NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 10a0749n.06
FILED
06-4329 Dec 02, 2010
LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
EUGENE WOODARD, )
)
Petitioner-Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
BETTY MITCHELL, Warden, ) NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
)
Respondent-Appellant. )
Before: MERRITT, DAUGHTREY, and MOORE, Circuit Judges.
Martha Craig Daughtrey, Circuit Judge. In this capital case, Warden Betty Mitchell
appeals a conditional grant of habeas relief to petitioner Eugene Woodard, a prison inmate
on Ohio’s death row, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court’s order was
premised on its finding that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in the penalty
phase of Woodard’s state court trial by failing to investigate and present relevant mitigating
evidence, after the jury found Woodard guilty of aggravated murder in the commission of
what was essentially a car-jacking. The respondent contends, first, that there is insufficient
proof upon which to find that counsel’s performance was deficient and, second, that any
additional evidence of the petitioner’s “familial and social history” could not have
established prejudice, because it was “not of a different strength and character” from the
mitigating evidence offered by Woodard’s attorneys. The respondent thus argues that the
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petitioner has failed to meet the well-recognized two-prong standard of Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), and urges us to reverse the judgment of the district
court. We, on the other hand, conclude that the district court did not err in granting
conditional relief in this case, and we therefore affirm the judgment of that court.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Woodard was charged in a six-count indictment with premeditated murder and
felony murder in the death of Mani Akram. Both the aggravated-murder counts carried
death-penalty specifications under Ohio law. He was also charged with aggravated
robbery, receiving stolen property, and two counts of arson, each with a firearm
specification. Following a week-long trial, Woodard was convicted by a jury of all charges
except arson.
Evidence at trial established that Woodard and three of his friends joined some
other young men in an inner-city neighborhood in Cleveland in June 1990 to go “gaffling.”
According to the statement of fact set out by the Ohio Supreme Court, “‘gaffling’ is a term
used to describe the act of forcibly removing people from their cars to rob them.” State v.
Woodard, 623 N.E.2d 75, 76 (1993). The first intended victim they accosted managed to
outrun the assailants’ car, which was itself a stolen vehicle that overheated as a result of
the chase. The gang then abandoned that car, stole another one from a nearby parking
lot, and went after their second intended victim, Mani Akram. The ensuing car-jacking was
accomplished at the cost of Akram’s life – he was shot and then left for dead in the street
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after Woodard and the other perpetrators took possession of his car and drove away.
Later that same evening, the petitioner and other members of the group doused both
stolen vehicles with gasoline and set them on fire. At Woodard’s trial, one of his
accomplices, Gary Hill, testified that Woodard was the shooter and that Woodard claimed
entitlement to Akram’s car, saying that he was “the one who shot the guy.” The jury came
to the same conclusion and convicted Woodard on multiple counts.
At the sentencing hearing that took place a week after the jury returned its verdict,
defense counsel called only two witnesses: the petitioner’s mother, Marsha Woodard, and
his sister, Tonya Woodard. On direct examination totaling just ten pages of transcript, they
testified that Woodard was a good son and loving brother and, as directed by counsel, they
both pleaded with the jury not to impose the death penalty. Woodard then made an
unsworn statement, in which he gave a less-than-coherent account of the events leading
up to Akram’s death, denying his own guilt and telling the jury that it was Gary Hill who had
fired the fatal shot. The state presented no evidence. Although the transcript of the
hearing does not record the time that the hearing began, it appears to have lasted less
than an hour.
Woodard was 19 years old at the time of Akram’s death and at the trial some four
months later. Despite his age and the relatively unexceptional circumstances of the
offense that led to his conviction, the jury recommended imposition of the death penalty,
and the trial judge accepted the recommendation, sentencing Woodard to death for the
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aggravated murder counts and to various terms on the other felony counts. Woodard’s
conviction was affirmed by the state court of appeals, see State v. Woodard, No. 611 71,
1992 WL 84888, *11 (Ohio Ct. App. Apr. 23, 1992), and by the Ohio Supreme Court. See
Woodard, 623 N.E.2d at 82. His subsequent certiorari petition was denied by the United
States Supreme Court. See Woodard v. Ohio, 512 U.S. 1246 (1994). Woodard then filed
a petition for post-conviction relief that was dismissed in state court, see State v. Woodard,
No. CR-254478, slip op. (Ohio Ct. Com. Pleas Dec. 9, 1996), in an order that was affirmed
by the Ohio Court of Appeals. See State v. Woodard, No. 71912, 1998 WL 23844 (Ohio
Ct. App. Jan. 22, 1998). The Ohio Supreme Court denied review in 1998. See State v.
Woodard, 692 N.E.2d 1024 (Ohio 1998). That same year Woodard also filed a petition for
habeas relief in federal court but returned to state court temporarily in order to exhaust his
state remedies before federal litigation began. There he sought to reopen his direct appeal
in order to allege that his attorneys were ineffective, supporting his claim with affidavits and
seeking an evidentiary hearing. That application was denied by the Ohio Court of Appeals,
which held that the claim was barred by res judicata because it had not been raised on
direct appeal. See State v.Woodard, No. 61171, 2001 WL 1134873 (Ohio Ct. App. Sept.
18, 2001). Although this conclusion was, in fact, erroneous because the evidence to
support Woodard’s allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel was outside the record
on direct appeal, the Ohio Supreme Court nevertheless affirmed the Court of Appeals.
See State v. Woodard, 774 N.E.2d 1213 (Ohio 2002). At that point, Woodard resumed
his federal litigation, filing an amended petition that included 31 grounds for relief, all but
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two of which the district court dismissed without an evidentiary hearing, either on the merits
or as procedurally defaulted in state court. The district court determined that a hearing was
necessary in order to rule on the remaining two grounds, which alleged ineffective
assistance of counsel in the penalty phase of the petitioner’s trial. The court also granted
discovery motions filed by both parties.
During discovery, counsel for the state insisted that the petitioner’s witnesses be
deposed, claiming that the court would not be able to assess their credibility solely from
affidavits that had already been filed in the case. As a result, the petitioner deposed
several members of his family, two mitigation experts, and a psychologist. These
depositions and affidavits were entered in the record, but the district court also heard live
testimony from the petitioner’s witnesses at the ensuing evidentiary hearing. The state did
not subpoena or call any witnesses.
Based on testimony by Woodard, three of his family members, and three expert
witnesses, the district court found that trial counsel had failed to investigate Woodard’s
family history and social history adequately, thereby losing any opportunity to present
relevant information at the penalty hearing in state court. Although Woodard’s trial
attorneys did procure some of his school and juvenile-court records in advance of trial, they
did not use them, either as exhibits or, more significantly, as the basis for further
investigation. Moreover, they assigned the state-paid investigator to assist in preparation
for the culpability phase of the trial, but did not direct him to investigate grounds for
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mitigation in the event of conviction. During the week between the return of the jury’s
verdict and the sentencing hearing, counsel did contact a clinical psychologist, Dr. Sandra
McPherson, but she declined to evaluate Woodard because there was insufficient time for
her to do a thorough investigation and issue a report. She later recalled spending only
about an hour on the case, principally in speaking to the petitioner’s mother, and did not
open a file on the case, prepare a report, or testify at trial.
The district court concluded that these meager efforts – a “cursory request for some
court and school records” and an “eleventh-hour attempt to contact a psychologist” –
constituted the only preparation undertaken by counsel in preparation for the penalty
hearing. The district judge further concluded that there had been no actual investigation
carried out by trial counsel or by anyone else acting on Woodard’s behalf. Instead, the
district court concluded, counsel’s penalty-phase strategy was limited to having Woodard’s
mother and sister plead for mercy, presenting Woodard’s unsworn statement, and arguing
a theory of residual doubt that Woodard was not the triggerman, despite the jury’s verdict
to the contrary.
Following the evidentiary hearing, the district court issued a well-analyzed and
thoroughly detailed opinion that culminated in a finding that the petitioner had been
“afforded . . . constitutionally deficient assistance of counsel” at his penalty hearing in state
court. The district court held that, in view of the evidence that was presented at the hearing
in federal court – specific portions of which are discussed below – counsel’s pre-hearing
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investigation and preparation was not only deficient but also resulted in prejudice to their
client. As a result, the state was given 180 days to vacate the petitioner’s death sentence
and either impose a life sentence in its place or conduct a new sentencing hearing. From
that conditional grant of relief, the state now appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Because Woodard filed his federal habeas petition after the effective date of the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), the standards set out in
that statute govern our review. Lindh v. Murphy, 521 U.S. 320, 326-27 (1997). We review
the district court’s rulings on legal questions and on mixed questions of law and fact de
novo, and the court’s factual findings for clear error. Lucas v. O’Dea, 179 F.3d 412, 416
(6th Cir. 1999). Ordinarily, we would not affirm a grant of habeas relief on any claim that
had been adjudicated on the merits in state court unless the adjudication had resulted in
a decision that (1) was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly
established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court or (2) was based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented to the state
courts. Slagle v. Bagley, 457 F.3d 501, 513 (6th Cir. 2006) (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)),
cert. denied, 551 U.S. 1134 (2007).
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However, AEDPA is, by its own terms, applicable only to habeas claims that were
“adjudicated on the merits in State court.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). Hence, in reviewing the
merits of federal constitutional claims that were not resolved by the state courts, we apply
pre-AEDPA law and review questions of law and mixed questions of law and the facts de
novo. See Maples v. Stegall, 340 F.3d 433, 436-37 (6th Cir. 2003). In this case, the Ohio
Court of Appeals, the last state court to review the petitioner’s ineffective-assistance-of-
counsel claims, did not reach the merits of those claims, instead concluding – mistakenly,
as the state now concedes – that they were barred by res judicata. For this reason, there
is no definitive ruling by the state court on the precise legal issues now before us, and we
therefore review them de novo. Moreover, there are no dispositive findings of fact from the
state court that must be presumed to be correct, as would otherwise be the case under 28
U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
B. Legal Standard
To establish ineffective assistance under the well-entrenched two-part Strickland
analysis, Woodard must show (1) that trial counsel’s performance was deficient –
objectively unreasonable under prevailing professional norms – and (2) that it prejudiced
Woodard’s defense. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-88. The test for prejudice is whether
there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of
the proceedings would have been different. See id. at 694. “A reasonable probability is
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a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome,” id., but is less than a
preponderance of the evidence. Id. at 693-94.
C. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
The district court determined that counsel’s representation at the penalty phase of
Woodard’s trial was not only deficient but prejudicially so. On appeal, the state contends
that the district court erred in granting relief on Woodard’s two ineffective-assistance-of-
counsel claims. In those claims, Woodard alleged that trial counsel were ineffective in the
penalty phase in failing to use expert psychological assistance and failing to hire a
mitigation expert and, by extension, in failing themselves to investigate and present
mitigating evidence. Combining the claims, the district court interpreted them to propound
a single argument: that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to investigate
and present evidence of Woodard’s family background, upbringing, and mental condition.
On appeal, the parties also have combined the claims for analysis, as do we for purposes
of this opinion.
1. Ineffective Assistance: Performance
The district court summarized the evidence from the transcript of the petitioner’s
sentencing hearing in state court as follows:
During the mitigation hearing, counsel presented only the testimony of
Marsha and Tonya Woodard, Woodard’s mother and sister, and Woodard’s
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own unsworn statement. Woodard’s mother and sister testified that
Woodard was a good son and brother and that he deserved mercy.
Woodard expressed remorse for Akram’s death, but asserted that he was
not Akram’s shooter.
It also became clear from testimony in federal court that trial counsel had not interviewed
Woodard or members of his family prior to trial in preparation for the penalty hearing that
would inevitably follow his conviction on the aggravated murder charge. Woodard’s mother
had been present throughout his trial but told the district court that she was not interviewed
by his counsel until the morning of the penalty hearing, a week after the jury verdict was
returned, when she met with the attorneys for a short while in a witness room and was
advised to plead for her son’s life. Likewise, his sister testified that she met with counsel
in the hall of the courthouse shortly before being called as a witness and was told to “plead
and beg” for her brother’s life. Woodard testified that his lawyers had discussed mitigation
with him only after he was convicted, in a meeting that lasted about 20 minutes. He said
that he had given counsel the names and contact information for other members of his
family and friends who could be called as witnesses, but he also indicated that he had not
been asked about his personal history or that of his family. Instead, he testified, they told
him to “get up there and beg for your life and say you’re healed.”
Reviewing this evidence, the district court held that counsel’s investigation and
preparation for the mitigation phase of Woodard’s trial was objectively unreasonable. On
appeal, the respondent challenges the district court’s decision on three grounds,
contending: (1) that Woodard failed to show that counsel’s investigation was unreasonable,
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because he cannot establish the full extent of that investigation; (2) that trial counsel’s
failure to present additional evidence was not unreasonable, because the sources for it
were unavailable at trial; and (3) that Woodard failed to show that trial counsel’s residual-
doubt strategy was unreasonable, given the risk that introduction of additional evidence
would have opened the door damaging information about Woodard. We find no merit to
these arguments.
As to the first ground, the state contends – correctly – that in order to establish the
professional unreasonableness of counsel’s investigation, Woodard bears the burden of
documenting “either through the [case file] or statements from trial counsel what they did
to investigate the case and why they pursued that strategy.” The state then argues –
incorrectly – that Woodard cannot sustain that burden because, during litigation in state
court, “he submitted no affidavits from his trial attorneys concerning the extent of their
investigation.” Moreover, the state accuses the petitioner of gaining an unfair advantage
because both attorneys had died by the time of the evidentiary hearing in district court
and, therefore, could not “defend themselves against claims that they did not talk to family
members or investigate Woodard’s social history.” The respondent further contends that
“since Woodard had [an] opportunity in the state court to produce an affidavit from counsel
on the extent of their investigation, that failure should cut against Woodard’s claim.”
In support of this argument, the respondent cites three opinions of this court, Carter
v. Mitchell, 443 F.3d 517, 531 (6th Cir. 2006), cert. denied, 507 U.S. 938 (2007); Mason
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v. Mitchell, 320 F.3d 604, 620-21 (6th Cir. 2003); and Martin v. Mitchell, 280 F.3d 594, 615
(6th Cir. 2002). None of the three cases, however, requires that evidence of the
investigation of trial counsel come from their statements or their case files, however
preferable those sources might be. It is true that in the most recent of the three, Carter,
we observed that “curiously absent from the record is any statement from trial counsel
describing what he did or did not do in investigating Carter’s background. By not detailing
trial counsel’s efforts to learn of Carter’s background, Carter has provided no basis for a
finding that trial counsel’s investigation was unreasonable.” Carter, 443 F.3d at 531. But,
in that opinion we also noted that “there [we]re no allegations that counsel did not contact
the four family members” who had useful information to offer, in contrast to three family
members with little useful information who had signed affidavits stating that they were
never contacted by trial counsel. Id. at 530-31. Thus, Carter failed to provide information
from any relevant source (either relatives with important knowledge or trial counsel)
detailing trial counsel’s efforts to learn of Carter’s background.
It is also true that Mason includes our suggestion that “in order for us to evaluate
whether defense counsel rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance at sentencing, we
must know more about the extent of counsel’s investigation and preparation of mitigating
evidence.” Mason, 320 F.3d at 620. But there we remanded the case for an evidentiary
hearing “[b]ecause the record as it now stands reflects disputes about defense counsel’s
performance with respect to the sentencing phase of Mason’s trial.” Id. at 620-21. The
record in this case reflects no such dispute. And although the remand in Mason was
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presumably ordered so that trial counsel could testify, the ruling stands merely for the
obvious: that such testimony, when available, is preferred. Mason does not hold, as a
categorical matter, that testimony from trial counsel or evidence from counsel’s case file
is a condition precedent to a grant of habeas relief on a claim of ineffective assistance.
The final case cited, Martin, is simply not on point. In state court, Martin had failed
to develop the factual basis for his claim that trial counsel had rendered ineffective
assistance in the penalty phase of Martin’s trial. Because Martin had not contacted trial
counsel and developed a factual record concerning his allegedly deficient representation
during post-conviction proceedings in state court, we held that he was not entitled to an
evidentiary hearing in the district court, based on 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(A)(ii). See Martin,
280 F.3d at 615. Here, by contrast, Woodard presented a factual basis for his claim in
state court. As petitioner, he does have the burden of establishing that trial counsel’s
investigation was deficient. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-88. But Martin does not
prohibit a defendant from meeting this burden by means of sources other than trial
counsel’s statements or case file.
The state next argues, as to the second ground, that trial counsel’s failure to present
the “new mitigating evidence” was not unreasonable because the main sources for that
evidence – the two male figures in Woodard’s childhood – were unavailable at trial. Leo
Clayton, Woodard’s father, was involved along with his brother (Woodard’s uncle) in a
drug-trafficking operation in Cleveland and was in prison for the first seven years of his
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son’s life. Out of prison, Clayton used Woodard as a drug courier as early as age eight,
sending him unaccompanied on a plane to Chicago on at least one occasion to deliver or
pick up contraband. When Clayton’s own addiction to narcotics disabled him, Woodard
attempted to operate his father’s drug-trafficking business for him at age 12 or 13.
Meanwhile, Woodard’s mother had begun living with another man, Alonzo Eberhardt, who
physically assaulted Marsha Woodard in front of her son and eventually went to prison for
shooting her. As the state points out, neither of the two men testified at trial.
The state contends that Clayton would not have testified in any event, because he
was “hiding from the law” at the time of trial. The state further argues that the petitioner
has failed to establish that trial counsel would have been able to contact Clayton, noting
testimony that neither Woodard or his mother knew Clayton’s exact whereabouts at that
time. The state contends that there is, likewise, no reason to believe that Eberhardt would
have testified at trial and that Marsha Woodard herself offered no testimony about abuse
at the hands of Eberhardt either at the trial or in the evidentiary hearing in district court.
We conclude that the record establishes otherwise.
Leo Clayton testified in the federal evidentiary hearing and admitted that, at the time
of his son’s trial, there had been an outstanding warrant for his arrest. He said that he had
not attended the trial for that reason, but he contended that he was in Cleveland during the
trial and that – although never contacted by trial counsel – he did speak by telephone with
his son and with Marsha and Tonya Woodard about the ongoing trial. Clayton also
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indicated that the outstanding warrant was actually for a relatively minor charge, and he
was adamant that, if asked to testify at the sentencing hearing, he “[m]ost definitely . . .
would have stepped forward.”
The state argues that “this late-in-the-day bravery rings hollow” and questions not
only whether Clayton would have been willing to risk jail for his son but also whether trial
counsel could have contacted Clayton had they tried. One of their potential sources for
such information, Marsha Woodard, testified at trial that, as far as she knew, Clayton was
in the Cleveland area but that she had not seen him, which might be taken to imply that
she did not know how to contact him. In the federal hearing, however, she testified that
at the time of trial, she could have told trial counsel how to contact him. Woodard also
made inconsistent statements, telling a probation officer at the time of trial that he did not
know where Clayton was, but testifying in the federal hearing that he had could have
contacted his father if asked to do so by trial counsel.
The respondent’s skepticism notwithstanding, we conclude that in holding that trial
counsel were ineffective for not presenting this evidence in mitigation, the district court
necessarily found credible the witnesses who testified that the information could have been
uncovered and presented at trial. Moreover, despite the state’s conjecture, we find just as
plausible the possibility that Clayton’s family was able to contact him but was also reluctant
to tell law enforcement officials where he could be found at the time of trial. In any event,
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the state has not shown the district court’s factual determinations regarding Clayton’s
testimony are clearly erroneous.
If the district court’s account of the evidence is plausible in light of the record
viewed in its entirety, the court of appeals may not reverse it even though
convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed
the evidence differently. Where there are two permissible views of the
evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C., 470 U.S. 564, 573-74 (1985).
As with Clayton’s testimony, the state contends that evidence of Alonzo Eberhardt’s
abuse of the petitioner’s mother was unavailable at the time of trial or, alternatively, that
the petitioner has not shown it to have been available, citing the lack of any testimony from
Eberhardt himself, as well as the fact that the victim of the alleged abuse – Marsha
Woodard – did not testify about it at trial. The state also argues that there is no
documentation in the record confirming such abuse, “only a reference by Dr. Pearson
during the post-conviction proceedings that [Eberhardt] was a known ‘batterer’ who
sometimes pulled a gun on Woodard’s mother in front of [Woodard].” But the state also
concedes that at the federal evidentiary hearing, Marsha Woodard testified that she stood
by the statements in the affidavit that she had signed in connection with the post-conviction
litigation in state court, thereby effectively incorporating them by reference into her
testimony in federal court. In that affidavit she described the abuse she suffered at
Eberhardt’s hands. Although it might have strengthened the record from the fact-finder’s
point of view if Marsha Woodard had reiterated the details of Eberhardt’s conduct during
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her testimony, the district court apparently found that live testimony from this witness was
sufficient to establish her credibility and, by extension, concluded that the allegations in her
affidavit were also credible.
Moreover, there was another eyewitness to the domestic abuse not mentioned by
the state: Woodard’s sister, Tonya. At the federal hearing, she reaffirmed the information
in her post-conviction affidavit, in which she had described the relationship between her
mother and Alonzo Eberhardt, who was Tonya’s father. As a result, the record contains
two sources for this evidence that were available at the trial in state court, and those two
sources were, in fact, witnesses at the penalty hearing in state court. Counsel simply did
not ask either of them the right questions, which may have been due to the absence of an
investigation into their client’s background that would have informed them of this family
history. It is difficult, if not impossible, to conceive that the lack of relevant questioning was
the result of intentional strategy on the part of the petitioner’s counsel.
In its third argument concerning trial counsel’s performance, the state argues that
the petitioner has failed to show that his attorneys’ residual-doubt strategy was
unreasonable in light of the risk that introduction of the new mitigating evidence would have
allowed the jury to learn damaging information about Woodard. While “strategic choices
made after thorough investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
unchallengeable,” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690, strategic choices made after less than
complete investigation are open to serious challenge. They are “reasonable precisely to
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the extent that reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation.”
Id. at 691.
In other words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to
make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
unnecessary. In any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not to
investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the
circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s
judgments.
Id.
As the district court found, trial counsel’s strategy, if it can be called that, was
virtually wholly uninformed and was, therefore, unreasonable. Except for the cursory
request for court and school records and counsel’s eleventh-hour attempt to contact a
psychologist, there is nothing in the record to suggest that either of Woodard’s trial
attorneys even attempted to investigate his background in preparation for sentencing.
Such representation is, as a legal matter, deficient. See Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510,
524-28 (2003) (holding that when counsel abandons investigation into the client’s
background after having acquired only rudimentary knowledge from a narrow set of
sources, neither the choice nor the investigation is reasonable under Strickland). Hence,
because the follow-up step – the choice to opt for a residual-doubt strategy – was
uninformed, it was also professionally unreasonable. See Williams v. Anderson, 460 F.3d
789, 804 (6th Cir. 2006).
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2. Ineffective Assistance: Prejudice
“[I]n order to establish prejudice, the new evidence that a habeas petitioner presents
must differ in a substantial way — in strength and subject matter — from the evidence
actually presented at sentencing.” Hill v. Mitchell, 400 F.3d 308, 319 (6th Cir. 2005). In
this case, the state challenges the district court’s determination that the petitioner was
prejudiced by counsel’s deficient performance, characterizing the evidence both as
“tenuous” because of its indirect sources and as “too weak to establish actual prejudice.”
The state also insists that the mitigating evidence offered at the evidentiary hearing in
federal court, if produced by Woodard at the original trial, would have risked introduction
by the prosecution of damaging rebuttal evidence. Despite this speculation, we agree with
the district court’s finding that the evidence adduced at the federal hearing established a
clear case of prejudice to the petitioner, resulting from the failure of his attorneys to
uncover what was reasonably available information about Woodard’s background.
The new mitigating evidence differed substantially in scope and substance from the
meager testimony presented at the sentencing phase of Woodard’s trial, through which the
jury learned only that Woodard was born to a single mother whose sole income was from
welfare and grew up in a housing project; that his father was in prison until Woodard was
eight years old; that he had a good relationship with his sister; and that he dropped out of
high school before graduation. Because there was nothing of a truly mitigative nature
about that testimony, it is obvious that trial counsel were focused merely on attempting to
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arouse the jury’s sympathy through pleas for leniency by the petitioner’s mother and sister,
in addition to presenting Woodard’s obviously ineffectual, unsworn statement to the jury
in an ill-conceived effort to create residual doubt about his guilt.
By contrast, at the evidentiary hearing in federal court, counsel for the petitioner
presented the testimony of three family members (the petitioner’s mother, father, and
sister) and the petitioner himself, as well as three expert witnesses (Dr. Sharon Pearson,
Charles See, and Dr. Sandra McPherson). The evidence they provided painted a far
different picture of the teen-aged Woodard than the one the jury saw at trial. The new
proof revealed not just a disadvantaged childhood, but also entanglement with crime from
a very early age. Combined with serious psychological problems, this social history set
Woodard on a path to personal disaster, culminating in his senseless shooting of Mani
Akram. Although it seems virtually certain that the new mitigation evidence would not have
convinced even one juror that Woodard was innocent. i.e., that someone else in the
gaffling gang was actually the triggerman, it is equally clear that available evidence about
the petitioner’s background and psychological make-up might well have changed at least
one juror’s mind about the propriety of imposing the death penalty.
For example, Dr. Pearson, a clinical psychologist, testified that she had interviewed
and tested the petitioner in order to evaluate his “background and psychosocial history.”
In doing so, she reviewed various documents, including Woodard’s school, health, and
juvenile court records. She concluded, among other things, that he suffered from
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undiagnosed and untreated attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which manifested itself
in behaviors such as anger, aggression, and poor impulse control. Such “[i]mpulsivity,” she
said in an affidavit filed as an exhibit in federal court, “often leads to accidents and
engagement in potentially dangerous activities without consideration of possible
consequences.” Dr. Pearson also noted that:
Eugene is a product of his dysfunctional family of origin, growing up in the
projects, unhealthy role modeling, unavailability of reasonably attainable,
socially acceptable goals, exposure to repeated violence, destruction and
loss, and probable congenital difficulties – low birth weight, Attention
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, fetal distress, Cytomegalovirus exposure.
The “unhealthy role modeling” was provided, first and foremost, by Leo Clayton,
Woodard’s biological father, who was imprisoned for much of his son’s childhood and who
never married his mother. Dr. Pearson reported that following Clayton’s release from
prison:
Leo quickly put Eugene to work in Leo’s drug business as he believed no
one would suspect an 8 year old. Eugene was flown back and forth between
Chicago and Cleveland picking up drugs from Leo’s suppliers; he also was
expected to deliver drugs and collect payment in the neighborhood. By the
age of 12 or 13, he was running Leo’s business attempting to keep from
collapsing secondary to Leo’s own increasing drug use. Leo reports
intentionally teaching his son to hustle as a way to make a living. He denies
teaching him to earn a living legitimately. While Leo worked in his earlier
years, the streets soon provided him an income. Eugene later stopped
contact with Leo secondary to Leo’s drug use.
Based on the petitioner’s experience as a juvenile drug-courier for his father, Dr. Pearson
found that “Eugene learned very early to take responsibility for the actions of others, to
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keep his mouth shut, to behave loyally even when loyalty was not deserved. He had to
learn to ignore or deny fears or concerns in order to please his father.”
The second role model was, of course, Alonzo Eberhardt, who also was never
married to Woodard’s mother but who lived with her for many years and whom Woodard
called “Dad.” Dr. Pearson reported that Eberhardt “attempted to befriend [Woodard] and
parent him [but] at the same time was violent with his mother . . . [and] eventually was
imprisoned for shooting [her].” According to Marsha Woodard, Eberhardt “tried to be a
father-figure to Eugene,” but she also said that Eberhardt “oftentimes pulled a gun on me,”
sometimes in front of the petitioner.
Another expert witness, Charles See, was the director and co-founder of the
Community Re-entry Program, which aided individuals newly released from prison. He
testified as a cultural expert to his familiarity with the Cleveland urban community in which
Woodard grew up, as well as from his knowledge of the Woodard family. See said that
Woodard came from a family that on his father’s side was locally notorious for involvement
in crime and various illegal activities and that Leo Clayton had involved the petitioner in
trafficking drugs at a young age. The resulting impact on Woodard, he testified, was that
although “he struggled to develop some sort of identity independent from that of his family,
he found that almost impossible, being constantly reminded of who he was, being
constantly invited to join various youth gangs, and also unfortunately being given drugs by
his father [and] using drugs with his father.” In addition, See said that Alonzo Eberhardt
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“was a reputed underworld figure himself . . . . So between the reputation of Leo Clayton
and Alonzo Eberhard[t], Eugene f[ound] himself involved with two men who were
notoriously reputed in that community.” See also said that, to the best of his knowledge,
all the information on which he based his testimony was available at the time of Woodard’s
trial in 1990.
Dr. McPherson was the clinical psychologist who had not been contacted by
petitioner’s trial attorneys until after the jury had returned a guilty verdict and who was
therefore unable to evaluate and file a report on their client in time for the sentencing
hearing. She noted that there was undoubtedly sufficient evidence available on which to
base an evaluation at that time but, with no opportunity to gather and analyze it, she had
been forced to decline to take on the case.
In response, the state argues that this newly presented evidence, in and of itself,
is not particularly powerful, because the evidentiary support for it is “tenuous, coming from
a collateral source instead of the primary actors.” We reject this view of the proof.
It is true, as the state points out, that Alonzo Eberhardt himself never testified, by
affidavit, deposition, or in person. But he was not the only available source for information
about the domestic abuse that marked Woodard’s childhood, given that both Marsha
Woodard and Eberhardt’s daughter, Tonya Woodard, could have provided that information
to the jury. And, contrary to the state’s contention, Dr. Pearson’s affidavit was not the sole
source for the information about Woodard’s early involvement in his father’s drug business.
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Clayton, in an affidavit filed as part of the state post-conviction litigation, admitted that he
began using Woodard to run drugs when he was eight years old and that, when the boy
was 12, Clayton used him to pick up contraband from an out-of-state supplier. At the
subsequent federal hearing, Clayton affirmed as true all the statements in his affidavit. He
did not testify concerning the statement in Dr. Pearson’s affidavit that, at age 12 or 13,
Woodard took it upon himself to run his drug-trafficking business in an attempt to keep it
from collapsing due to Clayton’s increasing drug use. But this information also has a direct
source: Woodard himself testified at the federal hearing that the family history given in Dr.
Pearson’s affidavit was accurate.
The state next argues that the district court made no credibility findings regarding
the information contained in affidavits and merely adopted by reference in the federal
hearing. We disagree here, as well. By holding that trial counsel were ineffective in not
presenting this mitigating evidence, the district court was necessarily finding credible the
witnesses in support of that evidence. Moreover, that determination is not clearly
erroneous.
The state concedes that the new mitigating evidence is substantially different in
subject matter from that presented at trial, but denies that the new mitigating evidence is
substantially stronger. As indicated in the discussion set out above, the proof offered at
the penalty phase of Woodard’s trial consisted of “[his] mother and sister testif[ying] that
Woodard was a good son and brother and that he deserved mercy.” Woodard made an
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unsworn statement in which he expressed remorse for the victim’s death, but denied that
he was the shooter. That was the extent of the evidence offered in mitigation. It stands
in stark contrast to the core theme of the new mitigating evidence: the effect on Woodard
of having a father who involved him in drug sales when he was still a child and a father
figure who subjected Woodard’s mother to physical abuse in Woodard’s presence. It
would be difficult, if not impossible, to conclude that this evidence was not substantially
stronger than that presented at trial. It is no misstep to conclude in addition that if this
evidence had been presented at trial, there is a reasonable probability at least one juror
would have had a reasonable doubt that death was the appropriate penalty.
Nor do we believe, as the state now contends, that the new evidence, if presented
to the jury, would have run the risk of opening the door to a barrage of damaging rebuttal
evidence about Woodard. In Ohio, at the time of Woodard’s trial, the prosecutor’s use of
rebuttal evidence in the penalty phase was governed by this rule:
The prosecutor, in the penalty stage of a capital trial, may rebut false or
incomplete statements regarding the defendant’s criminal record. This right
is limited, however, to those instances where the defense offers a specific
assertion, by a mitigation witness or by the defendant, that misrepresents the
defendant’s prior criminal history.
State v. DePew, 528 N.E.2d 542, syl. ¶ 3 (Ohio 1988). Based on DePew, the district court
rejected the Warden’s argument: “Had defense counsel merely presented the testimony
regarding Woodard’s relationships with Clayton and Eberhardt in the context of presenting
Woodard’s family background, there is a substantial likelihood that any rebuttal evidence
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regarding Woodard’s character would not have been admissible during trial.” On appeal,
the state has presented no reason to believe the other-acts evidence would have been
admissible. Indeed, although framed as “rebuttal,” it is difficult to grasp just what rebuttal
would achieve. Evidence that Woodard had previously committed various juvenile crimes
would seem consistent with the theme of the new mitigating evidence, i.e., that he had
been raised in a family environment in which crime was seen as a way of life, not a rebuttal
of it.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set out above, we conclude that the district court did not err in ruling
that petitioner Woodard received ineffective assistance of counsel in the penalty phase of
his state trial. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court and REMAND the
case for issuance of a conditional writ of habeas corpus directed to the state court.
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