Full opinion text
HULL, Circuit Judge: John C. Marquard appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition challenging his death sentence. On appeal, Marquard argues primarily that his trial counsel was ineffective in various ways during the penalty phase of his trial. After review and oral argument, we affirm Marquard’s death sentence. I. BACKGROUND A. Murder of Stacey Willets Marquard was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death for the 1991 murder of his girlfriend, Stacey Wil-lets. After Willets’s remains were discovered by hunters in the woods, Marquard and codefendant Michael Abshire were arrested, and both confessed. The facts relating to the murder, as recited by the Florida Supreme Court, are as follows: John Marquard, Mike Abshire, and the victim, Stacey Willets, decided to move from North Carolina to Florida in June 1991 using Stacey’s car and sharing expenses. Prior to leaving, Mar-quard and Abshire discussed killing Stacey for her car and money, and during a stop in South Carolina Marquard told Abshire that he was going to kill her because he was tired of arguing with her. In St. Augustine, Marquard and Abshire formulated a plot to kill Stacey that night after luring her into the woods. Marquard and Abshire invited Stacey to attend a party, drove her to a deserted area, and walked her into the woods. Marquard grabbed her from behind, stabbed her, threw her to the ground, and sat on her back. She was still breathing, so Marquard held her head under the rainwater that had accumulated in a puddle until she stopped breathing. When her body convulsed, he held her head underwater again. Abshire then stabbed her and the two tried to decapitate her. Marquard was arrested and confessed, saying he remembered walking into the woods with Stacey and standing over her body with a knife in hand. Abshire testified at trial, giving a detailed account of the murder. Marquard v. State, 641 So.2d 54, 55-56 (Fla.1994). Marquard was convicted of first-degree murder and armed robbery. B. Guilt Phase of Trial At trial, Marquard contended that he was present for the murder of Stacey Wil-lets, but that eodefendant Abshire, and not Marquard, actually initiated and committed the murder. Abshire, on the other hand, testified that it was Marquard who planned to kill and ultimately did kill Wil-lets. Abshire testified that Marquard first mentioned killing Willets in South Carolina, at the first stop on their trip. Some luggage had fallen off the car, where Mar-quard had tied it down, and Marquard and Willets fought over the incident. Mar-quard then discussed with Abshire killing Willets, as follows: [STATE ATTORNEY]: Where is the first place that you stopped? [ABSHIRE]: We stopped at a ... like a convenience store/gas station in South Carolina when the sea bags that were on the trunk fell off. [STATE ATTORNEY]: Okay. And was ... anything unusual occur there? [ABSHIRE]: Other than the sea bags, yes, sir. [STATE ATTORNEY]: Okay. Explain to the jury what that is.... [ABSHIRE]: Okay. I decided I was going to tie the stuff down on the trunk, because John had tied it down before and it came loose. So him and Stacy [sic] went inside the store to get drinks and use the bathroom, you know. And Stacy [sic] came out and asked me if I wanted something to1 drink, and she went back in to get me something while John came out. And he ... see, I was going to drive from there, and he told me I should find a ... like a farm road off the side off the road and — like a hunting road or something — and go back in there and, you know, find like a ... a lonely spot like, and he was going to kill Stacy [sic] and leave her there. [STATE ATTORNEY]: Did he say why? [ABSHIRE]: He was tired of arguing and everything. They — they argued about the stuff being tied on the trunk and that he didn’t do a good job and it had fallen off, and he didn’t like that and it was just' — ■ Abshire testified that Marquard again discussed killing Willets after they arrived in St. Augustine and Marquard and Willets had an argument about their search for jobs. Willets stayed back in the motel room the three shared while Marquard and Abshire went out to look for jobs and to look for a room in a boarding house. When Marquard and Abshire spoke to the proprietor of the boarding house, Mar-quard told her that it would just be Mar-quard and Abshire. When Abshire questioned Marquard about Willets, Marquard indicated that he intended to kill her, and the two then discussed how they would kill her: [STATE ATTORNEY]: Okay. Well, did you ever question Mr. Marquard about why he said it would just be you two? [ABSHIRE]: When we got in the car later, I asked him, you know, ‘What are we going to tell Miss Rosa about Stacy [sic]?” And he said that — you know, he again brought up killing her. [STATE ATTORNEY]: Okay. I need you to tell the jury exactly what was said, to the best of your recollection. [ABSHIRE]: Actually started planning on what to do and ... [STATE ATTORNEY]: By ' saying what? [ABSHIRE]: By ... said that we’re going to take her someplace, find one of them little lonely roads just like before, and preferably ... it’s like usually when you cross over a river, there’s like an access road to get underneath the bridge for fishermen, and he said there was a river down State Road 16, I think, and we’re going to go there and take her back there and tell her there’s a party going on back there. [STATE ATTORNEY]: Did you come up with some ideas on how to do this, as well? [ABSHIRE]: Yes, sir. We did. [STATE ATTORNEY]: Okay. What did you suggest? [ABSHIRE]: Pretty much a basic consensus. I couldn’t really say who thought of what particular thing. I mean, it’s like a ... a general scenario, you know, go back into .some woods somewhere, I mean, because there’s a guy we knew who did it exactly that way before — or, I knew. I’m not sure if John knows him. [STATE ATTORNEY]: So is it — is it a question-and-answer period— [ABSHIRE]: Yes, sir. [STATE ATTORNEY]: — or are you both coming up with ideas and — ■ [ABSHIRE]: Yes. I mean it isn’t really anything. I mean, I was worried; but it still wasn’t really a serious thing, you know. I mean ... [STATE ATTORNEY]: But you were both talking about killing her. [ABSHIRE]: Yes, sir. According to Abshire’s testimony, when he and Marquard arrived back at the motel, they told Willets there was going to be a party that night and where it was going to be, and the three began getting ready to go to the party. After drinking a beer, Marquard, Abshire, and Willets drove out Highway 16, with Marquard at the wheel. Abshire testified that he and Marquard looked for a bridge with water because they had discussed leaving Willets’s remains where they could be destroyed by alligators. When they found a bridge over water, they got out and followed a trail through the woods with Willets walking between Marquard and Abshire. They were unable to find a trail to the water they had hoped for, but it was raining hard and the ground was very wet, with shin-deep water in some parts. The three of them decided it was not worth walking through the thick, wet trails, and decided to turn back. When Abshire came to a clearing in the woods, he heard a muffled scream and turned around to see Mar-quard murder Willets: [ABSHIRE]: ... John had Stacy [sic] from behind and was like backing up, keeping her feet off the ground, and she was struggling and still screaming. And then I saw his hand come up, and I saw the knife in his hand, and I saw him stab her at least once. I don’t know how many other times. I saw him stab her one time. And then he threw her on the ground in the middle of the clearing and sat on her back, pretty much looked at her, and then he saw she was still alive. And the water was, you know, pretty deep; so he ... he held her head under water till she quit breathing. Then he handed me the knife, and I washed the blood off it. And he sat there just looking at her. And then she jerked like, you know, like — like a gasp or something, and I thought she was still alive. And he put her head under water again and, you know, made sure. Then he told me to stab her. She was already dead, but he told me to stab her. So I did. And I washed it off and gave the knife back to him. Abshire testified that he then, at Mar-quard’s direction, hacked at Willets’s neck with a second knife. Marquard then tried to dig a hole to bury Willets’s body but gave up because there were too many roots. Abshire testified that the motivation for killing Willets was for her car and the remaining $150 she had at the time of the killing. After killing her, they went through her pockets, took some money and a knife, and returned to the motel to shower and wash their bloody clothes. At the close of the trial, the jury unanimously found Marquard guilty of one count of first-degree murder and one count of armed robbery with a deadly weapon. C. Evidence at Penalty Phase During Marquard’s penalty phase, the State presented North Carolina parole officer Patricia Rawls, who testified that Marquard was on parole in North Carolina at the time of the killing, a statutory aggravating factor under Florida law. To establish mitigating factors, the defense counsel presented testimony from Dr. Harry Krop, a licensed Florida psychologist with a wealth of experience in the field of forensic psychology. Because Dr. Krop was the defense’s only mitigation witness, we outline Dr. Krop’s testimony in detail. Dr. Krop had previously evaluated 472 people who had been charged with first-degree murder and had testified about forty-five times in the penalty phase of first-degree murder trials, generally as a defense witness but on several occasions as a consultant to the State. Dr. Krop saw Marquard on two different occasions, at which times he interviewed Marquard and also performed a battery of personality and neuropsychology tests. Dr. Krop also reviewed Marquard’s psychiatric records, psychiatric hospital records, social service records, and records from various facilities in which Marquard resided as a juvenile. In addition, Dr. Krop reviewed various depositions and police records relating to the offense of conviction and interviewed Marquard’s mother and father by telephone. Dr. Krop testified that he took all these materials into consideration in forming an opinion as to Marquard’s mental status. Based on his interviews with Marquard, his review of the relevant records and depositions, and his interviews with family members, Dr. Krop testified in detail about Marquard’s dysfunctional family; alcoholic and abusive mother; abusive and distant father; and deprived and troubled childhood. Dr. Krop reviewed how Mar-quard had an unstable family life and had been deprived of the emotional care and support he should have received. Dr. Krop started with Marquard’s dysfunctional family as early as when Mar-quard was age six, and described his parents’ divorce and physical abuse of Marquard: I would have to say that I guess the most significant aspect of his background is what we refer to as a dysfunctional family. Mr. Marquard’s parents separated and/or divorced soon after when he was rather young, somewhere around six or seven years old. At that time, and depending on who I talked to in terms of the mother or father, basically, it was a very bitter divorce, and as a result of the custody battle, Mr. Mar-quard, the defendant, stayed in the custody of his mother, whereas his two sisters went into the custody of his father. According to his father, the reason that he obtained custody of the two daughters was because the mother was physically abusive of the two girls. According to the mother, the father was physically abusive of her and also Mr. Marquard. Mr. Marquard basically reports that he was physically abused by both of his parents. The mother admits and the records document that the mother has a history of alcohol abuse and has been treated as an inpatient for her alcohol problems. As a result of his parents’ separation, Marquard did not see his father for many years and did not have a relationship with his father during childhood and adolescence. Dr. Krop opined it was very important for Marquard to have a relationship with his father during this period: At the time that they were separated, according to the father, he was not able to find John for close to four or five years, that he did not have any contact with his son for four or five years. The mother indicates- — when I asked her why John did not see his father for four or five years, she indicated that John essentially did not want to see his father and because he was afraid of his father. So both parents basically blame the other for why John was not involved in any way with the father for a significant period of his life. It was the period of his life in terms of his childhood, as well as the area going through puberty, a time when I think it’s very important for a son to be with his father. But in any event, whatever the facts were, he did not have a relationship with his father. Dr. Krop also described how each of Mar-quard’s parents alienated Marquard from the other parent: After talking to the mother and father, it became clear that there were a behavior pattern on both of their parts which we now refer to as Parental Alienation Syndrome. It’s essentially when one parent, usually the custodial parent, does things or says things to the child or in front of the child which attempts, either consciously or unconsciously, to alienate the child from the other parent. At that time period, I don’t believe there was terminology for that; but it’s been a fairly common phenomenon for several years. Dr. Krop described how Marquard began drinking and using drugs at around eight or nine years of age: Basically, also just staying with the childhood, it was at the time period when the parents were separated that John started getting into additional trouble. He indicates that he actually started drinking when he was eight years old — not regularly at that time; but he started using drugs and alcohol somewhere around eight or nine years old. And at some point, of course, that continued and became heavy and more regular. Dr. Krop also recounted how Marquard reported that he was sexually abused as a child by a neighbor: John also reports that when he was five or six years old that he was sexually abused by an adult neighbor. He said that the abuse consisted of frequent anal sex. He indicated that he never told his mother or his father of this sexual abuse, but that he has informed some mental-health counselors about the abuse. During that time period, also, as I indicated, he was not allowed to see his father; but also because the sisters, his two older sisters, went with the father, he had no contact with his sisters during that time period, and according to his father, he ... John was close to his sisters prior to that separation. That’s in a nutshell what occurred when John was a child in terms of the parental situation. In essence, Dr. Krop described Marquard as having abusive parents and having been perhaps sexually abused, with the result that Marquard was drinking and using drugs by age eight or nine. Dr. Krop then testified about Mar-quard’s transient adolescence, in which he was then separated from his family and placed in boys’ homes, foster care, and a state hospital. At age eleven, Marquard was sent to a boys’ home, where he stayed for eighteen months. Dr. Krop testified that “[according to the records at the boys’ home, he was doing relatively well and was making some progress until around the 15th- or 16th-month period, at which time he had a home ... visit.” After his home visit with his sisters, who reportedly were in a motorcycle gang, Marquard “regressed and came back ... talking about more violent type of things, talking about weapons.” According to the boys’ home records, Marquard’s new interest in violence was because of his association with his sisters. Dr. Krop further explained the negative impact Marquard’s mother continued to have on Marquard. During Marquard’s time in the boys’ home, the records suggest that the mother was telling Marquard during some of the home visits that she would welcome Marquard back home with them. According to the records, “[w]hen [Marquard] would come back, that would be his expectation, when he came back to the boys’ home.” However, “when the boys’ home staff asked the mother to come in and meet with them and talk about her taking home [Marquard], she would not show up for the meetings.” There were regular promises made, but then no follow-through on the part of Marquard’s mother. After Marquard got back to the boys’ home following his visit with his sisters, the boys’ home staff felt they could no longer treat him and that he needed more intensive work. The boys’ home then referred Marquard to a “therapeutic foster-care situation,” which is a family specifically trained in working with emotionally disturbed children. According to Dr. Krop, Marquard went into that system for about fifteen months, when he was around age thirteen to fourteen. At the end of that time, the father took Marquard home with him for about two years. During that two-year period with his father, Marquard was about fifteen and sixteen and was again having difficulty adjusting. He had difficulty in school and exhibited behavior problems, at which time he was referred to a group home for emotionally disturbed adolescents. Marquard stayed in that group home for just a short period of time because his problems were too serious. The group home referred Marquard to a state hospital, where he stayed for sixteen months. Marquard was in a state hospital at ages sixteen and seventeen. After Marquard was released at about age seventeen from that state hospital, it was determined that his family situation was too unstable, but because of his age, he could not be placed back in a foster care situation. As a result, he lived on his own thereafter. According to Dr. Krop, from that time on, Marquard “lived in a transient type of existence in terms of moving around from one place to another, having difficulty adjusting and having any type of stable environment.” Dr. Krop also summarized the results of the most recent evaluation, which was in North Carolina in 1989. Although all professionals recommended that Marquard needed stability, consistency and support, the records reflect that he was never able to get that environment from his family. Dr. Krop explained that the professionals all “indicated that the rejection that [Mar-quard] had from significant others has contributed to his difficulties.” Dr. Krop concluded that the records “support the [reports of] instability and the dysfunctional family unit and suggest that many of [Marquard’s] current problems adjusting to society and functioning adaptively in society ... relate back to the instability, his rejection and low self-esteem as a result of the dysfunctional family.” As a result of his family instability and lack of supervision, Marquard started drinking and using drugs at a very early age. Dr. Krop added that Marquard has a history of alcohol and drug abuse. Dr. Krop essentially opined that all this unfortunate history, taken together, has resulted in Marquard being “a seriously disturbed individual with a number of personality deficiencies and defects.” After this discussion of Marquard’s background, Dr. Krop then discussed his diagnosis. Dr. Krop discussed Marquard’s history of substance abuse and concluded that Marquard did not suffer from significant intellectual or neurological deficits: Diagnostically, let me say that in my testing from him, although he reports a number of head injuries, he also reports some blackouts and hallucination. I would say that from what I can tell, almost all of those were related to drug ... drug ingestion as opposed to any type of psychotic illness. I did a neuropsychological evaluation to determine whether there was any neurological or organic basis for some of these problems, and the results were negative. I did not find any neurological aspects ... as a contributing factor. Dr. Krop further noted that Marquard was a “fairly bright young man,” with an IQ in the average range. Dr. Krop thus opined that “intellectually or neuropsychologically, there do not seem to be any significant problems.” Dr. Krop then testified that what Mar-quard presented, from a diagnostic standpoint, was a “number of different personality problems.” Dr. Krop explained that every individual develops certain personality traits, which are traceable to genetic predisposition and also the individual’s environment and upbringing and values in the home. He further explained that as a result of those factors, there are individuals who develop maladaptive personality traits, causing them difficulty functioning in society. This type of personality profile is called a “personality disorder,” and the type of personality disorder “can vary depending on the particular criteria that are available or that we know of with regard to that individual in terms of the particular personality.” Dr. Krop then opined that Marquard had traits typical of many different personality disorders and that he presented a “personality disorder not otherwise specified” and also was a substance abuser: He has been diagnosed with different types of personality disorders in the past. I would say that when I try and put a specific diagnosis on him, because he fits into so many different categories and his personality traits basically are across the different personality diagnoses, I would have to diagnose him as what we call a personality disorder not otherwise specified; in other words, the criteria are from across the different personality disorders as opposed to just fitting into one particular personality disorder. I would also have to diagnose him as a substance abuser, based on his history, both reported to me and in the records. Dr. Krop also elaborated on the traits Marquard exhibited from various personality disorders, including borderline, explosive, and antisocial personality traits. Dr. Krop first described the “borderline” personality traits exhibited by Marquard, stating that individuals with borderline traits react to stress with inappropriate acting out, tend to be manipulative, and engage in “self-injurious, self-destructive type of behavior, oftentimes for attention-seeking purposes.” Although borderline personalities can engage in certain “psychotic-like” behaviors, Dr. Krop clarified that the only evidence he had of that type of behavior in Marquard was, he believed, the result of hallucinogenic drugs. Dr. Krop then described Marquard’s tendency to react to stress with disproportionate anger and violence, typical of an “explosive” personality disorder: He’s been diagnosed in the past as having explosive personality disorder. This is an individual who reacts to stress in a manner that is totally out of proportion to the given situation. It might be a situation that might create some anger or frustration in all of us; but the person who has poor impulse control and low frustration tolerance essentially can explode and, of course, sometimes engage in violent behavior. So we have those features from that type of personality disorder. Dr. Krop further explained that Marquard presented certain features associated with an “antisocial” personality disorder, which Dr. Krop described: We have certain features from an antisocial personality disorder, the individual who does not particularly benefit from or a person who does not particularly look at the consequences of his behavior, a person who basically is fairly selfish and a person who engages in behaviors that are against the values of society and the rules of society. Dr. Krop then noted that Marquard exaggerated and even lied — -for example, telling people that he was in the Navy Seals — to build up his self-esteem. Dr. Krop opined that “these kind of grandiose, manipulative kinds of behavioral characteristics are all reflective of a person with a personality disorder of the nature that I described.” After Dr. Krop’s testimony about Mar-quard’s background and his diagnoses, the State presented Dr. Jack Merwin, an expert clinical psychologist. Dr. Merwin testified that, based on his review of Mar-quard’s background and conduct, Mar-quard suffered from antisocial personality disorder, a disorder common among inmates whom he had evaluated. Dr. Mer-win distinguished a personality disorder such as Marquard’s from what is generally considered “mental illness” in that a personality disorder is more personality-based and less focused on the mental process. D. Shackling During the Penalty Phase On appeal, Marquard contends that he was shackled before the jury during some portion of his trial’s penalty phase. Thus, we examine what the record shows in that regard. We can locate no evidence in the record showing that Marquard was shackled during the penalty phase. Additionally, Marquard’s trial counsel never objected to any shackling. In fact, this Court directed Marquard to file record citations where any shackling occurred at trial. In reply, Marquard referenced only one place in the record where Marquard apparently entered the courtroom while the jury was present, and the record of the event reads as follows: (In open court.) THE COURT: All right. We’re waiting on Mr. Marquard. I think he had to go to the restroom. He’ll be back in a second. (Defendant present.) THE COURT: All right. Now I would ask that the following people please step down and report to Judge Wienberg in the courtroom at the other end of the hall.... The above events took place during jury-selection proceedings, not during the penalty phase. In any event, the record contains no evidence that Marquard was shackled before the jury. E. Jury Instructions and Recommendation After hearing the above evidence, the State trial court instructed the jury regarding its duty to recommend a sentence for Marquard. The State trial court instructed the jury to “render to the Court an advisory sentence based upon [its] determination as to if sufficient aggravating circumstances exist to justify the imposition of death penalty and whether sufficient mitigating circumstances exist to outweigh any aggravating circumstances found to exist.” The trial court also instructed the jury that the .aggravating circumstances it might consider were limited to any of the following four: (1) the capital felony was committed by a person under a sentence of imprisonment or community control, including parole; (2) the crime was committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of a robbery or was committed for financial gain; (3) the crime was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel; and (4) ■ the crime was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification. With regard to the third potential aggravating factor, the “heinous, atrocious or cruel” (“HAC”) factor, the trial court instructed as follows: “Heinous” means “extremely wicked or shockingly evil.” “Atrocious” means “outrageously wicked and evil.” “Cruel” means “designed to inflict a high degree of pain with utter indifference to or enjoyment of the suffering of others.” The kind of crime intended to be included as heinous, atrocious or cruel is one accompanied by additional acts that show that the crime was consciousless or pitiless and was unnecessarily torturous to the victim. If the victim in this case lost consciousness, any event which occurred after unconsciousness began cannot be considered as evidence of the especially — especially wicked, evil, atrocious or cruel nature of the crime. Any event after the death of the victim cannot be considered as evidence of the especially wicked, evil, atrocious or cruel nature of the crime.... Prior to trial, the defense filed written objections to the standard jury instructions. In those written objections, the defense objected to the HAC instruction on the ground that it was unconstitutionally vague in that it failed to genuinely limit the class of people eligible for the death penalty in violation of the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments. At trial, the defense also objected to the HAC instruction, again on the ground that it was unconstitutionally vague and also on the ground that the evidence did not support the HAC aggravating factor. Trial counsel also asked the trial court, if it overruled the objection and gave the HAC instruction, to add onto the standard jury instruction the limitation that events after the victim lost consciousness or death could not be considered as evidence of the wicked, evil, atrocious, or cruel nature of the crime, as follows: If the victim in this case lost consciousness, any event which occurred after unconsciousness began cannot be considered as evidence [of the] especially wicked, evil, atrocious, or cruel nature of the crime. Any event after the death of the victim cannot be considered as evidence of the especially wicked, evil, atrocious, or cruel nature of the crime. If you have reason to doubt whether some particular event occurred after unconsciousness or death, you cannot consider that event in deciding whether the State has established this aggravating circumstance. (Quotation marks omitted.) Although overruling the objection to the constitutionality of the HAC instruction, the trial court did give the first two sentences of this requested limiting instruction but not the last sentence. The trial court further explained (1) that if the jury did not find that aggravating circumstances justified imposition of the death penalty, it should recommend life imprisonment, and (2) that if it did find that one or more sufficient aggravating circumstances existed, the jury then had the duty to determine whether any mitigating circumstances existed that outweighed the aggravating circumstance or circumstances. As to potential mitigating circumstances, the trial court instructed: “Among the mitigating circumstances you may consider if established by the evidence are any aspects of the defendant’s character or record and any other circumstance of the offense.” The trial court further instructed that while aggravating circumstances must be established beyond a reasonable doubt, mitigating circumstances need not be. Rather, it instructed the jury: “If you are reasonably convinced that a mitigating circumstance exists, you may consider it as established.” After the jury retired to deliberate, the defense movéd for a directed sentence of life imprisonment, arguing that the State had failed to prove aggravating circumstances sufficient to allow a reasonable jury to recommend a death sentence. The trial court denied the motion. After deliberating, the jury unanimously recommended a sentence of death. The defense then moved for a new trial, asserting, inter alia, that Marquard’s trial was tainted by cumulative error. The trial court denied the motion. F. Sentencing At sentencing, the State trial court recounted the details of Willets’s murder and Marquard’s role in the murder, stating that, there was overwhelming evidence that the idea of killing Willets originated with Marquard. The trial court found that these four aggravating factors were proved beyond reasonable doubt: (1) the crime was committed while Marquard was on parole; (2) the crime was committed while Marquard was engaged in the commission of a robbery or was committed for financial gain; (3) the crime was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel; and (4) the crime was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification. The trial court described the facts supporting each aggravating factor. With regard to the HAC aggravator, the trial court restated the instruction defining the factor and then explained why Marquard’s crime met this definition: Chopping and stabbing and attempting to drown a defenseless, unsuspecting '22-year-old woman with a Bowie knife, a dagger and attempting to cut her head off with a Gurka head knife is extremely wicked and shockingly evil. Such conduct is designed to inflict a high degree with indifference to the suffering of Stacey Ann Willets. Marquard cut her throat, stabbed her in the chest and attempted to drown her and attempted to behead her. Mr. Mar-quard threw her to the ground after cutting her throat and stabbing her. He held her face under water until she stopped breathing. When she started breathing again, he then held her face under water until she finally stopped breathing. Abshire stabbed her at Marquard’s instruction. Then Marquard struck the back of her neck with his Gurka head knife. Abshire did the same thing with his Bowie knife. Stacey did not die instantly. She was breathing when Marquard first tried to drown her. She started breathing after the first attempt. Marquard again tried to drown her. The attack was without provocation, and she vainly sought to defend herself by struggling. Marquard had one hand over her mouth and a knife in the other hand cutting her throat and stabbing her in the chest. Attempting to drown the victim is comparable to strangulation and would involve foreknowledge of death, extreme anxiety or fear. The trial court found that no statutory mitigating factors existed. With regard to non-statutory mitigating factors, the trial court made mitigation findings that Mar-quard had an unstable family life, difficult childhood, divorced parents, alcoholic mother, no emotional support, and a personality disorder, but concluded that any mitigating factors relating to that background and diagnosis were overwhelmed by the aggravating factors in this case: The Court finds that the defendant had an unstable family life as a child and lacked the emotional support and care he should have received. Defendant reported to Doctor Krop that he had a number of head injuries. Those are not documented, nor did Doctor Krop describe how they occurred, when they occurred or the nature of the injuries. Such testimony and those of blackouts as related to the jury by defendant via Doctor Krop are highly suspect. The Court places very little weight on such testimony. Doctor Krop diagnosed defendant as [sic] a personality disorder not otherwise specified. In other words, defendant has characteristics which fit different personality diagnoses. Those traits are inappropriately acting out in response to stress, being manipulative, self-injurious, self-destructive, engaging in attention-getting behavior, explosive personality, poor impulse control, low frustration tolerance, failing to look at consequences of his behavior, basically selfish, a liar and a person who engages in behaviors that are against the values of society. Doctor Krop also — mentioned also that such a'person can engage in psychotic behavior, but there’s no evidence of such behavior. Doctor Jack Merwin, an equally qualified psychologist, opined that the defendant suffers from an antisocial personality disorder, which affects three percent of American males. The Court finds that the defendant suffers from either a personality disorder not otherwise specified or an antisocial personality. There is not much difference between the two. The Court further finds defendant did not have a stable home, but had divorced parents and an alcoholic mother with whom he lived. He had a difficult childhood. He may have been sexually abused on one occasion. Defendant used various drugs and alcohol; however, there is no evidence that the use of those had anything whatsoever to do with the commission of the murder. In summary, the four aggravating circumstances overwhelm the mitigating circumstances. The strongest mitigating circumstance is defendant’s difficult childhood. He did not have a stable home. He was in a group home, a therapeutic foster home and the state hospital. He lived with an alcoholic mother. The trial court then recounted the brutal, senseless murder of Willets and concluded: “The murder of Stacey Ann Wil-lets was a cold-blooded, premeditated murder. The death penalty is the appropriate punishment.” The trial court then sentenced Mar-quard to death. G. Direct Appeal On direct appeal to the Florida Supreme Court, Marquard, represented by new counsel, argued that the trial court erred in these matters: (1) excusing for cause a death-qualified venireperson; (2) refusing to suppress knives and camouflage pants recovered from his room; (3) permitting the State to introduce evidence that Mar-quard had discussed with Abshire how to kill people with knives and how to make a “silent kill”; (4) denying the defense’s request for judgment of acquittal on the armed robbery count; (5) refusing to allow defense counsel to argue to the jury concerning the consequences of life imprisonment; (6) permitting cross-examination into Marquard’s criminal history during the penalty phase; (7) instructing on and finding the aggravating circumstance of commission while under a sentence of imprisonment; (8) giving the HAC instruction; (9) finding that the murder was for pecuniary gain; and (10) finding that the murder was cold, calculated, and premeditated. See Marquard v. State, 641 So.2d at 56 n. 3. Marquard also argued that: (11) cumulative errors required reversal; and (12) Florida’s death-penalty scheme, including the standard jury instructions regarding aggravating factors, was unconstitutional. See id. Marquard did not raise any shackling issue on direct appeal. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed Marquard’s convictions and sentences. Marquard then filed a motion for rehearing, which was denied. See id. at 58. The Florida Supreme Court listed the twelve issues raised by Marquard on direct appeal, id. at 56 n. 3, but discussed only six of those issues in some detail. As to the remaining six, the Florida Supreme Court summarily affirmed the trial court. Id. at 58 n. 4. Among those claims summarily affirmed were Marquard’s claims that the trial court erred in instructing on and finding that the murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel and that the Florida death-penalty scheme, including the HAC aggravator, was unconstitutional. The Florida Supreme Court simply stated “no error” with regard to the giving of the HAC instruction, and “no merit” with regard to the constitutionality of the HAC instruction given. Id. Marquard then filed a petition for a writ of certiorari in the United States Supreme Court, seeking review on the following basis: “THE TRIAL COURT’S RESTRICTION OF DEFENSE COUNSEL’S CLOSING ARGUMENT CONCERNING DEFENDANT’S FUTURE DANGEROUSNESS VIOLATED THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE AND REQUIRES A NEW TRIAL AS TO PENALTY IN LIGHT OF THIS COURT’S DECISION IN Simmons v. South Carolina, 512 U.S. [154,] 114 S.Ct. [2187,] 129 L.Ed.2d 133 (1994).” In his petition, Marquard argued that the trial court erred in refusing to allow defense counsel to inform the jury that the court could sentence Marquard to consecutive life sentences for the armed robbery and the murder, which would likely ensure that Marquard would spend the rest of his life in prison. The Supreme Court denied the petition. Marquard v. Florida, 513 U.S. 1132, 115 S.Ct. 946, 130 L.Ed.2d 890 (1995). H. Post-conviction 3.850 Motion Marquard then filed in the Florida circuit court a motion for post-conviction relief pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850, and subsequently amended that motion. In the amended 3.850 motion, Marquard asserted the following claims: (1) that his trial counsel at the guilt phase of his trial was ineffective; (2) that his trial counsel at the penalty phase was ineffective in failing to investigate and present sufficient mitigating evidence; (3) that his trial counsel was ineffective at the penalty phase in failing to object to and/or preserve various erroneous rulings by the trial court and various statements by the court and the prosecutor; (4) that the Florida Bar Rules unconstitutionally prohibited counsel from interviewing jurors to determine if they followed the statutory sentencing guidelines; (5) that the jury instructions as to aggravating factors, including the,H-^C instruction, were unconstitutionally vague, overbroad, and inaccurate, and that trial counsel was ineffective in not objecting to, or preserving an objection to, the jury instruction as to the “cold, calculated, and premeditated” aggravating factor on that basis; (6) that execution by electrocution is cruel and unusual and violates the United States and Florida Constitutions; and (7) that Marquard was unable to prepare an adequate 3.850 motion until he received certain public records and was accorded time to review them and conduct a follow-up investigation. While Marquard objected to the constitutionality of the HAC instruction, his 3.850motion did not argue that his trial counsel failed to raise the HAC-constitutionality issue or was ineffective in failing to raise or preserve it. In fact, the record shows Marquard’s trial counsel did object to the HAC instruction as unconstitutional. Additionally, in his amended 3.850 motion, Marquard for the first time raised a shackling claim (claim eight). Marquard’s 3.850motion claimed that his constitutional rights were violated when he was handcuffed in front of the jury “during his penalty phase,” and that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to that shackling. Thus, Marquard’s 3.850 motion raised his shackling claim both as a substantive constitutional claim and as an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim. As to this shackling claim, Marquard’s amended 3.850motion states: “After Mr. Marquard was found guilty of Ms. Willets’ murder, he was placed in handcuffs during the penalty phase. The handcuffs were in full view of the jury.” (Emphasis added.) The 3.850 motion contained no citations to the record that would show the shackling occurred, and Marquard made no proffer nor offered any affidavit relating to the shackling claim. The 3.850 court determined that Mar-quard’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel in the guilt phase and in the penalty phase, (set forth in claims one and two, respectively) were facially sufficient and that a hearing should be held on those claims. The 3.850 court denied claims three, four, and five as procedurally barred. The 3.850 court also denied Mar-quard’s shackling claim (claim eight) as procedurally barred. The 3.850 court denied the remaining claims (six and seven) on the merits, finding that the Florida Supreme Court had already rejected a constitutional challenge to electrocution (claim six) and that the public records in claim seven had already been disclosed. Marquard then again amended his 3.850 motion to assert that his death sentence should be vacated based on newly discovered evidence (1) that co-defendant Abshire’s sentence had been reduced on remand to life imprisonment, and thus Marquard’s death sentence was not proportional, and (2) that Abshire had admitted to Hobart Harrison, an inmate, that he had stabbed Stacey Willets and cut her neck while she was still alive. I. Hearing on S.850 Motion At the evidentiary hearing before the 3.850 court in November 1999, Marquard sought to show, inter alia, that his trial counsel was ineffective in the guilt phase in numerous ways. Marquard also sought to establish that his trial counsel was inadequate in the penalty phase in failing to present mitigation testimony beyond Dr. Krop’s testimony. Specifically, Marquard argued that his counsel should have presented more detailed testimony about his difficult and troubled childhood and the sexual and physical abuse he suffered and its effect on his mental state. Marquard also asserted that codefendant Abshire’s changed story about the murder constituted new evidence that would have changed the outcome of the trial, and trial counsel was ineffective for failing to discover and present it. We now review Abshire’s changed story during the 3.850 hearing and then proceed to the testimony of the witnesses presented on the mitigation issue. 1. Abshire’s changed story During the 3.850 evidentiary hearing in November 1999, Michael Abshire testified about his history with Marquard and the events the day of the murder. Abshire testified that he and Marquard habitually drank beer, consumed ephedrine, and smoked marijuana, and they also occasionally took LSD. Abshire indicated that he and Marquard both blacked out and had memory loss at times due to their alcohol and drug use. In contrast to his trial testimony, Abshire indicated that the day of the murder, he and Marquard went to two different bars before returning to the motel and getting ready to go out. At the first bar, they drank two beers; at the second, they drank numerous beers, approximately one every ten to fifteen minutes for an uncertain period of time. At some point during the night they also drank the remains of a bottle of tequila, which was approximately four inches of the bottle, and also ingested ephedrine. Ab-shire stated that he did not remember exactly what his testimony was at trial or why he would have omitted the fact that he and Marquard drank many beers and tequila the day and evening of the murder, but that he was sure they had done so. However, Abshire testified that Marquard, nevertheless, was able to drive the three of them into the woods in inclement weather without incident. With regard to the murder, Abshire testified that he stabbed Willets and cut her throat because he thought she was still alive after Marquard had stabbed her, and he wanted to put her out of her pain. Hobart Harrison also testified briefly that Abshire claimed he, and not Mar-quard, had killed Willets. Harrison previously had testified at Abshire’s trial that Abshire told him Abshire cut Willets’s head off and left a piece of skin to hold it on. However, Harrison failed to provide any details at the 1999 evidentiary hearing, stating that he did not want any part of the case. Harrison also admitted that he was not present at the crime scene and could not know whether Abshire told the truth and that Abshire seemed to be trying to impress people with how tough he was. Garry Wood, who served along with Howard Pearl as Marquard’s trial counsel, also testified about his involvement with Marquard’s case. Pearl was deceased. Wood was asked about Hobart Harrison, a prison inmate with whom Abshire talked about the murder. Wood testified that he and Pearl made a strategic decision not to call Harrison as a witness in the guilt phase because Harrison’s statements did not indicate that Marquard was innocent. Further, Wood would not call him in either the guilt or the penalty phase because Harrison was not credible and because Wood believed Harrison’s testimony would not cause jurors to be sympathetic to either Abshire or Marquard. In addition, Wood and Pearl did not want to call Harrison because they could not control him as their witness. 2. Mitigation witnesses The majority of the testimony at the 3.850 hearing related to Marquard’s mitigation claim. Marquard contends that his trial counsel should have presented in the penalty phase the mitigation evidence presented in the 3.850 hearing. At the 3.850 hearing, Mariah Harrelson testified that she was Marquard’s foster mother for a period when he was about twelve or thirteen years old, after his stint in a boys’ home. Harrelson testified that he was a shy, bashful child, with whom she had no problems. She described Mar-quard as a follower, but stated on cross-examination that he was generally able to make up his own mind and “mostly” seemed to know the difference between wrong and right. Harrelson had the impression that Marquard could not depend on his mother. His father kept telling Marquard that he would come and get him. As a result, one night Marquard took Harrelson’s child’s bicycle and rode approximately fifty-five miles to Jacksonville, North Carolina, where his father lived. Harrelson was never contacted in connection with Marquard’s trial. Eric Wallen, a friend of Marquard’s, testified that Marquard lived with Wallen and his family for some period when they were seventeen years old. Wallen testified that they drank alcohol every day and habitually consumed a variety of drugs, including LSD and POP. Wallen testified that Mar-quard was somewhat “withdrawn” and “spaced out” at times. Wallen also knew Abshire, and had spent time with Abshire in county jail and state prison. He described Abshire as “a very explosive person” who was jealous in his friendships and did not like other people to come between him and his friends. According to Wallen, Marquard was not an aggressive person. Wallen was not contacted to be a witness in Marquard’s trial and was in prison at the time of the trial. Rebecca Marquard Hicks, Marquard’s oldest sister, then testified about her and Marquard’s childhood. Hicks testified in detail about their mother’s heavy drinking. Hicks remembered her mother’s violent behavior toward her but did not remember whether her mother abused Marquard or their other sister. Hicks recalled her mother often drinking all day until she passed out and also stated that her mother consumed cocaine, marijuana, and hash. Her mother took Marquard to bars with her and also consumed drugs in front of him when he was approximately ten years old. At one point Marquard, at age ten, was taken to the hospital after taking quaaludes, but their mother was pássed out and did not know about the incident. Hicks was never contacted by Marquard’s trial counsel and was sure that their other sister Amy also had not been contacted because she had spoken to Amy about it. Amy died in 1995. On cross-examination, Hicks acknowledged that there was an incident in which Marquard had been accused of molesting the daughter of their sister Amy. Wood, Marquard’s trial counsel, testified that he and Pearl made a strategic decision to present all evidence of Marquard’s childhood, emotional, and substance-abuse problems through Dr. Krop rather than through various other witnesses because they wanted Dr. Krop to “put it into a mental health perspective.” As a result of Dr. Krop’s specific expertise, Dr. Krop was in charge of the mitigation investigation and presentation. With regard to his failure to contact witnesses to determine if Marquard was intoxicated when he was arrested, consented to a search, and provided a statement to the police, Wood testified that Mar-quard never told him he was intoxicated. Marquard apparently at some point told Dr. Krop that he had taken acid the day of the arrest, but Wood testified that the defense team concluded Marquard was not intoxicated at the time of the arrest, as follows: And I do recall exploring with Dr. Krop further about the ramifications of that and .... we did not feel, Howard Pearl and myself, based on our information in consultation with Dr. Krop, that either Mr. Marquard was incompetent to stand trial, incompetent to render any statements, insane at the time of the offense or incapable of providing a statement to the police based on any alcohol or drug ingestion. Dr. Michael Amiel, an expert in the field of psychiatry, testified about his opinions about Marquard’s substance abuse and mental state. Dr. Amiel met with Mar-quard three times and reviewed Mar-quard’s history and Dr. Krop’s psychological testing of him. Based on his review, Dr. Amiel concluded that Marquard’s impulse control may have been mildly impaired as a result of his alcohol consumption. Based on Marquard’s statement that he could not remember the incident and that he zoned out at times, Dr. Amiel was of the opinion that Marquard “might have had some kind of psychogenic amnestic period whereby he could not therefore recall what had taken place.” Dr. Amiel testified that such a psychogenic amnestic period “suggests that the experience was very traumatic, and therefore, he blocked it out.” Dr. Amiel further testified that Marquard had a well-documented chronic depressive disorder, and that the alcohol and drugs were self-medication. Dr. Am-iel agreed with Dr. Krop’s assessment of Marquard’s personality disorder. Dr. Barry Crown, an expert in the field of psychology, then testified about a battery of neuropsychological tests he administered on Marquard in 1997, at the request of Marquard’s 3.850 counsel. Dr. Crown testified that Dr. Krop had not administered any of the tests he administered, which were focused more on “diffuse matters of brain development.” Dr. Crown testified that the test results suggested that Marquard’s problem-solving ability was at the level of a person aged fifteen years and seven months, although his vocabulary was much more advanced. The test results suggested a thought disorder and processing deficit. Dr. Crown also administered a personality test that suggested a pattern of schizophrenia, paranoid type, in a “subacute stage.” Dr. Crown testified that Marquard’s personality and thought disorders and diminished capacity would “reduce his capacity to reason and to exercise sound judgment, particularly when he was under pressure.” His difficulty in problem-solving would also make him more likely to act impulsively. However, Dr. Crown clarified that he was not diagnosing Marquard as schizophrenic; rather, he was simply reporting that a personality test Marquard took suggested schizophrenia. Dr. Crown further clarified that he was not testifying that Marquard was insane. Cheryl Furtick testified as an expert in the field of social work. Furtick testified that Marquard’s records did not contain many significant details regarding Mar-quard’s experiences and mental health. Furtick discussed Marquard’s unstable childhood and adolescence and long history of behavioral problems. She testified that Marquard as a child looked for the acceptance of others and did not receive it. The State then presented Marquard’s father, Roger Marquard. Roger Mar-quard testified that he divorced Mar-quard’s mother because she drank and abused their daughters, but that she did not abuse Marquard. He further testified that Marquard lived with him from age fifteen to nineteen except for an eighteen-month stint in a hospital. J. Denial of S.850 Relief After the evidentiary hearing, the state 3.850 court denied Marquard’s remaining ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims for post-conviction relief. The 3.850 court determined that trial counsel made reasonable, strategic decisions in deciding not to question jurors about the emotional impact of the crime scene evidence and the victim’s remains and not to call Hobart Harrison as a witness. In addressing Marquard’s argument that counsel was ineffective in failing to obtain mitigating evidence about Mar-quard’s mental state and substance abuse, the 3.850 court found that no evidence was presented at the hearing that Marquard suffered from any head injury, blackout periods, or memory loss. The court further found that the evidence of Marquard’s drug and alcohol abuse and past mental health problems were introduced at trial through the testimony of Dr. Krop. As to the allegation that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to expand upon the intoxication and insanity defenses, the court found that there was never any evidence of intoxication at the tirpe of the crime until Abshire came up with his latest version of events, and trial counsel could not be faulted for not attempting a defense for which the factual basis did not exist at the time. With respect to the allegations that trial counsel, and Dr. Krop, were ineffective at the penalty phase, the 3.850 court found that no evidence was presented at the evidentiary hearing that would have presented mitigating circumstances in the penalty phase, and that “all relevant matters in mitigation were in fact presented at the penalty phase.” As to Marquard’s assertion that Ab-shire’s changed story was “new evidence” and that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to discover it, the court found that “this is simply the latest version of the events surrounding the homicide which is in direct conflict with Abshire’s prior testimony and other evidence presented at the Defendant’s trial,” and therefore “there is no probability there would have been a different result at trial.” Thus, the 3.850 court found from the evidentiary hearing that trial counsel was not ineffective in either jury selection, the guilt phase, or the penalty phase of Mar-quard’s trial. K. S.850 Appeal ■ Marquard- appealed the denial of his 3.850 motion for post-conviction relief and also filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Florida Supreme Court. The 3.850 appeal and habeas corpus petition were consolidated in the Florida Supreme Court. In his 3.850 appeal, Marquard raised, inter alia, these claims as claims three, four, seven, and nine: (3) Marquard had ineffective assistance of counsel at the penalty phase; (4) he was denied a full and fair postconviction evidentiary hearing; ... (7) Marquard was unconstitutionally shackled during the trial; ... [and] (9) the jury instructions during the penalty phase were vague or overbroad.... Marquard v. State, 850 So.2d at 423 n. I. In claim four, Marquard alleged that he was denied a full and fair hearing because the 3.850 court (1) refused to permit hearsay evidence from several witnesses, and (2) failed to take judicial notice of Hobart Harrison’s prior testimony from Abshire’s trial proceeding on the ground that the prior testimony would be inadmissible. Id. at 425. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s evidentiary rulings on these issues. Id. at 425-26. As to the penalty-phase ineffectiveness claims (claim three), the Florida Supreme Court concluded that Marquard’s counsel was not ineffective in deciding not to call as witnesses Harrison and David Blanks (another inmate). Id. at 428-29. It further concluded that counsel was not ineffective in failing to call witnesses other than Dr. Krop to testify about Marquard’s childhood and substance-abuse history, stating: “Although other witnesses could have provided more details relative to Marquard’s early life, counsel is not required to present cumulative evidence.” Id. at 429-30. With respect to Marquard’s assertion that his counsel failed to ensure that he received an adequate mental health evaluation, the Florida Supreme Court noted that neither Dr. Amiel nor Dr. Crown indicated that Dr. Krop had failed to give any specific tests, interviews, or other procedures. After reviewing the testimony of Dr. Amiel, Dr. Crown, and Cheryl Furtick, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that substantial evidence supported the 3.850 court’s determination that all relevant matters in mitigation were in fact presented at the penalty phase. Id. at 430-31. As to claim seven, the Florida Supreme Court treated Marquard’s case as if shackling had occurred in the penalty phase and addressed the issue only as an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim for failing to object to the shackling. The Florida Supreme Court concluded that “[bjecaiise this occurred only during the penalty phase, and not the guilt phase, in order to show prejudice, Marquard must show that ‘there is a reasonable probability that, absent trial counsel’s error, the sentencer ... would have concluded that the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.’ ” Id. at 431 (quoting Cherry v. State, 781 So.2d 1040, 1048 (Fla.2000)). Based on the brutal facts of the case, the unanimous jury recommendation of death, and the presence of no statutory and minimal non-statutory mitigating circumstances, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that Marquard had not met his burden on the prejudice prong. Id. Finally, as to claim nine — that the jury instructions, including the HAC instruction, during the penalty phase w