William Emmett Lecroy, Jr. v. United States , 739 F.3d 1297 ( 2014 )


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  •              Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 1 of 54
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    __________________________
    No. 12-15132
    __________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 2:08-cv-00083-RWS
    WILLIAM EMMETT LECROY, JR.,
    Petitioner - Appellant,
    versus
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Respondent - Appellee.
    __________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Georgia
    __________________________
    (January 15, 2014)
    Before TJOFLAT, HULL, and MARCUS, Circuit Judges.
    TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:
    William Emmett LeCroy, Jr. is a federal death-row inmate. In 2004, he was
    convicted in the Northern District of Georgia of taking a motor vehicle by force
    from Joann Lee Tiesler, resulting in her death. See 18 U.S.C. § 2119(3) (2010).
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    LeCroy was sentenced to death, and this court affirmed his conviction and sentence
    on direct appeal. United States v. LeCroy, 
    441 F.3d 914
    (11th Cir. 2006), cert.
    denied 
    550 U.S. 905
    (2007). LeCroy then petitioned the District Court to vacate
    his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (2010). The court, after holding a three-
    day evidentiary hearing, denied his petition. United States v. LeCroy, Nos. 2:02-
    CR-38-RWS-SSC, 2:08-CV-2277-RWS, 
    2012 WL 1114238
    (N.D. Ga. Mar. 30,
    2012). LeCroy now appeals that ruling. His claim is that he was denied the
    effective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase of his trial in violation of
    the Sixth Amendment. 1 See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 80 L. Ed. 2d (1984). After reviewing the record and the parties’ briefs, and
    after hearing oral argument, we affirm the judgment of the District Court.
    1
    The Sixth Amendment provides, in relevant part, that “In all criminal prosecutions, the
    accused shall . . . have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” U.S. Const. amend. VI.
    Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1), the District Court issued a certificate presenting for
    appeal the following claims of ineffective assistance of counsel:
    Mental Health Case:
    1. Failure to adequately investigate and present a mental health case;
    2. Failure to conduct and present an adequate and comprehensive mitigation
    investigation and present character witnesses who were properly prepared;
    3. Failure to proffer Petitioner’s teaching expert testimony which would have allowed
    the District Court to rule on the scope of the Government’s rebuttal evidence and on whether the
    Government was entitled to evaluate Petitioner;
    4. Failure to make an effective penalty phase closing argument regarding mitigation
    evidence actually presented.
    Instruction on Future Dangerousness: failure of counsel to object to the instruction
    regarding claimed future dangerousness because of the “risk” of escape.
    Instruction on balancing of aggravating and mitigating sentencing factors: failure to
    object to the District Court’s failure to instruct the jury that before imposing the death penalty, it
    must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating
    factors presented by the defense.
    2
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    I.
    The basic facts of the crime for which LeCroy was convicted and sentenced
    have never been in dispute: on October 7, 2001, LeCroy broke into the home of
    Joann Tiesler, raped and murdered her, and fled in her car to the Canadian border,
    where he was arrested two days later. But because evaluating LeCroy’s § 2255
    claim requires an understanding of his life and background, we begin in Subpart A
    with a sketch of LeCroy’s biography up to the murder, then describe the murder
    and his arrest. Subpart B deals with LeCroy’s attorneys, their investigation of the
    case, and their strategic choices heading to trial. Subpart C recounts the events at
    trial, and Subpart D describes the § 2255 proceedings in the District Court.
    A.
    LeCroy was born in 1970 in Marietta, Georgia, to William Emmett LeCroy,
    Sr., and Donna Houston. At seventeen, shortly after his parents divorced, he
    joined the United States Army. Stationed in Hawaii, LeCroy went absent-without-
    leave and lived on the streets of Honolulu, supporting himself by breaking into
    homes to steal food. He was arrested in 1989 and discharged from the Army.
    Then nineteen years old, LeCroy moved back in with his mother—who had since
    married Sam Houston, a former police partner of LeCroy’s father—in Cobb
    County, Georgia, just northwest of Atlanta.
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    While living with his mother and stepfather, LeCroy began a sexual
    relationship with one of Sam Houston’s two daughters, Alecia, who was just shy of
    her fourteenth birthday. The family discovered the relationship in January, 1990,
    when Alecia’s mother—Sam Houston’s ex-wife—found a note written by Alecia
    to a friend detailing her sexual encounters with LeCroy. Alecia’s mother reported
    the incident to the police and urged local authorities to charge LeCroy with
    statutory rape.
    Meanwhile, the Cobb County police were investigating a string of burglaries
    that occurred between late 1990 and early 1991. The police identified LeCroy as a
    suspect and arrested him on March 3, 1991, following a traffic stop. Police found
    a gun in LeCroy’s car along with several handwritten notes. 2
    LeCroy was first convicted in state court for aggravated assault, burglary,
    child molestation, and statutory rape. As he was serving his sentence for those
    crimes, he was convicted in federal court for possession of a sawed-off shotgun,
    which he had obtained in one of his burglaries. He served an additional five years
    in federal prison for that offense. In total, he was incarcerated for just over ten
    years.
    2
    One of the notes described a plan to “rob cars and kill people driving so the car can be
    used two or three days.” Another note appeared to list steps for avoiding apprehension:
    “burglarize house,” “flee and switch cars,” “be ruthless and famous,” “rape rob and pillage.” A
    third note was titled “H-L” and contained a list of names. Police believed “H-L” stood for “hit
    list,” and the names were people LeCroy wanted to kill.
    4
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    LeCroy was released from federal prison in August 2001 and subject to a
    three-year term of supervised release. He moved back in with his mother and Sam
    Houston, who had since relocated to Blue Ridge, Georgia, in the mountains south
    of the Tennessee border. LeCroy was required to undergo a psychosexual
    evaluation as a condition of supervised release, but LeCroy left the evaluation
    prematurely. His probation officer warned that if he refused the evaluation he
    risked being sent back to prison, so LeCroy agreed to return to complete the
    evaluation in late October.
    Later, at trial, the Government would contend that LeCroy never intended to
    make good on this agreement to submit to the evaluation. LeCroy was, according
    to his increasingly concerned stepfather, spending time alone in his room on the
    computer. Investigators determined the computer was used to search for survival
    gear, and to scan and copy Sam Houston’s passport. Investigators also found a
    “need to acquire” list written on the back of the letter scheduling LeCroy’s original
    evaluation; the list included binoculars, boots, gloves, guns, ammunition, food, and
    water.
    LeCroy’s mother and stepfather went away for the weekend on October 5,
    leaving LeCroy alone in their cabin. That weekend there was a series of robberies
    in the neighborhood, including the theft of medical supplies, a shotgun, and
    ammunition.
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    On the evening of October 7, LeCroy broke into Joann Tiesler’s home
    through a bedroom window, armed with a shotgun, a knife, and plastic cable ties.
    LeCroy made sure to return the open window blinds to their original position, so
    that from the outside Tiesler’s house appeared undisturbed. Tiesler, a nurse, had
    been away for the weekend visiting her fiancé in Rome, Georgia. She returned
    home around 6:00 p.m.
    As Tiesler entered her home, LeCroy approached from behind and struck her
    on her head with the butt of his shotgun, causing the gun to discharge in the
    hallway outside her bedroom. LeCroy bound Tiesler’s hands behind her back with
    the plastic cable ties. LeCroy stripped her and raped her vaginally and anally.
    After that, he strangled her with an electrical cord, slashed her throat with his
    knife, and stabbed her five times in the back before wiping the knife off on her
    shirt. LeCroy left Tiesler’s house and drove away in her car. A real-estate agent
    and one of Tiesler’s coworkers discovered her body the next day, naked and bound
    on her bed.
    LeCroy was arrested on October 9, 2001, two days after Tiesler’s murder.
    He was captured at the border between Minnesota and Canada, still driving
    Tiesler’s car. Inside the car, police found a knife covered in Tiesler’s blood and
    plastic cable ties like those used to bind Tiesler’s wrists. A note found in the car
    read, “Please call the police and report this vehicle as stolen. Thanks, The Thief.”
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    A second note, written on the back of a map, read “Please please please forgive me
    Joanne [sic]. You were an angel and I killed you. Now I have to live with that and
    I can never go home. I am a vagabond and doomed to hell.”
    B.
    On May 15, 2002, a Northern District of Georgia grand jury indicted LeCroy
    for taking a motor vehicle by force, violence, and intimidation from Joann Tiesler,
    resulting in her death. See 18 U.S.C. § 2119(3). A superseding indictment, dated
    August 13, 2002, added special death-eligibility allegations. LeCroy was
    appointed a team of lawyers from the Northern District of Georgia Federal
    Defender Program: Paul Kish, Stephanie Kearns, and Brian Mendelsohn. 3 Later, a
    fourth attorney—Daniel Summer—was appointed as local counsel from the
    Gainesville area, where the trial would be held.4 The attorneys agreed that Kish
    and Summer would focus on the guilt phase of trial, while Kearns and Mendelsohn
    would focus on the penalty phase.
    3
    Kish began practicing in 1982, and joined the Federal Defender Program in 1985. At
    the time of trial, Kish was the Deputy Director of the Federal Defender Program. Kearns
    received her law degree in 1975 and had spent her whole legal career doing federal criminal
    defense work. At the time of trial, Kearns was Executive Director of the Federal Defender
    Program. LeCroy’s was her second federal death penalty case. Mendelsohn received his law
    degree in 1990 and worked at an organization providing postconviction representation to death
    row inmates in Georgia before joining the Federal Defender Program in 1995.
    4
    Summer had substantial criminal law experience, including a Georgia death penalty
    trial. The other attorneys agreed he was particularly helpful during jury selection, when he was
    able to explain “the churches that people went to, what significance that had or where they lived,
    that sort of thing.” Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 87.
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    With the help of two investigators, Susan Miller and Michael Hutcheson, the
    defense attorneys gathered extensive records of LeCroy’s background. They
    gathered school records, military records, records relating to LeCroy’s earlier
    criminal convictions, prison records, and police reports relating to Tiesler’s
    murder. The attorneys delivered all these records to Doctor Michael Hilton, a
    forensic psychiatrist the attorneys hired on March 27, 2003, to conduct an
    evaluation of LeCroy. Paul Kish testified at the § 2255 hearing that the public
    defender’s office “quite often used [Hilton]” to conduct these sorts of evaluations.
    Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 14. As Paul Mendelsohn later testified, the attorneys never
    planned to call Doctor Hilton as a witness at trial; his evaluation was, instead, to be
    a “test run” so that the defense team could see what a psychiatric evaluation of
    LeCroy would reveal before making any final strategic judgments: “[T]he idea
    behind Dr. Hilton was to see what would happen, what kind of results we would
    get in an evaluation if we just did a straight evaluation. . . . [W]e were going to
    see what results he came back with, and then with that information in hand,
    proceed with the rest of the case.” Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 265.
    Doctor Hilton met with LeCroy in prison for four and a half hours, and
    prepared a set of reports for defense counsel. One report related Doctor Hilton’s
    conclusion that LeCroy was competent and that he could not present an affirmative
    defense of not guilty by reason of insanity. Another report summarized Doctor
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    Hilton’s psychiatric evaluation of LeCroy, reflecting Doctor Hilton’s diagnoses
    and professional observations.
    During the evaluation, LeCroy told Doctor Hilton about his troubled
    upbringing. His parents’ marriage had been an unhappy one: his father—William
    LeCroy, Sr.—was verbally abusive toward his mother, a “loving, gentle, timid
    woman.” Hilton Report at 3. The two eventually divorced, and one year later
    LeCroy’s mother married Sam Houston.
    LeCroy told Doctor Hilton that when he was eight years old he had sexual
    encounters with a female babysitter he knew as “Tinkerbell.” LeCroy and his
    brother played a “kissing game” with her: they would run up to her, kiss her, and
    then run away. One night, Tinkerbell came into LeCroy’s bedroom and told him
    that he needed to “know how to do it right,” and began kissing him, undressing
    him, and performing oral sex on him. A week later, Tinkerbell again molested him
    and the two may have had intercourse. The day after that, however, LeCroy
    attempted to visit Tinkerbell—who lived in an apartment above the LeCroys’
    apartment—and discovered her coming down the stairs arm-in-arm with a
    boyfriend. Tinkerbell gave LeCroy what he called a “malevolent” smile. The
    LeCroy family moved a week later, and he never saw Tinkerbell again or told his
    family what happened.
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    Turning to Tiesler’s murder, LeCroy described the crime to Doctor Hilton in
    lurid detail. After being released from federal prison in August 2001 and moving
    in with his mother and Sam Houston in Blue Ridge, Georgia, LeCroy began
    commuting by motorcycle to the town of Marietta, where he worked with his
    father. He passed Joanne Tiesler’s house every day and the two would usually
    wave to each other. In early October 2001, LeCroy—convinced that the
    government was determined to put him back in prison—traveled out into the
    woods, where he had hidden a cache of survival gear.
    On his way to check up on his cache in the woods, LeCroy passed Tiesler’s
    house and waved to her. She did not wave back. Later, at his hiding spot in the
    woods, LeCroy heard the sound of car tires on gravel and turned to see Tiesler
    driving toward him in a sport-utility vehicle. LeCroy told Doctor Hilton that
    Tiesler stopped, said “Huh!” through her half-open driver’s side window, and then
    turned her vehicle around and drove away.
    LeCroy’s brief interaction with Tiesler in the woods apparently disturbed
    him a great deal. He began to dwell on Tiesler, until his thoughts turned to the
    possibility that Tiesler was, in fact, Tinkerbell, the babysitter who had sexually
    abused him as a child. LeCroy began to suspect that Tinkerbell had been a witch
    and that her sexual abuse had placed him under some kind of spell, and that in turn
    this spell explained all the troubles and frustrations in his life. He reasoned that if
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    Tiesler—by now synonymous with Tinkerbell—had placed some kind of sexual
    spell on him, she could also be made to undo that spell. As Doctor Hilton related
    it, “[LeCroy] started to develop a plan that he needed to reverse the roles on
    Tinkerbell and do to her what she had done to him.” Hilton Report at 10.
    Because the contents of Doctor Hilton’s report came to play a crucial role
    both in the defense attorneys’ thinking and in LeCroy’s subsequent ineffective
    assistance claim, we reprint here an illustrative excerpt of the report:
    Mr. LeCroy went back to Ms. Tiesler’s house and went inside to wait
    for her. He then heard a car drive up. He became nervous. He
    looked out the window and saw that it was some of Ms. Tiesler’s
    neighbors arriving at the cabin next door. He continued to wait and
    was quite nervous. He used her restroom. He urinated and defecated
    in the toilet. As he was coming out of the bathroom, he heard another
    vehicle coming. He went into her bedroom and could hear her
    approaching the cabin. As she came in, he saw her and struck her in
    the back of the head with the gun. The shotgun accidentally
    discharged, shooting into the wall. She fell on the floor. He told her
    not to look at him. He also, however, had the collar of his combat
    uniform pulled up over the bottom part of his face and the back of the
    collar pulled up around the back of his head over the top of his head,
    so that only his eyes were exposed. He said the conversation was
    minimal. He told her several times, “You know what I want.” She
    questioned him about the possibility of wanting money, and he told
    her he did not want her money. He used the plastic ties that he
    brought with him to tie her hand [sic] together. He then tied her legs
    together. As he started undoing her belt, she asked him, ‘Is this what
    this is?’ He did not say anything. She cooperated with him as he took
    her pants down. She stated only, ‘Not on the floor.’ Mr. LeCroy
    picked her up and put her on the side of the bed. He said his penis
    was too soft to penetrate her. He asked for some Vaseline. She told
    him where it was. He put some Vaseline on his penis and on her
    vagina. He was then able to penetrate her and immediately developed
    an erection. During the act, they were both silent. After he climaxed,
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    he told her it was her turn to “undo it.” She questioned him about
    what he meant. He told her she knew. They argued a little bit. He
    told her, “I'm getting pissed off.” She was trying to appease him, but
    was not complying with his demands. He did not know what she had
    done the first time (when he was a child). He put a new shotgun shell
    in his shotgun and threatened her, yet she still did not comply. He
    then found a cord from a carbon monoxide monitor and looped it
    around her neck. He told her to “do it or else,” but she did not know
    what to do. He started choking her to the point that she could not
    breathe. She started gasping. She grabbed at his pants legs. He heard
    her start to urinate and defecate on herself. He then let go of the cord
    and said, “That’s it.” He told her, “You can do it or I’ll do it.” At that
    time, she was only making mumbling sounds. He pulled his knife out
    of its sheath, grabbed her head by her hair from behind, pulled her
    head back and cut her throat as hard as he could. She went limp
    immediately, but he could still hear breathing sounds. He became
    frustrated that she would not die. He started to think, “I can’t kill this
    woman.” He walked out of the bedroom and looked out the window
    to see if anyone was around. He was planning to go back into the
    bedroom and shoot her in the back of the head with both barrels of the
    shotgun, but when he went into the bedroom, she was not making any
    sounds. She was dead.
    Hilton Report at 10–11.
    As LeCroy’s defense team considered their options in light of Doctor
    Hilton’s report, they were operating in the shadow of Rule 12.2(b) of the Federal
    Rules of Criminal Procedure, which requires a defendant to notify the Government
    in advance of trial if the defendant plans to introduce expert testimony on mental
    health issues at either the guilt or penalty phase of trial. 5 Rule 12.2 further
    5
    See Fed. R. Crim. P. 12.2(b) (“If a defendant intends to introduce expert evidence
    relating to a mental disease or defect or any other mental condition of the defendant bearing on
    either (1) the issue of guilt or (2) the issue of punishment in a capital case, the defendant must—
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    provides that if a defendant elects to introduce expert evidence bearing on a mental
    health issue, the defendant must make the results and reports of the defendant’s
    expert available to the Government, and the defendant himself may be required to
    submit to an evaluation by a Government expert.6 See Fed. R. Crim. P. 12.2(c).
    Having seen Doctor Hilton’s report, the attorneys unanimously agreed they
    were, as Mendelsohn put it, “very scared of [a] government evaluation.” Collateral
    Tr. Vol. II at 159. In short, Mendelsohn said, the defense team “made a decision
    not to have [LeCroy] evaluated and stuck with that all the way through.” 
    Id. at 172.
    Nonetheless, the attorneys recognized that some information in Doctor
    Hilton’s report would be useful in mitigation: the evidence of childhood sexual
    abuse, specifically, might both arouse sympathy from the jury and offer a
    mitigating explanation of LeCroy’s crime. The trick was finding a way to
    introduce the mitigating aspects of LeCroy’s background without also opening the
    door to the wealth of aggravating information in Doctor Hilton’s report.
    within the time provided for filing a pretrial motion or at any later time the court sets—notify an
    attorney for the government in writing of this intention . . . .”).
    6
    Rule 12.2 serves both efficiency and fairness purposes in criminal trials. It implicates
    fairness because it alerts the Government to a defendant’s intention to introduce expert mental-
    health evidence, thereby giving the Government a chance to prepare its own mental-health
    evidence in rebuttal. This, in turn, implicates efficiency in the courts because the preparation of
    mental-health evidence frequently requires the use of expensive and time-consuming experts.
    Early notice and reciprocity, then, motivate the Rule 12.2 requirement. See generally Charles
    Alan Wright & Andrew D. Leipold, Federal Practice and Procedure: Criminal § 205 (4th ed.
    2008).
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    The attorneys developed a plan to introduce Doctor David Lisak as a
    “teaching expert” on the relationship between childhood sexual abuse and
    criminality in men. Doctor Lisak, a clinical psychologist and Associate Professor
    of Psychology at the University of Massachusetts in Boston, was known to the
    attorneys as perhaps the nation’s preeminent expert on childhood sexual abuse of
    males. Instead of evaluating LeCroy himself—and thereby triggering the
    reciprocity provisions of Rule 12.2—Doctor Lisak was to review a documentary
    record of LeCroy’s life, drawn from his state prison records, his pre-sentence
    report from the 1995 federal conviction, his counseling records from prison, and
    Doctor Hilton’s report. In front of the jury, Doctor Lisak would explain that
    individuals who experience childhood sexual abuse experience significant
    psychological problems later in life, and that these problems can be especially
    acute in men who are abused as children, leading to an elevated risk of later
    criminal behavior.
    Doctor Lisak’s testimony would thereby provide a backdrop for the jury,
    against which the defense lawyers hoped to introduce evidence of LeCroy’s
    childhood abuse. Doctor Gary Ganahl, a psychological consultant for the Georgia
    Department of Corrections who evaluated LeCroy in prison following a suicide
    attempt, had been told by LeCroy about physical abuse at the hands of his father
    and sexual abuse by a female babysitter. Similarly, Doctor Marti Carlson—a
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    clinical psychologist from the federal Bureau of Prisons—had also seen LeCroy
    when he was incarcerated and heard him report physical abuse by his father and
    sexual abuse by a female babysitter. Finally, the defense retained Jan Vogelsang, a
    clinical social worker, to conduct wide-ranging social and psychological evaluation
    of LeCroy and his family. Vogelsang would testify that aspects of LeCroy’s
    childhood put him at special risk of criminality as an adult, including a history of
    mental illness in his family, a troubled relationship with his father, and a generally
    dysfunctional family environment.
    By combining Doctor Lisak’s “teaching” testimony with the factual
    testimony of Vogelsang and doctors Ganahl and Carlson, the defense team hoped
    to replicate the helpful aspects of Doctor Hilton’s report—that is, the inference that
    LeCroy’s crime was the product of an abusive and dysfunctional childhood, or as
    Kearns put it more bluntly: “That Mr. LeCroy was damaged goods because of what
    he suffered in his childhood and that that might explain why he would do
    something so awful,” Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 96—without triggering Rule 12.2’s
    requirement that LeCroy be evaluated by a Government expert. Kish explained
    that the strategy was to “have the teaching expert [i.e., Doctor Lisak] talk with the
    jury about what happens when a person has been the subject of childhood sexual
    abuse, and in that fashion avoid having to make Mr. LeCroy available for a
    government examination.” Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 45–46. Mendelsohn explained
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    that the lawyers themselves could then “draw inferences from what we got out of
    Dr. Lisak and the facts that we put into the record to then argue it to the jury.”
    Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 159.
    The defense team’s teaching-expert strategy became the subject of intense
    pre-trial wrangling with the Government. On October 17, 2003, LeCroy gave
    notice pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12.2(b) that he intended to
    introduce an expert regarding mental health. The Government moved for a
    psychiatric examination of LeCroy, and Magistrate Judge Susan S. Cole granted
    that motion on November 10, 2003. LeCroy appealed, and defense counsel met ex
    parte with District Judge Richard W. Story to contest the Government’s right to an
    independent evaluation. Judge Story ordered a compromise: the Government
    would appoint a team of “firewalled” attorneys to address only the mental-health
    issues in LeCroy’s trial, and these firewalled attorneys would not disclose any
    mental-health evidence to the primary prosecution team. Judge Story ordered the
    firewalled attorneys and the defense team to confer regarding the need for the
    Government to conduct an independent evaluation.
    The firewalled attorneys ultimately argued that they did need an independent
    mental evaluation of LeCroy, and Judge Story agreed after a hearing on December
    22, 2003, that the Government was entitled to such an evaluation under Rule 12.2.
    The defense complied with an order to give a list of mental-health experts they
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    planned to use to the firewalled attorneys, but argued that there was no need for the
    Government to conduct a full examination of LeCroy because their own expert—
    Doctor Lisak—would be testifying only as a teaching expert, without himself
    having conducted an evaluation of LeCroy. The Government objected, and Judge
    Story agreed that because LeCroy planned to present expert evidence regarding
    childhood trauma, “thereby inviting the jury to make conclusions about how
    Defendant’s childhood trauma may have impacted him and could impact him in
    the future,” that the Government was entitled to its own evaluation by its own
    expert, Doctor Julie Medlin. That examination never happened, however, because
    LeCroy—following his lawyers’ advice—invoked his Fifth Amendment right
    against self incrimination 7 and refused to submit to the Government evaluation.
    Judge Story nevertheless reserved a final ruling on whether Doctor Lisak
    would be allowed to testify as a teaching witness. Before trial, the arrangement
    was that Doctor Medlin would review the mental-health evidence otherwise
    available through discovery and prepare a written mental-health opinion under
    seal. At the close of the guilt phase of trial, the report would be released to defense
    counsel and to the firewalled prosecutors, at which point the defense team could
    make a decision about whether to introduce Doctor Lisak’s testimony at
    7
    The Fifth Amendment provides, in relevant part, that “[n]o person shall . . . be
    compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. amend. V.
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    sentencing, in which case the Medlin report would be released to the primary
    prosecution team.
    C.
    LeCroy’s trial began on February 17, 2004. Faced with overwhelming
    evidence that LeCroy had killed Tiesler, the defense attorneys seized upon a
    botched-burglary defense at the guilt phase of the trial: they argued that LeCroy
    merely planned to rob Tiesler’s home, but panicked when she caught him in the act
    and murdered her on impulse. As Kish put it to the jury in his guilt-phase closing
    argument, the whole episode was not a carjacking but “an irrational criminal act in
    the middle of a burglary.”
    The botched-burglary defense was jurisdictional: the case was only in
    federal court because the Government had charged LeCroy with carjacking, which
    in turn required the Government to prove that LeCroy killed Tiesler with the intent
    of taking her car. See 18 U.S.C. § 2119; see also Holloway v. United States, 
    526 U.S. 1
    , 12, 
    119 S. Ct. 966
    , 972, 
    143 L. Ed. 2d 1
    (1999) (“The intent requirement of
    § 2119 is satisfied when the Government proves that at the moment the defendant
    demanded or took control over the driver’s automobile the defendant possessed the
    intent to seriously harm or kill the driver if necessary to steal the car.”) (emphasis
    added); United States v. Applewhaite, 
    195 F.3d 679
    , 686 (3d. Cir. 1999). If the
    defense could instead convince the jury that the crime had been a robbery gone
    18
    Case: 12-15132       Date Filed: 01/15/2014       Page: 19 of 54
    bad—that LeCroy had panicked upon being discovered in Tiesler’s house and
    impulsively killed her, and only later formed the intent to take her car as a means
    of escape—then the federal jurisdictional hook would be absent and LeCroy would
    evade a federal conviction. 8 LeCroy’s jurisdictional argument was unsuccessful,
    and the jury found LeCroy guilty on March 1, 2004, but the botched-burglary
    theory of the case would continue to play a role in the defense team’s calculations
    as the case proceeded to sentencing.
    At the sentencing phase of the trial, the Government’s case-in-chief
    consisted of victim-impact evidence from Tiesler’s family and friends, testimony
    relating to LeCroy’s convictions in the early 1990s, and testimony regarding
    LeCroy’s conduct while incarcerated. Of special relevance was testimony from
    two Lumpkin County law-enforcement officials who had witnessed LeCroy escape
    from his cell in the Lumpkin County Detention Center. Officer Aaron Welch, a
    Lumpkin County detention officer, testified that in 2003 LeCroy (and other
    inmates) were using a catwalk in the Detention Center’s drop ceiling as a “virtual
    highway” between male and female cells. Officer Christopher Holman of the
    Lumpkin County Sheriff’s Office testified that in one incident two female inmates
    8
    LeCroy would, of course, have been vulnerable to a state prosecution even if he were
    acquitted of the federal carjacking charge, but his attorneys’ immediate concern was avoiding the
    federal conviction. As Kish testified at the § 2255 evidentiary hearing, “if we had won the
    jurisdictional challenge, then the case was definitely going to be going to Gilmer County. But
    what we were tasked to do was to try to win the federal case, the matter directly in front of us.”
    Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 54.
    19
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 20 of 54
    were found under a bed in LeCroy’s cell. In a separate incident, Holman inspected
    LeCroy’s cell and found that LeCroy had created a hole in the shower wall that
    was large enough for a man to sneak through. In the crawlspace, they found a note
    written on the wall: “So well, have a great day explaining to the Marshals about
    me. Thanks for the food, . . . smokes, and women, LeCroy. P.S. Had a great time
    here but sorry I won’t miss you.”
    After the Government rested, LeCroy called a variety of mitigation
    witnesses to rebut the suggestion that LeCroy had been a threat to others in prison
    or that he had attempted to escape. Some of the witnesses had been incarcerated
    with LeCroy and testified that he had been pleasant and peaceful. A retired Bureau
    of Prisons official, Donald Romine, testified as an expert on the security of federal
    prisons and said that a person convicted of LeCroy’s crimes would be held in a
    maximum security facility from which escape would be especially difficult.
    The defense attorneys had, by this time, decided not to call Doctor Lisak as a
    teaching expert. They had been given a copy of Doctor Medlin’s report at the
    conclusion of the guilt phase of trial, and concluded after reviewing the report that
    calling Doctor Lisak would only initiate an unhelpful battle of experts between
    Doctor Lisak and Doctor Medlin. Before presenting other mental health evidence,
    the defense team sought clarification from the Judge Story about what questions
    20
    Case: 12-15132      Date Filed: 01/15/2014      Page: 21 of 54
    could be put to LeCroy’s former psychiatrists 9 about LeCroy’s mental health.
    Judge Story ruled that the witnesses were permitted to testify about fact matters
    related to them in meetings with LeCroy, but could not testify about psychological
    testing, results, diagnoses, or opinions without triggering Doctor Medlin’s
    testimony in rebuttal.
    LeCroy subsequently called Doctor Gary Ganahl, who testified that he met
    with LeCroy in 1992 after LeCroy attempted suicide in state prison. Doctor
    Ganahl said that LeCroy related a troubled childhood, including sexual abuse by a
    female babysitter. Doctor Marti Carlson, who saw LeCroy in federal prison, also
    testified and also related that LeCroy had told her about having a troubled
    childhood and about being molested as a child by a female babysitter.
    LeCroy also called a series of friends and family to testify about his good
    character. His mother, Donna Houston, took the stand, but given her emotional
    state, was unable to go forward with her testimony. She then said that she had
    informed Jan Vogelsang about LeCroy’s early life and her marriage to LeCroy’s
    father and had nothing to add. She did ask the jury for mercy.
    Vogelsang testified at length about her interviews with LeCroy’s friends and
    family, which she compiled as part of what she called a “biopsychosocial”
    9
    The former psychiatrists had examined and in some instances had treated LeCroy while
    he was incarcerated in state and federal prisons.
    21
    Case: 12-15132        Date Filed: 01/15/2014        Page: 22 of 54
    assessment. 10 Beginning with LeCroy’s father, LeCroy, Sr., Vogelsang testified
    that he grew up in “a family that was without limits and without boundaries; and
    this was more in the area of gambling, the areas of money and the areas of the
    ready availability of weapons.” Several family members demonstrated suicidal
    behavior and the children were poorly supervised. Within the extended family,
    “cousins continued to have sex with each other, to engage in sexual behaviors that
    sometimes were almost right in front of their parents with nothing being said.”
    The male members of LeCroy, Sr.’s family were particularly dismissive of women,
    saying that “if it weren’t for sex, women would have a bounty on their heads.”
    With his own family, LeCroy, Sr. was highly controlling and often abusive.
    He was particularly controlling of LeCroy’s mother, frequently interrogating her
    about her whereabouts and the possibility that she was unfaithful to him. Their
    divorce was, Vogelsang said, particularly terrible: LeCroy, Sr. threatened to rape
    and kill LeCroy’s mother and kill her coworkers. After an episode in which
    LeCroy, Sr. put his gun to Donna Houston’s forehead, he gave his gun to LeCroy
    to keep him from killing her.
    According to Vogelsang, LeCroy joined the Army to escape his fractured
    home life. Early in his military career, however, LeCroy broke his ankle, scuttling
    10
    Vogelsang defined this as a “method of collecting extensive information on an
    individual and/or his family. Typically [the report] covers at least three or four generations” of a
    family.
    22
    Case: 12-15132   Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 23 of 54
    his dream of becoming a paratrooper. Stationed in Hawaii, he began drinking and
    taking drugs before going absent-without-leave, getting arrested, and taking a
    discharge. After returning home, LeCroy began a sexual relationship with his step-
    sister Alecia after his brother, Chad, began a sexual relationship with their other
    step-sister, Priscilla. Finally, Vogelsang listed a set of factors she believed made it
    more likely for someone of LeCroy’s background to commit serious crimes.
    On cross-examination, Vogelsang said her report covered LeCroy’s
    background up to 1991 and did not include the time of Tiesler’s murder.
    Vogelsang testified that LeCroy did well in school, that no member of LeCroy’s
    immediate family remembered a female babysitter named Tinkerbell or knew that
    LeCroy had been molested, and that after his release from federal prison in 2001,
    LeCroy’s mother and father opened their homes to him and tried to facilitate his
    reentry to society.
    Kearns delivered the closing argument in mitigation. About sexual abuse,
    Kearns said:
    And, again, I think if you look at his history, what you see and
    what—the family history, what Jan Vogelsang and what Dr. Carlson, I
    think, more importantly shows to you is that you have someone who
    has a basic moral fiber. His entire childhood through that divorce he
    was a good kid. He was doing well in school. He sought out ROTC,
    it’s in the writings, he seeks out ROTC because it gives him
    something that he is missing, those boundaries that Jan Vogelsang
    described there were a lack of. He seeks it out on his own. He knows
    that ROTC is healthy for him, it has discipline, it builds his self-
    23
    Case: 12-15132       Date Filed: 01/15/2014       Page: 24 of 54
    esteem, the self-esteem that is in the pits. And you know he has
    virtually no self-esteem.
    And what does he attribute that to? The baby-sitter, to the
    sexual abuse he suffered as a child. And the government may—Mr.
    Burby made a big deal yesterday of one of the witnesses about he
    never described the child molestation to anybody. He didn't tell
    anybody.
    His family didn’t know about it.
    Come on, this is 2004. You know, we all watch TV. If we
    haven’t read books about it, why do we have all these priests that are
    now being accused of sexual abuse for things they did 20 years ago?
    Because children don’t talk about it. For whatever reasons, whatever
    happens. That doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
    Why would he be talking about sexual abuse by a teenager
    while he’s in therapy with Dr. Carlson? He’s not in therapy to get out
    of jail. He’s not in therapy to cut his sentence short. He has no
    benefit to gain from the therapy or the [Drug Abuse Program]
    program that he was involved in El Reno except self-improvement or
    to relieve himself, learn how to deal with his anger and get beyond his
    anger so that his life will be better emotionally. There’s no motive to
    lie about the baby-sitter. And he’s talking about the baby-sitter in ‘92
    and he’s talking about the baby-sitter in ‘99. But it’s a significant
    event because it robbed him of his self-esteem. That’s the impact it
    had on him. We know that from what he’s written.
    Trial Tr. at 2715–16.
    The jury returned a death sentence on March 10, 2004.11 LeCroy filed a
    motion for a new trial on March 17, 2004, and the District Court denied that
    11
    The jury found that all of the eligibility factors, and all of the statutory and
    nonstatutory aggravating factors, existed. The eligibility factors were that LeCroy intentionally
    killed Tiesler and intentionally inflicted serious bodily injury that resulted in her death. The
    statutory aggravating factors were that LeCroy committed the murder in an especially heinous,
    cruel, and depraved manner, and that LeCroy committed the crime after substantial planning and
    premeditation. The nonstatutory aggravating factors were that LeCroy would be a future danger
    to the lives and safety of others, and that LeCroy caused injury, harm, and loss to the victim’s
    family. See Trial Tr. at 2766–67. By statute, a jury need only find one statutory aggravator to
    impose the death penalty. See 18 U.S.C. § 3593(e) (2010).
    24
    Case: 12-15132        Date Filed: 01/15/2014       Page: 25 of 54
    motion on October 12 of the same year. On October 25, LeCroy appealed his
    conviction and sentence to this court, and we affirmed on March 2, 2006. See
    
    LeCroy, 441 F.3d at 931
    .
    D.
    On April 22, 2008, LeCroy petitioned the District Court to vacate his death
    sentence pursuant to § 2255, asserting—as relevant to this appeal—that he had
    been denied the effective assistance of counsel at trial. 12 The claim LeCroy
    presented has two elements.
    First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient.
    This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was
    not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth
    Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient
    performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s
    errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose
    The jury also found the following mitigating factors: that LeCroy’s conduct was
    appropriate during his ten years in prison, that LeCroy was subjected to emotional and physical
    abuse as a child, that he grew up in an unstable and violent environment, that he had been
    exposed to a harsh and difficult prison life, that he was a kind and loving grandson, son, brother,
    and friend, that he had shown himself to be a person capable of kindness, friendship, and
    generosity, that he was deeply tormented after his fiancé got an abortion, that in prison he had
    helped other inmates and participated in counseling, that he would likely do well in a prison
    environment, that executing him would cause his family grief, and that he spent the first 18 years
    of his life in an abusive household and another ten years in a prison environment. Two jurors
    found that LeCroy expressed remorse, and six found that he was molested as a child.
    The jury found, finally, that the aggravating factors sufficiently outweighed any
    mitigating factors so as to justify the imposition of the death penalty. See Trial Tr. at 2767–70.
    12
    Section 2255 provides that “[a] prisoner in custody under sentence of a court
    established by Act of Congress claiming the right to be released upon the ground that the
    sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, or that the
    court was without jurisdiction to impose such sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the
    maximum authorized by law, or is otherwise subject to collateral attack, may move the court
    which imposed the sentence to vacate, set aside or correct the sentence.”
    25
    Case: 12-15132       Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 26 of 54
    result is reliable. Unless a defendant makes both showings, it cannot be said
    that the conviction or death sentence resulted from a breakdown in the
    adversary process that renders the result unreliable.
    
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2064.
    The court held an evidentiary hearing on LeCroy’s claims on January 11–13,
    2010 and on February 8, 2010. LeCroy presented the testimony of his attorneys
    Kish, Kearns, and Mendelsohn, in addition to doctors Hilton, Carlson, Lisak, and
    Medlin. The court found that LeCroy had failed to carry his burden of proof on
    either of Strickland’s elements, performance or prejudice, and accordingly denied
    him § 2255 relief. Regarding performance, the District Court credited testimony of
    LeCroy’s attorneys that they had settled on the jurisdictional defense at the guilt
    phase of trial and on the teaching expert strategy at the sentencing phase, and that
    they had adapted the teaching expert strategy in response to District Court rulings
    during the course of the trial.
    In particular, the District Court found that it was not ineffective to not call
    Doctor Hilton as a witness. Contrary to LeCroy’s assertions, the court found that
    the attorneys were aware of the contents of Doctor Hilton’s report and alert to both
    the mitigating and aggravating aspects of it. They had, the court found, made a
    reasonable strategic judgment that the risk of aggravation outweighed the possible
    benefits of mitigation, and this judgment was entitled to Strickland deference.
    26
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 27 of 54
    The same considerations made it reasonable to not have Doctor Lisak
    personally evaluate LeCroy for fear that such an evaluation would both expose
    Doctor Lisak to damaging cross-examination and also trigger an evaluation of
    LeCroy by a Government expert. Nor was it unreasonable for the defense team to
    ultimately forego Doctor Lisak’s testimony—even as a teaching expert—once they
    saw Doctor Medlin’s report and decided that they did not want to engage in a battle
    of experts in front of the jury. The District Court found that these decisions were
    reasonable strategic judgments made on the basis of a thorough investigation and
    consideration of the lawyers’ options at trial.
    Finally, the District Court concluded that Kearns was not ineffective in her
    closing argument. Though LeCroy might wish that she made the connection
    between his childhood abuse and his murder of Tiesler more vigorously or used
    different language, the court concluded that Kearns met minimum constitutional
    requirements by drawing the jury’s attention to evidence that LeCroy had been
    abused and that this abuse played a role in his criminality as an adult.
    Regarding prejudice, the District Court found that LeCroy had not been
    prejudiced by his attorneys choices regarding expert mental-health testimony
    because the testimony they elected not to offer was at least as aggravating as it was
    mitigating, and that therefore there was no reasonable probability that its
    27
    Case: 12-15132   Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 28 of 54
    introduction would have persuaded the jury to reach a different verdict. Indeed, it
    might have made the jury more certain that LeCroy deserved the death penalty.
    Following the District Court’s denial of his § 2255 petition, LeCroy lodged
    this appeal.
    II.
    In reviewing a district court denial of a § 2255 petition,we review the court’s
    legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error. Devine v. United
    States, 
    520 F.3d 1286
    , 1287 (11th Cir. 2008) (per curiam). “A claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel is a mixed question of law and fact that we review de novo.”
    
    Id. We give
    substantial deference to the factfinder on credibility determinations.
    
    Id. We may
    affirm on any ground supported by the record. Lucas v. W.W.
    Grainger, Inc., 
    257 F.3d 1249
    , 1256 (11th Cir. 2001).
    Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel require the petitioner to show
    both that his attorneys’ performance was deficient and that their deficient
    performance prejudiced his defense. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    , 104 S. Ct. at
    2064. In evaluating performance, “counsel is strongly presumed to have rendered
    adequate assistance and made all significant decisions in the exercise of reasonable
    professional judgment.” 
    Id. at 690,
    104 S. Ct. at 2066. It is petitioner’s burden to
    “establish that counsel preformed outside the wide range of reasonable
    professional assistance” by making “errors so serious that [counsel] failed to
    28
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 29 of 54
    function as the kind of counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.” Butcher v.
    United States, 
    368 F.3d 1290
    , 1293 (11th Cir. 2004) (citing 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    –89, 104 S. Ct. at 2064–65). Showing prejudice requires petitioner to establish
    “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of
    the proceeding would have been different.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    , 104 S. Ct.
    at 2068. “The prejudice prong requires a petitioner to demonstrate that seriously
    deficient performance of his attorney prejudiced the defense.” 
    Butcher, 368 F.3d at 1293
    (citing 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2064).
    Where, as here, the petitioner challenges the scope of his attorneys’
    investigation and the reasonableness of their strategic choices, a further word about
    attorney performance is warranted. Strickland makes plain that a reviewing court’s
    objective “is not to grade counsel’s 
    performance.” 466 U.S. at 697
    , 104 S. Ct. at
    2069. We do not measure counsel against what we imagine some hypothetical
    “best” lawyer would do, in part to avoid “the distorting effects of hindsight” and in
    part to avoid judicial interference with “the constitutionally protected
    independence of counsel,” lest we “restrict the wide latitude counsel must have in
    making tactical decisions.” 
    Id. at 689,
    104 S. Ct. at 2065. We instead “reconstruct
    the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct” and “evaluate the conduct
    from counsel’s perspective at the time.” 
    Id. 29 Case:
    12-15132      Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 30 of 54
    Underpinning Strickland, then, is the assumption that “[t]here are countless
    ways to provide effective assistance in any given case. Even the best criminal
    defense attorneys would not defend a particular client in the same way.” 
    Id. at 689–90,
    104 S. Ct. at 2065–66. Crucially, Strickland permits attorneys to choose
    between viable avenues of defense, and attorneys are not ineffective for making a
    reasonable choice to take one avenue to the exclusion of another, or for selecting a
    reasonable course without considering some other, equally reasonable course. “If a
    defense lawyer pursued course A, it is immaterial that some other reasonable
    courses of defense (that the lawyer did not think of at all) existed and that the
    lawyer’s pursuit of course A was not a deliberate choice between course A, course
    B, and so on. The lawyer’s strategy was course A. And, our inquiry is limited to
    whether that strategy, that is, course A, might have been a reasonable one.”
    Chandler v. United States, 
    218 F.3d 1305
    , 1315 at n.16 (11th Cir. 2000). With
    these standards in mind, we turn to LeCroy’s specific claims in this case.
    III.
    LeCroy makes three allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel on
    appeal: (1) that his attorneys failed to investigate mental health mitigation evidence
    and then present it during the sentencing phase of the trial; (2) that his attorneys
    failed to object to jury instructions on the issue of LeCroy’s future dangerousness
    and escape risk; and (3) that his attorneys failed to request a jury instruction that
    30
    Case: 12-15132        Date Filed: 01/15/2014        Page: 31 of 54
    the balancing of aggravating and mitigating factors be conducted according to the
    reasonable doubt standard. See Pet’r’s Br. at v.13 Applying Strickland’s deferential
    lens, we examine each claim in turn.
    A.
    LeCroy claims that his lawyers’ performance was constitutionally deficient
    because they failed “to investigate and present mental health evidence” at the
    sentencing phase of his trial. Pet’r’s Br. at 23. There are two variants of this
    claim: one is that the attorneys failed to meet with Doctor Hilton to discuss his
    report on LeCroy’s mental health and subsequently failed to call him as a witness.
    Had they done so, the jury would have heard mitigating testimony about how
    LeCroy’s mental health issues contributed to the crime. The second variant is that
    the attorneys failed to implement their preferred strategy of calling Doctor Lisak as
    a teaching expert, both because they unreasonably abandoned calling Doctor Lisak
    as a witness in the face of anticipated rebuttal testimony from Doctor Medlin and
    because lawyers Mendelsohn and Kearns miscommunicated during their closing
    arguments and failed to make the mitigating argument each expected the other to
    make.
    1.
    13
    Note 
    1, supra
    , sets out the ineffective assistance claims as contained in the certificate
    of appealability the District Court issued.
    31
    Case: 12-15132        Date Filed: 01/15/2014       Page: 32 of 54
    LeCroy’s first argument is that his lawyers performed incompetently
    because they did not have a face-to-face conversation with Doctor Hilton regarding
    his written psychiatric report. LeCroy concedes that his attorneys “had done their
    job in conducting an extensive investigation of Defendant’s background,” Pet’r’s
    Br. at 26, but argues that “[i]nstead of working with Dr. Hilton to appreciate the
    full context of his conclusions, counsel merely jettisoned his report,” 
    id. at 28.
    LeCroy argues that his attorneys could not possibly have made an informed
    strategic choice regarding a mental health defense because, by not meeting with
    Doctor Hilton, the lawyers prematurely closed this particular line of
    investigation.14 LeCroy believes his defense was prejudiced because his attorneys
    would have called Doctor Hilton to testify at trial had they only met with him, and
    Doctor Hilton’s testimony would in turn have introduced the jury to such powerful
    mitigation evidence that the verdict might have been different.
    14
    The only authority LeCroy cites on this point is Holsomback v. White, 
    133 F.3d 1382
    ,
    1386–89 (11th Cir. 1998), but that case involved distinguishable facts. The defendant in
    Holsomback was accused of sexually abusing his son, and he asked his defense lawyer to
    interview the family doctor—who had examined the son—so that the lawyer might uncover
    medical records showing no physical signs of abuse. 
    Id. at 1385.
    The defense lawyer did not
    contact the doctor or request the doctor’s records, and so this court said the lawyer had been
    ineffective for failing “to conduct any investigation into the conceded lack of medical evidence,
    including [the lawyer’s] failure to consult with any physicians concerning the significance of the
    lack of medical evidence in the case.” 
    Id. at 1386
    (emphasis added).
    Plainly, LeCroy’s situation is not like the defendant’s in Holsomback, where the lawyer
    made no effort at all to investigate medical evidence. Indeed, even LeCroy concedes that his
    lawyers “had done their job in conducting an extensive investigation of the Defendant’s
    background.” Pet’r’s Br. at 26. Holsomback therefore has nothing to say about a case like
    LeCroy’s, where the attorneys commissioned a report by a medical expert and then, having
    reviewed its contents, made a tactical decision not to use it.
    32
    Case: 12-15132    Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 33 of 54
    We do not agree with LeCroy that his attorneys performed ineffectively by
    not meeting in person with Doctor Hilton after reviewing his reports. Even
    LeCroy concedes that Doctor Hilton’s written report was “extensive,” Pet’r’s Br. at
    27, and it is plain that the defense attorneys reviewed and understood the contents
    of the report. See, e.g., Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 264 (Mendelsohn responding to
    questions about the potentially damaging contents of Doctor Hilton’s report). The
    District Court was right to conclude that Doctor Hilton’s report “was so detailed
    that a reasonable attorney did not need to speak with him to understand his
    diagnoses and the fact that he thought ‘magical thinking’ was a cause of the event.”
    LeCroy, 
    2012 WL 1114238
    , at *52. Nor does LeCroy identify any “red flags” in
    Doctor Hilton’s reports that might have prompted a reasonable attorney to initiate a
    meeting or explore other avenues of investigation. Cf. Ferrell v. Hall, 
    640 F.3d 1199
    , 1233–34 (11th Cir. 2011). LeCroy’s argument seems to be, instead, that
    attorneys are per se ineffective if they commission and review an expert report
    without taking the additional step of meeting in person with the report’s author.
    That is not what Strickland requires. LeCroy’s attorneys made a thorough
    investigation of his background and employed an expert to evaluate the viability of
    a mental health defense, and were not required to sit down with Doctor Hilton to
    rehash conclusions that were already plain from the written report. See Bobby v.
    Van Hook, 
    558 U.S. 4
    , 11–12, 
    130 S. Ct. 13
    , 19, 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 255
    (2009)
    33
    Case: 12-15132    Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 34 of 54
    (explaining that Strickland does not require attorneys to “dig deeper” when
    substantial mitigation evidence is already in hand following a reasonably thorough
    investigation); Reed v. Sec’y, Florida Dep’t of Corrs., 
    593 F.3d 1217
    , 1242–43
    (11th Cir. 2010) (same).
    But even supposing LeCroy’s attorneys performed ineffectively when they
    decided not to meet with Doctor Hilton in person, that decision did not prejudice
    LeCroy’s defense. LeCroy’s theory of prejudice is twofold: he argues first that by
    failing to meet with Doctor Hilton the defense team made strategic decisions on the
    basis of an incomplete understanding of Doctor Hilton’s findings, see 
    Strickland 466 U.S. at 690
    –91, 104 S. Ct. at 2066 (“[S]trategic choices made after less than
    complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable
    professional judgments support the limitations on investigation.”), and second that
    if the attorneys had met with Doctor Hilton they would have also called him as a
    witness at trial, thereby exposing the jury to powerful mitigation evidence
    concerning the role LeCroy’s mental illnesses played in the crime. But the record
    does not support either theory of prejudice.
    Although LeCroy writes vaguely that through an in-person meeting the
    lawyers could have “explored with [Doctor Hilton] the full ramifications of the
    diagnoses he found” and “appreciate the full context of his conclusions,” Pet’r’s
    34
    Case: 12-15132        Date Filed: 01/15/2014        Page: 35 of 54
    Br. at 27–28, 15 LeCroy never says what, exactly, was left to explore or appreciate
    that was not already in Doctor Hilton’s report. LeCroy puts great emphasis on
    Doctor Hilton’s testimony at the § 2255 hearing that “mental illness played a
    ‘direct role’ in the crime and that the murder would not have ‘occurred but for’ the
    mental illnesses [Hilton] had diagnosed.” Pet’r’s Br. at 27; see also Collateral Tr.
    Vol. II at 238. But one need not be a mental health expert to comprehend from the
    written report that Doctor Hilton attributed the crime to LeCroy’s mental health
    problems. Indeed, the report plainly lays out Doctor Hilton’s theory that LeCroy’s
    “unusual and unexplainable encounter with Ms. Tiesler” in the woods “inflamed
    some of his unresolved issues relative to his sexual abuse” by Tinkerbell, and that
    “[h]is schizotypal tendencies of magical thinking and his previous experiences in
    witchcraft led him to believe that Ms. Tiesler was indeed his former babysitter
    (Tinkerbell), that witchcraft was involved and that a spell needed to be broken.”
    Hilton Report at 17. Contrary to LeCroy’s assertions, then, there was nothing
    15
    LeCroy is inconsistent in his briefing regarding the ability of a layperson to understand
    psychiatric diagnoses. He argues initially that his attorneys could not “appreciate the full context
    of [Hilton’s] conclusions” without a face-to-face meeting, Pet’r’s Br. at 27–28, but later argues
    in his reply brief that the attorneys had an unreasonable fear of letting the jury hear a diagnosis of
    anti-social personality disorder because LeCroy’s “prior criminal acts” represented “evidence in
    and of itself of an anti-social personality, which would have hardly been exacerbated by this
    unremarkable conclusion by mental health experts.” Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 12. LeCroy is trying to
    have it both ways: a jury of laypeople would allegedly have found a diagnosis of anti-social
    personality disorder unremarkable because the evidence for it was so obvious, but his hapless
    defense team needed a sit-down meeting with Doctor Hilton so their expert could convey
    verbally what had already been conveyed in writing.
    35
    Case: 12-15132       Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 36 of 54
    more to be learned by meeting face-to-face with Doctor Hilton, and so the
    attorneys’ failure to do so could not have prejudiced LeCroy’s defense.
    Nor was the defense prejudiced by the decision not to call Doctor Hilton to
    testify at trial, a decision LeCroy says is “at the core of the Defendant’s claim,
    because the decision not to call [Hilton] was made without full knowledge of the
    consequences of this decision, that is without knowledge of the full extent of Dr.
    Hilton’s testimony.” Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 13 n.1. It is important to note at the
    outset that the decision not to call Doctor Hilton as a witness was itself a strategic
    one deserving Strickland deference: indeed, the defense team never intended to use
    Doctor Hilton as a witness at trial. He was, Mendelsohn explained, a “test run” to
    “see what would happen”: “[W]e were going to see what results he came back with
    and then with that information in hand, proceed with the rest of the case.”
    Collateral Tr. Vol. III at 265.
    A “test run” was strategically important because the defense team knew that
    offering the testimony of a mental health expert who had evaluated LeCroy would
    trigger the Government’s reciprocal rights under Rule 12.2 to review the defense
    team’s expert reports and to have LeCroy evaluated by an expert of the
    Government’s choosing. Avoiding such an evaluation was a fundamental strategic
    goal of the defense team: as Kish explained, “[A]n evaluation by a government
    expert would have resulted in very harmful information. Real frankly, we didn’t
    36
    Case: 12-15132       Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 37 of 54
    trust the government experts. And we felt that when the government would have
    such information, it would make it exceptionally difficult to raise the parts of
    [LeCroy’s] background that we thought were worthy of presenting to the jury
    when they had to make their decision . . . during the sentencing phase of the case.”
    Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 45–46.
    Contrary to LeCroy’s assertion, then, the decision not to use Doctor Hilton
    as a witness at trial was imminently reasonable: it allowed the defense team to get
    a complete picture of LeCroy’s background and mental health without having
    LeCroy evaluated by their preferred expert witness, Doctor Lisak. Doctor Lisak
    would in turn be able to testify as a “teaching witness” at trial—connecting
    childhood sexual abuse to criminal acts in general terms—without being subject to
    damaging cross-examination by the Government about LeCroy’s first-hand
    account of the crime. This strategy had the added virtue of not undercutting the
    jurisdictional defense the attorneys planned for the guilt phase of trial: an expert
    who evaluated LeCroy would be cross-examined about the substantial planning
    and premeditation preceding Tiesler’s murder, whereas a “teaching witness” would
    not.
    Doctor Hilton’s actual findings only underscore the reasonableness of the
    attorneys’ decision not to use him as a witness. The attorneys reviewed Doctor
    Hilton’s report and recognized correctly that the results were a mixed bag for the
    37
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 38 of 54
    defense. “There were parts of Dr. Hilton’s report that would have been very
    helpful,” Kearns testified. “The problem was that there was the risk that the actual
    diagnosis would not be helpful,” Collateral Tr. Vol. I. at 104–05, not to mention
    Hilton’s vivid reconstruction of the crime and the report’s baseline inconsistency
    with the botched-burglary defense.
    The first problem was LeCroy’s graphic and disturbing play-by-play review
    of the murder. An expert, like Doctor Hilton, who had evaluated LeCroy and
    learned the first-hand details of the offense would have been subject to lurid cross-
    examination about the brutality of the murder and the extent to which Tiesler
    suffered in the minutes before her death. At the § 2255 evidentiary hearing, the
    Government’s attorney illustrated what this might have looked like during his
    cross-examination of Doctor Hilton:
    Q:     Now, the defendant told you that when Ms. Tiesler first
    came into the house, that he was waiting for her. And
    you know that she had no idea he was there; correct?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     And that he came up behind her and he hit her in the back
    of the head with the shotgun; right?
    A:     Yes.
    ...
    Q:     Then he told you that he tied her hands behind her back;
    correct?
    A:     Yes.
    ...
    Q:     And when her hands are tied behind her back, she’s
    virtually defenseless; correct?
    A:     Yes.
    38
    Case: 12-15132    Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 39 of 54
    Q:    She can’t fight her attacker, she can’t do anything,
    correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    And then the defendant told you that he sexually
    assaulted her, correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    She couldn’t fight that off, could she?
    A:    No.
    Q:    And then defendant told you that he took a wire, a cord
    of some sort, correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    He wrapped it around her neck, correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    She was still conscious and knowledgeable of what’s
    going on, correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    She can’t fight him off because her hands are tied behind
    her back and he’s a six-foot-six almost 300-pound man,
    correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    And he started choking her, correct?
    A:    That’s correct.
    Q:    And she would be fully aware of the fact that she’s being
    strangled to death, wouldn’t she?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    But that wasn’t enough. He choked her to the point
    where she was gasping for air, according to him correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    Choked her to the point where she defecated on herself,
    correct?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    She couldn’t get her hands from behind her neck to try to
    get the cord off, could she?
    A:    No, she—
    Q:    She was being strangled to death, right?
    A:    Yes.
    Q:    And she would have known that, correct?
    A:    Yes.
    ...
    39
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 40 of 54
    Q:     So since she wasn’t dying from the choking, he decided
    to slash her throat, correct?
    A:     Well, he stopped choking her, gave her the option of
    undoing the spell, and then when she still—I think at this
    point I think she was unconscious or near unconscious,
    that’s when he stabbed her in the back or—
    Q:     He slashed her throat first, didn’t he?
    A:     He slashed her throat and then—
    Q:     So if she still was conscious—and he described how he
    did it, right?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     Grabbed her hair, pulled her neck up so the throat would
    be fully exposed, came to her with a knife and just slit the
    knife from, basically from ear to ear, right?
    A:     That’s correct.
    Q:     And you know that the crime scene investigation
    corroborates that, correct?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     And if she was still conscious when that happened, then
    she would know that she was about to die, right?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     But she didn’t die immediately, even after her throat was
    slashed, according to the defendant, is that correct?
    A:     That’s correct.
    Q:     So not only did he choke her to the point that she can’t
    breathe, slashed her throat, but then he stabbed her
    repeatedly in the back, right?
    A:     Yes.
    Q:     And if you had testified at the trial, you might have been
    subject to exactly this kind of examination about what the
    defendant said that he did to this victim, correct?
    A:     Yes.
    Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 239–43 (emphasis added). We cannot fault LeCroy’s
    defense attorneys for wanting to avoid this kind of testimony, even if LeCroy is
    right, as an analytical matter, that the crime scene and autopsy reports had already
    introduced the jury to many of the same details. LeCroy attempts to take this point
    40
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    a step forward and argue that the first-hand recollection of the crime was “no
    worse than the evidence that the defense was already facing,” Pet’r’s Reply Br. at
    11, but that is at least debatable: certainly a reasonable attorney could believe that
    hearing this sort of narrative testimony, with its emphasis on the victim’s
    awareness of her suffering, might inflame the jury in a way that a clinical coroner’s
    report would not. Strickland deference is especially important in this setting
    because defense attorneys are in the courtroom and able to see the jury and make
    first-hand assessments of how jurors might react to testimony. Appellate judges,
    by contrast, review only a cold record months or sometimes years after the events
    at trial. LeCroy’s attorneys made a tactical choice that the mitigating value of
    expert mental health testimony would be outweighed by the aggravating
    information the Government would emphasize, and on this record we cannot say
    their choice was unreasonable for Strickland purposes.
    A second problem with Doctor Hilton’s findings was that they wholly
    undercut the botched-burglary defense LeCroy had put on in the guilt phase of his
    trial. The defense had argued that LeCroy panicked when Tiesler interrupted him
    midway through the burglary of her home and killed her impulsively, in what they
    called “an irrational criminal act in the middle of a burglary.” Testimony from an
    expert like Doctor Hilton would have shown the jury that none of that was true and
    that the defense lawyers had always known it to be untrue: LeCroy instead had
    41
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    sought Tiesler out specifically and laid in wait for her to come home. See Hilton
    Report at 10–11. This revelation might have seriously undercut the defense
    lawyers’ credibility in the eyes of the jury for the remainder of trial.
    Third and finally, the defense team considered Doctor Hilton’s clinical
    diagnoses—that LeCroy suffered from borderline personality disorder and anti-
    social personality disorder—“not helpful,” to use Kearns’ term. Collateral Tr. Vol.
    I at 104–05. Doctor Hilton reported that LeCroy had “homicidal ideations toward
    a few of the other inmates” over what LeCroy called “trivial things.” Hilton
    Report at 12. At the § 2255 hearing, Hilton testified on cross-examination that he
    believed LeCroy would represent a danger if he ever escaped custody, that his
    future dangerousness might extend to others incarcerated with him, and that—
    because LeCroy understands now that Tiesler was not Tinkerbell—he might
    mistake a different woman for Tinkerbell in the future and kill again. See
    Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 225–27.
    Any of these considerations, standing alone, would give a good attorney
    pause. Cumulatively, they present an ironclad case for the reasonableness of the
    defense team’s decision not to call Doctor Hilton as a witness. Mendelsohn’s
    testimony summarized the attorneys’ thinking before trial:
    Q.     So Dr. Hilton’s report wasn’t going to give you an
    affirmative defense that you could use against the
    charges, correct?
    A.     Yes.
    42
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    Q.     And he was going to give you the negative
    assessments that the defendant was suffering from
    antisocial personality disorder and borderline
    personality disorders, correct?
    A.     Yes.
    Q.     And he was going to give you this very detailed
    recitation of the facts of this very horrible crime,
    correct?
    A.     That’s right.
    Q.     And none of that you wanted to present to the jury
    in your either presentation of a defense in the guilt
    phase or your presentation in the penalty phase,
    correct?
    A.     Yes.
    Q.     And that was a judgment that you, the four
    attorneys that were involved in the case reached
    collectively. Is that fair?
    A.     That is fair.
    Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 264. We agree with the District Court that this strategic
    judgment was a reasonable one.
    In any event, the decision not to call Doctor Hilton as a witness did not
    prejudice the defense because—as the District Court put it—“LeCroy’s mental-
    illness evidence was the ultimate double-edged sword.” LeCroy, 
    2012 WL 1114238
    at *68. For one thing, none of the evidence went to LeCroy’s
    competency or presented an affirmative defense; LeCroy understood that killing
    Tiesler was wrong, and he did it anyway. Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 264. Second,
    “the testimony that could have been presented was just as likely to have resulted in
    aggravation against rather than mitigation for” LeCroy. See 
    Reed, 593 F.3d at 1238
    (citation omitted). Doctor Hilton’s testimony would have underscored all of
    43
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 44 of 54
    the Government’s aggravating factors: that LeCroy targeted Tiesler, that he laid in
    wait for her inside her home, and that he committed the murder in an especially
    heinous manner. Doctor Hilton found, moreover, that LeCroy could be a danger to
    others in the future, either to fellow inmates or to the public if he ever escaped—
    and LeCroy had tried to escape from prison before. Third, Doctor Hilton’s
    testimony would have undercut the credibility of the defense lawyers in the eyes of
    the jury once it became clear that Doctor Hilton’s conclusions were orthogonal to
    the botched-burglary defense. Considered in total, then, the District Court was
    correct in concluding that there was no reasonable probability that the jury would
    have reached a different sentence with Doctor Hilton’s testimony before them.
    Indeed, Doctor Hilton’s testimony might have made things worse. See LeCroy,
    
    2012 WL 1114238
    at *68–69.
    2.
    LeCroy’s second argument is that—whatever the merits of the botched-
    burglary defense and teaching-witness gambit as strategic questions—his attorneys
    failed to actually implement their strategy at trial. Had the attorneys pulled off the
    teaching-expert plan, LeCroy allows that “there might, but only might, be some
    merit” to the District Court’s conclusion that the attorneys were not ineffective.
    Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 1. But LeCroy says that “simply did not happen.” 
    Id. Instead, LeCroy
    says his attorneys unreasonably decided not to call their teaching expert,
    44
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 45 of 54
    Doctor Lisak, because of an irrational fear of the Government’s rebuttal witness,
    and then compounded the error in their closing argument by failing to adequately
    connect LeCroy’s sexual abuse to the crime. See 
    id. at 1–4.
    On this account,
    LeCroy received at best only a fragmentary mental health defense at trial: “What
    was missing was any connection of the sexual abuse to Defendant’s crime, which
    could only be provided by expert testimony, which counsel unreasonably
    abandoned.” 
    Id. at 4–5.
    We do not agree that LeCroy’s attorneys were incompetent in their
    execution of their trial strategy. For purposes of our discussion, we divide
    LeCroy’s claim on this point into three alleged defects in his attorneys’
    representation: (1) that they ought to have had Doctor Lisak personally evaluate
    LeCroy; (2) that they ought to have called Doctor Lisak as a witness at trial; and
    (3) that they ought to have done a better job in their closing argument connecting
    LeCroy’s childhood sexual abuse to Tiesler’s murder. We conclude that none of
    these claims warrant § 2255 relief.
    First, all the problems that would have attended calling Doctor Hilton as a
    witness at trial, discussed in Part III.A.
    1, supra
    , applied with equal force to any
    expert who evaluated LeCroy. As Kearns explained at the § 2255 hearing, “[I]f we
    had Dr. Lisak examine Mr. LeCroy and then intended to use Dr. Lisak as a witness,
    then we would have to make Bill LeCroy available to the government and their
    45
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 46 of 54
    expert for an evaluation,” Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 93, in addition to disclosing
    Doctor Lisak’s findings to the Government. 
    Id. at 113.
    Just as we do not think it
    was unreasonable not to call Doctor Hilton as a witness, we do not think it was
    unreasonable for the defense team to try and insulate their preferred teaching
    expert from damaging cross examination or protect their client from a hostile
    Government evaluation. These choices represented reasonable tactical decisions
    by competent attorneys.
    The decision not to call Doctor Lisak, even as a teaching expert, was also a
    reasoned tactical decision on the defense team’s part. At the close of the guilt
    phase and before the jury returned a verdict, the lawyers were provided a copy of
    Doctor Medlin’s report, which she had prepared from examining LeCroy’s
    documentary records from school, the military, and prison. In her report, Doctor
    Medlin rejected out of hand the causal link between childhood sexual abuse and
    violent criminality as an adult, and she further drew attention to LeCroy’s
    inconsistent reporting of his abuse at the hands of Tinkerbell. Doctor Medlin
    suggested that some inmates fabricate tales of abuse to garner sympathy in the
    criminal justice system, and that such fabrication might explain why LeCroy
    sometimes reported being abused and sometimes did not. At the § 2255 hearing,
    Kearns explained “what was so threatening about Dr. Medlin’s report. It was the
    complete apparent unwillingness to accept any impact of childhood sexual abuse
    46
    Case: 12-15132       Date Filed: 01/15/2014       Page: 47 of 54
    on an adult man. I mean, it was more that she seemed—we seemed to have two
    experts that were polar opposites, one [i.e., Lisak] that said this is a very damaging,
    this trauma is very damaging and has very serious consequences, and then an
    expert who seemed to be unwilling to accept it.” Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 125. Not
    wanting to engage in a battle of the experts, and still fearful that calling Doctor
    Lisak would trigger a Government evaluation,16 the defense elected not to call
    Doctor Lisak and instead try to connect the abuse to the crime on their own in their
    closing argument.
    LeCroy contends that this decision was manifestly unreasonable because
    Doctor Medlin’s report was of such poor quality that, had Doctor Lisak been called
    to testify, he could have easily dismantled a report he told the attorneys was
    “nonsense,” a “hatchet job by somebody who really didn’t know what she was
    talking about.” See Pet’r’s Reply Br. at 14 (quoting Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 166).
    But as Mendelsohn explained, the attorneys understood that they “weren’t dealing
    with experts, we were dealing with lay people; and in the end it may just be a battle
    of the experts. No matter how incredible she may be on an objective expert level,
    16
    Kearns noted that, at that point in trial, “if we used Dr. Lisak as a teaching expert
    without having evaluated Mr. LeCroy, we were running the risk of still having to make him
    available to the government for Dr. Medlin’s evaluation. . . . And this order put us in the worst
    possible position because then we had Bill LeCroy, our expert not having seen Bill LeCroy; and
    if that was countered by Dr. Medlin who had done an evaluation of Bill LeCroy, then clearly a
    jury would be more likely to believe the doctor who had actually evaluated him.” Collateral Tr.
    Vol. I at 112.
    47
    Case: 12-15132     Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 48 of 54
    you know, she could come off polished enough to a lay jury that we would end up
    having her be believable.” Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 277–78. The District Court,
    having seen Doctor Medlin testify at the § 2255 hearing, expressly found that “the
    Defense’s concerns were real. Even though Dr. Lisak and Dr. Hilton disagree with
    Dr. Medlin, her experience with sexual abuse perpetrators and citation of studies
    may well have convinced a lay jury that LeCroy only admitted sexual abuse in
    situations in which he wanted sympathy or benefits.” LeCroy, 
    2012 WL 1114238
    at *55. We are especially hesitant to disturb this conclusion insofar as we give
    special deference to the factfinder on questions of credibility. See 
    Devine, 520 F.3d at 1287
    .
    LeCroy also argues—with respect to both Doctor Hilton and Doctor Lisak—
    that his attorneys were operating under an irrational fear of a Government
    evaluation. LeCroy claims that his attorneys could have agreed to a Government
    evaluation “and, if it turned out badly, still attempted the ‘teaching expert’ ploy.”
    Pet’r’s Br. at 31. But without knowing what a Government evaluation would
    show, LeCroy claims his attorneys could not have made an informed strategic
    decision because they were operating “without knowledge of what the real stakes
    were.” 
    Id. This argument
    misses the mark. First, it was not unreasonable for the
    defense team to infer, based on Doctor Hilton’s evaluation, that an evaluation by a
    48
    Case: 12-15132    Date Filed: 01/15/2014   Page: 49 of 54
    Government expert would come to similar—or worse—conclusions. Kearns
    testified that she was “very fearful” of a Government evaluation “based on [her], at
    that point in time, 30 years of experience doing criminal defense work,” during
    which her experiences with Government psychiatric evaluations had “not been
    good.” Collateral Tr. Vol. I at 94, 108, 110. Or, as Mendelsohn put it, “I don’t
    have a lot of faith that the government experts would be coming out trying to help
    Mr. LeCroy.” Collateral Tr. Vol. II at 269. LeCroy certainly offers no reason to
    think that the lawyers’ judgment was unreasonable.
    Second, and perhaps more importantly, LeCroy’s argument here inverts the
    burden of proof, which on a § 2255 petition belongs to the petitioner. If LeCroy’s
    claim is that a Government evaluation would have been less damaging than Doctor
    Hilton’s evaluation—and that, accordingly, the defense team ought to have been
    more willing to roll the dice and see what the Government would come up with—
    then to carry that argument LeCroy would actually need to show that the
    Government evaluation would be favorable. Otherwise, LeCroy is asking us to
    disregard the burden of proof and speculate about what might have been, drawing
    an inference in his favor that the record simply does not support. Here, where
    LeCroy is either unwilling or unable to demonstrate that the Government’s
    evaluation would in fact have been favorable—as opposed to conceivably being
    favorable—he has failed to carry his burden in showing prejudice.
    49
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    Finally, LeCroy takes issue with his attorneys’ closing argument at the
    sentencing phase, claiming they never adequately connected his childhood abuse to
    the crime. This Court explained in Lawhorn v. Allen, 
    519 F.3d 1272
    (11th Cir.
    2008), that deficient performance in the closing-argument context can be shown by
    “an attorney’s failure to use the closing argument to focus the jury’s attention on
    his client’s character or any mitigating factors of the offender’s circumstances, and
    by his failure to ask the jury to spare his client’s life.” 
    Id. at 1295.
    Here, Kearns
    indisputably asked the jury to show mercy and spare LeCroy’s life, so LeCroy’s
    claim is that Kearns failed to “drive the point home regarding the effect of sexual
    and other abuse suffered by the Defendant,” Pet’r’s Br. at 29–30, and that the link
    she drew in her closing argument—that LeCroy’s self-esteem suffered as a
    consequence of Tinkerbell’s abuse, and that this contributed to Tiesler’s murder—
    was “hardly a compelling case for a sentence other than death.” 
    Id. at 30.
    But as the District Court correctly noted, LeCroy’s point here is not that Kearns
    failed to draw the jury’s attention to the available mitigating evidence. Plainly, she
    did that. His claim is, at best, that he wishes she had done it better. That does not
    give rise to an ineffectiveness claim of the sort we found in Lawhorn. In that case,
    we said an attorney had performed deficiently on closing where the attorney
    waived his closing argument entirely “based on a complete misunderstanding of a
    clear rule of 
    law.” 519 F.3d at 1295
    –96. By contrast, Kearns in her closing
    50
    Case: 12-15132      Date Filed: 01/15/2014    Page: 51 of 54
    argument reminded the jury that LeCroy had been abused and explained how it
    affected him as an adult. She might have done more, but Strickland requires
    competence, not perfection.
    B.
    LeCroy’s second category of alleged ineffectiveness is his attorneys’ failure
    to object to the District Court’s instruction at the conclusion of the sentencing
    phase that the jury could consider the nonstatutory aggravating factor of future
    dangerousness to the public if the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that
    defendant posed a “risk” of escape, as opposed to finding a “likelihood” of escape.
    See Pet’r’s Br. at 42. The word “risk” is, LeCroy says, “so elastic and ill-defined
    that it could include the mere possibility of an escape, no matter how fanciful.” 
    Id. at 43.
    By failing to object to this instruction, the attorneys allegedly failed to
    perfect a meritorious legal issue on appeal.
    We disagree. First, LeCroy’s attorneys were not ineffective in failing to
    object to the court’s wording because the instruction did not misstate the law. We
    have said that district courts have “broad discretion in formulating a jury charge so
    long as the charge as a whole accurately reflects the law and facts,” United States
    v. Turner, 
    871 F.2d 1574
    , 1578 (11th Cir. 1989) (citations omitted), and the jury
    instruction at issue here was not an inaccurate statement of law. Rather than
    inviting the jury to entertain a “fanciful” possibility of escape, as LeCroy suggests,
    51
    Case: 12-15132         Date Filed: 01/15/2014        Page: 52 of 54
    Pet’r’s Br. at 43, the court instructed the jury that they could only consider
    LeCroy’s future dangerousness “if each of you finds beyond a reasonable doubt
    that Mr. LeCroy does pose a risk of escape.”
    When we considered this instruction on direct appeal in LeCroy’s case, we
    said:
    “In light of LeCroy’s history of attempted escapes and the judge’s
    clear instructions to the jury requiring that it find a risk of escape
    ‘beyond a reasonable doubt,’ we cannot conclude that there is a
    reasonable probability that the different standard urged by LeCroy
    would have resulted in a different outcome. Moreover, the jury found
    every other aggravating factor alleged by the government, and such
    findings are amply supported by the record.”
    
    LeCroy, 441 F.3d at 931
    . LeCroy is right that, because trial counsel did not
    object to this instruction, we conducted only plain error review. But he
    offers no reason to suggest that the analysis would change under an abuse-
    of-discretion standard, and indeed cites no authority at all for the proposition
    that “likelihood” was the magic, mandatory word.17 Our reasoning in
    LeCroy’s direct appeal also suggests that even if counsel had objected to the
    instruction, we would not have reversed his conviction given that “the jury
    found every other aggravating factor alleged by the government.” 
    Id. 17 The
    case that LeCroy does cite on this point is not persuasive. United States v. Allen,
    
    247 F.3d 741
    , 788 (8th Cir. 2000), rev’d on other grounds, 
    536 U.S. 953
    (2002), does not help
    him, because there the Eighth Circuit said that “[a] defendant in prison for life is still a risk to
    prison officials and to other inmates, and even though a life sentence without the possibility of
    parole greatly reduces the future danger to society from that particular defendant, there is still a
    chance that the defendant might escape from prison or receive a pardon or commutation of
    sentence.”
    52
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    LeCroy, therefore, cannot show prejudice from his attorneys’ failure to
    object.
    C.
    LeCroy’s final claim is that his attorneys were ineffective for failing to
    request an instruction that the jury, in conducting its balancing of aggravating and
    mitigating factors, was required to find beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating ones. LeCroy’s theory is that, under
    cases like Ring v. Arizona, 
    536 U.S. 584
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 2428
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 556
    (2002) and Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 2348
    , 
    147 L. Ed. 2d 435
    (2000), any fact essential to the imposition of a particular sentence must be
    found beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the ultimate balance between
    aggravating and mitigating sentencing factors is effectively a factual question.
    Pet’r’s Br. at 44–45. A competent attorney would, LeCroy says, have asked for
    such a jury instruction.
    The problem with this argument is that it invites us to evaluate counsel’s
    conduct retrospectively, rather than at the time of trial. Contra Strickland, 466
    U.S. at 
    689, 104 S. Ct. at 2065
    . At the time of LeCroy’s trial in 2004, no court had
    found that the jury had to be instructed that it conduct its balancing inquiry against
    a reasonable doubt standard. To be sure, subsequent cases advanced the possibility
    that Apprendi and the like applied to a jury’s balancing deliberations, see, e.g.,
    53
    Case: 12-15132        Date Filed: 01/15/2014       Page: 54 of 54
    United States v. Gabrion, 
    648 F.3d 307
    , 325–29 (6th Cir. 2011), aff’d en banc, 
    719 F.3d 511
    (6th Cir. 2013), but LeCroy points to no authority that would have given
    LeCroy’s attorneys notice at the time of trial that such an instruction was even
    arguably required. 18 Even supposing LeCroy’s argument had merit, then, he
    directs it to the wrong target. Strickland is concerned with prevailing professional
    norms at the time of trial, not with subsequent developments in the law.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is
    AFFIRMED.
    18
    Indeed, the District Court surveyed available cases and concluded that the opinions available
    to LeCroy’s attorneys at the time of trial “would have [led] a reasonable attorney to believe that
    Ring and its progeny would not apply to” balancing instructions. See LeCroy, 
    2012 WL 1114238
    at *63–65 (emphasis added).
    54