[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED
________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
May 31, 2006
No. 05-14334 THOMAS K. KAHN
______________________ CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 04-00405-CV-WTH-GRJ
GUY RICHARD GAMBLE,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
SECRETARY, FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
FLORIDA ATTORNEY GENERAL,
Respondents-Appellees.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
_________________________
(May 31, 2006)
Before ANDERSON, BARKETT, and MARCUS, Circuit Judges.
BARKETT, Circuit Judge:
Guy Richard Gamble, a death-sentenced state prisoner, appeals the district
court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254. We review his petition on the two grounds specified in our Certificate of
Appealability: (1) the trial court’s failure to hold a Faretta 1 hearing after Gamble’s
alleged attempt to dismiss his counsel; and (2) Gamble’s claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel. The ineffective assistance claim is based on: (a) the failure
of Gamble’s counsel to raise the aforementioned Faretta issue on appeal; and (b)
his trial counsel’s contradiction, at the penalty phase, of facts argued by guilt-
phase counsel. Gamble argues that such self-contradiction by the defense team
destroyed credibility with the jury on an issue directly affecting his death
sentence.2
The facts of Gamble’s crime were succinctly described by the Florida
Supreme Court as follows:
Guy R. Gamble and Michael Love murdered their landlord, Helmut
Kuehl, by striking him several times in the head with a claw hammer
and choking him with a cord.
...
[A]pproximately six days before the murder[,] Gamble told his
girlfriend that he was going to “take out” Kuehl. The day before the
murder he instructed his girlfriend to pack their belongings because
they would be leaving town. He also had her sit at a table pretending
1
Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806, 807 (1975), held that a defendant in a state criminal
trial has a constitutional right to proceed without counsel when he voluntarily and intelligently
elects to do so. The purpose of a Faretta hearing is to determine whether a defendant’s decision
to represent himself is, in fact, voluntary and intelligent.
2
In light of the United States Supreme Court’s holding in Florida v. Nixon, 543 U.S. 175
(2004), Gamble has abandoned certain other ineffective assistance claims based on concessions
(regarding his participation in the murder) in guilt-phase counsel’s opening statement.
2
to write a rent receipt, whereupon he would sneak up behind her and
practice choking her with a cord. The day of the murder Gamble
picked up his final paycheck and returned home, where he and Love
gathered money to use as a guise for rent payment. They approached
Kuehl, who was sitting in his garage, engaged him in conversation,
and asked for a rent receipt. When Kuehl went to his apartment to
obtain the receipt, Love searched the garage for a weapon, found a
claw hammer, and placed it on a counter. Kuehl returned to the
garage, Gamble picked up the claw hammer and struck Kuehl in the
head with such force that Kuehl fell to the floor. Gamble then got on
top of Kuehl, held him down, and instructed Love to shut the garage
doors. After shutting the doors, Love took the claw hammer and
proceeded to repeatedly strike Kuehl in the head. After the hitting
ceased, Love wrapped a cord around Kuehl's neck and began choking
him. Gamble stated that there was no reason to choke their victim and
urged that they just leave him. Gamble then wrapped the hammer and
cord in newspaper and left them lying on the floor. After cleansing
themselves of their victim's blood, Gamble and Love stole Kuehl's car,
picked up their girlfriends, . . . forged and cashed a check on Kuehl's
account, and left town.
Gamble v. State, 659 So. 2d 242, 244-45 (Fla. 1995).
Based on these facts, the jury found Gamble guilty of murder in the first
degree, armed robbery, and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. It recommended
the death penalty by a ten-to-two vote, and the trial court followed this
recommendation.
Gamble unsuccessfully appealed his murder conviction and death sentence
to the Florida Supreme Court, see id., and the United States Supreme Court denied
his petition for certiorari. Gamble v. Florida, 516 U.S. 1122 (1996). Gamble then
returned to state court for collateral relief pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal
3
Procedure 3.850. Nine of Gamble’s claims were summarily dismissed and, after
an evidentiary hearing, the court denied relief on the three remaining claims. This
judgment was affirmed by the Florida Supreme Court in Gamble v. State, 877
So. 2d 706 (Fla. 2004). Gamble then filed this federal habeas petition, which was
denied by the district court in Gamble v. Crosby, No. 504CV405OC10GRJ, 2005
WL 1618212 (M.D. Fla. July 5, 2005), as was his subsequent Notice of Appeal,
which the district court properly treated as an Application for Certificate of
Appealability. See Edwards v. United States, 114 F.3d 1083 (11th Cir. 1997).
Gamble filed a formal Application for Certificate of Appealability, which this
Court granted with respect to the two issues addressed here: the trial court’s failure
to hold a Faretta hearing and the allegedly ineffective assistance of Gamble’s
counsel.
We review de novo the district court’s denial of habeas relief under 28
U.S.C. § 2254. Because the state court adjudicated Gamble’s claims on the merits,
§ 2254(d)(2) withholds the writ unless the state court’s conclusions were “contrary
to,” or involved an “unreasonable application of,” federal law. A decision
“contrary to” federal law contradicts the United States Supreme Court on a settled
question of law or holds differently than did that Court on a set of materially
indistinguishable facts – in short, it is a decision “substantially different from the
4
[Supreme Court’s] relevant precedent.” Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 405
(2000). A decision that unreasonably applies federal law identifies the correct
governing legal principle as articulated by the United States Supreme Court, but
unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the petitioner’s case,
“unreasonably extends [the] principle . . . to a new context where it should not
apply, or unreasonably refuses to extend [it] to a new context where it should
apply.” Id. at 407.
The Florida Supreme Court considered both of the issues presently before
us. With regard to Gamble’s Faretta claim, it held that “no Faretta inquiry was
necessary in this case because Gamble never asked to represent himself.” Gamble,
877 So. 2d at 718 (citing Tefeteller v. Dugger, 734 So. 2d 1009, 1028 (Fla. 1999)).
The state Supreme Court also rejected Gamble’s ineffective assistance claims. It
held, first, that precisely because there was no need for a Faretta inquiry in the trial
court, Gamble “cannot demonstrate that failure of appellate counsel to raise [the
Faretta] issue undermined confidence in the outcome of the appeal.” Id. at 719.
Second, the Florida Supreme Court determined that “it would have been
preposterous for penalty-phase defense counsel to argue that no facts in the record
established pecuniary gain when the jury found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that it
did. . . . [T]his is not a case where defense counsel conceded an aggravator that
5
required proof of additional facts not established in the guilt-phase trail . . . .” Id.
at 716 (internal quotation marks omitted).
As to each of these issues, we address whether the Florida Supreme Court’s
determinations were “contrary to,” or involved an “unreasonable application of,”
federal law.
I. Failure to Hold a Faretta Hearing
Prior to trial, the court considered a potential conflict of interest issue
regarding Gamble’s continued representation by the Public Defender’s Office. The
record reflects the following exchange on this matter:
THE COURT: Before we get started on all the motions, . . . I think
there’s an issue that needs to be addressed regarding the continued
representing of the defendant, Mr. Gamble, by Mr. Nacke, and in
particular, the Public Defender’s Office; is that correct, Mr. Nacke?
MR. NACKE: Yes, . . . I know the Court is aware of the situation. Our
office and myself was instructed to go to my client with a Consent and
Waiver Form to ask him to consent and waive a potential conflict
because of a relationship between Michael Johnson and Michelle
Morley. Michael Johnson being the Chief Assistant Public Defender
of the Fifth Judicial Circuit in our office and Michelle Morley being
one of the attorneys representing Mike Love. Based on that, and also
the fact that Susan Graves who is employed as an Assistant Public
Defender in the office of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, the Public
Defender’s Office, is the wife of Michael Graves, who is counsel for
co-Defendant Michael Love. We were asked to notif[y] Mr. Gamble
of that situation . . . and to ask him to sign a consent for us to continue
representing him and to waive any potential conflict those
relationships may create.
6
It has been our position from the outset of this request that, that there
was no conflict, that there was no ethical duty for us to obtain this
consent or waiver, . . . . The potential itself is, is not a conflict [nor]
an ethical violation. . . .
As instructed . . . I drafted a Consent and Waiver Form for Mr.
Gamble to sign, took it over to him, and he had many reservations.
He considered it for a couple of days, and he indicated to me that he
did not want to sign it; that, you know, that has caused him to distrust
me as his attorney and the office of the Public Defender’s Office in
representing him. He told me that he wanted to have substitute
counsel, did not want us to represent him anymore. I will let him, you
know, make that motion himself, your Honor. . . .
THE COURT: [M]r. Gamble.
GAMBLE: At this time, your Honor, it’s not so much that I distrust
Mark as he said, I just feel that they brought me this potential conflict
and I didn’t – I don’t see a problem with it but there, you know, I
don’t understand why it was brought to me if it wasn’t a conflict, if it
wasn’t an ethical problem, you know. I didn’t know about it
beforehand, so, you know, I have a problem with signing it if, you
know, if you can see fit to substitute counsel, you know.
THE COURT: Do you know of anything that your attorney has done
that is inappropriate or improper on, on your behalf in representing
you?
GAMBLE: Well, not anything that I could substantiate with law, you
know. I’ve been to the law library here in Lake County and there’s
nothing that says that he’s done anything legally or ethically wrong
but . . .
THE COURT: Do you know of any improper exchange of
confidential or privileged information by your attorney with anybody
else in this case?
GAMBLE: No, I don’t.
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THE COURT: Is there any hint that that might have happened as far
as you’re concerned?
GAMBLE: Not – No, there’s no hint that there was but I just, you
know, all I can say is there’s a potential of, you know, a relationship
between the persons, you know, the situation things could be said at
moments that, you know, normally wouldn’t leave those two people
but in the circumstances.
THE COURT: Okay. Anything else, sir?
GAMBLE: No.
After further testimony from counsel for Gamble and co-defendant Love, the court
“[found] that there are no grounds for removal of your attorney, Mr. Gamble, . . .
no evidence to support that [request], . . . and no grounds to appoint another
counsel in this case.”
In addition to agreeing with the trial court’s substantive findings as to the
necessity of removing and appointing counsel, Gamble, 877 So. 2d at 717-18, the
Florida Supreme Court held that “no Faretta inquiry was necessary in this case
because Gamble never asked to represent himself.” Id. at 718 (citing Tefeteller v.
Dugger, 734 So. 2d 1009, 1028 (Fla. 1999)). We cannot say that this
determination was “contrary to,” or was “an unreasonable application” of, Supreme
Court precedent – including U.S. v. Faretta, 422 U.S. 806 (1974).
Faretta held that “a defendant in a state criminal trial has a constitutional
right to proceed without counsel when he voluntarily and intelligenly elects to do
8
so.” Id. at 807. Thus, in order for there to be a Faretta violation, the defendant
must have indicated that he wishes to conduct his own defense. Gamble’s
statements to the trial court simply did not express this wish. Rather, Gamble
submitted – at most – a conditional request: essentially, “I would like to discharge
my counsel if the court will appoint a different one.” Gamble points to no
precedent from the United States Supreme Court supporting his contention that this
request should have been treated as an invocation of his Faretta right, and he
ignores that Court’s strongly worded suggestion to the contrary.3
As the Florida Supreme Court recognized, a defendant’s assertion of his
desire to proceed without counsel is the starting-point for any federal Faretta
claim: “If the defendant decides to continue without representation, the dictates of
Faretta are triggered, and the trial court must determine whether the defendant’s
decision is knowingly and intelligently made.” Gamble, 877 So. 2d at 717. In
holding that Gamble did not ask to continue without representation, the state
Supreme Court did not contradict or unreasonably apply United States Supreme
Court precedent. Therefore Gamble’s Faretta claim must fail.
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
3
See Wheat v. United States, 486 U.S. 153, 159 n.3 (1988) (“Our holding in Faretta . . .
that a criminal defendant has a Sixth Amendment right to represent himself if he voluntarily
elects to do so, does not encompass the right to choose any advocate if the defendant wishes to
be represented by counsel.”) (emphasis in original).
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A. Counsel’s Failure to Raise Faretta Claim
Gamble argues that his counsel was unconstitutionally ineffective in failing
to raise the Faretta issue just discussed. To succeed on this claim, Gamble must
show that his attorney’s performance was deficient and that the deficiency was
prejudicial. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). The Florida
Supreme Court found neither element in the present case. Because Gamble’s
substantive Faretta argument itself fails, the Court reasoned that Gamble “cannot
demonstrate that failure of appellate counsel to raise [the] issue undermined
confidence in the outcome of the appeal.” Gamble, 877 So. 2d 719. We agree.
This Court has no cause to question the Florida Supreme Court’s determination
that, under the state’s own laws, Gamble never asked to represent himself.4 Nor
does federal law require such an interpretation, for the reasons explained in the
4
Of course,“in the context of a federal habeas proceeding,” the independent and adequate
state grounds doctrine has “excluded from consideration any questions of state substantive
law . . . where questions of that sort are . . . in themselves dispositive of [a petitioner’s] case.”
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72, 81 (1977) (emphasis added). Here, however, Gamble’s
alleged entitlement to a Faretta hearing under state law poses a question antecedent to his
federal ineffective-assistance claim. Thus the state law question is not in itself dispositive,
making this is one of “a broad set of situations in which federal constitutional or statutory law
[would] operate[] to protect an entitlement created primarily, if not exclusively, by state law.”
Fallon, Meltzer, & Shapiro, Hart and Weschler’s The Federal Courts and the Federal System 540
(5th ed. 2003). Though the application of these principles can be difficult, see generally id. at
527-40, they pose no problem here, as Gamble’s state law claim was based on dicta in Hardwick
v. State, 521 So. 2d 1071, 1074 (Fla. 1988). Moreover, the Hardwick Court stressed that
“vacillation on the question of self-representation has been held a sufficient grounds for denying
the request,” with courts “long requir[ing] that a request for self-representation be stated
unequivocally.” Id. at 1074-75.
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previous section. Therefore we do not find that the Florida Supreme Court’s
determination was “contrary to,” or was “an unreasonable application” of, United
States Supreme Court precedent – including Strickland.
B. Contradictory Statements by Guilt-Phase and Penalty-Phase Counsel
In the guilt phase of Gamble’s trial, counsel proceeded on a theory of theft-
after-the-killing – which is to say that, notwithstanding other admissions as to
Gamble’s guilt, counsel declined to concede a pecuniary-gain aggravator. In the
penalty phase, however, where it was the State’s responsibility to prove
aggravating factors sufficient to impose the death penalty, second chair defense
counsel (a different attorney than guilt-phase counsel) told the jury that “this
murder . . was committed for financial gain, there’s no question about that, it was a
robbery. Guy Gamble was involved in that robbery. You have heard all the
testimony.” Counsel further stated that Gamble’s involvement in the planning of
the robbery “is not in dispute and never has been,” and he conceded outright that
an aggravator existed “because it was for financial gain. . . . [T]he evidence you
have before you is of a heightened premeditation for robbery.”
Reviewing this claim, the Florida Supreme Court held that “it would have
been preposterous for penalty-phase defense counsel to argue that no facts in the
record established pecuniary gain when the jury found, beyond a reasonable doubt,
11
that it did. . . . [T]his is not a case where defense counsel conceded an aggravator
that required proof of additional facts not established in the guilt-phase trial . . . .”
Id. at 716 (internal quotation marks omitted). We do not find that this
determination was “contrary to,” or was “an unreasonable application” of, federal
Supreme Court precedent – including Strickland. Again, counsel is ineffective
under Strickland if his performance is both deficient and prejudicial. Even if
contradictory statements might sometimes furnish a case for deficiency, see Florida
v. Nixon, 543 U.S. 175, 191-92 (2004), in this case, as the Florida Supreme Court
observed, the jury had already discounted guilt-phase counsel’s theft-after-the-
killing theory when sentencing-phase counsel conceded the pecuniary gain
aggravator. Such concession obviously could not have been prejudicial, nor could
it have rendered counsel’s performance deficient, as its content was beyond
genuine dispute in the penalty phase. Accordingly, the Florida Supreme Court’s
determination was neither “contrary to,” nor “an unreasonable application” of,
Supreme Court precedent.
AFFIRMED.
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