DocketNumber: No. 17-70007
Judges: Costa, Dennis, King
Filed Date: 8/24/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Jedidiah Isaac Murphy was convicted and sentenced to death by a Texas jury for the capital murder of Bertie Cunningham. After unsuccessfully pursuing state appellate and habeas remedies, Murphy brought a federal habeas petition, which eventually was denied. We recently granted Murphy a certificate of appealability to appeal the denial of two of his federal habeas claims. See Murphy v. Davis ,
I.
A.
After robbing 80-year-old Bertie Cunningham at gunpoint, Jedidiah Isaac Murphy forced her into the trunk of her own car and shot her in the head. He then drove around with her body in the trunk, using her ATM card and credit cards to buy beer and liquor. Murphy was soon arrested. He admitted to the shooting and led police to the creek where he had dumped Cunningham's body. Later at the police station, he wrote and signed a statement claiming that he accidentally shot Cunningham while forcing her into her own trunk.
In June 2001, a Texas jury convicted Murphy of capital murder. The State of Texas sought the death penalty. During the penalty phase of the trial, the sides clashed over the future threat to society Murphy would pose if allowed to live.
In particular, the severity of Murphy's history of violence was a point of contention. To demonstrate he had such a history, the State submitted Murphy's record of theft convictions. A responding officer also testified for the State about a domestic-abuse call involving Murphy and his girlfriend. The officer said that when he entered Murphy's home, the girlfriend had a bloody nose and Murphy had a knife. The officer subdued Murphy with pepper spray. Another State witness said that Murphy pulled a gun on her at a high school party. He put the gun to her head, asked if she was afraid to die, and held it there for a minute. One of Murphy's coworkers also testified for the State. She claimed that Murphy talked about having access to guns, bragged about shooting people, and threatened to "knock [her] fucking head off." The woman was so frightened that she quit her job and reported Murphy to the police.
Along with this, the State tried to implicate Murphy in a three-year-old kidnapping case. Sheryl Wilhelm testified for the State that, three years before the Cunningham killing, a man briefly kidnapped her and then stole her car. After seeing a TV news report on Cunningham's murder featuring Murphy's photo, Wilhelm called the police to report Murphy as her kidnapper. She identified Murphy during a pretrial hearing and then again at trial. Wilhelm also testified at trial that she identified Murphy in a police-constructed photo lineup. The detective who conducted the photo lineup testified that Wilhelm's "was one of the better photo" identifications he ever had. According to the detective, Wilhelm said "she was virtually sure that that was the guy who abducted her."
Murphy attacked Wilhelm's identification in a few ways. He called a psychologist who testified that Wilhelm's memory was tainted by the photo of Murphy she saw on the news. The psychologist also pointed out prominent differences between a composite sketch, made just a week after the kidnapping, and the press-released photo of Murphy. And the psychologist added that the photo lineup was unfairly constructed; obvious differences between the mugshots reduced the odds of selection from one-in-six to one-in-three. Murphy also put on an alibi defense. Wilhelm said she had been kidnapped, escaped, and had her car stolen at 11:30 a.m. in Arlington, Texas. The day after her kidnapping, Wilhelm's car was found in Wichita Falls, Texas. In the car, the police found documents belonging to another woman. That *584woman had been assaulted and had her purse stolen in Wichita Falls at 8:24 p.m. on the day of Wilhelm's kidnapping. Also on the same day, Murphy clocked in for his night shift at 11:54 p.m. in Terrell, Texas. Murphy's counsel argued that Murphy did not have time to kidnap Wilhelm in Arlington, rob the other woman in Wichita Falls, and make it to work in Terrell.
The trial did not just focus on Murphy's dangerousness. Murphy claimed that mitigating circumstances reduced his moral blameworthiness. To make his case, Murphy called, among others, a psychologist named Dr. Mary Connell. Dr. Connell had interviewed Murphy three times, interviewed Murphy's family and other acquaintances, and reviewed his records. From this, Dr. Connell was able to testify in detail about Murphy's background. She explained that Murphy's father was an abusive alcoholic. By seven, both of Murphy's parents had abandoned him and he was put in the foster-care system. In the system, Murphy went through five families. His first adoptive father hit and screamed at him. His second adoptive family broke up. As Murphy grew older, he became an alcoholic and he started to feel like he was falling into his father's pattern of abuse. He attempted suicide and sought out psychiatric treatment for depression, psychosis, and anxiety.
Drawing on what she had learned, Dr. Connell testified that Murphy "is generally described by people as a warm, outgoing, loving kind of person." Dr. Connell added that Murphy expressed remorse for his crime and that "he talked about Ms. Bertie Cunningham in almost a reverent or awed way." Based on his early childhood abuse and abandonment, Murphy became self-loathing. Per Dr. Connell, Murphy's drinking was driven by "a genetic predisposition," a desire to temporarily feel better about himself, and "his identification with his father." Like his father, he saw himself as nothing but a worthless drunk. Dr. Connell did admit, however, that Murphy is "unpredictable," "moody," and "impulsive"-behaviors that intensify when he is drinking. According to Dr. Connell, Murphy is intermittently violent. "[H]e could maintain an even keel for a period of a month or two ... but then something would set him off and he would go on another binge, get aggressive, angry, loud, belligerent, and things would spiral downward and out of control."
Dr. Connell also testified that she gave Murphy two tests: the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-II (MMPI-2) and the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III (MCMI-3). As background, the MMPI-2 and MCMI-3 consist of 567 and 175 true-false questions, respectively. For both tests, the subject's answers are fed through a database. A computer program, using group statistical data, then returns a profile on the subject. Upon request, an interpretative report-which supplies further hypotheses about the subject-may also be returned. Per Dr. Connell, the MMPI-2 is the "flagship" personality-assessment test and the MCMI-3 assesses the subject for character problems.
Murphy's MMPI-2 profile and interpretative report showed, according to Dr. Connell, that Murphy exhibited signs of depression, anxiety, physical ailments, and paranoid thoughts. At first, Dr. Connell thought Murphy might be exaggerating his symptoms-a fact suggested by elevated results on the MMPI-2's "lie scale." But when she looked at his answers and compared them to the interviews they had, she concluded Murphy was not lying. Turning to Murphy's MCMI-3, the test result's suggested, per Dr. Connell, that Murphy was "deeply depressed with an agitated edge." His thoughts, according to Dr. Connell, *585would shift between suicide, hopelessness, and futility "to occasional outbursts of bitter discontent or irrational demands." Murphy's results on both tests, said Dr. Connell, would normally prompt referral for psychiatric consultation and probably indicate a need for medication.
It is important here to note that neither test is designed to give a final interpretation of the test subject. Rather, as explained by the interpretative reports themselves (which were introduced by the State into evidence) and by Dr. Connell, the tests render hypotheses. It is also important to note that no psychologist, besides Dr. Connell, was directly involved in administering or interpreting Murphy's MMPI-2 and MCMI-3. The tests instead draw on computer algorithms constructed by other psychologists. As Dr. Connell explained on direct, she gave the tests to Murphy and "scored the results with a computer system" which looked at how he "compared to other people in a clinical setting."
Despite this, when cross-examined, Dr. Connell agreed that Dr. James Butcher-"probably the leading expert in the country on the interpretation of the MMPI"-had "interpreted" Murphy's MMPI-2. Strictly speaking, Dr. Butcher had only developed the computerized interpretative system which read Murphy's answers and generated an interpretative report. Dr. Butcher's name therefore appeared on the interpretative report for the MMPI-2. But Murphy had never interacted with Dr. Butcher, and Dr. Butcher never reviewed Murphy's MMPI-2 answers, profile, or interpretative report. That distinction did not stop the State from referring to the MMPI-2 interpretative report "as the report of Dr. James Butcher." Nor did it stop Dr. Connell from agreeing that the hypotheses contained in MMPI-2 report were the "statements of Dr. Butcher."
The State proceeded to read off some of the MMPI-2 interpretative report's unfavorable hypotheses, referring to them as Dr. Butcher's "statements." Per the State, Dr. Butcher stated that Murphy exaggerated his symptoms and responded to the last section of the MMPI-2 "either carelessly, randomly, or deceitfully, thereby invalidating that portion of the test." The State continued, reading off that Murphy "has serious problems controlling his impulses and temper," "loses control easily," and may be "assaultive." Murphy, according to the parts read aloud, "manipulates people" and lacks "genuine interpersonal warmth." According to the report, Murphy matches the profile of a Megargee Type H offender, a seriously disturbed inmate type. Inmates with Murphy's profile will, per the report, "not seek psychological treatment on their own" and are "poor candidates for psychotherapy."
Dr. Connell pushed back on the State's use of the interpretive report. She clarified that the report only gave hypotheses, one of which "we know ... is wrong"; Murphy had sought psychological treatment on his own. She directed the jury to the beginning of the report, which said that the offered interpretation is not meant to be final and that "interview, observation, and history should be taken into account." She also explained that based on her interviews with Murphy, she did not believe he was exaggerating his symptoms. She did not, however, clarify that it was only Dr. Butcher's computer program-not the doctor himself-that read Murphy's 567 true-false answers.
The State moved to the MCMI-3 interpretative report, calling it the "report produced by Dr. [Theodore] Millon" (again, without clarification from Dr. Connell). Dr. Millon is an authoritative figure on the MCMI-3, and his name is affixed to the MCMI-3 interpretative report. The *586prosecution elicited from Dr. Connell that through the MCMI-3, Dr. Millon himself had stated that Murphy "may have reported more psychological symptoms than objectively exist," and Murphy has "a moderate tendency toward self-deprecation and a consequent exaggeration of current emotional problems." Dr. Connell again clarified that she did not "know that these results should be considered definitive for diagnosis."
On redirect, the defense did not ask Dr. Connell if Drs. Butcher and Millon were personally involved with Murphy in any way. Instead, counsel had Dr. Connell explain what use she made of the tests and interpretative reports. Dr. Connell explained that she administered the tests to help her "gain an understanding of [Murphy's] view of his own functioning and an understanding of how he compares to other people in similar situations." Dr. Connell added, "I didn't administer them for the diagnosis or treatment of a disorder, but just to give myself a sort of objective and normative feel for who it was that I was attempting to understand." Counsel elicited that Dr. Connell's ultimate conclusions about Murphy were informed by the tests and reports, and that despite the reports, she thought Murphy was truthful, was not blaming others, and was "suffering enormously over the guilt for what he had done." The defense also had Dr. Connell read the parts of the reports the prosecution "left out." Dr. Connell read off the reports that Murphy's alcohol abuse was caused by frustration and disappointment, that his inappropriate behavior manifests when drinking, and that he has genuine feelings of guilt and remorse.
During opening summation, the State emphasized the "chilling" results of Murphy's MMPI-2 and MCMI-3, which it invited the jury to read. Specifically, the State pointed out that Murphy's profile matched that of a Megargee Type H offender-"one of the most seriously disturbed inmate types" for whom "[a]djustment to prison appears to be difficult." During its summation, the defense did not mention the MMPI-2 or MCMI-3. During the State's rebuttal summation, it returned to the tests:
You know, all you have to do if you really have a question about what this guy's going to do in prison, if you look at the defense's own expert-now, these are not people that the State of Texas hired on his behalf, but you look at Dr. James Butcher who the defense hired and this report was brought out on cross-examination. And you remember what Dr. Butcher said? You know, he's the doctor, I suppose, who's not opposed to the death penalty. Here is what he says about the defendant. He says this man right here is a poor candidate for psychotherapy. Individuals with his profile are not very amenable to changing their behavior. You have a litany illustrating his behavior. He goes on to say this, they tend to be quite aggressive. And finally, if you have any question about what this man is all about in a confined setting, adjustment to prison appears to be difficult for them. Those aren't my words, ladies and gentlemen. That's not some expert that we hired. That's Dr. James Butcher hired by the defense to look at the tests administered to this man over here. So even if I look at that set alone, which each and every one of you told us you weren't going to do, but even if you do that, I mean, their own expert says, that ain't going to fly in this case. This man is going to be a danger wherever he's going to be.
The defense did not object to this line of argument.
The jury found that Murphy was a continuing threat to society and there were *587insufficient mitigating circumstances to justify life in prison. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 37.071, § 2. Based on these two findings, Murphy was sentenced to death.
Murphy's conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal. Murphy v. State ,
B.
In 2009, Murphy's new lawyer cold called Sheryl Wilhelm and asked her what happened during the photo lineup where she identified Murphy as her kidnapper. Wilhelm said that when she identified Murphy, she told the detective: "This is him. This looks a lot like him, and I'm pretty sure it's him." She also stated that: "You know, nobody's ever 100 percent sure.... I'm talking about anything in this life but, I mean, to me, it was him. I mean, 95 to 100 percent it was him." Wilhelm also disclosed to Murphy's lawyer that the lead prosecutor in Murphy's case came to her house before trial. At her house, Wilhelm said that she asked the prosecutor "was that the guy?" He responded, "Yes." Following up on what she meant, Murphy's lawyer asked Wilhelm: "when you asked [the prosecutor] if you got the right guy, and he said that you did, it confirmed in your mind the accuracy of your identification?" Wilhelm responded, "Right." Murphy's lawyer then asked if the prosecutor "hadn't told you that, would you have retained any, perhaps, uncertainty about it?" Wilhelm responded, "No." "I mean, I knew it was him. Yeah I knew it was him. I think that happened. I swear it's been so long ago, but I'm pretty sure that I asked him, 'Was this the guy?' ... And he nodded his head so, I don't know."
Soon after this phone exchange, Murphy filed a federal habeas petition. The district court stayed the proceedings to give Murphy time to exhaust three sets of claims in the state system: (1) suppression of evidence impeaching Wilhelm's identification,
Following the stay, Murphy filed a second state habeas application. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) dismissed Murphy's two ineffectiveness claims as abuses of the writ. Ex parte Murphy , No. WR-70,832-02,
The state trial court held an evidentiary hearing where it heard testimony from Sheryl Wilhelm, the detective who administered the photo lineup, the lead prosecutor, and Murphy's lead trial counsel. At the hearing, Murphy's counsel elicited from Wilhelm that, at the pretrial interview, the following occurred: Wilhelm asked the lead prosecutor whether she "had identified the right man in the photo spread," the prosecutor told her she had, and this confirmed in her mind the accuracy of her identification of Murphy. On cross-examination, Wilhelm testified that, in fact, she had asked the lead prosecutor *588whether she had identified the same person who was arrested for Bertie Cunningham's murder, not whether her identification of the person who kidnapped her was correct. Wilhelm said she understood the distinction between the two concepts. She added that when she made her in-court identification she was thinking about the person that who kidnapped her.
When examined at the evidentiary hearing, the lead prosecutor denied that he confirmed the accuracy of Wilhelm's photo-lineup identification. He said that as best he could recall, he told Wilhelm that he was "there to prosecute a capital murder" and that he believed "that the same person who had kidnapped [Wilhelm] had abducted and killed [Cunningham]." He swore that he "would have done everything he could not to inform her about the validity of her photo identification." He maintained that he did not believe that he ever told Wilhelm "I believe you have the right person." When asked if he thought he might have affirmatively responded to the question "did I pick the right guy out of the photo spread?" he responded, "No. I don't recall it being in response to that. I think that would've been in response to do you think that you have the same person who kidnapped me."
After the hearing, the trial court found that Murphy's claim should be dismissed as an abuse of the writ and alternatively denied as meritless. To do so, it entered two sets of factual findings: one related to the procedural bar and the other related to the merits. With respect to the procedural bar, the trial court found that Murphy reasonably could have ascertained the factual basis for his suppression claim before his first state habeas application was filed by asking Wilhelm questions during her pretrial or trial cross-examination. With respect to the merits, the court found that Wilhelm was not certain what was said at the pretrial interview, that the "prosecutor purposefully avoided doing things that might influence or taint Wilhelm's identification," and that the pretrial conversation "would not have altered Wilhelm's courtroom identification." The court added that the defense presented more credible attacks on the identification than the pretrial interview and that the "best evidence" of future dangerousness "was the primary offense"-that is, Cunningham's murder. Based on the trial court's findings, the TCCA concluded that Murphy's application was an abuse of the writ and dismissed his application "without considering the merits of the [his] claims." Ex parte Murphy , No. WR-70,832-02,
Murphy returned to federal court and raised the three sets of now exhausted claims, among others. The district court denied Murphy relief on all of his claims, finding them procedurally barred and alternatively meritless. It also denied his request for an evidentiary hearing. Murphy then sought a certificate of appealability (COA) from us to appeal all three sets of claims. We obliged him on parts of two separate claims:
(1) Ineffective assistance of trial counsel at the penalty phase arising from his counsel's failure to correct a false impression created by Dr. Connell; and
(2) Suppression of evidence, specifically the pretrial conversation where the lead prosecutor allegedly confirmed to Wilhelm that she got the right *589guy.2
Murphy ,
Our task now is to decide whether either claim justifies reversal of the district court. We conclude that neither does.
II.
Murphy claims that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective at the penalty phase. The specific defect in counsel's representation was, according to Murphy, not eliciting from Dr. Connell on redirect that it was Drs. Butcher's and Millon's computer algorithms-not the doctors themselves-that generated the damaging MMPI-2 and MCMI-3 interpretative reports.
A.
Murphy's ineffectiveness claim is governed by the familiar Strickland standard. To prevail, Murphy must show: (1) that his trial counsel's performance was deficient, and (2) that the deficient performance resulted in prejudice. See Strickland v. Washington ,
Strickland 's first prong "sets a high bar." Buck v. Davis , --- U.S. ----,
*590(quoting Strickland ,
To satisfy Strickland 's second prong, "[t]he defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome." Strickland ,
We will consider both Strickland prongs, reviewing the district court's conclusions of law de novo and factual findings for clear error. See Woodfox v. Cain ,
B.
Federal courts faced with habeas petitioners' discovery requests have, in some circumstances, a duty "to provide the necessary facilities and procedures for an adequate inquiry." See Gibbs v. Johnson ,
When a habeas petitioner requests an evidentiary hearing, district courts have discretion over whether to grant one. See Schriro v. Landrigan ,
Murphy argues that the district court should have granted him an evidentiary *591hearing. Such a hearing would, according to Murphy, reveal whether trial counsel were aware that Drs. Butcher and Millon did not evaluate his test answers and did not directly author the reports. If counsel were not aware, then, per Murphy, they could not have strategically decided not to correct any false impression. And if they were aware, then exploration of their decision not to expose the prosecutor's misleading framing would be needed to determine whether their decision making was strategically sound.
Contra Murphy, we conclude that an evidentiary hearing is not necessary. To reach our conclusion, we proceed based on the assumption that a hearing would show what Murphy wants-that trial counsel did not know the MMPI-2's and MCMI-3's origins.
1.
Counsel did not render deficient performance, whether they knew of the MMPI-2's and MCMI-3's origins or not. Broadly stated, counsel "has a duty to bring to bear such skill and knowledge as will render the trial a reliable adversarial testing." Strickland ,
In an affidavit submitted at the behest of Murphy's current counsel, Murphy's lead trial counsel identified a key constraint she faced: "regardless of the interpreter of the tests, the results were what they were." Counsel understood that most of their evidence was going to be "double-edged"-meaning it was both mitigating and showed Murphy's dangerousness. Counsel calculated that Dr. Connell's testimony about Murphy's upbringing and problems it caused in his life might lead the jury to "weigh in more heavily on mitigation instead of aggravation."
At trial, the defense executed this mitigation-focused strategy. Dr. Connell's testimony painted a sympathetic picture of Murphy. She established that, as a child, Murphy was abused, abandoned, and mistreated. To cope with feeling unlovable, Murphy drank. Doing so, he started to fall into the same pattern of abuse his father *592displayed. This, admittedly, meant that Murphy was intermittently violent when drinking and could "spiral downward and out of control." But after, Murphy would express genuine remorse and guilt for his wrongs, including killing Bertie Cunningham. On cross-examination, counsel watched as their own expert-who had administered the tests and reviewed the interpretive reports-agreed with the State's characterization of the interpretative reports as Dr. Butcher's and Millon's. Counsel also watched Dr. Connell push back in a different way-pointing out that the reports only generated hypotheses. On redirect, counsel pressed forth with their mitigation-focused strategy while also countering the prosecution's use of the MMPI-2 and MCMI-3. Counsel elicited that the tests' reports had a limited purpose and drew out the reports helpful parts. Counsel had Dr. Connell point out that the reports indicated that Murphy's alcoholism was a product of self-resentment and guilt. And counsel elicited that Dr. Connell's sympathetic conclusions about Murphy were drawn, in part, from the reports.
In light of counsel's selected mitigation-focused strategy and their known counter to the interpretative reports, it was reasonable not to investigate the extent of Drs. Butcher and Millon's involvement. Figuring out this single detail about the reports might "distract[ ] from more important duties," see Bobby v. Van Hook ,
Even more vitally, counsel was entitled to rely on Dr. Connell to alert her to the potential misapprehension over Drs. Butcher and Millon's involvement. Of course, hiring an expert and having her testify does not give counsel license to "completely abdicate ... responsibility." See Turner v. Epps ,
Assuming what Murphy seeks to prove, trial counsel still would not have rendered deficient assistance. Counsel made an informed strategic choice to adopt a mitigation-focused strategy, lessening the need to counter the State's potential spin on the reports. Counsel also already discovered a convincing counter to any such spin. Plus, counsel's expert, whom they were entitled to reasonably rely upon, did not alert them to any issues. And it was not prospectively apparent what any further investigation would turn up or what its value would be. Whether counsel knew of the test's origins or not, their overall performance would still fall "within the 'wide range' of reasonable professional assistance." See Richter ,
2.
Murphy also falls short on the prejudice prong-a problem an evidentiary hearing cannot change. To show prejudice, Murphy must perform a delicate balancing act. He must show that the jury gave a good deal of weight to the reports' hypotheses. He must also show that exposing the reports' true origins would then meaningfully change that assessment. This is a tough balance to strike. The jury heard that the reports only gave hypotheses not conclusions. The jury heard that one of those hypotheses-that Murphy would not seek psychological treatment on his own-was conclusively wrong. And it heard that another hypothesis fell apart after Dr. Connell's interviews. Assuming, as we must, that the jury fairly weighed this evidence, it would be difficult for it to place much faith in the reports, regardless of how they came to be. Cf. Strickland ,
But if, despite all this, the jury was still inclined to give weight to the reports, revealing the degree of Drs. Butcher and Millon's involvement (or lack thereof) would not change much. It is unlikely that the jury would put less stock in the reports based on the realization that a computer, not a person, scored a true-false exam. The jury still would have heard that computer programs devised by leading psychologists had generated disturbing hypotheses about Murphy. And the reports would retain an imprimatur of neutrality because Murphy's expert administered the tests *594and computer programs returned the results. Given all this, Murphy cannot prevail. It is hard to conclude that the jury gave the reports much weight at all. It strains credulity to believe that, had the jury given the reports weight, merely clearing up that the tests were graded by computer, not hand, would change its opinion.
In any event, no matter how the jury viewed the reports, the historical evidence of Murphy's dangerousness was far more damaging. The jury heard that Murphy kidnapped an elderly woman, shot her point blank in the head, drove around with her body in the trunk as he used her credit cards, and eventually dumped her in a creek. It heard that Murphy had put a gun to the head of a woman at a high school party and asked if she was afraid to die. It heard that a police officer had to subdue him while he was wielding a knife after he hit his girlfriend. It heard that he had repeatedly threatened to shoot his coworker. It heard from Dr. Connell that Murphy was intermittently violent. Of course, it might be "conceivable" that the jury was swayed by a misapprehension over Drs. Butcher and Millon's involvement. See Richter ,
* * *
As it stands, the record does not show deficient performance or prejudice. And assuming what Murphy seeks to prove at an evidentiary hearing-that counsel was unaware of the reports' origins-Murphy would still fail to make out a case for deficient performance. Plus, Murphy does not even argue that a hearing would save his case for prejudice. Thus, the district court did not abuse its discretion by denying Murphy an evidentiary hearing and it properly denied Murphy's Strickland claim on the merits.
III.
Murphy's second claim is that the State suppressed evidence that could have been used to impeach Sheryl Wilhelm, the State witness who identified Murphy as her kidnapper. Specifically, he complains that the State did not disclose a pretrial interview between the lead prosecutor and Wilhelm where the prosecutor allegedly confirmed the accuracy of her identification. This conversation, according to Murphy, could have been used to impeach Wilhelm's identification, knocking out a key part of the State's case for future dangerousness. We agree with the district court that this Brady v. Maryland ,
A.
Before considering the validity of Murphy's Brady claim, we must determine our standard for reviewing the state trial court's relevant factual conclusions. This requires recitation of some procedural history.
Murphy's Brady claim was first raised in his second state habeas application. The TCCA remanded his Brady claim to the convicting state court. Murphy ,
On remand, the state trial court held an evidentiary hearing and eventually issued written findings of fact and conclusions of law. It found Murphy's claim was procedurally barred and meritless. Within the trial court's written ruling, it made two sets of factual findings. The first set supported the conclusion that Murphy's Brady claim was available before his first application was filed and so his claim was abusive. The second set supported the conclusion that Murphy's Brady claim failed on the merits. Based on these findings, the TCCA, in a brief order, dismissed Murphy's application "as an abuse of the writ without considering the merits of the claims." Murphy ,
Before us, the sides now quarrel over whether both sets of factual findings are entitled to a presumption of correctness under
Under
In this case, both sets of the state trial court's findings "survive[d] review." See
Murphy tries to distinguish Williams . He argues that the TCCA's dismissal without *596consideration of the merits was directly inconsistent with the trial court's merits findings. Plus Williams , per Murphy, states that a presumption of correctness only attaches when the state appellate court "appl[ies] the law to those facts," something the TCCA did not do for the trial court's merits findings. See
Murphy misreads Williams . Neither Williams nor any of our caselaw indicates that an appellate court's failure to consider an issue makes its ruling "directly inconsistent" with the trial court's relevant finding. Plus in this case, inconsistency is particularly difficult to infer; the TCCA did not state which factual findings it based its dismissal upon, and the factual findings on the merits of the Brady claim are relevant to whether the claim was an abuse of the writ. And the full passage of Williams Murphy cites states that a "trial court's factual findings are entitled to a presumption of correctness even if the state appellate court reached a different legal conclusion when applying the law to those facts."
Murphy also cites Jones v. Davis for support. See
Jones involved an express rejection of factual findings.
Accordingly, all the state trial court's express factual findings are owed a presumption of correctness, a presumption Murphy may rebut only with clear and convincing evidence. See
Resolved that § 2254(e)(1) constrains our review of all the state trial court's factual findings, we next turn to the Brady claim itself.
B.
To prove his Brady claim, Murphy must show three things: (1) the evidence at issue is favorable to the defense, either because it is exculpatory or impeaching, (2) the prosecution suppressed the evidence, and (3) the evidence is material. See United States v. Brown ,
Suppressed evidence is material "if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different." United States v. Bagley ,
*598"The materiality of Brady material depends almost entirely on the value of the evidence relative to the other evidence mustered by the state." Rocha ,
Murphy claims he could have used the conversation to impeach Wilhelm's two identifications: her initial photo identification and her in-courtroom identification. He argues that the jury would believe that the conversation confirmed for Wilhelm the accuracy of her prior photo identification and influenced her later in-courtroom identification. This revelation, according to Murphy, would therefore undermine a key piece of evidence of his future dangerousness.
We disagree. The pretrial conversation was of marginal value to the defense and was cumulative with already presented impeachment evidence. See Miller ,
The pretrial conversation was not material. Thus, the district court correctly held that Murphy's Brady claim was both procedurally defaulted and meritless.
IV.
Before we finish, we must address one more argument from Murphy. Murphy claims that the prejudice from his Strickland and Brady claims should be considered cumulatively if, considered individually, neither is sufficiently prejudicial. This argument does not avail Murphy.
As an initial matter, Murphy did not raise this argument below, and thus he may not present it on appeal. See United States v. Scroggins ,
*599(en banc) (establishing, as a condition for showing cumulative error, that "the error complained of must not have been procedurally barred from habeas corpus review").
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Murphy also raised a related prosecutorial-misconduct claim based on use of false testimony. He no longer presses this claim.
Originally, Murphy requested a COA based on suppression of evidence Brady v. Maryland ,
Murphy does not separately claim that counsel was deficient for failing to object to the State's summation. The argument is therefore forfeited. See Scroggins ,
Murphy did not raise an ineffectiveness claim in his original state habeas application. When he raised this ineffectiveness claim in his second application, the TCCA dismissed it as an abuse of the writ-an adequate and independent state ground. See Canales v. Stephens ,
This of course assumes that the availability of an evidentiary hearing is not barred by
Murphy argues that a federal evidentiary hearing is required because the state courts did not allow him to develop the facts needed to support his ineffectiveness claim. But he cites nothing showing that a lack of record development before the state courts entitles him to a federal evidentiary hearing. See Segundo v. Davis ,
If the hearing revealed that counsel knew of the MMPI-2's and MCMI-3's origins, Murphy's case would be even weaker. If counsel was aware, we must presume that the omission on redirect was done "for tactical reasons rather than through sheer neglect." See Yarborough v. Gentry ,
As Turner is unpublished, we cite it as "persuasive authority." See United States v. Torres-Jaime ,
Murphy also appears to argue that counsel failed him by not preparing Dr. Connell to testify. Certainly, failing to prepare a witness may constitute deficient assistance. See, e.g. , Bemore v. Chappell ,
The parties also clash over whether the strictures of
Compare Craker ,
Indeed, Jones cited Williams , which in turn held that "a state habeas trial court's factual findings do not survive review by the [TCCA] where they [are] neither adopted nor incorporated into the appellate court's peremptory denial of relief, but instead were directly inconsistent with the appellate court's decision."Williams ,
The parties quarrel over whether the pretrial conversation could impeach Wilhelm's photo and in-courtroom identification. Murphy argues that exposing the conversation could explain why Wilhelm was confident about her photo identification. And exposing the conversation, according to Murphy, could show that her in-courtroom identification was tainted. The State counters, arguing that the state trial court's factual findings indicate that the conversation did not confirm her photo identification or taint her in-courtroom identification. The State adds that the conversation lacked impeachment value as the jury would naturally suspect that a prosecutor spoke with Wilhelm beforehand and that Wilhelm knew she was called because she had previously identified Murphy. We assume without deciding that the evidence was impeaching, and nevertheless conclude that the evidence was not material.
Murphy does not argue that we may cumulate errors to satisfy the prejudice prong to excuse procedural default, and thus we do not consider any such argument here.