Hood v. Cockrell , 72 F. App'x 171 ( 2003 )


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  •                                                       United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS         August 19, 2003
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT             Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    No. 00-41272
    CHARLES DEAN HOOD,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    versus
    JANIE COCKRELL, DIRECTOR, TEXAS
    DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
    INSTITUTIONAL DIVISION,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    --------------------
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Texas
    (4:99-CV-109)
    --------------------
    Before SMITH, WIENER, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    IT IS ORDERED that Petitioner’s motion to expand the district
    court’s grant of a Certificate of Appealability (“COA”) to cover a
    claim of constructive ineffective assistance of counsel is DENIED
    for the following reasons.
    In his motion, Hood implicates nine issues:
    1.    Whether  the    district  court   misapplied   the
    Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
     (1993) harmless error
    standard
    2. Whether the district court erroneously evaluated the Ake
    v. Oklahoma, 
    470 U.S. 68
     (1985) errors under the harmless
    error standard
    3. Whether the trial court’s Ake violation in refusing to
    appoint Hood an independent psychiatrist prior to trial and at
    trial was harmless error
    4. Whether trial counsel’s failure to adequately preserve and
    pursue Hood’s rights under Ake was harmless
    5. Whether the trial court’s Ake violation in not directing
    Dr. Brooks to assist the defense in preparing for trial was
    harmless
    6. Whether the Ake violation by Dr. Brooks in refusing to
    state his opinion in his report regarding Hood’s future
    dangerousness was harmless
    7. Whether the Ake violation by Dr. Brooks in refusing to
    tell the defense his opinion on Hood’s future dangerousness
    except from the witness stand was harmless
    8.   Whether the Ake violation by Dr. Brooks in failing to
    delve into mitigation issues and to provide assistance to
    prepare a mitigation defense was harmless
    9. Whether the trial court, by forcing Hood to elect between
    his constitutional rights, created a constructive ineffective
    assistance of counsel requiring automatic reversal1
    I
    Texas prisoner # 000982, Hood was convicted of the 1989
    capital murders of Ronald Williamson and Tracie Lynn Wallace under
    Texas Penal Code section 19.03(a)(2) and was sentenced to death.
    Hood v. State, No. 71, 167 (Tex. Crim. App. Nov. 24, 1993)
    (unpublished). His conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct
    appeal.
    Prior to his trial, Hood moved for the appointment of an
    independent psychiatrist to assist him in preparing a defense at
    sentencing, noting that a particular need existed because, in all
    likelihood, his present and future mental condition would be an
    issue at trial and, further, that the State would have access to
    1
    Hood does not brief issues 3-8, stating that they are
    premised on the contention set forth in Issue 2, that the Ake
    errors were structural, requiring automatic reversal.
    2
    its own expert.2     At the first hearing on the matter, the trial
    court ordered defense counsel to submit a list of psychiatrists
    from which the court would appoint one.           The trial court reserved
    decision on whether the prosecution would be able to receive a copy
    of the psychiatric report.
    The prosecution moved for a rehearing.           At a hearing on that
    matter held early in June of 1990, the State requested that either
    a neutral psychiatrist be appointed and that the report be made
    available to both parties or that the prosecution’s psychiatrist,
    if it chose to obtain one, have access to Hood.                  The defense
    objected, arguing that if Hood’s psychiatric report were required
    to be shared with the State, he would be forced to choose between
    his right to appointment of a psychiatrist and his right against
    self-incrimination, because sharing the report with the prosecution
    would be tantamount to communicating with the State.               The trial
    court reserved ruling on that issue.
    Immediately after the hearing, however, the trial judge met
    with counsel   for   both   parties       in   chambers.   The   in-chambers
    conference was not recorded; however, the docket sheet indicates
    that the trial court granted the defense’s motion as follows:           “(1)
    Psychiatrist appointed ——    information shared by both or (2) [two]
    2
    At the time of Hood’s offense, Texas law provided that
    to impose the death penalty, the jury had to make an affirmative
    finding that, inter alia, “there [was] a probability that the
    defendant would commit criminal acts of violence that would
    constitute a continuing threat to society.” TEX. CRIM. PROC. CODE
    ANN. § 37.071(b)(2) (Vernon 1981 & Supp. 2003) (Historical and
    Statutory Notes).     The jury was further instructed that in
    answering the special issues, it should consider any evidence that
    mitigated against imposition of the death penalty.
    3
    psychiatrists [appointed], one of each side’s choice; interview
    together ——     share information.”         The docket sheet then listed
    three psychiatrists, one of whom was “Dr. Brooks.”
    Later that month, the trial judge signed an order granting
    Hood’s motion in part and giving him the option of choosing between
    two alternatives. The first alternative ordered the appointment of
    Dr. Sidney Brooks to conduct a psychiatric examination to determine
    Hood’s future dangerousness and assist the jury in determining the
    proper sentence. Under this alternative, Dr. Brooks was ordered to
    prepare and file a written report of his findings with the court,
    which report would be made available to both parties.
    The second alternative ordered that each party designate in
    writing one psychiatrist of its choosing before July 13, 1990, for
    purposes   of   conducting   a   joint      interview     with   Hood.   Each
    psychiatrist would report only to the party that had designated
    him.
    This basic order specified that Hood was to file a written
    election of one of the two alternatives no later than July 13,
    1990, and that if he failed to do so, his motion to appoint an
    independent psychiatrist would be denied. The order was signed for
    approval by counsel for Hood and for the State.
    Although no written election was ever made, Dr. Brooks did
    conduct an examination of Hood on July 6, 1990, and submitted his
    report to the trial court.        Dr. Brooks diagnosed Hood as having
    antisocial personality disorder and concluded in relevant part that
    Hood   “ha[d]   demonstrated     in   the    past   and    [was]   likely   to
    4
    demonstrate       in    the     future,    particularly      when      subjected    to
    provocative circumstances, a propensity to act out his aggressive
    instincts       upon    other    persons       and/or    property.”      Dr.   Brooks
    additionally      diagnosed       Hood    with    “[n]europhysiological         brain
    dysfunction with probable left temporal cortical and deep temporal
    limbic brain dysfunction” and offered the opinion that “brain
    dysfunctional factors [were] inevitably important and contributory
    to Mr. Hood’s personality dysfunction” and “contribute[d] to the
    risk     of   behavioral        dysfunction      and     future     dangerousness.”
    Dr.    Brooks     suggested      that     additional      testing      would   assist
    in further evaluating and confirming those clinical findings.
    Dr. Brooks was not called to testify at trial, however.
    According to the affidavit testimony introduced at Hood’s state
    habeas proceeding by his trial co-counsel David Haynes, the defense
    had access to Dr. Brooks’s report, but it did not contain the
    doctor’s opinion on Hood’s future dangerousness.                         During the
    penalty phase, counsel interviewed Dr. Brooks in a courthouse
    witness room in an effort to obtain his position on the issue of
    future dangerousness, but Dr. Brooks refused to state his opinion,
    except from the witness stand.                 According to Haynes’ affidavit,
    defense counsel elected not to call Dr. Brooks because if he had
    testified that Hood was a future danger, it would have been
    disastrous to the defense. According to the affidavit testimony of
    Hood’s trial co-counsel George Parker, the decision not to call Dr.
    Brooks    was    made    “[b]ecause       of   [his]    refusal   to    provide    any
    information not contained in his report.”
    5
    During the penalty phase, the prosecution called two expert
    witnesses, both of whom testified that Hood was a sociopath who
    would more likely than not be a continuing threat to society.
    Immediately before to the close of evidence at the penalty phase,
    defense counsel re-urged their pre-trial motion and requested
    funding for an independent psychiatrist.            Counsel for Hood argued
    that the State had the economic ability to hire two experts and
    that Hood had been denied such an opportunity, but the trial judge
    denied the motion.         Based on the jury’s answers to the special
    issues, the death penalty was assessed.
    Hood filed a state application for post-conviction relief
    raising, inter alia,3 the following grounds for relief:                (1) The
    trial court’s refusal to appoint an independent, confidential
    psychiatrist prior to and at trial violated his Fifth, Sixth,
    Eighth,   and    Fourteenth      Amendment   rights   and    Hood    had   never
    waived his right to such an expert; (2) counsel was ineffective for
    failing to      preserve   and    pursue   Hood’s   rights   under    Ake;   and
    (3) counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present
    mitigation evidence.       The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (“TCCA”)
    denied the application with written order based on the following
    pertinent factual findings and legal conclusions of the trial
    court:
    1. Hood failed to choose in writing which psychiatric
    examination alternative he preferred.
    3
    Only those claims that he chose to raise in his § 2254
    petition are listed.
    6
    2. Hood agreed to cooperate with Dr. Brooks, even though
    counsel had advised him against it.
    3. Hood impliedly elected the first option contained in
    the trial court’s motion, both by his failure to make a
    written election and by cooperating with Dr. Brooks
    against the advice of counsel.
    4. Before Hood was examined by Dr. Brooks, his legal
    rights were explained to him and he appeared to
    understand them.
    5. Hood waived appellate complaint about not having his
    own psychiatrist by failing to exercise the option
    offered by the trial judge of being examined by a
    psychiatrist of his own choosing.
    6.   The options set forth in the trial court’s order
    satisfied Ake.
    7. During the course of trial counsel’s representation,
    Hood   stopped  communicating   with   them,   insisting
    on communicating only through counsel’s legal assistant,
    Janet Heitmiller.
    8. The unsuitability of this arrangement was made clear
    to Hood, but to no avail.
    9. Counsel met with Hood’s parents to obtain mitigating
    evidence; however, counsel’s efforts were hampered by a
    lack of cooperation from Hood and members of his family.
    10.   Hood received effective assistance of counsel.
    11. Hood failed to demonstrate a reasonable probability
    that his sentence would have been different but for
    counsel’s alleged deficiencies.
    Hood subsequently filed the instant § 2254 petition, raising
    the following issues:   (1) whether his trial court’s refusal to
    appoint an independent, confidential psychiatrist to examine Hood
    prior to and at trial violated his Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and
    Fourteenth Amendment rights; (2) whether Hood waived his right to
    an independent psychiatric expert; (3) whether Hood was denied
    his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to effective assistance
    7
    of counsel at the punishment phase by counsel’s failure to preserve
    and   pursue   Hood’s   rights      under   Ake,   by   not   effectively
    communicating with Hood, by failing to request further medical
    testing so as to present a mitigation defense, and by allowing Hood
    to give a psychiatric interview to Dr. Brooks; (4) whether the
    trial court created constructive ineffective assistance of counsel
    by forcing Hood to abandon his rights under Ake so as to avoid
    self-incrimination;     and   (5)    whether   trial    counsel   rendered
    ineffective assistance during the punishment phase of trial under
    the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments by failing to develop and
    present a mitigation defense and by delegating that responsibility
    to a legal assistant.     The State moved for summary judgment, and
    the district court issued a memorandum opinion denying habeas
    relief for the following reasons.
    Ake Claims
    Future Dangerousness
    The district court determined that the TCCA’s finding on
    direct appeal that Hood had waived his Ake claims by submitting to
    an evaluation against the advice of counsel was untenable.4           The
    district court found that both the affidavit evidence and Dr.
    Brooks’s report supported a finding that counsel misunderstood the
    court’s order as requiring Hood to be examined by Dr. Brooks.          In
    support of this finding, the district court pointed to the fact
    4
    On direct appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held
    that the fact that Hood did not exercise the option afforded him by
    the trial court of having a psychiatrist of his own choosing that
    would report solely to him meant that he had waived his appellate
    complaint that he was denied an independent psychiatrist.
    8
    that the trial court coordinator had sent a copy of the order to
    Hood’s trial counsel and to Dr. Brooks, along with a copy of a
    letter to Brooks which stated, “Enclosed is a copy of the Court’s
    Order Appointing Psychiatrist to Examine Defendant.                          Your contact
    at     the     sheriff’s       office    will     be     Jim       Hamilton,      Medical
    Officer. . . .”         Based on this letter, the district court ventured
    that it appeared that the court coordinator mistakenly concluded
    that Dr. Brooks had in fact been appointed by the trial court to
    examine Hood and, as a result of receiving copies of her letter
    with the court’s order, both Hood’s counsel and Dr. Brooks had the
    same misunderstanding.             The district court found this mistake
    understandable, observing that the order was “somewhat ambiguous.”
    Based     on    the    affidavit    testimony          of     Janet    Heitmiller5
    and information in Dr. Brooks’s report, the district court found
    that Hood’s counsel believed that he had no right to prevent Hood’s
    interview       with    Dr.    Brooks,    and    that    if    Hood’s        counsel   had
    understood the order, Brooks would not have gone to the jail to
    interview Hood at all, absent an agreement in writing by Hood’s
    counsel to the first alternative. The district court further found
    that       neither    the    affidavit   evidence       nor    Dr.    Brooks’s    report
    established that Hood was ever informed of his right to refuse to
    be interviewed.
    In     sum,    the    district    court   found        that    Hood’s    counsel,
    the court coordinator, and Dr. Brooks all mistakenly believed that
    5
    The district court noted Heitmiller’s attestation that
    counsel instructed her to tell Hood not to answer any questions
    posed by Dr. Brooks about the crime.
    9
    Dr. Brooks had been appointed to examine Hood and that Hood had to
    submit; and, further, that this mistake was caused in part by the
    trial court coordinator’s letter to Dr. Brooks and in part by the
    ambiguity of the order.     The district court further found that
    there was no evidence to support the determination that counsel had
    waived the Ake claim by failing to elect in writing to pursue the
    order’s   second   alternative,   because   the   terms   of   the   order
    contradicted this reasoning. Counsel never made a written election
    and, therefore, under the terms of the order, Dr. Brooks should not
    have examined Hood.6
    Having determined that the state court’s determination was
    unreasonable in light of the record, the district court addressed
    the merits of Hood’s Ake claim.     The court assumed arguendo that
    the alternatives set forth in the trial court’s order violated Ake,
    6
    Although not relevant to the resolution of the instant
    motion to expand the COA grant, we nevertheless note that in
    interviews with Hood’s habeas counsel, trial counsel stated that
    they saw both alternatives offered in the trial court’s order as
    constitutionally impermissible and because they did not want to
    waive Hood’s Fifth Amendment rights, they made a purposeful
    decision to make no election between the options offered by the
    trial court.    Moreover, defense co-counsel Parker’s affidavit
    states, “The options provided by the Court, after being analyzed by
    Mr. Haynes and myself, were found to be options that in my opinion
    at the time only made Mr. Hood’s situation worse if he were to
    exercise either option.” These statements cast serious doubt on
    the district court’s factual finding that counsel misread or
    misunderstood the order by reading only its first paragraph and,
    therefore, erroneously believed that Hood had to submit to an
    examination by Brooks.     It is further noteworthy that habeas
    counsel did not argue that trial counsel (or Dr. Brooks or the
    court coordinator) misunderstood the order; counsel instead argued
    that Ms. Heitmiller erroneously informed Hood that he had to submit
    to the interview because the trial court had so ordered and that,
    for purposes of ineffective assistance, her actions were imputable
    to trial counsel.
    10
    and found that Dr. Brooks’s actions violated Ake, insofar as he (1)
    disobeyed the court’s order to state in his report his opinion
    whether there was a probability that Hood would commit future
    criminal acts, and (2) refused to reveal his opinion on Hood’s
    future dangerousness except from the witness stand.7
    The district court then assessed whether these errors were (1)
    structural, requiring automatic reversal, or (2) trial errors,
    requiring reversal only if there was a showing of harm.     Citing
    White v. Johnson, 
    153 F.3d 197
     (5th Cir. 1998), the district court
    held that the errors were trial errors and should therefore be
    analyzed under the harmless error standard.      Using White as a
    guide, the district court determined that the following non-
    psychiatric evidence of Hood’s future dangerousness was so strong
    that his future dangerousness would have been a foregone conclusion
    in the jury’s mind:     (1) Hood had a juvenile conviction for
    breaking and entering and was jailed for violating probation; (2)
    while in jail, Hood attempted to draw attention to himself on three
    occasions by deliberately injuring himself or feigning injury; (3)
    at age 19, Hood entered into a sexual relationship with a   15-year
    old girl; (4) Hood’s father had grabbed him from behind while Hood
    was arguing with his girlfriend’s mother,, and Hood struck his
    father and threatened to kill him; (5) Hood would force his 15-year
    old girlfriend to have sex with him when she would refuse; (6) Hood
    7
    The district court additionally found that Dr. Brooks had
    violated Ake by not delving into mitigation issues and by not
    providing assistance to prepare a mitigation defense; however, the
    court noted that Hood’s Ake claim did not encompass the mitigation
    issue, and therefore refused to address it.
    11
    took his girlfriend to Texas from Indiana and told her mother that
    he would kill her if she refused to allow him to see her daughter;
    (7) after working at Taco Bell for only three days Hood was fired
    for   fighting;    (8)    shortly   before   the    murders,   Hood    raped   a
    different 15-year old girl who was visiting him and threatened to
    kill her if she told anyone; and (9) Hood was “written up” for
    fighting with another inmate while in prison awaiting trial on the
    murder charge.      Based on the strength of this non-psychiatric
    evidence, the district court determined that any error in not
    allowing Hood to have the benefit of an independent, confidential
    psychiatric expert on the issue of future dangerousness, or any
    lack of help by Dr. Brooks in preparing a defense on this issue,
    was harmless.
    The district court next addressed Hood’s claim that trial
    counsel provided ineffective assistance at the punishment phase.
    The   district    court    rejected   Hood’s       constructive     ineffective
    assistance argument, in which he contended that the trial court’s
    order rendered counsel’s representation ineffective.              The district
    court held that its conclusion that any Ake error was harmless
    precluded   a     determination     that     a   deficiency    in     counsel’s
    performance precipitated by the court’s order was prejudicial under
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984).            The district court
    also rejected Hood’s contention that counsel should have done more
    to preserve the right to an independent, confidential psychiatric
    expert.   The district court found that as counsel had twice moved
    12
    unsuccessfully for appointment of such an expert, their performance
    was not deficient.
    The district court nevertheless found that trial counsel’s
    misreading of the trial court’s order, and the incorrect advice
    given     Hood    based    on     the    misreading,        constituted     deficient
    performance.       The court added, however, that even if counsel had
    correctly read the order and advised Hood not to submit to Dr.
    Brooks’s evaluation, the only remaining options for counsel were
    either to have Hood submit to a joint interview by psychiatrists
    for the state and defense, or to forgo any expert psychiatric
    assistance entirely.            Thus, the district court held that because
    Hood failed to demonstrate that there was a probability that his
    sentencing would have been different but for counsel’s failure to
    pursue    the     remaining       alternatives,        he   failed   to    establish
    Strickland prejudice.
    Regarding mitigation evidence, the district court rejected the
    contention that counsel’s failure to communicate directly with Hood
    resulted in a failure to recognize the need to obtain additional
    medical     testing       and    an     additional     expert    and,     therefore,
    constituted ineffective assistance.              The district court found that
    the   opinion      Hood    claimed      might   have    been    obtained     from   an
    additional       expert   ——    that    his   mental    impairments       contributed
    to his behavior —— was already contained in Dr. Brooks’s report.
    The district court identified the “real problem” as the trial
    court’s failure to order Dr. Brooks, and Brooks’s own refusal, to
    assist defense counsel in preparing and presenting their case in
    13
    mitigation.    The court reasoned that, because counsel should not
    have had to pursue an additional expert, the failure to do so did
    not constitute deficient performance.
    The   district    court    determined,     however,      that   counsel’s
    decision to use his legal assistant, Ms. Heitmiller, to investigate
    Hood’s background concerning issues of mitigation was deficient
    performance.     This was because Ms. Heitmiller was not qualified to
    conduct such an investigation, and counsel had readily available
    the   services     of   a   trained,      court-appointed        investigator.
    The district court noted the following new mitigation evidence that
    was gathered post-trial:        (1) Hood’s family moved often because of
    financial and legal trouble; his father served jail time for theft,
    made no     financial   contribution      to   the   family,   and    was   under
    investigation for incest; (2) Hood’s mother was raised in an
    abusive home and consequently was unemotional to her children and
    denied or tolerated her husband’s abuse of Hood and his siblings;
    (3) Hood’s father verbally and physically abused him; (4) Hood’s
    parents sent him conflicting signals on moral issues; (5) Hood
    suffered brain damage at age three after being hit by a truck,
    impairing his intellectual and emotional development; (6) Hood was
    ridiculed by classmates because of his intellectual impairment; and
    (7) Hood manifested emotional and behavioral problems at a young
    age, and they appeared to worsen over time.             Although it labeled
    this “a close question,” the district court nevertheless determined
    that there was not a reasonable probability that a juror would have
    voted against the death penalty in Hood’s case and, therefore, that
    14
    he had not shown Strickland prejudice.                  The district court based
    this    determination on a comparison of Hood’s facts with those of
    the petitioner in Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
     (2000), finding
    that   the    cases    were    similar     but       concluding      that    Williams’s
    demonstration of remorse after his crimes “rendered him more worthy
    of mercy” than Hood.            The court thus found that there was no
    likelihood     that    Hood’s    jury     would       have    been      swayed    by   the
    mitigation evidence.
    Hood’s final ineffective assistance claim —— that counsel was
    ineffective    for    not     presenting       the    above-mentioned        mitigating
    evidence to Dr. Brooks —— was also rejected by the district court.
    It determined that even if counsel had                  performed competently by
    showing Dr. Brooks the mitigating evidence, there was still no
    reasonable     probability      that     the    result       of   the    penalty-phase
    proceedings would have been different.                   The court so concluded
    because the trial judge’s order did not direct Dr. Brooks to
    provide such assistance, and Dr. Brooks acted in conformity with
    what he believed the order required, i.e. an impartial psychiatric
    evaluation.
    Finally, the district court rejected Hood’s contention that
    the cumulative effect of his trial errors rendered his trial
    fundamentally     unfair.         The     district       court       found   that      the
    combination of the trial court’s Ake error in not ordering Dr.
    Brooks   to   assist    the     defense    on    the    issue     of     Hood’s   future
    dangerousness, and of counsel’s failure to present more extensive
    evidence in mitigation, did not have a substantial or injurious
    15
    effect on the jury’s verdict.                   The district court based this
    determination on “the very strong non-psychiatric evidence of
    future dangerousness, the double-edged nature of the mitigating
    evidence,8 and Hood’s lack of either remorse or rehabilitation.”
    The district court granted the State’s motion for summary
    judgment and denied Hood’s petition for habeas relief.                  Hood filed
    a timely notice of appeal and moved to amend the judgment and,
    alternatively, for a new trial.              He also moved for a COA.
    The district court granted Hood a COA on the following issues:
    (1) Whether Hood’s counsel’s misreading of the trial court’s order
    regarding   the    psychiatrist        examination,     and    delegating    to    an
    untrained    legal      assistant      the      investigation    into     potential
    mitigating evidence, created a reasonable probability that the
    result of his punishment hearing would have been different had
    counsel’s    performance        been    adequate,      and     (2)   whether      the
    combination of the violations of Hood’s rights under Ake and his
    counsel’s deficient performance had a substantial and injurious
    effect on the jury’s decision, thereby depriving him of a fair
    trial.    COA was denied on all other claims, and the district court
    denied Hood’s post-judgment motion.
    II
    We    may    not   grant    a   COA     unless   the     applicant    makes    a
    substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.
    8
    The district court recognized that the mitigating evidence
    of Hood’s mental impairment would be a “double-edged sword,”
    because, despite reducing his moral culpability, it also would have
    increased the probability of his future dangerousness.
    16
    See 
    28 U.S.C. § 2253
    (c)(2). “The COA determination under § 2253(c)
    requires an overview of the claims in the habeas petition and a
    general assessment of their merits.” Miller-El v. Cockrell, 
    123 S. Ct. 1029
    , 1039 (2003). We look to the district court’s application
    of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) to the
    petitioner’s constitutional claims and asks whether the district
    court’s resolution of those claims was debatable among jurists of
    reason.
    ISSUE 1:    Whether the district court misapplied the Brecht harmless
    error standard
    Hood   argues     that   in    reviewing     the    harmlessness    of   the
    trial errors, the district court used the wrong standard when
    it assessed whether there was a “‘reasonable probability’” that the
    result of the punishment phase would have been different but for
    the errors.   Relying on Brecht and Woods v. Johnson, 
    75 F.3d 1017
    ,
    1027 (5th Cir. 1996), Hood contends that the district court was
    required to ask instead whether there was “‘more than a mere
    possibility’” that the error contributed to the verdict.                 Noting
    that the    district    court      found   the   issue   whether   the   penalty
    proceedings would have been different a “‘close question,’” Hood
    argues that he is entitled to relief under the “more than a mere
    possibility” standard.        He further contends that under the “more
    than a mere possibility” standard, the cumulative impact of the
    trial errors requires a finding of harm.
    17
    Brecht held that constitutional errors that do not require
    automatic reversal would be assessed on collateral review under the
    harmless error standard set forth in Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
     (1946).     
    507 U.S. at 623
    .       Under that standard, the error
    must have “had substantial and injurious effect or influence in
    determining the jury’s verdict” for the petitioner to obtain habeas
    relief.   
    Id.
        In Woods, we reasoned that, under Brecht, a defendant
    is not entitled to relief “unless there is more than a mere
    reasonable      possibility   that   [the   constitutional   trial   error]
    contributed to the verdict.” 
    75 F.3d at 1026
    . We noted further that
    the Brecht standard does not require the petitioner to prove by the
    more demanding “reasonable probability” standard that, absent the
    error, the result of the proceeding would have been different.         
    Id.
    at 1027 (citing Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 436 (1995); see also
    Barrientes v. Johnson, 
    221 F.3d 741
    , 756 (5th Cir. 2000) (noting
    that the “reasonable probability” standard is more demanding than
    the Brecht harmless error standard).
    Hood asserts that the district court erroneously held him
    to the more demanding “reasonable probability” standard when it (1)
    evaluated the harmlessness of the Ake errors, (2) evaluated the
    prejudice prong of his ineffective assistance of counsel claims,
    and (3) evaluated the effect of the cumulative error.          The record,
    however, does not support Hood’s assertion that the district court
    applied the “reasonable probability” standard when evaluating the
    Ake claims.      Based on its summary of the non-psychiatric evidence
    of Hood’s future dangerousness, the district court held that Hood’s
    18
    future dangerousness would have been a foregone conclusion in the
    mind of the jury, so that any Ake error was harmless.                 Further, the
    district court correctly identified the Brecht standard, and no
    where in this portion of its opinion does the court use the words
    “reasonable probability.”
    Additionally, the Brecht standard was inapplicable to Hood’s
    ineffective assistance claims.              Instead, the district court was
    required to evaluate whether “there [was] 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
    (emphasis added).          The court thus applied the appropriate standard
    when determining whether counsel’s errors were prejudicial.                     The
    district     court    concluded      that     there   was   not   a    “reasonable
    probability” that the result of Hood’s penalty proceeding would
    have been different.         See also Barrientes, 
    221 F.3d at 756
     (noting
    that “Strickland claims utilize the more demanding ‘reasonable
    probability’ standard”).
    Finally,      the    district   court     reviewed    Hood’s     claim    of
    cumulative error under the Brecht standard and determined that
    counsel’s failure to introduce the psychiatric and the mitigating
    evidence would not have substantially or injuriously influenced the
    verdict.     There is no support in the record for Hood’s contention
    that   the   district       court   applied    the    “reasonable     probability”
    standard to this claim.
    19
    Based on the foregoing arguments, Hood has not demonstrated
    that the district court’s resolution of these constitutional claims
    was debatable.
    ISSUE 2:   Whether the district court erroneously evaluated the Ake
    errors under the harmless error standard
    Hood insists that the district court erroneously classified
    the Ake errors as “trial” errors (which are properly evaluated
    under the harmless error standard), when the errors were in fact
    “structural” and, therefore, required automatic reversal.   Relying
    on our decision in White, Hood contends that a defendant who makes
    a showing that his mental condition could have been a significant
    mitigating factor and then suffers an Ake error has suffered a
    structural error.   He further notes that the TCCA has held that Ake
    error is not subject to a harmless error analysis and, further,
    that in Ake, the Supreme Court reversed and remanded without
    conducting a harmless error analysis.
    Whether a constitutional error is reviewed for harmless error
    depends on whether the error is characterized as “trial error”
    or “structural error.”    White, 
    153 F.3d at 201
    .     “Trial error”
    occurs during the presentation of the case and is subject to a
    harmless error analysis because “it ‘may . . . be quantitatively
    assessed in the context of other evidence presented in order
    to determine [the effect it had on the trial].’” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Brecht, 
    507 U.S. at 629
    ). “Structural error,” however, “‘affect[s]
    the framework within which the trial proceeds, rather than simply
    20
    an error in the trial process itself’” and is therefore not subject
    to the harmless error analysis.              Id. at 201-02 (quoting Arizona v.
    Fulminante, 
    499 U.S. 279
    , 310 (1991)).
    In Ake, the Supreme Court held in relevant part that when the
    state presents psychiatric evidence on the issue of a capital
    defendant’s future dangerousness for purposes of establishing an
    aggravating factor to be considered at sentencing, due process
    requires that the defendant be afforded access to a psychiatric
    examination on relevant issues, to psychiatric testimony, and
    to assistance in preparation at the penalty phase.                    
    470 U.S. at
    83-
    84.    After determining that Ake suffered due process violations
    when he was denied the assistance of a psychiatrist, the Court
    reversed and remanded for a new trial.                
    Id. at 86-87
    .
    The Court has never held definitively, however, that Ake error
    is structural.         See Briseno v. Cockrell, 
    274 F.3d 204
    , 210-11 (5th
    Cir. 2001) (recognizing same).               Indeed, in Tuggle v. Netherland,
    
    516 U.S. 10
    , 14 (1995), the Court remanded for a determination
    “whether, or by what procedures, the sentence might be sustained or
    reimposed” in light of an Ake error, specifically noting that
    neither the state court nor the Court of Appeals had addressed the
    applicability of the harmless error analysis.
    A   federal      habeas    petitioner       must     establish    that      he   is
    entitled     to       relief   under   “clearly      established        Federal     law,
    as    determined       by   the   Supreme    Court     of    the     United   States.”
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1);     see       Williams,     
    529 U.S. at 381
    .
    Consequently, the absence of Supreme Court authority on this issue,
    21
    in addition to the fact that the district court’s use of the
    harmless error analysis was not inconsistent with other Supreme
    Court precedent, precludes a finding that the district court’s
    resolution of the constitutional claim was debatable.   Cf. Ledford
    v. Thomas, 
    275 F.3d 471
    , 474 (5th Cir. 2001) (absence of Supreme
    Court precedent on point precluded finding that state court’s
    adjudication involved an unreasonable application of federal law),
    cert. denied, 
    536 U.S. 927
     (2002).
    Furthermore, because relief must be established under federal
    law, Hood’s contention based on Rey v. State, 
    897 S.W.2d 333
    , 346
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (holding that Ake error cannot be evaluated
    for harm), that the TCCA has held Ake error to be structural, is
    irrelevant.   Citing the absence of an explicit statement from the
    Supreme Court on this issue, we have   concluded that Rey’s holding
    has been overruled by Cain v. State, 
    947 S.W.2d 262
    , 264 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 1997),9 which held that “[e]xcept for certain federal
    constitutional errors labeled by the United States Supreme Court as
    ‘structural,’ no error . . . is categorically immune to a harmless
    error analysis.”   Briseno, 
    274 F.3d at 210-11
     (internal quotations
    omitted) (quoting Cain, 
    947 S.W.2d at 264
    ) (emphasis added).
    Finally, we have squarely addressed this issue and have held
    that Ake errors are subject to harmless error review.   White, 
    153 F.3d at 201
     (“Three other circuits have expressly concluded that
    Ake error is subject to harmless-error analysis, and we now join
    9
    Cain was superseded by statute on other grounds by Aguirre-
    Mata v. State, 
    992 S.W.2d 495
    , 497-98 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999).
    22
    them.”). Hood urges that White limited the application of harmless
    error review to cases in which a defendant failed to make a showing
    that his mental condition could have been a significant mitigating
    factor, leaving unanswered the question whether a defendant who
    makes a proper showing and then suffers an Ake violation has
    suffered a “trial” or “structural” error.            Hood reads White too
    narrowly; but even assuming arguendo that White did not foreclose
    a determination that Ake error is structural when a defendant has
    established to the state trial court that his mental condition
    could have been a significant mitigating factor, Hood failed to
    make such a showing.     Like White, Hood argued that he was entitled
    to   the   appointment   of   a   psychiatrist    only   because   the   State
    intended to present its own psychiatric testimony; he made no
    showing that he was entitled to a psychiatrist on any other basis.
    White, 
    153 F.3d at 204
    .       White held such a showing insufficient to
    establish that any purported Ake error was structural.             See White,
    
    153 F.3d at 203-04
     (holding that showing of an entitlement to
    psychiatric assistance on the sole basis that the State intended to
    present    expert   testimony     was   subject   only   to   harmless   error
    review.).
    In light of the foregoing, Hood has not demonstrated an
    entitlement to a COA on this issue.
    23
    ISSUES 3-8:           Whether   the    specified             Ake      errors require
    automatic reversal
    Hood does not brief issues three through eight; he instead
    states that each is premised on his contention that the district
    court erroneously evaluated the Ake error under the harmless error
    standard.       As just noted, however, Hood has not demonstrated that
    the propriety of the district court’s application of the harmless
    error standard is debatable.              Therefore, he has also failed to
    demonstrate entitlement to a COA on issues three through eight.
    ISSUE 9:    Whether the trial court, by forcing Hood to elect between
    his constitutional rights, created a constructive
    ineffective assistance of counsel requiring automatic
    reversal
    Hood contends that the state trial court’s order appointing
    a psychiatrist assured that defense counsel’s assistance would
    be ineffective.         He argues that the alternatives provided defeated
    the adversarial nature of the proceedings, inasmuch as the common
    thread to       each    alternative      was   that    the    State   would     receive
    full     disclosure.        Hood     asserts     that    the       district     court’s
    determination that he established no Strickland prejudice as a
    result     of    this    error     was   based    on    the     court’s       erroneous
    determination that the Ake errors were harmless trial errors rather
    than structural errors and, therefore, that he is necessarily
    entitled to a COA on this issue as well.
    As a prefatory matter, we note that the issue whether Hood
    exhausted       his    “constructive”     ineffective        assistance   claim     was
    24
    raised in the district court.               In his § 2254 petition, Hood
    contended that “the facts and argument set forth in this Claim were
    presented to the State habeas court as part of Claims 1 and 2.”
    The State argues, however, that Hood presented this claim for the
    first time in his federal habeas proceedings and that it was
    therefore procedurally barred.         The district court did not address
    the State’s procedural bar contention, instead disposing of the
    claim on its merits.
    A    review   of   the   state    habeas   application   reveals   that
    this “constructive” ineffective assistance claim was not raised and
    therefore was not exhausted.          See Nobles v. Johnson, 
    127 F.3d 409
    ,
    420 (5th Cir. 1997) (exhaustion requirement is not met merely
    because the facts necessary to support the federal claim were
    before the state court). When a claim is unexhausted and therefore
    procedurally barred, however, it may nevertheless be denied on the
    merits.    Smith v. Cockrell, 
    311 F.3d 661
    , 684 (5th Cir. 2002).
    Hood would be precluded from raising his “constructive” ineffective
    assistance claim in the state courts under Texas’s abuse of the
    writ doctrine, because he has cited no cause for his failure to
    raise this claim in his state habeas application.         It is therefore
    procedurally barred.      See Nobles, 
    127 F.3d at 423
    .
    Notwithstanding the applicability of procedural bar, however,
    we find that this claim fails on its merits, because it hinges on
    Hood’s contention that he is entitled to a COA on the issue whether
    Ake errors are structural. As previously discussed, in the absence
    of clearly established Supreme Court law holding that Ake errors
    25
    are structural, Hood cannot demonstrate an entitlement to a COA on
    that issue.     Therefore, he is not entitled to a COA on his
    constructive ineffective assistance claim.       In addition, White
    supports the district court’s determination that, because the Ake
    error was harmless, Hood was precluded from establishing Strickland
    prejudice.    See 
    153 F.3d at 208
    ; R. 2, 499.
    III
    Hood has not established an entitlement to a COA on any of the
    issues raised herein, and, therefore, his motion to expand the COA
    grant is
    DENIED.
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