               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018      Page: 1 of 71


                                                                      [DO NOT PUBLISH]



                  IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                            FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                              ________________________

                                     No. 15-14586
                               ________________________

                          D.C. Docket No. 5:03-cv-02399-SLB



CORY R. MAPLES,

                                                                        Petitioner-Appellant,

                                            versus

COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

                                                                      Respondent-Appellee.

                               ________________________

                      Appeal from the United States District Court
                         for the Northern District of Alabama
                             ________________________

                                       (April 5, 2018)

Before WILSON, JILL PRYOR, and HULL∗, Circuit Judges.

WILSON, Circuit Judge:


∗
  Judge Hull was in active service when this case was orally argued, but subsequently took senior
status.
               Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018      Page: 2 of 71


       Cory R. Maples, an Alabama death-row inmate, appeals the district court’s

denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 amended petition for writ of habeas corpus. We

granted Maples a Certificate of Appealability (COA) as to one claim: “Whether the

district court erred in denying [Maples’s] claim that his trial counsel rendered

ineffective assistance of counsel in the investigation and presentation of mitigating

evidence during the penalty phase of [Maples’s] 1997 trial?” Having considered

the state court record, the district court’s order, the parties’ submissions, and with

the benefit of oral argument, we vacate the district court’s denial of Maples’s

amended § 2254 petition as to that penalty-phase mitigation claim and remand for

an evidentiary hearing and fact findings as outlined below.1

                                    I. BACKGROUND

       When Maples was 21 years old, he confessed to shooting and killing two

friends and fleeing in a car belonging to one of the friends after a long day of

drinking. Two years later, he was convicted of murder and the jury recommended

the death penalty, by a vote of 10 to 2 2; the state trial court subsequently accepted

that recommendation. The court found one statutory aggravating factor (murder

during a robbery), one statutory mitigating factor (Maples had a limited criminal


1
  To the extent necessary, we sua sponte expand the COA to include the issue of whether Maples
should be granted an evidentiary hearing on his penalty-phase mitigation claim. See Thomas v.
Crosby, 371 F.3d 782, 796 (11th Cir. 2004) (Tjoflat, J. concurring) (“[O]ur cases establish the
power of our court to add issues to a COA sua sponte.”).
2
  Under Alabama law, at least 10 jurors must agree to recommend the death penalty. See Ala.
Code § 13A-5-46(f).
                                               2
              Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 3 of 71


history), and a few non-statutory mitigating factors. After concluding that

Maples’s mitigating factors were weak and unpersuasive, the court found that the

single statutory aggravating factor justified imposing the death penalty.

      In July 2001, Maples filed his initial Rule 32 petition for habeas relief in

Alabama state court. In September 2001, the State filed a response and a proposed

order denying the petition. In December 2001, Maples filed an amended Rule 32

petition that contained significantly more factual allegations about his penalty-

phase mitigation claim, and the state habeas court accepted the petition; but no

evidentiary hearing was held. Then, in 2003, the court dismissed Maples’s

petition on the pleadings and signed the State’s September 2001 proposed order,

even though the order was drafted before Maples filed his amended Rule 32

petition. Thus, the order did not address Maples’s new allegations. In signing the

order, the court merely struck through “2001” on the signature line and wrote in

the 2003 date.

      Because Maples did not timely appeal this Rule 32 order, albeit through no

fault of his own as his counsel at the time had abandoned him, no state appellate

review occurred. As a result, the district court in his federal § 2254 case

determined that Maples’s penalty-phase mitigation claim was procedurally

defaulted. This court later affirmed that determination. Maples v. Allen, 586 F.3d

879, 886–91 (11th Cir. 2009) (per curiam). The United States Supreme Court,

                                          3
                  Case: 15-14586      Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 4 of 71


noting the abandonment by his own counsel, granted certiorari as to the

procedural-default issue, vacated this court’s ruling, and remanded, concluding that

“ample” cause exists to excuse Maples’s procedural default. See Maples v.

Thomas, 565 U.S. 266, 280, 289–90, 132 S. Ct. 912, 922, 927–28 (2012).

However, the Court left open the question of whether actual prejudice exists. We

then remanded the case back to the district court to consider actual prejudice in the

first instance.

       On remand, the district court, without holding an evidentiary hearing and

applying AEDPA deference, 3 concluded that Maples’s penalty-phase mitigation

claim was procedurally defaulted for lack of prejudice. Because the standard for


       3
         Because the state habeas court denied Maples’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim
on the merits, the district court reviewed the claim under the standards set by the Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA). See Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 402-
03, 120 S. Ct. 1495, 1518 (2000). AEDPA bars federal courts from granting habeas relief to a
petitioner on a claim that was adjudicated on the merits in state court unless the state court’s
adjudication:

       (1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
           unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
           determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or

       (2) resulted in a decision that was 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). “‘[C]learly established Federal law’ under § 2254(d)(1) is the governing
legal principle or principles set forth by the Supreme Court at the time the state court renders its
decision.” Lockyer v. Andrade, 538 U.S. 63, 71–72, 123 S. Ct. 1166, 1172 (2003). With respect
to § 2254(d)(2), “[s]tate court fact-findings are entitled to a presumption of correctness unless the
petitioner rebuts that presumption by clear and convincing evidence.” Conner v. GDCP Warden,
784 F.3d 752, 761 (11th Cir. 2015).

                                                 4
                Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 5 of 71


actual prejudice overlaps with the standard for Strickland4 prejudice, see Strickler

v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 289, 119 S. Ct. 1936, 1952 (1999), the court focused its

analysis on whether Maples’s penalty-phase mitigation claim satisfied Strickland’s

prejudice prong. In doing so, the court found reasonable the state habeas court’s

conclusion that Maples, in his amended Rule 32 petition, did not allege facts that

established Strickland prejudice, and determined that the claim was procedurally

defaulted. This is Maples’s appeal of that determination.

                                      II. DISCUSSION

       Like the district court, we too focus our analysis on Strickland prejudice.

But we, unlike the district court, conclude that the state habeas court’s rejection of

Maples’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim was unreasonable under 28 U.S.C.

§ 2254(d).”5 We also conclude, upon a de novo review, that Maples pleaded facts

in his amended Rule 32 petition that, if proven, “would entitle him to habeas

corpus relief.” Daniel v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr., 822 F.3d 1248, 1280 (11th


4
  Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct. 2052 (1984). Under Strickland, a defendant
has a Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of trial counsel. Id. at 686, 104 S. Ct. at
2063. Counsel renders ineffective assistance, warranting vacatur of a conviction or sentence,
when his performance falls “below an objective standard of reasonableness,” taking into account
prevailing professional norms, and when, upon a reweighing of all of the evidence old and new,
“there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 688, 694-95, 104 S. Ct. at 2064, 2068-69. “A
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id. at
694, 104 S. Ct. at 2068.
5
  Because Maples “did not fail to develop the factual basis of his claim[] in state court through
any omission, fault, or negligence that can fairly be attributed to him,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2)
does not a bar him from accessing an evidentiary hearing. See Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1281 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
                                                5
              Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 6 of 71


Cir. 2016). Because the state court’s habeas decision was unreasonable—thereby

piercing AEDPA deference and prompting a de novo review—and because a de

novo review reveals Maples’s claims, if proven, would establish a valid Strickland

claim, we hold that he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the matter. See id. at

1248, 1261, 1280–81 (ordering an evidentiary hearing on a petitioner’s Strickland

claim after an Alabama state court unreasonably dismissed the petitioner’s Rule 32

petition on the pleadings). We address each point in turn.

                                          A.

      The state habeas court’s decision that Maples’s allegations, if true, could not

establish a valid penalty-phase mitigation claim was unreasonable under § 2254(d).

The decision was based both on an unreasonable determination of facts, see 28

U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), and an unreasonable application of clearly established law,

see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Not only did erroneous factual conclusions based on

the wrong Rule 32 petition permeate the court’s decision, but the court also

conducted a splintered and fragmented prejudice analysis, contrary to Strickland’s

directives.

                                          1.

      The state habeas court’s “adjudication of [Maples’s penalty-phase

mitigation] claim . . . resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable

determination of the facts” because the court, in adjudicating the claim, relied on

                                          6
              Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 7 of 71


the wrong Rule 32 petition. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). The court was required to

determine the facts governing Maples’s claim by examining his operative Rule 32

petition—his amended Rule 32 petition—and accepting as true the allegations

therein. See Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1261. Instead, the court determined the governing

facts by examining Maples’s initial Rule 32 petition; thus, all of the new and more

detailed allegations in the amended petition were ignored. In Maples’s amended

Rule 32 petition detailing his mitigating evidence, he not only alleged specific

details about his depression, suicide attempts, mental health issues, head trauma,

and good character, but he also identified multiple persons who could have

testified accordingly.

      For example, although Maples alleged specific details about his depression

and suicide attempts, and named multiple persons who could have testified about

the details, the state habeas court concluded that Maples failed to identify any

details about his depression. And, even though Maples alleged that the director of

his drug-addiction program, Kathy Goodwin, could have testified about his

addiction and mental health issues, the court found that Maples did not identify

anyone from the program who could testify about his addiction and mental health

issues.

      Similarly, the state habeas court made unreasonable factual determinations

about Maples’s head-trauma allegations. In his amended Rule 32 petition, Maples

                                          7
                Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 8 of 71


alleged that but for trial counsel’s deficient performance, his stepmother would

have testified that he suffered head traumas that required emergency medical

treatment, including a fall off a 20-foot cliff. The state habeas court nonetheless

concluded that Maples identified no specific instances of head trauma about which

his stepmother would have testified. This same error is true for the state habeas

court’s determinations about Maples’s good-character allegations. In his amended

Rule 32 petition, Maples named several friends, a guidance counselor, and a high

school football coach who could have testified about his history of good character.

But the court concluded that Maples did not identify by name any educators or

friends who could have testified about his character.

       Although § 2254(d)(2) imposes a high bar for showing an unreasonable

determination of facts, we have little trouble concluding that Maples has overcome

that bar. The state habeas court did not merely misconstrue a few facts in the

record; the court—in a capital case—relied on the wrong set of facts. And that

error led to a decision based on factual conclusions that cannot be reconciled with

the record.6

                                               2.



6
  At oral argument, the State contended that Maples cannot rely on § 2254(d)(2) to establish that
the state habeas court’s decision was unreasonable because the decision was a summary decision
and did not include factual determinations. We disagree. The decision was not a summary
decision devoid of factual determinations. It was 86-pages long, and it made reasoned
conclusions about Maples’s pleaded facts.
                                                8
              Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 9 of 71


      The state habeas court also unreasonably applied clearly established federal

law, Strickland, because the court “failed to consider the prejudicial effect of trial

counsel’s deficient performance based on the totality of available mitigating

evidence.” See Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1277 (internal quotation marks omitted);

Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 397–98, 120 S. Ct. 1495, 1515 (2000). In

considering Maples’s penalty-phase mitigation claim, the court impermissibly

“broke up [the] claim into different subparts, then analyzed them separately.” See

Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1278. It examined Maples’s allegations paragraph by

paragraph, treating individual paragraphs (or, in some instances, small groups of

paragraphs) as distinct subparts. Only in analyzing each subpart in isolation did

the court find that none of the subparts include allegations that would support a

finding of prejudice; it never considered the combined effects of the allegations.

      For example, in evaluating Maples’s allegation that his brother could have

offered helpful good-character evidence if trial counsel had called him as a

witness, the court analyzed it alone, in a vaccum:

             In paragraph 126, Maples alleges that Daniel Maples, his
             half brother, would have testified that [Maples] was a
             fun, loving brother who respected his father and did what
             he was told . . . . Maples has failed to proffer the [c]ourt
             any evidence that testimony from his half brother would
             have produced a different result in the penalty phase of
             trial.




                                           9
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 10 of 71


Because of this splintered prejudice inquiry, “the [court] never considered what

would be the combined effect of all mitigating evidence in producing a different

outcome at sentencing.” See id. Therefore, the court unreasonably applied

Strickland. See id. (“[I]t is the reweighing of the totality of mitigating evidence

that is important for reweighing under Strickland.”); Williams, 529 U.S. at 397–98,

120 S. Ct. at 1515.

                                          B.

      And because the state court’s determinations were unreasonable under

§ 2254(d), we now review Maples’s petition de novo—where, notably, we are

unrestrained by AEDPA’s “formidable barrier to federal habeas relief.” See White

v. Wheeler, 577 U.S. ___, ___, 136 S. Ct. 456, 460 (2015).

      Strickland’s deficient-performance prong requires Maples to show that his

trial counsel’s performance at the penalty phase “fell below an objective standard

of reasonableness and was outside the wide range of professionally competent

assistance.” See Johnson v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 643 F.3d 907, 928 (11th Cir.

2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). The prejudice prong requires Maples to

show that “but for [the] deficient performance, there is a reasonable probability

that the result of [his penalty-phase] proceeding would have been different.” Id. at

928–29. To be clear, Strickland does not require certainty that the result would

have been different, only a reasonable probability. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694,

                                          10
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 11 of 71


104 S. Ct. at 2068; Hardwick v. Crosby, 320 F.3d 1127, 1160–61(11th Cir. 2003).

And a reasonable probability is simply a probability sufficient to undermine

confidence in the outcome. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S. Ct. at 2068. In

determining whether there is a reasonable probability of a different result, we must

“evaluate the totality of the available mitigation evidence—both that adduced at

trial, and the evidence adduced in the habeas proceeding”—and “reweigh[] it

against the evidence in aggravation.” Williams, 529 U.S. at 397–98, 120 S. Ct. at

1515. If this reweighing shows “a breakdown in the adversarial process that our

system counts on to produce just results,” such that the proceeding was

“fundamentally unfair,” then we must vacate the death sentence. Strickland, 466

U.S. at 696, 700, 104 S. Ct. at 2069, 2071.

      Here, Maples’s allegations, if true, amount to a valid Strickland claim.

                                         1.

      First, the allegations in Maples’s amended Rule 32 petition, if true, amount

to deficient performance under Strickland. In the petition, Maples asserts that,

among other things:

   • Before Maples’s case, trial counsel had never assisted with a capital penalty
     phase.
   • Trial counsel’s entire mitigation investigation consisted only of briefly
     speaking to Maples’s father and stepmother and hiring a psychologist, Dr.
     Allen Shealy, who only met with Maples for a few hours. Trial counsel did
     not contact any other individuals, despite Maples’s father and stepmother
     recommending several potential mitigation witnesses by name, including:
     neighbors, teachers, friends, and relatives. Trial counsel also neglected to
                                         11
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 12 of 71


      request Maples’s educational and medical records. Further, trial counsel
      failed to provide Dr. Shealy with more thorough information about, among
      other things, the abuse Maples suffered as a child, Maples’s struggles with
      drug addiction, and Maples’s past suicidal ideation, thereby jeopardizing the
      thoroughness of his assessment.

   • Trial counsel conducted this cursory investigation despite their awareness
     that Maples had a history of personal trauma that warranted additional
     investigation. For example, trial counsel were in possession of Maples’s
     application to a drug-addiction program which indicated that Maples
     struggled with addiction and multiple suicide attempts. Yet, trial counsel did
     not contact any of Maples’s counselors from the program—not even Kathy
     Goodwin, the director of the program who interviewed Maples for admission
     to the program.
   • Trial counsel offered just four witnesses at the penalty phase: Dr. Shealy,
     Maples’s father, Maples’s stepmother, and Maples’s uncle—and wholly
     failed to prepare them for their testimony. In fact, trial counsel did not even
     inform the majority of the witnesses—Maples’s stepmother, father, and
     uncle—prior to trial that they would even testify; counsel told them during a
     break in the trial that they would testify.

   • And when trial counsel did put the mitigation witnesses on the stand, he
     elicited limited, scattered mitigation evidence. The testimony from Maples’s
     father, stepmother, and uncle was superficial at best. And Dr. Shealy’s
     testimony was not only based solely on his short discussion with Maples,
     without the benefit of any educational, medical, or other records provided by
     the defense, but was also confusing and misleading.

These allegations show that trial counsel “failed to conduct a minimally adequate

mitigation investigation” and that trial counsel’s preparation for Maples’s penalty-

phase presentation “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” See

Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1262, 1268 (internal quotation mark omitted).

      First, based on the allegations, the scope of trial counsel’s mitigation

investigation was unreasonable. Trial counsel “unreasonably decided to end the[ir]

                                         12
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 13 of 71


. . . investigation after only talking to” Maples’s father, Maples’s stepmother, and

Dr. Shealy. See Cooper v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 646 F.3d 1328, 1351 (11th Cir.

2011). “[P]otentially powerful mitigating evidence stared [trial counsel] in the

face,” such as Maples’s suicide attempts, but they ignored the evidence, failing to

take any steps to pursue it. See Bobby v. Van Hook, 558 U.S. 4, 11, 130 S. Ct. 13,

19 (2009). Trial counsel requested neither Maples’s medical records nor his

educational records. They also failed to contact Maples’s drug-addiction program

or a single person from the laundry list of people whom Maples’s father and

stepmother named as potential witnesses. “[A]ny reasonably competent attorney

would have realized that pursuing these leads was necessary to making an

informed choice” about penalty-phase strategy. See Williams v. Allen, 542 F.3d

1326, 1340 (11th Cir. 2008) (internal quotation mark omitted).

      Second, based on Maples’s allegations, trial counsel’s preparation for the

penalty-phase presentation was unreasonably cursory. In light of Maples’s

videotaped confession, trial counsel had “every expectation that [Maples would] be

convicted and w[ould] be facing a death sentence.” See Johnson, 643 F.3d at 932.

Trial counsel knew from the outset that Maples’s life depended on the penalty-

phase presentation. Yet they (1) waited until midway through trial to inform

Maples’s family members that they would be testifying and (2) failed to prepare

any of the penalty-phase witnesses for their testimony. No reasonable attorney

                                         13
               Case: 15-14586         Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 14 of 71


who knows his client’s life depends on the penalty-phase presentation would

devote such minimal effort to preparing the presentation.

                                                 2.

       Furthermore, the allegations in Maples’s amended Rule 32 petition, show

“that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors,

the result in the proceeding would have been different.” Williams, 542 F.3d at

1342. The result we reach is guided both by the de novo standard of review and

Strickland, which emphasized that “the ultimate focus of the inquiry must be on

the fundamental fairness of the proceeding whose result is being challenged.”

Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696, 104 S. Ct. at 2069. To this end, we must ask whether

“the result of the particular proceeding is unreliable because of a breakdown in the

adversarial process that our system counts on to produce just results.” Id. With

Strickland as our guide, reexamining in combination all of the evidence—that

adduced in Maples’s penalty phase and that alleged in his amended Rule 32

petition—de novo, and considering that Maples was only one vote away from a life

sentence even without this additional mitigating evidence, we are unconvinced that

Maples’s trial produced a reliable, just result.7


7
  This is so despite the fact that Maples’s trial counsel presented a case in mitigation, including
relatively lengthy testimony by Dr. Shealy that included some examples of the physical abuse
Maples suffered as a child. Dr. Shealy was engaged only to evaluate Maples’s fitness for trial,
trial counsel failed to prepare him adequately for the evaluation with any records or other
information, and his entire evaluation consisted of a single four-hour interview with Maples.
The quantity of Dr. Shealy’s testimony, although relevant to our prejudice analysis, does not
                                                 14
               Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 15 of 71


   In his amended Rule 32 petition, Maples alleged that he was prejudiced by his

trial counsel’s deficient performance because, among other things:

   • Due to the deficient performance, the jury did not hear evidence that
     Maples’s birth mother: has a mental illness; routinely threw violent, self-
     mutilating tantrums; stabbed Maples’s father once while he was driving;
     attempted to slit the throat of Maples’s father; once tried to sell Maples to a
     neighbor; and once left Maples in a car for hours when he was a toddler.

   • Due to the deficient performance, the jury did not hear evidence that Maples
     cried for his birth mother, who had abandoned him in childhood, until his
     early teenage years and that Maples’s stepmother had to sit with him at night
     while he was growing up because of his nightmares. The jury also did not
     hear evidence that Maples’s birth mother emotionally abused him again in
     his late teenage years. Specifically, the jury was not able to fully appreciate
     Maples’s encounter with his mother at age 17, where she again neglected
     him, verbally abused him, and after just a few months abandoned him once
     more—an event that deeply hurt him and launched him into a period of drug
     abuse. Underscoring the extent to which this episode of abuse affected
     Maples, he dropped out of high school during the time that he lived with his
     mother.

   • Due to the deficient performance, the jury did not hear evidence that, in the
     years leading up to his crimes, Maples suffered from serious depression and
     suicidal ideation. Maples wrote poetry about depression and loneliness;
     once wrote a suicide note and then hid in the woods; and took anti-
     depressants in jail prior to trial. Nor did the jury hear evidence that Maples
     attempted suicide on three separate occasions by (1) taking over thirty
     sleeping pills, drinking a bottle of alcohol, and crashing a family member’s
     car; (2) playing Russian roulette (he put a gun in his mouth and pulled the
     trigger); and (3) slashing his wrists with a butcher knife.



change our task—reweighing all of the evidence anew. To the extent some of the new mitigating
allegations in Maples’s amended Rule 32 petition could be characterized as cumulative, that
characterization goes to the weight of the evidence, not to whether we consider it at all. And for
the reasons we explain below, after we reweigh de novo the totality of the evidence in mitigation
against that in aggravation, we cannot say we have confidence in the outcome of Maples’s
penalty phase proceedings.
                                               15
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 16 of 71


   • Due to the deficient performance, the jury heard only a few scattered
     statements about Maples’s good character, even though Maples had lifelong,
     positive relationships with friends and family members; looked after his
     younger brother, discouraging him from using drugs; acted in an undercover
     capacity to assist police officers with arresting a drug dealer; never had
     disciplinary issues in school; was regarded as a respectful young man by
     school staff; was active in extracurriculars as a youth, including church and
     high school sports; and had a record of good behavior in jail during the two
     years leading up to trial.

   • Due to the deficient performance, the jury also did not hear evidence that
     Maples has a history of head trauma. Maples once fell off a 20-foot cliff as
     a teenager and was struck in the head with a bat about a year before his
     crimes.

      These new and more extensive allegations identify powerful, more in-depth

mitigation evidence, and establish a reasonable probability that, but for trial

counsel’s deficient performance, the result of Maples’s penalty-phase proceeding

would have been different.

      We are unpersuaded that the new mitigation evidence would have been a

“double-edged sword” if it had been presented. The State had already harped on

some of the damaging aspects of Maples’s past. And even then, the jury still

narrowly voted for death; this new evidence would have helped far more than it

would have hurt.

      We are equally unpersuaded that the new mitigation evidence is merely

cumulative; especially when evidence of the suicidal ideation and the head traumas

was completely left out. Furthermore, the gravity of the abuse and personal trauma

that Maples experienced was not accurately depicted. Trial counsel offered no
                                          16
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 17 of 71


evidence of Maples’s multiple suicide attempts and suicidal ideation. Trial counsel

offered no evidence of Maples’s serious and grave depression. Trial counsel

offered no evidence of Maples’s head traumas. Trial counsel offered no evidence

about Maples’s history of nightmares. Trial counsel offered little to no evidence

exploring the abuse that Maples’s birth mother subjected him to when he was 17

years old. And trial counsel failed to fully bring evidence of Maples’s good

character to light, which could have shown the jury that Maples tried to be a good

person despite his traumatic childhood, adolescence, and ongoing resulting mental

health problems.

      The evidence actually offered by trial counsel compared to the evidence that

was available, merely scratched the surface of the kind of trauma Maples suffered.

And even if a portion of the new evidence is cumulative in a sense, its relevance or

strength is not undermined when it is considered and reweighed with all of the

evidence. This is especially true here since the allegations in the amended Rule 32

petition are considerably more detailed and substantive than what was actually

presented. All things considered, the quality of the mitigation evidence is

important.

      Here, we are tasked with reweighing all of the aggravating and mitigating

circumstances as a whole. And in doing so, we are hard pressed to conclude that




                                         17
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 18 of 71


there is no reasonable probability that a jury would have recommended a life

sentence over the death penalty.

      Indeed, the impact of evaluating the totality of the evidence is even more

striking considering that it need only sway one more juror. And the probability

that one more juror would have been moved to vote for life over death is further

compounded by the limited aggravation evidence in this case—the state trial court

found only one statutory aggravating factor applicable here. See Williams, 542

F.3d at 1343 (“Further supporting a finding of prejudice is the fact that this case is

not highly aggravated. It is well established that ‘a [sentence] only weakly

supported by the record is more likely to have been affected by errors than one

with overwhelming record support.’” (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696, 104 S.

Ct. at 2069)). Again, even with trial counsel’s cursory mitigation presentation, two

jurors still voted against the death penalty: just one vote shy of enough votes to

preclude a jury recommendation of death. Id.; See Ala. Code § 13A-5-46(f);

Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1276 & n.20. Under these circumstances, there is a reasonable

probability that Maples’s new evidence—evidence that could have altered his

sentencing profile—would have shifted the life-versus-death balance. See

Williams, 542 F.3d at 1343.

      Because the evidence offered by trial counsel lacked so many important data

points about Maples’s background and character, the trial judge and jury could not

                                          18
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 19 of 71


“accurately gauge [Maples’s] moral culpability.” See Porter v. McCollum, 558

U.S. 30, 41, 130 S. Ct. 447, 454 (2009) (per curiam). These powerful pieces of

evidence could have altered Maples’s sentencing profile, painting a different, more

compelling picture of him. The mitigation evidence that was actually presented

painted a picture of Maples as someone who was abused as a child but suffered no

real continuing effects from the abuse, got mixed up with drugs as an adult, and

made bad decisions solely as a result of his drug addiction. But when accounting

for Maples’s new evidence, the totality of the mitigation evidence paints a different

picture of Maples as someone with life-threatening mental health issues who has

experienced lasting, ongoing trauma due to his birth mother’s abuse and rejection,

and who, despite such issues, tried to lead a productive life. Thus, it is reasonable

to conclude that the evidentiary scales would have been tipped, yielding a sentence

of life rather than death. Essentially, we cannot in good conscience refuse to

acknowledge that there could have been a different result here.

                          III. PROCEEDINGS ON REMAND

       After conducting an evidentiary hearing,8 the district court shall make

factual findings and conclusions of law as to whether Maples has shown actual

prejudice to excuse his procedural default of his penalty-phase mitigation claim in

state court, as set forth in Maples, 565 U.S. at 280, 289–90, 132 S. Ct. at 922, 927–

8
  Of course, in addition to holding the evidentiary hearing, the district court may order discovery
if appropriate.
                                                19
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 20 of 71


28. If the court concludes that Maples has shown actual prejudice, the court shall

rule on the merits of the penalty-phase mitigation claim. Since we have

determined that the state habeas court’s decision was unreasonable, the district

court “is no longer bound by § 2254(d) or limited to consideration of the facts

developed in the state [habeas] court record when evaluating the merits of

[Maples]’s claim.” See Daniel, 822 F.3d at 1280. The district court should review

Maples’s claim de novo. See id. at 1282.

      VACATED AND REMANDED.




                                         20
                   Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018      Page: 21 of 71


HULL, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

         Cory R. Maples, an Alabama death-row inmate, appeals the district court’s

denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 amended petition for writ of habeas corpus. In this

appeal, Maples’s sole claim is that his trial counsel was ineffective in the

investigation and presentation of mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of

his 1997 trial.

         After conducting de novo review, the district court ruled that Maples has not

shown (1) the required prejudice to excuse his procedural default or (2) Strickland
1
    prejudice. There was no evidentiary hearing in state or federal court, and thus the

district court accepted all of Maples’s well-pleaded allegations as true. Because of

certain concerns about the state collateral proceedings, the district court conducted

de novo review. Without deciding deficient performance, the district court

concluded that Maples had not shown prejudice because: (1) his trial counsel had

presented extensive mitigating evidence at trial; (2) his new evidence was either

cumulative or, at best, weak mitigating evidence; and (3) given the totality of the

aggravating and mitigating evidence, Maples had not show a reasonable

probability that his new evidence would have changed the outcome of his penalty

trial.



         1
             Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct. 2052 (1984).

                                                  21
               Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 22 of 71




       I agree with the district court and conclude that precedent requires us to

affirm its ruling that Maples has not shown prejudice and its denial of his amended

§ 2254 petition.

       Because a prejudice inquiry requires consideration of both aggravating and

mitigating circumstances, I review the aggravating nature of Maples’s admitted

murders and the extensive mitigating evidence his counsel presented at trial. I then

outline the district court’s comparison of the trial and new mitigation evidence, and

why it concluded Maples had not established prejudice. Lastly, I explain why I

agree with the district court that Maples has not shown prejudice.

                                    I. 1995 MURDERS

       Defendant Maples robbed and brutally murdered his two friends, Stacy

Terry and Barry Robinson, so that Maples could steal Terry’s red Camaro. 2

Maples confessed and has never denied that he shot both young men twice in the

head during his robbery of Terry’s Camaro. The Alabama Court of Criminal

Appeals described the “execution-type slaying” as follows:

       At some time in the late evening hours of Friday, July 7, 1995, or the
       early morning hours of Saturday, July 8, 1995, Stacy Alan Terry,
       2
         Throughout the record, various parties’ names have multiple spellings. Appellant
Maples’s first name is spelled either Cory or Corey. His father’s name is spelled Philip or
Phillip. A friend, Mr. Birdsong’s, first name is spelled either Alan or Allen. And the testifying
psychologist’s first name is also spelled either Alan or Allen, and his last name is spelled both
Shealy and Shealey. For clarity’s sake, I will use one spelling of each of these names throughout
this dissent.
                                               22
             Case: 15-14586   Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 23 of 71


      Barry Dewayne Robinson II, and the Defendant, Corey Ross Maples,
      arrived at the residence of the Defendant on Mud Tavern Road in
      Morgan County[, Alabama]. All three of the young men were
      acquaintances. Mr. Terry, whose nickname was Twinky, and the
      Defendant had spent the evening of July 7 drinking, playing pool, and
      “riding around” in Mr. Terry’s 1995 Camaro. The Defendant and Mr.
      Terry had attended high school together until the Defendant dropped
      out his senior year. As evidenced by the testimony of family and
      friends, the two young men had spent a considerable amount of time
      together during the week preceding these events.

      Mr. Robinson was new to the area, but had known Mr. Terry and the
      Defendant for several months. Mr. Robinson asked Mr. Terry for a
      ride home from the pool hall where all three young men were playing
      pool.

      Once the three young men arrived at the home of the Defendant,
      Corey Maples, [Maples] left the car and went into the mobile home.
      The [D]efendant picked up a .22 caliber rifle and walked back outside
      to the car where Mr. Terry and Mr. Robinson sat getting ready to
      leave. The Defendant walked to the driver’s side of the car and shot
      Mr. Terry twice in the head and then shot Mr. Robinson twice in the
      head.

      ....

      Mr. Terry and Mr. Robinson died as a result of gunshot wounds to the
      head. Both young men were shot twice in the head. . . . The wounds
      were consistent with an execution-type slaying. The evidence proved
      beyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendant shot both men. He was
      armed with a .22 caliber rifle which belonged to his father.

Maples v. State, 758 So. 2d 1, 14–15 (Ala. Crim. App. 1999).            After

executing his friends, Maples left Terry’s body lying in the driveway and

dumped Robinson’s body in a nearby creek. The state court pointed out

where the bodies were found, stating:

                                        23
              Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 24 of 71


      At some time around 1:00 a.m. on July 8, 1995, the Defendant’s half-
      brother, Daniel Maples, and his friend, Matt Shell, arrived at the
      residence on Mud Tavern Road and found the body of Stacy Terry
      lying in the driveway close to the trailer where the Defendant and his
      half-brother lived with their father and the Defendant’s stepmother.

      At some time around 9:00 p.m. on July 8, 1995, the Decatur police
      received a report of a body found in a creek commonly referred to as
      Mud Tavern Creek, one mile down the road from the Defendant’s
      residence. The body was identified as that of Barry Robinson II.

Id. at 15. After learning that Maples killed the victims, the police found Maples in

a motel in Nashville, Tennessee a month later, still in possession of Terry’s red

Camaro. Id.

      The 1995 indictment charged: (1) that Maples, pursuant to one course of

conduct, did intentionally murder Stacy Terry and Barry Robinson by shooting

them with a rifle (Count I); and (2) did intentionally murder Terry while Maples

was in the course of committing the theft of Terry’s 1995 Chevrolet Camaro

automobile (Count II). Given the overwhelming evidence of guilt and Maples’s

confession, the jury convicted Maples of the capital murders.

                               II. PENALTY PHASE

      The State did not present any evidence during the penalty phase. Instead,

Maples’s trial counsel presented extensive mitigating evidence from these four

witnesses: Dr. Allen Shealy and family members Elyse, Kenneth, and Phillip

Maples.


                                         24
               Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 25 of 71


         The mitigation evidence fell into these four categories: (1) Maples’s birth

mother’s abuse and neglect of Maples from birth to age three; (2) his alcohol and

drug abuse and his attempts to overcome them by attending Quest Rehab; (3) his

assistance to law enforcement in a drug case; and (4) the care and high regard

Maples’s family and friends had for him. As to these categories, I detail the trial

mitigation evidence and later compare it to Maples’s new mitigating evidence (i.e.,

his factual allegations in the amended collateral petitions, which the district court

accepted as true and proven for purposes of its prejudice ruling).

                 III.   MITIGATION EVIDENCE AT 1997 TRIAL

A.       Dr. Shealy

         At defense counsel’s request, the state trial court ordered that a doctor from

the State’s medical facility evaluate Maples to determine (1) his mental state at the

time of the murders and (2) his competence to stand trial. Importantly, as to the

mitigation issue here, defense counsel also asked for and obtained funds to retain

the separate services of psychologist Dr. Allen Shealy, noting that such assistance

would be vital to proving mitigating circumstances during the penalty phase of

trial.

         Dr. Shealy has impressive credentials, including a Ph.D. in clinical

psychology, certifications from the Alabama Board of Examiners in Psychology

and the American Board of Examiners in Professional Psychology, and was the

                                            25
              Case: 15-14586      Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 26 of 71


author of numerous scholarly articles and publications. At the time he interviewed

Maples in 1997, Dr. Shealy had served: (1) as a professor at the University of

Alabama’s medical school (in the departments of psychiatry and psychology)

and/or the University of Alabama’s department of criminal justice for almost thirty

years; (2) as the director of psychology at an Alabama hospital for eight years; and

(3) in clinical private practice for fifteen years.

       Dr. Shealy’s evaluation consisted of “an extensive interview and history and

mental status exam” along with the administration of tests to gauge Maples’s

intelligence, personality, psychoneurological deficits, and reading level. Dr.

Shealy testified that he gave Maples: (1) the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale

(“WAIS”) test, which is the “most reliable measure of intelligence”; (2) the

Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (“MMPI”); (3) projective testing

(e.g., showing people drawings, ink blots, etc., and “asking what their perceptions

are and comparing that to other people”); and (4) the Wide Range Achievement

Test (“WRAT”) to gauge reading level. According to Dr. Shealy, these tests are

widely used among psychologists, and he performed them as part of “a complete

psychological evaluation” of Maples. As discussed later, Maples had average

intelligence but could read at a college level.

       Dr. Shealy spent four to five hours with Maples. Prior to the evaluation,

Maples’s lawyers provided Dr. Shealy with “some background” information. Dr.

                                            26
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 27 of 71


Shealy determined that Maples was oriented in person, time, place, and

circumstances.

      During the evaluation, Dr. Shealy had Maples describe his recollection of

the murders and the events leading up to them. Maples told Dr. Shealy that he had

attended drug rehab at Quest Treatment Center a year or so before the murders and,

prior to that, was using a host of illegal drugs. Maples acknowledged to Dr. Shealy

that “beginning at about age seventeen and for about three years he was using

marijuana, cocaine, LSD, he had used heroin once, he had used Ecstasy, various

pills, crack cocaine, methamphetamine, PCP, and something called Crank.”

      Dr. Shealy had Maples describe his use of alcohol and drugs, noting

Maples’s “lack of memory for the events.” Dr. Shealy explained to the jury: (1)

that there are certain drugs and combinations of drugs and alcohol that would make

it difficult for Maples to recall events; (2) that he was thus interested in knowing

what “chemical state” Maples’s brain was in at the time of the murders, including

the type and amount of substances Maples had ingested; and (3) he wanted to

know roughly how much alcohol Maples had that night and if Maples had smoked

marijuana or taken any other drugs in order to “see what the mix was.”

      Maples told Dr. Shealy that he was drinking steadily for approximately ten

hours before the shootings—he started at around 2:00 that afternoon, had seven or

eight beers in the early evening, four to five more beers at Terry’s sister’s house,

                                          27
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 28 of 71


and then “seven or eight mixed drinks” at the Caddy Shack. Maples also smoked a

joint of marijuana at 3:00 that afternoon. Maples stopped drinking at 10:00 p.m.

when he and Terry went to the pool hall. They left the pool hall with Robinson

around midnight. Terry told Maples that they had to give Robinson a ride home,

and Terry dropped Maples off first.

      Maples told Dr. Shealy that “his memory started getting fuzzy when he came

out of the house that night. [Maples] didn’t remember what made him come

outside after he went in the house after he was dropped off there.” Dr. Shealy

testified that Maples told him the following details about the murders.

      Maples remembered that Terry dropped him off at home, and Maples told

Terry to call him the next day “and they would play golf or something.” Maples

got out of the car and had some trouble finding his keys or fumbled for his keys,

but he eventually got into the house.

      Once inside the house, Maples: (1) “opened his parents’ bedroom door

because he knew he could see the car from there”; (2) saw the car was still in front

of the house and saw Robinson standing up outside the car; and (3) observed that

“it was a low built car, and [Robinson] was slouched over like he was looking into

the car and had his head inside the door.” Maples told Dr. Shealy that the next

things he remembered were: (1) “seeing Twinky [Terry] with his head laid back in

the seat” and he remembered a lot of blood on the side of Terry’s face; (2) “putting

                                         28
              Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018     Page: 29 of 71


the gun down, . . . going up to the car, Twinky being in the passenger seat and

[Robinson] being half in and half out of the car”; and (3) “checking both of their

pulses and realiz[ing] that they both were dead.”

      Then Maples told Dr. Shealy that he: (1) “kind of freaked out and didn’t

know what to do so he pulled Twinky [Terry] out of the car, checked his pulse

again”; (2) he “stood there for two to three minutes trying to figure out what to

do”; (3) he “thought about calling the police but he knew they would arrest him

whether he left or whether he didn’t”; (4) he “couldn’t pick up Twinky [Terry]

because he was too heavy, so he left him”; and (5) he put Robinson “the rest of the

way in the car and drove back towards Decatur and came to a creek and knew he

couldn’t ride around with a body in the car, so he threw the body in the creek.”

      Dr. Shealy asked Maples if he had experience with traumatic situations, and

Maples replied that he had found a friend of his dead in 1994 or 1995. Maples

“was the first one on the scene of a car accident, and . . . it looked like [the

friend’s] head had been cut off.” In 1992, Maples came upon another car accident

and saw a girl’s lifeless body. This shocked him because “her face was

particularly torn up.”

      While Dr. Shealy said it was “hard to say with any specificity” how much

alcohol and/or drugs Maples had consumed prior to the murders, he thought “it

was clear that [Maples] wasn’t so intoxicated that his memory was totally wiped

                                           29
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 30 of 71


out because he remembered the details of what happened before such as getting out

of the car and looking for his keys. He [Maples] remembered the details

afterwards in terms of checking the pulses.”

      From these facts, Dr. Shealy formed several hypotheses, including:

(1) Maples had a “dissociative experience where he blocked out that part from his

memory which would have been perhaps contributed to by the intoxication; the

alcohol and drugs”; or (2) “because of his heavy hallucinogenic drug usage, LSD

and so forth, it could have been a dissociative experience related to a flashback.”

Maples had told Dr. Shealy that he previously had experienced “several bad trips

and one flashback” while he was using LSD in 1992 or 1993.

      During the evaluation, Dr. Shealy questioned Maples about his family

history. Maples had a “good relationship” with his father (Phillip Maples), but

Maples reported that his birth mother was abusive and neglectful. Maples’s birth

mother “beat him a lot.” His birth mother even tied Maples to a chair and whipped

him with a broom handle. Maples told Dr. Shealy that his birth mother was

“crazy.” His birth mother had stabbed his father and poured hot grease on his

father while he was sleeping. When Maples would stay with his grandmother on

the weekends, Maples would arrive with “fingernail marks on his neck and bruises

on his body from his mother’s abuse.” When his grandmother later told him about

these incidents, Maples “got angry and wondered what he had done to cause it.”

                                         30
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 31 of 71


According to Maples’s grandmother, his mother “had run away with him at one

time to Pennsylvania.”

      When Maples was three years old, his birth mother and father divorced, and

his mother moved away. Maples did not see his mother again until he was 17 or

18 years old, when he went to live with her briefly. At age 17 or 18, Maples lived

with his mother for only two to three months and described her as “easily

angered.” Maples said “he had a lot of questions he wanted to ask her, why after

fifteen years of no contact, why she wanted to see him now.”

      When Maples was four years old, his father, Phillip, remarried. Maples told

Dr. Shealy that “he always got along with [his stepmother Elyse] real good all in

all.” Maples related that his father was the disciplinarian, “that discipline was

being whipped with a belt when he was younger and as he became older it was

being grounded or having restrictions placed on him.” Maples did say that his

father “got drunk” when Maples was young.

      Maples performed well academically and got along with his classmates

throughout grammar school and junior high school. Maples began smoking

marijuana when he was 11 or 12 and started drinking alcohol when he was 13. His

parents “stayed on him” about his grades and his friends. Although he had been in

advanced academic classes when he was younger, Maples (at age 18) dropped out

of school in 12th grade in 1992.

                                          31
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 32 of 71


      Dr. Shealy said that there was “[n]othing remarkable” about Maples’s

history of romantic relationships “except perhaps sexual relations beginning at age

fourteen.” Dr. Shealy opined that Maples’s romantic relationships were “not a

major factor in terms of understanding his psychological and emotional

involvement and personality involvement.”

      Dr. Shealy asked about Maples’s friendships and learned that Maples’s “best

friend in growing up,” Kenneth, had slept with Maples’s girlfriend. Maples

admitted that he later “got even with” Kenneth during a drug deal. Dr. Shealy

asked about Maples’s relationship with Jamie Dobbs, who Maples met in 1993 and

who introduced Maples to cocaine. Dobbs had a “big inheritance” and the two

men spent their time partying and doing drugs. In addition, Maples had “spent a

lot of time on the street.” According to Maples, the spring of 1993 to the

beginning of 1994 “were the street days and heavy drug use days.” The murders

were committed in July 1995, after Maples was released from drug treatment at the

Quest rehab facility in January 1995.

      Dr. Shealy explained to the jury how Maples’s abusive and neglectful

mother had a long-lasting effect on Maples. Dr. Shealy testified that the abuse and

abandonment Maples’s mother inflicted on him occurred at a very vulnerable age.

Because infants are totally dependent on their mothers, an abusive mother “has a

lot of long-term effects on people.” Dr. Shealy emphasized that “[c]hildren who

                                         32
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 33 of 71


have been abused or neglected or abandoned during early childhood are much

more likely” to rebel against authority, “act out in some antisocial ways,” and

abuse drugs and alcohol. Substance abuse, he explained, was a common tactic to

numb the emotional pain of the mother’s abuse. Dr. Shealy said this was Maples’s

story—an abused child growing into “a man of the streets . . . somebody who had

taken the tough guy position.” In Dr. Shealy’s opinion, Maples had feelings, but

he would numb them or pretend they did not exist.

      Dr. Shealy also interviewed a police officer, Officer Frost, who worked at

the jail where Maples was held. Officer Frost was friends with and knew Maples

in high school. According to Officer Frost, Maples played varsity football and

baseball in high school. Maples was not a troublemaker at school but was, rather,

a “perfectionist” who was concerned about his image. In 1992, when Maples was

18, he dropped out of school and was denied entry to the Army due to a failed drug

test. This, according to Dr. Shealy, was the start of Maples’s “downfall.”

      According to the tests performed by Dr. Shealy, Maples was of average

intelligence but could read at a college level. Dr. Shealy commented that it was

“unusual” for a defendant’s achievement level to surpass his intelligence, and this

suggested that Maples had “applied himself and been a good student.” It also fit

with Officer Frost’s description of Maples as a perfectionist.




                                         33
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 34 of 71


       Dr. Shealy also performed a personality test on Maples by having Maples

answer 566 true/false questions and then feeding the answers into a computer

program, which in turn generated results. Based on the computer program, the

Axis II 3 “diagnosis” was “passive aggressive personality disorder.” Dr. Shealy

testified that the lower-level “diagnostic impressions” generated by the personality

test were “adjustment disorder with depressed mood,” “[o]rganic personal

syndrome,” “alcohol abuse and psycho active substance abuse,” and “dissociative

disorder.” Dr. Shealy said he did not find any evidence of brain damage.

       Based on the computer program’s results, Dr. Shealy explained Maples’s

personality disorder this way: “Many of these individuals control their anger most

of the time at a great emotional expense. That is, they are over controlled.

However, some may prove to be dangerous or unpredictable. . . . If sufficiently

provoked they can explode in an outburst of passion often seen as unexpected by

those around them and violently assault their provoker and others present as well.”

Dr. Shealy said that this diagnosis “fits with the evidence that during high school

he [Maples] was very well behaved, he had a period of pretty intense acting out

which related to substance abuse and alcohol abuse, and there was this


       3
        “The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (‘DSM’) organizes
psychiatric diagnoses into several dimensions or axes: Axis I pertains to all psychological
diagnostic categories except mental retardation and personality disorders, and Axis II pertains to
mental retardation and personality disorders.” Jones v. GDCP Warden, 815 F.3d 689, 709 n.3
(11th Cir. 2016).

                                                34
               Case: 15-14586   Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 35 of 71


perfectionistic pattern, over controlled, and probably a lot of seething anger

underneath having to do with [his] early childhood experience of being abused.”

       Dr. Shealy told the jury that Maples’s use of drugs and alcohol could be the

“cue that would trigger something from the past. It could be something in the

present that could provoke an outburst.” Dr. Shealy explained to the jury that

individuals with passive aggressive personality disorder “build an emotional wall

around themselves” that can be eroded by substance abuse or intoxication. Dr.

Shealy stated that either a “sufficiently strong stimulus” or “some incapacitation as

a result of intoxication” could provoke an outburst. Dr. Shealy also explained that

his diagnosis of passive aggressive personality disorder relates back to, and is a

product of, the trauma in Maples’s childhood because abused children “are likely .

. . to act out.”

       Dr. Shealy’s final opinion was that, given Maples’s history and his alcohol

and marijuana use during the ten hours or so before the murders, Maples was

impaired in terms of his capacity to behave in a normal fashion or to conform his

behavior to the requirements of the law.

       As part of his preparation, Dr. Shealy also reviewed a report prepared by Dr.

Lawrence Maier, a psychologist with the state department of mental health. Dr.

Maier performed a structured interview of Maples but did not conduct any

psychological testing. Dr. Maier found that Maples had “probable personality

                                           35
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 36 of 71


disorder antisocial type” and “poly substance abuse,” both of which are, according

to Dr. Shealy, consistent with his own findings and conclusions.

      During the State’s cross-examination, Dr. Shealy admitted that there was not

much difference between his diagnosis and Dr. Maier’s. Dr. Shealy explained that

both disorders involve anger, but one is expressed as “over controlled hostility”

and the other is typically expressed towards others. Dr. Maier had not conducted

any personality testing, but only interviewed Maples. Dr. Shealy said that, if he

had not conducted the personality testing, he “probably” would have reached the

same conclusion as Dr. Maier.

      Dr. Shealy acknowledged that “the diagnostic impression of a passive

aggressive personality disorder was a diagnostic impression arrived at by the

computer program.” But Dr. Shealy insisted that his own opinion was based not

only on the computer results but also on Maples’s history and his personal

observations of Maples. For example, Dr. Shealy administered the Bender-Gestalt

Visual-Motor test to Maples, and Dr. Shealy noted that Maples drew the figures in

a very organized, precise, and exacting way, even erasing one drawing twice to get

an angle exactly right. This suggested to Dr. Shealy that Maples was “not

impulsive,” but was “orderly, organized, careful, [and] conscientious.” To Dr.

Shealy, this meant that Maples was not someone who suffered from a “conduct

disorder,” or an “impulse control disorder,” or even “chronic acting out.”

                                         36
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 37 of 71


B.    Stepmother Elyse Maples

      Maples’s stepmother, Elyse Maples, testified that Maples was a good and

smart child who did not get into trouble and that his birth mother abused him.

Elyse and Maples’s father were married for 20 years and had one child together.

Stepmother Elyse had known Maples since he was three years old. Elyse

described him as a “typical kid” who was “very fun loving” and “enjoyed being

around other kids a lot.” Although Maples was “adventuresome” as a child and

“liked to have his daddy’s attention,” “he wasn’t somebody that got in trouble a

lot.” Elyse said that Maples was smart and did well in school. [Id.] He tested

“above average” in kindergarten and was in advanced classes until the fourth

grade. During those years, Elyse said that she had a good relationship with

Maples. Elyse tried to be a mother to Maples as best she could.

      When Maples was in sixth or seventh grade, his grades started falling.

Based on Elyse’s observation, Maples did not have a drug problem until after he

came back from living with his biological mother when he was 17 or 18 years old.

During the time that Maples lived with his mother, his mother abused him. His

birth mother would call Elyse and say she did not want him at home “when her

company came over.” Elyse testified that Maples’s mother called her “three weeks

after she hadn’t seen him any more and asked me if he came home and he hadn’t,




                                        37
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 38 of 71


so he was basically on the streets then.” Maples initially would not return to his

father and stepmother’s home, so he “was actually on the street basically.”

      When Maples did return, Elyse noticed that he “would stay out until the

early hours of the morning,” and he was drinking and running with a crowd who

were known for using drugs. Maples’s father and stepmother tried several tactics

to address their son’s drug problem, but because Maples “didn’t have any

insurance and at the time was basically indigent,” most treatment facilities would

not accept him. Eventually, Maples sought drug treatment and was accepted at the

Quest drug rehab center. That treatment ended in January 1995, and Elyse saw “a

lot of improvement” in Maples.

      Elyse testified that Maples “had worked with the Decatur city police to catch

somebody with some drugs, and we had some threats—some telephone threats and

we just didn’t feel like [Maples] would be safe in the area so we moved him.” At

this point, Maples moved to his uncle’s house in Tennessee.

      Elyse stated that she had attended the trial and “[t]hat’s not the Corey

Maples I knew and it’s still not the Corey Maples I know.”

C.    Uncle Kenneth Maples

      Maples’s uncle also testified. Kenneth Maples worked for the local fire

department, and he was at the scene of the murders that night as part of his job.

Kenneth testified that Maples was “okay” growing up. Kenneth confirmed that

                                         38
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 39 of 71


Maples’s birth mother abandoned Maples and the family. Kenneth never saw

Maples’s mother around him. Kenneth agreed that Maples was “a pretty good

kid,” that Maples “got messed up on drugs,” and that Maples would not have

committed the crimes if not for “drugs in his life.”

      In addition to testimony that Maples was a good kid until he started abusing

drugs, trial counsel in the guilt phase had already presented testimony that Maples

was trustworthy. During the guilt phase, Maples’s lawyers called Allen Birdsong,

Maples’s friend and former employer, who testified that Maples was trustworthy.

For example, Birdsong testified that Maples lived with him in Tennessee for a time

and worked for him doing cable T.V. installation. Birdsong said that Maples was

with him when he cashed business checks for thousands of dollars, and Maples

knew Birdsong had three trucks. Birdsong said he trusted Maples with his things.

D.    Father Phillip Maples

      Maples’s father, Phillip Maples, testified last and gave vivid examples of

how Maples’s birth mother physically and emotionally abused their son. Phillip

described Maples’s birth mother as “crazy” and “a nut case.” Phillip explained

that Maples’s mother tried to kill Maples and him on “several different occasions.”

Phillip testified that Maples’s mother “beat [Maples] on several occasions, choked

him, left him in the car with the windows rolled up, slapped him, you know, just

crazy stuff.” Phillip stated that he was at work when the birth mother tied Maples

                                         39
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 40 of 71


to a chair and beat him with a broom handle, and Phillip came home to find bruises

and rope marks on his two-year-old son. That was the “final straw,” and he

divorced Maples’s mother when Maples was 2 or 3 years old.

      Phillip testified that Maples’s mother viciously attacked him on several

occasions by stabbing him, shooting at him, and pouring hot grease on him while

he slept. Phillip explained that “[y]ou could be talking to her one minute and she

would be fine and the next minute she was a whole other person in another world.”

      Phillip was “totally against” Maples going to live with his mother when

Maples was 17. Phillip agreed with defense counsel that Maples’s mother seemed

to be ashamed of him because she kicked him out of the house when she had

friends coming over and she never came to the trial.

      Phillip admitted that he knew Maples drank “a little bit” as a teenager, but he

did not realize Maples was using drugs at that time. After Maples went to stay

with his birth mother, Phillip saw a change in his son. “[I]t was like his mind was

wandering a lot,” Phillip explained. Maples used to call his father and check in,

but Phillip and Elyse “didn’t hear from him more and more and more . . . and we

heard from different people that the folks he was running around with . . . was

well-known into drugs.” Phillip reiterated that Maples eventually went to drug

therapy, and it helped him. Phillip testified that his son was “a good kid.” Phillip




                                         40
               Case: 15-14586   Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 41 of 71


said that Maples’s birth mother was “just the woman that had him. . . . [Elyse] is

his mother.”

      In addition to Dr. Shealy’s and his family’s testimony about Maples’s

substance abuse during the penalty phase, there had already been evidence of

Maples’s alcohol and substance abuse during the trial.

      The trial evidence in the guilt phase revealed that Maples was drinking the

night of the murders. In his written statement to police, Maples wrote that, several

hours before the murders, he had “6 or 7 beers” but “didn’t feel very drunk.” Two

women with Maples and Terry earlier that night testified that all four of them were

drinking at the Caddy Shack, a local restaurant, although Maples did not appear

drunk or high. The owner of the pool hall where all three men spent time that

night testified that Maples had trouble getting out of the car when he arrived.

Another witness from the pool hall testified that he did not know whether Maples

was drunk that night, but that Maples was not shooting pool as well as normal and

seemed “a little hyper.” During the defense’s case-in-chief, Maples presented

evidence from two witnesses who said that, although he had been drinking that

day, Maples did not seem intoxicated.

      The State presented evidence that Maples was also using drugs that day.

After killing Terry and Robinson in execution style, Maples drove to the home of

Heather Davis and April Phillips. Phillips testified that Maples had drugs in his

                                         41
             Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 42 of 71


hand and “kept asking” her if she wanted to “get messed up,” (do drugs). Maples

told her “he had been doing crystal meth and crack.” After leaving Phillips’s

house, Maples went to the home of James Smith, a.k.a. “Fishbone,” and tried to

buy drugs. When Fishbone did not sell him drugs, Maples left with another man to

“get some crack.”

      In a videotaped interview shown to the jury, Maples admitted to police his

execution-style killings and that he smoked marijuana that night, but he denied

consuming any hard drugs. In the video, Maples acknowledged having “seven or

eight” beers and some liquor in the hours leading up to the murders. Later, Maples

stated that he had between six and seven beers by the time he left a party at Terry’s

sister’s house that night at about 7:30-7:45 p.m. Maples said he could tell he had

had six beers, but he was not “starting to get drunk or staggering around or

anything.”

      Maples told investigators that “personal problems” had been on his mind,

but his anger and gloominess had nothing to do with the victims. Maples said

drinking would exacerbate these negative thoughts. Maples said he would think

about how he was a “screw-up,” he was lonely, “things about my real mom,” and

he was down on himself because of problems he had caused his family.




                                         42
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 43 of 71


E.    Trial Counsel’s Closing Stressed Multiple Mitigation Factors

      At the close of the sentencing-phase evidence, Maples’s trial counsel argued

that the following mitigating factors warranted a life sentence: (1) Maples’s lack of

a significant criminal history; (2) Maples acted under the influence of extreme

mental or emotional disturbance; (3) Dr. Shealy had testified that Maples’s

capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially

impaired; (4) Maples’s age (21) at the time of the murders; (5) the abandonment,

abuse, and neglect by Maples’s birth mother; (6) Maples’s past drug dependency;

(7) Maples’s attempts to control his drug addiction by going to a drug rehab

program; (8) Maples’s assistance to law enforcement; (9) Maples’s diminished

mental capacity at the time of the murders due to his consumption of alcohol; (10)

Maples’s display of remorse and candor and acceptance of full responsibility for

his crimes in his videotaped confession to police; and (11) the fact that “the crime

was absent of any prolonged suffering or torture.”

                              IV. 1997 SENTENCING

      On October 31, 1997, the jury recommended death by a 10-2 vote. At the

November 21, 1997, sentencing hearing, the state trial court judge accepted the

jury’s recommendation and sentenced Maples to death on both murders.

      In its November 21, 1997 sentencing order, the state trial court explained

that the State had proven the existence of one statutory aggravating circumstance:

                                         43
              Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 44 of 71


Maples committed the capital murder offense while engaged in the commission of

a robbery of the victim’s red Camaro. The state trial court also found the existence

of one statutory mitigating circumstance: Maples had no significant prior criminal

history.

       The state trial court found that Maples’s alcohol consumption on the night of

the murders did not establish that Maples was so severely impaired that he could

not appreciate the criminality of his conduct that night. Further, the court noted

that Maples stole the vehicle of victim Terry and fled the state because he knew the

authorities would be after him. The court found the evidence too unpersuasive to

support the statutory mitigating circumstances of (1) Maples being under extreme

mental or emotional disturbance or (2) substantial impairment of Maples’s capacity

to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.

       The state trial court acknowledged Dr. Shealy’s diagnosis of a passive-

aggressive personality disorder caused by his birth mother’s abuse of Maples and

that Dr. Shealy had testified that alcohol and past drug abuse might be a trigger for

Maples’s actions on the night of the murders. And the state trial court discussed

how Maples had presented seven additional mitigating circumstances, on top of

those listed in the statute.

       First, the state trial court did not doubt that Maples was abused and

abandoned by his birth mother. Maples’s evidence proved that Maples “is a

                                          44
             Case: 15-14586      Date Filed: 04/05/2018      Page: 45 of 71


troubled young man with a history of abuse from his mother and self-abuse

through drugs and alcohol.”

      Second, the state trial court acknowledged that the trial testimony

established that Maples had a “drug dependency” on a host of illegal drugs and

“has suffered from addiction to various controlled substances.”

      Third, the state trial court credited the testimony from Phillip and Elyse

Maples that Maples had tried to stop using drugs and had attended drug rehab.

      Fourth, as to Maples’s cooperation with police, the state trial court noted that

Maples’s stepmother testified that Maples had assisted the city police “in

apprehending a drug violator.”

      Fifth, Maples had presented his “diminished mental capacity at the time of

the crime due to his consumption of alcohol” as a non-statutory mitigating factor.

But the state trial court was not convinced on this point.

      Lastly, the state trial court credited Maples’s “candor” in his confession to

police. The state trial court concluded that the victims not experiencing prolonged

suffering or torture was not a mitigating factor.

      In weighing the aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the state trial

court wrote that it did find “several non-statutory mitigating circumstances in

addition to the one statutory mitigating circumstance, but found them weak and




                                          45
             Case: 15-14586      Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 46 of 71


unpersuasive.” In sum, the state trial court found “[t]he statutory aggravating

circumstance far outweighed the mitigating facts.”

      On direct appeal, the Alabama appellate courts affirmed Maples’s

convictions and two death sentences. Maples v. State, 758 So. 2d 1 (Ala. Crim.

App. 1999); Ex parte Maples, 758 So. 2d 81 (Ala. 1999).

       V. POST-CONVICTION PROCEEDINGS IN STATE COURT

      Maples pursued collateral relief in state court. In 2001, and through new

counsel, Maples filed a petition for relief pursuant to Rule 32 of the Alabama Rules

of Criminal Procedure (the “initial Rule 32 petition”). In September 2001, the

State filed (1) an answer and motion to dismiss the initial Rule 32 petition, and (2)

a proposed order as to the allegations in the initial Rule 32 petition.

      In December 2001, Maples’s counsel filed an amended Rule 32 petition,

which is, in some places, a verbatim copy of the initial Rule 32 petition (the

“amended Rule 32 petition”). However, in critical areas of the mitigation claim,

the amended Rule 32 petition added names of new mitigation witnesses and the

substance of those witnesses’ alleged testimony about specific incidents.

      As noted in the majority opinion of my colleagues, the state Rule 32 court in

2003 dismissed Maples’s amended Rule 32 petition on the pleadings. But the state

Rule 32 court signed verbatim the State’s September 2001 proposed order, even

though that order was drafted prior to Maples filing his amended Rule 32 petition

                                          46
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 47 of 71


and thus did not address the many substantive new allegations contained in

Maples’s amended Rule 32 petition. The Rule 32 court merely struck through

“2001” on the signature line, wrote in the 2003 date, and signed the order.

      Accordingly, I agree with the majority opinion that the state court’s Rule 32

decision (1) relied on a “wrong set of facts” taken from the initial Rule 32 petition

in 2001, (2) did not consider the additional, substantive mitigation facts alleged in

the amended Rule 32 petition in 2003, and (3) thus did not consider the totality of

the available mitigating evidence. Importantly too, under the unique procedural

history here, Maples did not timely appeal the Rule 32 court’s ruling and, thus,

there is no Alabama appellate decision on Maples’s amended Rule 32 petition to

review.

      As a result, the federal district court, and now this Court, are left with only

the state trial court’s Rule 32 decision that (1) did not mention or consider

Maples’s operative amended Rule 32 petition, and (2) incorrectly said Maples had

not named his new mitigation witnesses and had not produced the substance of

their mitigation testimony, when in fact Maples had done just that in his amended

Rule 32 petition. Thus, I agree with my colleagues’ majority opinion that the

district court, and now this Court, must conduct de novo review.

      Where the majority and I part company is over the prejudice ruling in the

majority opinion. Taking as true all factual allegations in Maples’s amended Rule

                                          47
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 48 of 71


32 and § 2254 petitions,4 I agree with the district court that Maples has not shown

either actual prejudice to overcome his procedural default or Strickland prejudice.

The district court first denied the amended § 2254 petition based on Maples’s

failure to timely appeal the Rule 32 court’s decision and failure to exhaust his

mitigation claim in state court. This Court affirmed. Maples v. Allen, 586 F.3d

879 (11th Cir. 2009).

       Reversing, the United States Supreme Court found that Maples’s collateral

counsel (Sullivan & Cromwell in New York), who filed Maples’s amended Rule

32 petition and did not timely appeal the Rule 32 court’s decision, essentially

“abandoned” him, which constituted “ample cause . . . to excuse the procedural

default in which he was trapped when counsel of record abandoned him without a

word of warning.” Maples v. Thomas, 565 U.S. 266, 289, 132 S. Ct. 912, 927

(2012).

       The Supreme Court, however, remanded to our Court to consider whether

Maples could establish the prejudice necessary to excuse his procedural default, id.

at 927-28, and we remanded the prejudice issue to the district court. Maples v.

Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr., 460 F. App’x 860 (11th Cir. 2012) (unpublished).

The district court concluded Maples had not established prejudice to excuse his


       4
         Maples’s allegations in his amended Rule 32 petition are substantially identical to those
in his amended § 2254 petition, although his § 2254 petition alleged for the first time that his
maternal grandmother suffered from Pseudotumor Cerebri, a brain condition.
                                                48
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 49 of 71


procedural default or Strickland prejudice either. This is now Maples’s appeal of

that prejudice ruling. I review the district court’s thorough order and then why I

agree Maples has not shown prejudice.

                 VI. DISTRICT COURT’S PREJUDICE RULING

       In a 178-page order, the district court denied Maples’s amended § 2254

petition. The district court initially found that the state Rule 32 court’s order was

an adjudication on the merits and was entitled to AEDPA deference. The district

court reasoned that “[a]lthough the wholesale adoption of a party’s proposed

opinion may be disfavored, it is not per se illegal or improper.”

       Nonetheless, the district court also recognized that (1) Maples’s amended

Rule 32 petition provided additional details that were lacking in his initial Rule 32

petition, such as the names of the new witnesses and the substance of their

mitigation testimony, and (2) the Rule 32 court’s ruling that some claims lacked

details and specificity was therefore unreasonable. Thus, the district court also

conducted de novo review of all allegations in Maples’s amended Rule 32 and

§ 2254 petitions.5


       5
        The district court noted that Maples’s reply brief in federal court for the first time also
made new allegations that were never made in his amended Rule 32 petition in state court. For
example, Maples’s reply brief alleged that his father and stepmother, Phillip and Elyse Maples,
abused him physically and emotionally, including beating him, burning him with cigarettes, and
forcing him to sleep in the woods. That is a wholly new claim never made in the amended Rule
32 and § 2254 petitions.
       The district court rejected the new allegations made in the reply brief as unexhausted and
procedurally defaulted. Maples does not appeal that ruling. Indeed, Maples does not rely on
                                                49
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 50 of 71


       At bottom, the district court determined that, even under de novo review and

even if proven, Maples’s allegations did not show the requisite prejudice, his

mitigation claim was procedurally defaulted, and his Strickland claim failed too.

Because the showings of prejudice with respect to procedural default and

Strickland “overlap,” the district court stated that it would consider them

simultaneously. Because the district court took all of Maples’s allegations as true

and proven, the district court referred to Maples’s allegations as “mitigation

evidence.”

       In deciding the prejudice issue in its 178-page order, the district court

grouped Maples’s allegedly new mitigation evidence into these seven subsets: (1)

Maples’s family history (the abuse and abandonment by his birth mother); (2)

Maples’s good character references; (3) Maples’s drug addiction, including his

efforts at recovery, depression, and suicide attempts; (4) Maples’s assistance to law

enforcement; (5) counsel’s failure to procure a “competent” psychological

evaluation; (6) Maples’s post-arrest behavior; and (7) Maples’s head trauma.

       First, as to his abusive childhood inflicted by his birth mother, the district

court concluded the additional mitigation evidence was cumulative of the trial

mitigation evidence because it consisted of “the same examples, perhaps with more

details, or different examples of abuse and abandonment of Maples by his mother.”

these newly added allegations in this appeal at all. In his reply brief on appeal, Maples explicitly
states that his claim relies on the allegations in his amended Rule 32 petition.
                                                50
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 51 of 71


The district court determined that “[e]ven if the state court unreasonably

determined that Maples failed to identify witnesses and the substance of their

testimony in the amended Rule 32 petition, its decision that any additional

testimony from witnesses would have been cumulative of that presented at trial is

not an unreasonable application of Strickland.” Alternatively, the district court

determined that “even if this aspect of the claim is considered de novo, Maples’s

allegations, if true, fail to show Strickland actual prejudice because this court finds

the alleged [mitigation] testimony was merely cumulative of the [mitigation]

testimony presented at trial and would not have changed the result of the penalty

phase.”

      Second, as to Maples’s “character references,” the district court determined

that much of the additional mitigation testimony Maples hopes to offer is

cumulative of the trial testimony by his father, stepmother, Dr. Shealy, and some

witnesses during the guilt phase. In any event, the new character evidence

consisted of generic impressions of Maples’s good nature, which would have only

spurred the prosecution to highlight gruesome details of the murders and argue

how, “despite his intelligence and supportive extended family, Maples chose a

culture of drugs and violence over education and responsibility.” Even under de

novo review, the district court concluded that the additional good-character

testimony was cumulative, refuted by the record, or was at best “generic good

                                          51
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 52 of 71


character evidence that either carries with it an aggravating edge or could have

spurred the prosecutor to undermine it.” In sum, the district court found the new

character evidence “double-edged” and “minimally consequential.”

      Third, as to Maples’s depression, suicide attempts, and drug abuse, the

district court noted that Maples’s amended petitions “frame[d] this claim in such a

way that the relevance of the depression and suicide attempts is tied to another

mitigating factor that was well known to the jury – his history of drug abuse and

his attempted recovery.” The district court concluded that even if Maples’s

depression and suicide attempts were part of the evidence put before the jury to

show that Maples suffered from a serious drug addiction, “this evidence would not

likely have changed the balance of aggravating and mitigating factors such that

there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the penalty phase of trial

would have been different.” While noting that “no reasonable jurist would agree”

with the Rule 32 court that Maples had failed to identify mitigation witnesses and

describe the substance of their testimony in his amended Rule 32 petition on this

point, Maples was not entitled to relief because he had not established prejudice.

      Fourth, as to Maples’s assistance to law enforcement in the arrest of drug

dealer Mark Carrell, the district court found that such testimony “likely would have

caused the prosecutor to present and emphasize Maples’s prior lawless behavior.”

Maples himself had been buying and using illegal drugs for years. The prosecutor

                                         52
                Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 53 of 71


would have emphasized that Maples may have turned informant for reasons of

personal revenge.6

       Fifth, as to Dr. Shealy’s testimony, the district court determined that

Maples’s allegations, even if true, did not show why Dr. Shealy’s diagnosis of

passive-aggressive personality disorder is wrong, how Dr. Shealy’s testimony was

confusing or misleading, or how counsel’s preparation of Dr. Shealy was

inadequate.

       Sixth, as to Maples’s good behavior in jail, the district court found “very

little likelihood that such evidence would have influenced either the jury or the trial

court.”

       Seventh, as to his two instances of head trauma, the district court noted that

Maples had not described: (1) what Elyse Maples or his friends could have said

about the nature and severity of his head injuries; (2) the effect of the head injuries

on his behavior or mental state; or (3) why Dr. Shealy’s testimony failed to

adequately explain the impact of these head injuries. 7



       6
           It was already known to the jury that, on a different occasion, Maples had ripped off his
former best friend, Kenneth, in retribution for Kenneth sleeping with Maples’s girlfriend.
         7
           For the first time before the district court, Maples alleged that his counsel had “notice”
of his “diminished mental capacity” caused by “brain injury.” At trial, Maples’s counsel argued
that he had diminished mental capacity due to alcohol and drug use, not past head traumas. The
district court rejected these new allegations as unexhausted and procedurally defaulted and,
alternatively, concluded that the state court record did not support Maples’s contention that
counsel had “notice” of his now alleged brain injury.

                                                 53
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 54 of 71


      Even accepting as true all of Maples’s allegations in his amended Rule 32

and § 2254 petitions, the district court determined that Maples had not

demonstrated prejudice based on the state-court record and, thus, it denied

Maples’s request for an evidentiary hearing.

      Before discussing why the district court’s prejudice ruling should be

affirmed, I review the relevant law as to prejudice required to overcome procedural

default and Strickland prejudice.

 VII. PREJUDICE FOR PROCEDURAL DEFAULT AND STRICKLAND

      Federal courts may not entertain claims from a state habeas petitioner that

are procedurally defaulted. Maples, 565 U.S. at 280, 132 S. Ct. at 922. Claims are

procedurally defaulted when a state court has declined to address those claims due

to a failure by the prisoner to meet some state procedural requirement and the state

judgment rests on independent and adequate state procedural grounds. Id.

Procedural default can be overcome, however, by a showing of cause and “actual

prejudice.” United States v. Frady, 456 U.S. 152, 167-68, 102 S. Ct. 1584, 1594

(1982). Because the U.S. Supreme Court already determined that cause exists for

Maples’s procedural default (failing to timely appeal the Rule 32 order), the district

court correctly confined its opinion to whether he can establish “actual prejudice”

to excuse his procedural default.




                                         54
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 55 of 71


       The State argues that this means Maples must meet both Strickland’s

prejudice standard and the “more rigorous” “actual prejudice” standard needed to

overcome procedural default. But the district court properly concluded that, under

the particular circumstances here, the prejudice inquiries overlap. See Mincey v.

Head, 206 F.3d 1106, 1147 & n.86 (11th Cir. 2000) (explaining that Strickland

prejudice and the prejudice required to overcome procedural default are “one and

the same”) (citing Prou v. United States, 199 F.3d 37, 49 (1st Cir. 1999)

(concluding that the Frady and Strickland prejudice standards are one and the

same)); see also Harris v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corrs., 874 F.3d 682, 688 (11th

Cir. 2017) (“[T]he prejudice showing for overcoming the procedural default is

coterminous with the prejudice showing [a petitioner] must make to prove [his]

ineffective assistance of counsel claim.”). In other words, in this case, the

procedural-default and merits inquiries fold together—if Maples can show

Strickland prejudice, he has shown “actual prejudice” sufficient to excuse his

procedural default. So this brings us to what Maples must show to establish

Strickland prejudice. 8


       8
         For purposes of this appeal, and because the threshold issue is prejudice, I will assume
arguendo that Maples’s trial counsel’s performance was deficient as to the investigation and
presentation of mitigating evidence and discuss only prejudice.
        At this juncture, there is no testimony by Maples’s trial counsel as to (1) what
investigation they did or did not do and their reasons for doing so, (2) what Maples told them, or
(3) what strategic decisions they made. Therefore, because this case has a threshold prejudice
issue for procedural default and that prejudice analysis is essentially the same as Strickland
prejudice, I focus on the prejudice issue.
                                                55
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 56 of 71


      As for Strickland’s prejudice prong, the standard is whether “there is a

reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the

proceeding would have been different.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694, 104 S. Ct. at

2068. Because Maples alleges ineffective assistance at the penalty phase, he must

show a “reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the sentencer would have

concluded that the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not

warrant death.” Puiatti v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 732 F.3d 1255, 1286 (11th

Cir. 2013) (internal quotation marks omitted). A reasonable probability is “a

probability sufficient to undermine confidence” in the outcome. Johnson, 643 F.3d

at 935 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Rose v. McNeil, 634 F.3d 1224,

1242 (11th Cir. 2011). “The likelihood of a different outcome must be substantial,

not just conceivable.” Rose, 634 F.3d at 1242 (internal quotation marks omitted).

      In assessing prejudice, we consider the totality of the mitigation evidence—

including the evidence adduced at trial and the new evidence adduced at the habeas

proceeding—and “reweigh” it against the evidence in aggravation. Puiatti, 732

F.3d at 1286 (citing Porter v. McCollum, 558 U.S. 30, 41, 130 S. Ct. 447, 453-54

(2009)); see also Wong v. Belmontes, 558 U.S. 15, 26, 130 S. Ct. 383, 390 (2009)

(per curiam) (“[T]he reviewing court must consider all the evidence—the good and

the bad—when evaluating prejudice.”).




                                          56
             Case: 15-14586      Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 57 of 71


      For the reasons explained below, I agree with the district court that Maples

has not established prejudice.

                                 VIII. DISCUSSION

      As an initial matter, there was compelling evidence in aggravation. Maples

killed two young men, one of whom was a good friend, by shooting them each

twice in the head at point-blank range, unceremoniously dumping their bodies, and

stealing his friend’s red Camaro, and cavalierly escaping out of state until he was

caught a month later still with his friend’s car. The state trial court found the

existence of one statutory aggravating circumstance: that Maples committed the

murders during the commission of the theft of his friend’s Camaro. None of

Maples’s post-conviction allegations undermines this statutory highly aggravating

circumstance.

      More importantly, this is not a case in which trial counsel presented no

mitigating evidence. Rather, at trial the jury was well aware of Maples’s abuseive

birth mother, his other family background, his serious drug and alcohol abuse, his

drug rehab, and other personal background. Most of Maples’s new allegations are

cumulative of the themes already advanced at trial.

      Time and again, the United States Supreme Court and this Court have held

that a defendant-petitioner failed to show prejudice when his allegedly new

mitigation evidence was essentially cumulative of that presented at trial. See, e.g.,

                                          57
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 58 of 71


Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170, 200-01, 131 S. Ct. 1388, 1409-10 (2011) (“The

‘new’ evidence largely duplicated the mitigation evidence at trial. School and

medical records basically substantiate the testimony of [the petitioner’s] mother

and brother. Declarations from [the petitioner’s] siblings support his mother’s

testimony that his stepfather was abusive and explain that [the petitioner] was

beaten with fists, belts, and even wooden boards.”); Wong, 558 U.S. at 22-23, 130

S. Ct. at 387-88 (holding that “[s]ome of the [additional mitigating] evidence was

merely cumulative of the humanizing evidence [the petitioner] actually presented”

because the jury was “well-acquainted with [the petitioner’s] background and

potential humanizing features” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Tanzi v. Sec’y,

Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 772 F.3d 644, 660 (11th Cir. 2014) (holding that the mitigating

evidence presented at the petitioner’s postconviction hearing, while not “identical”

to the mitigating evidence presented at trial, was “substantially the same in all

relevant respects (albeit more detailed)”); Holsey v. Warden, Georgia Diagnostic

Prison, 694 F.3d 1230, 1262-66 (11th Cir. 2012) (concluding that the state supreme

court’s determination—that the petitioner’s additional mitigating evidence

regarding his limited intelligence and his troubled, abusive childhood was “largely

cumulative” of the evidence presented at trial—was not unreasonable where the

petitioner merely presented “more details” and a “larger pool of information of the

same type already offered”); Pooler, 702 F.3d at 1276 (rejecting prejudice claim

                                          58
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 59 of 71


where the “new” evidence of the petitioner’s good character and military service

was cumulative of that presented at trial); Boyd, 592 F.3d at 1297-98 (finding that

much of the evidence presented by the petitioner during postconviction

proceedings “was in some measure cumulative” of the trial evidence because

“much (although not all) of the ‘new’ testimony introduced at the post-conviction

hearing would simply have amplified the themes already raised at trial”); Rhode v.

Hall, 582 F.3d 1273, 1287 (11th Cir. 2009) (“At best, the evidence would have

been cumulative, providing more information about [the petitioner]’s bad

childhood and early exposure to drugs and alcohol.”). 9

       The same holds true here. The majority of what Maples presented in his

amended Rule 32 and § 2254 petitions was additional evidence of previous

mitigation factors that were already presented to the jury. For example, Maples

presented to the jury that: (1) his birth mother regularly beat him, choked him, and

slapped him; (2) his birth mother left Maples in the car with the windows rolled up

and once tied Maples to a chair and beat him with a broom handle; (3) his birth

       9
         This approach is consistent with that taken by our sister circuits too. See, e.g., Jackson
v. Bradshaw, 681 F.3d 753, 769–70 (6th Cir. 2012) (holding that evidence presented during
collateral proceedings was “largely cumulative” of evidence presented during sentencing because
the collateral evidence provided only a “larger pool of information of the same type already
offered” at sentencing); Paul v. United States, 534 F.3d 832, 842–43 (8th Cir. 2008) (holding that
“[m]uch of the new [collateral] evidence cited by [the petitioner] [was] largely cumulative of
evidence that was presented . . . at the penalty phase of the trial” although the collateral evidence
might have provided “more detail about [the petitioner]’s difficult and abusive childhood or his
compassionate character”); Buckner v. Polk, 453 F.3d 195, 207 (4th Cir. 2006) (“To the extent
that the [new] affidavits provide new detail of the stories of [the petitioner]’s brother’s death and
his father’s alcoholism, we conclude that this new detail is largely cumulative.”).
                                                59
              Case: 15-14586    Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 60 of 71


mother would also viciously attack his father, Phillip, stabbing him and pouring

hot grease on him; (4) his birth mother abandoned him not once but twice;

(5) when Maples reunited with his birth mother at age 17, he only lived with her

for two to three months, during which time she was again abusive and neglectful;

(6) it was during or directly after this time with his birth mother that Maples

became heavily involved in drugs and was living on the streets; and (7) Phillip

Maples testified that he saw a change in his son after Maples briefly went to live

with his mother at age 17.

        While Maples’s amended Rule 32 and § 2254 petitions provided some

additional details about Maples’s abusive birth mother—her violent, self-

mutilating tantrums, her attack on Phillip with a metal hairbrush, trying to sell

Maples to a neighbor when he was three years old—these are simply “more or

better examples” of the same story. Our Court has instructed that providing a state

collateral court with mere cumulative evidence—that is, a “larger pool of

information of the same type already offered” that “merely amplifie[s] the themes”

of sentencing by “expanding on and providing more details and different

examples” is insufficient to demonstrate prejudice. Holsey, 694 F.3d at 1260-61,

1263.

        Indeed, Maples’s new allegations about how his mother’s abuse affected

him—how he cried for his mother until his early teenage years, how he would ask

                                          60
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 61 of 71


family members about his mother and why she left him, and how her second

abandonment of him when he was 17 deeply hurt him—are very similar to

evidence that the jury heard from his parents, Phillip (father) and Elyse Maples

(stepmother), about how Maples was changed after going to live with his birth

mother at 17, how he fell in with a rough crowd, began doing heavy drugs, and was

living on the streets. It is also strikingly similar to the testimony Dr. Shealy gave

about how the birth mother’s early abuse and neglect likely caused Maples’s drug

abuse and Maples’s desire to project a “tough guy” image. In sum, the jury knew

the parameters and many of the details of Maples’s birth mother’s abuse, along

with the fact that she abandoned Maples not once, but twice. They knew from Dr.

Shealy the long-term effect this sort of parental abuse has on children, and they

heard from Phillip and Elyse Maples how Maples went into a tailspin after his birth

mother left Maples a second time.

      The allegations in the amended Rule 32 and § 2254 petitions at most might

have “amplifie[d]” these themes, but they did not present something radically

different or even new. See id. at 1263. Thus, as to the birth mother’s abuse and

abandonment of Maples, I agree with the district court that the allegations in the

amended Rule 32 and § 2254 petitions are largely cumulative of the evidence put

before the jury and do not change the overall picture. See Marquard v. Sec’y for

Dep’t of Corr., 429 F.3d 1278, 1308 (11th Cir. 2005) (“There is no reason to

                                          61
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 62 of 71


believe that added details about Marquard’s troubled childhood and substance

abuse—which the sentencing court clearly recognized in imposing a death

sentence—would have had any effect on the sentence.”); Robinson v. Moore, 300

F.3d 1320, 1347 (11th Cir. 2002) (“While the additional mitigation witnesses

procured by Robinson’s 3.850 counsel could have presented the resentencing jury

and trial judge with more details, or different examples, of these aspects of

Robinson’s life, these aspects of his life were nonetheless known to the

resentencing jury and trial judge.”).

      But this is not all. The jury also heard ample testimony about Maples’s own

serious problems with drug addiction, his stay at the Quest rehab center in an effort

to stop using drugs and alcohol, his help to law enforcement, and his family’s view

that he was a well-behaved, smart child who did not present any problems until he

began abusing drugs. In that sense, the so-called “new” evidence of his good

moral character, friendliness, efforts to beat his drug addiction, and assistance to

law enforcement are similarly cumulative of the trial testimony. But important to

the prejudice assessment, this “new” evidence carried a bad downside.

      As this Court has noted, a § 2254 petitioner cannot establish prejudice when

there is a “virtual certainty” that the introduction of “good” mitigating evidence

“would have led to the introduction of ‘bad’ evidence.” Reed v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t

of Corr., 593 F.3d 1217, 1246 (11th Cir. 2010); see also Wong, 558 U.S. at 25, 130

                                          62
               Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018      Page: 63 of 71


S. Ct. at 389 (“A heavyhanded case to portray [the petitioner] in a positive light . . .

would have invited the strongest possible evidence in rebuttal—the evidence that

[the petitioner] was responsible for not one but two murders.”).

       Here, the prosecutor could have readily flipped this “good” evidence into a

liability by pointing out how, despite coming from an environment with a loving

and helpful father and step-mother, other affectionate and concerned family

members, and a life full of supportive friends, caring teachers, and skilled coaches,

Maples nonetheless left high school in his senior year and chose a life of drug

addiction and then coldly murdered even his good friend in order to take his

friend’s red Camaro, while killing a second young man in order to do so. See

Jones v. GDCP Warden, 815 F.3d 689, 716-17 (11th Cir. 2016) (noting the

mitigating nature of certain new evidence but pointing out that a “substantial

flaw[]” in that evidence was how it “would have opened the door to a vast array of

aggravating evidence that likely would have overwhelmed the balance of

mitigating evidence”); see also Pooler, 702 F.3d at 1275 (“Much of the 3.850

evidence Pooler claims his trial counsel . . . should have presented in the penalty

phase was not mitigating but aggravating, or else would have opened the door to

the introduction of aggravating evidence that would have diluted its impact.”).10


       10
          The new evidence Maples alleges is testimony from Maples’s childhood friends,
teachers, and other family members, such as the Farrells (an aunt and uncle), the Rays (extended
family), and Daniel Maples (a half-brother). Maples alleges they will testify he had good moral
                                               63
                Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018         Page: 64 of 71


       The belated assistance-to-law-enforcement evidence suffers from similar

problems. The prosecutor could have noted that Maples had a history of both

heavy drug use and getting revenge on people who wronged him—i.e., ripping off

his friend Kenneth Hall during a drug deal after Hall slept with Maples’s

girlfriend—and suggested that Maples’s intentions in helping the police were less

than honorable.

       The other problem with this so-called good-character evidence is that it is

weak in light of Maples’s confession to murdering his good friend and a young

man simply hitching a ride home in such a cold-blooded and execution-style

manner. See Brooks v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr., 719 F.3d 1292, 1301 (11th

Cir. 2013) (“A reasonable jurist could conclude that evidence that Brooks had been

a nice, polite, and nonviolent person would not sway a jury from its

recommendation of death, especially in light of the aggravating circumstances in

the case that directly and powerfully contradicted any generic impression of

Brooks’s good nature.”).

character, was friendly and polite, worked hard, was a fun-loving person, and did what he was
told.
        It is worth noting that at this stage, the district court accepted Maples’s allegations as true
as to the friends, teachers, and other family members who would say good things about him.
However, it remains to be seen (at the evidentiary hearing before the district court) if Maples can
actually prove his allegations or if these witnesses, on cross-examination, might have to admit
Maples’s various negative traits or other bad conduct that the jury never heard about.
        In any event, the State did not introduce any evidence at all at the first penalty phase, but
that would not be what happens when Maples must now try to prove his alleged good moral
character and positive demeanor on remand. But taking all of Maples’s allegations as true and
proven, and even with no additional evidence by the State, the district court properly found
Maples had not shown prejudice.
                                                  64
               Case: 15-14586        Date Filed: 04/05/2018        Page: 65 of 71


       Further, the alleged non-cumulative mitigating evidence is also weak and

unpersuasive. As a new mitigation factor, Maples emphasizes his post-arrest good

behavior, nightmares, and prescription for depression medication. But given the

heinous and cold-blooded nature of Maples’s double murders, I do not believe the

jury would have given this post-arrest mitigating circumstance much, if any,

weight.

       That leaves Maples’s new allegations of depression and suicidal behavior

while he was abusing drugs and his two alleged head traumas. The jury was

actually aware of Maples’s past drug addiction and Dr. Shealy’s diagnosis that

Maples was suffering from mild situational depression, likely caused by being in

prison. But evidence of a wider depression after dropping out of high school, 11 his

multiple suicide attempts (during his periods of drug use), his taking antidepressant

medication while in prison, and his head traumas were mostly not before the jury.

In this regard, trial counsel actually had in their possession Maples’s application to

the Quest drug rehab center, which chronicled his past drug use and suicide

attempts. Maples suggests that Heather Davis, his ex-girlfriend, could have

testified that Maples once took more than 30 sleeping pills and drank a bottle of


       11
          In his amended Rule 32 petition, Maples tied the time frame of his depression to his
years of serious drug use, between the time he dropped out of high school in 1992 and when he
went to drug rehab in 1994. For the first time in his reply brief before the district court, Maples
alleged that he had a long history of depression and emotional disorders, but the district court
rightly did not credit those allegations. I also note again that Maples does not rely on the new
allegations from his reply brief in this appeal.
                                                65
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 66 of 71


alcohol before crashing his step-mother’s car. This is yet another example of new

mitigation evidence that also had a bad downside.

      In any event, there are no allegations regarding: (1) whether Maples’s

depression and suicidal ideation were in place at the time of the murders (which

took place shortly after he got out of drug rehab); (2) what effect, if any, the head

traumas had on Maples, how they affected his cognitive function, if at all, whether

Maples sustained brain damage or how severe any such damage was; or

(3) whether any of these factors contributed to the execution-style slayings of

Terry and Robinson. There are simply no allegations tying Maples’s depression,

suicidal ideation, or alleged head traumas to the brutal double murders he

committed. Indeed, both the trial testimony and post-conviction allegations

demonstrate that Maples is intelligent, read at a college level, and had no brain

damage or neurological deficiencies. The evidence instead points to the cold-

blooded act of a clear-thinking man—he shot his good friend and an acquaintance

at point-blank range, dumped their bodies, stole the red Camaro, and drove it out of

state to enjoy that nice car and escape the consequences. He was not found for

over a month, but for sure he still had that coveted red Camaro.

      Simply put, the cumulative weight of all the allegations of mitigating

evidence made in Maples’s operative petitions falls far short of the powerful and

compelling evidence that the Supreme Court has held sufficient to satisfy the

                                          66
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 67 of 71


prejudice prong in a brutal murder case. See, e.g., Porter, 558 U.S. at 41, 130 S.

Ct. at 454 (“Had Porter’s counsel been effective, the judge and jury . . . would have

heard about (1) Porter’s heroic military service in two of the most critical—and

horrific—battles of the Korean War, (2) his struggles to regain normality upon his

return from war, (3) his childhood history of physical abuse, and (4) his brain

abnormality, difficulty reading and writing, and limited schooling.”); Rompilla v.

Beard, 545 U.S. 374, 390-93, 125 S. Ct. 2456, 2467-69 (2005) (Rompilla’s trial

counsel failed to discover or present evidence that Rompilla (1) had test results

pointing to schizophrenia, fetal alcohol syndrome, and stunted mental

development, (2) was beaten by his father with fists, leather straps, belts, and

sticks, (3) was locked in a small wire mesh dog pen filled with excrement, (4) was

not allowed to visit other children or speak on the phone, and (5) lived without

indoor plumbing, slept in an unheated attic, and attended school in rags); Wiggins

v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 516-17, 534-35, 123 S. Ct. 2527, 2532-33, 2542 (2003)

(trial counsel offered no evidence of Wiggins’s life history, which included

(1) being left alone for days at a time with no food, forcing him to beg for food and

eat paint chips and garbage, (2) beatings for breaking into the locked kitchen, and

(3) being passed among various foster homes, where he was physically abused and

also suffered repeated molestations, rapes, and gang-rapes); Williams v. Taylor,

529 U.S. 362, 395-97, 120 S. Ct. 1495, 1514-15 (2000) (holding that petitioner was

                                          67
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 68 of 71


prejudiced where his trial counsel failed to present evidence of his “nightmarish

childhood,” neglect and abuse by his parents, and “borderline” mental retardation,

along with testimony of the petitioner’s good deeds and improvement while in

prison).

      In addition, Maples’s new mitigation evidence is simply an extension of

what the jury heard, which is critically different from the above cases, in which the

new mitigation was not only powerful, but of a type that counsel did not present at

all in the sentencing phase. See, e.g., Porter, 558 U.S. at 41, 130 S. Ct. at 454

(noting that the “judge and jury at Porter’s original sentencing heard almost

nothing that would humanize Porter or allow them to accurately gauge his moral

culpability,” including the powerful evidence of Porter’s heroic and emotionally

scarring military service); Rompilla, 545 U.S. at 393, 125 S. Ct. at 2469 (finding

that the evidence discovered after trial “adds up to a mitigation case that bears no

relation to the few naked pleas for mercy actually put before the jury”); see also

Hardwick v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 803 F.3d 541, 558-59 (11th Cir. 2015)

(concluding that petitioner had shown prejudice where sentencing judge and jury

heard “none” of the available mitigating evidence regarding the petitioner’s family

history of abuse, neglect, and dysfunction, his years of substance abuse or his

diagnosis of schizophrenia).




                                          68
             Case: 15-14586     Date Filed: 04/05/2018    Page: 69 of 71


      On appeal, Maples relies heavily on a few cases where this Court found

prejudice to exist, but those cases involved materially different factual

circumstances and do not help Maples. For example, in Johnson, this Court

determined that the jury never heard any evidence that: (1) Johnson’s parents were

alcoholics; (2) Johnson was sent to live with his grandparents when his father

abandoned the family; (3) Johnson and his siblings would hide in their bedroom

“huddled together in terror” when his father would come home drunk and beat

their mother; (4) Johnson’s mother severely abused him physically and

emotionally; (5) their grandparents inflicted “horrible” physical and emotional

abuse on their grandchildren in a home his brother described as “pure hell”; and

(6) Johnson witnessed his mother’s repeated suicide attempts and found her body

when she eventually succeeded in killing herself. Johnson, 643 F.3d at 935-37. In

granting habeas relief, this Court concluded that, “[t]he description, details, and

depth of abuse in Johnson’s background . . . far exceeded what the jury was told”

and trial counsel “could have painted for the jury the picture of a young man who

resembled the tormented soul in ‘The Scream.’” Id. at 936, 938.

      Similarly, in Williams v. Allen, the defendant’s mother was the sole

mitigation witness. 542 F.3d 1326, 1329, 1331-32 (11th Cir. 2008). Her “brief

testimony” did not mention the routine and vicious attacks the defendant’s father

would visit upon his wife and children. Id. The mother did little to protect her

                                          69
             Case: 15-14586      Date Filed: 04/05/2018   Page: 70 of 71


children and was herself physically abusive toward the children. Id. at 1332. The

jury did not hear from the psychiatrist, who would have testified that the defendant

had experienced “an extreme brutalizing exposure to trauma,” with a childhood

marked by extensive abuse, neglect, and deprivation. Id. at 1333-34. This Court

held that the mitigation evidence that his trial lawyers failed to discover “paints a

vastly different picture of his background than that created by [his mother’s]

abbreviated testimony.” Id. at 1342.

      In contrast, the Maples jury heard about his birth mother’s abuse and

abandonment from three witnesses and heard from Dr. Shealy that her abuse and

neglect had a long-lasting effect on Maples and caused him to use drugs to numb

the pain.

      In sum, when I review the totality of the mitigating facts alleged in Maples’s

amended Rule 32 and § 2254 petitions, I do not see the stark discrepancy that was

present in the above cases where the Supreme Court and this Court found

prejudice. Rather, this case is more like those where the Supreme Court and this

Court have found no prejudice.

      In light of Maples’s execution-style murders of two victims to steal his

friend’s red Camaro, and the similarity in the basic mitigation stories told at the

sentencing trial and on Rule 32 review, I agree with the district court that Maples

has not demonstrated a reasonable probability that he would have received a

                                          70
               Case: 15-14586       Date Filed: 04/05/2018       Page: 71 of 71


different sentence if his trial counsel had presented the additional mitigation

evidence Maples contends counsel should have.

                                   IX.    CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, I believe precedent requires that we affirm the

district court’s denial of Maples’s § 2254 petition. I respectfully dissent. 12




       12
          To be clear, the majority opinion, as did the district court, accepts all of Maples’s
allegations as true, but it remains to be seen what Maples can actually prove on remand. Notably
too, the district court bypassed and never made a ruling on deficient performance, and the
evidentiary hearing encompasses that issue too. Moreover, on remand, the State will have an
opportunity to present evidence as well. I anticipate that the evidence on remand will be
vigorously disputed, and the district court’s fact findings will need to be thorough and complete.
Given the original 178-page order by the district court, I am confident that a thorough review
will occur once again.
                                               71
