Full opinion text
HULL, Circuit Judge: Paul Everett, a Florida inmate, filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus, raising multiple challenges to his first-degree murder conviction and death sentence. The district court denied Everett’s petition, but granted him a certificate of appealability (“COA”) as to one issue: Whether a law enforcement officer’s request for a consent to search from, or service of an arrest warrant on, a defendant in custody who has invoked the right to counsel violates the Fifth Amendment. Upon Everett’s motion, this Court expanded the COA to include an additional issue: Whether the district court erred in denying Everett’s claim that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance in the investigation and presentation of mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of his 2002 trial. Having considered the state court record, the district court’s thorough order, and the parties’ submissions, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the district court’s denial of Everett’s § 2254 petition. I. CRIME, GUILT PHASE, AND VERDICTS A. Murder, Burglary, and Sexual Battery On Friday, November 2, 2001, during the late afternoon or early evening, Everett was roaming the neighborhood where victim Kelli M. Bailey lived in Panama City Beach, Florida. Everett was armed with a wooden fish bat and “looking for ... some money.” He entered the home of Bailey, a stranger to him, uninvited, possibly through an unlocked door. Bailey emerged from her bedroom and confronted Everett in the living room. Everett beat Bailey, and as she tried to run back to her bedroom, he knocked her down and raped her. Everett also twisted Bailey’s neck, breaking a vertebra, which paralyzed her and caused her to suffocate to death. Bailey suffered extensive other injuries, including multiple abrasions on her face; swollen eyelids and hemorrhaging of the eyes; a fractured nose; lacerations and bruising on her lips; a tear in her lip through which her teeth protruded; a knocked-out tooth; bruising of her tongue where her teeth impacted the tongue; and abrasions on her body consistent with carpet burn. Before leaving Bailey’s house, Everett removed his shirt, but he took with him some cash and a credit card from Bailey’s purse, his fish bat, and her jacket. Outside the house, Everett discarded all but the cash. Everett returned to the Fiesta Motel, the nearby motel where he was staying at the time. Bailey did not show up that evening for her seven o’clock shift as a medical technologist at a hospital and thus a concerned coworker called her home phone and left multiple messages on her answering machine. The coworker then called Bailey’s stepfather, John Greathouse, who lived less than a mile from Bailey, to ask Great-house if he knew where Bailey was. Greathouse drove to Bailey’s house and entered through her back door using his key. Greathouse discovered Bailey lying dead in the doorway to her bedroom, and he called 911. Police responded and investigated the murder scene, where they found blood spatter in the living room, on the doorway to Bailey’s bedroom, and in her bedroom. Police found Bailey lying face down in the entrance to her bedroom, with her legs partially splayed. One of Bailey’s teeth was lying on the floor next to her head. Bailey’s jacket and credit card were discovered one block from her house. Additionally, police recovered a fish bat approximately 133 feet from Bailey’s back door. The bat tested positive for the presumptive presence of blood. The police subsequently discovered that an individual—later determined to be Everett—had purchased the same model of fish bat at a local Wal-Mart store on October 27, 2001. B. Everett’s Arrest in Florida At the time of the murder, Everett was a fugitive from justice in Alabama, where he previously had received a ten-year suspended sentence for a 1999 conviction of possession of a forged instrument. In February 2000, Everett’s probation was revoked, and he was sentenced to ten years in state prison. Everett posted a supersedeas bond pending his direct appeal. When his appeal was denied on October 5, 2001, Everett was required to begin serving his sentence within fifteen days under the terms of the bond. Instead of turning himself in by his October 20, 2001 deadline, Everett fled to Florida. Accordingly, an Alabama bail bondsman was searching for Everett at the time of the November 2001 murder. Around nine o’clock on the night of the murder, based on a tip from one of Everett’s sisters, the bail bondsman found Everett at the Fiesta Motel. The bail bondsman took Everett into custody and transported him to Alabama authorities. Everett was then jailed at the Baldwin County Corrections Facility in Alabama. C. Everett’s First Statement, November 14, 2001, in Baldwin County, Alabama Jail On November 14, 2001, Sergeant Rodney Tilley and Lieutenant Chad Lindsey, investigators with the Panama City Beach Police Department, traveled to the Baldwin County jail to interview Everett regarding the Bailey homicide. The police in Florida' had traced the fish bat found near the crime scene to Everett, and had learned that Everett was being held in the Baldwin County jail in Alabama. At the beginning of the twelve-minute interview'—which was tape-recorded and subsequently transcribed—Sergeant Tilley said to Everett, “[Y]ou understand the right to remain silent, you do not have to talk to me, you have the right to have an attorney present before we talk.” Everett confirmed that he understood and that he wished to speak with the officers. In his transcribed November 14 statement, Everett indicated that, when the bail bondsman found him at the Fiesta Motel, he had been in Panama City for a couple of weeks. Everett had come down to Panama City from Alabama to meet up with a friend, Jared Farmer, with whom he spent most of his visit using crystal methamphetamine and marijuana. Everett financed the trip and the drugs in part by writing bad checks, including at a Wal-Mart store, where he purchased a fish bat among other items. Everett said that he had not seen the fish bat since leaving it in Farmer’s pick-up truck about a week before leaving Panama City. When Sergeant Tilley asked Everett what shoes he had with him during the trip, Everett stated that he had worn a pair of sneakers that he subsequently threw away when the sneakers got blood on them during a fight with another man on the beach. After Sergeant Tilley noted that Eyerett’s story about throwing away the shoes did not “jive,” Everett stated, “I wish to have a lawyer present. I can tell you, I can see where this is going. I mean I want a lawyer.” The transcript of the November 14 statement reflects that Sergeant Tilley then noted that Everett had requested a lawyer, after which one of the officers shut off the tape recorder. According to Sergeant Tilley’s and Lieutenant Lindsey’s subsequent depositions, as the Florida officers were “packing up” and leaving the room, Lieutenant Lindsey said something to Everett to the effect of, “Don’t be lying, don’t be caught in a lie, you know, now’s the chance for you to tell the truth, you know, because I don’t want to see the State of Florida stick a needle in your arm.” Picking up on Lieutenant Lindsey’s attempt to play “bad cop,” Sergeant Tilley took on the role of “good cop” and said to Everett, “[M]an, you know, I think this might have been a burglary that went bad.... I would sure like to hear it from you, but....” At that point, from Sergeant Tilley’s perspective, Everett “mellowed in his seat.” Sergeant Tilley then stated, “[WJell, if you want to talk to me, just let me know, let these folks know.” Sergeant Tilley believed that this left things between him and Everett on good terms. D. Request for Consent for DNA Samples—November 19, 2001 Following Everett’s November 14 statement, and sometime on or before November 19, Sergeant Tilley contacted Officer John Murphy, a detective in the Sheriffs Office in Baldwin County, Alabama. Sergeant Tilley asked Murphy to obtain consent from Everett to collect blood and saliva samples for Tilley’s investigation of the Bailey homicide. Thus, on November 19, Officer Murphy in Baldwin County asked for Everett’s consent to collect the DNA samples. On November 21, 2001, Officer Murphy prepared a written report concerning his November 19 interaction with Everett. According to that report, Everett agreed verbally and in writing to Officer Murphy’s request for DNA samples. The signed consent forms state in full: The undersigned, Everett, Paul, does hereby voluntarily and consentually [sic], grant permission for, Mary Hadley [illegible], to draw or extract a sample of my blood or hair. This consent is hereby granted without any pressure, force, or promises made to me. The sample or samples may be given to, John Murphy, with the, Baldwin County Sheriffs Office. I, Paul Everett, having been informed of my constitutional right not to have a search made of the body hereinafter described without a search warrant and of my right to refuse to consent to said search, do hereby authorize John D. Murphy, who are officers of the Baldwin County Sheriffs Department, to conduct a complete search of my: Body—Blood, Hair, Saliva.... I further state that I am the proper person to authorize the search referred to herein. This permission is being given voluntarily and without threats or promises of any kind. (Paragraph breaks omitted). Everett provided the samples to Officer Murphy in Alabama. No Florida police were there then, although Florida police arrived later. E. November 19 Statement to Officer Murphy and Sergeant Tilley Officer Murphy’s written report further reflects that, after providing the DNA samples, Everett told Officer Murphy that Everett had been attempting unsuccessfully “to contact his [attorney” regarding the Bailey homicide investigation. Everett said that he wished to “write a name on a piece of paper” for Officer Murphy to deliver to Sergeant Tilley, so as to “[p]oint [Sergeant Tilley] in the right direction.” Officer Murphy stated that he would deliver the piece of paper only after advising Everett of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966). Officer Murphy in Alabama then read Everett his Miranda rights, and Everett signed a copy of his rights and a waiver of them. On the signed “Statement of Miranda Rights,” Everett put a checkmark next to each of the five enumerated rights, including “the right to remain silent” and “the right to talk to a lawyer and have him present with you while you are being questioned.” Everett also signed below a “Waiver of Rights,” which stated, “I have read the above statement of my rights, and I understand each of them. Having these rights in mind, I waive them and willingly make a statement.” Officer Murphy’s written report states that Everett then told Officer Murphy that he would like to provide additional information “[o]ff the [r]ecord.” Officer Murphy informed Everett that any information Everett provided would have to be on the record and recorded. Everett replied that he would provide a statement to either Officer Murphy or Sergeant Tilley. Because Sergeant Tilley was en route from Panama City to collect the DNA samples, Officer Murphy started the interview with the understanding that Sergeant Tilley would join the interview when he arrived. Sergeant Tilley arrived from Florida just as Everett was starting his statement to Officer Murphy, which Officer Murphy tape-recorded. According to the transcription of Everett’s statement, Officer Murphy again advised Everett of his Miranda rights, stating, “You have the right to remain silent, anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to talk to a lawyer and have him present with you while you are being questioned if you wish. [If y]ou cannot afford to hire a lawyer[,] one will be appointed to represent you before any questioning. If you decide at anytime [sic] to exercise these rights and not answer any questions or make any statements.” Everett confirmed that he understood his rights and was willing to speak with Officer Murphy. In his November 19 statement, Everett claimed that, while in Panama City, he and an acquaintance, “Bubba,” visited the home of Bubba’s lady friend, “Angel,” a couple days after Halloween. Bubba left to buy drugs, during which time Angel and Everett struck up a conversation and had unprotected sex. Afterwards, as Everett and Angel sat talking, still partially undressed, Bubba returned and became enraged upon finding them together only partially dressed. Bubba started cursing and beating “Angel,” and after Everett voiced objection, Bubba pulled out a gun. Bubba pointed the gun at Everett, telling Everett it was none of his business and that he should leave. Everett left the house, at which point Angel was still alive and conscious. Everett had the fish bat with him, and he dropped it as he fled. Once back at the Fiesta Motel, Everett discovered that he had blood on his shorts and shoes from when Bubba punched Angel, and he threw these items away. Everett also stated that, although he was “not the type of person to tell on anybody,” since he had learned “what happened” to Angel after he left her house, he had been unable to sleep and it was “getting to [him].” Everett indicated that he had been planning on contacting Sergeant Tilley, noting, “I’ve got Sergeant Tilley’s card and I was going to be placing a call today (inaudible) said he was already coming. (Inaudible) my mother talked about this Friday and uh, I wanted to go ahead and get it off my chest lawyer or not. I know (inaudible) what happened (inaudible).” At the end of his November 19 statement, Everett said to Sergeant Tilley, “I do want to talk to a lawyer, but I did want to let you know to get you in the right direction to where----” Sergeant Tilley interrupted, asking whether Everett wanted an attorney at this point. Everett responded that he did but that he wanted to set Sergeant Tilley in the “right direction.” Sergeant Tilley indicated that he would not speak to Everett without an attorney present, and then reminded Everett to contact him if Everett wished to speak again. Everett noted that he was “racking [his] brains,” “trying to think of every detail.” F. Service of Arrest Warrant and November 27, 2001, Statement Subsequently, Sergeant Tilley in Florida called Officer Murphy in Alabama to say that he would be coming to serve an arrest warrant on Everett for Bailey’s murder. Sergeant Tilley asked Officer Murphy to set up an interview room for the service of the warrant. According to Sergeant Tilley’s deposition, on November 27, 2001, when Tilley arrived, Officer Murphy was in the interview room with Everett, who had asked to speak to Tilley again. Tilley presented the arrest warrant to Everett and then said, “I understand you want to talk to me.” Everett responded in the affirmative and then started to talk before Sergeant Tilley even had a chance to start the tape recorder. Sergeant Tilley interrupted Everett to start the tape recorder. At the beginning of his recorded November 27 statement, Everett acknowledged that he previously had requested an attorney, but that when presented with the arrest warrant that day, he had asked to speak to Sergeant Tilley without the presence of a lawyer. Sergeant Tilley then stated, “Ok, do you understand that you can still stop at anytime [sic]; you still have your rights?”—to which Everett responded, ‘Yes, sir.” In his deposition, Sergeant Tilley indicated that this statement was intended to remind Everett of his Miranda rights. Everett then confessed to beating and raping Bailey. Although Everett repeatedly denied knowing that Bailey was killed, he admitted to the jerking and twisting of Bailey’s neck that resulted in her death according to the medical examiner’s trial testimony. Everett indicated that, on the evening of the murder, he was walking around Bailey’s neighborhood with Bubba. Everett had smoked crack the day before and had used acid earlier that day, and he was “tripping” and “looking for ... some money.” Everett saw Bailey’s house and assumed that no one was home, as the lights were all out and it was too early for anyone to be in bed. While Bubba waited outside as a “look out,” Everett walked up and knocked on the door. After no. one answered, he opened the unlocked door and entered the house. Everett described the layout of Bailey’s living room and stated that the first thing he noticed when he entered her house was her purse on a table in the living room. Everett went to the purse and removed around seventy dollars in cash and possibly a credit card. Bailey then entered the living room from the bedroom and “started running towards [Everett].” Everett and Bailey got “in a tussle,” but Everett claimed that he did not remember much after that because he “was tripping on acid” and “the LSD pretty much started getting to [him] like really heavy” at that point. Everett, however, admitted that he punched Bailey two or three times with his fist, caused her to bleed, grabbed her by the hair as she attempted to run to the bedroom, jerked her head back, “possibly]” twisted her head, knocked her down, and raped her, vaginally and anally. Everett claimed that he brought the fish bat with him to Bailey’s house but never hit her with it. Everett removed his shirt and left it at Bailey’s house. He grabbed “something” from her house to wear but discarded it after leaving the house and running straight toward the Fiesta Motel. He also discarded his shoes in a trashcan at the motel. Everett claimed that he “had no idea that [Bailey] had been killed until the day [Sergeant Tilley and Lieutenant Lindsey] came the first time,” and since that first interview, “it ha[d] been going through [his] mind.” Everett’s November 27 statement was the only one offered at trial. G. Indictment, Appointment of Counsel, and Not Guilty Plea On January 28, 2002, a Florida grand jury indicted Everett on charges of first-degree murder, burglary of a dwelling with a battery, and sexual battery involving serious physical force. Public Defender Walter B. Smith was appointed to represent Everett. Everett entered a plea of not guilty. H. Motion to Suppress Prior to trial, defense counsel Smith moved to suppress the statements that Everett made on November 19 and 27, 2001 as violative of Everett’s rights under the Fifth Amendment because the officers did not honor Everett’s November 14 request for a lawyer. The trial court held a hearing on the motion to suppress. At the hearing, the parties agreed to stipulate to the facts surrounding Everett’s statements as presented in (1) the November 21, 2001, report by Officer Murphy recounting the details of his November 19 interaction with Everett; (2) the deposition transcripts of Sergeant Tilley and Lieutenant Lindsey; and (3) the transcripts of the interviews of Everett on November 14, 19, and 27, 2001. The parties then offered arguments on their respective positions on the suppression issue. Everett did not testify at the suppression hearing. In an order, the state trial court denied the motion to suppress on grounds that (1) as to the request for DNA samples, the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination did not extend to the taking of the DNA samples; (2) as to the November 19 interview, Everett himself initiated the interview after consenting to the provision of the DNA samples; and (3) as to the November 27 interview, Everett again initiated the interview after being served with the arrest warrant. The state trial court specifically found that the officers had not subjected Everett to any interrogation prior to seeking his consent for the DNA samples on November 19, and that his consent was not involuntarily given or the result of any coercion or wrongdoing on the part of law enforcement. The trial court also found that, on November 27, Everett “was not being brought in for the purpose of any additional questioning” and “it was [Everett], and not the officers, who initiated the request for the interview ... after being served with the arrest warrant.” In sum, “there [was] nothing to establish that the officers coerced, forced or misled [Everett] into giving either the November 19[] or November 27, 2001 interviews.” At trial, over the defense’s objection, the state trial court admitted the DNA samples and the tape recording and transcript of Everett’s November 27 confession during the State’s case-in-chief. I. Guilt Phase in November 2002 During the guilt phase of Everett’s 2002 trial, the State presented overwhelming evidence of Everett’s guilt. For example, a DNA expert testified that the DNA from vaginal swabs of victim Bailey matched Everett’s DNA on all thirteen genetic markers tested. The DNA expert further testified that the “frequency occurrence” of someone having Everett’s DNA profile was one in 15.1 quadrillion of the Caucasian population, 1.01 quintillion of the African-American population, and 11.2 quadrillion of the Hispanic population. Further, the medical examiner testified that there was an abrasion at the base of Bailey’s vagina that was fresh at the time of her death, and that the abrasion was consistent with forceful impact in that area by either nonconsensual sexual penetration or a blunt object. The medical examiner also testified as to the brutal and deadly attack on Bailey, as evidenced by her broken neck, fractured nose, swollen eyelids, hemorrhaging of the eyes, and multiple abrasions, lacerations, and bruises. The damage to Bailey’s neck, according to the medical examiner, was consistent with a “twisting motion, rather than a single blow to that area.” The jury also heard evidence linking the fish bat, which police recovered approximately 1,33 feet from Bailey’s back door, to the murder scene and to Everett. Besides the bat’s proximity to Bailey’s home, the bat tested positive for the presumptive presence of blood, and a crime scene analyst testified about the extensive blood spatter found around and near Bailey’s body. In addition, the medical examiner testified that Bailey’s injuries, including her missing and disrupted teeth, were consistent with a blow to the face by a firm, blunt object. As to the link between the fish bat and Everett, the State presented evidence that the same model of fish bat was purchased at a Panama City Beach Wal-Mart on October 27, 2001, less than a week before the murder. A surveillance camera videotape of that transaction was played for the jury, and a testifying investigator identified Everett as the person on the video purchasing the fish bat. Finally, the tape recording of Everett’s November 27 statement was admitted into evidence and played for the jury.. In that statement, as recounted above, Everett admitted to entering Bailey’s house with the fish bat, getting “in a tussle” with Bailey, punching her two or three times, causing her to bleed, grabbing her by the hair and jerking her head back as she attempted to escape, knocking her down, and raping her, vaginally and anally. While, as noted above, Everett did not admit to killing Bailey, he admitted the beating conduct and acts that resulted in her death. The jury found Everett guilty as charged. II. PENALTY PHASE EVIDENCE Following the penalty phase, the jury recommended a death sentence for Everett by a unanimous vote. Because Everett argues that his trial counsel, Smith, rendered ineffective assistance regarding mitigating evidence, we outline the steps that Smith took to investigate, develop, and present mitigating evidence. A. Pre-Trial Investigation of Mitigating Factors Upon his appointment, Smith immediately recognized that Everett’s case involved the possibility of the death penalty. Accordingly, from the beginning of his appointment in March 2002, Smith prepared for both the guilt and penalty phases of trial. 1. Meetings with Everett Smith and his investigator, Earnest Jordan, met with Everett in jail several times leading up to the trial, including at least once a month between March and June of 2002. Smith and Everett also corresponded “quite often.” In March 2002, investigator Jordan met with Everett and obtained basic biographical information and the names and contact information of Everett’s immediate family members. Everett advised Jordan that he had a drug problem and had been using drugs since around the age of thirteen, beginning with “weed and beer.” At age fifteen, Everett started experimenting with acid and methamphetamine. At sixteen, he learned how to cook and manufacture methamphetamine. In April 2002, attorney Smith met with Everett in an attempt to obtain more background information. Smith learned that, although Everett made it only to the tenth grade, Everett never was in “any special ed classes or emotionally handicapped classes.” Everett had an “unremarkable” childhood and had split his time growing up between Fort Payne, Alabama and Syl-vania, Georgia. Everett attended church “for awhile” in the past, and he provided Smith a name of a church leader who possibly could serve as a character witness. However, Everett “could not come up with any other names of teachers or community leaders who might be helpful.” Everett reiterated his history of drug use since his early teen years, and also stated that he used amphetamines every day while in Panama City during the two-week period in October and November 2002 leading up to the murder. Everett claimed that an acquaintance from Fort Payne, Joe Garrett, was around him when he was on drugs and might be able to testify at to Everett’s behavioral changes when using drugs heavily. During Smith’s April 2002 meeting, Everett claimed that Farmer and Bubba were present at Bailey’s house when she was killed. Everett stated that Bubba was acquainted with Bailey and that he, Bubba, and Farmer went to her house to steal money for drugs. The three men entered through the back door, and Everett was rifling through Bailey’s purse when she emerged from her bedroom. During his meeting with Smith, Everett admitted to striking and raping Bailey but claimed that she was alive when he left the house with Bubba and Farmer still inside. Everett suggested that Bubba and Farmer must have killed Bailey after he left, and he claimed that Farmer was a suspect in another rape-homicide in Fort Payne. In May 2002, defense counsel Smith spoke over the phone with one of Everett’s sisters, Vicki Godby, who stated that she was not sure whether it would help or hurt Everett if she testified at his penalty hearing. Godby said that she had some anger about the way that Everett had acted in the past and that, if he indeed were guilty of the charges, the death penalty might be appropriate for him. That same month, investigator Jordan met with Everett. During the meeting, Everett told another version of the events leading up to Bailey’s death, claiming that Bailey came by mistake to the hotel room where he and Farmer were making drugs, which caused him to believe that Bailey was a federal agent. Everett also claimed that he later saw Bailey again while he was out jogging in her neighborhood. Everett then cut off his meeting with Jordan, stating that Jordan would have to return later to finish the conversation. In June 2002, investigator Jordan and Everett met again. During the meeting, Jordan encouraged Everett to think of anyone else who might be helpful to the case, and Everett provided the names of a few people who might have information concerning Farmer. Subsequently, Everett’s story about how Bailey was killed further evolved, and by trial time, Everett was telling Smith that Bailey was a double agent who was herself involved in drugs. 2. Development of Mitigation Evidence Defense counsel Smith’s initial mitigation strategy was to rely on Everett’s father, Sidney Everett (“Sidney”), to secure mitigation witnesses, as Sidney had a lot of contacts in northern Alabama where Everett had been living at the time of his crimes and where he grew up in part. Sidney pledged to “twist arms” or do “whatever he had to ... to get witnesses ... to testify and say good things about Mr. Everett.” Moreover, Smith found that Sidney “had a realistic appraisal of what was going on” with the case, while Everett’s mother was in denial of her son’s guilt and lived in a different state than her son. Unfortunately, however, Sidney passed away before trial. After Sidney’s death, Smith and Jordan traveled to Alabama in October 2002 in an attempt to find mitigation witnesses. One of Everett’s sisters was supposed to take off work that day to help Smith and Jordan track down potential witnesses. How- ■ ever, Everett’s sister instead went to work that day, leaving them to “run[ ] around on [their] own” to find potential witnesses until she got off work. Despite this, Smith and Jordan were able to interview Everett’s high school principal and his guidance counselor; Everett’s friend Joe Garrett; Everett’s sister Cindy Grider and her husband; and family friend Joe Scott. The guidance counselor did not remember Everett. The principal, Mr. Tally, remembered Everett but “characterized him as a truant who did not like to attend school.” Nevertheless, Mr. Tally did not consider Everett to have been a discipline problem. Smith and Jordan also obtained Everett’s school records, including his report cards. Everett’s report cards showed a range of grades, from A’s to F’s, and the records indicated a history of absenteeism, particularly in high school. Smith and Jordan also found and interviewed Joe Garrett, the friend who Everett said could testify about Everett’s behavior while on drugs. Garrett stated that he and Everett were very close growing up and he never knew Everett to be a violent individual. Garrett claimed that Everett had had “quite a few girlfriends,” none of whom Garrett thought would be good mitigation witnesses because Everett “tended to use his girlfriends and throw them away.” Specifically, Everett would borrow money or cars from his girlfriends and “not return items to these girls.” Cindy Grider, Everett’s sister, told Smith and Jordan that she would try to come up with the names of additional people with whom they could meet. Joe Scott had been a friend of Sidney’s. However, “Scott did not have any kind words to say about Paul Everett ... [and] also seemed to be rather critical of [Sidney].” Scott did not express any interest in serving as a mitigation witness for Everett. Overall, Smith and Jordan kept running into “dead ends” in their mitigation investigation and could not find “much redeeming about [Everett],” who “wasn’t a Boy Scout, ... wasn’t an athlete, ... wasn’t a scholar, ... didn’t go to church,” and “never had a job.” Some of Everett’s own sisters wanted nothing to do with him. The sisters who would speak in support of him could say only that they loved their brother, were close to him, and never saw him do anything violent. After the trip to Alabama, .Smith and Jordan did not feel that there would be any more mitigation evidence forthcoming. As to Everett’s changing stories concerning Bailey’s murder and his attempts to implicate Farmer and Bubba, defense counsel Smith attempted to verify Everett’s claims but hit another dead end. Specifically, Smith located and interviewed Jared Farmer, who claimed that he and Everett were not together on the day of the murder. Smith also verified that Bub-ba was a real person. Smith, however, learned that Bubba was in a cast at the time of the murder because he had been in an accident where he was trampled by a horse. Ultimately, because Everett (between his arrest and his trial) had come up with so many versions of his story of how Bailey died, Smith did not know what Everett would testify to if called to the stand. Smith knew that Everett “would have been crucified on cross examination.” Finally, as to Everett’s claim that he was “tripping on acid” at the time of the crime, Smith could find no evidence to corroborate this claim. Smith asked Farmer about Everett’s alleged drug use, but Farmer “denied any knowledge of drug use” and said that he had no idea what Everett was doing the day of the murder. Additionally, Everett’s story— that he committed the crime only because he was “tripping on acid”—did not fit with the evidence that he left his motel room that evening armed with a fish bat and looking specifically for money. Indeed, Smith read a statement from the bail bondsman which stated that the bail bondsman had detained Everett “without any kind of incident” shortly after the murder. Smith viewed this as inconsistent with Everett’s story that he was in a violent, drug-induced state the evening of the murder. Therefore, although Smith had no doubt that Everett was “messing around with drugs” while in Panama City, it appeared to amount simply to “recreational drug use.” 3. Mental Health Expert Defense counsel Smith could tell from his interactions with Everett that Everett was not “mentally retarded ... [and] didn’t appear[] to be mentally ill,” and Everett did not have any history of mental illness, psychological problems, or “drug abuse problems.” Nevertheless, as a “CYA” measure,-Smith had Dr. Jill Rowan conduct a psychological evaluation of Everett to ensure that he was mentally competent, could testify if he had to, and had a realistic understanding of how the legal system works. On July 23, 2002, at Smith’s request, Dr. Rowan conducted a forty-five-minute evaluation of Everett, who was twenty-three years old at that time. In her report, Dr. Rowan indicated that Everett advised that he had seven older sisters and had split his time growing up with his mother and father depending on his mood. Everett dropped out of school in the tenth grade, after which he obtained his GED. He had a history of drug use, beginning at age fifteen, including LSD, methamphetamine, marijuana, and pills. Dr. Rowan further reported that Everett was cooperative, had good attention span and concentration, and had clear and coherent thinking, and that she found it “easy to follow his presentation.” Everett exhibited a grandiosity and over-confidence that were likely a combination of immaturity, denial, and personality. Everett referred to Smith by Smith’s first name, thought “he ought to be in charge of his case,” and indicated that he planned to attend law school if found not guilty. Given the severity of the case, Dr. Rowan concluded that Everett had not fully arrived at a realistic understanding of his situation. Everett told Dr. Rowan that he spent his time in jail reading novels, law books, and the paperwork in his case. Everett was able to speak conversantly about, and demonstrated an understanding of, the charges against him, the possible penalties, his actions on the day of the murder, the legal process generally, and the specifics of his case. Dr. Rowan concluded that “[t]here was nothing in his presentation that indicated a full Competence evaluation ought to be done.” And “Everett demonstrated no signs of mental retardation or of a major illness. His grandiosity [was] not of psychotic proportions.” Counsel Smith concluded that Dr. Rowan’s assessment of Everett corroborated his belief that that there was no reason to question Everett’s mental competency, and so he did not request “any greater psychological work up,” which he believed “would probably be detrimental to [Everett].” Specifically, Everett struck Smith as having “pretty classic” “antisocial personality disorder,” and Smith feared having any personality tests administered. Everett just seemed very “carefree” about the case, with unrealistic expectations about how he would not be convicted and would go on to attend law school. B. The State’s Penalty Phase Evidence The State opened the penalty-phase hearing with a victim impact statement by Greathouse, Bailey’s stepfather who raised her since the age of three. In his statement, Greathouse described Bailey’s intelligence, hard-working nature, and love of her family, and the impact of Bailey’s death on him, Bailey’s mother, and the rest of their family. The State presented evidence that Everett was under a sentence of imprisonment for the Alabama conviction of possession of a forged instrument when he killed Bailey, which could serve as an aggravating circumstance for purposes of the death penalty. The State also relied on the guilt-phase evidence to argue that it had shown two other aggravating circumstances, namely that Everett committed the murder during the course of a sexual battery and that the murder was particularly heinous, atrocious, or cruel. C. Presentation of Mitigation Evidence Before the Jury During the penalty phase of Everett’s trial, Smith presented two witnesses: Everett’s mother, Glenda Everett (“Glenda”), and one of Everett’s sisters, Cindy Grider, who both testified generally as to Everett’s loving and non-violent nature. 1. Glenda Everett Glenda testified that Everett was born to her and Sidney in Fort Payne, Alabama in 1979. Everett had seven older sisters, all of whom loved him and spent a lot of time with him growing up. As a child, Everett was fun-loving, loved to play with others, loved to be with* his friends and family, and loved people in general. At some point, Glenda and Sidney started having problems and divorced, after which Glenda moved her kids, including Everett, to the part of Georgia where she was from. Glenda and Sidney subsequently decided to try to work things out for the sake of the family and remarried, and Glenda returned to Alabama with the kids. The marriage, however, fell apart again, and Glenda and her children moved back to Georgia. Everett missed his father so much that at some point Glenda allowed him to move back to Alabama to live with his father. Glenda also testified that “[i]t was never easy on Paul coming from a broken home” and that he had a hard time accepting that he came from a broken home. Everett loved his father, but his father had “problems,” “was an alcoholic,” and “at times would say things to [Everett] that no child needed to know.” Glenda believed that her son turned to drugs to block out some of the bad memories of his father. She first noticed that Everett had a drug problem when he was around eighteen or nineteen years old, and she encouraged him for years to get into treatment for his drug problem. In the months leading up to the murder, Glenda noticed that Everett “was not completely himself’ because of his drug use. She tried to talk to him “about his problem and he just couldn’t seem to get it altogether. He wanted to; he tried more than one try at a time, he just couldn’t seem to get control of everything.” Glenda noticed some personality changes in Everett since he started using drugs, but “not to the extent that [she] thought he would ever be capable of doing something like this.” Glenda “very seldom saw [Everett] drink alcohol,” but she knew that he “[s]ome-times ... would drink a little alcohol.” On the other hand, Glenda also testified that, as an adult, Everett was “a very loving and caring person. That’s always the way he has always been. He has never been a violent person of this nature of any kind.” Glenda opined that for Everett to have done “something as horrendous as this is, there would have to be drugs involved. He’s a very loving, caring person in other cases.” For example, Everett’s nieces and nephews loved their “Uncle Paul” because he would play and cuddle with them. 2. Cindy Grider Grider, one of Everett’s sisters, testified that she and Everett were “very close,” and she saw or heard from him almost every day when he was living in northern Alabama. Everett was wonderful with her kids, would babysit them, and would play with them, and they missed their “Uncle Paul.” Everett ahvays was “wonderful” with his entire family and with other peo-pie in general. Like his “very caring” father, Everett would “give somebody the shirt off of his back.” Grider further testified that the reaction in Everett’s hometown to his arrest was “[s]hock”—no one could believe that “the Paul that they knew” was capable of the crimes for which he was arrested. They all kept asking Grider “who was he with [at the time], because there’s no way.” Grider believed that, “[without some influence from somewhere ..., [Everett] could have never done this.” Grider had never known Everett to be violent, not even during times that the family knew “something was wrong” with him. Grider, however, was aware that Everett was involved in drugs, as were the people he spent time with, including Farmer and Farmer’s family. She tried “plenty of times” to get Everett to go to counseling or seek help for his drug use, but he would only “say what [she] wanted to hear” in response. 3. Smith’s Closing Argument In closing, defense counsel Smith largely focused on the argument that the State had not proven the existence of any aggravating circumstance. Specifically, Smith asserted: (1) Everett was not under a sentence of imprisonment at the time of the murder because he was not actually in prison when he committed the crimes; (2) the murder was not particularly heinous, atrocious, or cruel because it was not committed with an utter indifference to Bailey’s suffering or a torturous design; and (3) the murder was not committed during the commission of a sexual battery because Everett already had inflicted Bailey’s fatal injuries when he raped her. Smith also argued that Everett was a “young kid” who had made a senseless, tragic, and indefensible decision but who was not worthy of the death penalty. D. Penalty Trial Before the Sentencing Court After the jury recommended a death sentence, the state trial court held a Spencer hearing. The State did not introduce any evidence or call any witnesses. Everett called his mother Glenda and investigator Jordan to testify. Glenda testified that, although Everett was twenty-two years old at the time of his crimes, his maturity level did not match his chronological age. Everett always acted young for his age and never really supported himself or lived on his own. Jordan testified that he reviewed the jail records from Everett’s pre-trial incarceration and found no indication that any disciplinary action was ever taken against Everett. Everett declined to offer a statement to the court. The state trial court sentenced Everett to death for Bailey’s murder. The court found the existence of three statutory aggravating factors, specifically that the murder: (1) was committed while Everett was under a sentence of imprisonment for a previous felony conviction, Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(a); (2) was committed while Everett was engaged in the commission of a sexual battery or a burglary, id. § 921.141(5)(d); and (3) was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel, id. § 921.141(5)(d). The court found four statutory mitigating factors but accorded them little to very little weight: (1) Everett’s age, id. § 921.141(6)(g); (2) the crime was committed while under the influence of some type of substance, id. § 921.141(6)(b); (3) lack of significant history of prior criminal activity, id. § 921.141(6)(a); and (4) Everett’s family background and his drug use, id. § 921.141(6)(h). As to Everett’s family background, the trial court noted his father’s alcoholism and his parents’ divorce, remarriage, and second divorce. The court found that Everett’s upbringing, while not “ordinary,” was not a “deprived one.” The court also found non-statutory mitigating factors, each of which received very little weight: (1) Everett’s remorse, as expressed in his November 27 confession; (2) Everett’s good conduct in custody; (3) the alternative punishment of life imprisonment without parole; and (4) Everett’s confession. Finding that the aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances, the trial court imposed a sentence of death. III. DIRECT APPEAL Everett appealed to the Florida Supreme Court. See Everett v. State, 893 So.2d 1278 (Fla.2004) (“Everett /”). Everett argued, among other things, that the trial court should have suppressed the DNA samples and his November 27 confession because they were obtained in violation of his Fifth Amendment rights. Id. at 1282-83. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed Everett’s first-degree murder conviction and death sentence. Id. at 1280. On the Fifth Amendment claim, the Florida Supreme Court found that law enforcement officers contacted Everett on two separate occasions after he had invoked his right to counsel under Miranda, first, to obtain his consent to provide DNA samples, and second, to serve him with an arrest warrant. Id. at 1283. The Florida Supreme Court identified the question as “whether a law enforcement officer’s request for a consent to search from, or service of an arrest warrant on, a defendant in custody who has invoked the right to counsel violates the Fifth Amendment.” Id. at 1285. The Florida Supreme Court then cited and discussed at length the Supreme Court decisions in Miranda; Edwards v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477, 101 S.Ct. 1880, 68 L.Ed.2d 378 (1981); Arizona v. Roberson, 486 U.S. 675, 108 S.Ct. 2093, 100 L.Ed.2d 704 (1988); Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S. 291, 100 S.Ct. 1682, 64 L.Ed.2d 297 (1980); Michigan v. Mosley, 423 U.S. 96, 96 S.Ct. 321, 46 L.Ed.2d 313 (1975); Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757, 86 S.Ct. 1826, 16 L.Ed.2d 908 (1966); and others. Everett I, 893 So.2d at 1283-86. The Florida Supreme Court pointed out that “Miranda requires that once a defendant has invoked the right to counsel during questioning, no further interrogation of that individual in custody is permitted, unless counsel is present.” Id. at 1284. The Florida Supreme Court also stressed that the Supreme Court “did not require counsel’s presence for all further communications; only for interrogations.” Id. The Florida Supreme Court then discussed Innis, where the Supreme Court considered what constitutes “interrogation” for these purposes. Id. The Florida Supreme Court quoted from Innis at length, including Innis’s discussion of what constitutes interrogation. Id. at 1284-85. The Florida Supreme Court noted the Supreme Court’s conclusion that “the character of interrogation ‘must reflect a measure of compulsion above and beyond that inherent in custody itself,’ ” id. at 1284 (quoting Innis, 446 U.S. at 300, 100 S.Ct. at 1689), and the Supreme Court’s definition of the term interrogation as “express questioning or its functional equivalent,” as follows: “[T]he Miranda safeguards come into play whenever a person in custody is subjected to either express questioning or its functional equivalent. That is to say, the term “interrogation” under Miranda refers not only to express questioning, but also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably-likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.” Id. (quoting Innis, 446 U.S. at 300-01, 100 S.Ct. at 1689-90). The Florida Supreme Court added that the Supreme Court in Edwards provided further guidelines regarding the boundaries of custodial interrogation. Id. at 1285. The Florida Supreme Court explained that, in Edwards, “[t]he [Supreme] Court reiterated ‘that an accused, having expressed his desire to deal with the police only through counsel, is not subject to further interrogation by the authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges, or conversations with the police.’ ” Id. (quoting Edwards, 451 U.S. at 484-85, 101 S.Ct. at 1885) (alteration adopted). The Florida Supreme Court also cited and discussed Roberson. See id. After analyzing both Innis and Roberson, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that “[t]he police are not forbidden all contact with a defendant in custody; in fact, the [Supreme] Court expressly exempted from the definition of ‘interrogation’ routine police contact ‘normally attendant to arrest and custody.’ ” Id. (quoting Innis, 446 U.S. at 301, 100 S.Ct. at 1689). After considerable review of Supreme Court precedent, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that the service of the arrest warrant and the request for consent to provide DNA samples did not constitute interrogation because neither involved a word or action that the police should know is reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response. Id. at 1286. Specifically, the service of the arrest warrant was a routine police procedure and it did not require a response from Everett. Id. The request for consent to provide DNA samples was the same request the officers had made of several other individuals whom they had not been able to eliminate from a list of potential suspects in Bailey’s murder. Id. The Florida Supreme Court concluded that the DNA request was “not reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response.” Id. The United States Supreme Court denied Everett’s petition for certiorari. Everett v. Florida, 544 U.S. 987, 125 S.Ct. 1865, 161 L.Ed.2d 747 (2005). IV. STATE COLLATERAL PROCEEDINGS A. Motion for Post-Conviction Relief In 2006, Everett filed a motion for post-conviction relief pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.851. Among other claims, Everett alleged that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in connection with the investigation and presentation of mitigating evidence, including drug abuse evidence, for the penalty phase of the trial. B. State 3.851 Evidentiary Hearing In 2008, the state 3.851 court held an evidentiary hearing. Six witnesses presented testimony relevant to Everett’s claim of ineffective counsel in the penalty phase: (1) Glenda, Everett’s mother; (2) Grider, Everett’s sister; (3) Ashley Malone, one of Everett’s other sisters; (4) Everett himself; (5) Dr. Umesh Mhatre, a psychiatrist; and (6) Walter Smith, Everett’s trial counsel. We outline their 3.851 testimony. 1.Glenda Everett Glenda testified that she told Everett’s defense team in preparation for the penalty phase trial that Everett was a good, non-violent child and that the family had moved around a lot while he was growing up. Glenda testified as to the specifics of the family’s moves, explaining that she and Sidney had marital problems because of his drinking. She and Sidney first divorced in 1984, after which she and her children moved from Fort Payne, Alabama, to Sylvania, Georgia, where Everett started kindergarten. After about a year and a half, in January 1986, while Everett was in the first grade, Glenda and the children moved back to Fort Payne when she and Sidney remarried. Then, in November 1986, Glenda again moved herself and the children back to Sylvania, where Everett attended the same school that he had before. Around the beginning of the next school year, Glenda and her children returned to Fort Payne. In 1987 to 1988, Everett attended the same school as before, and the family remained for a full school year. Glenda and Everett then moved back to Sylvania after the end of that school year. Everett was able to make friends with other children, but his friendships were interrupted by the moves. Glenda further testified that Sidney “spent a lot of time with [Everett],” but she did not consider Sidney to be a good influence on him. When he was fourteen years old, Everett moved in with his father, and he eventually dropped out of school. In her testimony, Glenda indicated that Smith had not asked her a lot of questions about this part of Everett’s life and that he had interviewed her only once. On cross-examination, Glenda admitted that she could not tell when Everett was on drugs and when he was not. But she. did become aware that he “was into drugs real heavy” not long before the murder. 2. Cindy Grider Everett’s sister Grider, who is six years older than Everett, confirmed that the family moved a lot while he was growing up. At some point, she became aware that Everett was “going down the wrong path,” which included drug use. On many occasions, Grider spoke “very frankly” with Everett concerning his drug use and his friends, whom Grider did not consider to be good influences. Grider also did not consider Sidney, who “drank,” to have been a good influence on Everett. Grider had never seen her brother be violent, including when he was on drugs. As to. Smith’s mitigation investigation, Grider did not recall Smith ever formally interviewing her, and Smith had only one “very brief conversation” with her. 3. Ashley Malone Everett’s sister Malone, who is four years older than Everett, is the closest of his sisters in age to him. She stated that the family moves during Everett’s childhood were hard on him and his siblings, but he managed to maintain friendships throughout the moves. In around 2000 or 2001, Malone became aware that Everett was using drugs, but she never saw him do anything violent, including while on drugs. Smith never interviewed Malone during his mitigation investigation. 4. - Paul Everett With regard to Smith’s mitigation investigation, Everett testified that Smith did not bring up mitigating factors with Everett until they were about to go to trial, and Smith did very little to establish mitigating factors beyond “briefly speaking with [Everett’s] family.” Although Smith had Dr. Rowan meet with Everett, Dr. Rowan and Everett met for only “30, 45 minutes tops.” Basically, Dr. Rowan asked Everett about his childhood history, where he went to school, and “a little bit about [his] case.” Her emphasis in interviewing him was on his ability to stand trial, and she did not go into any great length about his background. Everett further testified that Smith never asked him about his problems with drugs. Given that he was steadily drinking alcohol from the age of seven or eight, Everett believed that Smith should have looked into his history with drugs and the effect that certain substances may have had on his brain development as a child. Everett started smoking marijuana around age twelve or thirteen. By the age of sixteen, he was “eating LSD every day, injecting methamphetamine every day.” Although drugs were “pretty much an every day thing” for him, he kept his drug use hidden from his family for several years. As to his two-week stay in Panama City leading up to the murder, Everett testified that he was using cocaine, methamphetamine, LSD, and ecstasy. In the hours leading up to the murder, Everett was using cocaine and methamphetamine together. Using cocaine and methamphetamine together would cause Everett to experience “intense paranoia of the police,” where he felt that he was being watched or followed by law enforcement. He was also experiencing paranoia at the time because he had been manufacturing methamphetamine. When asked whether the paranoia would ever prompt him to commit violence, Everett initially testified, “No,” but then immediately stated that he could not really say because “when it gets to that point it’s self-preservation not wanting to go to jail.” Everett admitted that he never discussed his drug-induced paranoia with either Smith or Dr. Rowan. 5. Dr. Umesh Mhatre Dr. Mhatre, a psychiatrist who had done “a lot of death row evaluation,” met with Everett on October 16, 2007 for about an hour. Dr. Mhatre testified as to the history of substance abuse that Everett reported during his interview. Specifically, Everett told Dr. Mhatre that Sidney gave him his first beer at around eight years old and that Everett sometimes would drink between twelve and eighteen beers a day. At some point, Everett started drinking hard liquor, which he found difficult to handle. At twelve years old, Everett started abusing marijuana, and he subsequently started using LSD, powder cocaine, crack cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, ecstasy, and pain pills. Everett also reported to Dr. Mhatre that, during his trip to Panama City at the time of the murder, he was cooking crystal methamphetamine every day, was high on drugs throughout the trip, and had not slept in several days. Everett also claimed that, in the week leading up to the murder, he used about half an ounce of methamphetamine, five ounces of marijuana, one gram of powder cocaine, one gram of crack cocaine; had done six to seven hits of LSD; and had consumed twelve beers a day. Dr. Mhatre testified that the crystal methamphetamine would have acted as a stimulant to Everett and could have caused significant paranoia. Most of the drugs that Everett was on were well known to cause paranoia, hallucinations, and delusions. Dr. Mhatre believed that Everett’s reported drug use on the day of the crimes was consistent with Everett’s history of drug use and Everett’s claim that he committed the crimes in a state of drug-induced paranoia. Specifically, Everett reported to Dr. Mhatre that, on the day of the murder, he was getting increasingly paranoid and when the victim accidentally got into [his motel] room looking for somebody, the paranoia just went off the roof, he started thinking she was a law enforcement, trying to get her, trying to track her down, ran into her unfortunately later on while she was jogging, followed her and stalked her and [was] convinced, and ... [his] initial purpose to go [to the victim’s house] was to find out ... if she does, in fact, belong to law enforcement. Dr. Mhatre conceded that he was not able to corroborate Everett’s claims concerning his drug use or Everett’s claim that he was in a drug-induced psychosis at the time of the murder through police officers’ reports or other witnesses. Dr. Mhatre did not conduct any psychological testing of Everett, and indeed, he was not qualified to administer such tests. Dr. Mhatre did speak to Everett’s mother and two of Everett’s sisters as part of his evaluation of Everett, and he testified as to the information obtained from these interviews. Glenda told Dr. Mhatre that she and Sidney fought a lot in front of the children, which she believed had “a big impact on all of her children, possibly especially on [Everett].” Glenda reported that Everett “was like a different person” when he was on drugs and that he was never violent except when he was on drugs, which caused him to have “a bit of a temper.” Dr. Mhatre also confirmed through the interviews that Sidney was an alcoholic, but Everett did not report any particularly positive or negative feelings about Sidney. 6. Walter Smith Everett’s trial counsel, Smith, testified regarding his extensive legal experience and his pre-trial investigation of mitigation factors in Everett’s case. At the time of the 2008 evidentiary hearing before the 3.851 court, Smith had been an attorney for twenty-eight years, including around fifteen years with the Public Defender’s Office. He represented defendants in forty-one first-degree murder trials, twenty of which were death penalty cases. Four of his clients received death sentences, two of which were upheld by the Florida Supreme Court. Smith had never used co-counsel, but he did utilize an investigator. Most of Smith’s defendants suffered from some kind of mental health issue, and based on consultations with psychologists, Smith was “pretty dead on” in recognizing and identifying potential mental health issues in his clients. C. State 3.851 Court Order On July 17, 2008, the 3.851 court issued an order making factual findings and denying Everett’s 3.851 motion. As to Everett’s claim of ineffective counsel in the penalty phase, the 3.851 court first rejected Everett’s allegation that Smith failed to adequately investigate mitigating circumstances and improperly relied on his alcoholic father to secure mitigating evidence. The 3.851 court found that Smith was an extremely experienced defense attorney who did investigate, find, and present mitigating evidence in Everett’s case. Specifically, after facing difficulty obtaining mitigation information from Ev