Error: Expected the default config, but wasn't able to find it, or it isn't a Dictionary
05-0610-pr
Murden v. Artuz
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
--------------------
August Term 2006
Argued: February 12, 2007 Decided: August 10, 2007
Docket No. 05-0610-pr
----------------------------------------------------X
WILLIAM MURDEN,
Petitioner-Appellant,
- against –
CHRISTOPHER ARTUZ, Superintendent of
Greenhaven Correctional Facility
Respondent-Appellee.
-----------------------------------------------------X
Before: WALKER, HALL, Circuit Judges, and COTE, District
Judge *
Petitioner appeals from the denial of a petition for a writ
of habeas corpus by the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of New York (Jack B. Weinstein, Senior District
Judge). Petitioner argues that he received ineffective
*
The Honorable Denise Cote, United States District Judge for the
Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.
assistance of counsel because his counsel failed adequately to
investigate and pursue a defense of extreme emotional
disturbance. Respondent argues that federal review of
petitioner’s claims is procedurally barred and that petitioner’s
claims would also fail on the merits.
AFFIRMED.
Judge Hall concurs in the judgment of the Court and files a
separate concurring opinion.
ANDREA G. HIRSCH, New York,
New York, for Petitioner-Appellant
CHARLES J. HYNES, District
Attorney for Kings County (Leonard
Joblove, Joyce Slevin, and Thomas
M. Ross, Assistant District
Attorneys, of Counsel), Brooklyn,
New York, for Respondent-Appellee.
DENISE COTE, District Judge:
The Honorable Jack B. Weinstein issued a Certificate of
Appealability with his denial of the petition filed by William
Murden (“Murden”) for a writ of habeas corpus. Murden asserts
that his 1991 conviction for murder in the second degree in New
York state court should be overturned because the jury was not
given a charge on the partial affirmative defense of extreme
emotional disturbance (“EED”). Specifically, Murden complains
that his trial counsel failed to develop the evidence that would
have supported an EED charge. For the following reasons, Judge
Weinstein’s denial of the petition for a writ of habeas corpus
is affirmed.
BACKGROUND
I. Trial Evidence
Murden was charged with two counts of murder in the second
degree. N.Y. Penal Law § 125.25[1], [2]. The evidence at trial
established that on September 4, 1976 (“Saturday”), Murden
stabbed his girlfriend Diane Miles (“Miles”) in her bedroom
nineteen times, causing her death. At the time, Murden was
thirty-three years old and Miles was twenty years old. The
summary of trial evidence that follows is drawn from the
testimony of both the prosecution witnesses and Murden, who
testified on his own behalf. The discussion of Murden’s
relationship with Miles prior to September 3, 1976 (“Friday”) is
drawn entirely from Murden’s testimony.
Murden, Miles, and Miles’s five-year-old son Antoine, began
living together in the summer of 1975. In February 1976,
Antoine’s father attacked Murden and Murden ran away. Miles and
her mother teased Murden about the incident. Murden was later
evicted from the apartment he shared with Miles and when he
found a new apartment, Miles initially refused to move in with
him again. After she rejoined him, the relationship went well
for a few months, but in June 1976 Miles attempted to stab her
sister and ended up stabbing Murden’s friend instead. Miles
also started to stay out nights. She would leave her son with
Murden or relatives and sometimes threatened Murden with a knife
when he asked where she had been.
On Friday, Miles returned to the apartment after a four-day
absence. Murden asked where she had been, but did not get an
answer. Murden, Miles, and Miles’s mother drank late into the
night. Miles then made Murden sleep separately so that Miles’s
mother could sleep in their bed.
On Saturday, some of Miles’s other relatives and friends
arrived. Miles and her mother mocked Murden, saying he would
have to leave the apartment. Murden refused to leave, saying it
was his apartment. Murden drank a pint of rum that Miles’s
mother had given him, but claimed at trial that he was not
“drunk” on Saturday.
After drinking the rum, Murden went shopping. When he
returned to the apartment, the only other people in the
apartment were Miles, Antoine, Miles’s fifteen-year-old cousin
Cathy Faison (“Faison”), Miles’s friend Jacqueline Crawford
(“Crawford”), and Miles’s seven-year-old niece Shereia Denee
Webb (“Webb”). 1
The evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the
state, see Policano v. Herbert, 430 F.3d 82, 84 (2d Cir. 2005),
established that the following events then occurred. Murden
1
Webb’s presence was disputed by the defendant.
entered the kitchen, where Miles and Faison were sitting with
Antoine and Crawford. Miles asked Murden how he had gotten into
the apartment, since she had taken his key. Miles and Murden
began arguing. Murden pulled a large knife out of a kitchen
drawer and threatened to kill Miles with it. Miles began
crying, and Murden placed the knife back in the drawer, assuring
Miles that he loved her. Miles and Antoine then went to Miles’s
bedroom.
Murden hid a kitchen knife behind his back and followed
Miles into the bedroom. Murden approached Miles and leaned over
her twice as if asking for a kiss. When she refused to kiss him
and pushed his face away, Murden pulled out the kitchen knife
and repeatedly stabbed Miles as she cried for help and as her
body slumped off the bed.
Murden left the bedroom and moved quickly down the hallway,
holding the bloody knife. As Faison testified, Murden “looked
really wild,” his eyes were “really wide open,” and he “looked
crazy.” When Faison asked Murden what was wrong, he did not
answer, threw the knife down, and ran out of the apartment. Two
other witnesses heard Murden say, “I killed the bitch.”
Murden took a taxicab to his cousin Rita Burrows’s home.
He reported encountering several people at Rita’s home,
including a “Benny Porter,” who helped Murden board a bus for
Georgia, allegedly to see a “root doctor” or spiritual healer to
cure pains in his stomach. Murden remained a fugitive for
thirteen years, until his arrest in Florida in 1989, where he
was living under the name Gary Walters. When arrested, Murden
told a detective, “If I had stayed in New York this would be
over by now,” and, “I’ve been looking over my shoulder for
thirteen years.”
At trial, Murden’s account of the sequence of events
immediately preceding the murder differed sharply from that
presented by the state witnesses. He denied that he had taken a
knife out of the kitchen drawer and threatened Miles. He
explained that he stayed in the kitchen talking to Faison and
drinking a glass of ice water after Miles went into her bedroom.
Murden then went to Miles’s bedroom, where they continued to
argue about whether he would move out. Murden testified that
Miles then stabbed him in the leg with a knife. He said he
reached for her knife and that as he struggled with Miles, other
people attacked him from behind, hitting him in the head and
biting his leg. He claimed that he then “blanked out.” On
cross-examination he testified that he remembered “grabbing at”
the knife. Murden testified that he did not remember actually
getting the knife away from Miles, but also admitted that he had
stabbed Miles and remembered swinging the knife at her. 2
Testimony by a forensic pathologist established that Miles’s
wounds were consistent with the assailant thrusting a knife
downward and backward and the victim trying to protect herself
and inconsistent with a knife slashing from side to side.
During the entire trial, Murden asserted a defense of
justification, claiming that he stabbed Miles in self-defense.
Sometime after explaining in his opening statement that his
client had acted in self-defense, Murden’s counsel decided to
pursue an EED defense as well. The attorney argued vigorously
for a jury charge on this partial affirmative defense. He
argued that Miles’s failure to appreciate all Murden had done
for her, her aggressive treatment of him, her absences from the
apartment at night, and her cruel responses to his questions
about those absences “all add[] up to a point where any normal
person can reach that state of extreme emotional . . .
disturbance” and that Miles’s stabbing of Murden was “like the
straw that broke the camel’s back.” The judge denied the
request for an EED charge, holding that it was not supported by
sufficient evidence. He observed,
The way I understood the defendant’s testimony was
that he went into the bedroom without any intention to
do anything. That he was surprised when the deceased,
2
Murden now asserts that his trial attorney convinced him to
admit to stabbing Miles even though he had no recollection of
getting the knife from her.
Diane Miles, is alleged to have stabbed him with a
knife. He reacted to the stabbing by apparently
trying to protect himself from being attacked not only
by Miss Miles, with a knife, but also someone behind
him and someone on the floor biting his leg.
Defense counsel did not request an intoxication charge. The
judge charged the jury on the defense of justification. Murden
was convicted of murder in the second degree.
II. Sentencing
At the March 8, 1991 sentencing proceeding, the state asked
for the maximum penalty of twenty-five years to life,
emphasizing Murden’s flight and lack of remorse. When Murden
spoke, he mentioned three complaints. He complained about jury
selection. He asserted that he was telling the truth when he
testified that he did not remember stabbing Miles, but that his
attorney told him during a recess in his testimony to admit that
he remembered doing it. Finally, he objected that his witnesses
had not been called to testify. He said, “I didn’t get none of
my witnesses that I gave -- didn’t get no witness that could
help me on my side . . . .” The judge asked for clarification,
stating that there was “nobody else in the room who was an
eyewitness as far as I know” and asking what kind of witness
Murden was talking about. Murden responded, “They are saying it
wasn’t my apartment and all that stuff like that and all other
stuff, owner of the building, and --.” The judge interjected,
“Those kind of witnesses doesn’t matter. The question is
whether you stabbed Ms. Miles with intent to cause her death,
and as a result of the stabbing, you did cause her death, and
whether you own the apartment, doesn’t matter.”
Murden concluded with a plea for mercy. The judge
sentenced him to twenty years to life imprisonment.
III. Direct Appeal
On direct appeal, Murden argued that the trial court
improperly refused his request for an EED charge. The Appellate
Division affirmed Murden’s conviction, holding that the trial
evidence was insufficient to support an EED defense. People v.
Murden, 593 N.Y.S.2d 837 (App. Div. 1993). It noted that Murden
had relied at trial upon a justification defense. It found that
his flight from the scene and the jurisdiction immediately after
the defense was inconsistent with the loss of control associated
with an EED defense; that his consumption of alcohol and
argument with his girlfriend just prior to the murder did not
suffice to establish the objective element of an EED defense;
and that the character of his argument with his girlfriend did
not establish a reasonable excuse for his claimed emotional
disturbance. Murden’s application for leave to appeal to the
New York Court of Appeals was denied without opinion. People v.
Murden, 616 N.E.2d 862 (N.Y. 1993).
IV. First Section 440 Motion
In his first motion to vacate, filed pursuant to Section
440.10 of the New York Criminal Procedure Law (“C.P.L.”) with
the assistance of counsel on February 5, 1996, Murden claimed
that he was denied effective assistance of trial counsel because
his counsel had failed to present enough evidence to support an
EED defense. He argued that trial counsel failed adequately to
confer with him in preparation for trial, and failed to consult
numerous potential witnesses whose testimony could have
supported both an EED and justification defense and bolstered
his credibility. He also asserted that trial counsel failed to
investigate Murden’s suicide attempt in 1972 or 1973, four years
before Miles’s murder. 3 In his affidavit offered in support of
his motion, he asserted that prior to trial he had informed
trial counsel of six witnesses who could have testified to his
emotional state shortly after Miles’s murder: his cousin Rita,
his sister Debra, 4 Benny Preston 5 (“Preston”), Mabel Lilly,
Robert Leverman, and Katherine Leverman. According to Murden,
3
Murden also argued that he was denied the opportunity to
testify before the grand jury and that trial counsel was
intoxicated, among other claims that are not presently at issue.
4
Murden submitted an affidavit from Debra Tulloch to support a
second Section 440 motion that he filed in 2004. Debra Tulloch
appears to be the sister “Debra” he mentioned in his 1996
affidavit.
5
“Benny Preston” appears to be the same individual whom Murden
identified at trial as “Benny Porter.”
they were at his cousin’s home on Saturday and knew of his
emotional disturbance, the pain in his stomach, and the wounds
on his hand and leg. Murden identified Dr. Dallas Moore, John
and Rose Clark, Jack Mayes, and Miles’s sister, Sheila Webb, as
individuals who could have testified about his stomach ailment
and Miles’s mistreatment of Murden. Murden submitted an
affidavit from one of these individuals, Preston, who described
Murden as appearing unusually agitated and frightened on
Saturday evening and reported Murden saying that he had been
attacked and had had to defend himself. Murden also explained
that he had told his trial counsel that he had seen a
psychiatrist six or seven times after a suicide attempt in 1972
or 1973, when he was despondent because a girlfriend wanted to
throw him out of his apartment.
The judge who had presided over Murden’s trial denied his
motion on March 28, 1996. He ruled that Murden’s claims that
trial counsel was ineffective for his failure to call certain
witnesses and for coercing Murden to perjure himself were
procedurally barred under C.P.L. § 440.10(2)(c) because Murden
had brought up these issues at sentencing and the record
contained facts sufficient for him to raise these claims on
direct appeal. The judge also ruled that, “[i]n any event,
defendant’s claims lack merit.” He noted that the defendant had
testified at trial of his stomach pain before the stabbing,
Miles’s mistreatment of him, the wounds he suffered when he was
stabbed and bitten, and his agitation. He concluded that the
trial record contained all of the facts that Murden’s witnesses
could have supplied. The judge observed that the Appellate
Division had already held that those facts were insufficient to
establish the EED defense, and that Murden’s behavior before and
after the murder was inconsistent with the loss of control
associated with the defense. 6 The decision did not discuss
whether trial counsel should have investigated Murden’s suicide
attempt.
With new counsel, who has continued to represent Murden
ever since, Murden applied on April 24, 1997 for leave to appeal
the denial of his Section 440 motion. He argued that with
sufficient preparation trial counsel would have concluded that
the EED defense was stronger than the justification defense and
would have presented just the EED defense to the jury rather
than a “scramble” of both defenses. With a more cohesive
presentation, he asserted that the trial court would have been
required to include the EED defense in its charge. Leave to
appeal was denied on July 9, 1997.
6
The judge also observed that defense counsel had never appeared
inebriated to the trial court.
V. 1997 Habeas Petition
In his habeas petition, which he filed on April 24, 1997,
Murden raised the same claims he had raised in his initial
motion to vacate, except that he did not repeat his claims that
his trial counsel had been intoxicated or that trial counsel
failed to investigate or present evidence on Murden’s 1972
suicide attempt and psychiatric care. The district court
dismissed the petition, holding that it was untimely under the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”). Murden
v. Artuz, No. 97-CV-2155(SJ), 1998 WL 305540 (E.D.N.Y. Apr. 23,
1998). With the state’s consent, this dismissal was vacated on
appeal and the petition was remanded.
On June 30, 2000, Murden filed a supplemental submission
that contained new grounds for his claim that trial counsel had
been ineffective. He added that counsel’s failures in pursuing
an EED defense included the failure to have Murden evaluated by
a psychiatrist and to obtain psychiatric records from 1972. The
state and Murden both submitted additional briefing to the
district court, and Murden included his hospital records from an
apparent suicide attempt in 1972.
On April 25, 2003, the petition was reassigned to Judge
Weinstein. 7 Responding to the state’s argument that Murden had
7
The Murden petition was reassigned to Judge Weinstein in
connection with Judge Weinstein’s extraordinary offer to work
not yet exhausted his new grounds for asserting ineffective
assistance, Judge Weinstein administratively closed the case on
September 4, 2003 to permit Murden to exhaust these grounds.
VI. Second Section 440 Motion
In his second motion to vacate, filed on January 2, 2004,
Murden argued that his trial counsel was ineffective for his
failure to develop the evidentiary record which would have
suggested the existence of an EED defense, for pursuing a
justification defense that was “hopeless,” and for not
developing the evidence that Murden was intoxicated during the
killing and requesting an intoxication charge. 8 According to
Murden, trial counsel failed to conduct a pre-trial
investigation, to obtain psychiatric records concerning Murden’s
prior suicide attempt, to have Murden examined by a
psychiatrist, and to interview potential defense witnesses.
Murden submitted several pieces of evidentiary material
that he had not presented with his original Section 440 motion.
through the backlog of habeas corpus petitions in the Eastern
District of New York. In re Habeas Corpus Cases, No. 03-misc-
66(JBW), 2003 WL 21919833 (E.D.N.Y. May 1, 2003). After
reviewing and issuing decisions on five hundred petitions, Judge
Weinstein issued his Report on 500 Habeas Corpus Cases to Chief
Judge Edward R. Korman on December 11, 2003. 298 F. Supp. 2d
303 (E.D.N.Y. 2003).
8
Murden also presented several other arguments not at issue
here.
He submitted his 1972 psychiatric records and an affidavit from
a psychiatrist, Dr. Eric Goldsmith, who evaluated Murden’s trial
testimony and psychiatric records reporting that Murden “might
want to hurt” his girlfriend at the time because of jealous
feelings. Dr. Goldsmith concluded that Murden “likely” killed
Miles under the influence of an extreme emotional disturbance. 9
Murden also presented three affidavits from individuals who saw
Murden Saturday night and who could support his intoxication
defense. His sister Debra Tulloch averred that Murden looked
drunk, wide-eyed, and discombobulated, “like he was out of it,”
on Saturday night. 10 Another sister, Elaine Boomer, reported
that Murden had sounded very upset and was drinking when they
spoke by telephone on Friday night and that Saturday night he
looked as if he had been drinking and was crying, apologizing,
and saying that he “didn’t mean to hurt” Miles. Preston stated
that Murden looked like he might have been drinking on Saturday
night. In his own affidavit, Murden describes himself as drunk
when Miles was killed.
9
Murden explained that he lacked the funds to pay for an
examination by Dr. Goldmith, and asked the state court to
appoint Dr. Goldsmith as an expert under Article 18-B to conduct
such an examination.
10
Tulloch asserts that at least three other witnesses that
Murden had identified to trial counsel as possible witnesses are
now dead: his cousin Rita Burrows, to whose apartment he fled on
Saturday night, and Robert and Katherine Leverman, who were at
Rita Burrows’s apartment that night.
On March 26, 2004, the state court denied Murden’s second
Section 440 motion, finding both that it was procedurally barred
and failed on the merits. Citing C.P.L. §§ 440.10(3)(b) and
(c), the judge found that the entire motion was procedurally
barred because the claims were or could have been raised in the
original Section 440 motion. In addition, insofar as the motion
asserted that Murden received ineffective assistance of counsel
because his trial counsel coerced him to lie and failed to call
his witnesses, the court found the claims procedurally barred
because they could have been raised on direct appeal. See
C.P.L. § 440.10(2)(c). On July 14, 2004, the Appellate Division
denied Murden leave to appeal.
VII. 2004 Habeas Litigation
Murden’s federal habeas petition was reopened on September
7, 2004. Murden amended his petition to add all of the claims
in the second Section 440 motion that had not been presented in
his original petition. As relevant to this appeal, he added
ineffectiveness claims premised on trial counsel’s failure to
get Murden’s psychiatric records and to retain a psychiatrist.
He argued that his claims were not procedurally barred and that
the state court’s merits ruling was an unreasonable application
of federal law. 11
At a hearing before Judge Weinstein on December 16, 2004,
in which Murden participated by telephone, his trial counsel
testified that he did not have a good recollection of this case
or of how many times he met with Murden. The attorney had been
retained by Murden’s mother in November 1990, at a time when the
case was marked as “trial ready,” and after Murden had been in
custody for over a year. In early January 1991, the trial court
scheduled the trial to begin at the end of the month.
One page of trial counsel’s surviving pretrial notes
contained the name Debra Murden beside a telephone number and
the notation “get from mother.” The same sheet contained the
name and number of a potential character witness, with the
notation “NOT GOOD.” Another page contains the notations
“Elaine Boomer,” “Jack + Helen Mayes,” and “Deborah Murden.”
The attorney had not retained all of his notes and did not
remember if Murden had suggested other potential witnesses, but
asserted that it was his general practice to contact and
evaluate potential witnesses. Habeas counsel for Murden offered
11
Although Murden did not submit to the District Court the
affidavits from Tulloch, Boomer, and Preston that he had
submitted to the state court in support of his second Section
440 motion, he did refer to them in his 2004 submissions to the
district court, and they were included in the state court record
which was transmitted to the district court.
a passage from the trial transcript showing that, when the trial
judge had asked trial counsel for witness names to read to
potential jurors, defense counsel had conferred with Murden and
written some names before answering. Murden testified about his
communications with his trial counsel and asserted that he had
lied at trial when he had denied being drunk at the time of the
murder.
In a twenty-two page unpublished opinion of January 3,
2005, Judge Weinstein thoughtfully evaluated the merits of each
of Murden’s claims, finding that the reopened petition was
timely, that Murden had exhausted his claims, and that the
procedural bar arguments were not decisive because the claims
failed on the merits and Murden had received a fair trial. From
his review of the trial transcript and the hearing evidence,
Judge Weinstein found that trial counsel had been prepared and
had mounted a vigorous defense. Where Murden and his trial
counsel disputed facts concerning the representation, Judge
Weinstein found counsel credible and found Murden’s credibility
to be “suspect.”
Judge Weinstein noted, however, that the claim that the
attorney had failed to investigate fully the EED defense was
“not without some basis,” and that it was possible that he
should have pursued that defense in lieu of a justification
defense. Instead, after opening to the jury on the theory of
self-defense alone, trial counsel chose to pursue both defenses.
When he turned to the second prong of the Strickland test
for ineffective assistance of counsel, however, Judge Weinstein
found Murden unable to show prejudice. See Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). While trial counsel “did not
have a winner” with self-defense, he “had a loser with EED.”
Murden’s psychiatric records “would have revealed petitioner to
the jury as a violently jealous man, possessed by a kind of
homicidal jealousy directed at least [at] one other person in
addition to this victim.” Psychiatric testimony based on
Murden’s contemplated suicide following an intense argument with
a prior girlfriend would not have established the objective
element of the EED defense since there was no reasonable
explanation for an extreme emotional disturbance, as the
Appellate Division had already held in rejecting Murden’s direct
appeal from his conviction. Murden having testified at trial
that he acted in self-defense, Judge Weinstein found that he
could not complain that his counsel had failed to pursue a
factually incompatible theory. Judge Weinstein concluded that
the proffered testimony from the uncalled witnesses would not
have helped to obtain an acquittal.
Judge Weinstein nonetheless granted a Certificate of
Appealability (“COA”) confined to the issues of whether Murden
was denied effective assistance of counsel because defense
counsel (1) failed to have Murden assessed by a psychiatrist,
and (2) failed to investigate or prosecute an EED defense. In a
June 6, 2006 order, we expanded the scope of the COA to include
(1) whether Murden was denied effective assistance of counsel by
defense counsel’s failure to investigate the EED defense by not
speaking to Murden or his witnesses before trial; and (2)
whether the procedural bars cited by the New York State court
bar relief on the substantive issues on appeal. 12
DISCUSSION
We review de novo the District Court’s denial of Murden’s
petition for a writ of habeas corpus, and we review its factual
conclusions for clear error. Mosby v. Senkowski, 470 F.3d 515,
518 (2d Cir. 2006). Murden filed his habeas petition after the
effective date of AEDPA, so it is subject to review under the
standards established in that Act. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); Lynn v.
Bliden, 443 F.3d 238, 245 (2d Cir. 2006).
This appeal addresses the claim that Murden’s trial counsel
was ineffective for his failure to do the following: (1) have
Murden evaluated by a psychiatrist; (2) obtain evidence of
Murden’s hospitalization and psychiatric care following his
12
The state urges us to deny the petition as untimely. Because
we may affirm the district court’s denial of the petition on
other grounds, we choose not to reach that issue.
possible suicide attempt in 1972; (3) interview and/or call
defense witnesses to testify in support of an EED defense; and
(4) confer with Murden regarding an EED defense. We begin by
addressing the state’s assertion that review of each of the
alleged omissions of Murden’s trial counsel is procedurally
barred.
I. Procedural Bar
As explained below, Murden’s assertion that his attorney
failed to have him evaluated by a psychiatrist is procedurally
barred because it could have been but was not presented in his
first Section 440 motion. The three remaining accusations
against trial counsel were sufficiently identified in the first
Section 440 motion to warrant at least partial review on the
merits.
A. Failure to Have Murden Evaluated by a Psychiatrist
Murden argued to the state courts for the first time in his
second Section 440 motion that his trial counsel should have had
him evaluated by a psychiatrist. In its March 26, 2004
decision, the state court ruled that this as well as other
claims were procedurally barred because they either were or
could have been raised in Murden’s first Section 440 motion,
citing C.P.L. §§ 440.10(3)(a), (b), and (c). Section
440.10(3)(c) of the C.P.L. applies to claims that a criminal
defendant could have but did not adequately raise in a prior
state court collateral attack on a conviction. 13 It provides:
Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one, the
court may deny a motion to vacate a judgment when . . .
(c) Upon a previous motion made pursuant to this
section, the defendant was in a position adequately to
raise the ground or issue underlying the present
motion but did not do so.
Although the court may deny the motion under any of
the circumstances specified in this subdivision, in
the interest of justice and for good cause shown it
may in its discretion grant the motion if it is
otherwise meritorious and vacate the judgment.
C.P.L. § 440.10(3)(c).
This court is generally procedurally barred from
considering a ruling that “fairly appear[s] to rest primarily on
state procedural law.” Jimenez v. Walker, 458 F.3d 130, 138 (2d
Cir. 2006) (citation omitted). Even where the state court has
ruled on the merits of a federal claim “in the alternative,”
federal habeas review is foreclosed where the state court has
also expressly relied on the petitioner’s procedural default.
Green v. Travis, 414 F.3d 288, 294 (2d Cir. 2005) (citation
omitted). To bar federal habeas review, however, the state
court’s decision must rest not only on an independent procedural
13
Subsections (a) and (b) generally apply to issues which appear
in the trial record or which were decided during a prior
collateral attack on the conviction. C.P.L. §§ 440.10(3)(a),
(b).
bar under state law, but also on one that is “adequate to
support the judgment.” Jimenez, 458 F.3d at 138.
A state procedural bar is “adequate” if it “is firmly
established and regularly followed by the state in question” in
the specific circumstances presented in the instant case.
Monroe v. Kuhlman, 433 F.3d 236, 241 (2d Cir. 2006) (citation
omitted). The “guideposts” for analyzing the issue of adequacy,
articulated in the context of a procedural default occurring at
trial, are:
(1) whether the alleged procedural violation was actually
relied on in the trial court, and whether perfect
compliance with the state rule would have changed the trial
court's decision; (2) whether state caselaw indicated that
compliance with the rule was demanded in the specific
circumstances presented; and (3) whether petitioner had
“substantially complied” with the rule given “the realities
of trial,” and, therefore, whether demanding perfect
compliance with the rule would serve a legitimate
governmental interest.
Cotto v. Herbert, 331 F.3d 217, 240 (2d Cir. 2003) (citation
omitted). The Cotto guideposts also apply to testing the
adequacy of a procedural default raised in a state collateral
proceeding. See, e.g., Clark v. Perez, 450 F.Supp. 2d 396, 426
(S.D.N.Y. 2006). Because of comity concerns, a decision that a
state procedural rule is inadequate should not be made “lightly
or without clear support in state law.” Garcia v. Lewis, 188
F.3d 71, 77 (2d Cir. 1999) (citation omitted).
When analyzed against the Cotto factors, subsection (3)(c)
of C.P.L. § 440.10 constitutes an adequate state procedural bar
to federal habeas review. The state court referred explicitly
to C.P.L. § 440.10(3)(c) when it dismissed the ineffectiveness
claim alleging that trial counsel should have engaged a
psychiatrist to evaluate Murden. Moreover, New York state
courts regularly apply subsection (3)(c) to deny claims that
could have been but were not raised on previous motions to
vacate. See Rosario v. Bennett, No. 01-CV-7142, 2002 WL
31852827, at *21 & n.31 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 20, 2002) (M.J.)
(collecting cases); see also, e.g., People v. Cochrane, 810
N.Y.S.2d 670, 671 (App. Div. 2006); People v. Brown, 807
N.Y.S.2d 24 (App. Div. 2005); People v. Sierra, No. 229/00, 2006
WL 2829819 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Aug. 21, 2006). 14
Turning to the third Cotto factor, Murden did not
substantially comply with subsection (3)(c). His first
14
The cases that Murden cites as considering successive Section
440 motions on their merits do not in any way suggest that
Section 440.10(3)(c) is not regularly applied to bar the types
of claims at issue here. In People v. Jackson, there was no
claim that the defendant could have raised the state’s failure
to produce a witness’s prior statement at any earlier point.
585 N.E.2d 795, 797 (N.Y. 1991). People v. Thomas, upheld
enforcement of the subsection (3)(c) bar. 537 N.Y.S.2d 600, 601
(App. Div. 1989). People v. Bell addressed whether a Section
440.10 claim was barred by laches. 686 N.Y.S.2d 259, 262-63
(N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1998). People v. Coles does not address a
successive Section 440.10 motion. 535 N.Y.S.2d 897 (N.Y. Sup.
Ct. 1988).
collateral attack on his conviction contained no reference
whatsoever to the absence of a psychiatric evaluation.
Moreover, enforcement of the procedural bar here serves
legitimate governmental interests. As New York’s courts have
explained, subsection (3)(c) protects “important finality
concerns” and prevents delays that might prejudice the
prosecution. People v. Bracey, 807 N.Y.S.2d 34, 36 (App. Div.
2005). Murden’s first Section 440 motion was filed roughly five
years after his conviction and nearly twenty years after the
murder. His second Section 440 motion was filed nearly eight
years later. Considering each of the Cotto factors, the
procedural bar applied by the state court was adequate to bar
federal habeas review on the merits, 15 as numerous district
courts have found in the circumstances of their cases. See,
e.g., Morales v. Greiner, No. CV-98-6284 (FB), 2005 WL 1009545,
at *8 (E.D.N.Y. May 2, 2005); Bell v. Poole, No. 00-CV-
5214(ARR), 2003 WL 21244625, at *9-10 (E.D.N.Y. Apr. 10, 2003);
Rosario v. Bennett, 2002 WL 31852827, at *20-22; Ryan v. Mann,
15
Murden argues that subsection (3)(c) is inadequate in light of
Williams v. Georgia, 349 U.S. 375 (1955), and Sullivan v. Little
Hunting Park, Inc., 396 U.S. 229 (1969). In each case, the
Court refused to find that a state court procedural bar was
adequate to prevent the exercise of Supreme Court review since
the bars were not consistently applied in the circumstances
presented in the cases on review. Williams, 349 U.S. at 383;
Sullivan, 396 U.S. at 234. Murden has made no similar showing
for C.P.L. § 440.10(3)(c).
73 F. Supp. 2d 241, 248 & n.7 (E.D.N.Y. 1998), aff’d, No. 99-
2140, 1999 WL 1295334 (2d Cir. Dec. 27, 1999).
Murden argues that C.P.L. § 440.10(3) cannot constitute an
independent and adequate state procedural bar because it is a
discretionary and not mandatory rule. Subsection (3) provides
that a court “may” deny a motion to vacate in each of the
circumstances it identifies, and also provides that “in the
interest of justice and for good cause shown” a court may
exercise its discretion and grant a meritorious motion. C.P.L.
§ 440.10(3); see also, e.g., People v. Bryce, 731 N.Y.S.2d 263,
268 (App. Div. 2001) (citing C.P.L. § 440.10(3) and vacating
conviction in interests of justice where post-trial exhumation
of victim’s skull showed that trial evidence of skull fracture
was grossly erroneous). The statutory grant of discretion does
not prevent Section 440.10(3) from operating as a procedural bar
to federal habeas review under the circumstances presented in
this case.
As already described, New York state courts regularly apply
subsection (3)(c) to deny claims that could have been but were
not raised on previous motions to vacate. As this court found
in connection with another New York rule that permits
exceptions, even if New York law allows “some discretion to be
exercised,” the application of the procedural default rule in a
particular case remains appropriate so long as the rule is
“evenhandedly” applied “to all similar claims.” Wedra v.
Lefevre, 988 F.2d 334, 340 (2d Cir. 1993) (enforcing procedural
bar from time limits for appeals from denials of Section 440.10
motions). Similarly, in Glenn v. Bartlett, we found a
procedural bar, based on the defendant’s failure to preserve an
objection at trial, even though the state court acknowledged
that it could have reversed the conviction “in the interest of
justice.” 98 F.3d 721, 724-25 (2d Cir. 1996).
Finally, Murden contends that Section 440.10(3)(c) is not
independent of federal law because it allows the court to grant
the motion if, among other requirements, it “is otherwise
meritorious,” thus requiring the state court to look to the
merits of a federal claim. We disagree. Where a state court
explicitly relies on a state procedural bar and does not rest
its application of the bar on its consideration of the merits,
the ruling is independent of federal constitutional law. See
Jiminez, 458 F.3d at 145; see also Stewart v. Smith, 536 U.S.
856, 859-61 (2002). Nothing in Section 440.10(3)(c) requires
the court to look to the merits of the prisoner’s motion, and
nothing in the record here suggests that the court considered
the merits in applying this procedural bar.
Even though a constitutional claim is procedurally barred
from federal review, Murden may obtain review of his claim on
the merits if he shows that equity demands it. Dretke v. Haley,
541 U.S. 386, 393 (2004). To obtain such review, he must either
demonstrate “cause and prejudice for the procedural default,” or
that the “constitutional violation has probably resulted in the
conviction of one who is actually innocent of the substantive
offense.” Id. (citation omitted); see also Doe v. Menefee, 391
F.3d 147, 160-63 (2d Cir. 2004); DiGuglielmo v. Smith, 366 F.3d
130, 135-36 (2d Cir. 2004).
Murden argues that he can show cause for the default because
the attorney who represented him on his first Section 440
petition was ineffective when he failed to include this
argument. There is no constitutional right, however, to an
attorney “in state post-conviction proceedings” where such
proceedings are not the first appeal as of right. Coleman v.
Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 752 (1991). As a consequence, “a
petitioner cannot claim constitutionally ineffective assistance
of counsel in such proceedings,” id., and errors by counsel in
such proceedings do not constitute cause for a procedural
default. Id. at 756-57.
Murden asks that this court reject Coleman’s holding in
light of the guidance in Massaro v. United States that federal
defendants should be permitted to bring ineffective assistance
claims through federal habeas petitions “whether or not the
petitioner could have raised the claim on direct appeal.” 538
U.S. 500, 504 (2003). Murden reasons that defendants in state
criminal proceedings should also have a right to submit
ineffective assistance claims for the first time through a
collateral attack on a conviction, and therefore that we should
find that they have a constitutional right to counsel in
bringing their first state court collateral attack on their
conviction, at least where they raise a claim that trial counsel
was ineffective. There is, however, no constitutional right to
representation by counsel to pursue a claim that trial counsel
was ineffective, apart from the right to counsel for direct
appeal. United States v. Doe, 365 F.3d 150, 155 (2d Cir. 2004).
Even where a federal defendant raises an ineffectiveness claim
for the first time through a habeas petition, there is no
constitutional right to counsel. Id.
Murden also has not shown actual innocence. “To
demonstrate actual innocence a habeas petitioner must show that
it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have
convicted him in light of the new evidence.” Dunham v. Travis,
313 F.3d 724, 730 (2d Cir. 2002) (citing Schlup v. Delo, 513
U.S. 298, 327 (1995)). This requires “a stronger showing” than
the showing of prejudice necessary to prevail on an ineffective
assistance claim. Id. Actual innocence requires “not legal
innocence but factual innocence.” Menefee, 391 F.3d at 162.
The affirmative defense of extreme emotional disturbance is
a partial defense to second-degree murder, and is available
where “[t]he defendant acted under the influence of extreme
emotional disturbance for which there was a reasonable
explanation or excuse.” N.Y. Penal Law § 125.25(1)(a). There
are two elements to the EED defense.
To prove such an affirmative defense, a defendant must
demonstrate, first, that he or she acted under the
influence of an extreme emotional disturbance and,
second, that there was a reasonable explanation or
excuse for that disturbance. The first, subjective
element is met if there is evidence that defendant’s
conduct at the time of the incident was actually
influenced by an extreme emotional disturbance. The
second is an objective element and requires proof that
defendant’s emotional disturbance was supported by a
reasonable explanation or excuse. This is determined
by viewing the subjective mental condition of the
defendant and the external circumstances as the
defendant perceived them to be at the time, however
inaccurate that perception may have been, and
assessing from that standpoint whether the explanation
or excuse for the emotional disturbance was
reasonable.
People v. Roche, 772 N.E.2d 1133, 1138 (N.Y. 2002)
(citation omitted). Proof of the subjective and objective
elements of the EED defense permits conviction of the
defendant of manslaughter in the first degree in lieu of
murder in the second degree. Vargas-Sarmiento v. U.S.
Dep’t of Justice, 448 F.3d 159, 166 (2d Cir. 2006).
Murden has not shown that, with testimony from a
psychiatrist, no reasonable juror would have convicted him of
murder. Murden has offered an affidavit from a psychiatrist
whose examination of Murden’s trial testimony and 1972
psychiatric records has led him to conclude that Murden “likely”
was suffering from an extreme emotional disturbance when he
killed Miles. The psychiatrist opines that these documents
suggest that Murden “had a mood and personality disorder, was
vulnerable to humiliation, lacked stability, and could not
manage his emotions, and that his emotional condition was
dependent on the condition of his relationship with his
girlfriend,” likely causing him to lose control of his emotions
when Miles taunted him and told him to leave the apartment.
If a psychiatric examination had been conducted at the time
of the trial, the examination would have taken place fifteen
years after the murder, seriously undermining its probative
value regarding Murden’s emotional condition at the time of the
crime. Murden’s trial testimony that he lashed out in self-
defense also runs counter to the proffered EED defense. While
Murden was entitled to pursue alternative defenses at trial, his
description of the course of events that led to Miles’s death
significantly weakens the EED defense as a practical matter.
Murden has not made the showing required to demonstrate actual
innocence. In sum, Murden’s claim that trial counsel was
ineffective for his failure to have Murden evaluated by a
psychiatrist is procedurally barred from federal habeas review.
B. Failure to Interview Witnesses
The state contends that Murden’s claim that his trial
attorney was ineffective due to his failure to interview or call
witnesses is procedurally barred because Murden could have
raised it on direct appeal. This portion of Murden’s
ineffectiveness claim is not procedurally barred.
Murden raised his trial counsel’s failure to interview
witnesses in his first Section 440 motion. 16 In ruling on that
motion, the state court found the claim procedurally barred,
pursuant to C.P.L. § 440.10(2)(c), because the trial record
permitted Murden to raise this claim on direct appeal.
Subsection (2)(c) provides:
Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one
[listing grounds for vacating judgment], the court
must deny a motion to vacate a judgment when . . .
Although sufficient facts appear on the record of the
proceedings underlying the judgment to have permitted,
upon appeal from such judgment, adequate review of the
ground or issue raised upon the motion, no such
appellate review or determination occurred owing to
the defendant's unjustifiable failure to take or
perfect an appeal during the prescribed period or to
16
Although Murden offered an affidavit from Preston and no other
witnesses in support of his first Section 440 motion, we find
that he preserved his claim that his trial counsel had failed to
interview and evaluate each of the witnesses Murden identified
in his first Section 440 motion. To the extent Murden offered
more witness affidavits or identified more witnesses when he
filed his second Section 440 motion, consideration of that
evidence is procedurally barred. See Kennaugh v. Miller, 289
F.3d 36, 40, 41, 48-49 (2d Cir. 2002), aff’g 150 F. Supp. 2d 421
(E.D.N.Y. 2001).
his unjustifiable failure to raise such ground or
issue upon an appeal actually perfected by him . . . .
C.P.L. § 440.10(2)(c) (emphasis supplied).
Where the basis for a claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel is well established in the trial record, a state court’s
reliance on subsection (2)(c) provides an independent and
adequate procedural bar to federal habeas review. See Sweet v.
Bennett, 353 F.3d 135, 140 (2d Cir. 2003). Since not every
ineffective assistance claim is sufficiently presented in a
trial record, however, the New York Court of Appeals has long
recognized that a Section 440.10 proceeding is often superior to
a direct appeal for asserting such claims. As the New York
Court of Appeals observed in People v. Brown, “in the typical
case it would be better, and in some cases essential, that an
appellate attack on the effectiveness of counsel be bottomed on
an evidentiary exploration by collateral or post-conviction
proceeding brought under C.P.L. 440.10.” 382 N.E.2d 1149, 1149
(N.Y. 1978); see also People v. Love, 443 N.E.2d 486, 487 (N.Y.
1982); People v. Velazquez, 822 N.Y.S.2d 65, 67 (App. Div.
2006); People v. Daley, 818 N.Y.S.2d 300, 302 (App. Div. 2006);
People v. Flagg, 819 N.Y.S.2d 577, 581 (App. Div. 2006).
Accordingly, New York courts have refused to apply subsection
(2)(c) to bar an ineffective assistance claim where “sufficient
facts do not appear on the record of the proceedings underlying
the judgment to have permitted” adequate review of the issue on
direct appeal. People v. Harris, 491 N.Y.S.2d 678, 687 (App.
Div. 1985) (citation omitted); accord People v. Johnson, 732
N.Y.S.2d 137, 139 (App. Div. 2001); People v. Williams, 586
N.Y.S.2d 215, 215 (App. Div. 1992).
The state has not shown that subsection (2)(c) provides an
adequate state procedural bar in the context of the specific
claim made here. While it is true that the state court
explicitly relied on this bar when it denied Murden’s first
Section 440 motion, the state has not shown that state courts
regularly demand compliance with this rule when a defendant
makes reference to uncalled witnesses in the course of a
sentencing proceeding. The focus of the proceeding was on the
length of the sentence that the court would impose, and not on
the adequacy of trial counsel’s representation of the defendant.
As a result, there was an insufficient exploration of Murden’s
accusation to enable him to litigate this issue on direct
review. Murden’s claim that his attorney failed to interview or
call witnesses to support an EED defense is therefore not
procedurally barred.
C. Remaining Two Claims
The state claims that Murden’s remaining two claims are
also procedurally barred. This contention can be swiftly
rejected.
In his first Section 440 motion Murden argued that his
trial counsel failed to investigate his attempted suicide in
1972 and to confer with him in preparation for the trial. The
ruling on the first Section 440 motion applied no procedural bar
to these claims and found that all of Murden’s claims lacked
merit. Thus, to the extent that he raised these issues in that
initial collateral attack on his conviction, they are not
procedurally barred from our review.
The rejection of the claims concerning the attempted
suicide and failure to confer in the second Section 440 motion
on the ground that they were or could have been raised in the
original Section 440 motion, and the citation to C.P.L. §
440.10(3)(c), creates a procedural bar to federal habeas review
only to the extent that Murden offered new evidence or argument
with his second motion. See Kennaugh v. Miller, 289 F.3d 36,
48-49 (2d Cir. 2002) (applying procedural bar to review of
second set of police reports presented on a motion to renew or
reargue a Section 440 motion). Thus, we are procedurally barred
from considering Murden’s 1972 psychiatric records, which were
not presented with his first Section 440 motion, but we are not
barred from considering his reference to his prior suicide
attempt, which was presented on that first motion.
II. Merits
Having resolved the extent to which Murden is procedurally
barred from federal habeas review of his ineffective assistance
claim concerning the EED defense, we turn to the merits of
Murden’s claim that his trial counsel should have consulted with
him regarding his EED defense, interviewed witnesses for that
defense, and explored his attempted suicide some four years
prior to the murder. Under AEDPA, when a claim “was adjudicated
on the merits in State court proceedings,” a federal court may
not issue a writ of habeas corpus unless the state court
adjudication “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or
involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United
States,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), or “was based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
presented in the State court proceeding.” Id. § 2254(d)(2).
Findings of fact by the state court are presumed correct, and
“[t]he applicant shall have the burden of rebutting the
presumption of correctness by clear and convincing evidence.”
Id. § 2254(e)(1). To find that a state court has unreasonably
applied clearly established federal law, “we must be able to
adequately identify why [we] found the [state-court] decision .
. . to be objectively unreasonable.” Jimenez, 458 F.3d at 147
(citation omitted).
In denying Murden’s initial Section 440 motion, the trial
court reached the merits of his ineffectiveness claim. 17 It
found that trial counsel had consulted with Murden at trial,
that Murden’s disagreement with his trial counsel’s “strategy or
tactics” did not result in ineffective assistance, and that the
proffered evidence from the uncalled witnesses, including the
evidence described in the Preston affidavit, had already been
presented to the jury through Murden’s own testimony and was in
any event insufficient to establish the EED defense. This
ruling on the merits is entitled to AEDPA deference. See 28
U.S.C. § 2254(d). Although the state court did not specifically
dismiss Murden’s assertion regarding the failure to investigate
the 1972 suicide attempt, an unexplained ruling on the merits is
also entitled to AEDPA deference. Jimenez, 458 F.3d at 143
(citing Sellan v. Kuhlman, 261 F.3d 303, 311-12 (2d Cir. 2001)).
Murden correctly identifies Strickland v. Washington, 466
U.S. 668 (1984), as the relevant Supreme Court precedent for
evaluating his claim of error. Under Strickland, a defendant
17
As described above, the state court ruled in the alternative
in denying Murden’s motion, finding that certain components of
the motion were procedurally barred, but that all of it should
be denied on the merits “in any event.”
must show that counsel’s representation “fell below an objective
standard of reasonableness” determined according to “prevailing
professional norms” and that “there is a reasonable probability
that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 688, 694. “A
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
confidence in the outcome.” Id. at 694. A court must consider
“the totality of the evidence before the judge or jury” in
judging counsel’s performance. Id. at 695. To prevail, a
defendant must establish both of Strickland’s prongs because,
otherwise, “it cannot be said that the conviction . . . resulted
from a breakdown in the adversary process that renders the
result unreliable.” Id. at 687. Counsel’s performance is
examined from counsel’s perspective at the time of and under the
circumstances of trial. Id. at 689. Counsel is “strongly
presumed” to have exercised reasonable judgment in all
significant decisions. Id. at 690.
Murden has not shown that the state court’s rejection of
Murden’s ineffective assistance claim was either contrary to, or
an unreasonable application of, the Strickland standard. Nor
has Murden presented clear and convincing evidence that the
state court’s factual findings were incorrect.
It was entirely reasonable for Murden’s counsel to pursue
as Murden’s primary defense the claim that Murden had killed
Miles in self-defense. The justification defense was consistent
with Murden=s description of the events that led to Miles’s
murder. Murden did not describe lashing out after Miles
rebuffed his request for a kiss. He did not assert that he
killed her because he suddenly feared that he would lose her or
his apartment. Instead, he described striking out only after
and in reaction to Miles’s attacking him with a knife and others
attacking him from behind. Even the Preston affidavit, which
Murden offered with his first Section 440 motion, corroborated
the justification defense. According to Preston, on the
Saturday night of the murder Murden reported that he had been
attacked and had acted to defend himself.
It is of course permissible as a legal matter for an
attorney to pursue alternative and even factually inconsistent
defenses, but as a practical matter, it is difficult for Murden
to show that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to
develop the EED defense further at trial. Murden argues that,
had his counsel been effective, he could have established that
Murden was predisposed to emotional disturbance based upon
troubles with girlfriends and that the taunting by Miles and her
family, Miles’s threats to kick him out of his apartment, and
her refusal to let him sleep with her on Friday night provoked
an extreme emotional disturbance that caused Murden to kill
Miles. Murden’s trial testimony did not support the asserted
EED defense, however, and was in fact inconsistent with it.
Moreover, with the exception of the victim, everyone who
was present in the apartment at the time of the murder testified
at trial, and their testimony was insufficient to establish
either the subjective or the objective component of the EED
defense. The state court heard Murden’s description at trial of
his troubled relationship with the victim, her taunts of him,
and the events as they unfolded that Friday and Saturday, and
concluded (as had the Appellate Division on Murden’s direct
appeal) that it did not establish an EED defense.
None of the witnesses Murden identified in his first
Section 440 motion could have done much to change that
perception; none was a witness to the events that occurred at
the murder scene that Saturday. Even Preston’s assertion in his
affidavit that Murden appeared unusually agitated and frightened
that Saturday night was of little benefit to Murden. If
anything, it undercut Murden=s assertions at trial that he didn=t
learn until years later that he had actually killed Miles and
that he had left New York to get medical treatment for his
stomach ailment and not to flee from imminent arrest.
In addition, the references in Murden’s first Section 440
motion to his 1972 suicide attempt, some four years before he
murdered Miles, do little to alter the prejudice calculus.
Nothing in those papers suggested that the 1972 incident, which
involved a different woman and was fairly remote in time,
revealed any probability that the circumstances existing just
prior to Miles’s murder would trigger in Murden a homicidal
emotional disturbance. Nothing in those papers suggested that
Murden’s mental condition in 1976 made such a disturbance a
reasonable response to the circumstances that Murden described
having experienced on the day he killed Miles.
In sum, when the evidence that Murden put before the state
court in his first Section 440 motion is viewed cumulatively, it
does not show sufficiently that the evidence would have created
a reasonable probability at trial that Murden would have
prevailed on an EED defense. More significantly for this
petition, it certainly does not permit us to find that the state
court unreasonably applied Strickland.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the opinion of the district
court is hereby AFFIRMED.
05-0610-pr
HALL, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
I agree with the result reached by the majority and its
analysis of the exhaustion issues. I write separately to
consider the claim that Judge Weinstein, in taking the rare step
of issuing a certificate of appealability, invited this Court to
consider: “petitioner’s claim that he was denied the effective
assistance of trial counsel because [counsel] failed to have the
petitioner assessed by a psychologist or psychiatrist and failed
to investigate or prosecute an extreme emotional disturbance
defense.” I think the majority wrongly implies (without
explicitly saying as much) that Murden failed to satisfy both
prongs of Strickland’s inquiry. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at
687. In my view, as discussed below, the record demonstrates
that Murden proved in his first § 440 motion filed in state
court and on habeas review in the district court that trial
counsel’s performance was not objectively reasonable. I concur
in the mandate, however, because I agree with the majority that
Murden failed to show prejudice. Only for that reason would I
hold that the ineffective assistance of counsel claim cannot
succeed.
1 The majority’s discussion of the objective reasonableness
2 of trial counsel’s performance is limited to the conclusion that
3 it was entirely reasonable for counsel to pursue self-defense as
4 a primary defense. Maj. Op. at Discussion Section II. But this
5 conclusion assumes that any deficiency in pursuing the EED
6 defense is therefore excused. I do not believe that Strickland
7 condones deficient performance in investigating one defense if
8 another also happens to be available. See, e.g., Michael v.
9 Crosby, 430 F.3d 1310, 1320 (11th Cir. 2005) (“Counsel’s duty to
10 investigate requires that counsel conduct a substantial
11 investigation into any of his client’s plausible lines of
12 defense.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see
13 also Eze v. Senkowski, 321 F.3d 110, 135-36 (2d Cir. 2003)
14 (ineffective assistance may be demonstrated where counsel
15 performs competently in some respects but not others). In
16 addition, in focusing only on the self-defense issue, the
17 majority does not consider the range of Murden’s allegations
18 properly before us: that trial counsel did not consult with
19 Murden regarding an EED defense, but should have done so; that
20 counsel did not interview witnesses for that defense, but should
21 have done so; and that counsel did not explore Murden’s past
22 attempted suicide, but should have done so.
23 Murden’s allegations are supported by the record. Pre-
24 trial transcripts show that counsel requested time to review the
1 file on the January 9, 1991 calendar call, and to “sit with the
2 defendant on one more occasion to prepare it.” 1/9/91 Hearing
3 Tr. at 6. Counsel’s notes indicate that he met with Murden for
4 one hour each on January 9 and on January 23, the day of the
5 next calendar call. At jury selection five days later (after a
6 three-day vacation), counsel was unable to name the witnesses he
7 intended to call until he consulted with his client. Although
8 counsel testified at the December 2004 hearing before the
9 district court that he did not remember whether he had met with
10 Murden at any other point before trial, he provided no evidence
11 to establish that he had done any investigation into the EED
12 defense.
13 Nothing in the record contradicts Murden’s assertions that
14 counsel did not consult with him about the EED defense or
15 otherwise pursue it. Even setting aside what has been asserted
16 about counsel’s pre-trial preparation, however, his actions at
17 trial proclaim that he did not prepare or investigate the EED
18 defense. Counsel neither mentioned the EED defense in his
19 opening statement, nor on cross-examination did he ever inquire
20 of witnesses about Murden’s emotional state. He did not call
21 any witnesses to bolster the defense. He introduced no evidence
22 of Murden’s psychiatric history or prior suicide attempt.
23 Unfortunately, it is little wonder that his request for an EED
45
1 charge at the conclusion of his case was denied for lack of
2 evidence supporting it.
3 “[C]ounsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or
4 to make a reasonable decision that makes particular
5 investigations unnecessary.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691. It is
6 readily apparent that counsel here gave no thought to laying the
7 foundation for the EED defense until the end of the trial. Had
8 counsel adequately prepared for the case, he would have thought
9 to raise the defense from the beginning. Had he done some
10 investigation, it would have revealed that Murden had a
11 psychiatric history and that he had threatened suicide and to
12 hurt his previous girlfriend when she threw him out of their
13 apartment. We also know that at least one psychologist believes
14 Murden was suffering from a mood and personality disorder and
15 could not manage his emotions. It is logical to conclude that
16 timely investigation would have revealed similar expert
17 testimony for use at the trial.
18 I can conceive of no strategic reason for an attorney who
19 wishes to assert an EED defense to decide not to: (1) consult
20 with his client about the defense; (2) interview witnesses with
21 the defense in mind; and (3) explore a documented past suicide
22 attempt made by his client. See id. at 690 (a court “must judge
23 the reasonableness of counsel’s challenged conduct on the facts
24 of the particular case, viewed as of the time of counsel’s
46
1 conduct”). Moreover, if, despite what the record clearly
2 indicates to me, counsel did in fact do some investigation into
3 this defense, I do not understand what strategy would compel
4 counsel to avoid presenting the defense in opening statements or
5 introducing any evidence or testimony supporting the defense.
6 See Eze, 321 F.3d at 136 (noting that, when strategic
7 considerations do not account for a challenged decision by
8 counsel, the deficient-performance prong of Strickland will
9 likely be met); Hart v. Gomez, 174 F.3d 1067, 1071 (9th Cir.
10 1999) (finding it “inconceivable” that strategy played a part in
11 counsel’s decision not to introduce readily-available evidence
12 that would have corroborated a particular line of defense).
13 Accordingly, to the extent the state court and district court
14 found trial counsel’s performance effective despite this lack of
15 preparation, and to the extent the majority implicitly adopts
16 these finding, I respectfully disagree.
47