Full opinion text
HULL, Circuit Judge: The State of Alabama appeals the district court’s grant of the habeas writ to Holly Wood, which vacated his death sentence based on counsel’s ineffective assistance in failing to investigate and offer sufficient mitigation evidence. Wood cross-appeals the denial of his claims that: (1) he is mentally retarded and ineligible for the death penalty under Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 122 S.Ct. 2242, 153 L.Ed.2d 335 (2002); and (2) the prosecutor’s peremptory strikes violated Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106 S.Ct. 1712, 90 L.Ed.2d 69 (1986). After review and oral argument, we affirm the district court’s denial of Wood’s Atkins and Batson claims and reverse its decision that Wood’s counsel rendered ineffective assistance. I. The Crime and Procedural History A The Crime On the night of September 1, 1993, Wood brutally killed Ruby Lois Gosha, who was Wood’s former girlfriend and the mother of his child. See Wood v. State, 715 So.2d 812, 813 (Ala.Crim.App.1996). About two weeks prior to murdering Ruby, Wood had assaulted Ruby, cutting her and causing her to lose the use of two fingers. Id. at 814. In addition to the testimony of Ruby’s mother in that regard, the autopsy showed recent bruises on Ruby’s palm and the back of her left hand, two recent trauma-induced scars on her right forearm, and recent scars on her left forearm and upper arm. Id. On the night of the murder, around 5:00 p.m., Ruby’s mother told Wood to leave her home (where Ruby lived) and not come back. Id. at 813-14. Wood returned to Ruby’s mother’s house around 9:00 p.m., snuck into Ruby’s bedroom with his 12-gauge shotgun, and shot Ruby in the head and face, fracturing her skull and injuring her brain. Id. at 814. There was a gunshot wound near her eye and one near her cheek. Id. Ruby was dead by the time the ambulance got her to the hospital. Id. After shooting Ruby, Wood that night told his cousin, Calvin Salter, “I shot that bitch in the head, and [blew] her brains out and all she did was wiggle.” Id. at 815 (alteration in original). Wood also told Salter that he had attempted to stab Ruby in the heart sometime prior to the shooting, but Ruby had thrown her arm up to protect herself, and he had stabbed her in the arm instead. Id. Thus, although Ruby had tried to escape Wood’s domestic violence and although her mother had tried to keep Wood away from her home, Wood managed to sneak into the home late at night and kill Ruby at point-blank range in her own bed. At the time Wood killed Ruby, he was already on parole for a prior violent felony shooting of another former girlfriend. See id. at 819. In short, Ruby was not Wood’s first domestic violence shooting victim, and the State sought the death penalty for Ruby’s murder. B. Procedural History On October 20, 1994, the jury unanimously convicted Wood of capital murder during a first-degree burglary. The jury recommended a death sentence by a 10-2 vote. After a pre-sentencing report and a separate sentencing hearing, the trial judge sentenced Wood to death. On direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals (“Alabama Appeals Court”) rejected Wood’s Batson claim and affirmed his conviction and death sentence. See Wood v. State, 715 So.2d at 817, 819. The Alabama Supreme Court also affirmed Wood’s conviction and sentence. Ex parte Wood, 715 So.2d 819 (Ala.1998). After the United States Supreme Court denied Wood certiorari, Wood v. Alabama, 525 U.S. 1042, 119 S.Ct. 594, 142 L.Ed.2d 536 (1998), Wood filed a petition for post-conviction relief under Alabama Rule of Criminal Procedure 32. Wood’s Rule 32 petition claimed that (1) he is mentally retarded and not eligible for a death sentence, and (2) his trial counsel were ineffective by failing to investigate and present evidence of his mental deficiencies during the penalty phase. After two evidentiary hearings, the Rule 32 court denied Wood’s Rule 32 petition in two separate orders. After these Rule 32 orders, the United States Supreme Court decided Atkins, and the Alabama Appeals Court remanded Wood’s Rule 32 case in light of Atkins. Wood v. State, 891 So.2d 398, 402 (Ala.Crim.App.2003). On remand, the Rule 32 court conducted an extensive evidentiary hearing and issued a third Rule 32 order thoroughly discussing Wood’s claims and denying them. The Rule 32 court found that Wood was not mentally retarded and his counsel were not ineffective. The Alabama Appeals Court adopted and affirmed the Rule 32 court’s findings and denial of Wood’s claims. See Wood v. State, 891 So.2d 398, 413 (Ala.Crim.App.2004). The Aabama Supreme Court denied certiorari. Ex parte Wood, No. 1030817 (Aa. May 21, 2004). Wood then filed his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition. The district court denied Wood’s Atkins and Batson claims, but granted relief on Wood’s claim that his counsel were ineffective in the penalty phase by failing to investigate and present evidence of his deficient “intellectual functioning.” Wood v. Allen, 465 F.Supp.2d 1211, 1228-29, 1232, 1245 (M.D.Aa.2006). This appeal followed. II. Standard of Review We review the district court’s grant or denial of habeas relief de novo. See Stewart v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 476 F.3d 1193, 1208 (11th Cir.2007); McNair v. Campbell, 416 F.3d 1291, 1297 (11th Cir.2005); Sims v. Singletary, 155 F.3d 1297, 1304 (11th Cir.1998). However, under § 2254, as amended by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), our review of a final state court habeas decision is “greatly circumscribed and is highly deferential to the state courts.” Crawford v. Head, 311 F.3d 1288, 1295 (11th Cir.2002). Section 2254(d) permits federal habeas relief only where the state courts’ decisions were (1) “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” or (2) “based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)-(2); Stewart, 476 F.3d at 1208. “[A] determination of a factual issue made by a State court shall be presumed to be correct,” and “[t]he applicant shall have the burden of rebutting the presumption of correctness by clear and convincing evidence.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1); Henyard v. McDonough, 459 F.3d 1217, 1240 (11th Cir.2006), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 127 S.Ct. 1818, 167 L.Ed.2d 328 (2007); Marquard v. Sec’y for the Dep’t of Corr., 429 F.3d 1278, 1303 (11th Cir.2005). Thus, “[o]ur review of findings of fact by the state court is even more deferential than under a clearly erroneous standard of review.” Stephens v. Hall, 407 F.3d 1195, 1201 (11th Cir.2005). With these highly deferential standards in mind, we turn to Wood’s Atkins, Bat-son, and ineffective assistance claims, in that order. III. Atkins We agree with the district court that the Aabama courts’ rejection of Wood’s mental retardation claim was not contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, Atkins, or based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. The Supreme Court in Atkins held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits the execution of mentally retarded persons. Atkins, 536 U.S. at 321, 122 S.Ct. at 2252. The Supreme Court left “‘to the States the task of developing appropriate ways to enforce the [Atkins] constitutional restriction.’ ” Id. at 317, 122 S.Ct. at 2250 (brackets and citation omitted). As the Rule 32 court recognized, Alabama law provides that a defendant making an Atkins claim must establish three elements to show mental retardation: (1) significantly subaverage intellectual functioning (defined as an Intelligence Quotient (“IQ”) of 70 or lower); (2) significant or substantial deficits in adaptive behavior; and (3) that both of the first two problems manifested themselves during the defendant’s “developmental period” (before the defendant reached the age of eighteen). See Smith v. State, — So.2d-, 2007 WL 1519869, 2007 Ala. LEXIS 91, at *19-21 (Ala. May 25, 2007); Ex parte Perkins, 851 So.2d 453, 456 (Ala.2002). After three evidentiary hearings, the Rule 32 court applied this standard and found Wood is not mentally retarded because he does not have significant or substantial deficits in his adaptive functioning but instead has a high level of adaptive functioning. The Rule 32 court found Wood: (1) was able to obtain and maintain employment and had worked at several jobs for a lengthy amount of time, such as driving a forklift, driving motor vehicles, working in a factory, and operating heavy machinery and equipment in a dangerous work environment; (2) was able to function well independently and did not need the assistance of others to complete daily tasks; (3) managed his own money and always had money; (4) did not have problems communicating or getting his needs met verbally or through written language; (5) was able to plan and cook meals for himself and others; (6) could identify and resolve typical problems that might arise in everyday life (such as checking the fuse box if the lights went out in his house); (7) was always neat and clean in his appearance; (8) often drove himself out-of-state to visit relatives and for other reasons, and in fact was an automobile enthusiast who subscribed to Hot Rod magazine; (9) could form and maintain interpersonal relationships with others and had a girlfriend, Barbara Siler, for three years; and (10) devised and implemented a scheme to lure Siler out of her house to shoot her after she ended their relationship. In finding that Wood has a high level of adaptive functioning, the Rule 32 court credited testimony from psychologists Dr. Harry McClaren and Dr. Gregory Prich-ard; Siler; Wood’s former teachers; and Wood’s former boss, Melvin Wright. Drs. McClaren and Prichard evaluated Wood together and concluded Wood was not mentally retarded because, while his full-scale IQ was 64 and his true IQ was between 61 and 69, Wood did not have significant or substantial deficits in his adaptive functioning. They administered the “Vineland” test for adaptive functioning and the Scales of Independent Behavior Revised Edition (“SIBR”). They interviewed Wood’s “[tjeachers, boss, correctional officers, a man that had known his family, [and] sisters.” Dr. McClaren testified that: (1) Wood “has been able to obtain and maintain a variety of jobs involving driving motor vehicles, working in a factory, [and] working heavy equipment,” including a forklift and a front-end loader; (2) Wood worked in the kitchen while in prison; (3) Wood’s heavy machinery jobs “required a degree of skill that is not typically associated with people who ... are mentally retarded” and he could not “think of another mentally retarded person [he] examined that did that kind of work”; (4) Wood was able to explain in detail how to prepare a meal for a large number of people; (5) Wood had numerous cars in his life and paid cash for most of them; (6) Wood liked hot rodding and subscribed to Hot Rod magazine; (7) Wood knew to go to the fuse box if a light went out in his house; (8) Wood once borrowed money from a bank to buy a car but quickly repaid the loan so he could do things for the family; and (9) Wood was a sharp dresser and a “neat freak.” Dr. Prichard’s “bottom line finding” was that Wood’s “adaptive skills are not impaired in the mentally retarded range.” Dr. Prich-ard added that Wood’s skills were “sufficient for independent functioning.” Dr. Prichard agreed with Dr. McClaren’s findings. Four teachers testified about Wood’s IQ and special education classes, and their testimony was consistent with that of the Rule 32 psychologists. Janet Penn— Wood’s special education teacher — taught Wood for two or three years during junior high. Penn could have no more than fifteen students at a time, and usually she had twelve. Penn’s special education students had an IQ range of 60-80, and Wood was a “pretty average” student who never failed. Penn did not recall Wood getting into trouble frequently, but as neat, clean, and on-time, albeit lazy, sleepy, and a little moody. Penn thought Wood was probably classified as educable mentally retarded, which meant he was more productive than the students classified as trainable mentally retarded. Hilda Maddox — another special education teacher — testified the range of IQs for special education students was “low 50s to .... [maybe] 80.” According to Maddox, Wood was in the middle range of the educable mentally retarded group of students, had an IQ in the low to mid 60s, and got C-range grades. Wood never failed and attended class on a regular basis, although he was quiet and did not always put forth maximum effort. Maddox confirmed Wood was very clean and had a very neat appearance. Alfreida Griffen attended Luverne High School with Wood and is now its principal. The special education students were called “moles.” The special education classroom was in the basement and called the “mole hole.” Douglas Brown taught Wood in junior high physical education and found him to be a typical junior high school kid. Brown testified that “Holly B,” Wood’s nickname, was used as an insult. Wright — Wood’s former boss at Sanders Lead Company — testified Wood was an average person who did not appear unusual and seemed to be like most other employees. Wood could follow instructions and did the work assigned to him; cooperated in a civil manner with his fellow employees; had no discipline problems; and was on-time, hard-working, and dependable. Once someone in Wood’s position learned to do the work assigned, it was not complicated, but for a beginner, it was complicated work. The work environment was hazardous, and Wood could have been seriously injured if he was not alert and paying attention to detail. Siler — Wood’s former girlfriend — testified about their relationship. Siler dated Wood from 1981 to 1984. When they dated long distance for some of that time, Wood drove to see Siler over “most weekends” and “sometimes through the week.” Wood was nice to Siler at the beginning; had a nice appearance; eared a lot about how he dressed, his hair, and his clothes; and did laundry frequently. When Siler met Wood, he drove a delivery truck and had worked for a funeral home and Sanders Lead Company. Wood always seemed to have money. He had three different cars during their relationship, liked his cars, and kept them well-detailed. When Wood visited Siler, they stayed at a motel and he would go inside and get the room. Nothing ever struck Siler as “slow or off’ about Wood. Wood seemed like an average man, and, in fact, was “pretty capable.” Siler and Wood talked about the possibility of getting married, but Wood became abusive, and their relationship deteriorated. The sheriff came to Siler’s mother’s house because Siler and Wood were having an argument. The argument and the sheriffs visit upset Siler’s mother, and Siler ended the relationship. This upset Wood, and he wanted to talk to Siler, but she did not want to talk to him. Wood then sent his friend to the door of her mother’s house “to tell [her] to come outside” because Siler’s mother would not have let Wood in. When Wood’s friend told Siler to come outside to talk to Wood, Siler told him no, and she stayed inside and sat down on the couch. A few minutes later, Wood shot Siler through the window and fled. The Rule 32 court found Wood’s ruse to shoot Siler “exhibited regrettable adaptability” on Wood’s part. Based on this wealth of evidence, the Alabama courts found Wood was not mentally retarded. Wood has not shown the Alabama courts’ rejection of his mental retardation claim was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, Atkins, or based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. TV. Batson The district court also properly determined the Alabama courts’ denial of Wood’s Batson claim was not an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law or predicated upon unreasonable findings of fact. The district court determined that although Wood raised a Batson claim in the state courts, he did not make any sub-argument comparing black venire members who were struck with white members who were not struck. We agree with the district court and affirm its decision pursuant to Hightower v. Terry, 459 F.3d 1067 (11th Cir.2006), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 127 S.Ct. 2254, 167 L.Ed.2d 1123 (2007), and Atwater v. Crosby, 451 F.3d 799 (11th Cir.2006), without additional discussion. V. Ineffective Assistance Claims The trial court appointed three attorneys for Wood: Cary Dozier and Frank Ralph, experienced trial attorneys, and Kenneth Trotter, a new attorney who shared office space with Dozier. Wood claims his counsel were ineffective in the penalty phase because they: (1) did not present to the jury evidence of Wood’s borderline intellectual functioning and special education classes; and (2) failed to adequately investigate those issues before deciding against presenting mental health evidence. To evaluate Wood’s ineffective assistance claims, we review: (1) what each counsel said about their investigation, preparation, and trial decisions; (2) what mitigation evidence counsel discovered and presented to the jury and later to the sentencing judge; (3) the Rule 32 mitigation evidence that Wood argues his counsel should have investigated and presented; and (4) the fact findings and legal conclusions in the Rule 32 orders. A. Dozier’s testimony and Dr. Kirkland’s report Dozier had practiced for more than twenty years, represented capital defendants before, tried over a thousand felony cases, and had extensive criminal experience. Dozier had worked in the Alabama Attorney General’s Office, for a judge on the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, for a private law firm, and as the Chief Deputy District Attorney in Montgomery County. Dozier was Wood’s lead counsel, and, as detailed below, Dozier and Ralph were responsible for and involved in investigating all phases of the trial, including the sentencing and guilt phases. Dozier testified Wood was always nice and cooperative and gave the trial team information about the case that it followed up on. Dozier used an experienced investigator, Pete Taylor, and was “sure” that Taylor met with Wood and “members of [Wood’s] family and other people.” Dozier used Taylor to “look into discovering mitigating evidence,” and was “sure” the trial team interviewed “potential witnesses about childhood problems that Mr. Wood may have had.” Although Dozier did not recall to which of Wood’s family members he personally spoke, Dozier was “sure” he spoke to Wood’s father and that the trial team “talked to several witnesses.” Investigator Taylor confirmed that all of his instructions on the Wood case came from Dozier and all of his meetings were with Dozier. Taylor had thirty years of police experience. He met with Wood for three hours and interviewed, inter alios, Wood’s sisters Johnnie Wood and Susan Wood Caldwell, and his father, J.P. Wood. Dozier obtained and reviewed a psychological evaluation of Wood as possible mitigation evidence. Dozier moved the state trial court to have Wood examined by a psychologist. Dozier explained that when they sought to have Wood evaluated by a psychologist, they did so “for both competency and mental state at the time of the offense,” as well as to “discover or get a lead on some possible mitigation evidence.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, Dozier sought a psychological evaluation for use in both the guilt/innocence and penalty phases. Dr. Karl Kirkland, Ph.D., examined Wood and reviewed various documents. Dr. Kirkland evaluated Wood’s intellectual functioning, as well as his emotional and mental health. Dr. Kirkland administered the Wide Range Achievement Tesb-Revised and Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory tests, and reported that Wood: (1) was “reading on less than a 3rd grade level”; (2) “could not use abstraction skills much beyond the low average range of intellect”; and (3) had “an IQ in the borderline range of intellectual functioning.” Based on the tests and his clinical interview, Dr. Kirkland reported that Wood was “functioning, at most, in the borderline range of intellectual functioning.” Wood told Dr. Kirkland he had no history of hospitalization, had never taken any psychoactive medication, and was not taking any medication at the time of the evaluation. Dr. Kirkland determined Wood had “problems with impulse control,” “poor anger control,” and “acting out behavior.” Part of Dr. Kirkland’s diagnosis was Axis II, Antisocial Acts. Wood reported to Dr. Kirkland that he had “felt injurious toward others in the past,” and referenced having assaulted a different girlfriend (Siler) by shooting her “through the window of her apartment after seeing her with another man.” Indeed, Wood was on parole for his felony assault of Siler when he killed Ruby. Dr. Kirkland reported that Wood “did not evidence any memory deficits”; had “a complete memory of his behavior at the time of the alleged offense”; had a “normal thought process”; and his “thinking was goal directed and logical.” Dr. Kirkland concluded there was no mental disorder present that would detract from Wood’s ability to appreciate the criminality of his murder of Ruby. Dr. Kirkland reported Wood felt he had a good relationship with his attorneys and had been able to discuss his case in detail with them. As discussed later, Wood’s counsel did not show Dr. Kirkland’s report to the jury. The Rule 32 court found: (1) Wood’s counsel decided that calling Dr. Kirkland was not in Wood’s best interest; and (2) “counsel investigated a potential mental health defense, but decided against presenting it.” Dozier was responsible for the decision whether to use Dr. Kirkland’s report. Although Trotter handled the bulk of the courtroom portion of the penalty phase, Dozier was lead counsel at all times, and Trotter testified he “relied upon Mr. Dozier’s opinion of [Dr. Kirkland’s] psychiatry evaluation” and Dozier was the primary contact with Dr. Kirkland. Trotter testified Dozier and Ralph essentially “made the decisions and told [him] what [he] was going to do.” Dozier testified that had there been any useful information in Dr. Kirkland’s report, he would have presented it, as follows: [Q.] Had there been information in [Dr. Kirkland’s] report that you found useful for Mr. Wood to present, would you have presented it? A. We would have. Q. Including what was in the report, if you found it useful? A. If it was useful, we’d have used it. At the time of Dozier’s Rule 32 testimony in 2000, six years had passed since the 1994 trial, and Dozier had no files from Wood’s case because they were destroyed in a fire. Given the passage of time and lack of files, Dozier could not specifically recall reading Dr. Kirkland’s report, but did testify, “I’m sure we did,” as follows: Q. Did [Dr. Kirkland’s] report provide anything for you all? A. I think it indicated that Holly Wood had some problems at a younger age or something like that. I just don’t recall all this. But I think there was some childhood problems, something in the report. Q. Do you recall reading the Kirkland report before the trial? A. I don’t recall. I’m sure we did, but I don’t recall. Trotter testified that “Dozier had indicated that he had looked at the report and that he didn’t think anything in the report really merited ... going further.” Trotter emphasized: “And, again, he [Dozier] looked at the report and thought that wouldn’t be needed.” Dozier testified that he, Ralph, and Trotter had “a lot of correspondence” with Dr. Kirkland. As to Wood’s alcohol consumption on the day of the murder, Dozier recalled the trial team “considered presenting evidence that [Wood] was intoxicated at the time” and in fact “did bring out some testimony at the sentencing phase that [Wood] was intoxicated.” The defense in the penalty phase introduced the arrest report for Ruby’s murder, which indicated Wood had been drinking, and Trotter argued Wood’s drinking and emotions about Ruby rejecting him were mitigating factors. B. Ralph’s testimony Defense counsel Ralph had practiced law in Alabama for thirty years: twenty-five in private practice and the other five as an assistant attorney general. Ralph had handled fifty felony jury cases, and 25% of his practice was criminal cases. Ralph considered Dozier to be Wood’s lead counsel. The case began before Ralph became involved, and Dozier had already met with Wood and “made perhaps some other interviews.” While Ralph “didn’t prepare the penalty phase,” he “was in the penalty phase,” and Ralph clarified that it was not “entirely correct” to say that he had “no involvement in the preparation for or investigation of the penalty phase.” Ralph may have talked to Ruby’s mother and Ruby’s mother’s boyfriend and believed he “talked to a sister or two” of Wood’s “or maybe ... a sister and [Wood’s] father” prior to the penalty phase, in an effort to gain information for the penalty phase. Although Ralph never met with Dr. Kirkland, he was “sure” he reviewed Dr. Kirkland’s report and “remember[ed] seeing it.” Ralph recalled he and counsel “sat down and went over [Dr. Kirkland’s report] and reviewed it.” Ralph explained counsel purchased, from an organization called “Capital Resources,” a large book entitled “Handling Capital Cases in Alabama,” which contained a great deal of information about “motion practice” and “techniques for handling various aspects of capital trials.” Ralph testified that while he could not “say that [he] relied on it entirely ... it was helpful.” C. Trotter’s testimony Trotter was appointed as Wood’s third attorney, to assist Dozier. Admitted to the Alabama Bar in 1993, Trotter had done “juvenile court work, some criminal defense, small claims, commercial litigation involving breach of contract issues, [and] some family law.” Trotter’s “understanding” was that he was appointed to assist the two senior attorneys who were considerably senior to him in experience. According to Trotter, Dozier was the principal attorney, and Dozier oversaw “all phases of the trial, including both ... the sentencing and the guilt or innocence adjudication.” Trotter testified that “Dozier made the determination that [Trotter] would assist primarily with the penalty phase — preparation of the penalty phase.” Although initially Dozier decided “Ralph ... was to be more primarily responsible for the penalty phase,” it was decided by either Dozier or Ralph “shortly before the trial ... that [Trotter] would represent Mr. Wood during the penalty phase in the courtroom.” Although Trotter testified he initially “didn’t think that [they] were actually prepared to move forward with the penalty phase,” Trotter explained that “after consultation with Mr. Dozier and Mr. Ralph ... their concerns about that were alleviated. And at their direction, I went ahead and proceeded.” Ralph testified that even though Trotter was relatively inexperienced and nervous about the case, Trotter’s “apprehension was about being in front of a jury. It was not about his being prepared. I thought that he had done his work.” Trotter had “two levels of preparation” in representing Wood. First, he was assisting Dozier and Ralph, and was thereby able to “rely[ ] on their criminal law expertise and experience to help ... them.” Trotter explained that if he had issues or concerns, he would try to raise those issues or concerns with Dozier and Ralph “as to why I thought we were or were not prepared for something so they could give me feedback and guidance on how to proceed from that point.” Trotter “was able to see issues but relied a lot on [Dozier and Ralph] for guidance as to how to resolve the issues.” Trotter testified Dozier and Ralph essentially “made the decisions and told [him] what [he] was going to do.” Second, Trotter obtained a capital defense book published by either the Capital Resource Center or the Equal Justice Initiative, as well as various other resources, to “gain a greater understanding of capital punishment, a greater understanding of the procedures that lead up to the trial or the hearing, motions that might be necessary to preserve any appellate rights, things that we might ... want to bring out at the trial in either phase.” Trotter, Dozier, and Ralph all had copies of the capital defense book and a diskette with the types of motions typically filed in capital cases. Trotter met with the investigator, Taylor, and reviewed Taylor’s written reports to Dozier. However, Dozier was the “primary point of contact for Mr. Taylor, and he was the one that determined what would be investigated.” Likewise, for motions, Trotter made a contribution, but Dozier was the ultimate decision maker. Trotter spoke to “a lot of [Wood’s] family” in preparing for the penalty phase. These family meetings were at the courthouse; “there were a number of occasions” on which Wood was brought to the courthouse and his family was present also; and “on some of those occasions at some point in time,” Trotter interviewed the family. Trotter explained that through his interviews — in which Trotter tried to obtain information about Wood’s “upbringing, his background, his childhood, what it had been like growing up in [Wood’s] home, characteristics about [Wood], anything that [might] humanize [Wood] to make him seem more real to the jury; something that would make him seem more like a human being, somebody that would be worth saving even if that would mean he would spend his life in prison” — he identified the witnesses who were used at the penalty phase. Trotter “tried to get as much information as possible about [Wood’s] background from the family.” In preparing for the penalty phase, Trotter tried to contact people at the schools Wood attended, including Luverne High School, to obtain “background information about what kind of student he was, what kind of person he’d been at the school ... anything that would be able to be used as a mitigating factor.” Trotter spoke to people at Luverne High, but was unable to obtain Wood’s academic records because Luverne High did not respond to his subpoena and its staff was generally unhelpful. As to Dr. Kirkland, Trotter testified Dozier was the primary contact. Trotter recalled Wood was evaluated by a psychologist and a report was prepared. Trotter’s fee declaration indicated he had a thirty-minute conversation with Dr. Kirkland in 1994. According to Trotter, Dozier would have initially reviewed Dr. Kirkland’s report, and if “Dozier thought that [there] was something that [Trotter] should review or have, then he would give [Trotter] a copy ... to review as well.” That Dozier made the penalty phase decisions is particularly shown by what happened in deciding whether to obtain another psychological evaluation of Wood beyond Dr. Kirkland’s. After the jury trial, Trotter sent Dozier and Ralph a letter suggesting the possibility of moving for a continuance of the sentencing hearing before the trial judge in order to request another psychological evaluation. Trotter’s letter noted to Dozier: “We have not had any independent psychological evaluations done since you said it would not be needed.” Trotter explained that prior to the penalty phase, Dozier had determined that they did not need any further evaluations, and Dozier had determined that nothing in Dr. Kirkland’s report merited going further, as follows: [O]n or about the time that we would have been having discussions with [Dr.] Kirkland ... there may have been a discussion about whether we should do anything further and ... Mr. Dozier had indicated that he had looked at the report and that ... there was nothing in the report that merited going further. And so at that point, he determined that we didn’t need any further evaluators and no further were called because in the course of my preparation for the penalty phase, I would read things about different psychological evaluations and had raised that to him. And, again, he [Dozier] looked at the report and thought that wouldn’t be needed. (Emphasis added.) While Trotter suggested an additional psychological evaluation, Dozier, as lead counsel, reviewed Dr. Kirkland’s report and decided not to seek another evaluation. Trotter “relied upon Mr. Dozier’s opinion of the psychiatry evaluation” by Dr. Kirkland. D. Penalty phase before the jury Although Dozier was lead counsel and made the trial strategy decisions, Wood bases his ineffective assistance claims mainly on Trotter’s role in the penalty phase. Thus, we detail what happened in the penalty phase. First, all three attorneys were present and participated in the penalty phase before the jury. Dozier handled various arguments, objections, and oral motions to the court on Wood’s behalf, as well as the jury charges. Ralph also argued on Wood’s behalf. Although Dozier and Ralph participated in the courtroom work, Dozier and Ralph had earlier decided Trotter would present the mitigation witnesses and argue to the jury. Dozier went over the penalty phase motions with Trotter. On the morning the penalty phase began, the trial court handled three matters before the jury was brought in. The first matter was the State’s notice of aggravating circumstances. Dozier and Ralph argued the State failed to give proper notice of one of the aggravating circumstances— that Wood committed the murder after being convicted of a crime of violence. The trial judge denied Dozier’s motion to exclude that aggravating circumstance. The second matter was the pre-sentene-ing report to be prepared for the trial judge after the jury made its sentencing recommendation. Trotter reminded the trial judge that in May 1994, Dr. Kirkland produced his evaluation of Wood and Dr. Kirkland’s report indicated Wood had “a history of antisocial behavior and problems with anger control.” Trotter told the trial judge: “[W]e don’t intend to introduce [the Kirkland] report today to the jury.” (Emphasis added.) While all counsel had Dr. Kirkland’s report, Dozier had made the decision not to use the report with the jury and not to seek another psychological evaluation. However, Trotter also told the trial judge that “[n]o further investigation ha[d] been done, psychologically, of those points” and Trotter asked the judge that, prior to the court’s final sentencing verdict, there be further psychological evaluation done of Wood. The trial judge stated he would consider Trotter’s request after the jury was released, and pointed out that under the governing statute, the trial judge sets a date for sentencing after the jury’s recommendation and only then orders the filing of the pre-sentencing report. The third matter involved Trotter advising that Wood’s counsel had not received records from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the state prisons, and the Department of Human Resources. The State responded that a Pardons and Paroles clerk was under subpoena to testify, and the State had no objection to letting Wood’s counsel look through Wood’s parole file, which the clerk was bringing to the hearing. The court ruled Wood’s counsel would have access to the clerk’s file during a break in the penalty phase and further ruled that, if necessary and upon request, Wood’s counsel could also have access to Wood’s parole officer’s file. The trial court asked the defense if it was ready to proceed, and Dozier responded the defense was ready. The jury was brought in, and each side gave opening statements. Trotter gave the opening statement for Wood, stressing the option of life without parole. Trotter advised the jury, inter alia, that the defense would present evidence to show there were ample reasons to return an advisory verdict of life imprisonment without parole. The State put on its case for aggravating factors, introducing a certified copy of Wood’s prior conviction for first-degree assault. The Pardons and Paroles clerk testified Wood was on parole when he murdered Ruby. Another witness testified the District Attorney had recommended against Wood’s parole. The State attempted to call Siler, the victim in Wood’s prior assault conviction, and Trotter objected. Trotter argued that the details of Wood’s crime against Siler were unduly prejudicial. The court sustained Trotter’s objection and refused to allow the State to present Siler’s testimony regarding the specific details of Wood’s assault against her. The State rested. Trotter’s success in keeping out Siler’s testimony was significant. While the jury knew Wood had a prior assault conviction for shooting his girlfriend, the jury did not know the circumstances of that shooting and Ruby’s murder were the same, which would have established Wood’s killing of Ruby was highly premeditated and aggravated. The State wanted to show Wood suspected Siler was seeing another man, snuck around Siler’s house, and attempted to kill her at her own home by shooting her through a window. In both shootings, Wood suspected his girlfriends were seeing other men, snuck around their residences, and shot them out of jealousy at their own homes. This striking similarity would have undermined Wood’s mitigation claim that he shot Ruby only in the heat of passion and due to alcohol. After keeping Siler’s testimony out, Trotter called three mitigation witnesses to show the very difficult childhood and many hardships Wood had suffered, and to illustrate how Wood, despite these extreme hardships, was a good, responsible brother and son who worked tirelessly to help support his five sisters and was a leader in their family life. The defense team portrayed Wood as a responsible person whose life was worth saving and showed Wood was despondent and drinking because Ruby rejected him, as opposed to a heartless, cold-blooded murderer. The primary mitigation witness was Wood’s oldest sister Johnnie, who portrayed their difficult childhood and how Wood was, nevertheless, extremely responsible and hardworking. According to Johnnie, their mother died when Wood was ten years old. Johnnie explained that after their mother died, they stayed with a cousin for approximately four years, and after that, she (Johnnie) raised Wood and their four sisters. Johnnie testified that after their mother died, but before they moved out of their cousin’s house, their brother Samuel was killed in a car accident. Johnnie testified that when Wood turned fifteen, he quit school and got a job at the Pepsi-Cola plant “in order to ... help provide for the household, because we didn’t have any help or nothing like that.” According to Johnnie, Wood quit school to provide for the household “because he was the only son that was there and we needed a lot of things by the other kids growing up.” Wood gave Johnnie money from his job to buy groceries and cleaning supplies. Johnnie explained Wood bought a car for the family “in order to provide for us to have a way to go back and forward to the store in order to get groceries.” The car cost about $200, and after making a down payment of approximately $100, Wood paid money on the car every two weeks. Johnnie stressed Wood was “a leader” in the family even though he was younger than Johnnie and other siblings. Johnnie emphatically told the jury: “if it hadn’t been for [Wood] ... providing for [the family,] I don’t know where we would have been at.” Wood’s father, J.P. Wood, and Wood’s other older sister, Lillie Jean Wood, also testified. Lillie Jean explained she was close with her brother and was scared that he might receive the death penalty. Lillie Jean stated she “always had [Wood] to look up to” and could “ask him for something and he wouldn’t ever say no.” J.P. Wood testified Wood was a “good boy” and a “good son.” He also testified that when Wood was a child, he helped with chores around their farm. Wood’s counsel recalled the Pardons and Paroles clerk to establish Wood’s parole file contained the arrest report and the report stated Wood was drinking at the time of the arrest. During the guilt phase, there was also testimony that Wood was drinking during the day and night of Ruby’s murder. Before closing arguments, the trial court held a hearing in chambers, in which Dozier argued the State had failed to prove the alleged aggravating circumstances. Dozier moved to strike the aggravating eircum-stances on that ground and also as not being alleged in the indictment. The trial court denied Dozier’s motion. The court then discussed the jury charges. Dozier, and to some extent Ralph, handled the arguments about the jury charges. In its closing statement, the State argued it had established three aggravating factors: (1) Wood murdered Ruby during a burglary; (2) Wood had a prior conviction for a violent felony; and (3) Wood murdered Ruby while on parole. In reply, Trotter’s closing argument emphasized the jury could consider not only the mitigation evidence from the penalty phase, but also all the trial evidence about the circumstances of the crime, including Wood’s alcohol consumption on the night of the murder and that Wood was a good son and brother who dropped out of school to work and to help support his family. Trotter reviewed Wood’s very difficult childhood, emphasizing Wood was ten when his mother died and had to move in with his cousin and live in a sixteen-person house for four years. Trotter stressed how Wood left school to make money to support his five sisters. In addition to the hardships in Wood’s life, Trotter argued there were mitigating circumstances surrounding the crime, and this was not a case of cold-blooded murder. Trotter argued that Ruby was the mother of Wood’s child, and that Wood loved Ruby but she rejected him. Trotter emphasized that the more Wood drank on the day of the murder, the more he thought about Ruby and not seeing his child, and his reasoning was clouded by those emotions and his alcohol consumption. As Trotter summarized, Wood lost his mother at age ten, and now his girlfriend and the mother of his child were rejecting him too. Trotter asked the jury to consider all the childhood difficulties and the emotional factors that brought Wood to the point where he was on the night of the murder. Although alcohol was not a defense to Wood’s crime, Trotter argued it was a strong mitigating factor, especially since Wood had been drinking all day up until the crime. The State made a rebuttal closing argument to the jury. Dozier objected to part of the State’s rebuttal, but the trial court overruled Dozier’s objection. The trial court, inter alia, instructed the jury about mitigating factors and read a list of statutory mitigating factors that the jury could consider, including: (1) whether the capital felony was committed while Wood was under extreme emotional disturbance; and (2) whether Wood’s capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired. The trial court told the jury the latter mitigating circumstance would exist even if the defendant appreciated the criminality of his conduct, as long as his capacity to conform to the law was substantially impaired. The trial court explained that this was so because “a person may appreciate his actions [are] wrong and still lack the capacity to refrain from doing them.” The trial court’s instructions made it clear that “[e]vidence of a difficult family history and of emotional disturbance constitutes relevant mitigating evidence.” The trial court instructed the jury that the list of statutory mitigating factors was non-exhaustive and that “mitigating circumstances shall include any aspect of [the] defendant’s character, or record or any of the circumstances of the offense that defendant offers.” The jury recommended a death sentence by a vote of 10-2. E. Penalty phase before the state trial judge Approximately one month later, the trial court held a sentencing hearing. The court and counsel reviewed the pre-sen-tencing report. Dozier made numerous objections to errors and omissions in the pre-sentencing report, and Trotter lodged objections too. The trial court sustained most objections. The pre-sentencing report included two psychological evaluations for consideration by the sentencing judge: (1) Dr. Kirkland’s May 1994 report; and (2) a June 1992 evaluation by the office of Dr. Harry A. McClaren, Ph.D. After the State argued, Dozier presented the initial argument for Wood and contended the facts were not sufficient to support a death sentence. Dozier stressed that Wood and Salter had been drinking all day on the day of the murder, and that Wood came to Troy, Alabama to find his girlfriend and shot her only in the heat of passion. Trotter then emphasized Wood’s difficult family history: he lost his mother when he was ten; he had no father figure in his home; and he was raised by various members of the family, including his older sister. Trotter stressed Dr. Kirkland’s conclusion that Wood could not “use abstraction skills much beyond the low average range of intellect, and that he [was] at most functioning in the borderline range of intellectual functioning,” and Trotter emphasized Wood’s anger control and antisocial behavior problems. A week later, the trial judge sentenced Wood to death. The judge found Wood was not “under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbances” at the time of the murder and had “the capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct and to conform his conduct to the requirements of law.” The trial court noted defense counsel had asked the court to consider Dr. Kirkland’s report, and observed that the report showed Wood was functioning in the borderline range of intellect but did “not have a mental disorder present that would detract from his ability to appreciate the criminality of his behavior.” The trial court observed that the jury was charged as to the relevant aggravating and mitigating circumstances. The trial court further noted that both defense counsel and the State were satisfied with the jury charge as given. As to aggravating circumstances, the trial court found, inter alia, that: (1) the capital offense was committed while Wood was under a sentence of imprisonment; (2) Wood was previously convicted of a violent felony; and (3) the capital offense was committed while Wood “was engaged in the commission of or an attempt to commit or flight after committing ... burglary in the first degree.” As to mitigating circumstances, the trial court found none, and noted Wood was not under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance during the commission of the capital offense and Wood had the capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct and to conform his conduct to the law. The trial court concluded, “beyond a reasonable doubt,” that the aggravating circumstances “far outweighfed]” any evidence of mitigating circumstances “in all regards” and were “sufficient in both quantity and quality to more than uphold the jury’s verdict recommending the death penalty.” F. Rule 32 proceedings between 2000 and 2003 After Wood’s death sentence was affirmed on direct appeal, Wood filed his Rule 32 petition for post-conviction review. Between 2000 and 2003, there were three evidentiary hearings, and the Rule 32 court entered three orders denying Wood’s claims. The second order repeated some of the first order’s findings and conclusions and added to them, and the third order did the same. We already recounted the Rule 32 testimony from Wood’s counsel, school teachers, Siler, Wright, and psychologists McClaren and Prichard. The Rule 32 court also considered testimony from Wood’s sisters, which we now review. We then summarize the three Rule 32 orders. In her testimony, Wood’s sister Maeola detailed their strict upbringing and how after their mother died, they lived with a half-sister, Nellzena, and a cousin. According to Maeola, Nellzena was very strict and would whip the children with an extension cord for hours whenever they did something wrong. Maeola testified that after Nellzena left, Wood and Johnnie fought with some frequency; Wood did not listen to Johnnie; and Wood was kicked out of school and did not leave school to support the family. The Rule 32 court found Maeola’s testimony “less than credible.” Johnnie corroborated Maeola’s testimony about their strict upbringing and agreed Nellzena was strict. However, Johnnie testified Nellzena did not hit them regularly and would instead “mostly punish.” Nellzena would punish Wood by making him clean up the backyard, not allowing him to play after school, grounding him, or forbidding him to have company. Their mother whipped Wood for wetting the bed, a problem that he had until he was fourteen or fifteen, but she “never hurt” them and did not physically abuse them. Johnnie’s testimony at the Rule 32 hearing is consistent with Dr. Kirkland’s statement that Wood “denies any sexual or physical abuse ... [or] history of criminal victimization.” We now turn to the three Rule 32 orders, which addressed Wood’s ineffective assistance claims at length. As to pre-trial investigation, the Rule 32 court found Dozier and Ralph were “very experienced attorneys,” and Trotter, although “very inexperienced,” was to assist Dozier and Ralph and benefitted from their experience. Trotter “was assistant to Mr. Dozier and Mr. Ralph”; relied on their criminal law experience to help him assist them; and obtained books and had discussions to gain a greater understanding of what they might want to bring out at the trial in either phase. The Rule 32 court found Wood’s trial counsel requested the psychological evaluation rendered by Dr. Kirkland in May 1994, and Wood’s trial team corresponded frequently with Dr. Kirkland. The Rule 32 court found: (1) counsel employed the services of a private investigator — Taylor — who prepared reports used in Wood’s defense; (2) Trotter met with Wood’s family to prepare for the penalty phase and attempted to gather information about Wood’s upbringing, background, and childhood, in order to humanize Wood in the jury’s eyes; (3) counsel contacted and attempted to get information from Wood’s schools, the Alabama Department of Pardons and Paroles, the Alabama Department of Corrections, and the Alabama Department of Human Resources; (4) counsel sought guidance from the Capital Resource Center and the Southern Poverty Law Center; (5) Wood’s father and two sisters testified at the penalty phase; and (6) evidence was presented suggesting Wood suffered from an emotional disturbance. Trotter investigated Wood’s educational background to some extent and “trial counsel met with Wood’s family on several occasions to discuss possible mitigating evidence.” ■ As to Dr. Kirkland’s pre-trial report, the Rule 32 court observed that it stated Wood: (1) was “cooperative, attentive, and interested in the evaluation process”; (2) was “neatly dressed” and had good hygiene; (3) had a “normal thought process”; (4) exhibited “goal-directed and logical” thinking; (5) “evidenced a normal affect”; (6) “did not evidence any memory deficits”; (7) “evidenced concrete reasoning ability” and could use “abstraction skills” at the “low average range of intellect,” despite “functioning, at most, in the borderline range of intellectual functioning”; (8) had “a good relationship with his attorneys” and was “able to discuss his case in detail with [them]”; and (9) “had a complete memory of his behavior” at the time of the murder. Dr. Kirkland’s report concluded: (1) Wood had no “mental disorder present that would detract from his ability to appreciate the criminality of his behavior with regard to this specific alleged instant offense” of murder; (2) “[t]here is no allegation of any mental disorder factors in the explanation of thought or behavior process variables at all on the day of the alleged offense”; and (3) “[rjeview of collateral data and interview data ... do[es] not reveal the presence of a mental disorder that would bear any causal relationship to [Wood’s] alleged behavior on the day of the offense.” The Rule 32 court specifically found that counsel decided calling Dr. Kirkland was not in Wood’s best interest, and “counsel investigated a potential mental health defense, but decided against presenting it.” The Rule 32 court observed that counsel’s decision “was based on at least one mental health evaluation, and most probably two,” and found that as very experienced attorneys, Dozier’s and Ralph’s decision not to raise a mental deficiency issue at Wood’s trial was due great deference. Dozier testified he was “positive that he reviewed Dr. Kirkland’s report,” and counsel “would have used anything in Dr. Kirkland’s report that was helpful to them.” The Rule 32 court concluded Wood had the burden of proving counsel’s decision to not call Dr. Kirkland was unreasonable and “Wood failed to establish that what trial counsel did in preparation and investigation for the penalty phase was unreasonable.” The Rule 32 court noted Wood did not question his trial counsel at the Rule 32 hearings “as to the reasoning behind the strategy employed, [the] witnesses called to testify and those who were not asked to give testimony,” which yielded a silent record and a strong and continuing presumption of reasonable professional judgment. As to Dr. Kirkland specifically, the Rule 32 court observed that “[b]ecause Wood did not ask Attorneys Ralph or Dozier about this matter, the record is silent as to why they did not call Dr. Kirkland as a witness.” The Rule 32 court found Wood’s trial counsel made a decision not to call Dr. Kirkland and that the silent record created a presumption that experienced counsel exercised sound judgment in not calling Dr. Kirkland. The Rule 32 court also found counsel were not unreasonable in not obtaining an additional psychological evaluation beyond Dr. Kirkland’s. Counsel “thoroughly reviewed Dr. Kirkland’s report and determined that nothing in that report merited further investigation”; “Wood’s counsel made a reasonable judgment that another mental evaluation was not necessary”; and, in light of the fact that Wood’s counsel were “very experienced attorneys,” “reasonable counsel could have decided against seeking another mental health evaluation, in order to prepare other, more promising, defenses for trial.” The Rule 32 court specifically found that Trotter testified Dozier was the primary contact person for Dr. Kirkland and the trial team “did not request another psychological evaluation of Wood because Mr. Dozier thoroughly reviewed Dr. Kirkland’s report and decided that nothing in the report merited further inquiry.” Alternatively, the Rule 32 court concluded Wood had not established prejudice. The Rule 32 court found “Wood did not demonstrate a reasonable probability that but for counsel’s allegedly unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Even if Wood’s counsel had presented evidence concerning his impaired intellectual functioning, there was no reasonable probability that the balance of aggravating and mitigating factors that led to the imposition of the death penalty would have changed, and “nothing in the evidence presented during the evi-dentiary hearing established that some portion of the defendant’s character or record ... served as a basis for a sentence of life imprisonment without parole rather than death.” In light of the fact that Wood brutally murdered Ruby while she was asleep in her bed in her own home, there was no reasonable probability that the presentation of evidence concerning Wood’s mental deficiencies would have changed the jury’s 10-2 recommendation of a death sentence or the finding that the aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances. G. 200k Rule 32 appeal In 2004, the Alabama Appeals Court affirmed the Rule 32 court’s denial of Wood’s petition. Wood v. State, 891 So.2d at 420. The Alabama Appeals Court rejected Wood’s claim that his trial counsel were ineffective by failing to “investigate and present sufficient mitigating evidence during the penalty phase,” and expressly adopted and agreed with the Rule 32 court’s extensive fact findings and conclusions that Wood failed to establish deficient performance and prejudice under Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). Wood v. State, 891 So.2d at 414, 418-19. The Alabama Appeals Court concluded “counsel does not necessarily render ineffective assistance simply because he does not present all possible mitigating evidence” and “counsel may make a reasonable strategic judgment to present less than all possible available evidence in mitigation.” Id. at 416 (quotation marks and citations omitted). The Alabama Appeals Court noted, “[tjhere has never been a case where additional witnesses could not have been called.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). H. District court’s § 225í order Wood then filed a § 2254 petition. The district court’s § 2254 order noted this is “not a case ... in which counsel failed to investigate, obtain, or present any mitigating evidence to the sentencing jury. Instead, this is a case in which at least some evidence was investigated and presented.” Wood v. Allen, 465 F.Supp.2d at 1239. The district court pointed out that evidence of Wood’s difficult childhood and poverty was presented to the jury, and concluded there was no ineffective assistance as to those mitigation issues. Id. However, the district court granted Wood’s § 2254 petition based on trial counsel’s failure to investigate and present evidence of Wood’s impaired intellectual functioning. Id. at 1245. The district court noted “Wood’s three trial counsel” actually possessed Dr. Kirkland’s report, which showed that Wood- “ ‘is functioning, at most, in the borderline range of intellectual functioning’”; ‘“could not use abstraction skills much beyond the low average range of intellect’ and “reads on a third grade level.” Id. at 1240. The district court concluded that counsel should have put before the jury evidence of Wood’s “‘borderline range of intellectual functioning,’ ” as identified in Dr. Kirkland’s report. Id. at 1243. The district court also concluded defense counsel failed to investigate further Wood’s intellectual functioning, such as by interviewing Wood’s teachers or seeking an evaluation beyond Dr. Kirkland’s. Id. As to prejudice, the district court found there was a reasonable probability that evidence of Wood’s intellectual functioning, even if not enough to establish mental retardation, would have established a mitigating circumstance and was sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome. Id. at 1245. This appeal followed. I. Performance prong: presentation of mental health evidence On appeal, the State contends the district court erred in concluding that the Alabama courts’ rejection of Wood’s ineffective assistance claims was an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law. We review the established federal law and then explain how the Alabama courts’ decision was fully consistent with that law. To establish ineffective assistance, Wood must show: (1) counsel’s performance was deficient; and (2) that deficiency prejudiced him. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-92, 104 S.Ct. at 2064-67, 104 S.Ct. 2052. Counsel’s performance is deficient when it falls “below an objective standard of reasonableness.” Id. at 688, 104 S.Ct. at 2064. The test for reasonableness is not whether counsel could have done something more or different. Instead, Wood must show counsel’s performance fell “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.” Id. at 690, 104 S.Ct. at 2066. Furthermore, “omissions are inevitable _ [T]he issue is not what is possible or ‘what is prudent or appropriate, but only what is constitutionally compelled.’ ” Chandler v. United States, 218 F.3d 1305, 1313 (11th Cir.2000) (en banc) (quoting Burger v. Kemp, 483 U.S. 776, 794, 107 S.Ct. 3114, 3126, 97 L.Ed.2d 638 (1987)). Courts conduct a highly deferential review of counsel’s performance