John Hardwick,Jr. v. Secretary, FL DOC ( 2015 )


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  •             Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 1 of 48
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 97-2319
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 3:95-cv-00250-J-10
    JOHN GARY HARDWICK, JR.,
    Petitioner - Appellant,
    versus
    SECRETARY, FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
    Respondent - Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (September 18, 2015)
    Before TJOFLAT, HULL and MARTIN, Circuit Judges.
    TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 2 of 48
    In Hardwick v. Crosby (Hardwick III), 
    320 F.3d 1127
     (11th Cir. 2003), we
    determined that Petitioner Hardwick was due an evidentiary hearing to determine
    whether his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel under the Sixth
    Amendment standard set out in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
     (1984), during the penalty phase of his capital murder trial.
    While retaining jurisdiction over the appeal, we remanded the case to the District
    Court for the limited purpose of conducting that hearing. The District Court held
    the hearing and found that the attorney’s performance failed to meet Strickland’s
    standard. The court further found that, but for such failure, it was reasonably
    probable that Hardwick would not have been sentenced to death. The District
    Court therefore concluded that a writ of habeas corpus should issue as to the death
    sentence.
    The District Court’s findings and conclusion are now before for us for
    review. We review the District Court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual
    findings for clear error. Turner v. Crosby, 
    339 F.3d 1247
    , 1273 (11th Cir. 2003).
    The court’s finding of ineffective assistance of counsel presents a mixed finding of
    fact and law, which we review de novo. Collier v. Turpin, 
    177 F.3d 1184
    , 1198
    (11th Cir. 1998).
    2
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    In the end, we agree with the District Court. Hardwick is entitled to a writ
    of habeas corpus setting aside his capital sentence and, unless the State provides
    him with a new penalty phase, requiring the imposition of a life sentence.1
    I.
    Hardwick III provides a highly detailed account of the facts and procedural
    history of Hardwick’s case. See 
    320 F.3d at
    1131–58. We recapitulate only those
    facts necessary to explain our disposition here.
    Upset about the disappearance of his stash of quaaludes, Hardwick killed
    seventeen-year-old Keith Pullum in the early morning hours of December 24,
    1984. On March 13, 1986, after a three-day trial, Hardwick was convicted of first-
    degree murder. At the penalty phase of the trial which followed, the State’s case
    consisted of establishing five statutory aggravating circumstances, which, the
    prosecutor argued, warranted a death-sentence recommendation. 2 The prosecutor
    laid the groundwork for the first statutory aggravating circumstance by introducing
    1
    Hardwick also asks us to address an argument on which we reserved judgment in
    Hardwick III: whether his relationship with his attorney was so dysfunctional that continued
    representation constituted a conflict of interest and denied Hardwick his right to effective
    representation of counsel during the guilt phase. We find no merit in the argument and therefore
    reject it. The District Court’s original denial of relief on this claim is AFFIRMED.
    2
    To recommend the imposition of a death sentence in Florida in 1986, the jury was
    required to find: one or more of the enumerated aggravating circumstances set out in 
    Fla. Stat. § 921.141
    (5); that sufficient mitigating circumstances outweighing the aggravating circumstances
    did not exist; and that the defendant should be sentenced to death. See 
    id.
     § 921.141(2) (1985).
    3
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    Hardwick’s three prior felony convictions “involving the use or threat of violence
    to the person.” See 
    Fla. Stat. § 921.141
    (5)(b) (1985). 3 The prosecutor’s arguments
    regarding the other four statutory aggravating circumstances were based on the
    evidence introduced during the guilt phase of the trial, and consisted of the
    following: Hardwick murdered Pullum while “kidnapping” him, see 
    id.
    § 921.141(5)(d); the murder was committed for “pecuniary gain,” see id.
    § 921.141(5)(f); the murder was “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel,” see id.
    § 921.141(5)(h); and the murder was committed in a “cold, calculated, and
    premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification,” see id.
    § 921.141(5)(i). Emphasizing the premeditated and cruel nature of the murder, the
    prosecutor told the jury that statutory mitigating factors did not exist to counter the
    aggravating circumstances. The prosecutor added that “there isn’t one shred of
    evidence that indicates” Hardwick was under the influence of emotional or mental
    disturbance and “[t]here is no evidence” that Hardwick’s mind was impaired.
    Hardwick’s attorney did not call any witnesses or present any evidence
    during the penalty phase, in mitigation or otherwise. His strategy was to present
    Hardwick’s case solely via his closing argument to the jury. That argument
    consisted of an attempt to undermine the statutory aggravating circumstances the
    3
    All future references to 
    Fla. Stat. § 921.141
     refer to the 1985 version of the statute.
    4
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    State presented and an appeal for mercy based on Hardwick’s age (he was twenty-
    five at the time of the crime) 4 and the sanctity of human life. Rather than give the
    jury any mitigation evidence at all to consider, trial counsel’s closing and rebuttal
    arguments reviewed again the evidence in keeping with the sufficiency-of-the-
    evidence defense. As noted in our prior opinion, trial counsel’s “last statement to
    the jury in his rebuttal argument was notable for its lack of foundation: ‘I think the
    evidence is clear and the lack of evidence even clearer that John Gary Hardwick is
    innocent of the crime of first degree murder.’” Hardwick III, 
    320 F.3d at 1150
    .
    The jury returned a verdict recommending the imposition of a death sentence
    by a seven-to-five vote. At sentencing, the trial court found the five aggravating
    circumstances the State presented to the jury and no mitigating circumstances.
    Accordingly, the court sentenced Hardwick to death.
    On direct appeal, despite holding two of the statutory aggravating
    circumstances found by the trial court—that the murder was committed during a
    kidnapping, and for pecuniary gain—to be erroneous, Hardwick v. State (Hardwick
    I), 
    521 So. 2d 1071
    , 1075 (Fla. 1988), superseded on other grounds by rule, Fla. R.
    Crim. P. 3.111, as recognized in McKenzie v. State, 
    29 So. 3d 272
     (Fla. 2010), the
    4
    One of the mitigating circumstances set out in Florida’s capital sentencing scheme is
    “[t]he age of the defendant at the time of the crime.” 
    Id.
     § 921.141(6)(g).
    5
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    Florida Supreme Court affirmed Hardwick’s conviction and sentence, id. at 1077.
    That court concluded these errors were harmless because three valid statutory
    aggravating factors remained with no evidence of any mitigating circumstances in
    the record before it. Id. at 1076–77.
    On February 16, 1990, Hardwick moved the trial court for postconviction
    relief pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. His motion included a
    claim that his trial attorney rendered ineffective assistance at the penalty phase by
    failing to adequately investigate and present available mitigation evidence of his
    deprived and abusive childhood, the mental and physical abuse he endured during
    his childhood and teen years, his dysfunctional family background of neglect and
    mistreatment, his long history of substance abuse, and his drug- and alcohol-
    induced impairment at the time of the murder. The court held three evidentiary
    hearings on Hardwick’s claims and rejected them. The Florida Supreme Court
    affirmed that decision. Hardwick v. Dugger (Hardwick II), 
    648 So. 2d 100
    , 105
    (Fla. 1994) (per curiam).
    On March 20, 1995, Hardwick petitioned the United States District Court for
    the Middle District of Florida for a writ of habeas corpus setting aside his
    conviction and sentence under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    . The District Court denied his
    petition on the record of the state courts’ proceedings. We affirmed its decision
    with the exception of the conflict-of-interest claim, which we did not reach at that
    6
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    time, see supra note 1, and the ineffective assistance claim now before us.
    Hardwick III, 
    320 F.3d at 1192
    . We vacated the District Court’s rejection of the
    latter claim because we concluded that “[t]he entirety of Hardwick’s
    postconviction record under a Strickland analysis at least strongly suggests a
    reasonable probability that the result of the sentencing proceeding would have been
    different if competent counsel had presented and explained the significance of all
    the available evidence.” 
    Id. at 1191
     (quotation marks omitted).
    In Hardwick III, we also stressed that trial counsel Tassone (1) “presented no
    mitigating evidence at the sentencing proceeding”; (2) did not obtain any school,
    medical, mental health, or juvenile justice records, or any social service records
    about Hardwick’s foster home placements and abuse; (3) did not ask Dr. Barnard
    or anyone else to investigate or evaluate mitigation evidence relative to the
    sentencing phase; and (4) indeed failed “to investigate, obtain, or present any
    mitigating evidence to the jury, let alone the powerful mitigating evidence,
    including Hardwick’s deprived and abusive upbringing.” 
    Id. at 1167, 1171, 1173, 1189
     (quotation marks omitted). We previously concluded that trial counsel
    Tassone “appear[ed] to have given up on defending Hardwick and seemingly
    expended no effort, either in presentation of mitigating evidence or in
    understanding mitigation law.” 
    Id. at 1189
    . Tassone did not understand mitigation
    7
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    law or the benefit to Hardwick at sentencing of having witnesses testify concerning
    mitigation evidence. 
    Id. at 1191
    .
    In Hardwick III, we also determined that Hardwick’s family members were
    present during the trial each day and repeatedly offered to testify, and the reasons
    Tassone later gave for not calling family members as mitigation witnesses were not
    supported by the record. 
    Id. at 1175-77
    . Dr. Barnard testified that if he had been
    asked to evaluate mitigation evidence, such as Hardwick’s poor and abusive family
    life and its effect on his life, he would have been willing to do so. 
    Id. at 1171-72
    .
    Importantly too, the majority in Hardwick III expressly concluded that the
    state court’s findings of fact on Hardwick’s ineffective counsel claim were not
    supported by the record for various reasons. 
    Id.
     at 1185 n.207.
    Having found “the state [courts’ Rule 3.850] findings and consequent legal
    conclusions relating to the penalty phase . . . untenable,” 
    id.
     at 1184 n.207, we
    remanded the case, instructing the District Court to consider “the statutory and
    nonstatutory mitigating evidence that [counsel] could have presented at the state
    [court] sentencing proceeding,” 
    id. at 1192
    ; weigh “the totality of this mitigating
    8
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    evidence . . . against the valid aggravating factors,” id.; and “determine whether
    Hardwick is entitled to habeas relief,” id. at 93. 5
    We marked out a broad scope for the hearing, stating that “we d[id] not want
    to inhibit the district judge in his conduct of an evidentiary hearing” on the issue of
    ineffective assistance at the penalty phase. Id. at 1192 n.219. We directed the
    District Court to evaluate
    the full exposition of Hardwick’s deprived and abusive childhood and
    adolescence, including longstanding alcohol and drug dependency; his
    binge or extensive and consistent consumption of drugs and alcohol
    during the relevant time period of Pullum’s homicide; and the
    testimony of examining experts as to the presence of statutory and
    nonstatutory mitigating factors, especially, his ability to conform his
    conduct to the dictates of law.
    Id. We added that “to the extent that evidence at the federal hearing may exceed
    that presented in state court, . . . Hardwick already has proffered specific facts that
    overcome the procedural bar.” 6 Id. We also specifically dictated that “the district
    5
    The dissent disagreed with the majority opinion over whether certain state court
    findings of fact were supported by the record. Hardwick III, 
    320 F.3d at 1193-97
    .
    6
    As we explained in Hill v. Jones, 
    81 F.3d 1015
    , 1023 (11th Cir. 1996),
    [a] state habeas petitioner is not entitled to an evidentiary hearing in
    federal court on the merits of a procedurally defaulted claim unless he can first
    overcome the procedural bar. This requires showing either cause for failing to
    develop in state court proceedings the facts supporting his claim, and prejudice
    resulting from that failure, or a fundamental miscarriage of justice would result
    from failure to hold a federal evidentiary hearing.
    
    Id.
     (citations and quotation marks omitted).
    9
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    judge must consider the various affidavits . . . from the state 3.850 proceeding.”
    
    Id.
     at 1186 n.207.7
    Pursuant to our instructions, the District Court held an evidentiary hearing
    on February 17–19, 2009. At the hearing, Hardwick called seven witnesses. First,
    three experienced capital defense attorneys testified as to the standard among
    defense attorneys in the mid-1980s for investigating and presenting mitigation
    evidence. Next, Dr. Jethro Toomer, a clinical psychologist, testified about the use
    of mental-health mitigation in the mid-1980s and explained the specific mitigating
    evidence available in Hardwick’s case. Then Mary Braddy, a correctional officer
    That standard was met in Hardwick’s case, we explained, because “[Defense
    counsel’s] failure to call defense witnesses Hardwick desired or to provide Hardwick any
    defense at the guilt or sentencing phase” provided cause, and “the seven/five jury
    recommendation for death, when knowledge and presentation of the applicable statutory
    and nonstatutory mitigating factors well may have resulted in one more vote that would
    have rendered a jury recommendation of life rather than death,” constituted prejudice
    sufficient to excuse the default. Hardwick III, 
    320 F.3d at
    1192 n.219.
    7
    As part of Hardwick III’s mandate, the District Court was bound to follow this
    instruction. Litman v. Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co., 
    825 F.2d 1506
    , 1510–11 (11th Cir.
    1987) (en banc) (“A district court when acting under an appellate court’s mandate, ‘cannot vary
    it, or examine it for any other purpose than execution; or give any other or further relief; or
    review it, even for apparent error, upon a matter decided on appeal; or intermeddle with it,
    further than to settle so much as has been remanded.’” (quoting In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co.,
    
    160 U.S. 247
    , 255, 
    16 S. Ct. 291
    , 293, 
    40 L. Ed. 414
     (1895)). Thus, any argument that it was
    error for the District Court to rely on these affidavits is barred. See United States v. Amedeo, 
    487 F.3d 823
    , 829–30 (11th Cir. 2007). We decline to consider the State’s belated attempt to identify
    an applicable exception to the mandate rule, made for the first time on appeal in a post-oral-
    argument letter submitted pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 28(j). See Adkins v.
    Warden, Holman CF, 
    710 F.3d 1241
    , 1246–47 (11th Cir.).
    10
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    who interacted with Hardwick at the Duval County jail shortly after his arrest,
    testified as to her perception of his level of mental impairment at that time. Gary
    Hendrix, an investigator in the Public Defender’s office who assisted with the
    investigation prior to Hardwick’s Rule 3.850 motion in 1990, then testified about
    standard procedures involved in conducting a mitigation investigation. Finally,
    Hardwick’s trial counsel testified about his reasons for not presenting any
    mitigating evidence during the penalty phase. The State called one witness, Dr.
    Ernest Miller, a psychiatrist, who testified as to the state of the field of mental
    health mitigation in the mid-1980s, particularly as it related to substance abuse and
    a diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder. In addition to this testimony, the
    District Court considered the record of the state court trial and post-conviction
    proceedings, and twenty-three exhibits introduced by the parties, including
    Hardwick’s school, social services, and juvenile justice records; the reports of
    several mental health professionals; notes and billing records made by Hardwick’s
    trial counsel; and affidavits from Hardwick’s family and acquaintances that were
    introduced in the Rule 3.850 proceedings.
    After conducting an evidentiary hearing and reviewing the record before it,
    the District Court found that counsel rendered ineffective assistance under
    Strickland. That is, the court found that counsel’s performance fell below an
    objective standard of reasonableness and that, but for his deficient performance, it
    11
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    was reasonably probable that Hardwick would not have been sentenced to death.
    The District Court entered a 111-page order with extensive findings of fact and
    conclusions of law.
    II.
    Before beginning our discussion of the merits, we think it might be helpful
    to clarify the legal posture of Hardwick’s case.
    Because Hardwick filed his § 2254 petition prior to April 24, 1996, the
    effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
    (“AEDPA”), 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
    , et seq., we apply pre-AEDPA law. Lindh v.
    Murphy, 
    521 U.S. 320
    , 336–37, 
    117 S. Ct. 2059
    , 2068, 
    138 L. Ed. 2d 481
     (1997);
    Brownlee v. Haley, 
    306 F.3d 1043
    , 1058 (11th Cir. 2002). That Hardwick’s appeal
    is not governed by AEDPA means that we are not constrained by AEDPA’s
    “highly deferential” standard of review of state court adjudications. Lindh, 
    521 U.S. at
    333 n.7, 
    117 S. Ct. at
    2066 n.7. Under AEDPA, a federal court may only
    grant habeas relief to a state prisoner where the state court’s adjudication of the
    petitioner’s claim “was contrary to . . . Federal law” as clearly established by
    Supreme Court holdings, § 2254(d)(1); “involved an unreasonable application” of
    such law, id.; or “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts” in light
    of the record before the state court, § 2254(d)(2). Thus, “[t]he question under
    AEDPA is not whether a federal court believes the state court’s determination was
    12
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    incorrect but whether that determination was unreasonable—a substantially higher
    threshold.” Schriro v. Landrigan, 
    550 U.S. 465
    , 473, 
    127 S. Ct. 1933
    , 1939, 
    167 L. Ed. 2d 836
     (2007).
    Under pre-AEDPA law, however, a federal habeas court decides questions
    such as whether habeas relief is warranted or whether counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance—i.e., pure questions of law and mixed questions of law and fact—
    independently of all prior adjudications. See, e.g., Freund v. Butterworth, 
    165 F.3d 839
    , 861 (11th Cir. 1999) (en banc) (“Questions of law and mixed questions of law
    and fact . . . mandate de novo review.”); 2 Randy Hertz & James S. Liebman,
    Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure, § 32.1, at 1746 (6th ed. 2011)
    (“Until Congress’ enactment of AEDPA, it was blackletter law that federal habeas
    courts were required to resolve all of the petitioner’s legal claims de novo in the
    strictest sense of that term. Insofar as the petition presented questions of law or
    mixed questions of law and fact, the federal courts were required to treat the
    petition as a wholly new complaint, which originated an independent civil suit and
    deserved to be adjudicated from scratch—as if, in effect, a state court had not
    already adjudicated the same claims in the same case.” (footnotes and quotation
    marks omitted)).
    Accordingly, the District Court’s task, now subject to our de novo review,
    was not limited merely to assessing the reasonableness of the state court’s
    13
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    application of the Strickland standard; rather, it was to apply Strickland’s standard
    directly. Cf. Harrington v. Richter, 
    562 U.S. 86
    , 101, 
    131 S. Ct. 770
    , 785, 
    178 L. Ed. 2d 624
     (2011) (stating that under AEDPA, “[a] state court must be granted a
    deference and latitude that are not in operation when the case involves review
    under the Strickland standard itself”).
    In contrast to determinations of law, under both AEDPA and pre-AEDPA
    law, state court factual findings are generally due a presumption of correctness.
    Compare 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (e)(1), and Schriro, 
    550 U.S. at
    473–74, 
    127 S. Ct. at
    1939–40 (“AEDPA also requires federal habeas courts to presume the correctness
    of state courts’ factual findings unless applicants rebut this presumption with clear
    and convincing evidence.” (quotation marks omitted)), with Hardwick III, 
    320 F.3d at 1158
     (explaining that under pre-AEDPA law, “factual findings by a state court
    following a merits hearing on the claims raised generally are accorded a
    presumption of correctness” unless one of “the eight exceptions in former
    § 2254(d) apply”). That general rule does not hold here, however.
    In Hardwick III, we found that several of the exceptions in the former
    § 2254(d) applied to the state court’s factual findings regarding the penalty phase
    of Hardwick’s trial, and therefore the state court factual findings “are not entitled
    to a presumption of correctness.” See 
    320 F.3d at
    1158–59 n.141, 
    id.
     at 1184 n.207
    (finding some of the state court’s findings unreliable in part because of the absence
    14
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    of “a full, fair, and adequate hearing”; discounting others as “not fairly supported
    by the record”; and ultimately concluding that the state court’s penalty-phase-
    related factual findings were “untenable,” “not consistent with the record,” and
    even “contradicted by the record”). As a result of our Hardwick III decision, there
    is no presumption of correctness as to those findings and the District Court was
    free to make its own findings of fact based on the record before it. 8
    The combined effect of these points—first, the District Court’s obligation to
    resolve the legal issues surrounding Hardwick’s claim without deference to any
    prior state court adjudications, which derives from the nature of the pre-AEDPA
    civil habeas suit, and second, the lack of any presumption of correctness due to the
    factual findings of the state court, as a result of our finding in Hardwick III—is that
    the District Court was effectively writing on a blank slate in adjudicating
    Hardwick’s claim. We proceed with that understanding.
    8
    The State asserts that on Hardwick’s prima facie showing that the state court
    proceedings were not full, fair, and adequate, Hardwick III consigned the state court’s factual
    findings to a kind of evidentiary purgatory. Since the testimony at the subsequent evidentiary
    hearing did not, in all respects, contravene the state court’s findings, the State urges that the
    findings must now be revived and “given their due deference.” We decline to adopt the State’s
    novel position , especially in light of our prior opinion in Hardwick III concluding those fact
    findings were not fairly supported by the record or contradicted by the record.
    15
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    III.
    Hardwick asserts—and the District Court found—that he was denied his
    Sixth Amendment right 9 to the effective assistance of counsel when his attorney
    failed to investigate, discover, and present substantial mitigating evidence to the
    sentencing jury. As set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
     (1984), to establish a denial of this right, a habeas
    petitioner must show (1) “that counsel’s performance was deficient”; and (2) “that
    the deficient performance prejudiced [his] defense.” 
    Id. at 687
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2064
    .
    A.
    1.
    Deficient performance is defined as “representation [that] f[alls] below an
    objective standard of reasonableness.” 
    Id. at 688
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2064
    . “[T]rial
    counsel’s failure to present mitigating evidence is not per se ineffective assistance
    of counsel,” Stevens v. Zant, 
    968 F.2d 1076
    , 1082 (11th Cir. 1992); it can, on
    occasion, be justified as a strategic choice, e.g., Lightbourne v. Dugger, 
    829 F.2d 1012
    , 1025 (11th Cir. 1987). As a general matter, a high level of deference is
    accorded an attorney’s strategic decisions. See, e.g., Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 690
    ,
    9
    The Sixth Amendment right to counsel in capital cases was incorporated against the
    States via the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in Powell v. Alabama, 
    287 U.S. 45
    , 71, 
    53 S. Ct. 55
    , 65, 
    77 L. Ed. 158
     (1932).
    16
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    104 S. Ct. at 2066
     (“[S]trategic choices made after thorough investigation of law
    and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually unchallengeable . . . .”).
    However, a decision not to put on mitigating evidence is only reasonable, and thus
    due deference, to the extent it is based on a professionally reasonable investigation.
    Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 521, 
    123 S. Ct. 2527
    , 2535, 
    156 L. Ed. 2d 471
    (2003).
    Accordingly, the first question the District Court had to answer was
    “whether the investigation supporting counsel’s decision not to introduce
    mitigating evidence of [Hardwick’s] background was itself reasonable.” 
    Id.,
     
    539 U.S. at 523
    , 
    123 S. Ct. at 2536
     (emphasis omitted). This is an objective inquiry, as
    measured from counsel’s perspective. 
    Id.
     In other words, the District Court had to
    put itself in counsel’s shoes, review the information of which he was or should
    have been aware, and determine what a reasonable attorney would have done under
    those circumstances. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 690
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2066
    .
    The Supreme Court has cautioned that a federal habeas court is to avoid
    concluding “that it is prima facie ineffective assistance for counsel to abandon their
    investigation of the petitioner’s background after having acquired only rudimentary
    knowledge of his history from a narrow set of sources.” See Cullen v. Pinholster,
    ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    131 S. Ct. 1388
    , 1406–07, 
    179 L. Ed. 2d 557
     (2011) (quotation
    marks and alterations omitted). “Strickland itself rejected the notion that the same
    17
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    investigation will be required in every case.” 
    Id.
     Instead, “the Strickland test of
    necessity requires a case-by-case examination of the evidence.” 
    Id.
     at ___, 131 S.
    Ct. at 1407 n.17 (quotation marks omitted). Thus, in each case, it must be
    determined “whether counsel conducted a reasonable background investigation or
    made a reasonable decision that made conducting a background investigation
    unnecessary.” Johnson v. Sec’y, Dept. of Corr., 
    643 F.3d 907
    , 931 (11th Cir.
    2011) (quotation marks omitted).
    2.
    The District Court found that Hardwick’s attorney failed to conduct a
    professionally reasonable mitigation investigation under the circumstances. It did
    so based on its subsidiary findings about what counsel knew about Hardwick and
    his background, and what counsel then failed to do and learn about Hardwick and
    his childhood background.
    The District Court found that the attorney was aware of a number of red
    flags, which—given his knowledge of Hardwick’s grave legal situation—should
    have highlighted the need to conduct at least some life-history investigation and at
    least some mitigation investigation. Regarding Hardwick’s legal situation, counsel
    testified that he believed Hardwick would be convicted of first-degree murder. He
    also knew that the State would likely seek the death penalty on the basis of several
    aggravating circumstances, and, if so, that the jury would be instructed that unless
    18
    Case: 97-2319      Date Filed: 09/18/2015      Page: 19 of 48
    the defense presented mitigation evidence sufficient to outweigh the aggravating
    circumstances, they must recommend a sentence of death. Given these
    circumstances, counsel knew, or should have known, that Hardwick’s defense in
    the penalty phase—specifically, the presence or absence of mitigating evidence—
    would be pivotal.
    Hardwick’s attorney was aware of potential sources of mitigating evidence.
    For example, from the outset of his representation, he had notes that an Assistant
    Public Defender had taken during a preliminary interview with Hardwick.10 These
    notes contained the names of Hardwick’s parents and all ten of his siblings, three
    of the schools he had attended, contact information for a mental health evaluation
    center in South Carolina where Hardwick had been diagnosed with schizophrenia,
    a list of Hardwick’s medications, and information that Hardwick had been using
    drugs and alcohol since the age of eleven or twelve.
    Counsel also knew from speaking with Hardwick and his mother that his
    childhood was marked by neglect and physical and sexual abuse; and that he had
    spent a great deal of his youth in foster homes, in the care of social services, and in
    juvenile detention. Moreover, counsel also knew from the pretrial deposition
    10
    The Office of the Public Defender had originally been appointed to represent
    Hardwick, but had to recuse itself shortly thereafter upon discovering a conflict.
    19
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 20 of 48
    testimony of a number of witnesses that Hardwick had ingested a substantial
    amount of drugs and alcohol prior to the murder.
    Additionally, counsel also had the benefit of an evaluation of Hardwick,
    performed by a court-appointed expert, Dr. George Barnard, a psychiatrist. The
    District Court found that “Dr. Barnard was appointed solely to evaluate Hardwick
    for competency and sanity, not for mitigation,” and that Tassone did not discuss
    mitigation with Dr. Barnard. The District Court also found that Tassone did not
    provide Dr. Barnard with any pretrial depositions, any historical records, or even
    the limited background information obtained from the Public Defender’s file. Trial
    counsel did not give Dr. Barnard any of Hardwick’s life history. The District
    Court concluded that Dr. Barnard’s report—though conducted solely for the
    purpose of evaluating Hardwick’s sanity and competency to stand trial—was filled
    with “many red flags that [sh]ould have spotlighted the need for a mental health
    expert to evaluate the case for mitigation.”
    Dr. Barnard’s report recounted Hardwick’s description of the circumstances
    of the crime, including his heavy ingestion of marijuana, quaaludes, beer, and
    vodka prior to committing the murder, and a blow-by-blow account of how he had
    killed Pullum. The report also summarily gave a few pieces of Hardwick’s family
    background. His father was an alcoholic; both of his parents were married and
    divorced multiple times; his mother, unable to care for him, placed him in a boys’
    20
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 21 of 48
    home for a year and a half when he was six; thereafter, when not in reform school
    or other juvenile institutions, he was shuttled between various parents and step-
    parents, several of whom subjected him to beatings and abuse. Hardwick
    described how by the age of twelve or thirteen, he was using alcohol and various
    drugs on a regular, if not daily basis. By the age of thirteen, he was experiencing
    blackouts due to alcohol abuse and had spent two weeks in the hospital after
    contracting hepatitis from a dirty needle. Dr. Barnard’s report concluded that
    Hardwick “me[t] the criteria . . . for multiple substance abuse [disorder] and for
    anti-social personality disorder,” but that he was aware of his actions and their
    wrongfulness at the time of the offense —i.e., he was not insane at the time—and
    was competent to stand trial.
    The District Court found that despite his awareness of this information,
    Hardwick’s attorney did not conduct a life-history investigation or follow up on
    any leads. He failed to obtain any of Hardwick’s readily available life-history
    records, such as his school, medical, psychiatric, foster care, juvenile justice, or
    social-services records, even though the notes provided by the Assistant Public
    Defender clearly pointed him toward such information. Other than Hardwick’s
    mother, the attorney failed to ask any of Hardwick’s family members about
    Hardwick’s dysfunctional upbringing or extended history of substance abuse prior
    to trial, even though several family members were willing and available to testify
    21
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    to these circumstances. 11 And, critically, counsel failed to provide any of this
    information to Dr. Barnard or another mental health expert, or seek an opinion as
    to the presence of mitigating evidence or evidence that might undermine one or
    more of the aggravated circumstances the State would be relying on, despite the
    availability of mental health experts who could have rendered such an opinion.
    The District Court concluded that the combination of these factors—
    counsel’s awareness of information signaling the presence of significant mitigation
    lying just beneath the surface and his failure to perform even a rudimentary amount
    of investigating—led ineluctably to the finding that counsel’s performance was
    deficient.
    We agree. Under the prevailing professional norms at the time of
    Hardwick’s trial in 1986, defense attorneys in capital cases had a clear “obligation
    to conduct a thorough investigation of the defendant’s background.” See Williams
    v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 396, 
    120 S. Ct. 1495
    , 1515, 
    146 L. Ed. 2d 389
     (2000)
    (citing 1 ABA Standards for Criminal Justice 4-4.1, cmt. (2d ed. 1980)); cf. Porter
    v. McCollum, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    130 S. Ct. 447
    , 452, 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 398
     (2009)
    11
    The District Court noted that counsel testified that he had several conversations with
    one of Hardwick’s brothers after the start of Hardwick’s trial, but he acknowledged that he had
    no contact with the brother pretrial. Counsel also testified that he tried to speak with Hardwick’s
    fifteen-year-old wife, but abandoned the attempt when it became clear that she was not going to
    be a reliable witness.
    22
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 23 of 48
    (per curiam) (“It is unquestioned that under the prevailing professional norms at
    the time of [the 1988] trial, counsel had an obligation to conduct a thorough
    investigation of the defendant’s background.” (quotation marks omitted)).
    As we have noted in the context of pretrial guilt-phase investigations, the
    obligation to conduct a reasonable investigation does not require defense counsel
    to “discern every possible avenue which may hurt or help the client,” but it does
    require counsel to “make an effort to investigate the obvious.” House v. Balkcom,
    
    725 F.2d 608
    , 618 (11th Cir. 1984). Thus, for example, the Supreme Court held in
    Williams v. Taylor “that counsel’s failure to uncover and present voluminous
    mitigating evidence at sentencing could not be justified as a tactical decision to
    focus on Williams’ voluntary confessions, because counsel had not ‘fulfill[ed] their
    obligation to conduct a thorough investigation of the defendant’s background.’”
    Wiggins, 
    539 U.S. at 522
    , 
    123 S. Ct. at 2535
     (quoting Williams, 
    529 U.S. at 396
    ,
    
    120 S. Ct. at 1515
    ).
    Here, Hardwick’s attorney had ample information signaling the existence of
    potential significant mitigation evidence. He knew that Hardwick had been raised
    in an abusive environment and has been in and out of foster and boys’ homes;
    knew that Hardwick had been abusing drugs and alcohol for over a decade; and
    knew of Hardwick’s particularly heavy usage of quaaludes, marijuana, and alcohol
    immediately prior to the murder. Counsel was also aware of witnesses who would
    23
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 24 of 48
    have provided documentary and testimonial support for these facts. As the District
    Court found, reasonable capital defense attorneys at the time would have pursued
    these avenues of mitigation by seeking Hardwick’s life-history records and
    interviewing his family members, and then by providing this information to Dr.
    Barnard or another mental health expert pursuant to a mental health mitigation
    evaluation.
    This information should have highlighted for counsel the need for at least
    some mitigation investigation and a mitigation-focused evaluation by Dr. Barnard
    or another mental health expert. Unfortunately, it did not. The record fully
    supports the District Court’s findings that counsel did not obtain any of
    Hardwick’s life-history records or conduct a life-history investigation, much less
    even a rudimentary mitigation investigation. The District Court properly
    concluded that counsel’s performance fell below the objective standard of
    reasonableness required by the Sixth Amendment.
    3.
    In opposition, the State summarily declares that counsel “conducted a
    reasonable investigation.” But the State cannot dictate reality by fiat. The State
    offers virtually nothing to counter the District Court’s factual findings that counsel
    obtained no life-history records, had very little contact with Hardwick’s family
    regarding potential mitigation testimony, and, having been put on notice about the
    24
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 25 of 48
    presence of potential mental health-related mitigators in Hardwick’s background,
    failed to conduct any mitigation investigation or to request a mitigation evaluation
    from Dr. Barnard or another mental health expert. These findings are not clearly
    erroneous; thus the District Court did not err in concluding that the investigation
    was unreasonable.
    The State spends the bulk of its rhetorical energy constructing arguments
    founded on the assumption that the relevant issue is whether counsel’s failure to
    present mitigation evidence during the sentencing phase constituted deficient
    performance. First, the State contends that counsel made a reasonable strategic
    decision not to put on any evidence of Hardwick’s childhood background or his
    substance abuse. In light of Hardwick’s criminal history, his diagnosis of
    antisocial personality disorder, and the prosecution’s attempt to paint Hardwick as
    a drug enforcer, the State argues, counsel reasonably decided not to add fuel to the
    fire by parading Hardwick’s checkered past before the jury. Second, the State
    maintains that counsel’s decision not to put on any mitigation case whatsoever was
    due in part to the refusal of Hardwick’s mother and brother to testify at the penalty
    phase. Lacking his star witnesses, counsel’s decision not to put on a mitigation
    case must have been reasonable. Finally, the State argues that Hardwick told
    counsel that he did not want any witnesses presented in the penalty phase. In
    25
    Case: 97-2319      Date Filed: 09/18/2015       Page: 26 of 48
    following Hardwick’s explicit command, counsel could not have been acting
    unreasonably.
    As a preliminary matter, the District Court made fact findings that
    undermine all of the State’s arguments. For example, the District Court found that
    Hardwick’s mother and brother “adamantly denied Tassone’s assertions that they
    were not willing to testify” and testified they were present at trial and willing to
    testify. The District Court found them “credible” and expressly found they “were
    available and willing to testify on Hardwick’s behalf.” 12 As discussed more later,
    the District Court also found that Hardwick “would have permitted [counsel] to
    introduce some mitigation evidence.”
    Furthermore, the fatal flaw in all of the State’s arguments is that the
    reasonableness of counsel’s decision whether to present mitigation evidence is not
    the relevant issue at this point. The District Court’s “principal concern in deciding
    whether [Hardwick’s attorney] exercised ‘reasonable professional judgmen[t],’
    [was] not whether counsel should have presented a mitigation case. Rather, [the]
    focus [was] on whether the investigation supporting counsel’s decision not to
    12
    This Court in Hardwick III also already rejected this contention. See Hardwick, 
    320 F.3d at
    1185 n.207 (Tassone’s claims about Hardwick’s mother are “inconsistent with the record
    evidence of [her] actions, such as attending his trial daily, and their care and concern for each
    other, demonstrated by such examples as Hardwick’s going to her home to wish her a Merry
    Christmas, even in a very drunk and drugged state, and her visiting him regularly in prison.”)
    26
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 27 of 48
    introduce mitigating evidence of [Hardwick’s] background was itself reasonable.”
    See Wiggins, 
    539 U.S. at
    522–23, 
    123 S. Ct. at 2536
     (citation omitted) (quoting
    Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 691
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2066
    ). Even were we to credit all of the
    State’s arguments, this would not somehow transform counsel’s unreasonable
    investigation into a reasonable one. For example, here the District Court found
    that counsel failed to obtain any life-history records at all and failed to conduct any
    life-history investigation at all. Given all of the fact findings made by the District
    Court, the scope of counsel’s investigation was thus unreasonably limited, the
    District Court did not need to go further to find deficient performance under
    Strickland. Nor do we.
    B.
    We thus turn to the District Court’s finding of Strickland prejudice. To
    prevail under Strickland’s second prong, Hardwick had to demonstrate that but for
    counsel’s deficient performance, “there is a reasonable probability he would have
    received a different sentence.” See Porter, 
    558 U.S. at 41
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 453
    . “A
    reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2068
    . That probability is
    assessed by considering “‘the totality of the available mitigation evidence—both
    that adduced at trial, and the evidence adduced in the habeas proceeding’—and
    ‘reweighing it against the evidence in aggravation.’” Porter, 
    558 U.S. at 41
    , 130
    27
    Case: 97-2319   Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 28 of 48
    S. Ct. at 453–54 (alteration omitted) (quoting Williams, 
    529 U.S. at
    397–98, 
    120 S. Ct. at 1515
    ).
    For example, the District Court found that trial counsel failed to obtain any
    life-history records and failed to conduct any life-history investigation, even
    though Hardwick had been in boys’ homes and foster homes and had had mental
    problems, including a diagnosis of schizophrenia, and even though such records
    were readily available from schools, jails, a medical center, and several social
    service agencies that had interacted with Hardwick.
    Ultimately, the focus of our inquiry is the fundamental fairness of the
    sentencing proceeding. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 696
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2069
    . If we
    adjudge that the result of that proceeding “is unreliable because of a breakdown in
    the adversarial process,” we must affirm. See id.at 696, 
    104 S. Ct. at 2069
    .
    1.
    The District Court found it “abundantly evident that statutory and
    nonstatutory mitigating factors existed that [counsel] should have presented to
    provide Hardwick a defense at sentencing and to make a case for sparing his life.”
    First, and foremost, the District Court found that had counsel presented the
    evidence a professionally reasonable investigation would have uncovered, counsel
    could have argued as a statutory mitigating circumstance that, at the time of the
    murder, Hardwick’s capacity “to conform his conduct to the requirements of the
    28
    Case: 97-2319       Date Filed: 09/18/2015      Page: 29 of 48
    law was substantially impaired.” See 
    Fla. Stat. § 921.141
    (6)(f). This finding is
    amply supported by the record. 13
    The length and magnitude of Hardwick’s substance abuse and dependency
    are well-established. At the time of the murder, Hardwick had been sniffing,
    smoking, injecting, drinking, or otherwise ingesting a wide variety of drugs and
    alcohol on a regular basis for more than half of his twenty-five years. Hardwick
    had already begun his alcohol and drug use by age twelve. His mother neglected
    him and placed him in a boys’ home at age seven, but he repeatedly ran away and
    returned to his physically abusive father who gave him drugs and alcohol to keep
    him occupied. By age thirteen, Hardwick was having alcohol-induced blackouts
    and contracted hepatitis from dirty intravenous needles. In 1974, at age fifteen,
    Hardwick attempted suicide twice; first by drug overdose, and then by slashing his
    wrists. Dr. Toomer opined at the evidentiary hearing that when substance abuse
    13
    The District Court also found that had counsel conducted a reasonable investigation,
    counsel would have discovered evidence implicating two additional statutory mitigating
    circumstances: that Hardwick acted “under the substantial domination of another person”; and
    that he committed the murder “while . . . under the influence of extreme mental or emotional
    disturbance.” See 
    Fla. Stat. § 921.141
    (6)(e), (b). The District Court grounded its finding
    regarding the presence of the substantial-domination mitigator in Dr. Levin’s Rule 3.850 hearing
    testimony that Hardwick had admitted to him that another individual was present while the crime
    was being committed, and that the other individual encouraged Hardwick to complete the job of
    killing Pullum. As for the extreme-mental-disturbance mitigator, the District Court appears to
    have credited testimony by Dr. Barnard at the Rule 3.850 hearing that during the weekend on
    which the murder occurred, Hardwick’s wife told him that she was going to leave him. We find
    the presence of the substantial-impairment mitigator sufficient to support our disposition and
    thus focus our attention accordingly.
    29
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 30 of 48
    begins at such a young age and occurs for an extended period of time, it generally
    results in significant psychological and functional impairment. In his words, the
    end is result is “an individual who is unable to function effectively, i.e., in terms of
    what we call executive functioning[:] weighing alternatives, projecting
    consequences, managing what we call high order thought . . . .”
    The record is also uncontroverted as to Hardwick’s heavy intake of drugs
    and alcohol around the time of the murder. Several of his associates averred that
    they saw him taking quaaludes, smoking marijuana, and drinking vodka the day
    before the murder. At least one witness described him sweating heavily, shaking,
    and acting erratically shortly after the murder occurred; another recalled that his
    speech was incoherent and slurred. Correctional officer Mary Braddy saw
    Hardwick shortly after his incarceration, two days after the murder, and testified
    that he did not appear to be aware of her presence, his eyes were glassy and vacant,
    and he appeared to be either high or intoxicated.
    As pointed out in our Hardwick III, Dr. Levin considered that during the five
    days leading to his offense Hardwick “ingested forty or fifty [ ] Quaaludes,
    continually smoked marijuana, drank a fifth of vodka, and shared a couple of cases
    of beer with friends.” Darlene Hardwick observed that Hardwick was intoxicated
    during those five days and Hardwick got “little sleep during this period.” Dr. Dee,
    30
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 31 of 48
    who also interviewed Hardwick, concluded that Hardwick was “acutely
    intoxicated” at the time of the offense.
    Dr. Toomer testified, based on his personal evaluation of Hardwick before
    the evidentiary hearing in federal court, and his review of the witness accounts of
    Hardwick’s intoxicated condition at the time of the crime, and the life-history
    records detailing Hardwick’s history of drug and alcohol abuse, that Hardwick’s
    ability to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially
    impaired at the time of the murder. In reaching this conclusion, Dr. Toomer
    echoed the opinions of the mental health experts in the state Rule 3.850
    proceedings, Dr. Barnard, Dr. Levin, and Dr. Dee. Each of these experts
    concluded, based on the postconviction evidence outlined above, that Hardwick’s
    capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially
    impaired at the time of the offense. Dr. Toomer further testified that had he been
    provided with the witness accounts of Hardwick’s condition at the time of the
    murder and Hardwick’s extensive life-history records, and asked to render an
    opinion as to the presence of this statutory mitigating factor at the time of
    Hardwick’s trial, he would have been able to answer affirmatively.
    Reviewing this evidence, we cannot say that the District Court erred in
    finding that, but for counsel’s failure to conduct a reasonable investigation, this
    statutory mitigating circumstance could have been argued to the jury. As Dr.
    31
    Case: 97-2319   Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 32 of 48
    Toomer explained, and as documented by the extensive life-history records,
    Hardwick was already suffering from significant psychological and functional
    impairment due to his early and extended exposure to drugs and alcohol—not to
    mention the physically abusive and deprived childhood and the extensive family
    trauma that precipitated his substance abuse. When compounded by his holiday
    drug and alcohol binge, it seems highly likely that Hardwick’s capacity to conform
    his behavior to societal standards was substantially impaired at the time of the
    murder. See Brownlee, 
    306 F.3d at 1070
     (noting the defendant’s pre-existing
    intellectual and psychiatric impairment and concluding that “[d]rug or alcohol use
    on the day of the crime would have substantially aggravated these pre-existing
    limitations”).
    The District Court then turned to nonstatutory mitigation. Citing the
    aforementioned evidence of Hardwick’s background, the District Court concluded
    that “Hardwick’s turbulent family history, dysfunctional upbringing,
    mental/physical abuse and early alcohol/drug use and addiction” constituted
    compelling mitigating circumstances that would have supported a life sentence.
    Having thoroughly reviewed the record, we are in agreement with the
    District Court’s conclusion. Lay witness accounts, evaluations by mental health
    experts, and Hardwick’s life-history records all tell a clear, consistent tale of abuse,
    neglect, and dysfunction. Hardwick’s father was an alcoholic and physically
    32
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 33 of 48
    abusive of both Hardwick’s mother and Hardwick himself—to the point of
    wrenching Hardwick’s shoulder out of its socket on one occasion. Another time
    Hardwick’s father beat his son “with a belt so badly that the blood came up to the
    skin.” Hardwick’s father also would “take his shoe and kick [Hardwick] with it.”
    Hardwick’s family lived in poverty because his father, a severe alcoholic, spent
    much of his money on alcohol and could not maintain a job. Hardwick’s family
    lived in substandard housing, moved frequently, and did not have adequate food
    and clothing. His father beat his mother, leaving cuts, bruises, and black eyes. His
    mother was emotionally detached and unable to provide the attention, discipline,
    and care Hardwick needed. After his parents divorced when he was four,
    Hardwick was frequently left to fend for himself during his pre-teen years,
    sometimes hitchhiking alone between his father’s house in South Carolina and his
    mother and step-father’s residence in Florida. Neither location was safe: his
    mother neglected him to avoid triggering her new husband’s jealous rage, and his
    father would beat him. At age seven, Hardwick was placed in a boys’ home
    because his mother was pregnant again and could not take care of him. Hardwick
    repeatedly ran away from the institution to return to his abusive father in South
    Carolina. Eventually, social services found the father’s home unfit and placed
    Hardwick in a foster home. Hardwick’s mother had a total of eleven children with
    three different husbands and never took care of Hardwick either. By the age of
    33
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 34 of 48
    eleven, Hardwick had begun drinking alcohol, sniffing glue, and smoking
    marijuana. Over the course of his teenage years, Hardwick was in and out of
    juvenile institutions for a variety of theft and drug-related offenses. His
    institutional records include reports of depression, mood swings, and multiple
    suicide attempts. At one point, Hardwick was diagnosed with schizophrenia and
    the records show his medications included Thorazine, Sinequan, and Elavil. In
    sum, there is ample evidence of “the kind of troubled history [the Supreme Court]
    ha[s] declared relevant to assessing a defendant’s moral culpability.” See Wiggins,
    
    539 U.S. at 535
    , 
    123 S. Ct. at 2542
    .
    The jury and the trial judge, however, heard none of it. Counsel’s failure to
    investigate and present even the least bit of this powerful mitigating evidence
    enabled the prosecutor to emphasize repeatedly in closing arguments that there
    were no mitigating circumstances in Hardwick’s case. For instance, the jury was
    told “there is absolutely no evidence . . . that the defendant’s mind was impaired or
    that he was out of control. . . . There is no evidence that has been presented to you
    for you to conclude that . . . this mitigating circumstance applies. That mitigating
    factor does not apply . . . .” We are left with the distinct sense that, had the jury
    been presented with this copious and powerful mitigating evidence a reasonable
    investigation would have uncovered, there is at least a reasonable probability that
    Hardwick would not have received a death sentence.
    34
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 35 of 48
    2.
    The State raises several points that, it contends, demonstrate that Hardwick
    was not prejudiced by counsel’s deficient performance. First, the State argues that
    the District Court did not give proper weight to the aggravating circumstances.
    Second, the State argues that the District Court overlooked the harmful effects that
    would have flowed from the introduction of this mitigating evidence. Third, the
    State posits that a finding of prejudice is precluded by Hardwick’s instruction to
    counsel not to present any mitigation evidence at the penalty phase. We address
    each argument in turn.
    a.
    The State correctly observes that the District Court was required to place
    both the aggravating circumstances and the mitigating circumstances in the scales
    to appropriately weigh them. See Collier v. Turpin, 
    177 F.3d 1184
    , 1203 (11th Cir.
    1998) (“In evaluating the probability that Collier’s jury would have rejected the
    death penalty, we must not forget to balance the aggravating and mitigating factors
    that would have been before the jury in the absence of his counsels’ errors.”). The
    State argues that the aggravating circumstances present in this case are so weighty
    that the addition of the mitigating evidence the District Court identified would
    have made no difference in the jury’s recommendation or Hardwick’s ultimate
    sentence. In a related vein, the State also asserts that the District Court erred in
    35
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 36 of 48
    finding that the mitigating evidence would have undermined the weight of the
    aggravating circumstances found by the sentencing judge. We disagree with both
    assertions.
    The Florida Supreme Court held that the sentencing judge properly found
    three aggravating circumstances in Hardwick’s case: (1) that Hardwick had prior
    violent felony convictions; (2) that the murder was heinous, atrocious and cruel
    (“HAC”); and (3) that the murder was cold, calculated, and premeditated (“CCP”).
    Hardwick I, 
    521 So. 2d at
    1076–77. The State notes that these aggravators have
    been characterized by the Florida Supreme Court as being among the most serious
    aggravating circumstances. See, e.g., Brown v. State, 
    143 So. 3d 392
    , 405 (Fla.)
    (per curiam), cert. denied, 
    135 S. Ct. 726
    , 
    190 L. Ed. 2d 453
     (2014) (“This Court
    has consistently recognized that CCP and HAC are two of the weightiest
    aggravators in Florida’s statutory sentencing scheme.”); Hodges v. State, 
    55 So. 3d 515
    , 542 (Fla. 2010) (per curiam) (“Qualitatively, prior violent felony and HAC
    are among the weightiest aggravators set out in the statutory sentencing scheme.”).
    We do not quibble with the State’s characterization of Florida law, but
    whether one aggravator is weightier than another in the abstract, does not resolve
    whether here, on the facts of this case, with the mitigation and aggravation present
    in these circumstances, there is a reasonable probability that the jury would have
    reached a different balance. The District Court was convinced that had the jurors
    36
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 37 of 48
    been presented with the weight of this strong and extensive mitigation evidence
    hidden beneath the surface of this case, there is at least a reasonable probability
    that they would have recommended a different sentence—and that the judge would
    have heeded their recommendation. Having reviewed the District Court’s
    conclusion de novo, we are similarly convinced.
    The strength of our conclusion takes into account not only the affirmative
    mitigating effect of that evidence, but also what might be termed the negative
    mitigating effect of the evidence. The District Court found that the evidence
    establishing the mitigating factors would also likely have lessened the weight the
    jury would have assigned to each of the three aggravating factors. While we
    disagree with the District Court on one or two points, we agree that the copious
    and powerful mitigation evidence likely undermines at least two of the aggravating
    factors.
    As to the first aggravating circumstance, the District Court observed that one
    of the three prior convictions relied on by the sentencing court—a North Carolina
    conviction for assault with a deadly weapon—was actually classed as a
    misdemeanor in North Carolina, and thus did not appear to qualify as a prior
    violent felony. To the extent that Hardwick contends that the prior-violent-felony
    aggravator can be entirely negated on this basis, we cannot agree. Even assuming
    37
    Case: 97-2319       Date Filed: 09/18/2015        Page: 38 of 48
    that the North Carolina conviction is not eligible for the aggravator, 14 Hardwick’s
    felony convictions for armed robbery and kidnapping remain. Either would
    suffice to establish the prior-violent-felony aggravator.15
    We think it relevant, however, that the criminal acts underlying these two
    convictions occurred less than twenty-four hours after Pullum’s murder—which, as
    14
    Although Hardwick was convicted of misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon
    under North Carolina law, the analogous offense was considered a third-degree felony under
    Florida law. Compare State v. O'Briant, 
    258 S.E.2d 839
    , 842 (N.C. Ct. App. 1979) (explaining
    that the misdemeanor offense of assault with a deadly weapon is a lesser included offense of the
    felony of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill (citing N.C.G.S. 14-33(b)(1)), with 
    Fla. Stat. § 784.021
     (defining the felony offense of aggravated assault as an assault with a deadly
    weapon without intent to kill).
    It is clear that the North Carolina conviction could not now be considered for the
    purposes of the prior-violent-felony aggravator under Florida law. See Carpenter v. State, 
    785 So. 2d 1182
    , 1205 (Fla. 2001) (per curiam) (“[W]e determine that an out-of-state conviction
    related to an offense that has only similar but different elements and does not constitute a
    “felony” in that state does not amount to a felony in Florida as a matter of law for the purposes of
    establishing the prior violent felony aggravating circumstance under the present statute.”). The
    state of the law on this point at the time of Hardwick’s trial in 1986 is less clear, however. See
    
    id. at 1204
     (noting that the question was “an issue of first impression”). The State points out that
    in 1985, the Florida Supreme Court had explained that “whether a previous conviction . . .
    constitutes a felony involving violence under [the statute listing aggravating circumstances],
    depends on the facts of the previous crime.” Johnson v. State, 
    465 So. 2d 499
    , 505 (Fla. 1985),
    overruled on other grounds by In re Instructions in Criminal Cases, 
    652 So. 2d 814
     (Fla. 1995)
    (per curiam) (emphasis added). We express no opinion as to the resolution of this issue.
    15
    Even though the two offenses occurred later in time than the murder, the convictions
    were handed down prior to Hardwick’s murder trial. These two convictions could thus be
    counted for the purposes of the prior violent felony conviction aggravator. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 921.141
    (5)(b) (“The defendant was previously convicted of . . . a felony involving the use or
    threat of violence to the person.”) (emphasis added); King v. State, 
    390 So. 2d 315
    , 320 (Fla.
    1980) (per curiam) (“The legislative intent is clear that any violent crime for which there was a
    conviction at the time of sentencing should be considered as an aggravating circumstance.”),
    receded from on other grounds by Strickland v. State, 
    437 So. 2d 150
     (Fla. 1983).
    38
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 39 of 48
    we have just explained, was committed while Hardwick’s ability to conform his
    conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially impaired due to his
    substance abuse disorder and his contemporaneous, heavy drug and alcohol use for
    four or five days constantly around the time of the murder. See supra, Part III.B.1.
    Thus, we agree with the District Court that the weight of the prior violent felony
    aggravator would likely have been diminished somewhat in the eyes of the jury
    had they been made aware of the facts underlying Hardwick’s impairment.
    As to the HAC and CCP aggravators, the District Court concluded that
    “[b]oth relate to Hardwick’s mental state, and thus both are undermined by the
    post-conviction mental health evidence.” We agree with respect to the CCP
    aggravator; had the jury known about Hardwick’s longstanding mental health
    issues and substantial drug- and alcohol-induced impairment at the time of the
    murder, they may indeed have attributed less weight to the State’s assertion that
    the murder was the result of heightened premeditation. See Gorham v. State, 
    454 So. 2d 556
    , 559 (Fla. 1984) (per curiam) (“[CCP] applies only to crimes which
    exhibit a heightened premeditation, greater than that required to establish
    premeditated murder.”). We disagree, however, with the District Court’s
    conclusion that the weight of the HAC aggravator is directly linked to Hardwick’s
    mental state. In 1984, the Florida Supreme Court explained that “heinous,
    atrocious, or cruel pertains more to the nature of the killing and the surrounding
    39
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 40 of 48
    circumstances while cold, calculated, and premeditated pertains more to state of
    mind, intent, and motivation.” Stano v. State, 
    460 So. 2d 890
    , 893 (Fla. 1984); see
    also Hardwick I, 
    521 So. 2d at 1077
     (“The factor of heinous, atrocious and cruel
    arises from the means actually employed in the killing; the factor of cold,
    calculated and premeditated refers to the degree of calculation and planning that
    preceded the killing.”). We do not find this error to be dispositive, however; we
    are aware of no requirement that the weight of each aggravating circumstance be
    appreciably lessened in order to move the needle on the scale.
    In sum, the evidence counsel failed to investigate and introduce would have
    had the dual effect of substantially strengthening the mitigation case and
    appreciably weakening the aggravation case. “Had the judge and jury been able to
    place [Hardwick’s] life history on the mitigating side of the scale, and
    appropriately reduced the ballast on the aggravating side of the scale, there is
    clearly a reasonable probability that the advisory jury—and the sentencing judge—
    would have struck a different balance . . . .” See Porter, 
    558 U.S. at 42
    , 
    130 S. Ct. at 454
     (quotation marks omitted).
    b.
    The State’s second argument regarding prejudice is that the District Court
    erred by failing to afford sufficient weight to the negative aspects of the mitigation
    evidence an effective attorney would have put on. The State argues that if
    40
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 41 of 48
    Hardwick’s attorney had introduced evidence of Hardwick’s traumatic childhood,
    history of substance abuse, and use of drugs and alcohol before the murder, the
    prosecution would have exploited the countervailing aspects of that evidence, such
    as the voluntary nature of Hardwick’s substance abuse and his diagnosis of
    antisocial personality disorder. The State submits that had that happened, the net
    effect would not have been mitigating, but aggravating.
    We do not believe that the District Court erred in determining that the
    potentially harmful aspects of the evidence of Hardwick’s personal history,
    especially his deprived and abusive childhood and his substance abuse given its
    early onset at age eleven or twelve in that childhood environment, were insufficient
    to outweigh its beneficial effect. It is true that this court has frequently noted the
    double-edged nature of evidence of drug and alcohol abuse. See, e.g., Suggs v.
    McNeil, 
    609 F.3d 1218
    , 1231 (11th Cir. 2010) (citing cases). Indeed, this Court
    has also said that an antisocial personality disorder is more harmful than
    mitigating. Reed v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    593 F.3d 1217
    , 1248 (11th Cir.
    2010). Here, however, the cornerstone of the State’s theory in both the guilt and
    penalty phases of the trial was that Hardwick was a hardened drug dealer who
    executed Pullum for stealing a large quantity of drugs from him. See Trial
    Transcript 286–87 (State’s opening argument at guilt phase) (“[D]efendant
    murdered Keith Pullum because . . . defendant thought that Keith Pullum had
    41
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 42 of 48
    stolen his drugs, had stolen his Quaaludes, his valuable Quaaludes . . . .”); id. at
    975 (State’s closing argument at penalty phase) (“[D]efendant was a drug dealer.
    His business was dealing drugs. He killed Keith Pullum because he thought Keith
    Pullum had stolen his drugs and had interfered in his business of selling drugs.
    This defendant was a drug dealer.”). The jury was repeatedly reminded that
    Hardwick and his associates were involved in drugs and that the murder was
    ancillary to Hardwick’s drug business. See, e.g., Trial Transcript 863 (“Again,
    remember, the defendant is a drug dealer . . . .”); id. at 864 (“I’m not saying
    [Hardwick’s neighbor] Michael Hyzer is the type of person you want to live next
    door to. He seemed to be a little rough. He was a convicted felon and he was
    obviously involved in drugs. He bought the Quaaludes from the defendant.”); id.
    at 851 (“[T]he only evidence of the defendant ever doing any work or anything that
    ever made any money or might make money was what? He sold drugs. I would
    submit to you that the defendant’s motive in this case went to his very livelihood;
    the effect of those drugs.”).
    Under these particular circumstances, evidence of Hardwick’s substance
    abuse would not have come as a shock to the jurors, further prejudicing them
    against him. Instead, presenting Hardwick’s lengthy history of substance
    addiction, along with his deprived and physically abusive childhood, his alcoholic
    father and neglectful mother who abandoned him, his family poverty and
    42
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 43 of 48
    instability, his placement in a boys’ home at age seven and later in foster homes,
    his early onset of alcohol and drug abuse at age eleven or twelve, his diagnosis of
    schizophrenia, his suicide attempts, and the many aspects of his traumatic family
    background that precipitated it, would have provided the jury with a more
    complete understanding of how Hardwick ended up where he did. All they had
    was a brief snapshot of the instant Hardwick’s life hit rock bottom; absent was the
    decades-long slide of childhood neglect, abandonment, abuse, instability, mental
    and emotional problems, intoxication, and addiction that led up to that moment.
    Further, while we acknowledge that disclosure of Hardwick’s diagnosis of
    antisocial personality disorder to the jury would not have helped his case, we
    cannot say that this factor, standing alone, would have nullified the cumulative
    mitigating effect of all of the unintroduced, but powerful, mitigation evidence
    about Hardwick’s dysfunctional and abusive childhood. The District Court did not
    err in deciding that this diagnosis “was not justification for [counsel’s] failure to
    present mitigating evidence through a mental health expert.”
    c.
    Finally, the State contends that counsel’s recollection that Hardwick
    instructed him not to call any mitigation witnesses in the penalty phase precludes a
    finding of prejudice. In support of this proposition, the State relies on Schriro v.
    Landrigan, 
    550 U.S. 465
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 1933
    , 
    167 L. Ed. 2d 836
     (2007). In that case,
    43
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 44 of 48
    Landrigan explicitly and repeatedly informed the trial court at sentencing that he
    did not wish to put on any mitigating evidence—even going so far as to interrupt
    his counsel’s attempt to proffer evidence to which the mitigating witnesses would
    have testified. 
    Id.
     at 469–70, 
    127 S. Ct. at
    1937–38. Landrigan made this decision
    even though his attorney “had carefully explained to Landrigan the importance of
    mitigating evidence,” and explicitly told him that “as counsel, he had a duty to
    disclose any and all mitigating factors to the court for consideration regarding the
    sentencing.” 
    Id. at 479
    , 
    127 S. Ct. at 1943
     (alterations and quotation marks
    omitted).
    The Supreme Court, applying AEDPA, held that the state court’s factual
    finding “that Landrigan refused to allow the presentation of any mitigating
    evidence was a reasonable determination of the facts.” 
    Id. at 477
    , 
    127 S. Ct. at 1941
     (emphasis added). Accordingly, the Court held that the Ninth Circuit erred in
    concluding that the District Court abused its discretion in deferring to the state
    court’s determination that Landrigan could not demonstrate prejudice under
    Strickland. 
    Id. at 477
    , 
    127 S. Ct. at 1942
    .
    As Hardwick correctly points out, Schriro’s reasoning does not apply here.
    Contrary to the facts in Schriro, the unambiguous conclusion of the District
    Court—the relevant factfinder here, see supra, Part II—is that had counsel
    “investigated the many red flags” in Hardwick’s case, presented this potentially
    44
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 45 of 48
    mitigating evidence to Hardwick, and explained that this evidence could be used to
    make a compelling case for life, Hardwick “would have permitted [counsel] to
    introduce some mitigation evidence.” On the record before us, we cannot say that
    this factual finding is clearly erroneous. Moreover, as the District Court also
    found, Hardwick’s actions, including his continued efforts to seek a life sentence,
    further support this finding.
    3.
    “The purpose of a sentencing hearing is to provide the jury with the
    information necessary for it to render an individualized sentencing determination
    based upon the character and record of the individualized offender and the
    circumstances of the particular offense.” Collier, 177 F.3d at 1203 (alterations
    omitted) (quoting Dobbs v. Turpin, 
    142 F.3d 1383
    , 1386–87 (11th Cir. 1998)).
    Here, “counsel’s absolute failure to investigate, obtain, or present any evidence, let
    alone the powerful, concrete, and specific mitigating evidence that was available,
    prevented the jurors from hearing anything at all about the defendant before them.
    An individualized sentence, as required by the law, was therefore impossible.”
    Brownlee, 
    306 F.3d at 1074
    .
    Because of counsel’s deficient performance, the jury saw only a drug dealer
    who brutally killed someone for stealing his quaaludes. They did not hear a word
    about Hardwick’s traumatic childhood background that was consistently marked
    45
    Case: 97-2319       Date Filed: 09/18/2015       Page: 46 of 48
    by neglect, deprivation, abandonment, violence, and physical and sexual abuse.
    They never had a chance to examine the trove of documents evidencing his
    decade-and-a-half long history of drug and alcohol addiction starting at the young
    age of eleven or twelve. They heard none of the affirmative evidence of his heavy
    intoxication at the time of the crime. Nor did they hear expert testimony about
    how these factors combined to render Hardwick substantially unable to conform
    his conduct to the requirements of the law, as the postconviction mental health
    experts unanimously concluded.
    Yet even without this evidence, the jury still came within a single vote of
    recommending life. 16 See Wiggins, 
    539 U.S. at 537
    , 
    123 S. Ct. 2543
     (“Had the
    jury been able to place petitioner’s excruciating life history on the mitigating side
    of the scale, there is a reasonable probability that at least one juror would have
    struck a different balance.”); Cave v. Singletary, 
    971 F.2d 1513
    , 1519 (11th Cir.
    1992) (noting in its discussion of prejudice that “despite the presentation of no
    mitigating circumstances, Cave came within one vote of being spared execution.”);
    cf. Blanco v. Singletary, 
    943 F.2d 1477
    , 1505 (11th Cir. 1991) (“Given that [four
    16
    “In Florida, a vote of six jurors for life constitutes a recommendation against the death
    penalty.” Cave v. Singletary, 
    971 F.2d 1513
    , 1519 (11th Cir. 1992). Given the jury’s seven-to-
    five vote here, if only one additional juror had been persuaded to vote for a life sentence, the
    jury’s advisory sentence would have been interpreted as a recommendation of life imprisonment,
    rather than the death penalty.
    46
    Case: 97-2319     Date Filed: 09/18/2015   Page: 47 of 48
    out of the twelve] members of Blanco’s jury were inclined to mercy even without
    having been presented with any mitigating evidence and that a great deal of
    mitigating evidence was available to Blanco’s attorneys had they more thoroughly
    investigated, we find that there was a reasonable probability that Blanco’s jury
    might have recommended a life sentence absent the errors.”). The Supreme Court
    has “explained that there is no prejudice when the new mitigating evidence would
    barely have altered the sentencing profile presented to the decisionmaker.” Sears
    v. Upton, 
    561 U.S. 945
    , 954, 
    130 S. Ct. 3259
    , 3266 (2010) (quotation marks
    omitted). But that is not the case here where absolutely none of the powerful
    mitigation story about Hardwick’s childhood was told.
    As was the case in Collier, we believe that counsel’s ineffectiveness
    precipitated a breakdown in the adversarial process. The jury was
    called upon to determine whether a man whom they did not know
    would live or die; they were not presented with the particularized
    circumstances of his past and of his actions on the day[s]
    [surrounding] . . . the crime that would have allowed them fairly to
    balance the seriousness of his transgressions with the conditions of his
    life. Had they been able to do so, we believe that it is at least
    reasonably probable that the jury would have returned a sentence
    other than death.
    177 F.3d at 1204 (quotation marks omitted).
    IV.
    Having found both deficient performance and prejudice under Strickland, we
    hold that John Gary Hardwick, Jr. did not receive effective assistance of counsel
    47
    Case: 97-2319    Date Filed: 09/18/2015    Page: 48 of 48
    during the penalty phase of his trial, in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth
    Amendments of the Constitution. We therefore AFFIRM the District Court’s
    determination that Hardwick is entitled to habeas relief as to the penalty phase of
    his trial and REMAND with instructions that the District Court issue a writ of
    habeas corpus vacating Hardwick’s sentence of death. The State must either grant
    Hardwick a new sentencing proceeding within 180 days or resentence him to life
    imprisonment.
    SO ORDERED.
    48