lawyer would
    have chosen. Id., at 23–24.
    This analysis is “doubly deferential” when, as here, a
    state court has decided that counsel performed adequately.
    Id., at 15 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Sex-
    ton v. Beaudreaux, 585 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2018) (per cu-
    riam) (slip op., at 7–8) (deference is “near its apex” in such
    cases). A federal court may grant habeas relief only if a
    state court violated “clearly established Federal law, as de-
    termined by the Supreme Court of the United States.”
    8                     DUNN v. REEVES
    Per Curiam
    §2254(d)(1) (emphasis added). This “wide latitude” means
    that federal courts can correct only “extreme malfunctions
    in the state criminal justice syste[m].” Richter, 
    562 U. S., at 102, 106
     (internal quotation marks omitted). And in re-
    viewing the work of their peers, federal judges must begin
    with the “presumption that state courts know and follow
    the law.” Woodford, 
    537 U. S., at 24
    . Or, in more concrete
    terms, a federal court may grant relief only if every “ ‘fair-
    minded juris[t]’ ” would agree that every reasonable lawyer
    would have made a different decision. Richter, 
    562 U. S., at 101
    .
    A straightforward application of these principles reveals
    the extent of the Eleventh Circuit’s error. We start, as we
    must, with the case as it came to the Alabama court. Reeves
    had filed a 100-plus-page brief alleging manifold errors, in-
    cluding several theories of ineffective assistance of counsel.
    Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    749–750, and n. 16. Many of these
    attacked basic strategic choices, including his current argu-
    ment that counsel should have hired Dr. Goff to develop ad-
    ditional evidence of intellectual disability. Yet, despite
    Reeves’ determination to find fault with his lawyers, he of-
    fered no testimony or other evidence from them.
    That omission was particularly significant given the
    “range of possible reasons [Reeves’] counsel may have had
    for proceeding as they did.” Cullen v. Pinholster, 
    563 U. S. 170
    , 196 (2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). This is
    not a case in which a lawyer “failed to uncover and present
    any evidence of [Reeves’] mental health or mental impair-
    ment, [or] his family background.” Porter, 
    558 U. S., at 40
    (emphasis added). Counsel’s initial enthusiasm to collect
    Reeves’ records and obtain funding hardly indicates profes-
    sional neglect and disinterest.
    Rather, we simply do not know what information and
    considerations emerged as counsel reviewed the case and
    refined their strategy. The attorneys may very well have
    pored over the voluminous evidence in their possession—
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)            9
    Per Curiam
    including those obtained after their funding request—and
    identified several reasons that a jury was unlikely to be per-
    suaded by a claim of intellectual disability. After all, alt-
    hough Reeves’ records suggested that his intelligence was
    below average, they also indicated that he was not intellec-
    tually disabled. E.g., 
    226 So. 3d, at 729
    . Counsel might also
    have been concerned about the evidence of Reeves’ history
    of violence, criminal past, and behavior problems, ibid., and
    concluded that presenting these characteristics alongside a
    full-throated intellectual-disability argument would have
    convinced the jury that Reeves “was simply beyond rehabil-
    itation,” Pinholster, 
    563 U. S., at 201
    . Or, counsel may have
    uncovered additional evidence confirming their concerns
    about an intellectual-disability strategy. Perhaps Reeves
    informed them, as he later did Dr. King, that he was savvy
    enough to earn thousands of dollars a week in a drug-
    dealing operation where he had a leadership role. 
    226 So. 3d, at 736
    .
    Or, counsel may well have further investigated Dr. Goff
    and decided that his debatable methodologies would under-
    mine credibility with a local jury—possibly a prescient
    choice given that every single court to consider the issue has
    rejected Reeves’ claim of intellectual disability. In fact,
    around the time that counsel were formulating their trial
    strategy, Dr. Goff was already performing questionable
    evaluations. See, e.g., King v. Apfel, 
    2000 WL 284217
    , *2
    (SD Ala., Feb. 29, 2000) (Dr. Goff ’s 1996 evaluation of a So-
    cial Security claimant was “unsupported by the medical ev-
    idence,” and “everything else in the record [was] counter to
    [his] extreme findings” (emphasis added)); Small v. Apfel,
    
    2000 WL 1844727
    , *3, n. 5 (SD Ala., Oct. 17, 2000) (“[Dr.]
    Goff ’s [1998] conclusions regarding deficits in adaptive be-
    havior are not only mere guesses . . . but also suffer from a
    lack of support in the record”). It is not unreasonable for a
    lawyer to be concerned about overreaching.
    Simply put, if the attorneys had been given the chance to
    10                     DUNN v. REEVES
    Per Curiam
    testify, they might have pointed to information justifying
    the strategic decision to devote their time and efforts else-
    where. Yet, Reeves—possibly pursuing a strategy of his
    own—declined to put that testimonial evidence before the
    Alabama court. So given that the Alabama court was enti-
    tled to reject Reeves’ claim if trial counsel had any “possible
    reaso[n] . . . for proceeding as they did,” Pinholster, 
    563 U. S., at 196
     (internal quotation marks omitted), it surely
    was not obliged to accept Reeves’ blanket assertion on an
    incomplete evidentiary record that “[n]o reasonable strat-
    egy could support counsel’s failure,” ECF Doc. 23–29, at 81.
    Rather than defer to this commonsense analysis, the
    Eleventh Circuit took a path that we have long foreclosed:
    “mischaracterization of the state-court opinion.” Woodford,
    
    537 U. S., at 22
    . As explained above, the Alabama court
    reasonably concluded that the incomplete evidentiary rec-
    ord—which was notably “silent as to the reasons trial coun-
    sel . . . chose not to hire Dr. Goff or another neuropsycholo-
    gist”—doomed Reeves’ belated efforts to second-guess his
    attorneys. Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 751
    . The Eleventh Circuit,
    however, recharacterized this case-specific analysis as a
    “categorical rule” that any prisoner will always lose if he
    fails to call and question “trial counsel regarding his or her
    actions and reasoning.” 836 Fed. Appx., at 744 (emphasis
    deleted; internal quotation marks omitted).
    We think it clear from context that the Alabama court did
    not apply a blanket rule, but rather determined that the
    facts of this case did not merit relief. As an initial matter,
    the Alabama court twice recognized that there can be in-
    stances of “per se deficient performance.” Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    750–751. It simply concluded that here, counsel’s
    choice regarding experts involved a strategic decision enti-
    tled to a presumption of reasonableness. 
    Ibid.
     Moreover,
    other portions of the opinion’s lengthy recitation of the law
    (which the Eleventh Circuit omitted) belie a categorical ap-
    proach. In particular, the court twice said that it would
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)             11
    Per Curiam
    consider “ ‘all the circumstances’ ” of the case, and it quali-
    fied its supposedly categorical rule by explaining that
    “counsel should ordinarily be afforded an opportunity to ex-
    plain his actions before being denounced as ineffective.” 
    Id., at 744, 747
     (emphasis added; some internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    Other parts of the opinion yield the same interpretation.
    For example, the court devoted almost nine pages to dis-
    cussing ineffective assistance of counsel. That would have
    been a curious choice for a “busy state cour[t]” if a single
    sentence applying a per se rule could have sufficed. John-
    son v. Williams, 
    568 U. S. 289
    , 298 (2013) (state courts need
    not even “discuss separately every single claim”). Within
    that lengthy discussion, the court individually mentioned
    many of Reeves’ specific theories, including his current
    intellectual-disability argument. Moreover, that the court
    in a footnote summarily rejected different ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel claims for procedural reasons further
    weighs against imputing a per se rule for the theories that
    the court discussed in the body of its opinion. Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    749–750, n. 16.
    Even more important, the actual analysis of the claim at
    issue here reflects a case-specific approach. The court did
    not merely say, as the Eleventh Circuit wrongly suggested,
    that Reeves’ “ ‘failure to call his attorneys to testify was fa-
    tal to his claims.’ ” 836 Fed. Appx., at 744 (brackets omit-
    ted). Rather, the opinion prefaced this quote with an im-
    portant qualifier—“In this case.” Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 749
    (emphasis added). And sure enough, the court proceeded to
    explain why Reeves could not prevail “in this case”—be-
    cause “the record [was] silent as to the reasoning behind
    counsel’s actions.” 
    Id., at 751
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). To be sure, the record in this particular case hap-
    pened to be deficient “because Reeves failed to call his coun-
    sel to testify.” 
    Ibid.
     But, this unremarkable observation of
    cause and effect in light of the facts before the court was
    12                         DUNN v. REEVES
    Per Curiam
    hardly an absolute bar in every case where other record ev-
    idence might fill in the details. And, it certainly was not
    contrary to clearly established law given that this Court
    and the Eleventh Circuit have made the same observation
    that a silent record cannot discharge a prisoner’s burden.
    E.g., Titlow, 571 U. S., at 15, 22–24; Grayson v. Thompson,
    
    257 F. 3d 1194
    , 1218 (CA11 2001) (noting that “the record
    [was] silent as to why trial counsel did not pursue a motion
    to suppress the evidence,” and that “habeas counsel did not
    inquire as to trial counsel’s reasons for not raising such a
    claim”). 4
    *     *   *
    For the foregoing reasons, we grant the petition for a writ
    of certiorari, reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals,
    and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    JUSTICE BREYER dissents.
    ——————
    4 Today’s dissent suggests that a more recent decision—State v.
    M.D.D., ___ So. 3d ___, 
    2020 WL 6110694
     (Ala. Crim. App., Oct. 16,
    2020)—illustrates that Alabama courts understand Reeves to announce
    a per se rule. Post, at 6–9, and n. 4 (opinion of SOTOMAYOR, J.). But that
    case does the exact opposite. In M.D.D., the petitioner alleged that his
    attorney should have called a medical expert at trial, yet he did not have
    the attorney testify at the postconviction hearing. 
    2020 WL 6110694
    ,
    *5–*6. The Alabama court denied relief after examining the evidence
    and identifying a “sound, strategic reason for not calling [the expert] to
    testify.” Id., at *8 (discussing a possible downside to having the expert
    testify); see also id., at *9 (explaining, in the alternative, why the peti-
    tioner suffered no prejudice). Notably, the court did so after citing Reeves
    and quoting the same language that the dissent claims represents a
    per se rule. Compare id., at *7–*8 (“[A] Rule 32 petitioner must, at his
    evidentiary hearing, question trial counsel regarding his or her actions
    and reasoning. . . . In this case, the failure to have trial counsel testify
    is fatal to [the petitioner’s] claims of ineffective assistance of counsel”
    (emphasis deleted; internal quotation marks omitted)), with post, at 1, 5.
    Again, it would have been strange for a busy Alabama court to devote
    pages to rejecting a claim if a categorical bar would have sufficed.
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)              1
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    JEFFERSON S. DUNN, COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS v.
    MATTHEW REEVES
    ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED
    STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    No. 20–1084.   Decided July 2, 2021
    JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE KAGAN joins,
    dissenting.
    Under Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
     (1984),
    courts must assess a defendant’s claim that his attorney
    failed to provide constitutionally effective assistance “in
    light of all the circumstances.” 
    Id., at 690
    . No single type
    of evidence is a prerequisite to relief. Therefore, as the ma-
    jority implicitly acknowledges, a per se rule that a habeas
    petitioner’s claim fails if his attorney did not testify at an
    evidentiary hearing is flatly incompatible with Strickland.
    The Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama applied pre-
    cisely such a rule in this case. When respondent Matthew
    Reeves raised several ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
    (IAC) claims in state postconviction proceedings, the court
    stated, in no uncertain terms (and underlined for empha-
    sis), that “to overcome the strong presumption of effective-
    ness, a Rule 32 petitioner must, at his evidentiary hearing,
    question trial counsel regarding his or her actions and rea-
    soning.” Reeves v. State, 
    226 So. 3d 711
    , 748 (2016) (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted). Applying that rule “[i]n this
    case,” the court held that “Reeves’s failure to call his attor-
    neys to testify is fatal to his claims of ineffective assistance
    of counsel.” 
    Id., at 749
    . Reeves then sought habeas relief
    in federal court. Based on the state court’s clear holding,
    the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit properly de-
    termined that the state court’s use of the per se rule was an
    2                     DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    unreasonable application of Strickland. Reeves v. Commis-
    sioner, Ala. Dept. of Corrections, 
    836 Fed. Appx. 733
    , 744
    (2020) (per curiam).
    Through linguistic contortion, the Court today rescues
    the state court’s decision by construing it not to apply a
    per se rule at all. Based on that implausible reading, the
    Court summarily reverses the Eleventh Circuit’s grant of
    relief. The lengths to which this Court goes to ensure that
    Reeves remains on death row are extraordinary. I respect-
    fully dissent.
    I
    A
    In 1998, Reeves was convicted of capital murder for a bru-
    tal crime he committed when he was 18 years old. By a vote
    of 10 to 2, a divided jury recommended that Reeves be sen-
    tenced to death, and the trial court accepted that recom-
    mendation.
    During his trial, Reeves was initially represented by two
    attorneys, Blanchard McLeod and Marvin Wiggins. Reeves’
    counsel moved for the appointment of a neuropsychologist,
    Dr. John Goff, to conduct an intellectual disability evalua-
    tion. When the motion was denied, Reeves’ counsel sought
    rehearing. They explained that they had collected “hun-
    dreds of pages of psychological, psychometric and behav-
    ioral analysis material relating to [Reeves].” Electronic
    Case Filing in No. 1:17–cv–00061 (SD Ala.) (ECF), Doc. 23–
    1, p. 74. That material, McLeod had represented in court,
    was “exceptionally pertinent” to Reeves’ penalty phase de-
    fense. ECF Doc. 23–3, at 96. Counsel stated that retaining
    “a clinical neuropsychologist” like Dr. Goff was “the only av-
    enue open to the defense to compile this information . . . and
    present [it] in an orderly and informative fashion to the
    jury.” ECF Doc. 23–1, at 74–75. The state court granted
    the request and provided funding to hire Dr. Goff. 
    Id.,
     at
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)            3
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    81. Around the same time, McLeod was replaced by an-
    other attorney, Thomas Goggans. 836 Fed. Appx., at 736.
    Reeves’ new team, Goggans and Wiggins, failed to follow
    through on hiring a neuropsychologist. As Dr. Goff later
    testified, in the more than three months between his ap-
    pointment and the penalty phase trial, Reeves’ attorneys
    “just never called.” ECF Doc. 23–24, at 68. They also never
    hired any other neuropsychologist to review the evidence
    and evaluate Reeves for intellectual disability. 836 Fed.
    Appx., at 748. Instead, on the day of the penalty phase
    trial, counsel contacted Dr. Kathleen Ronan, a clinical psy-
    chologist who had previously evaluated Reeves for compe-
    tence to stand trial and his mental state at the time of the
    offense. ECF Doc. 23–26, at 82–84. She had never evalu-
    ated Reeves for intellectual disability, and she had not spo-
    ken with Goggans or Wiggins until “the day that [she] tes-
    tified.” Id., at 84.
    Dr. Ronan informed Reeves’ counsel that her prior evalu-
    ation would not serve their purposes. Ibid. As she later
    explained, assessing Reeves for intellectual disability “was
    not within the scope of [her] evaluation.” Ibid. Had she
    been hired to conduct such an assessment, she would have
    administered a full IQ test and conducted other evaluations
    designed to diagnose intellectual disability. Id., at 85–87.
    Instead, Dr. Ronan had only administered part of an IQ test
    and found that Reeves’ verbal IQ “was not in a level that
    they would call him [intellectually disabled].” ECF Doc. 23–
    8, at 155; see also ECF Doc. 23–26, at 85. An expert for the
    State later administered a full IQ test, however, showing
    that Reeves’ IQ was well within the range for intellectual
    disability. Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 737
    ; ECF Doc. 23–25, at
    24; ECF Doc. 23–24, at 26.
    Nevertheless, Reeves’ counsel called Dr. Ronan to testify.
    The only other witnesses counsel called were Reeves’
    mother and a police detective. The entire penalty phase
    trial lasted just one and a half hours. ECF Doc. 23–14, at
    4                         DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    154. Reviewing the record, the trial judge found that “[t]he
    only evidence that [he could] consider in mitigation of this
    offense . . . is the evidence of [Reeves’] age and [his] youth-
    fulness.” ECF Doc. 23–8, at 212. Concluding that such lim-
    ited evidence would not outweigh the aggravating circum-
    stances, the court sentenced Reeves to death. 
    Ibid.
    B
    In 2002, Reeves filed a motion for state postconviction re-
    lief under Alabama Rule of Criminal Procedure 32 (known
    as a Rule 32 petition). Reeves alleged that his trial counsel
    had been constitutionally ineffective in several ways, in-
    cluding by failing to hire a neuropsychologist to evaluate
    him for intellectual disability.
    The state court held a 2-day evidentiary hearing on
    Reeves’ claims. Reeves called Dr. Goff to testify. At the
    request of Reeves’ postconviction counsel, Dr. Goff had re-
    viewed Reeves’ mental health and school records and ad-
    ministered “a battery of tests designed to assess Mr. Reeves’
    IQ, cognitive abilities, and adaptive functioning.” 836 Fed.
    Appx., at 737. Dr. Goff found that Reeves’ IQ scores were
    71 and 73, 1 showing that Reeves “has significantly subav-
    erage intellectual functioning,” and that he “has significant
    deficits in multiple areas of adaptive functioning.” Ibid.
    These deficits manifested before Reeves turned 18 years
    old. ECF Doc. 23–24, at 25–26, 65–67. Based on his find-
    ings, Dr. Goff concluded that Reeves is intellectually disa-
    bled. 836 Fed. Appx., at 737. Dr. Goff testified that “had
    Mr. Reeves’ trial counsel asked him to evaluate Mr. Reeves
    years earlier for the purpose of testifying at trial, he would
    have performed similar evaluations and reached the same
    conclusions.” Ibid.
    ——————
    1 Reeves’ IQ scores were even lower after accounting for the Flynn Ef-
    fect. ECF Doc. 23–24, at 43–46. Dr. Goff concluded that Reeves’ IQ fell
    within the intellectual disability range even without such an adjustment.
    Id., at 44, 99.
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)              5
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    Reeves’ trial counsel did not testify at the Rule 32 hear-
    ing. At the beginning of the hearing, the State had declared
    that it intended to call Goggans and Wiggins to “explain
    why they did certain things and maybe why they didn’t do
    certain things.” ECF Doc. 23–24, at 14. But at the conclu-
    sion of the hearing, the State “decided not to call trial coun-
    sel.” ECF Doc. 23–25, at 86.
    The state court denied Reeves’ motion for postconviction
    relief. On appeal, Reeves argued that the lower court had
    “erred in ignoring substantial evidence in support of [his
    IAC claim] on the basis that he did not call counsel to tes-
    tify.” ECF Doc. 23–29, at 45. In response, the State argued
    that because “Reeves failed to call either of his trial attor-
    neys to testify concerning their decision to call Dr. Ronan
    rather than Dr. Goff,” the lower court “properly presumed
    that they acted reasonably.” Id., at 199–200.
    The Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama agreed with
    the State, rejecting Reeves’ contention that “testimony from
    counsel is not necessary to prove any claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel.” Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 747
    . That ar-
    gument, the court reasoned, “fail[ed] to take into account
    the requirement that courts indulge a strong presumption
    that counsel acted reasonably, a presumption that must be
    overcome by evidence to the contrary.” 
    Ibid.
     (emphasis in
    original). The court then specified what that evidence must
    be: “ ‘[T]o overcome the strong presumption of effectiveness,
    a Rule 32 petitioner must, at his evidentiary hearing, ques-
    tion trial counsel regarding his or her actions and reason-
    ing.’ ” 
    Id., at 748
     (emphasis in original; quoting Stallworth
    v. State, 
    171 So. 3d 53
    , 92 (Ala. Crim. App. 2013)). The
    court cited over half a dozen cases supporting that per se
    rule. See 
    226 So. 3d, at 748
    . It then applied the rule to
    Reeves, explaining that “[i]n this case, Reeves’s failure to
    call his attorneys to testify is fatal to his claims of ineffec-
    tive assistance of counsel.” 
    Id., at 749
    .
    6                      DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    Reeves filed a petition for a writ of certiorari seeking re-
    view of the state court’s decision, which this Court denied.
    I dissented, joined by Justice Ginsburg and JUSTICE
    KAGAN. We pointed out that the state court had applied a
    per se rule “that counsel must testify in order for a peti-
    tioner to succeed on a federal constitutional ineffective-as-
    sistance-of-counsel claim.” Reeves v. Alabama, 583 U. S.
    ___, ___ (2017) (slip op., at 2). Even the State did not defend
    the constitutionality of such a rule. See 
    ibid.
    C
    Reeves then filed a federal habeas petition pursuant to
    
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    . The District Court denied Reeves’ peti-
    tion and his motion for reconsideration. See 
    2019 WL 1938805
    , *11 (SD Ala., May 1, 2019). The Eleventh Circuit
    reversed in relevant part. It read the state appellate court’s
    decision to “trea[t] Mr. Reeves’ failure to call his counsel to
    testify as a per se bar to relief—despite ample evidence in
    the record to overcome the presumption of adequate repre-
    sentation.” 836 Fed. Appx., at 744. In so doing, the state
    court “unreasonably applied Strickland.” Ibid. The Elev-
    enth Circuit accordingly reviewed Reeves’ claim de novo
    and found that Reeves had proved ineffective assistance of
    counsel. Id., at 747–753.
    The Eleventh Circuit was not alone in interpreting the
    state court’s decision to apply a “categorical rule.” Id., at
    744. Less than a month earlier, the Court of Criminal Ap-
    peals of Alabama (the same court that had issued the deci-
    sion in question) denied another defendant’s IAC claim.
    Once again, the court stated its per se rule: “[T]o overcome
    the strong presumption of effectiveness, a Rule 32 peti-
    tioner must, at his evidentiary hearing, question trial coun-
    sel regarding his or her actions and reasoning.” State v.
    M.D.D., ___ So. 3d ___, ___, 
    2020 WL 6110694
    , *7 (Oct. 16,
    2020) (internal quotation marks omitted; emphasis de-
    leted). In support, the court cited its prior decision in
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)                     7
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    Reeves, which it summarized as “holding that [a] Rule 32
    petitioner had failed to prove his claims of ineffective assis-
    tance of trial and appellate counsel because he did not call
    his trial or appellate counsel to testify at the Rule 32 evi-
    dentiary hearing.” Id., at *8. As in Reeves’ case, the court
    in M.D.D. held that “the failure to have trial counsel testify
    is fatal to M.D.D.’s claims of ineffective assistance of coun-
    sel.” Ibid. 2
    The State petitioned this Court to review the Eleventh
    Circuit’s decision in Reeves. Despite the Alabama court’s
    plain embrace of a per se rule, the State accused the Elev-
    enth Circuit of too “readily attributing error to the state
    court” by interpreting its decision to “purportedly creat[e]
    and us[e] this per se rule.” Pet. for Cert. i. On that basis,
    the State asked this Court to reverse summarily the Elev-
    enth Circuit. Id., at 30.
    II
    The sole question presented in this case is whether the
    Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama applied a categorical
    rule that Reeves’ failure to call his attorneys to testify was
    fatal to his IAC claim as a matter of law. No one disputes
    that such a rule would be an “unreasonable application” of
    Strickland and its progeny. 
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    (d)(1); see also
    ante, at 1, 10; Pet. for Cert. 1. Under those decisions, no
    single type of evidence, such as counsel’s testimony, is a
    prerequisite to relief. 3 See Roe v. Flores-Ortega, 528 U. S.
    ——————
    2 The state court separately held that relief was not warranted because
    the court could conceive of a sound strategic reason for counsel’s actions
    and because M.D.D. failed to show prejudice. See State v. M.D.D., ___
    So. 3d ___, ___–___, 
    2020 WL 6110694
    , *8–*9 (Ala. Crim. App., Oct. 16,
    2020).
    3 As the Eleventh Circuit recognized, this Court has found deficient
    performance without any testimony from trial counsel. See Reeves v.
    Commissioner, Ala. Dept. of Corrections, 
    836 Fed. Appx. 733
    , 751 (2020)
    (per curiam) (discussing Buck v. Davis, 580 U. S. ___ (2017)). This Court
    8                          DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    470, 478 (2000) (describing Strickland’s “circumstance-spe-
    cific reasonableness inquiry”); Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U. S. 362
    , 391 (2000) (explaining that “the Strickland test ‘of ne-
    cessity requires a case-by-case examination of the evi-
    dence’ ”).
    The Court of Criminal Appeals improperly applied such
    a per se rule here. It began by invoking Reeves’ burden “to
    present evidence” sufficient to overcome the “strong pre-
    sumption that counsel acted reasonably.” Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at 751
     (emphasis deleted). It then ignored all of the ev-
    idence that Reeves’ counsel had acted unreasonably, includ-
    ing Dr. Goff ’s description of the evaluation he would have
    conducted, Dr. Ronan’s warning that her testimony was no
    substitute for an actual intellectual disability assessment,
    and trial counsel’s repeated representations about the ne-
    cessity of hiring Dr. Goff to conduct such an evaluation.
    The court held that none of this evidence mattered be-
    cause trial counsel did not testify: “[B]ecause Reeves failed
    to call his counsel to testify, the record is silent as to the
    reasons trial counsel . . . chose not to hire Dr. Goff or an-
    other neuropsychologist.” 
    Ibid.
     The court treated that fact
    as “fatal” to Reeves’ claim. 
    Id., at 749
    . Because Reeves
    could not establish the subjective “reasoning behind coun-
    sel’s actions, the presumption of effectiveness [was] suffi-
    cient to deny relief.” 
    Id., at 751
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also M.D.D., ___ So. 3d, at ___, 
    2020 WL 6110694
    , *8 (explaining that the court denied Reeves relief
    “because he did not call his trial . . . counsel to testify”). 4
    ——————
    has also found deficient performance when counsel testified and “at-
    tempt[ed] to justify their [actions] as reflecting a tactical judgment.”
    Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U. S. 510
    , 521 (2003).
    4 The Court has no answer to the explicit description in M.D.D. of the
    state court’s reasoning in Reeves. Instead, the Court collapses the state
    court’s alternative holdings in M.D.D., conflating the state court’s appli-
    cation of the per se rule requiring counsel’s testimony with the state
    court’s separate reasons for denying relief. Ante, at 12, n. 4. It is true,
    as the Court notes, that the state court “examin[ed] the evidence and
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)                        9
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    III
    In reviewing habeas petitions, “federal judges must begin
    with the ‘presumption that state courts know and follow the
    law.’ ” Ante, at 8 (quoting Woodford v. Visciotti, 
    537 U. S. 19
    , 24 (2002) (per curiam)). But when state courts contra-
    vene this Court’s precedents, federal courts cannot turn a
    blind eye. Here, it is hard to see how the state court could
    have been any clearer in applying a per se rule that undis-
    putedly violates Strickland.
    A
    The Court declares that it is “clear from context that the
    Alabama court did not apply a blanket rule, but rather de-
    termined that the facts of this case did not merit relief.”
    Ante, at 10. The problem is that the “facts of this case”
    make no appearance in the state court’s discussion. See
    Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    749–751. This Court thus searches
    for some sign (any sign) that the state court implicitly as-
    sessed the facts of the case.
    The Court first points to two statements at the beginning
    ——————
    identif[ied] a sound, strategic reason” for counsel’s actions “after citing
    Reeves and quoting the same language that the dissent claims represents
    a per se rule.” 
    Ibid.
     (internal quotation marks omitted). What the Court
    fails to mention is that the state court first concluded that the per se rule
    applied in Reeves was sufficient, on its own, to deny relief. M.D.D., ___
    So. 3d, at ___, 
    2020 WL 6110694
    , *8 (“In this case, the failure to have
    trial counsel testify is fatal to M.D.D.’s claims of ineffective assistance of
    counsel,” because “where the record is silent as to the reasoning behind
    counsel’s actions, the presumption of effectiveness is sufficient to deny
    relief ” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Only after announcing this
    holding did the state court separately offer two additional, independent
    reasons for denying relief, explaining that “[f]urther,” there was a
    “sound, strategic reason” for counsel’s actions, and “[m]ore[o]ver,” an ex-
    amination of the record showed that M.D.D. had failed to demonstrate
    prejudice. 
    Id.,
     at *8–*9. Contrary to the Court’s suggestion, these alter-
    native holdings formed no part of the state court’s discussion of Reeves
    or application of the per se rule. The Court rewrites yet another state-
    court decision in service of its efforts to rewrite this one.
    10                     DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    of the state court’s analysis in which it “said that it would
    consider ‘all the circumstances’ of the case.” Ante, at 10–11.
    But after perfunctorily citing the Strickland standard, the
    state court never actually followed through on its obligation
    to consider the evidence. Its analysis began and ended with
    counsel’s failure to testify. See Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    750–
    751. State courts cannot insulate their decisions from scru-
    tiny by quoting the proper standard and then ignoring it.
    In a similar vein, this Court seizes upon the state court’s
    quotation from an earlier case stating that trial “ ‘counsel
    should ordinarily be afforded an opportunity to explain his
    actions before being denounced as ineffective.’ ” Ante, at 11.
    This, the Court claims, “belie[s] a categorical approach.”
    Ante, at 10. The state court, however, expressly overrode
    that formulation of the rule, stating that the court “[s]ubse-
    quently” held that IAC petitioners “ ‘must’ ” question trial
    counsel. Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    747–748 (emphasis in origi-
    nal). It relied on that rule to reject Reeves’ claim. 
    Id.,
     at
    748–749.
    The Court also cites the length of the state court’s opinion
    as purported proof that the court conducted a fact-specific
    inquiry. Ante, at 11. But what matters is the state court’s
    reasoning, not the length of its opinion. The state court did
    not spend “almost nine pages” conducting a detailed “case-
    specific” analysis. 
    Ibid.
     The vast majority of the state
    court’s discussion instead consists of a list of Reeves’ IAC
    allegations and lengthy block quotes of general legal stand-
    ards. See Reeves, 
    226 So. 3d, at
    744–750. When the court
    finally turned to the facts of this case, it explicitly barred
    relief only “because Reeves failed to call his counsel to tes-
    tify.” 
    Id., at 751
    .
    Finally, the Court latches on to three words, “[i]n this
    case,” insisting that they prove that the state court merely
    concluded that trial counsel’s testimony was critical to
    Reeves’ IAC claim “[i]n this case.” Ante, at 11 (quoting 
    226 So. 3d, at 749
    ; emphasis deleted). But in using the phrase
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)                      11
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    “[i]n this case,” the state court was not addressing the evi-
    dentiary record. It was analogizing Reeves’ case to the
    many cases it had just cited for the proposition that “ ‘a Rule
    32 petitioner must, at his evidentiary hearing, question
    trial counsel regarding his or her actions and reasoning.’ ”
    
    Id.,
     at 748–749 (emphasis in original). It then concluded
    that “Reeves’s failure to call his attorneys to testify” in this
    case was similarly “fatal to his claims.” 
    Id., at 749
    . If the
    state court had meant to weigh the evidence in the record,
    it would have. It did not. This Court is putting words in
    the state court’s mouth that the state court never uttered,
    and which are flatly inconsistent with what the state court
    did say.
    B
    Finding no relevant factual analysis in the state court’s
    decision, this Court attempts its own, speculating as to
    what Reeves’ counsel might have said had they been called
    to testify. See ante, at 8–10. For instance, the Court ima-
    gines that “counsel may have uncovered additional evi-
    dence confirming their concerns about an intellectual-disa-
    bility strategy.” Ante, at 9. 5 The Court also insinuates that
    ——————
    5 The Court hypothesizes that “[t]he attorneys may very well have
    pored over the voluminous evidence in their possession—including those
    obtained after their funding request—and identified several reasons that
    a jury was unlikely to be persuaded [by] a claim of intellectual disability.”
    Ante, at 8–9 (noting evidence indicating that Reeves’ “intelligence was
    below average,” but he was not intellectually disabled, and Reeves’ “his-
    tory of violence, criminal past, and behavior problems”). But counsel al-
    ready knew of these concerns when they moved for Dr. Goff ’s appoint-
    ment. For instance, several months before counsel filed their initial
    motion, they received a report from Dr. Ronan’s guilt-phase evaluation
    detailing these issues. See ECF Doc. 23–13, at 61–63, 65. It is hard to
    see how counsel’s later request for the records underlying that evaluation
    could have significantly changed their calculus. See ante, at 3; ECF Doc.
    23–1, at 88. Moreover, even if counsel had discovered additional evi-
    dence related to Reeves’ intellectual disability, there would still be a need
    for an expert to evaluate the evidence in its totality. Indeed, Reeves’
    12                         DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    Reeves may have strategically declined to call his trial
    counsel to avoid harmful testimony. Ante, at 10. But if
    counsel’s testimony would have been damaging to Reeves’
    claim, one would have expected the State to call counsel to
    testify. Yet the State expressly declined to do so, despite
    having counsel available to testify. See ECF Doc. 23–25, at
    85–86.
    The Court’s eagerness to invent scenarios harmful to
    Reeves’ claim stems from its apparent belief that “the Ala-
    bama court was entitled to reject Reeves’ claim if trial coun-
    sel had any ‘possible reaso[n] . . . for proceeding as they
    did.’ ” Ante, at 10 (quoting Cullen v. Pinholster, 
    563 U. S. 170
    , 196 (2011)). That view has no basis in this Court’s
    precedent. Cullen did not hold that an IAC claim fails if a
    court can imagine any possible reason for counsel’s actions.
    No claim could ever survive such a standard. One can al-
    ways imagine some unsubstantiated reason for what trial
    counsel did. Cullen instead stated that, to assess whether
    counsel’s conduct was reasonable, courts must “entertain
    the range of possible reasons” for counsel’s actions in light
    of the events and evidence actually established in the rec-
    ord. 
    Id., at 196
     (internal quotation marks omitted). The
    Court’s speculations about what may have occurred after
    Dr. Goff ’s appointment are pure conjecture.
    In any case, the Court’s guesswork is beside the point be-
    cause it was not the basis for the state court’s decision.
    When a state court gives a reasoned explanation for its de-
    cision, federal habeas courts must review that decision on
    its own terms. See Wilson v. Sellers, 584 U. S. ___, ___
    (2018) (slip op., at 2) (“In that case, a federal habeas court
    ——————
    counsel argued to the state court that, given the volume of evidence, they
    needed the assistance of a qualified expert to properly “compile” and “cor-
    relate” the information and evaluate Reeves. 
    Id.,
     at 74–75; see ECF Doc.
    23–3, at 91 (counsel arguing that they required Dr. Goff ’s assistance be-
    cause “the amount of material that we have received through discovery
    . . . is beyond our ability to deal with”).
    Cite as: 594 U. S. ____ (2021)            13
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    simply reviews the specific reasons given by the state court
    and defers to those reasons if they are reasonable”). Here,
    the state court relied solely on the mere fact that Reeves’
    counsel did not testify. That is the only reason subject to
    our review, and it plainly contravenes Strickland.
    Even as the Court attempts to save the state court’s deci-
    sion, it erroneously embraces the state court’s flawed as-
    sumption that IAC claims require direct evidence of the
    subjective “ ‘reasoning behind counsel’s actions.’ ” See ante,
    at 11. “Strickland, however, calls for an inquiry into the
    objective reasonableness of counsel’s performance, not
    counsel’s subjective state of mind.” Harrington v. Richter,
    
    562 U. S. 86
    , 110 (2011). “A convicted defendant making a
    claim of ineffective assistance must identify the acts or
    omissions of counsel that are alleged not to have been the
    result of reasonable professional judgment. The court must
    then determine whether, in light of all the circumstances,
    the identified acts or omissions were outside the wide range
    of professionally competent assistance.” Strickland, 
    466 U. S., at 690
    . This inquiry must be conducted “[e]ven as-
    suming” that counsel acted “for strategic reasons,” Wiggins
    v. Smith, 
    539 U. S. 510
    , 527 (2003), and even if counsel does
    not testify. Cf. Buck, 580 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 17) (“No
    competent defense attorney would introduce such evidence
    about his own client”). “ ‘In any case presenting an ineffec-
    tiveness claim, the performance inquiry must be whether
    counsel’s assistance was reasonable considering all the cir-
    cumstances.’ ” Hinton v. Alabama, 
    571 U. S. 263
    , 273
    (2014) (per curiam). This Court simply cannot escape the
    fact that the state court failed to conduct the necessary in-
    quiry.
    *     *     *
    Today’s decision continues a troubling trend in which this
    Court strains to reverse summarily any grants of relief to
    those facing execution. See, e.g., United States v. Higgs, 592
    14                     DUNN v. REEVES
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    U. S. ___ (2021) (emergency vacatur of stay and reversal);
    Shinn v. Kayer, 592 U. S. ___ (2020) (per curiam) (summary
    vacatur); Dunn v. Ray, 586 U. S. ___ (2019) (emergency va-
    catur of stay). This Court has shown no such interest in
    cases in which defendants seek relief based on compelling
    showings that their constitutional rights were violated.
    See, e.g., Johnson v. Precythe, 593 U. S. ___ (2021) (denying
    certiorari); Whatley v. Warden, 593 U. S. ___ (2021) (same);
    Bernard v. United States, 592 U. S. ___ (2020) (same). In
    Reeves’ case, this Court stops the lower court from granting
    Reeves’ petition by adopting an utterly implausible reading
    of the state court’s decision. In essence, the Court turns
    “deference,” ante, at 7, into a rule that federal habeas relief
    is never available to those facing execution. I respectfully
    dissent.