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[DO NOT PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 20-13966
____________________
TAVARES J WRIGHT,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
Respondent-Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
D.C. Docket No. 8:17-cv-00974-WFJ-TGW
____________________
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2 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, JORDAN, and LUCK, Circuit
Judges.
PER CURIAM:
In April of 2000, as part of a multi-day crime spree involving
burglary, attempted murder, and carjacking, Tavares Wright and
Samuel Pitts kidnapped David Green and James Felker in Lakeland,
Florida. Shortly after the kidnappings, Mr. Wright murdered Mr.
Green and Mr. Felker. See Wright v. State, 19 So.3d 277, 283–91
(Fla. 2009) (Wright I) (setting out the chronology of the crimes in
detail).
After two mistrials, Mr. Wright was eventually convicted for
those murders. He received two death sentences based on his con-
victions, and he now appeals the district court’s denial of his habeas
corpus petition, which was filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
We granted Mr. Wright a certificate of appealability on
whether he is intellectually disabled and therefore ineligible for the
death penalty under the Eighth Amendment. Following a review
of the record, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the
district court’s denial of habeas relief on the intellectual disability
claim. 1
1As we write for the parties, we assume their familiarity with the record. We
therefore set out the procedural history and the facts only as necessary to ex-
plain our decision.
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 3
I
Florida defines intellectual disability as “significantly subav-
erage general intellectual functioning existing concurrently with
deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested during the period from
conception to age 18.” Fla. Stat. § 921.137(1) (2021). As Mr. Wright
acknowledges, see Appellant’s Br. at 9, this definition comports
with the standard set out by the Supreme Court in Hall v. Florida,
572 U.S. 701, 710 (2014).
On post-conviction review, the Florida Supreme Court
found that Mr. Wright is not intellectually disabled, but the United
States Supreme Court vacated and remanded for consideration of
the intellectual disability issue in light of Moore v. Texas, 137 S. Ct.
1039 (2017). See Wright v. State, 213 So.3d 881 (Fla. 2017) (Wright
II), vacated and remanded, 138 S. Ct. 360 (2017) (Mem). On re-
mand, the Florida Supreme Court again concluded that Mr. Wright
is not intellectually disabled for two reasons. First, he “failed to
prove significant subaverage intellectual functioning by clear and
convincing evidence. For instance, on his July 15, 2005, IQ test, [he]
scored an 82 with a range of 79-86, which is well above the approx-
imation for [intellectual disability].” Wright v. State, 256 So.3d 766,
772 (Fla. 2018) (Wright III). Second, he “failed to prove adaptive
deficits by clear and convincing evidence.” Id. at 778.
II
After the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Wright III, the
district court denied Mr. Wright’s amended petition for habeas re-
lief. With respect to the Eighth Amendment intellectual disability
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4 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
claim—which is the only claim before us—the district court con-
cluded that it reasonably determined that Mr. Wright was not in-
tellectually disabled for Eighth Amendment purposes, and that the
Florida Supreme Court came to that determination in a manner
consistent with controlling U.S. Supreme Court precedent.
On appeal, Mr. Wright asserts that the district court erred.
First, he argues that the state court record proves by clear and con-
vincing evidence that he is intellectually disabled and therefore in-
eligible for execution under the Eighth Amendment, as interpreted
by Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002). Second, and relatedly, he
argues that the Florida Supreme Court’s resolution of his intellec-
tual disability claim was an unreasonable application of clearly es-
tablished law as set forth in Atkins, Hall, and Moore.
III
The district court’s denial of Mr. Wright’s habeas petition is
subject to plenary review. See Fults v. GDCP Warden, 764 F.3d
1311, 1313 (11th Cir. 2014). But under the Antiterrorism and Effec-
tive Death Penalty Act, Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996),
Mr. Wright is entitled to relief only if the Florida Supreme Court’s
adjudication of his intellectual disability claim was “contrary to, or
involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Fed-
eral law, as determined by the Supreme Court,” or was “based on
an unreasonable determination of facts in light of the evidence pre-
sented in the State court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)–(2).
This standard is “difficult to meet.” Metrish v. Lancaster, 569 U.S.
351, 357–58 (2013) (internal quotation marks omitted).
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 5
A defendant in Florida must demonstrate intellectual disa-
bility by clear and convincing evidence. See Fla. Stat. § 921.137(4).
A determination as to intellectual disability is a finding of fact. See
Fults, 764 F.3d at 1319. As a result, the Florida Supreme Court’s
finding that Mr. Wright is not intellectually disabled is “presumed
to be correct,” and he has the burden of “rebutting the presump-
tion of correctness by clear and convincing evidence.” 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(e)(1). See Fults, 764 F.3d at 1319.
Mr. Wright’s factual and legal arguments are intertwined.
For purposes of clarity, we will first address the contention that the
Florida Supreme Court unreasonably applied clearly established
federal law. We will then consider the assertion that the Florida
Supreme Court made an unreasonable determination of fact in
concluding that he is not intellectually disabled.
IV
On the legal side, Mr. Wright does not claim that the Florida
Supreme Court’s decision in Wright III was contrary to clearly es-
tablished federal law; rather, he argues that it was an unreasonable
application of that law. Under § 2254(d)(1)’s unreasonable-applica-
tion clause, a prisoner is entitled to habeas relief only if “the state
court identifies the correct governing legal principle from the Su-
preme Court’s decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to
the facts of the case.” Fults, 764 F.3d at 1314 (cleaned up and cita-
tion omitted). An unreasonable application of clearly established
federal law “must be objectively unreasonable, not merely wrong.”
White v. Woodall, 572 U.S. 415, 419 (2014) (internal quotation
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6 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
marks and citation omitted). “[E]ven clear error will not suffice.”
Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). So, to obtain
habeas relief, a “prisoner must show that the state court’s ruling on
the claim being presented in federal court was so lacking in justifi-
cation that there was an error well understood and comprehended
in existing law beyond any possibility for fair[-]minded disagree-
ment.” Id. at 419–20 (quoting Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86,
103 (2011)).
Again, Mr. Wright contends that the Florida Supreme Court
unreasonably applied the legal principles established in Atkins,
Hall, and Moore to the facts of his case. As explained below, we
disagree.
A
In Atkins, the Supreme Court held that executing intellectu-
ally disabled individuals violates Eighth Amendment protections
against cruel and unusual punishment. But it tasked the states with
developing appropriate ways to enforce this constitutionally-man-
dated restriction. See 536 U.S. at 317.
The Court in Hall clarified that states do not have “unfet-
tered discretion to define the full scope of the constitutional pro-
tection,” but instead must establish a legal framework for deter-
mining intellectual disability that is “informed by the medical com-
munity’s diagnostic framework.” Hall, 572 U.S. at 719–21 (striking
down Florida’s strict IQ cutoff as conclusive of intellectual disabil-
ity without allowing for consideration of other evidence that may
indicate intellectual disability).
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 7
Hall recognized, consistent with clinical standards, that IQ
scores are imprecise and best measured as a range rather than a
single numerical score. See id. at 720. It further made clear that
“when a defendant’s IQ test score falls within the test’s acknowl-
edged and inherent margin of error, the defendant must be able to
present additional evidence of intellectual disability, including tes-
timony regarding adaptive deficits.” Id. at 723. And it reaffirmed, as
noted in Atkins, that “the medical community defines intellectual
disability according to three criteria: significantly subaverage intel-
lectual functioning, deficits in adaptive functioning (the inability to
learn basic skills and adjust behavior to changing circumstances),
and onset of these deficits during the developmental period.” Id. at
710.
Moore then expanded on the second criterion of this defini-
tion and emphasized the importance of adhering to contemporary
clinical standards in analyzing adaptive deficits. See Moore, 137 S.
Ct. at 1053. There, a Texas appellate court had denied a defendant
relief after relying on a seven-factor judicial test for determining
intellectual disability. See id. at 1051 (rejecting the application of
those factors to determine intellectual disability). The Supreme
Court noted that the seven-factor test advanced lay perceptions—
and outdated ones at that—of intellectual disability. See id. It re-
jected this approach as inconsistent with the rule established in
Hall, and it criticized the Texas appellate court’s analysis of Bobby
Moore’s adaptive functioning for “deviat[ing] from prevailing
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8 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
clinical standards and from the older clinical standards the court
claimed to apply.” Id. at 1050.
The Texas appellate court, the Supreme Court explained,
had “overemphasized [Mr.] Moore’s perceived adaptive strengths”
when it concluded that he did not suffer significant adaptive defi-
cits. Id. This was problematic because “the medical community fo-
cuses the adaptive-functioning inquiry on adaptive deficits.” Id.
(emphasis in original).
Moore was in many ways a straightforward application of
Hall. But it also emphasized that adaptive deficits—specifically,
“significant limitations in conceptual, social, or practical adaptive
skills,” id. (quoting American Association on Intellectual and De-
velopmental Disabilities, Intellectual Disability: Definition, Classi-
fication, and Systems of Supports 47 (11th ed. 2010) (AAIDD-11)),
are “not outweighed by the potential strengths in some adaptive
skills.” Id. See also id. (“deficits in only one of the three adaptive-
skills domains suffice to show adaptive deficits”) (citing American
Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Men-
tal Disorders 38 (5th ed. 2013) (DSM-5)).
With these legal principles in mind, we now turn to the Flor-
ida Supreme Court’s decision in Wright III.
B
Mr. Wright first challenges the Florida Supreme Court’s
finding with respect to prong one of the Florida statute, which
mimics the first criterion of the widely accepted diagnostic
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 9
framework: significantly subaverage general intellectual function-
ing. See Fla. Stat. § 921.137(1). The Florida statute defines the stat-
utory phrase “significantly subaverage general intellectual func-
tioning” as “performance that is two or more standard deviations
from the mean score on a standardized intelligence test.” Id. The
medical approximation of significant subaverage intellectual func-
tioning is therefore an IQ score of 70, give or take. But Hall, of
course, instructs that courts must account for a standard error of
measurement (SEM), which here is a range of plus or minus five
points. See Hall, 572 U.S. at 720. See also DSM-5, at 37.
The record reflects that Mr. Wright took a total of nine IQ
tests, beginning at age 10. We consider six of these tests in deter-
mining whether Mr. Wright had subaverage intellectual function-
ing for the purpose of capital sentencing, and these six reported
scores are between 75 and 82. See Appellant’s Br. at 13–15. 2
2 Two of the nine tests were Weschler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence
(WASI) tests, which Mr. Wright contends cannot be considered in the context
of capital punishment because the WASI is not explicitly listed as a permissible
test in Fla. Admin. Code. R. 65G-4.011(1). See Appellant’s Br. at 14 n. 10. We
assume, without deciding, that the WASI tests should not be taken into ac-
count because even without these tests Mr. Wright’s contention fails.
A third test score, administered in 2014 while Mr. Wright was incarcerated,
was unusually low. This was due (depending on which version of the facts one
believes) to either Mr. Wright’s malingering or the state expert’s use of a non-
standardized test procedure which fatigues the test taker. Again, we assume
for the sake of argument that this third test also should not be considered.
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10 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
Accounting for the SEM in a manner most favorable to Mr.
Wright (in other words, assuming every test score was improperly
inflated by five points), he still scored above 70 on all but two of
the tests. See D.E. 36 at 15, 89, 102–03. This led the postconviction
trial court, after remand due to Hall, to find that these IQ scores
did not demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that Mr.
Wright had significant subaverage general intellectual functioning.
See D.E. 37 at 122. As we explained earlier, the Florida Supreme
Court ruled in Wright III that this finding was supported by sub-
stantial evidence. See 256 So.3d at 772.
Mr. Wright now asserts that the Florida Supreme Court in
Wright III disregarded Hall and instead misconstrued IQ as a single
number (rather than a range) when it focused on his highest score
of 82 and failed to explicitly mention any of his other scores. This
is an incorrect reading of Hall—and of Wright III—for a couple of
reasons.
First, even when Florida courts used the strict-cutoff rule for
determining intellectual disability (the approach struck down in
Hall), they still considered multiple scores. See Hall, 572 U.S. at 734
(Alito, J., dissenting) (noting that Florida accounted for risk of error
by analyzing multiple test results). Hall did not establish any rule
regarding how to weigh IQ tests when a person takes several of
them; it instead held that “[e]ven when a person has taken multiple
tests, each separate score must be assessed using the SEM . . . .” Id.
at 714. And that is precisely what the Florida Supreme Court in
Wright III did with respect to Mr. Wright’s highest score of 82—it
noted this score reflected “a range of 79-86, which is well above the
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 11
approximation for [intellectual disability].” Wright III, 256 So.3d at
772.
Second, the Florida Supreme Court did not limit its analysis
to Mr. Wright’s highest score of 82. It noted in Wright III that the
most favorable evidence of Mr. Wright’s IQ range, adjusted for the
SEM, “dipped 1 point beneath 70” at “the lowest end of the range.”
Id. It also referenced “numerous IQ test scores above 70,” and con-
sidered testimony from two competing experts. Id.
On this record we cannot conclude that Wright III was an
unreasonable application of Hall. This is particularly so because the
postconviction trial court found that though Mr. Wright failed to
establish subaverage intellectual functioning, his scores did “fall
within the test’s acknowledged and inherent margin of error,” and
he therefore was entitled to present evidence of adaptive deficits.
See D.E. 37 at 122. And this is consistent with Hall. The Florida
courts’ approach here did not “fail[] to take into account the stand-
ard error of measurement;” nor did it “bar[] an essential part of a
sentencing court’s inquiry into adaptive functioning.” Hall, 572
U.S. at 724 (Alito, J., dissenting). Instead, the record reflects that
Mr. Wright “ha[d] the opportunity to present evidence of his intel-
lectual disability, including deficits in adaptive functioning over his
lifetime.” Id.
C
Before we turn to the arguments regarding the adaptive-def-
icits prong, we will consider one final claim Mr. Wright raises with
respect to the subaverage-intellectual-functioning prong. Mr.
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12 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
Wright asserts that the Florida courts unreasonably applied the
Hall command that the legal determination of intellectual disability
be “informed by the medical community’s diagnostic framework”
by failing to account for the so-called Flynn effect. See 572 U.S. at
721. The Flynn effect describes an upward drift in IQ scores over
time. Under this theory, a person’s score can be artificially higher
if he takes an IQ test several years after the test was normed on the
population. See Raulerson v. Warden, 928 F.3d 987, 1008 (11th Cir.
2019). See also AAIDD-11, at 37 (“Because Flynn reported that
mean IQ increases about 0.33 points per year, some investigators
have suggested that any obtained IQ score should be adjusted 0.33
points for each year the test was administered after the standardi-
zation was completed.”) (cleaned up).
Mr. Wright first took an IQ test at age 10, in 1991, and he
received a score of 76. Dr. Mary Kasper, an expert witness for the
defense, testified that the IQ test he took that year was normed on
the population in 1972, 19 years before the test. With a Flynn ad-
justment, Mr. Wright’s first score would therefore be 70. And his
score of 75, which he received at age 16 in 1997, would drop down
to a 69. Mr. Wright says that these scores are the most accurate and
reliable indicators of his true IQ.
We have, as Mr. Wright recognizes, previously held that
courts need not “accept and apply the Flynn effect.” Ledford v.
Warden, Ga. Diagnostic and Classification Prison, 818 F.3d 600,
636 (11th Cir. 2016). See also id. at 637 (“[O]ur Circuit . . . leaves it
to the fact-finder court to hear and consider the Flynn effect
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 13
evidence and to make its own fact-findings about the credibility and
weight of the expert evidence regarding the Flynn effect.”). And we
have observed that “there is no consensus about the Flynn effect
among experts or among the courts.” Raulerson, 928 F.3d at 1008.
Mr. Wright contends that there is now a general consensus in the
clinical manuals that Flynn adjustments are the best practice—but
he also acknowledges that not every expert in the field of intellec-
tual disability holds the same opinion. Compare Leigh D. Hagan et
al., IQ Scores Should Not Be Adjusted for the Flynn Effect in Capi-
tal Punishment Cases, 28 Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment
474 (2010), with Jack M. Fletcher, et al., IQ Scores Should Be Cor-
rected for the Flynn Effect in High-Stakes Decisions, 28 Journal of
Psychoeducational Assessment 469 (2010).
Only five years have elapsed since we rejected the same ar-
gument from the defendant in Ledford, see 818 F.3d at 637–39, and
we are not persuaded that the medical consensus has changed since
then. Indeed, one of the clinical manuals that Mr. Wright cites to
buttress his Flynn-effect argument is the same edition of the same
clinical manual cited by the defendant in Ledford—the DSM-5. See
Ledford, 818 F.3d at 637.
Mr. Wright also cites to the AAIDD-11, which does not ap-
pear to have been part of the evidentiary record in Ledford. But
that alone does not convince us that the general medical consensus
has changed. Just two years ago, in Raulerson, we again rejected a
Flynn-effect argument, explaining that “[n]o adjustment for the
Flynn effect is required in this Circuit.” Raulerson, 928 F.3d at 1008
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14 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
(noting that two psychologists who had administered the defend-
ant’s IQ tests “testified that they would not apply the Flynn effect
to the scores”). Mr. Wright acknowledges the holdings in Ledford
and Raulerson, and then asks us to reach a different conclusion. But
he does not in his brief attempt to explain how the medical consen-
sus has changed since those cases. And if nothing has changed, Led-
ford and Raulerson constitute binding precedent for us as a later
panel.
Having concluded that the Florida Supreme Court in
Wright III did not unreasonably apply clearly established federal
law in analyzing the intellectual-functioning prong, we now turn
to Mr. Wright’s arguments concerning the adaptive-deficits prong.
D
Mr. Wright contends that the district court erred in its anal-
ysis of adaptive deficits—the second prong of both the Florida stat-
ute and the widely accepted diagnostic framework. As Moore rec-
ognized, “the medical community focuses the adaptive-function-
ing inquiry on adaptive deficits,” rather than adaptive strengths.
137 S. Ct. at 1050. Adaptive deficits are defined as “the inability to
learn basic skills and adjust behavior to changing circumstances.”
Hall, 572 U.S. at 710. Moore cautioned courts, pursuant to clinical
recommendations, to not focus too heavily “on adaptive strengths
developed ‘in a controlled setting,’” such as a prison. 137 S. Ct. at
1050 (citations omitted).
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 15
The DSM-5 and the AAIDD-11 divide adaptive functioning
into three categories: conceptual, social, and practical. See AAIDD-
11, at 43; DSM-5, at 37. Adaptive deficits exist when at least one of
the three domains “is sufficiently impaired that ongoing support is
needed in order for the person to perform adequately in one or
more life settings at school, at work, at home, or in the commu-
nity.” DSM-5, at 38.
According to Mr. Wright, the Florida Supreme Court in
Wright III unreasonably applied Moore by overemphasizing ex-
pert- and lay-witness testimony of his perceived adaptive strengths
while disregarding evidence of his deficits in all three categories of
adaptive behavior. The Florida Supreme Court compounded this
error, Mr. Wright argues, by relying too heavily on his prison be-
havior in its analysis.
The Florida Supreme Court noted that Moore was unclear
in instructing courts as to what degree of emphasis on adaptive
strengths constitutes overemphasis. It described “the difficult posi-
tion that the States are placed in due to the Supreme Court’s lack
of clear guidance on this analysis” and due to its directive that states
should “interpret and follow two clinical manuals that caution peo-
ple like us from making untrained ID diagnoses.” Wright III, 256
So.3d at 776 n.9. While acknowledging that Wright II had indeed
discussed some of Mr. Wright’s adaptive strengths and behavior in
prison, the Florida Supreme Court nonetheless concluded in
Wright III that the decision in Wright II boiled down to “the com-
peting expert medical testimony of [state expert] Dr. Gamache and
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16 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
[defense expert] Dr. Kasper,” whose testimony was based on “cur-
rent medical standards.” Id. at 775, 777. Notably, the Florida Su-
preme Court in Wright III found that Wright II did not “inde-
pendently weigh[ ] strengths and deficits,” like the Texas appellate
court had done in Moore, nor did it base its decision on outdated
standards and nonclinical factors. Id.
The Florida Supreme Court did not unreasonably apply
Moore. Though Wright III certainly criticized Moore, it also spent
several pages distinguishing its decision in Wright II from the Texas
appellate court’s decision in Moore. And the distinctions it made
were plausible. For example, with respect to the overemphasis-on-
adaptive-strengths issue, the Florida Supreme Court pointed out
that even though it considered some expert testimony that detailed
strengths in certain areas, “much of the evidence that the [Wright
II] opinion detailed was directly relevant to the conceptual do-
main,” whereas the Texas appellate court in Moore had “used com-
pletely unrelated adaptive strengths . . . to outweigh the extensive
evidence of adaptive deficits in all three domains.” Id. at 777 (citing
Moore, 137 S. Ct. at 1045–47). The key difference, as the Florida
Supreme Court saw it, was that in Wright II it did not “arbitrarily
offset deficits with unconnected strengths” but instead “relied on
expert testimony with regard to connected adaptive deficits and the
postconviction court’s credibility determinations.” Id.
This is not an unreasonable application of Moore. The rec-
ord does not reflect that there was overwhelming evidence of
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 17
adaptive deficits that the Florida Supreme Court disregarded in fa-
vor of lay perceptions about adaptive strengths.
With respect to the prison-behavior issue, the Florida Su-
preme Court in Wright III again criticized Moore, noting that it is
likewise difficult to know where the Supreme Court drew the line
for reliance on prison conduct. See 256 So.3d at 777–78. It then
pointed out that the only portion of its decision in Wright II where
it discussed prison conduct was when it recited the findings of the
state expert, Dr. Gamache. Id. at 777. Mr. Wright asserts that Dr.
Gamache primarily based his opinion on a single interview with
him while he was imprisoned, and that therefore the Florida Su-
preme Court’s reliance on this opinion contradicts Moore.
We do not agree. In addition to what we’ve summarized,
the Florida Supreme Court relied heavily on evidence from outside
of the prison context—and, to the extent that it relied on some be-
havior within the prison, it did not stress “improved behavior in
prison” the way that the Texas appellate court did in Moore. 137 S.
Ct. at 1050. Indeed, it was this “improved behavior in prison” that
the Texas appellate court in Moore used to justify disregarding ev-
idence of adaptive deficits from earlier in the defendant’s life. Id.
The Florida Supreme Court, on the other hand, “merely listed con-
nected facts that Dr. Gamache relied upon to render his medical
conclusion that [Mr.] Wright does not have adaptive deficits.”
Wright III, 256 So.3d at 777.
It is also worth pointing out that the Supreme Court decided
Moore on direct review, rather than on federal collateral review,
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18 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
where AEDPA requires substantial deference. See Clemons v.
Commissioner, Al. Department of Corrections, 967 F.3d 1231, 1250
(11th Cir. 2020). Here we must find not only that the Florida Su-
preme Court erred, but that its application of Moore was “objec-
tively unreasonable,” White, 572 U.S. at 419 (internal quotation
marks omitted), and we are confident that it was not.
V
On the factual side, Mr. Wright argues that the state court
record proves by clear and convincing evidence that he is intellec-
tually disabled and thus ineligible for execution under Atkins, 536
U.S. 304. We conclude that the Florida Supreme Court’s finding to
the contrary was not an unreasonable determination of fact in light
of the evidence presented in the state court proceedings and that
Mr. Wright has not rebutted by clear and convincing evidence the
presumption of correctness given to that factual finding.
Mr. Wright acknowledges that he has a mild level of disabil-
ity but argues that it nonetheless precludes his execution. As dis-
cussed earlier, he asserts that the postconviction trial court improp-
erly interpreted his IQ scores, and that the scores he received
should not be given equal evidentiary weight. In fact, he says, the
postconviction trial court should have discounted four of them as
unreliable indicators of his IQ because they were either artificially
inflated by the practice effect or because he achieved them after the
developmental stage.
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20-13966 Opinion of the Court 19
In analyzing the subaverage intellectual functioning prong,
the postconviction court considered competing expert testimony
from Dr. Kasper and Dr. Gamache, as well as numerous IQ scores
above 70 (after SEM adjustments) to determine that there was
competent and substantial evidence for it to find that Mr. Wright
“failed to prove significant subaverage intellectual functioning.”
See Wright III, 256 So.3d at 772. For several reasons, this was not
an unreasonable determination of fact.
First, as we said above, the medical approximation of signif-
icant subaverage intellectual functioning is an IQ score of 70, give
or take. Mr. Wright’s scores ranged from 75 to 82. Even accounting
for the SEM adjustment, it was not unreasonable for the postcon-
viction court and the Florida Supreme Court to find, based on Mr.
Wright’s scores, that he did not meet the significant subaverage in-
tellectual functioning prong. Cf. Clemons, 967 F.3d at 1248–49
(state court’s finding that defendant failed to show significantly
subaverage intellectual functioning when his scores ranged from
51 to 84 was not an unreasonable determination of fact).
Second, the state’s expert, Dr. Gamache—who administered
one of Mr. Wright’s IQ tests—had expressed concerns in his testi-
mony that Mr. Wright malingered on both that test and his previ-
ous tests. He also opined that “one can malinger and fake a low IQ”
but one “cannot fake a higher IQ.” Wright II, 213 So.3d at 898. This
testimony could reasonably be viewed by the postconviction trial
court as more credible and persuasive than that of Mr. Wright’s
expert, Dr. Kasper, who testified about the practice effect. Cf.
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20 Opinion of the Court 20-13966
Clemons, 967 F.3d at 1249 (allowing state courts to take into ac-
count expert opinions that the defendant was malingering).
The postconviction trial court also considered Dr. Kasper’s
testimony regarding the practice effect. Dr. Kasper testified that the
most accurate range of scores for Mr. Wright was derived from his
first IQ examination in 1991, which yielded a score of 76 (between
a 69 and 82, she testified, if one applies the SEM to a 95 percent
confidence interval). See Wright II, 213 So.3d at 897–98. And even
Dr. Kasper conceded that the score of 82 was within the 95 percent
confidence interval she determined from applying the SEM to Mr.
Wright’s first exam. See id. at 898. Based on this testimony, and the
scores themselves, we cannot conclude that the postconviction
trial court made an unreasonable determination of fact with re-
spect to the subaverage-intellectual-functioning prong, or that the
Florida Supreme Court erred in affirming that finding.
The same is true of the postconviction trial court’s factual
findings regarding the adaptive-deficits prong. Here, again, the
postconviction trial court was faced with “the competing expert
medical testimony of Dr. Gamache and Dr. Kasper,” Wright III,
256 So.3d at 777, and it chose to credit Dr. Gamache’s testimony
over Dr. Kasper’s. Dr. Gamache testified that Mr. Wright has some
deficits in reading and writing skills but attributed them to a lack of
education and a learning disability rather than to an intellectual dis-
ability. See Wright II, 213 So.3d at 899. Dr. Gamache did point to
some adaptive strengths in explaining why these deficits do not rise
to the level required for a determination of intellectual disability.
USCA11 Case: 20-13966 Date Filed: 11/15/2021 Page: 21 of 21
20-13966 Opinion of the Court 21
See id. at 899–900. But, as explained above, we think it is reasonable
to read Moore as stopping short of precluding courts from consid-
ering any evidence of adaptive strengths, especially when those
adaptive strengths are directly relevant—in an expert’s view—to
disproving adaptive deficits.
The postconviction trial court also explained at length why
it disregarded the testimony of Mr. Wright’s expert, Dr. Kasper,
who had conceded that she had not administered the standardized
test for adaptive functioning in “the normal way.” Id. at 900. This
gave the court “great pause in considering its validity,” and we do
not view that as an unreasonable determination of fact. Id. As a
result, the denial of Mr. Wright’s intellectual disability claim by the
postconviction trial court and the Florida Supreme Court in
Wright III was not based on an unreasonable determination of the
facts.
VI
We affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Wright’s petition
for a writ of habeas corpus.
AFFIRMED.