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No. 9998174
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Delaney Marks v. Ronald Davis
No. 9998174 · Decided July 8, 2024
No. 9998174·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 8, 2024
Citation
No. 9998174
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
DELANEY G. MARKS, No. 17-99007
Petitioner-Appellant, D.C. No. 5:11-cv-
02458-LHK
v.
RONALD DAVIS, Warden, OPINION
California State Prison at San Quentin,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
Lucy H. Koh, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted December 14, 2022
Pasadena, California
Filed July 8, 2024
Before: Mary H. Murguia, Chief Judge, and Marsha S.
Berzon and Ryan D. Nelson, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Murguia;
Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Berzon;
Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge R. Nelson
2 MARKS V. DAVIS
SUMMARY *
Habeas Corpus / Death Penalty
The panel affirmed in part and vacated in part the district
court’s judgment denying a federal habeas petition filed by
Delaney Marks, who was convicted of murder and sentenced
to death in California in 1994; and remanded.
In Part I, the panel held that the district court properly
denied relief on Marks’s claim that he was incompetent to
stand trial. Although Marks presented substantial evidence
of incompetence, there was a reasonable basis in the record
for the California Supreme Court to deny this
claim. Considering the record as a whole, the California
Supreme Court’s adjudication of this claim was not so
lacking in justification that there was an error well
understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any
possibility for fairminded disagreement.
In Part II, the panel held that the district court erred by
denying relief on Marks’s claim that he is intellectually
disabled and thus ineligible for the death penalty under
Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002). Marks has shown
that the California Supreme Court’s rejection of this claim
was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in
light of the evidence presented in the state court
proceeding. The state court rejected the opinions of two of
Marks’s experts, Dr. Cowardin and Dr. Woods, on the
strength of factual findings that were erroneous, objectively
unreasonable, and material to the outcome of the
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
MARKS V. DAVIS 3
proceedings. Accordingly, the panel vacated the judgment
in part and remanded to the district court for de novo review
of this claim.
In Part III, the panel held that the district court properly
denied relief on Marks’s claim that the judge adjudicating
his Atkins claim was biased against him. The California
Supreme Court reasonably could have concluded that the
judge did not display a deep-seated favoritism or antagonism
that would make fair judgment impossible. There was
therefore a reasonable basis for the state court to reject this
claim.
In Part IV, the panel held that the district court properly
denied relief on Marks’s claim that he did not knowingly
waive his Fifth Amendment right not to testify at trial. The
California Supreme Court reasonably could have concluded
from the transcript that Marks fully understood the
consequences of his decision. There was therefore a
reasonable basis for the state court to reject this claim.
In Part V, the panel held that the district court properly
denied relief on Marks’s first ineffective assistance of
counsel claim. Marks contended that his attorneys should
have sought funding to retain a mental health expert during
trial to opine on his mental competence. He argued that an
expert would have concluded that he was incompetent and
that this finding would have prompted a second competency
hearing at which he would have been found incompetent to
stand trial. The California Supreme Court reasonably could
have concluded that a second competency hearing would
have reached the same conclusion as a jury which had
already found Marks competent. The state court therefore
reasonably could have concluded that Marks failed to
demonstrate a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
4 MARKS V. DAVIS
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
have been different.
In Part VI, the panel held that the district court properly
denied relief on Marks’s second ineffective assistance of
counsel claim relating to trial counsel’s failure to object to
false or misleading statements made by the prosecution
during penalty-phase closing argument. The panel granted a
certificate of appealability on this claim, but agreed with the
district court that Marks neither exhausted this claim in the
California courts nor adequately pleaded the claim in his
federal petition.
Judge Berzon concurred in part and dissented in
part. She joined the majority in reversing the district court’s
decision rejecting Marks’s Atkins claim and concurred in
remanding to the district court on that issue. She wrote that
the state court’s treatment of both Dr. Cowardin and Dr.
Woods evinces a pattern of mischaracterization and bias in
assessing the testimony of Marks’s expert witnesses, and
that this pattern extends to the state court’s treatment of
Marks’s third expert witness, Dr. Gur. She explained why
the relevant record for de novo review should include Dr.
Gur’s expert evidence, as well as some additional
material. She therefore dissented from portions of Part II of
the majority opinion, including those that discuss the
treatment of Dr. Gur’s credibility. She concurred in Parts I,
III, IV, V, and VI of the majority opinion.
Judge R. Nelson concurred in part and dissented in
part. He concurred in Parts I, II(A), II(C), and III-VI of the
majority opinion. He disagreed with the conclusion in Part
II(B) that the record as it relates to Dr. Cowardin and Dr.
Woods suggests Marks may be intellectually disabled and
thus ineligible for the death penalty. He wrote that a
MARKS V. DAVIS 5
properly deferential analysis establishes that the trial court’s
technical misstatements were not material and capable of
rendering its credibility determinations objectively
unreasonable, but were inconsequential. He wrote that
properly applying precedent, the record as a whole supports
the trial court’s factual determinations, and that the
majority’s approach conflicts with the purpose of AEDPA.
COUNSEL
Gary D. Sowards (argued), McBreen & Senior, Los Angeles,
California; Cliona R. Plunkett, and Caroline P. Cincotta,
Habeas Corpus Resource Center, San Francisco, California;
for Petitioner-Appellant.
Sarah J. Farhat (argued), Deputy Attorney General; Alice B.
Lustre and Glenn R. Pruden, Supervising Deputy Attorneys
General; Ronald S. Matthias and James W. Bilderback II,
Senior Assistant Attorneys General; Gerald A. Engler, Chief
Assistant Attorney General; Xavier Becerra, California
Attorney General; Office of the California Attorney General,
San Francisco, California; for Respondent-Appellee.
6 MARKS V. DAVIS
OPINION
MURGUIA, Chief Circuit Judge:
Petitioner Delaney Marks was convicted of murder and
sentenced to death in 1994. After pursuing postconviction
review in the California courts, he filed a federal habeas
petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court denied
relief, and Marks timely appeals, raising six claims. We
affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand.
In Part I, we hold that the district court properly denied
relief on Marks’s claim that he was incompetent to stand
trial. Although Marks presented substantial evidence of
incompetence, there was a reasonable basis in the record for
the California Supreme Court to deny this claim. See 28
U.S.C. § 2254(d); Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 98
(2011). A jury unanimously found that Marks was
competent. The state trial court judge was firmly convinced
that Marks was competent. The state court reasonably could
have concluded from Marks’s conduct and testimony at trial
that he understood the proceedings and was capable of
assisting counsel. The contrary opinions of Marks’s
attorneys were “not determinative.” Miles v. Stainer, 108
F.3d 1109, 1113 (9th Cir. 1997). Nor were the opinions of
Marks’s experts. Three of Marks’s experts had testified at
the competency trial, and the jury had rejected their
opinions. And the remaining experts opined on Marks’s
competency eight or nine years after trial; such retrospective
competency determinations are disfavored. Williams v.
Woodford, 384 F.3d 567, 610 (9th Cir. 2004). Considering
the record as a whole, the California Supreme Court’s
adjudication of this claim was not “so lacking in justification
that there was an error well understood and comprehended
MARKS V. DAVIS 7
in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded
disagreement.” Woods v. Etherton, 578 U.S. 113, 117
(2016) (per curiam) (quoting White v. Woodall, 572 U.S.
415, 420 (2014)).
In Part II, we hold that the district court erred by denying
relief on Marks’s claim that he is intellectually disabled and
thus ineligible for the death penalty under Atkins v. Virginia,
536 U.S. 304 (2002). Marks has shown that the California
Supreme Court’s rejection of this claim 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)(2). The state court rejected the opinions of two of
Marks’s experts on the strength of factual findings that were
erroneous, objectively unreasonable, and material to the
outcome of the proceedings. Accordingly, we vacate the
judgment in part and remand to the district court for de novo
review of this claim.
In Part III, we hold that the district court properly denied
relief on Marks’s claim that the judge adjudicating his Atkins
claim was biased against him. We recognize that the judge
in question directed unusually sharp criticism at Marks’s
attorneys and witnesses and, in the majority’s view, made
significant factual errors. The California Supreme Court,
however, reasonably could have concluded that the judge did
not “display a deep-seated favoritism or antagonism that
would make fair judgment impossible.” Liteky v. United
States, 510 U.S. 540, 555 (1994). There was therefore a
reasonable basis for the state court to reject this claim. See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); Harrington, 562 U.S. at 98.
In Part IV, we hold that the district court properly denied
relief on Marks’s claim that he did not knowingly waive his
Fifth Amendment right not to testify at trial. Before
8 MARKS V. DAVIS
allowing Marks to testify, the trial court engaged in an
extensive colloquy with Marks and defense counsel to
confirm that Marks understood his right to testify or to refuse
to do so, as well as the consequences of his election. The
California Supreme Court reasonably could have concluded
from the transcript that Marks fully understood the
consequences of his decision. There was therefore a
reasonable basis for the state court to reject this claim. See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); Harrington, 562 U.S. at 98.
In Part V, we hold that the district court properly denied
relief on Marks’s first ineffective assistance of counsel
claim. Marks contends that his attorneys should have sought
funding to retain a mental health expert during trial to opine
on his mental competence. He argues that an expert would
have concluded that he was incompetent and that this finding
would have prompted a second competency hearing at which
he would have been found incompetent to stand trial. A jury,
however, had already found Marks competent once. The
California Supreme Court reasonably could have concluded
that a second competency hearing would have reached the
same conclusion. The state court therefore reasonably could
have concluded that Marks failed to demonstrate “a
reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694
(1984); see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); Harrington, 562 U.S. at 98.
Finally, we hold in Part VI that the district court properly
denied relief on Marks’s second ineffective assistance of
counsel claim relating to trial counsel’s failure to object to
false or misleading statements made by the prosecution
during penalty-phase closing argument. Although we grant
a certificate of appealability on this claim, we agree with the
district court that Marks neither exhausted this claim in the
MARKS V. DAVIS 9
California courts nor adequately pleaded the claim in his
federal petition. The district court therefore properly
declined to consider this claim.
In sum, we vacate the district court’s denial of Marks’s
Atkins claim and remand for de novo review of that claim.
We otherwise affirm.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review de novo the district court’s denial of a
habeas petition.” Gulbrandson v. Ryan, 738 F.3d 976, 986
(9th Cir. 2013). “We also review whether a petitioner failed
to exhaust state court remedies de novo.” Wooten v.
Kirkland, 540 F.3d 1019, 1023 (9th Cir. 2008).
Because Marks’s petition was filed after April 24, 1996,
our review is governed by the Antiterrorism and Effective
Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA). Under AEDPA,
federal habeas relief may not be granted unless the state
court’s adjudication of a claim “(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)(1)–(2).
Under § 2254(d)(1), “clearly established” “refers to the
holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the Supreme] Court’s
decisions as of the time of the relevant state-court decision.”
Lockyer v. Andrade, 538 U.S. 63, 71 (2003) (quoting
Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 412 (2000)). A state
court’s decision is “contrary to” clearly established federal
law “if the state court arrives at a conclusion opposite to that
reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law or if
10 MARKS V. DAVIS
the state court decides a case differently than [the Supreme]
Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
Williams, 529 U.S. at 413. A state court’s decision involves
“an unreasonable application” of clearly established federal
law “if the state court identifies the correct governing legal
principle from [the Supreme] Court’s decision but
unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the
prisoner’s case.” Id. The standard under § 2254(d)(1) is
“difficult to meet” and is satisfied only “where there is no
possibility fairminded jurists could disagree that the state
court’s decision conflicts with [the Supreme] Court’s
precedents.” Harrington, 562 U.S. at 102. A petitioner
“must show that the state court’s ruling on the claim being
presented in federal court was so lacking in justification that
there was an error well understood and comprehended in
existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded
disagreement.” Id. at 103. It is not enough that the state
court decision was “incorrect or erroneous”; “[t]he state
court’s application of clearly established law must be
objectively unreasonable.” Lockyer, 538 U.S. at 75.
Under § 2254(d)(2), “a state-court factual determination
is not unreasonable merely because the federal habeas court
would have reached a different conclusion in the first
instance.” Wood v. Allen, 558 U.S. 290, 301 (2010). State
courts are accorded “substantial deference.” Brumfield v.
Cain, 576 U.S. 305, 314 (2015). “If reasonable minds
reviewing the record might disagree about the finding in
question, on habeas review that does not suffice to supersede
the trial court’s determination.” Id. (alterations and internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting Wood, 558 U.S. at 301).
“This is a daunting standard—one that will be satisfied in
relatively few cases.” Taylor v. Maddox, 366 F.3d 992, 1000
(9th Cir. 2004), abrogated on other grounds as stated in
MARKS V. DAVIS 11
Murray v. Schriro, 745 F.3d 984, 999–1000 (9th Cir. 2014).
“[W]here the state courts plainly misapprehend or misstate
the record in making their findings, and the misapprehension
goes to a material factual issue that is central to [a]
petitioner’s claim, that misapprehension can fatally
undermine the fact-finding process, rendering the resulting
factual finding unreasonable.” Id. at 1001. 1
When the last state court decision adjudicating a claim is
unreasoned,
the federal court should “look through” the
unexplained decision to the last related state-
court decision that does provide a relevant
rationale. It should then presume that the
unexplained decision adopted the same
reasoning. But the State may rebut the
presumption by showing that the unexplained
affirmance relied or most likely did rely on
different grounds than the lower state court’s
decision, such as alternative grounds for
affirmance that were briefed or argued to the
state supreme court or obvious in the record
it reviewed.
Wilson v. Sellers, 584 U.S. 122, 125–26 (2018). Where there
is no reasoned state court decision, “the habeas petitioner’s
burden still must be met by showing there was no reasonable
basis for the state court to deny relief.” Harrington, 562 U.S.
at 98. “[A] habeas court must determine what arguments or
theories . . . could have supported[] the state court’s
1
A material fact is “[a] fact that is significant or essential to the issue or
matter at hand; esp., a fact that makes a difference in the result to be
reached in a given case.” Fact, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
12 MARKS V. DAVIS
decision; and then it must ask whether it is possible
fairminded jurists could disagree that those arguments or
theories are inconsistent with the holding in a prior decision
of th[e Supreme] Court.” Id. at 102.
A petitioner who satisfies § 2254(d)(1) or (d)(2) is
entitled to de novo review of the merits of the claim. See
Kipp v. Davis, 971 F.3d 939, 955 (9th Cir. 2020); Maxwell
v. Roe, 628 F.3d 486, 494–95, 506 (9th Cir. 2010); Frantz v.
Hazey, 533 F.3d 724, 735–37 (9th Cir. 2008) (en banc).
Finally, § 2254(e) states that a state court’s factual
findings are presumed correct:
In a proceeding instituted by an application
for a writ of habeas corpus by a person in
custody pursuant to the judgment of a State
court, a determination of a factual issue made
by a State court shall be presumed to be
correct. The applicant shall have the burden
of rebutting the presumption of correctness
by clear and convincing evidence.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
DISCUSSION
I. COMPETENCY
Marks argues that he was denied his constitutional right
against being tried and convicted while incompetent to stand
trial. The district court denied this claim under § 2254(d).
We affirm.
A. Background
On October 17, 1990, a man later identified as Marks
entered a Taco Bell in Oakland, California and shot an
MARKS V. DAVIS 13
employee. People v. Marks, 72 P.3d 1222, 1226–27 (Cal.
2003). The employee was seriously injured but survived. Id.
at 1227. A few minutes later, a man fitting Marks’s
description entered a nearby convenience store and shot two
workers. Id. One of the victims died and the other was
injured but survived. Id. A short time later, a man and a
woman later identified as Marks and his girlfriend, Robin
Menefee, took a taxicab from Oakland to Alameda. Id. at
1227–28. The cab driver was shot and killed. Id. at 1228.
Police later identified Marks as the cab driver’s shooter and
alleged robbery as the motive. Id.
The police took Marks into custody later that evening.
Id. He was in possession of a revolver at the time of his
arrest. Id. During a recorded interview, Marks told the
police that he had found the revolver two days earlier, id. at
1229, and denied any involvement in the shootings. A police
criminologist later linked the revolver to the shootings,
although the police found no gunshot residue on Marks’s
person or clothing. Id. at 1228–29. Marks, who was born in
1956, was thirty-four years old at the time of the shootings.
The State charged Marks with two counts of first degree
murder, two counts of attempted premeditated murder, and
one count of robbery. He was represented initially by public
defenders Joseph Najpaver, Joseph McGrew, and Susan
Sawyer.
Marks was dissatisfied with his attorneys, especially
Najpaver, and brought several pretrial motions to replace
Najpaver as counsel. 2 Marks made a number of outlandish
charges at the substitution of counsel hearings, accusing
2
When these motions failed, Marks resorted to assaulting Najpaver for
the purpose of obtaining new counsel. That plan succeeded.
14 MARKS V. DAVIS
Najpaver of, among other things, discriminating against him
on account of race, being in league with the prosecution, and
hating him because of his supposed relationship with co-
counsel Sawyer. Marks’s dissatisfaction with his attorneys
stemmed in part from his attorneys’ unwelcomed advice that
he consider a plea bargain—pleading guilty and agreeing to
a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole—
to avoid the death penalty. But Marks’s motions for
substitution of counsel began before his attorneys first
initiated plea discussions with the State. Marks, who
maintained his innocence throughout the proceedings,
refused to consider a guilty plea.
During the substitution of counsel hearings, Marks
frequently spoke from prepared notes and fell into repetitive
speech patterns that he described as “brain sticking.” Marks
told the state trial court, for example, that he should be
appointed substitute counsel because of:
[i]neffective questioning of testifying
witnesses on the stand [during the
preliminary hearing] which was a disclose of
my innocence. I experienced constant racial
slander from Joseph Najpaver, too. I
experienced—excuse me. I experienced
constant racial slander from Joseph Najpaver,
towards I am often addressed as whom—I am
often addressed as a fool by Joseph Najpaver,
who refused—who refused—who refused his
open hand, who I am often addressed as a
fool—I’m often addressed as a fool to Joseph
Najpaver when I am refused his open-handed
cons to conceal my innocence because he
MARKS V. DAVIS 15
feels his lawful tactics when word usage is
above my capacity of understanding. . . .
This has been taking place one year. Joseph
Najpaver and Joseph McGrew hate, secretly
hate me for—Joseph Najpaver and Joseph
McGrew secretly hate me for—Joseph
Najpaver and Joseph McGrew secretly—
Joseph Najpaver and Joseph McGrew
secretly hate me—Joseph Najpaver and
Joseph McGrew secretly hate me because he
feels I am trying to take, take from him the
married Miss Sawyer, Attorney at Law, from
him.
The state trial court held a preliminary hearing in
October 1991, a year after Marks’s arrest. At the hearing,
Marks repeatedly interrupted the proceedings when the State
presented the testimony of his former girlfriend, Menefee.
Marks’s behavior prompted the prosecutor at the time, Kevin
Ryan, to question Marks’s mental competence. Ryan told
the court that he had “some doubt under Penal Code Section
1368 as to the mental competency of Mr. Marks.” 3 The trial
3
At the time, California Penal Code section 1368 stated:
(a) If, during the pendency of an action and prior to
judgment, a doubt arises in the mind of the judge as to
the mental competence of the defendant, he shall state
that doubt in the record and inquire of the attorney for
the defendant whether, in the opinion of the attorney,
the defendant is mentally competent. If the defendant
is not represented by counsel, the court shall appoint
counsel. At the request of the defendant or his counsel
or upon its own motion, the court shall recess the
16 MARKS V. DAVIS
court acknowledged Ryan’s concerns and asked Najpaver
for his “evaluation of your client, whether you think he is
mentally competent or not.” Following a recess, during
which Najpaver consulted with Marks, the following
exchange occurred:
MR. NAJPAVER: In answer to the
Court’s question, your Honor, as the Court
has seen and heard, obviously there are some
problems. But I believe at this time we
proceedings for as long as may be reasonably
necessary to permit counsel to confer with the
defendant and to form an opinion as to the mental
competence of the defendant at that point in time.
(b) If counsel informs the court that he believes the
defendant is or may be mentally incompetent, the court
shall order that the question of the defendant’s mental
competence is to be determined in a hearing which is
held pursuant to Sections 1368.1 and 1369. If counsel
informs the court that he believes the defendant is
mentally competent, the court may nevertheless order
a hearing. Any hearing shall be held in the superior
court.
(c) Except as provided in Section 1368.1, when an
order for a hearing into the present mental competence
of the defendant has been issued, all proceedings in the
criminal prosecution shall be suspended until the
question of the present mental competence of the
defendant has been determined.
Cal. Penal Code § 1368(a)–(c) (1991). The current version of the statute
has been expanded to cover revocation proceedings for a violation of
probation, mandatory supervision, post-release community supervision,
or parole but is otherwise unchanged. See Cal. Penal Code § 1368
(2022).
MARKS V. DAVIS 17
should attempt to proceed with this
preliminary examination.
THE COURT: All right. I’ll reserve. I
have not seen sufficient, in my own
judgment, to make a determination. But if
you feel he’s competent to proceed, we will
proceed. However, I reserve the right at a
later time if I see anything further to make a
referral [for a competency determination] on
my own motion.
Najpaver later explained that he had considered Marks
“barely” competent at the time of the preliminary hearing.
Najpaver also drew a distinction between the competence
required for a preliminary hearing and the competence
needed for trial.
By January 1992, Najpaver no longer believed Marks
was competent to stand trial. The defense moved at that time
to suspend the proceedings for a competency determination,
invoking Penal Code section 1368. The trial court agreed to
the request, suspended proceedings, and appointed two
psychiatrists to examine Marks and opine on his
competency. After examining Marks, both court-appointed
psychiatrists, Dr. Karen Gudiksen and Dr. Fred Rosenthal,
informed the court that they believed Marks was
incompetent to stand trial. The State, however, demanded a
jury trial on the question.
The competency trial took place in July 1992. Marks,
who bore the burden of proof, relied on the testimony of two
of his attorneys, Najpaver and McGrew, each of whom said
Marks was incompetent, and five mental health
professionals.
18 MARKS V. DAVIS
The mental health professionals included three
psychiatrists who testified that Marks was incompetent to
stand trial. The first, Dr. Rosenthal, testified that
it was fairly clear that [Marks] was a man
who was having mental problems. He was
quite scattered. He would, at times in the
interview, be able to attend what looked like
in a rational fashion, but it was soon obvious
that he could not control that and he very
quickly lapsed into repetitive pressured
speech that made little sense.
He, at times, would become somewhat
scattered, not focused on the material that we
were discussing. He had a number of rather
unusual ideas about what was going on in his
life.
He didn’t really understand his situation.
He couldn’t really tell me clearly what the
charges were that he was being held on. He
had some idea of charges that really didn’t
relate to the seriousness of the charges that he
was being held on. . . . [H]e thought there
was something to do with possession of a
weapon and that was all. In his mind, this
was the sense of why he was in prison, in jail.
And when I tried to talk to him about what he
was really charged with, he essentially denied
those things and said he didn’t think that was
true, and denied the fact that it was written
down as charges against him.
MARKS V. DAVIS 19
He was quite paranoid. That is, he was
quite suspicious and rather unrealistic about
his attorneys and about the court system and
about what was going on in his legal
situation. . . . [H]e felt, for example, that his
attorney was working with the district
attorney, that they had made a deal to convict
him and that there was no—he said there was
no chance . . . of getting any kind of trial
because this deal had already been made. . . .
[H]e felt that the Judge and the whole system
was involved in that and that this had been
sort of a foredrawn conclusion and that “they
were all out to get him,” that was his words.
Dr. Rosenthal said that Marks “was not willing to even
accept the idea that he was being charged with murder.” In
Dr. Rosenthal’s view, “it was clear that [Marks] did not have
the kind of control where he could concentrate and attend to
a prolonged situation, complicated situation like a trial, and
really understand what was going on.”
On cross-examination, Dr. Rosenthal acknowledged that
his examination of Marks had lasted only half an hour, that
he did not conduct any neuropsychological testing that
would have been helpful, that he was an opponent of the
death penalty, that he had been unaware of the fact that
Marks’s attorneys were attempting to negotiate a plea deal—
against Marks’s wishes—by which Marks would plead
guilty and spend the rest of his life in prison, that he could
not rule out that possibility that Marks was lying to him, that
he had testified dozens of times for the defense but not once
for the State, and that he was being paid by the defense for
his time as a witness.
20 MARKS V. DAVIS
Dr. Gudiksen also testified that Marks was incompetent
to stand trial. She had interviewed Marks twice for a total of
about two hours. She testified that:
[I]n the first place, this written paper that he
read to me on our first encounter was not
terribly coherent and full of skulptified 4 and
kind of confusing language.
And then when we went—when I went
back and was able to talk with him, this sort
of confusing presentation continued off and
on through the interview. He was both
confused and it was confusing to try to
understand him. There w[ere] gaps in his
story. He would repeat himself. He would
start and stop sentences. He would say the
same several words together and then repeat
them in kind of—like he was stuck.
There w[ere] some pauses in the
interview like maybe he was paying attention
to voices or something. When asked if he
was hearing voices, he said he was hearing
them, although he didn’t want me to think
there were very many voices going on.
He described various and sundry bodily
symptoms in a rather bizarre way, like things
were going on to his body that, to my
physician ear, isn’t the way certain symptoms
are. It was like bizarre and unusual and not
4
So in the transcript.
MARKS V. DAVIS 21
the description a patient would describe some
particular ailment.
Dr. Gudiksen acknowledged that she had examined
many defendants to determine their competency and most of
the time had concluded that those defendants were
incompetent to stand trial. On cross-examination, she also
acknowledged that she was opposed to the death penalty,
that she had been unaware of Najpaver’s attempts to
negotiate a plea deal that would result in Marks spending the
rest of his life in prison, that anger and resentment would be
normal responses if a defendant insisted on his innocence but
his attorneys were attempting to persuade him to plead
guilty, and that she could not rule out the possibility that
Marks was lying to her. Dr. Gudiksen also testified that
Marks understood the charges against him but did not think
the charges had “anything to do with him.”
The third psychiatrist, Dr. Jules Burstein, testified as a
defense rebuttal witness. Dr. Burstein had found Marks
competent to stand trial in 1989, when Marks had been
charged with grand theft. At that time, Dr. Burstein had
concluded that Marks was not psychotic; was malingering
(i.e., pretending to be mentally ill); was unwilling, rather
than unable, to cooperate with his attorneys; and was “quite
competent” to stand trial. 5
5
A second psychiatrist, Dr. Hyman Silver, had also found Marks
competent to stand trial in 1989. Dr. Silver had concluded that Marks
was “one who is capable of behavior which is offensive and disrespectful
as well as showing poor judgment, but also is capable of remaining in
and controlling both speech and physical movement when he is
motivated or supportive.” He said that Marks was “quite capable of
rational thinking despite that Mr. Marks has not always behaved
22 MARKS V. DAVIS
In 1992, by contrast, Dr. Burstein concluded that Marks
was incompetent to stand trial. Dr. Burstein testified that
Marks’s thought processes were “scattered, tangential, . . .
and occasionally . . . incoherent.” He testified that Marks
could not give the name of his attorney, Najpaver, and was
unable to perform simple mathematical calculations. On
cross-examination, Dr. Burstein acknowledged that Marks
appeared lucid at times; that he, Dr. Burstein, was opposed
to the death penalty; and that he was being paid by the
defense for his testimony. He also disagreed with Dr.
Gudiksen’s opinion, recorded in a March 1992 report, that
Marks was “unable to understand the nature of the
proceedings against him.”
In addition to the three psychiatrists, two other mental
health professionals testified on Marks’s behalf. Josalyn
Harris, a vocational rehabilitation counselor at the Santa Rita
Jail where Marks had been detained since October 1990,
testified that Marks believed the “district attorney and the
public defender [were] in collusion in trying to give him the
death sentence.” She noted that Marks’s condition had
deteriorated since she first began treating him in 1987 and
that Marks’s “ability to communicate his desires, his ability
to communicate his feelings and focus on what his real
concerns are have become very confused for him.” Harris
declined to give an opinion as to whether Marks was
competent to stand trial. On cross-examination, she
acknowledged that Marks knew he was facing serious
charges, including the possibility of the death penalty. She
cooperatively, but he is apparently able to do so,” and concluded that
Marks was “fully aware of the nature and purpose of the proceedings
taken against him and is able to cooperate in his own defense.”
MARKS V. DAVIS 23
also acknowledged that Marks had been cooperative with jail
staff.
Dr. David Stein, a clinical psychologist who had
conducted neuropsychological testing on Marks as part of
the defense’s investigation of potential mental state
defenses, testified that Marks had
considerable pervasive brain imparity.
There are some areas of his brain that are
actually okay. . . . [H]e scores in a few areas
in the normal range. But for the most part,
he’s anywhere from mildly to moderately to
severely impaired depending on what part of
the brain.
This is fairly significant. And it can be
surprising, because somebody can look
normal, they can talk to you, and they don’t
look like they are impaired, but these are
measures of different aspects of vision, of
motor behavior, or thinking, of abstracting
that he scores in impaired ranges with.
Dr. Stein was not asked to opine as to whether Marks was
competent to stand trial. On cross-examination, Dr. Stein
acknowledged that he had exclusively testified on behalf of
the defense in other cases, that he was being paid by Marks’s
defense for his testimony, and that Marks had cooperated
with him during the testing.
The prosecution presented no mental health experts to
testify about Marks’s competence but offered testimony
from three Santa Rita Jail employees. Holly LaSalle, the
jail’s accounting supervisor and the custodian of inmate
24 MARKS V. DAVIS
financial accounts, said that Marks had consistently ordered
items from the commissary in accordance with the balance
in his account. In July 1991, for example, Marks made a
purchase for $6.90, leaving him with 12 cents in the account.
In September 1991, Marks purchased $4.60 from the
commissary, leaving him with nine cents in his account.
This pattern continued through July 1992.
Sergeant Harvey Lewis testified about his interactions
with Marks at the jail. Sergeant Lewis testified that in
August 1991 Marks submitted an inmate request form
reading, “I am involved in a civil matter now pending in the
California State Supreme Court. As there are time
constraints which must be met, and I am an indigent party in
pro se in the instant case, please meter these documents for
mailing forthwith. I have in my possession the necessary
waivers for court materials, mailing, et cetera.” Marks also
requested legal materials pertaining to personal injuries.
Sheriff’s Deputy Timothy Durbin testified that in June
1992 Marks asked to speak with him about the “possibility
of finding some work” in the bakery or kitchen. Marks wrote
Durbin, “I feel it will be best to remain in West 2 housing
until after my competence hearing 6-12-92 – 6-29-22, to play
it safe before going before the courts for upcoming hearing.”
Marks added, “I am still interested in work.” According to
Durbin, Marks later told him that he wanted a job because,
“if he was able to get a job, get work, it would look better to
his jury when he went to trial later in the year.” Durbin also
testified that Marks explained that he had declined an
invitation to appear on the television show “America’s Most
Wanted” on the advice of one of his attorneys, Sawyer.
According to Durbin, Marks said “his attorney had told him
that it wouldn’t be in his best interests, he might slip up, to
use his words, ‘trip himself up,’ and hurt his case.” Durbin
MARKS V. DAVIS 25
further testified that Marks told him that he had a
competency hearing in June “to see whether or not I am
sane.” According to Durbin, Marks told him, “I should lose
that in June and I’ll start my main trial later in the year or
early ’93.” A juror asked whether Durbin ever noticed
anything odd about Marks’s speech, such as repetitive
speaking, rambling, or unfocused speech. Durbin responded
that his conversations with Marks had been “to the point. He
has something to ask me, he asks it in logical sequence, and
once the answer is given, he doesn’t continue to ramble.”
The court asked Durbin whether he had noticed “a pattern of
repetitive speaking start and then getting stuck.” Durbin
responded, “He may have a slight speech impediment but
nothing that stood out—stuttering.”
Following closing arguments, the twelve-member jury
unanimously found Marks competent to stand trial. The
presiding judge, Michael Ballachey, denied Marks’s motion
for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, concluding that
the jury was not obligated to accept the opinions of the
experts and that “the testimony of Deputy Durbin alone was
. . . substantial evidence which raises a conflict in the
evidence that the jury apparently resolved against Mr.
Marks.”
The California Supreme Court upheld the verdict on
direct appeal years later. Marks, 72 P.3d at 1236–38. In
reaching that conclusion, the court noted, among other
things, that “Dr. Gudiksen’s information about defendant’s
history was limited to that which she received from defense
counsel and her meetings with defendant”; that “Dr. Burstein
acknowledged he was familiar with the determinations of the
other experts (one of whom was an acquaintance) before
examining defendant for himself”; that the defense experts
“were unfamiliar with much of the evidence that tended to
26 MARKS V. DAVIS
render defendant’s behavior comprehensible,” including the
fact that Najpaver was attempting to negotiate a plea
agreement that would have generated a conviction without a
trial; that Dr. Rosenthal’s testimony that Marks did not know
what he was charged with was contradicted by Marks’s own
words; and that Marks’s own “statements and conduct . . .
showed he could assist counsel in the conduct of the
defense.” Id. at 1236–37.
Although he did not cooperate with the
attorney who was trying to arrange
defendant’s conviction for noncapital
murder, he cooperated with Attorney Sawyer
because he trusted her. He took her advice
not to appear on television and he sought
work to make a good impression on the jury.
Defendant thus showed he was able to
cooperate with counsel but sometimes
refused to do so, largely to achieve a
substitution of counsel. In [the 1989
prosecution for grand theft in which Dr.
Burstein had found Marks competent],
defendant remarked, “I know I acted like a
zip-down fool in the courtroom. I don’t want
Mr. Denton as my attorney and I will not
cooperate with him.” Defendant promised to
cooperate and refrain from acting like a “zip-
down fool” if he were granted a new attorney.
Id. at 1237.
In October 1992, four months after the competency trial,
Marks was charged with assaulting a jail employee. A
month later, the judge overseeing that prosecution, Ronald
MARKS V. DAVIS 27
Hyde, suspended proceedings under Penal Code section
1368 and ordered a competency determination in the assault
case. Judge Hyde’s brief order provides no specific facts
concerning the reasons for ordering a competency
determination. The prosecution dismissed the assault
charges before a competency hearing could take place.
In December 1992, Louis Wies and Alfred Thews took
over Marks’s defense in the capital case, replacing Najpaver,
McGrew, and Sawyer. Marks continued to file motions for
substitution of counsel.
On January 21, 1994, three days before the beginning of
trial, Wies moved to suspend proceedings under Penal Code
section 1368. Wies and Thews told the court that they had
been able to meet with Marks on a weekly basis over the
previous year and had concluded over that time that he was
competent to stand trial. As Wies explained:
When we got this case we talked to Delaney
quite frankly, and only among ourselves, is
there a problem with Delaney’s cooperating
with counsel and his competency for trial.
And after probably a couple of months Mr.
Thews and I agreed among ourselves that
there was not an issue, that Delaney was
cooperating, that Delaney was able to
understand what was going on. He was able
to help us in preparation and help us in
discussing all matters connected with the
case. That has been the case up until today.
In preparation for trial, however, defense counsel had played
a recording of Marks’s post-arrest interview with the police
in which Marks had admitted to acquiring the revolver days
28 MARKS V. DAVIS
before the shootings. Marks, who insisted at the time of trial
that he had acquired the gun after the shootings, refused to
acknowledge that the voice on the recording was his. Thews
explained that Marks was “not accepting that kind of reality”
and that counsel could “not under the present situation . . .
address the issue of the contents of the tape in order to be
able to respond at trial.”
In addressing whether to order a second competency
hearing, the trial court applied California law holding that,
[w]hen a competency hearing has already
been held and defendant has been found
competent to stand trial . . . , a trial court need
not suspend proceedings to conduct a second
competency hearing unless it is presented
with a substantial change of circumstances or
with new evidence casting a serious doubt on
the validity of that finding.
People v. Kelly, 822 P.2d 385, 412 (Cal. 1992) (quoting
People v. Jones, 811 P.2d 757, 780 (Cal. 1991)). After
taking a weekend to review the transcript of the 1992
competency trial, trial Judge Jeffrey Horner concluded that
a second competency determination was unwarranted:
I am satisfied that there is no substantial
change in the defendant’s circumstances or in
his mental state or in his relationship with his
attorneys. Nor—and I am equally satisfied
that there is not any new evidence that has
been presented to me on these issues which
would require me to suspend, again, criminal
MARKS V. DAVIS 29
proceedings and conduct new proceedings
under section 1368 of the Penal Code.
And I particularly note that not only has,
in my view, has there been no evidence
presented to me, but I note that I have had
what may be a unique opportunity to actually
discuss matters relating to the issue before
me, that is the ability of the defendant to
cooperate with counsel [during a motion for
substitution of counsel heard on January 21,
1994]. I have had the chance to discuss the
general issue of the relationship of himself
and his counsel at great length.
So I’m satisfied, based on all of this
evidence, and in particular my own
observations of him in this courtroom, that
there is no substantial change in his
circumstances nor any new evidence to
indicate that I should suspend proceedings.
I note there has been, as Mr. Wies and Mr.
Thews indicated Friday, a difference in
interpretation and opinion regarding a
particular piece of potential evidence.
Obviously each case differs, and I can’t draw
any generalizations from case to case. But I
will make the general observation that this is
not at all unusual in a case of this complexity,
that there be disagreement between counsel
and a particular defendant regarding a case of
this complexity.
So, my finding is under People v. Kelly,
there is no substantial evidence, or rather
30 MARKS V. DAVIS
substantial change of circumstances, there is
no new evidence which would indicate that I
should have a serious doubt of the validity of
the finding of the jury in July of 1992, that
Mr. Marks is competent to stand trial.
So, the motion to suspend criminal
proceedings is denied.
I would also note in this respect I have
made my ruling based on the lack of any
substantial change of circumstance and the
lack of new evidence based on my own
observations here in this courtroom. It would
appear to me that every indication is that the
defendant, Mr. Marks, is fully capable of
cooperating with his attorneys, and I see no
evidence to indicate that this would not be the
case in the forthcoming trial.
During the ensuing trial, Marks engaged in occasional
outbursts over what he perceived to be weaknesses in the
prosecution’s case or deficiencies in his attorneys’
presentation of a defense. Although Marks relies on these
outbursts as evidence of his incompetence, the California
Supreme Court reached a different conclusion on direct
appeal. The California Supreme Court reasoned that
Marks’s
most conspicuous outburst during trial amply
proves his ability to understand the
proceedings and assist counsel. When the
prosecutor concluded his redirect
examination of John Myers, defendant
interrupted, “Your Honor, I object. This
MARKS V. DAVIS 31
person stated it was not me, it was No. 6 who
committed the shooting . . . . He did not even
ask.” Discussion among the attorneys and
the court revealed that Myers had selected a
suspect other than defendant at a
photographic lineup. The prosecutor
recognized, however, there was a sound
tactical reason for defense counsel’s not
asking Myers about his failure to select
defendant: Myers had indicated “it was a toss
up” between defendant and the “number six”
individual; Myers finally chose the latter.
Although there was a legitimate reason for
not asking Myers about his selection at the
lineup, defendant’s comment reflected he
comprehended not just the nature of the
proceedings but the state of the People’s case
and its potential deficiencies. Defendant also
demonstrated his ability to offer assistance to
counsel, even if such assistance was neither
solicited nor welcomed.
Marks, 72 P.3d at 1237–38. 6 The record contains other
examples of similar conduct. On cross-examination by
defense counsel, for example, eyewitness Diane Griffin
testified that she did not notice whether the shooter had facial
hair. Marks presumably believed that defense counsel did
not do enough to challenge the witness’s credibility on the
facial hair issue, interjecting, “May I object. If [lead
prosecutor Kenneth] Burr walked within ten feet of her she
could see his mustache.” During the defense’s cross-
6
The trial court temporarily removed Marks from the courtroom
following this outburst.
32 MARKS V. DAVIS
examination of witness Grace Haynes, Marks similarly
complained that his attorney kept “blotching”—i.e.,
botching—the question about facial hair.
Marks testified on his own behalf during the guilt and
penalty phases of the trial. Marks’s testimony as a whole
suggested that he possessed at least a modest understanding
of the proceedings—including the charges against him, the
purpose of the trial, and the respective roles of the judge,
jury, witnesses, prosecutor, and defense counsel. With some
exceptions, Marks understood and rationally answered the
questions he was asked. Marks’s direct examination during
the guilt phase of the trial, for example, began as follows:
Q: Good afternoon, Mr. Marks.
A: Good afternoon, Mr. Thews.
Q: Did you grow up in Alameda and
Oakland?
A: Yes.
Q: And your family lived primarily in
Alameda?
A: Yes, they have.
Q: And where did you go to school?
A: Various locations. I’m not here for
going to school. I’m in here for a suspect for
homicide.
Q: Did you go to school in Alameda?
A: Yes, I did.
Q: Graduated from high school there?
MARKS V. DAVIS 33
A: I did that also, too.
Q: After you graduated, did you enter the
service?
A: Service has nothing to do with
what—the service doesn’t pertain to these
proceedings.
Q: Did you enter the service?
A: Did I? Yes, I did.
Q: And what branch did you go into?
A: Umm, I went into the Navy.
Q: And—
THE COURT: I’m sorry, I didn’t hear
you, sir.
A: I went into the Navy, the naval
services.
THE COURT: Thank you.
Q: After you got out of the Navy did you
return then to the Alameda area?
A: Umm, not really. In some respects.
Q: How about Oakland, did you return to
the Oakland area?
A: That’s the same location, Oakland,
Alameda County.
Q: Now, I want to direct your attention
to October of 1990, and more specifically to
the 15th of October of 1990. Have you got
that in mind?
34 MARKS V. DAVIS
A: Not really, but if you ask me a
question I’m more than sure I can answer it.
Q: You got it. Did you receive a check
for assistance on the 15th of October?
A: First, I’d like to clear up, I’ve never
been on welfare. I was in the employment
program. That’s attached to the welfare
building, and we have certain requirements
we must meet to receive a check every two
weeks, and I did receive a check on that day.
Excuse me for the delay.
Q: You got a check?
A: For $170 for—I did work for that
money. It wasn’t just given to me. I don’t
bear kids, I don’t have any children.
Q: Now, what did you do with that check
on the 15th?
A: I cashed it.
Q: And tell me where you cashed it?
A: I cashed it across the street from the
old folks’ park, old man’s park in West
Oakland.
Q: Is that near the housewives market
there?
A: That would be to the right of
housewives market, going in the direction of
West Oakland.
Q: At the time that you cashed the check,
was anybody with you?
MARKS V. DAVIS 35
A: No, I don’t keep anybody with me
when I’m having any money ’cause it’s my
personal business. If I have any money, then
I’ll put them elsewhere until I finish taking
care of my business. Then I make myself
visible with them. That’s something I prefer
to keep personal.
Q: So you were alone when you cashed
the check, right?
A: In some respects. Someone was with
me, but I had them—I detained them until
I’m finished taking care of my business, as
far as my check was concerned—concerned.
Q: Who was the person that was with
you before you cashed the check?
A: The person that was with me before I
cashed my check was Robin Menefee.
Marks also provided detailed testimony about where he was
at the time of the shootings and how he came to be in
possession of a firearm.
Notwithstanding the tenor of Marks’s testimony
generally, at times Marks appears to have struggled to
understand the questions he was being asked or the purpose
of those questions. During guilt-phase cross-examination,
for example, the prosecutor, Burr, attempted with little
success to establish the anodyne fact that Marks had
prepared for his testimony:
Q: You, over the weekend, you prepared
for your testimony here, right?
36 MARKS V. DAVIS
A: No, I never prepare for my testimony.
I prepare for one speech. But I’m more than
sure that you would not let me say it, Mr.
Burr, because it is somewhat criticism on
your part, which you did criticize me a great
deal at the opening of these proceedings, but
I overlook that because I understand your
position.
Q: Your Honor, nonresponsive after the
word no.
THE COURT: It is, Mr. Marks, so I’m going
to strike all of that, too. So please answer the
questions that are asked.
Q: Sir, didn’t you say here in court that
you have been studying over the weekend,
studying for your testimony here?
A: Complete that question which you
stated. I mean you deleting, you’re trying to
make me say something that I didn’t say.
Make that a full sentence. I understand
English is a broken language, but make a full
statement. State what you stated from the
beginning and I will give you an answer,
because in the abstract and in the scope of
things I’m not going to do things—do that
again.
THE COURT: Mr. Marks—
A: I’m not a Laurel and Hardy you
understand. I want you to know that you’re
in competition, baby.
MARKS V. DAVIS 37
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, you asked
him to restate the question, and he will do
that.
Q: Mr. Marks, over this past week didn’t
you study in order so that you could testify
here?
A: I never studied in my testify, I studied
something I wanted to say to the court in, in
opposed to, not opposed to in regards to the
statement, that accusation, I’m talking about
that statement that you made of me. That’s
what I wrote down. That’s what I studied.
Here they are right here. But I wasn’t sure
you would not let me read this. That’s what
I was referring to, not going in out of my
position, because I put—
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, you have
answered.
A: Not going out of the jurisdiction of
the prosecution, in other words. That’s what
I’m saying.
THE COURT: Mr. Marks.
Q: In the process of getting ready to tell
the jurors what you wanted to tell them when
you took the stand, you have had a lot of time
to think about it, haven’t you?
A: I had my mind on other things
because my counsel was supposed to be
tending to those matters.
38 MARKS V. DAVIS
Q: Weren’t you thinking about how you
would explain to the jury all the various
things that happened to you that evening?
A: I wasn’t walking on the street taking
notes. I had to rehear something that I know
I didn’t commit. I will—if I had did
something I’d be worried and having to try to
think of some type of story, but if I’m
innocent why should I?
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, again all
of that is nonresponsive.
A: He asked me something. I’m
explaining it.
THE COURT: No, you have to answer the
questions that are asked. Those are the rules
in terms of direct examination of Mr. Thews,
and they are the same now on cross.
A: He was saying tricky—I’m saying
I’m not studying on this, they’re supposed to
be doing this, not me.
THE COURT: Your testimony is not
an opportunity to make a speech that isn’t
related to the question. So that’s stricken.
A: I’m just saying—
THE COURT: You are not answering
questions.
A: It’s vague.
THE COURT: We will deal with that.
But answer the questions the best you can.
MARKS V. DAVIS 39
A: I pointed it out to be noted exactly
how I’m answering the questions in the
phrases.
THE COURT: The reporter is doing the best
she can to report exactly.
A: I understand the use of the words, and
he want to make that liar out of me not in the
cannibalist of sabotage, it’s barbaric words,
murder, by the use of words that I should
have come in contact with Kenneth Burr,
there telling me I murder—
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, by the
cross-examination, the prosecution—
A: Well he say—
THE COURT: Let me say it again. If
you don’t follow the rules here I’m going to
take a recess and I’m going to have to take
some action. I don’t want to do that, but I’m
being left with fewer and fewer alternatives
here. So please, one more time answer the
questions that are being asked.
A: Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
Q: Now, since the time of your arrest you
have gone over the things that happened that
you did that evening of October the 17th,
1990, haven’t you?
A: No, Mr. Burr, I haven’t.
Q: You haven’t thought about what you
were doing or who you were with?
40 MARKS V. DAVIS
A: No, I haven’t given any thought in the
last three and half years. No, I—no, I
haven’t.
Q: You haven’t relived that time over
and over in your mind to recall who you were
with and what you were doing when the
shootings went down?
A: I haven’t relived that down—or no.
All I wrote down was where I was and it was
after a period of over 1,095 days and some
odd months to refresh my memory all the
events that took place that night. I just wrote
down because you’re a very good prosecutor
if you allow me to speak, to have everything
in the scope of things, because we, we’re not,
not abstracts and we should speak, and we
should have some tact as far as business is
concerned. We should be able to speak as
gentlemen. And so I wrote it down
everything according to your question.
THE COURT: Thank you.
A: Man I never had studied it, because I
should remember that, that’s why, because I
know in your motion I’m not biased to you,
I’m not—no disrespect Kenneth—
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, answer Mr. Burr’s
next question.
MARKS V. DAVIS 41
A: Mr. Burr is nice. He’s very super, you
know—
At times, moreover, Marks gave rambling and even
incoherent answers to the attorneys’ questions. When
describing his brief service in the Navy in the mid-1970s, for
example, Marks testified that he had been “a nukie in
charge” and “a lieutenant commander,” had been placed in
charge of handling recruits, had received a Presidential
award, and had been in charge of handling nuclear weapons
“till we brought Vietnam War to a standstill in the Bermuda
Triangle, against the Soviet Union.”
Other evidence suggested the possibility that Marks held
delusional beliefs. Marks apparently was convinced, for
example, that the judge overseeing the preliminary hearing
had found a conspiracy between the prosecution, the
probation office, and defense counsel, and that his trial
attorneys had accepted bribes to assist in his conviction. He
also apparently believed that transcripts of the preliminary
hearing had been altered and that the voice on the recording
of his interview with the police was not his. Dr. Rosenthal
later testified that Marks had “fixed false beliefs that . . .
witnesses who testified at the preliminary examination
excluded him as being the suspect, 7 that different
photographs of Mr. Marks had been substituted for exhibits
7
Marks apparently was convinced that Susan Yi, a prosecution witness,
had testified at the preliminary hearing that he was innocent and that his
girlfriend, Robin Menefee, was guilty. In fact, Yi had testified that she
could not identify the man in question because she did not see his face.
42 MARKS V. DAVIS
that were put in evidence at the preliminary examination,8
. . . that the prosecution was ‘found guilty of bribery, of
bribing witnesses’ at the preliminary examination,” 9 and that
the voice on the tape recording of the police interview was
not his. Marks was also unable or unwilling to accept the
proposition that his attorneys were working on his behalf.
During the penalty phase of the trial, for example, defense
counsel asked Marks whether he had assaulted Brenda
Bailey. Marks complained that his attorney was
“indirect[ly] prosecuting” and “asking these questions” to
make him “appear guilty.”
Defense counsel filed two additional motions during trial
to suspend proceedings for a competency determination. In
March 1994, Wies and Thews advised the court that Marks
was unable to have a conversation with them, that Marks was
“absolutely incapable of listening to us,” that Marks was
“absolutely unable to assist us in any way, shape, or form in
defending him,” and that Marks was convinced that his
lawyers had accepted bribes to assist in his conviction. They
also observed that Marks’s disruptive conduct in the
courtroom was prejudicing his defense. In an April 1994
motion prompted by Marks’s trial testimony, counsel argued
that Marks was unable to answer direct questions, unable to
8
At a March 17, 1994 substitution of counsel hearing, Marks claimed
that the photos of him after his arrest were not the photos presented at
trial. Defense counsel Thews later testified that Marks’s theory that
someone had switched the photographs “had no basis in reality.”
9
At a substitution of counsel hearing, Marks asserted that, “in the
preliminary hearing examination, [the prosecutors] were found guilty of
bribery, of bribing witnesses. They bribed the probation department,
they bribed the Alameda Sheriff’s for Robin Menefee to be released from
custody so she would appear admissible.” Thews later testified that this
theory too had no basis in reality.
MARKS V. DAVIS 43
understand the proceedings, and unable to cooperate with
counsel. Judge Horner denied both motions. In March, the
court saw no substantial change in Marks’s condition,
concluding that counsel’s complaints were similar to those
made by counsel in connection with the 1992 competency
determination—“lack of cooperation, differing views in
terms of the quality of evidence and how the case should be
presented, things of this nature.” In addition, drawing again
on its own observations, the court said that
Mr. Marks has at great length and with an
admirable and articulate ability, has
expressed his understanding of these
proceedings, his in depth understanding of
the criminal procedure, his in depth
understanding of oftentimes merely awesome
proportions of the facts of this case, of the
testimony of witnesses, of the contents of
police reports, of the contents of preliminary
examination transcripts, of the details of the
testimony that’s been received here in open
court. Has expressed and analyzed that
testimony and pointed out ways in which that
testimony is subject to either criticism, that it
can be—it can reflect weakness or purported
weakness in the prosecution’s case,
discrepancies in witnesses’ testimony, things
of this nature. I have been impressed. In fact
Mr. Marks has a remarkable grasp of the facts
of the case that has been presented in the
course of this trial and at earlier proceedings
in the course of this trial.
44 MARKS V. DAVIS
As counsel are aware I have been
involved in the criminal justice system in one
capacity or another since 1966. I cannot
remember another criminal defendant, that is
someone charged with a criminal offense,
that has expressed in open court as
comprehensive a grasp of the case against
him as has Mr. Marks.
Now, there is a clearly a considerable area
of dispute between Mr. Marks and his
attorneys as to how the case should be
handled. But I do not find that is any
different than that was expressed in 1992 at
the trial of the competency hearing then or
that was expressed and reflected by counsel’s
remarks and motions at the beginning of this
trial. There has been no substantial change in
circumstances here. Certainly no new
evidence or substantial change of
circumstances that cause a serious doubt on
my part as to the validity of the finding by the
jury in 1992 that he’s competent to stand trial.
On the contrary. As I have stated at
length and will state my conclusion again, I
find that Mr. Marks has a remarkable grasp
of both technical detail, tactics and facts
involving his case. If he chooses not to
cooperate with counsel, that’s something
obviously I can’t prevent. But I think he has
an absolute and comprehensive ability to
cooperate with counsel, and he has expressed
MARKS V. DAVIS 45
and acted on that ability on various
occasions.
In April, the court once again found that Marks was “fully in
command of his faculties” and was making a conscious
decision to present the jury with a story that he believed was
in his best interests.
Marks was convicted and sentenced to death.
Years later, on direct appeal, the California Supreme
Court sustained the trial court’s decision to forgo a second
competency hearing. Marks, 72 P.3d at 1237–38. The court
noted that, “once a defendant has been found to be
competent, even bizarre statements and actions are not
enough to require a further inquiry,” that “[r]eviewing courts
give great deference to a trial court’s decision whether to
hold a competency hearing” because “‘[a]n appellate court
is in no position to appraise a defendant’s conduct in the trial
court as indicating insanity, a calculated attempt to feign
insanity and delay the proceedings, or sheer temper,’” and
that Marks’s conduct at trial “amply prove[d] his ability to
understand the proceedings and assist counsel.” Id. at 1237
(quoting People v. Marshall, 931 P.2d 262, 279 (Cal. 1997)).
In 2002, eight years after the trial, Marks filed a state
habeas petition asserting that he had been incompetent to
stand trial in 1994. Wies had passed away by this time, but
Thews submitted a declaration in support of the petition.
Thews stated that “Marks could not accept the fact that the
voice on the tape recording of his statement to the police was
actually his voice”; that Marks “believed that the
prosecution, or someone, had switched photographs from the
exhibits admitted into evidence at the preliminary hearing,
and that the prosecution had been adjudged guilty of bribing
46 MARKS V. DAVIS
witnesses”; that Marks was “convinced that a witness, Susan
Yi, excluded him as the assailant in one of the fatal
shootings, when, in fact, Ms. Yi had not seen the shooter at
all”; that Marks was “obsessed with discrepancies between”
certain eyewitnesses’ “description of the suspect and his own
appearance” and could not understand why defense counsel
were not challenging the witnesses’ credibility while they
were testifying; that, as a witness, Marks “could not control
his urge to argue what he thought were significant points in
the evidence, such as discrepancies in the eyewitness
identifications and his own appearance”; that Marks “went
off on incomprehensible tangents, jumping from subject to
subject that did not have any rational connection to the case”;
and that Marks “was not able to comprehend what was going
on,” was “seriously out of touch with reality,” and was “in
no condition to cooperate rationally in his defense.” Thews
also said that Marks’s “paranoid delusions were making it
impossible for us to communicate with him. We concluded
that he was simply without understanding or awareness.”
A defense team investigator, Lauren Church Hatvany,
also submitted a declaration in support of the petition. She
said that Marks “was seriously mentally ill,” and
preoccupied and obsessed with his hair and with the
musician Prince. She testified that it “was not possible to
have a normal conversation with him,” because he “would
. . . jump around from one irrelevant topic to another,” and
that, when he testified, he “could appear relatively lucid at
times” but at other times would answer questions “with
illogical responses, and [he] would frequently drift into
tangents.” She concluded that Marks “did not seem able to
be genuinely involved in his defense.”
Marks also presented declarations from jurors and
witnesses who had observed him at trial. Prosecution
MARKS V. DAVIS 47
witness Sherman Boyd, for example, noted that Marks “did
not seem to comprehend anything while I was in the
courtroom.” Prosecution witness Brenda Joyce Bailey
testified that Marks “did not seem to understand what was
going on or why I was there.” And Juror Anita Clifton
testified that Marks had offered “incoherent, disjointed, and
irrelevant” testimony, showing that “he was mentally
unsound.”
Most significantly, Marks submitted declarations from a
half dozen mental health experts supporting his
incompetency claim. Clinical psychologist Karen Froming
conducted a clinical evaluation of Marks in 2002,
encompassing twenty hours of examination and testing. Dr.
Froming began by summarizing the work of others. She
noted that Dr. Stein, in 1992 testing, had found “very
significant brain impairment”; significant memory deficits,
placing Marks in the bottom 2 to 4% or bottom 10%; and
academic functioning in math, spelling, and reading at a
second- or third-grade level. She noted that Dr. Jo Gilbert,
in 1990, had assigned Marks an IQ of 65, with 69 or below
considered intellectually disabled. Dr. Froming concluded
that her own tests confirmed these results. Froming noted
“significant neurological impairments with psychiatric
manifestations.” She found that Marks’s test results were
consistent with damage to the frontal and temporal lobes;
that the severity of the memory impairment “substantially
compromises his ability to accumulate knowledge or
appreciate new information in light of what he previously
learned”; that Marks’s reading comprehension was at a
fourth- or fifth-grade level; that Marks’s frontal lobe deficits
prevented him from structuring his speech, causing his
speech to come out in a torrent of words; that Marks scored
in the thirteenth percentile on a smell function test,
48 MARKS V. DAVIS
suggestive of frontal lobe damage; that Marks’s frontal lobe
deficits “significantly impaired his cognition and executive
functioning”; and that Marks’s “neurological deficits would
be expected to have substantially impaired the functioning
that is necessary to attend and rationally participate in
judicial proceedings.” Dr. Froming concluded that:
Mr. Marks’s neurologically-based auditory,
visual, attention and language deficits
prevent Mr. Marks from discriminating in the
first instance between information that is
most import[ant] and information that is least
important. Damage to Mr. Marks’s frontal
lobes compromises his ability to prioritize
and organize information, and the damage to
both his frontal and temporal lobes impairs
his ability to retrieve information. As
discussed previously, these functional
deficits prevent Mr. Marks from
accumulating and organizing information in
the manner necessary to appreciate the
significance of new information in light of
the information to which he already has been
exposed. In the context of his trial, this meant
Mr. Marks would have extreme difficulty
retaining and building a fund of information
from one day to the next and in tracking the
proceedings to understand how each day’s
events related to the trial as a whole.
She noted that at trial Marks “frequently missed the point of
the discussions in which he was involved” and exhibited
“delusional ideation and identity defusion.” On the
MacArthur Competency Test, Marks exhibited mild
MARKS V. DAVIS 49
impairment in understanding and clinically significant
impairment in reasoning and appreciation, resulting in an
overall score in the incompetent range. Dr. Froming
reported that “Marks was severely impaired by both his brain
damage and his psychiatric dysfunction at the time of trial.”
She concluded that:
Marks shows marked impairments in delayed
memory, moderately syntactically complex
language comprehension, frontal lobe
functions of behavioral self-regulation,
problem-solving, shifting cognitive sets, and
taking in new information. Mr. Marks
competency is currently severely impaired.
Because all clinical indications are that his
neuropsychiatric disorder is of the same
severity now as it was then, it is my opinion,
which I hold to a reasonable degree of clinical
certainty, that Mr. Marks was incompetent
and unable rationally to assist his trial
counsel or otherwise participate in his
defense. No standardized, structured
competency evaluation was administered
prior to or at trial. When such a test is
administered, however, Mr. Marks is able
only to identify, albeit marginally, the players
in the courtroom. He is unable to take in new
information, unable to verify if old
information is correct or incorrect, cannot
choose salient information to relay to
counsel, and is unable realistically to appraise
50 MARKS V. DAVIS
options presented to him based on the
information given.
Psychiatrist Fred Rosenthal, who had testified at the
1992 competency trial, opined on Marks’s competency again
in connection with the state habeas proceedings. Dr.
Rosenthal stated in 1992 that Marks had a “disturbed mental
state,” “did not seem to be firmly connected to reality,” and
suffered from “periods of clearly irrational and paranoid
thinking.” In Dr. Rosenthal’s view, although Marks seemed
“mentally intact at times” and “was able to converse
rationally at some points,” it was “evident that an actual
psychotic mental state existed and this was either a chronic
functional disorder or the result[] of organic brain damage.”
In 2002, Dr. Rosenthal concluded that Marks suffered from
significant pervasive brain damage, impaired executive
functioning and memory, and delusional thinking. He
diagnosed schizoaffective disorder and chemical
dependency and found that Marks was unable to control his
conduct and engaged in impulsive behavior. Dr. Rosenthal
acknowledged that the jury had rejected his opinion in 1992
but emphasized that his examination of Marks at that time
had been limited and that he had testified without the benefit
of Dr. Stein’s neuropsychological testing.
Clinical psychologist David Stein had conducted
neuropsychological testing on Marks in 1992 and, like
Rosenthal, had testified at the competency trial. He had not,
however, been asked at that time to opine on Marks’s
competence to stand trial. Dr. Stein determined that Marks’s
“test results were in the impaired range for all seven of the
critical indicators of brain impairments” and that Marks
MARKS V. DAVIS 51
“suffer[ed] considerable, pervasive organic brain damage.”
He stated:
In 1992, I was not asked to opine whether Mr.
Marks was mentally competent to stand trial.
If I had been asked to do so, I could and
would have testified truthfully that in my
clinical judgment the functional impact of
Mr. Marks’s neurological deficits and
thought disorder made him unable to
understand the nature of the trial proceedings
or to assist his attorneys in a rational manner.
Mr. Marks’s performance on tests that
correlate with the nature and severity of
frontal lobe and temporal lobe damage, the
resulting impact on executive functioning
and memory and his evidence susceptibility
to distraction by internal stimuli were
predictive of Mr. Marks’s inability to
comprehend or conform his behavior to the
requirements of trial proceedings.
Dr. Stein concluded that Marks’s “impulsivity, pressured
and tangential speech, and loose associations were reliable
clinical indications that he would be unable to appreciate the
linear nature of the trial process or his appropriate role in it.”
He also cited “the delusional and paranoid qualities of
[Marks’s] disordered thinking.” After reviewing the
transcripts of pretrial proceedings and the 1994 trial, Dr.
Stein concluded that
Marks’s statements and testimony reveal a
human being suffering from significant
neurological and mental impairments that
52 MARKS V. DAVIS
make him unable to control his impulsive,
perseverative thoughts or to understand how
he and his attorneys must proceed to protect
his own interests. Mr. Marks’s pre-trial
statements in court were generally rambling,
frequently unintelligible and mostly
incoherent. He was unable to track the
substance of conversations or the meaning of
questions posed to him, frequently was
unable to give responsive answers and
missed the significance of information
provided by his attorneys to the court.
Psychiatrist George Woods performed a
neuropsychiatric evaluation of Marks in 2002. Dr. Woods
noted Marks’s troubled childhood and testing by Drs.
Gilbert, Stein, and Froming “document[ing] profound
cognitive impairment in Delaney’s frontal and temporal
lobes.” Dr. Woods concluded that Marks suffered from
“neurologically based learning disabilities”; delusions;
significant neuropsychological impairments; impaired
executive function, compromising his ability to
conceptualize, sequence, weigh, and deliberate, as well as
his ability to adapt his behavior; dementia; depression,
disassociation; PTSD; psychosis; and schizoaffective
disorder, causing him to view the world through a psychotic
lens. He concluded that Marks’s “brain impairment coupled
with his disruptive psychotic illness, left [him] unable to
appreciate the nature of his actions or to conform his
behavior to the law at the time of the offenses for which he
was tried and convicted, and incompetent rationally to
understand the proceedings or to assist in his defense during
the period in which he was tried.”
MARKS V. DAVIS 53
Psychiatrist Karen Gudiksen, who had testified at the
1992 competency trial, opined on Marks’s competency again
during the state habeas proceedings. She once again
concluded that Marks suffered from “delusional, paranoid”
and “disordered thinking” and “cognitive impairments . . .
consistent with . . . reported head traumas and/or substance
abuse” and was “incapable of understanding the nature of the
criminal proceedings or rationally assisting counsel in his
defense.” Dr. Gudiksen cited Marks’s significant,
neurologically impaired executive and cognitive functioning
impairments and his delusional and paranoid ideation. In her
view, Marks was not able to contextualize and integrate
information to the degree necessary to follow the
proceedings and understand what information is important
and what is not. She said that Marks’s trial testimony
exhibited his disinhibited and impulsive behaviors,
pressured, tangential speech and disordered, psychotic
thought processes, reflecting both “psychosis and significant
brain damage.” Like Dr. Rosenthal, Dr. Gudiksen
acknowledged that the jury had rejected her opinion in 1992.
But she emphasized that her opinion in 2002 was based on
additional information, including both Dr. Stein’s test results
and the evidence of Marks’s 1994 trial testimony.
Psychologist Ruben Gur conducted a
neuropsychological assessment of Marks in 2003. He
diagnosed schizophrenia, disorganized type; post-traumatic
stress disorder; and intellectual disability and opined that
Marks’s “impairments prevented him from understanding
the nature of the proceedings or rationally assisting in his
defense.”
Marks also submitted a declaration from clinical
psychologist Julie Kriegler. Kriegler completed a
psychosocial history and psychodiagnostic assessment of
54 MARKS V. DAVIS
Marks in 2002 and documented evidence of Marks’s
“emerging psychotic disorder” following his service in the
Navy. She placed a heavy emphasis on evidence of Marks’s
troubled childhood, which allegedly included fierce
beatings, domestic violence, substance abuse, fights, racism,
a traumatic home life, food deprivation, lack of a nurturing
environment, and being thrown out of the home.
In 2005, the California Supreme Court summarily denied
Marks’s competency claim.
In 2011, Marks presented the competency claim in his
federal habeas petition. In 2016, the district court denied the
claim under § 2254(d). The court concluded that Marks
“behaved at trial as if he understood the nature and purpose
of the proceedings against him and was capable of assisting
in his defense” and that Marks’s trial interruptions “could
reasonably be interpreted as rational efforts to make points
that he felt needed to be made.” Although Marks’s experts
offered a reasonable interpretation of the evidence, the court
concluded that the state court’s interpretation of the same
evidence was objectively reasonable under AEDPA.
On appeal, Marks contends that the district court erred.
To satisfy § 2254(d), he presents two arguments: (1) that the
California Supreme Court’s summary denial of his
competency claim rested on an antecedent objectively
unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent
because the state courts declined to hold a second
competency hearing after Judge Hyde raised a bona fide
doubt as to his competence in his assault case; and (2) that
the California Supreme Court’s summary denial of this
claim—reflecting the state court’s conclusion that his state
petition failed to establish a prima facie case of
MARKS V. DAVIS 55
incompetence—is objectively unreasonable. We address
these arguments in turn.
B. Antecedent Unreasonable Application
of Clearly Established Law
“When a state court’s adjudication of a claim is
dependent on an antecedent unreasonable application of
federal law, the requirement set forth in § 2254(d)(1) is
satisfied.” Panetti v. Quarterman, 551 U.S. 930, 953 (2007).
“A federal court must then resolve the claim without the
deference AEDPA otherwise requires.” Id.
Marks contends that this principle applies here. In
November 1992, Judge Hyde ordered a competency
determination in Marks’s assault case. The State dismissed
the assault charges before that competency determination
could be made, and Marks subsequently was tried and
convicted in the capital case without a further competency
determination taking place. Marks contends that the failure
to hold a second competency hearing in the capital case in
light of Judge Hyde’s order raising a bona fide doubt as to
his competence in the assault case amounted to an
unreasonable application of the Supreme Court’s decisions
in Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375 (1966), and Drope v.
Missouri, 420 U.S. 162 (1975). Pate held that, “[w]here the
evidence raises a ‘bona fide doubt’ as to a defendant’s
competence to stand trial, the judge on his own motion must
impanel a jury and conduct a sanity hearing.” 383 U.S. at
385. Drope, in turn, holds that, “[e]ven when a defendant is
competent at the commencement of his trial, a trial court
must always be alert to circumstances suggesting a change
that would render the accused unable to meet the standards
of competence to stand trial.” 420 U.S. at 181. Marks
contends that Judge Hyde’s order in the assault case created
56 MARKS V. DAVIS
an “unresolved” bona fide doubt as to his competence to
stand trial in the capital case and thus that he could not be
tried or convicted in the capital case without a second
competency hearing taking place:
At the time the state court summarily denied
Mr. Marks’s postconviction claim, the record
before it thus demonstrated that he had been
forced to stand trial and sentenced to death
despite the existence of an unresolved “bona
fide doubt” about whether he was, in fact,
competent to stand trial. But when the
evidence before a court is sufficient to raise a
doubt “as to [the defendant’s] present
competence” a competency “hearing must be
held.” Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375, 387
(1966) (emphasis added) . . . . The state
court’s failure to conduct the hearing
required by Robinson, either at the time of
trial or during post-conviction proceedings,
was an antecedent legal error, and rendered
its decision on Mr. Marks’s habeas claim of
incompetence contrary to and an
unreasonable application of clearly
established federal law.
Opening Br. at 27 (first alteration in original).
We reject this argument. First, the California Supreme
Court’s failure to order a second competency hearing in
response to Judge Hyde’s order was not “contrary to” Pate
or Drope. As noted, a state court decision is “contrary to”
federal law if it applies a rule that contradicts the governing
law set forth in Supreme Court cases or if it confronts a set
MARKS V. DAVIS 57
of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision
of the Supreme Court and nevertheless arrives at a result
different from Supreme Court precedent. Williams, 529 U.S.
at 405–06. Neither of those conditions is present here. The
Supreme Court has never held that a bona fide doubt finding
in one prosecution requires a competency determination in a
different prosecution—especially where, as here, a
competency determination has already been made in the
second case. The facts of this case, moreover, are readily
distinguishable from those in Pate and Drope.
Nor did the California Supreme Court’s decision involve
an “unreasonable application” of Pate and Drope. Although
a state court decision involves an unreasonable application
of federal law when the state court unreasonably refuses to
extend a Supreme Court precedent to a new context where it
should apply, that principle does not apply unless it is
“beyond doubt” that the Supreme Court’s rulings apply to
the new situation or set of facts. Moore v. Helling, 763 F.3d
1011, 1017 (9th Cir. 2014). Here, the California court
reasonably could have concluded that Pate and Drope do not
extend to this novel context.
Finally, the California Supreme Court reasonably could
have concluded that Judge Hyde’s order in the assault case
did not raise a bona fide doubt as to Marks’s competence to
stand trial in the capital case. A jury had found Marks
competent in the capital case only four months earlier,
following an extensive trial on Marks’s competence.
Nothing in Judge Hyde’s brief order in the assault case,
moreover, suggested a change in Marks’s circumstances.
Furthermore, Marks’s attorneys did not move for a second
competency hearing in the capital case at that time. On the
contrary, Wies and Thews, who took over Marks’s defense
a month later, in December 1992, were persuaded at that
58 MARKS V. DAVIS
time that Marks was competent to stand trial: “after
probably a couple of months,” they agreed among
themselves “that there was not an issue, that Delaney was
cooperating, that Delaney was able to understand what was
going on. He was able to help us in preparation and help us
in discussing all matters connected with the case.” On this
record, the California Supreme Court reasonably could have
concluded that Judge Hyde’s order did not raise a bona fide
doubt as to Marks’s competence to stand trial in the capital
case. 10
In sum, we hold that the California Supreme Court’s
adjudication of Marks’s substantive competency claim was
not dependent on an antecedent unreasonable application of
the procedural rights established in Pate and Drope. The
state court reasonably could have concluded that Judge
Hyde’s order in the assault case did not raise a bona fide
doubt as to Marks’s competence in the capital case.
C. Unreasonable Determination of
a Prima Facie Case
Marks alternatively contends that he satisfies § 2254(d)
on his competency claim because the California Supreme
Court’s determination that he failed to establish a prima facie
case of incompetence was objectively unreasonable.
1. Framing the AEDPA Inquiry
Marks points out that the California Supreme Court
summarily denied this claim on state postconviction
10
In the district court, Marks alleged that the state courts’ failure to hold
a second competency hearing in the capital case violated his procedural
due process rights under Pate and Drope. Marks does not appeal the
district court’s denial of that claim.
MARKS V. DAVIS 59
review—without granting an evidentiary hearing or ordering
a response to the petition. He notes that
[u]nder California law, the California
Supreme Court’s summary denial of a habeas
petition on the merits reflects that court’s
determination that “the claims made in th[e]
petition do not state a prima facie case
entitling the petitioner to relief.” In re Clark,
5 Cal. 4th 750, 770, 21 Cal. Rptr. 2d 509, 855
P.2d 729, 741–742 (1993). It appears that the
court generally assumes the allegations in the
petition to be true, but does not accept wholly
conclusory allegations, People v. Duvall, 9
Cal. 4th 464, 474, 37 Cal. Rptr. 2d 259, 886
P.2d 1252, 1258 (1995), and will also
“review the record of the trial . . . to assess
the merits of the petitioner’s claims,” Clark,
supra, at 770, 21 Cal. Rptr. 2d 509, 855 P.2d,
at 742.
Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170, 188 n.12 (2011)
(alterations in original).
Our case law may be in some tension regarding the
proper framing of the AEDPA inquiry when the California
Supreme Court summarily denies a federal constitutional
claim on state postconviction review. On the one hand, we
held in Nunes v. Mueller, 350 F.3d 1045 (9th Cir. 2003), that
the inquiry under § 2254(d) “requires analysis of the state
court’s method as well as its result.” Id. at 1054. We
concluded in Nunes that § 2254(d)(1) was satisfied because
the petitioner “clearly made out a prima facie case of
ineffective assistance of counsel” and “it was objectively
60 MARKS V. DAVIS
unreasonable for the state court to conclude on the record
before it that no reasonable factfinder could believe that
Nunes had been prejudiced.” Id. at 1054–55; see also Lopez
v. Allen, 47 F.4th 1040, 1048 (9th Cir. 2022); Cannedy v.
Adams, 706 F.3d 1148, 1160–61 (9th Cir. 2013).
On the other hand, our decision in Montiel v. Chappell,
43 F.4th 942, 957 n.13 (9th Cir. 2022), states that, even when
the California Supreme Court summarily denies a claim for
failure to establish a prima facie case, “we must evaluate [the
petitioner’s] claims in their entirety to determine whether the
California Supreme Court could reasonably reject those
claims on the merits”:
Pinholster argued to the Supreme Court that
the state court’s implicit determination—in
summarily denying his petition without
issuing an order to show cause—that
Pinholster had not even made out a “prima
facie” case for relief was contrary to, or an
unreasonable application of, clearly
established federal law. See Brief for
Respondent at 52–53, Pinholster, 563 U.S.
170 (No. 09-1088), 2010 WL 3738678
(“[T]he California Supreme Court’s
determination that Pinholster’s allegations,
taken as true, failed even to make out a prima
facie claim was not only wrong, it was
objectively unreasonable. It follows that
§ 2254(d) does not prohibit a grant of relief
on the ground that trial counsel rendered
constitutionally ineffective assistance at the
penalty phase of Pinholster’s capital trial.”).
Yet, rather than evaluate only whether
MARKS V. DAVIS 61
Pinholster had made out a prima facie case in
his state habeas petition, the Supreme Court
evaluated the full merits of Pinholster’s
claims to assess whether the California
Supreme Court could reasonably have denied
habeas relief. See Pinholster, 563 U.S. at
189–203, 131 S. Ct. 1388. To the extent that
Montiel makes a similar argument to the one
Pinholster made, we must reject it.
Pinholster teaches that we must evaluate
Montiel’s Strickland claims in their entirety
to determine whether the California Supreme
Court could reasonably reject those claims on
the merits.
We need not resolve any tension between Nunes and
Montiel here. The inquiry under Nunes turns on “whether
the allegations contained in the petition, viewed in the
context of the trial record, established a prima facie case” of
incompetence. Cannedy, 706 F.3d at 1060 (emphasis
altered). Here, it was objectively reasonable for the
California Supreme Court—viewing the trial record in its
entirety—to conclude that Marks failed to establish a prima
facie case of incompetence. We therefore need not resolve
any tension in our case law.
2. Analysis
“It is well established that the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the criminal prosecution
of a defendant who is not competent to stand trial.” Medina
v. California, 505 U.S. 437, 439 (1992). Under this
principle, “a person whose mental condition is such that he
lacks the capacity to understand the nature and object of the
proceedings against him, to consult with counsel, and to
62 MARKS V. DAVIS
assist in preparing his defense may not be subjected to a
trial.” Drope, 420 U.S. at 171. “[I]t is not enough for the
[trial] judge to find that the defendant is oriented to time and
place and has some recollection of events.” Dusky v. United
States, 362 U.S. 402, 402 (1960) (per curiam) (alterations
and internal quotation marks omitted). The “test must be
whether he has sufficient present ability to consult with his
lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding—
and whether he has a rational as well as factual
understanding of the proceedings against him.” Id. Here,
we conclude that the California Supreme Court’s conclusion
during state postconviction proceedings that Marks failed to
establish his incompetence during trial was not objectively
unreasonable.
To be sure, Marks presented substantial evidence of
incompetency. His trial attorneys, Wies and Thews, both
concluded that he was incompetent at trial, and Thews
submitted a declaration to that effect in 2002. Defense
counsel’s opinions are entitled to considerable weight
because “defense counsel will often have the best-informed
view of the defendant’s ability to participate in his defense.”
Medina, 505 U.S. at 450; see Williams, 384 F.3d at 608
(deeming “especially relevant” counsel’s opinion the
petitioner was competent). Several mental health experts
also opined that Marks was incompetent, and there were no
expert opinions on the other side. Marks’s trial testimony
was, at least at times, confused, rambling, fantastic, and
incoherent. And there was evidence that Marks held
delusional beliefs. Marks’s evidence—especially the
consensus opinion of the mental health experts—presented a
powerful case of incompetence.
There was also evidence of Marks’s competence,
however. The question of Marks’s competence was tried to
MARKS V. DAVIS 63
a jury in July 1992. Twelve jurors heard from more than a
dozen witnesses, including mental health experts, over seven
days of testimony before unanimously finding that Marks
was competent. The trial court and the California Supreme
Court both sustained that verdict, concluding that it was
supported by substantial evidence. The jury’s verdict is
presumptively correct. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), (e)(1). 11
Of course, competence can change over time, including in
the context of different environmental factors and stressors,
such that the 1992 verdict is not dispositive of Marks’s
competence during his 1994 trial two years later. But the
jury’s 1992 verdict is of some relevance to Marks’s
competence in 1994, as some of the same experts testified
and the types of behaviors identified as indicating
incompetence were similar.
The experienced trial court judge, moreover, was firmly
convinced, based on personal observation and extensive
interactions with Marks, that Marks was competent to stand
trial. Cf. Deere v. Cullen, 718 F.3d 1124, 1145–46 (9th Cir.
2013) (pre-AEDPA case) (“Judge Metheny personally
interacted with Deere on numerous occasions at every
hearing and repeatedly found that Deere understood the
proceedings and could cooperate with counsel in a
defense. . . . His observation that Deere was competent is
11
The precise role of § 2254(e)(1) in conducting an analysis under
§ 2254(d) has not been fully resolved. See, e.g., Brumfield, 576 U.S. at
322; Wood, 558 U.S. at 304; Stevens v. Davis, 25 F.4th 1141, 1153 n.6
(9th Cir. 2022); Kipp, 971 F.3d at 953 n.12; Murray, 745 F.3d at 998–
1001. In reviewing the merits of a habeas petitioner’s claim after
§ 2254(d) is satisfied, we defer to a state court’s factual findings under
§ 2254(e); “those findings are presumed to be correct, a presumption that
can be overcome only by clear and convincing evidence.” Crittenden v.
Chappell, 804 F.3d 998, 1011 (9th Cir. 2015).
64 MARKS V. DAVIS
presumed correct . . . .”). The opinions of Wies and Thews
are “not determinative,” Miles, 108 F.3d at 1113, and the fact
that Wies and Thews were persuaded of Marks’s
competence for more than a year before trial suggests that
his later lack of cooperation could have reflected his
unwillingness, rather than his inability, to cooperate.
Further, some of Marks’s conduct and testimony at trial
suggested his competence. In fact, when the California
Supreme Court considered Marks’s competence in his 2003
direct appeal, the court concluded that Marks was “properly
found competent to stand trial,” Marks, 72 P.3d at 1238, and
identified certain statements by Marks at trial that the court
understood to show his recognition of “the magnitude of the
charges he faced and the potential consequences” of
conviction, id. at 1236–37. In reaching its determination, the
California court addressed the significance to the
competence finding of Marks’s behavior at the trial. The
court stated that:
[Marks’s] most conspicuous outburst during
trial amply proves his ability to understand
the proceedings and assist counsel. When the
prosecutor concluded his redirect
examination of John Myers, defendant
interrupted, “Your Honor, I object. This
person stated it was not me, it was No. 6 who
committed the shooting. . . . He did not even
ask.” Discussion among the attorneys and
the court revealed that Myers had selected a
suspect other than defendant at a
photographic lineup. The prosecutor
recognized, however, there was a sound
tactical reason for defense counsel’s not
MARKS V. DAVIS 65
asking Myers about his failure to select
defendant: Myers had indicated “it was a toss
up” between defendant and the “number six”
individual; Myers finally chose the latter.
Although there was a legitimate reason for
not asking Myers about his selection at the
lineup, defendant’s comment reflected he
comprehended not just the nature of the
proceedings but the state of the People’s case
and its potential deficiencies.
Id. at 1237–38 (second alteration in original). This
discussion was a reasonable assessment of that portion of the
trial record and supports the California Supreme Court’s
later conclusion on habeas that Marks was competent to
stand trial.
After a careful review of the record, the district court
similarly—and reasonably—concluded that Marks
“behaved at trial as if he understood the nature and purpose
of the proceedings against him and was capable in assisting
in his defense.” Marks v. Davis, 112 F. Supp. 3d 949, 981
(N.D. Cal. 2015). So, although Marks’s experts “interpreted
the guilt and penalty phase transcripts as supporting a
finding of incompetence,” we agree with the district court
that “it would not have been unreasonable for the California
Supreme Court to conclude otherwise, based on the record.”
Finally, the opinions of Marks’s experts were not
compelling. Three of the experts had testified in 1992. They
were effectively cross-examined at that time, and in some
cases their opinions were inconsistent with the opinions of
other defense experts. The remaining experts examined
Marks in 2002 or 2003, nearly a decade after the trial.
Retrospective competency evaluations are disfavored and
66 MARKS V. DAVIS
may not be “especially probative of whether [a defendant]
actually was incompetent at the time of his trial.” Williams,
384 F.3d at 610.
Ultimately, the California Supreme Court’s rejection of
this claim was objectively reasonable in light of the jury’s
competency verdict, the opinion of the trial court judge, the
pretrial opinions of defense counsel, and the court’s own
reading of the trial court record, even if Marks’s experts
reasonably reached a different conclusion. The question
before us is not whether we agree with the California
Supreme Court’s adjudication of this claim. “[E]ven a
strong case for relief does not mean the state court’s contrary
conclusion was unreasonable.” Harrington, 562 U.S. at 102.
Rather, the question under controlling Supreme Court
precedent is whether the state court’s adjudication of the
claim is “so obviously wrong that its error lies beyond any
possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Bolin v. Davis, 13
F.4th 797, 805 (9th Cir. 2021) (quoting Shinn v. Kayer, 592
U.S. 111, 118 (2020) (per curiam)). The record does not
establish an error of this magnitude. Although reasonable
judges, reviewing the claim de novo, might well reach a
different conclusion than the state court, we conclude that
there was a reasonable basis for the state court’s rejection of
Marks’s competency claim.
II. ATKINS CLAIM
Marks contends that he is intellectually disabled and thus
that the Eighth Amendment forbids his execution. See
Atkins, 536 U.S. 304. The district court granted summary
judgment to the State on this claim under § 2254(d). Marks,
112 F. Supp. 3d at 981–93. We vacate and remand.
MARKS V. DAVIS 67
A. Background
In Atkins, the Supreme Court held that the Eighth
Amendment forbids the execution of intellectually disabled
persons. 536 U.S. at 321. The Court did not adopt a specific
definition of intellectual disability, then known as mental
retardation, but cited with approval the clinical definitions
set out by the American Association on Mental Retardation
(AAMR), now known as the American Association on
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD), and
the American Psychiatric Association. Id. at 308 n.3. These
clinical definitions defined intellectual disability as
characterized by (1) significantly subaverage intellectual
functioning, often established through IQ test scores;
(2) existing concurrently with significant limitations in
adaptive functioning in areas such as communication, self-
care, community use, self-direction, health and safety,
functional academics, leisure, and work; and (3) an onset
occurring before the age of eighteen. Id. at 308 n.3. To
implement Atkins, California adopted Penal Code section
1376, which at the time of the state court proceedings under
review defined intellectual disability as “the condition of
significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning
existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior and
manifested before the age of 18.” Cal. Penal Code § 1376(a)
(2005). In In re Hawthorne, the California Supreme Court
held that section 1376 applies to postconviction claims of
intellectual disability. 105 P.3d 552, 556 (Cal. 2005). 12
12
Under current California law, “‘[i]ntellectual disability’ means the
condition of significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning
existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested
before the end of the developmental period, as defined by clinical
standards.” Cal. Penal Code § 1376(a)(1) (2023).
68 MARKS V. DAVIS
In October 2002, shortly after Atkins was decided, Marks
filed a habeas petition in the California Supreme Court
alleging that he was intellectually disabled and that his
execution would constitute cruel and unusual punishment
under the Eighth Amendment. In 2005, the California
Supreme Court ordered the trial court to conduct an
evidentiary hearing on the claim. The matter was assigned
to Judge Horner, who had presided over Marks’s trial and
sentencing in 1994.
The trial court conducted a ten-day evidentiary hearing
on the Atkins claim in 2006. The record included Marks’s
academic history. This evidence showed that: Marks was
placed on the middle track rather than the remedial track;
took classes in both the middle and remedial tracks; repeated
the second grade; skipped the fifth grade (at the request of
his mother, who objected that he was too old for the fifth
grade); graduated from high school (ranked 280th out of 290
students); and took various junior college classes over a
thirteen-year period. Marks passed about a third of his
college courses, including refresher courses in reading,
math, and writing (eighteen units); classes in typing and
office management (thirteen units); a Swahili class (five
units); and physical education (one unit).
The record also contained evidence of Marks’s IQ test
scores, including several from his childhood. Marks’s IQ
was measured as 98 at age six, 95 at age seven, 80 at age
eight, 86 at age ten, and 74 at age eleven. As an adult, Marks
scored 60 at age twenty-seven, 74 at age thirty-two, 65 at age
thirty-three, 74 at age forty-six, and 72 at age forty-nine.
Marks presented testimony from three mental health
experts—Dr. Nancy Cowardin, a psychologist with a
specialty in special education, Dr. Ruben Gur, a psychologist
MARKS V. DAVIS 69
with a specialty in neuropsychology, and Dr. George Woods,
a physician specializing in neuropsychiatry. Each provided
a professional opinion, based on evidence regarding Marks’s
intellectual and adaptive functioning before the age of
eighteen, that he was intellectually disabled.
Finally, Marks presented declarations, prepared in 2002,
from thirty-seven lay witnesses who knew Marks during
childhood, in the Navy, or in adulthood. Several of these
witnesses described Marks as having experienced a
traumatic childhood: that Marks and his siblings feared their
father (Jimmie Lee Marks); that Marks’s father and mother
both regularly whipped the children; that Marks’s mother,
Sallie, once fired a gun at Marks in anger; that Marks’s
parents had a strained relationship; that Jimmie Lee
physically abused Sallie; that Marks’s father was frequently
unemployed, often absent, and a poor provider; that Marks’s
father would throw his children out of the home; and that
Marks’s parents were heavy drinkers and occasional drug
users. At least one witness also testified to the lack of food
in the home.
The State presented a single witness—Mike Richard,
Mark’s cousin. Richard, a lay witness employed in law
enforcement, spent many weekends at the Marks home
during Marks’s childhood. Richard testified that Marks was
the eldest of the Marks children and functioned as the
“leader” among his siblings; that Marks had a “normal”
relationship with his parents; that Marks and his siblings
were never beaten by their parents, beyond the “spankings
as kids normally get”; that there was always enough food to
eat in the Marks home; and that “[i]n my layman view of
mental retardation, I saw no sign of mental retardation”
during Marks’s childhood. Richard did not offer any other
testimony about Marks’s intellectual functioning, lacked any
70 MARKS V. DAVIS
specialized “training in dealing with disabled” people, and
acknowledged that he knew nothing about Marks’s
academic performance during their childhoods. He was not
asked about Marks’s memory, reading ability, or speech, nor
about any other specific indicia of Marks’s intellectual
functioning while growing up.
Following the evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied
the Atkins claim. At the outset, the court rejected the
traumatic picture of Marks’s childhood portrayed in the lay
witness declarations. The court found that this portrayal—
“of a home rife with unrelenting violence, repeated beatings,
alcohol abuse, food deprivation, abandonment, and the
like”—was not credible in light of Richard’s testimony and
the testimony of defense witnesses during the penalty phase
of the 1994 trial. As the trial court pointed out, the penalty-
phase witnesses had described a good home and a fairly
normal childhood. Betty Williams, a family friend, testified
in 1994 that Marks was “[j]ust like any average child. He
did have some problems of growing up from things that were
not within his control, but he was a very good child.”
Willoris Childs, a family friend and the grandmother of
Marks’s daughter Relisha, testified in 1994 that she had no
problems with Marks when he was a child and that he was a
pretty good kid before he got out of the Navy. Damon
Marks, Marks’s younger brother, testified in 1994 that he
had “admired Delaney all my life. Best brother out of all my
brothers was Delaney.” Marks “played a good role” in the
family, “the kind of brother that you will want in the family,”
and was “very helpful” to their mother. He testified that both
his parents worked while the children were growing up and
that his father and mother both supported the children. He
testified that the entire family, including Marks, attended
church on a weekly basis. He said that Marks’s troubles
MARKS V. DAVIS 71
started after he got out of the Navy. Effie Jones, a family
friend, testified in 1994 that Marks “was a good kid” who
presented no problems while he was growing up. She said
that Marks was very helpful to his mother and had a good
relationship with his siblings. Bobbie Jane Redic, Marks’s
aunt, testified in 1994 that she never noticed any problems
with Marks when he was a child. She said that he had a
normal childhood and was “just like any other child.” Elaine
Marks Bell, Marks’s sister, testified in 1994 that Marks had
been “a big brother to me. He was always there for me.”
She said that Marks came from a good home, that his parents
expected him to go on and do some good things in life, that
their father was a hard-working man, that they had religion
in the home, that their parents did not abuse alcohol, that
there were no drugs in the home, and that there was plenty
of food in the home. She acknowledged some problems—
e.g., that their father was not there all the time and could have
been more supportive of his sons—but testified that she and
Marks grew up in a “great home.” Lorraine Winn, Marks’s
cousin, testified in 1994 that Marks was helpful to his mother
and had a fine relationship with his father, that both parents
worked and provided for the children, that there was “never”
any physical violence in the home, and that Marks “was a
good kid” who “never really got into trouble. I had high
expectations of him because of the way he was as a kid.”
She acknowledged that the family “had their ups and their
downs” when it came to having plenty of food. The
California Supreme Court accurately summarized these
witnesses’ testimony in its 2003 decision:
They presented mostly consistent testimony
that described defendant as having grown up
in a good family environment with religion,
where there was no drug or alcohol abuse, no
72 MARKS V. DAVIS
domestic violence, and with a father who
encouraged education and hard work.
Defendant was helpful to his family as a
child. He had no more problems than the
average child and was never in serious
trouble.
Marks, 72 P.3d at 1232. In penalty-phase closing argument,
the defense argued that Marks had experienced a “normal”
childhood and disclaimed any suggestion that Marks had
experienced a “dysfunctional family or abusive father.”
Given the inconsistencies between the 2002 declarations on
the one hand and the 1994 testimony and Richard’s 2006
testimony on the other, the trial court declined to credit the
picture of Marks’s childhood presented in the 2002
declarations. 13
None of the trial witnesses, however, was asked about
Marks’s intellectual functioning or adaptive behaviors—for
example, whether he had learned to talk and read at
developmentally appropriate ages or whether he was able to
carry out tasks appropriate for his age. Their testimony was
therefore of limited relevance to the Atkins claim.
Next, the trial court rejected the opinions of Marks’s
three experts. The court concluded that the experts’ opinions
were flawed because all three had “relied heavily upon
statements contained in the various 2002 declarations . . .
relating details of the defendant’s supposedly violent
upbringing.” In addition, the court concluded that all three
13
The trial court also noted that, unlike the 2002 declarants, both Richard
and the 1994 witnesses had testified in court and had been subject to
cross-examination. The court based its credibility determinations in part
on its “own careful, personal observations of each witness.”
MARKS V. DAVIS 73
experts’ opinions were flawed because “none of the experts
reviewed any of the testimony presented on the defendant’s
behalf in the 1994 penalty trial, which testimony refuted or
contradicted many of these recitations.”
The court also provided additional reasons for rejecting
the opinions of Dr. Gur and Dr. Cowardin, although not that
of Dr. Woods. The court rejected the opinion of Dr. Gur,
inter alia, based on his “cavalier refusal” to consider
evidence of Marks’s efforts to obtain state welfare
benefits—attempts that the prosecution highlighted as
evidence of Marks’s intellectual capacity. The court said:
[W]hen presented with evidence of the
defendant’s apparently extensive efforts to
obtain general assistance, Dr. Gur
acknowledged that he had not reviewed any
of these materials, explaining that he didn’t
need these things, and he could not imagine
that any of these materials would change his
diagnosis. I find this somewhat cavalier
refusal to consider materials which, arguably
at least, might demonstrate that the defendant
possessed certain ‘adaptive skills,’ when the
possession of or lack of such skills is
presumably a significant factor in reaching a
diagnosis of mental retardation, to be
illustrative of an attitude demonstrating a
certain lack of objectivity or impartiality.
With respect to Dr. Cowardin, the court found it highly
significant that the expert had presented a slide during her
testimony that allegedly misstated the AAMR’s clinical
definition of intellectual disability. Whereas the slide stated
74 MARKS V. DAVIS
that the “disability originates before age 18,” the court
believed the AAMR definition required the disability to have
manifested before age eighteen. The court criticized Dr.
Cowardin at length over this perceived misstatement,
describing it as a “surprising example of lack of impartiality,
and of partisanship,” on Dr. Cowardin’s part. The court was
also convinced that Dr. Cowardin’s slide represented a
strategic attempt to water down the clinical definition and
concluded:
The fact that the defense team, and Dr.
Cowardin in particular, have nevertheless
attempted to make these changes is extremely
alarming to this Court. It raises the question
(which cannot be answered, on this record) of
“how many other definitions of critical terms
involved in the description and diagnosis of
mental retardation or other mental or
psychological impairments which have been
the subject of testimony in these proceedings
has the ‘defense team’ modified or changed
to suit their own purposes?”
The trial court also found the evidence of Marks’s IQ test
scores and academic history unpersuasive. As to the former,
the court observed that, “[o]f the tests administered before
the defendant is 18, only one test, at age 11, reflects a test
score (74) in the range of ‘borderline’ mental retardation—
and it is at the high end of even this range.” The court
concluded that “[t]est result[s] which vary this widely, and
which (while the defendant is under 18) barely dip into the
range for borderline mental retardation on only one single
occasion, cannot be considered very ‘powerful evidence’
MARKS V. DAVIS 75
supporting a finding of mental retardation.” 14 Turning to
Marks’s school records, the court acknowledged Marks’s
“overall poor academic performance, his having to repeat the
second grade, teacher comments reflecting his ‘immaturity’
and that he was ‘slow’ and ‘below grade level skills’ at
various points in elementary school, and the fact that he
graduated from high school near the bottom of his class.”
But the court noted that Marks “was on the ‘medium track’
while in school,” graduated high school, and “attended
classes in a Junior College, where he passed some classes.”
Viewing the record as a whole, the trial court found that
Marks “failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence
that he is mentally retarded within the meaning of Atkins.”
The court therefore denied Marks’s habeas petition.
Marks subsequently filed a second state habeas petition,
challenging the trial court’s rejection of his Atkins claim in
the California Supreme Court. The California Supreme
Court summarily denied the petition. Marks then reasserted
his Atkins claim in his federal habeas petition. The district
court denied relief under § 2254(d)(1) and (2). Marks, 112
F. Supp. 3d at 981–93. 15 Marks challenges that denial on
appeal.
14
The state trial court did not address expert testimony opining that the
24-point decline in IQ test scores between ages six and eleven was itself
“very important.”
15
Although the district court concluded that the state court’s ultimate
factual findings were objectively reasonable under § 2254(d)(2), the
district court did not meaningfully address the two significant factual
errors discussed below. First, the district court did not address at all the
state trial court’s glaring factual error in discrediting Dr. Cowardin’s
opinion on the erroneous ground that she had misstated and manipulated
76 MARKS V. DAVIS
B. Section 2254(d)(2)
Marks first argues that the state trial court’s adjudication
of his Atkins claim “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)(2). 16
Marks argues that the trial court unreasonably rejected
Dr. Cowardin’s opinion on the ground that she misstated the
clinical definition of intellectual disability by substituting
“originates” for “manifested.” We agree. Dr. Cowardin’s
slide and testimony accurately quoted the then-current (10th
edition) AAMR definition of intellectual disability.
Although Dr. Cowardin’s testimony at first cast some doubt
on this fact, her later testimony clarified that she had
accurately quoted the clinical definition. The trial court
erred by concluding otherwise, and by relying on that error
to deem Dr. Cowardin partisan. The state court’s error, and
the extremely negative inferences drawn from that purported
error, were objectively unreasonable.
the clinical definition of intellectual disability, something she had not
done. Marks, 112 F. Supp. 3d at 986–93. Second, the district court
dismissed in a footnote the state court’s significant factual error in
discrediting Dr. Woods’s opinion on the faulty ground that he had not
reviewed the 1994 penalty-phase testimony, which he had done. Id. at
991 n.26. We consequently find the district court’s analysis of the §
2254(d)(2) issue unpersuasive.
16
Where, as here, the state supreme court’s decision is not accompanied
by reasons, we “‘look through’ the unexplained decision to the last
related state-court decision that does provide a relevant rationale” and
presume that the state supreme court adopted the lower court’s
reasoning. Wilson, 584 U.S. at 125. Because the State has not attempted
to rebut that presumption, our focus under § 2254(d) is on the trial court’s
adjudication of Marks’s Atkins claim.
MARKS V. DAVIS 77
Marks argues that the trial court unreasonably rejected
Dr. Woods’s opinion on the ground that he had not reviewed
the 1994 penalty-phase testimony. We again agree.
Although Dr. Cowardin and Dr. Gur each testified that they
had not reviewed the 1994 testimony, Dr. Woods testified
that he had done so. Indeed, Dr. Woods testified about the
1994 testimony at length. The trial court erred by
concluding otherwise, and the state court’s error was
objectively unreasonable.
Marks next challenges the state court’s finding that Dr.
Gur cavalierly refused to consider records of Marks’s efforts
to obtain general assistance benefits. We reject this
challenge. Dr. Gur testified that he had not reviewed
Marks’s applications for benefits and that he saw no need to
review them. He said that “there is a point as a clinician you
have to say, ‘Enough, I have what I need and I can make the
diagnosis and move on.’” He added that, “sitting here, I
can’t imagine anything you could tell me now that would
have changed my diagnosis.” The trial court accurately
summarized Dr. Gur’s testimony, and the inference the trial
court drew from that testimony—that the testimony
demonstrated a “lack of objectivity or impartiality” on Dr.
Gur’s part—was, while debatable, not objectively
unreasonable.
Marks argues the trial court questioned Dr. Gur’s
credibility “on the basis of statements the court either
misremembered or concocted.” Opening Br. at 79. The trial
court, however, merely used quotation marks when
paraphrasing Dr. Gur’s testimony. This appears to have
been a stylistic choice rather than a factual error, and we are
not persuaded that it constituted an unreasonable
78 MARKS V. DAVIS
determination of the facts. 17 Substantively, the trial court
drew reasonable inferences from the record. As Judge
Berzon’s partial dissent makes clear, a different factfinder
certainly could have drawn different inferences. But the trial
court’s inferences were not objectively unreasonable:
• During the penalty phase of the 1994 murder trial,
defense witnesses, including one of Marks’s brothers, had
described Marks as a good kid with a normal childhood. On
cross-examination during the 2006 Atkins hearing, the State
asked Dr. Gur whether this 1994 testimony undermined his
diagnosis of intellectual disability. Dr. Gur rejected that
suggestion, testifying that he wouldn’t trust the 1994
testimony of Marks’s brother because Marks’s brother might
have testified falsely to try to help his brother avoid the death
penalty:
Q: Doesn’t that [1994 testimony] tend to
weigh against these observations you made
about retardation and PTSD?
17
The trial court may have used quotation marks as “scare quotes,” to
indicate its disagreement with Dr. Gur’s opinions. See Scare quotes, Am.
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 1565 (5th ed. 2011)
(“Quotation marks used to emphasize a word or phrase or to indicate its
special status, especially to express doubt about its validity or to criticize
its use.”); Shona McCombes, When to Use Quotation Marks, Scribbr
(Nov. 29, 2022), https://www.scribbr.com/language-rules/quotation-
marks/ (“‘Scare quotes’ are quotation marks used around words that are
not a direct quotation from a specific source. They are used to signal that
a term is being used in an unusual or ironic way, that it is borrowed from
someone else, or that the writer is skeptical about the term.”).
Regardless, we infer that the trial court likely knew that it was
paraphrasing the testimony. Thus, we are not persuaded that the court
misapprehended the record.
MARKS V. DAVIS 79
A: It’s quite usual for members of the
family not to see a lot of the difficulties that
a family has.
Q: Okay. It’s – I’m sorry.
A: Also, I would question—since I
thought you mentioned this was done during
the penalty phase—the brother may have
thought that if he described his brother as
kind and nice, that it would spare his
brother’s life. So I’d be suspicious of that
sort of testimony, in view of everything else.
Q: So are you telling us that you think
people provide self-serving or beneficial stuff
that’s not true in the context of these criminal
cases?
A: Well, I wouldn’t blame a sibling for
trying to save a brother’s life.
The state trial court concluded that Dr. Gur’s testimony on
this subject undermined his credibility:
Each of the experts were confronted,
extensively, on cross-examination, with the
substance of the 1994 sworn testimony. Each
of the defense experts brushed this testimony
aside as a matter of little consequence. Thus,
Dr. Gur proclaimed, at one point in his
testimony, that he was “suspicious” of the
“self-serving testimony” given by family
members at the trial; at another point in his
testimony, he dismissed this testimony
(which, of course, he had never read) as the
80 MARKS V. DAVIS
“rose-colored-glasses outlook of family
members.” I find these statements both
preposterous and at the same time
illuminating of a significant lack of
objectivity or impartiality on the part of the
witness. As I have discussed at some length
earlier in this opinion, there is nothing in
what the family members and others stated in
their 1994 testimony which can reasonably or
even remotely be classified as “self-serving.”
On the contrary, for them to fail to relate
circumstances which, if true, might have
provided significant evidence in mitigation at
a penalty trial is hardly “self-serving.”
Putting aside the use of quotation marks to summarize Dr.
Gur’s testimony, the trial court’s reasoning is not objectively
unreasonable. The trial court drew permissible inferences
from the testimony.
• In a 2002 lay witness declaration, a childhood friend of
Marks by the name of Raymond Bradley described Marks as
a talkative child. During cross-examination of Dr. Gur in
2006, the State asked Dr. Gur whether Marks’s talkativeness
as a child undermined the diagnosis of intellectual disability.
Dr. Gur testified that Bradley’s declaration was consistent
with the diagnosis because Marks likely made no sense when
he talked to Bradley:
Q: Do you recall a declaration . . . from a
friend name[d] Raymond Bradley, [who]
described Mr. Marks as a colorful dresser,
good talker, careful dresser, loved to talk.
Remember that?
MARKS V. DAVIS 81
A: Yes.
Q: . . . How do you think that supports
your diagnosis?
A: I think it’s interesting that even in
the—the few characterization[s] that he gave,
he repeated one twice. And I agree. He’s
talkative. But if you listen to the content of
his speech, it’s—it’s—it’s vacuous. It’s very
impoverished.
...
Q: Okay. I’m asking you how he was
according to Mr. Bradley, how that supports
your diagnosis?
A: So he was talkative.
Q: Did what he say didn’t make sense
then?
A: I would assume it didn’t. I don’t
know for sure, but those kinds of descriptions
you often get from friends and family of
someone who later developed schizophrenia.
Q: How would you assume that?
A: Um, because I’ve seen now the kind
of behavior that would have given that
impression. If you spend some time with
him, he’s very friendly, smiling, talkative—
he was when I evaluated him. But I also tried
to understand what he said, and as you try
yourself, it’s very difficult to follow.
82 MARKS V. DAVIS
Q: So you think they just ignored how
difficult it was to follow when this
declaration from Raymond Bradley was
prepared. Is that what you’re saying?
A: That’s my best guess at this moment.
...
Q: So why would you conclude that he
didn’t make sense to Raymond Bradley when
it doesn’t say that?
A: I didn’t say that he didn’t make sense
to Raymond Bradley. He’s able to talk and
give the appearance of relating, and I’m—of
course this is conjecture, but I doubt that
there was much depth in those discussions.
The state trial court concluded that Dr. Gur’s testimony
further undermined his credibility:
When asked about the declaration of
Raymond Bradley . . . , which in part
described the defendant as a “good dresser”
and “good talker”, Dr. Gur testified that the
defendant “probably made no sense” when he
talked to Raymond Bradley. While experts
are certainly given broad latitude in forming
their opinions, this kind of utter speculation,
wholly unsupported by any evidence, only
casts doubt on the v[e]racity of the witness
(Dr. Gur) in other particulars. In the words of
the applicable CALCRIM instruction, such
speculation is “unbelievable, unreasonable
MARKS V. DAVIS 83
[and] unsupported by the evidence.”
(CALCRIM 332).
Once again, apart from the unusual use of quotation marks,
the trial court’s inferences were not objectively
unreasonable. Although Dr. Gur ultimately testified that he
“didn’t say [Marks] didn’t make sense to Raymond
Bradley,” he also testified that he “would assume” that
Marks did not make sense to Bradley.
• Another of the 2002 lay witnesses, Chester Langlois,
described working alongside Marks in the Navy: “I
remember Delaney working around the Hanger Deck talking
to the other men and remember him always smiling. He
acted like a good-natured kid.” During cross-examination in
2006, the State asked Dr. Gur about this testimony: “he
described Mr. Marks as a good-natured kid . . . . [I]s there
anything in there that helped you diagnose Marks the way
you have?” Later, on redirect, Marks’s counsel followed up:
Q: And he describes being on the hanger
deck of this nuclear-powered aircraft carrier
and saying: “I remember Delaney working
around the hanger deck talking to the other
men and I remember him always smiling. He
acted like a good-natured kind.”
A: Yes.
Q: Does that description have any
relevance one way or another to your
diagnosis of mental retardation?
A: It implies that the good-naturedness is
an act. I think it is [a] perceptive observation
that is consistent with mental retardation.
84 MARKS V. DAVIS
The state court concluded that this testimony also
undermined Dr. Gur’s credibility:
When questioned about the 2002 declaration
of Chester Langlois, who worked with the
defendant in the Navy on board the USS
Nimitz, Dr. Gur’s attention was called to the
declarant’s statement that the defendant
“acted like a good-natured kid.” Dr. Gur
testified that this reference implies that the
good-naturedness was an “act,” and
constituted a symptom of mental retardation.
I find it hard, if not absolutely impossible, to
believe that this conclusion can reasonably be
drawn from the simple statement that the
defendant “acted like a good-natured kid.” If
that should be the case, then I suppose that
every pleasant and good-natured young
person in the world can be so labeled, at least
in Dr. Gur’s mind.
The trial court drew an objectively reasonable inference.
• After an arrest in 1983, Marks expressed “concern about
being evicted while he was in jail.” Marks worried that his
personal property would be tossed out onto the street.
During testimony at the 2006 Atkins hearing, Dr. Gur was
asked about Marks’s concern:
Q: Do you recall if there’s anything in
this file that supports the diagnosis that you
made of Mr. Marks both now and as a child?
A: Yes.
Q: And what is that?
MARKS V. DAVIS 85
A: Well, someone in that age not to have
anybody who could make sure his stuff is not
thrown into the street does not have the kind
of vocational, social, and occupational
adjustment from a healthy individual.
Q: Now he’s 29 years old at this point,
right?
A: Yes.
Q: So he was concerned that his property
would be put out in the rain and nobody
would be able to take care of it, that’s what
his lawyer said?
A: Yes.
Q: And so do you think that confirms the
diagnosis that you made of Mr. Marks in this
case?
A: Yes.
The state trial court commented on this testimony:
When questioned about portions of a 1983
Alameda County court record which reflect
the defendant’s stated fears of being evicted
from his premises while he was in jail, Dr.
Gur stated that the defendant “should have
had a social network to prevent this,” and
that, because he did not, this confirmed Dr.
Gur’s diagnosis. This more than somewhat
arrogant and presumptuous statement
regarding what should be expected of an
incarcerated defendant in terms of a ‘social
86 MARKS V. DAVIS
network’ tells us more about Dr. Gur, I
submit, than it does about the defendant.
Once again, other than the unorthodox use of quotation
marks, the inferences drawn by the trial court are objectively
reasonable.
• Marks initially had three public defenders representing
him, two men and one woman. Marks did not like the two
male lawyers but had a better relationship with the female
lawyer. Marks made numerous requests to substitute
counsel. When those requests were unsuccessful, he
assaulted his lead (male) attorney—Najpaver—in order to
force the court to allow a substitution of counsel. Marks’s
plan succeeded. The State posited at the Atkins hearing that
this episode showed that Marks knew what he wanted and
could act rationally in pursuing his preferences. On cross-
examination, Dr. Gur was asked about this episode:
Q: . . . there were many times that Mr.
Marks was unhappy with his lawyers and he
tried to fire them and get a new lawyer; do
you remember that?
A: Yes.
...
Q: Well, if you read his testimony of the
penalty phase, he said he kicked Najpaver,
who was then his public defender lawyer, to
get a better lawyer. That was the only way I
could do it, was to be granted relief.
A: That’s—
Q: You weren’t aware that he said that?
MARKS V. DAVIS 87
A: No.
Q: And you saw how hard he tried to do
it from reading the records and reading other
people’s reports, legally by filing all these
motions and having hearings about that. Do
you remember that?
A: Yes, I remember. I think he—my
understanding was he couldn’t relate to the
male lawyers, that there was a—there was a
woman lawyer that he was able to relate to,
and usually spoke with her or through her.
Q: So I mean, he was very conscious of
what he wanted, right?
A: I don’t know.
Q: Isn’t that what you just said? He
didn’t relate well to the men and wanted a
woman?
A: Yeah, I don’t know whether that
implies that he was very conscious of what he
wanted.
Q: You don’t think it does?
A: No.
Q: Is there some sinister interpretation to
that that you want to share with us?
A: No.
Q: So you don’t think it shows he got
what he wanted? But you don’t have any
opinion about what it shows then?
88 MARKS V. DAVIS
A: I know that—I’m not sure exactly
what you’re getting at, but the fact that he
wasn’t getting along and a lot of his
comments about his lawyers appeared quite
bizarre. As I recall, he thought that his
lawyers were collaborating with the district
attorney who hate—who hated his guts and
was after him. So I wouldn’t call that sort of
behavior, a conscious perception of
someone’s needs and the logical pursuit of
their accomplishment.
The state trial court cited this exchange as further evidence
of Dr. Gur’s lack of credibility:
Along the same lines, I submit, is Dr. Gur’s
description of the defendant’s apparent
desire, reflected at one point in the Alameda
County court files, that a woman lawyer
represent him, as being “irrational,” and thus
presumably supportive of the Doctor’s
various diagnoses of mental and
psychological impairments. Perhaps this is
simply reflective of Dr. Gur’s lack of
significant exposure to the criminal justice
system. Some persons, charged with crimes,
wish male attorneys to represent them.
Others prefer female attorneys. Others have
no preference. The reasons for each choice
are unique to each defendant. But the choice
surely cannot, reasonably, be considered per
se “irrational,” and thus be attributed to
mental illness or psychological impairment.
MARKS V. DAVIS 89
The trial court’s findings are not objectively unreasonable.
Dr. Gur understood that Marks preferred a female lawyer but
rejected the proposition that this preference was the product
of conscious planning or logical action on Marks’s part.
When asked whether Marks’s desire for a woman lawyer
showed that he was conscious of what he wanted, Dr. Gur
responded, “I don’t know whether that implies that he was
very conscious of what he wanted.” And Dr. Gur questioned
the assertion that Marks’s attack of Najpaver was a logical
means of obtaining a substitution of counsel. The trial court
drew inferences with which a fairminded jurist might agree.
Marks argues that the trial court unreasonably found that
the three defense “expert witnesses, in particular Dr. Gur, all
relied, and relied very heavily, in support of their diagnoses
of various mental and psychological impairments of the
defendant, including mental retardation, upon the factual
allegations contained in a number of declarations filed by
various people in the year 2002, at the beginning the habeas
corpus proceedings which have led to this hearing.” This
finding was objectively reasonable. Although only Dr. Gur
relied heavily on the declarations in making his diagnosis of
intellectual disability, all three experts relied heavily on the
declarations in making their various diagnoses.
Relatedly, Marks challenges the trial court’s finding that
the lay witnesses’ statements regarding Marks’s traumatic
childhood—that “Marks was regularly and severely beaten
by both of his parents; that the defendant was regularly
beaten by his siblings; that other siblings and friends of the
defendant were beaten in the defendant’s presence; that the
defendant was forced to engage in fistfights with his
siblings; that the defendant watched his mother being
severely beaten by his father on frequent occasions; that the
defendant was, at various times, thrown out of his home by
90 MARKS V. DAVIS
his parents, was not allowed to return, and was abandoned
by them; that the defendant suffered from acute food
deprivation over a long period of time; that the defendant, on
at least one occasion, was chased by his mother with a gun;
and that both of the defendant’s parents continually and
regularly abused alcohol”—“contributed very heavily to the
experts’ opinions and diagnoses of various mental
impairments, including mental retardation.” Marks’s
argument is persuasive. Only Dr. Woods and Dr. Gur relied
significantly on Marks’s traumatic childhood in their
diagnoses of various mental impairments, and only Dr. Gur
relied significantly on Marks’s traumatic childhood in
diagnosing intellectual disability. 18 In making that
diagnosis, all three experts relied principally on Marks’s IQ
scores, academic records, and neuropsychological testing—
not Marks’s traumatic childhood.
Marks argues that the trial court unreasonably found that
“many” of the lay witnesses who submitted declarations in
2002 also had testified at trial and that “[t]he testimony of
those witnesses at the penalty phase of the trial in 1994
contradicts, in very significant and important respects, many
of the allegations contained in the declarations filed in
2002.” We agree with Marks that the trial court significantly
overstated both the existence and the relevance of these
contradictions. Of the thirty-seven lay witnesses who
submitted declarations in 2002, only eight had testified in
1994, and of those eight, only two or three directly
18
Dr. Gur testified about certain “risk factors” that contributed to
Marks’s diagnosis of intellectual disability, including: family poverty;
malnutrition; traumatic brain injuries brought about by frequent beatings
and fistfights; domestic violence in the household; parental drug use;
parental immaturity; parental rejection of caretaking; parental
abandonment; child abuse and neglect; and inadequate family support.
MARKS V. DAVIS 91
contradicted their 1994 testimony in their 2002
declarations. 19 But the trial court accurately found that the
picture of Marks’s childhood painted by the 2002
declarations differed from the image portrayed in both the
1994 testimony and Richard’s 2006 testimony. Thus, the
trial court’s decision to reject the 2002 declarations’
portrayal of Marks’s childhood was objectively reasonable.
Although we do not agree with all of Marks’s assertions,
we agree with his contention that the trial court’s findings
with respect to Dr. Cowardin and Dr. Woods were
objectively unreasonable. We also agree with Marks that, in
light of these errors, the trial court’s adjudication of Marks’s
Atkins claim was “based on” an objectively unreasonable
determination of the facts under § 2254(d)(2). Under our
precedent, “where [1] the state courts plainly misapprehend
or misstate the record in making their findings, and [2] the
misapprehension goes to a material factual issue that is
central to petitioner’s claim, that misapprehension can
19
Marks’s sister, Elaine Marks Bell, testified in 1994 that there were no
drugs in the home and that her parents did not abuse alcohol. In 2002,
the same witness submitted a declaration describing her parents’ alcohol
and drug use. Marks’s cousin, Lorraine Winn, testified in 1994 that there
was “never” any physical violence in the home. In 2002, the same
witness submitted a declaration stating that Marks’s mother used to whip
the children with a belt and once fired a gun at Marks. Marks’s brother,
Damon Marks, testified in 1994 that he had a very good relationship with
Marks while he was growing up, that both parents worked, that both
parents were in the home, that everyone on the family attended church
each week, and that both parents supported the children in the family. In
2002, the same witness submitted a declaration stating that most
members of the family did not attend church, that his father seldom
worked and his mother supported the whole family with her job, that his
parents whipped the children and threatened them with a gun, and that
no one in the family, including Marks, was supportive of him or helped
him along.
92 MARKS V. DAVIS
fatally undermine the fact-finding process, rendering the
resulting factual finding unreasonable.” Taylor, 366 F.3d at
1001. 20
Both prongs of the Taylor formulation are satisfied with
respect to Dr. Woods. First, the trial court plainly
misapprehended the record in stating that Dr. Woods had not
reviewed the 1994 penalty-phase testimony. Second, this
misapprehension goes to a material factual issue central to
Marks’s claim—Dr. Woods’s credibility. As noted, the trial
court offered only two reasons for rejecting Dr. Woods’s
opinion: (1) he had relied on the 2002 lay witness
declarations and (2) he had not reviewed the 1994 penalty-
phase testimony. The state court was wrong about the
second reason. And it is unlikely that the first reason would
have been sufficient to disregard Dr. Woods’s professional
opinion because the lay witness declarations did not figure
prominently in Dr. Woods’s conclusion that Marks was
intellectually disabled. Dr. Woods relied on a broad range
of information in making his diagnosis, 21 and his ultimate
20
Cf. Hughes v. United States, 584 U.S. 675, 685–86 (2018) (holding
that a sentence is “based on” the Sentencing Guidelines so long as the
Guidelines range was “a basis” for the sentencing decision or “part of
the framework the district court relied on in imposing the sentence”).
21
See Woods Decl. ¶ 7 (“In order to complete this evaluation, and render
an opinion regarding the reference questions, I conducted of Mr. Marks
at San Quentin State Prison; and reviewed voluminous materials,
including a comprehensive social history and psychosocial assessment
of Mr. Marks, prepared by Julie Kriegler, Ph.D.; pre-offense medical
records, which included records from Highland Hospital, Alameda
Hospital, and pre-offense custodial records from Alameda County Jails
and the California Department of Corrections (CDC); school records and
available military records; the results of interviews of family members,
friends, teachers, and associates of Mr. Marks; neuropsychological
MARKS V. DAVIS 93
conclusion that Marks was intellectually disabled rested not
on the lay witness declarations regarding Marks’s traumatic
childhood but on other factors—principally, (1) Marks’s
student records; (2) Marks’s IQ scores, including the
precipitous decline in those scores between ages six and
eleven; and (3) the uncontradicted neuropsychological
testing results showing impairments in Marks’s brain
functioning.
Both prongs of the Taylor formulation are also satisfied
with respect to Dr. Cowardin. The trial court plainly
misapprehended the record by finding that Dr. Cowardin had
misstated or manipulated the clinical definition of
intellectual disability. It was the trial court that misstated the
AAMR definition. Further, the court’s misapprehension
went to a material factual issue that was central to Marks’s
Atkins claim—Dr. Cowardin’s credibility. Like Dr. Woods,
Dr. Cowardin testified that Marks was intellectually
disabled. There was no expert testimony contradicting these
opinions. Thus, Dr. Cowardin’s credibility was both a
material factual issue and central to Marks’s claim. The trial
court erred, moreover, in finding that Marks’s traumatic
evaluations performed by Karen Froming, Ph.D. and David R. Stein,
Ph.D.; Dr. Stein’s testimony in Mr. Marks’s competency trial in 1992;
competency evaluations prepared by Karen Gudiksen, M.D., Fred
Rosenthal, M.D., Ph.D.[,] Jules Burstein, Ph.D.[,] and Hyman Silver,
M.D.; the testimony of Dr. Burstein and Josalyn Harris, a vocational
rehabilitation counselor at Mr. Marks’s 1992 competency hearing; a tape
recording identified by the Alameda Police as an interview with Mr.
Marks, but which Mr. Marks denies participating in; and numerous court
transcripts, including Mr. Marks’s statements in support of his motions
to obtain new trial counsel and transcripts of his testimony at the guilt
and penalty phases of his trial.”).
94 MARKS V. DAVIS
childhood “contributed very heavily” to Dr. Cowardin’s
diagnosis of Marks’s intellectual disability.
We cannot agree with the Judge Nelson’s suggestion that
the state court’s significant factual errors were
“inconsequential.” The three mental health experts who
examined Marks and testified at the Atkins hearing
uniformly concluded that he was intellectually disabled, and
this conclusion was fully consistent with Marks’s IQ scores
and academic records. Significantly, the State offered no
mental health expert of its own, leaving the professional
opinions of Dr. Cowardin, Dr. Woods, and Dr. Gur both
corroborated and unrebutted. Thus, the credibility of these
experts was of the utmost importance to the state court’s
adjudication of Marks’s Atkins claim.
Yet the state court dismissed the opinions of these
experts on highly dubious grounds. The state court was dead
wrong in concluding that Dr. Cowardin had misstated the
clinical definition of intellectual disability; she had in fact
quoted the current AAMR definition verbatim. And this
error figured prominently in the state court’s analysis.
Indeed, the state court seized upon the erroneously perceived
misstatement of the clinical definition not only to accuse Dr.
Cowardin, falsely, of “partiality” and “partisanship,” but
also to impugn the entire “defense team”:
far more significant to me[] is the fact that
this “defense team” does not hesitate to
change material portions of the definition of
mental retardation to suit their purpose. The
definition of mental retardation is not
subject to modification by the ‘defense
team’ or anyone else. . . . The fact that the
defense team, and Dr. Cowardin in particular,
MARKS V. DAVIS 95
have nevertheless attempted to make these
changes is extremely alarming to this Court.
It raises the question (which cannot be
answered, on this record) of ‘how many other
definitions of critical terms involved in the
description and diagnosis of mental
retardation or other mental or psychological
impairments which have been the subject of
testimony in these proceedings has the
“defense team” modified or changed to suit
their own purposes? . . .
. . . Another troubling question arises: why
was the “defense team” so concerned about
changing the definition of mental retardation,
to remove the word “manifested”, and
substitute the word “originates”? . . . [N]o
wonder the defense team had to get rid of
the word “manifest”. No wonder the
defense team had to substitute a word such
as “occur”, or “originate”, neither of
which carry, any of the requirements of
being readily perceived by the senses and
especially by the sight, being easily
understood and recognized by the mind,
being obvious, being evident, being shown
or displayed, all of which are part of the
definition of “manifest”.
(Emphases in original.) Judge Nelson’s suggestion that the
state court’s error was inconsequential is impossible to
reconcile with the state court’s own treatment of the issue.
The state court excoriated the defense over this wholly
manufactured issue over the course of five single-spaced
96 MARKS V. DAVIS
pages in a twenty-six-page decision. It is difficult to imagine
how the state court’s misapprehension of the record could
have figured more prominently in the court’s analysis.
Nor can the state court’s error regarding Dr. Woods be
dismissed as inconsequential. The state court was flatly
wrong in concluding that Dr. Woods had not reviewed the
1994 penalty-phase testimony. Dr. Woods had reviewed it,
and indeed testified about it at length. The state court,
moreover, placed extraordinary weight on its false
conclusion that Dr. Woods had not reviewed the testimony:
[I]ncredibly, none of the experts reviewed
any of the testimony presented on the
defendant’s behalf in the 1994 penalty
trial, which testimony refuted or
contradicted many of these recitations. I
simply find it astonishing, and totally, wholly
unreasonable and unprofessional, for these
experts to base their opinions of a variety of
mental and psychological impairments,
including mental retardation, upon the
circumstances of the defendant’s youth, and
yet to steadfastly refuse to read or even
consider the sworn testimony of the very
people who presumably would know the
defendant best at this exact period of his life,
and who presumably would be the very best,
the most reliable, the most accurate
‘historians’ (to use the expert’s own term) of
these circumstances. That makes the
testimony of these expert witnesses, to use
the words of the California Supreme Court in
criticizing the defense expert testimony in the
MARKS V. DAVIS 97
various competency proceedings, “not
compelling” and “suspect”.
(Emphases in original.) This harsh criticism, of course, had
absolutely no application to Dr. Woods at all. Yet the state
court plainly gave it enormous weight in rejecting Dr.
Woods’s opinion. Furthermore, as noted, the state court
offered no other significant reason for rejecting Dr. Woods’s
professional, corroborated, and unrebutted opinion that
Marks was intellectually disabled.
This is not a close case. The state court misstated the
record on material issues central to Marks’s Atkins claim and
central to the state court’s analysis, fatally undermining both
the state court’s factfinding process and its ultimate
conclusions. See Taylor, 366 F.3d at 1001. Thus, the state
court’s adjudication of Marks’s Atkins claim was based on
an unreasonable determination of the facts. Because
§ 2254(d)(2) is satisfied, Marks is entitled to de novo review
of his Atkins claim. See Kipp, 971 F.3d at 955. We remand
to the district court for this purpose.
C. Section 2254(d)(1)
Our conclusion that § 2254(d)(2) is satisfied makes it
unnecessary for us to address Marks’s alternative contention
that the trial court unreasonably applied Atkins within the
meaning of § 2254(d)(1). Because the parties have briefed
this issue, however, we exercise our discretion to reach it.
Marks first argues that the trial court unreasonably
applied Atkins by treating Marks’s IQ test score of 74 as
falling at the high end of borderline intellectual disability.
We disagree. Much has been clarified about intellectual
98 MARKS V. DAVIS
disability since Atkins. 22 But at the time it was not
uncommon to refer to IQ test scores of 74 as indicative of
“borderline” mental retardation. Atkins itself reflected this
uncertainty. Compare Atkins, 536 U.S. at 308 n.3 (“‘Mild’
mental retardation is typically used to describe people with
an IQ level of 50–55 to approximately 70.” (citing the
American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 42–43 (4th ed.
2000))), with id. at 309 n.5 (“It is estimated that between 1
and 3 percent of the population has an IQ between 70 and 75
or lower, which is typically considered the cutoff IQ score
for the intellectual function prong of the mental retardation
definition.” (citing 2 Kaplan & Sadock’s Comprehensive
Textbook of Psychiatry 2952 (B. Sadock & V. Sadock eds.
7th ed. 2000))). Notably, two of Marks’s own experts
described IQ test scores of 74 as reflecting “borderline”
intellectual disability. Dr. Froming stated that
“IQs . . . between 70 and 79 are considered borderline, and
those of 69 or below are considered mentally retarded,” and
Dr. Cowardin noted that Marks’s IQ test score of 74 in 1989
22
The AAIDD, for example, currently defines intellectual disability as
“a condition characterized by significant limitations in both intellectual
functioning and adaptive behavior that originates before the age of 22.”
“Defining Criteria for Intellectual Disability,” American Association on
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities,
https://www.aaidd.org/intellectual-disability/definition (last visited June
25, 2024). Under current AAIDD standards, “an IQ test score of around
70 or as high as 75 indicates a significant limitation in intellectual
functioning.” Id.; see Brumfield, 576 U.S. at 315 (“Accounting for th[e]
margin of error, Brumfield’s reported IQ test result of 75 was squarely
in the range of potential intellectual disability.”); Hall v. Florida, 572
U.S. 701, 723 (2014) (“[W]hen a defendant’s IQ test score falls within
the test’s acknowledged and inherent margin of error, the defendant must
be able to present additional evidence of intellectual disability, including
testimony regarding adaptive deficits.”).
MARKS V. DAVIS 99
had resulted in a diagnosis of “borderline mental
retardation.”
Marks alternatively argues that the trial court
unreasonably applied Atkins by relying on Richard’s
testimony that, “[i]n my layman view of mental retardation,
I saw no sign of mental retardation” during Marks’s
childhood years. Marks argues that “it is unsurprising that
Mr. Richard did not detect clinical signs of his cousin’s
disability when they were both still children” because
individuals with mild intellectual disability often are not
distinguishable from children without intellectual disability.
Marks, however, cites no authority for the proposition that
indications of intellectual disability are necessarily
undetectable by lay people during an individual’s middle or
late childhood. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (4th ed. 2000), upon which Marks relies,
states only that children with intellectual disability may be
difficult to distinguish from other children during “preschool
years (ages 0–5 years).” Richard’s frequent stays with the
Marks family occurred while the children were between the
ages of approximately six and sixteen. Given the then-
current clinical definitions requiring intellectual disability to
originate or manifest before age eighteen, see Atkins, 536
U.S. at 308 n.3, it was not unreasonable for the state court to
give some weight to Richard’s testimony.
III. JUDICIAL BIAS
Marks contends that Judge Horner, who oversaw the
Atkins hearing, was biased against him. After the state court
summarily denied this claim, the district court denied habeas
relief under § 2254(d). We affirm.
Due process guarantees a criminal defendant the right to
a fair and impartial judge. See Hurles v. Ryan, 752 F.3d 768,
100 MARKS V. DAVIS
788–90 (9th Cir. 2014); Duckett v. Godinez, 67 F.3d 734,
740 (9th Cir. 1995). As the Supreme Court explained in In
re Murchison, “[a] fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic
requirement of due process,” and “[f]airness of course
requires an absence of actual bias in the trial of cases.” 349
U.S. 133, 136 (1955). We apply “a presumption of honesty
and integrity in those serving as adjudicators.” Withrow v.
Larkin, 421 U.S. 35, 47 (1975).
Here, the trial court leveled unusually harsh criticism at
Marks’s attorneys and witnesses. The court concluded that
Marks’s lay witnesses’ descriptions of Marks’s childhood
were untruthful; that Marks’s experts had acted in a “wholly
unreasonable and unprofessional” manner; that Marks’s
attorneys had “deliberately withheld” unfavorable
information from the experts; that Dr. Gur’s statements were
alternatively “preposterous,” “arrogant,” and
“presumptuous”; and that Dr. Cowardin, in coordination
with the defense team, had intentionally misstated the
clinical definition of intellectual disability to manipulate the
outcome of the proceedings. But “judicial remarks during
the course of a trial that are critical or disapproving of, or
even hostile to, counsel, the parties, or their cases, ordinarily
do not support a bias or partiality challenge.” Liteky, 510
U.S. at 555. 23 The California Supreme Court reasonably
could have concluded that Judge Horner did not “display a
deep-seated favoritism or antagonism that would make fair
23
Although Liteky addresses the statutory recusal standards for federal
judges under 28 U.S.C. § 455(a), we have looked to the decision in
assessing bias claims under the Due Process Clause, see Bayliss v.
Barnhart, 427 F.3d 1211, 1215 (9th Cir. 2005), and both parties have
relied on the decision in their briefs. We therefore assume without
deciding that Liteky informs our analysis of Marks’s due process claim.
MARKS V. DAVIS 101
judgment impossible.” Id. There thus was a reasonable
basis for the state court’s rejection of this claim. 24
IV. FIFTH AMENDMENT
Marks contends that he did not knowingly waive his
Fifth Amendment right not to testify at trial. The district
court denied this claim under § 2254(d). We affirm.
A. Background
Marks elected to testify at trial. Before permitting him
to do so, the trial court engaged Marks and his counsel in a
colloquy regarding whether Marks understood his right not
to testify:
THE COURT: Let me inquire. You had also
indicated that it was your intention at least as
of yesterday that the defendant himself would
testify on his own behalf.
MR. THEWS: That’s correct. He wants to
testify, and we want him to testify.
THE COURT: If that is going to happen,
then there are some things we need to cover.
One of them is I need to be sure that the
defendant understands he has a constitutional
right obviously to testify in his own behalf.
He also has a right not to testify and to rest on
the state of the evidence. And I want to be
sure that he’s aware of both of these
24
The majority concludes that the trial court made factual errors in
adjudicating the Atkins claim. These errors, standing alone, are not
persuasive evidence of bias. See Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555 (“[J]udicial
rulings alone almost never constitute a valid basis for a bias or partiality
motion.”).
102 MARKS V. DAVIS
rights. . . . And that if he . . . avails himself
of his constitutional right not to testify the
People would not be able to comment on that
in any way. And I would propose to read the
jury instruction that deals with the
defendant’s declining to testify so that he’s
fully aware of that. Let me ask you as his
attorneys, have you explained to Mr. Marks
[that] he has both constitutional rights? . . .
MR. THEWS: I think we have discussed that
with him over a period of a number of
months.
...
THE DEFENDANT: I’m listening.
Somebody hasn’t asked me a question.
They’re just citing the law. You’re telling me
I have the right to remain silent if I wish to, if
I want to voice my opinion or voice my
testimony I can but nobody has directly given
me a direct statement what’s given to Mr.
Marks to respond, so I haven’t responded to
that question.
THE COURT: I appreciate that. Back to
you, Mr. Thews. Why don’t you tell the court
in terms of the nature of your discussions
with his client regarding his constitutional
rights.
MR. THEWS: The terms of the
constitutional rights over the past months we
have discussed those matters with Mr. Marks.
And the question I was about to ask Mr.
MARKS V. DAVIS 103
Marks is did you understand those
discussions that we had regarding the
constitutional right to remain silent?
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, did you hear Mr.
Thews’s question?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I did.
THE COURT: Did you want to respond?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I’m—
THE COURT: Very well.
THE DEFENDANT: —confident to what
Mr. Thews said. And my choice is to take the
stand and have on the record what actually
took place, and note that I’m not dark
complected, I’m not jet black, I’m medium
brown with the Fu Manchu, and I want to
proceed on that. That I was—
THE COURT: May I speak directly to Mr.
Marks in this regard?
MR. THEWS: Yes.
THE COURT: Mr. Marks, you have
indicated it is your intention to testify.
THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
THE COURT: I presume you understand
you have a right to do that, you have a right
to take the stand and testify in your own
behalf, you understand you have that right?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes.
104 MARKS V. DAVIS
THE COURT: You also understand you
have a right not to do that, you have a right to
remain there at the counsel table and put the
People to the proof, and that is to rely on the
state of the evidence and force the People to
prove their case without any proof. Do you
understand?
THE DEFENDANT: At this point I don’t
believe the state of evidence, I have enough
to pronounce on the presumption of
innocence on the defendant or I wouldn’t be
taking the stand. Are you comfortable with
what I’m saying, sir?
THE COURT: All right. And let me indicate
to you, if you decide not to testify, that is if
you decided to sit there at counsel table and
remain silent and put the People to the proof
I would give this instruction to the jury. So I
want you to understand what I will tell the
jury, if you decided not to testify. “A
defendant in a criminal trial has a
constitutional right not to be compelled to
testify. You must not draw any inference
from the fact that a defendant does not testify.
Further you must neither discuss this matter
nor permit it to enter into your deliberations
in any way. In deciding whether or not to
testify the defendant may choose to rely on
the state of the evidence and upon the failure,
if any, of the People to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt every essential element of
the charge against him. No lack of testimony
on defendant’s part will make up for a failure
MARKS V. DAVIS 105
of proof by the People so as to support a
finding against him on any such essential
element.”
So you understand if you decide not to testify
that’s what the jury would be told by me. Do
you understand that?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, I understand that.
THE COURT: I would also instruct the
district attorney that they would not be
allowed to comment on that fact in any way
in their closing argument. In other words,
Mr. Burr would not be able to call the jury’s
attention to the fact that the defendant had not
testified.
Do you understand that?
THE DEFENDANT: Well, at this point I
have been deprived of the right of freedom of
speech, and that’s my right. I’m willing to
get on the stand and speak because I want to
tell them what I have been suffering as a
victim.
THE COURT: I appreciate that, Mr. Marks.
I want to make sure—just a second. I want to
make sure you understand what your rights
are here. And in particular do you understand
that if you decided not to testify, Mr. Burr
could not comment on that point, that is he
could not point out Mr. Marks has the right
not [to] testify.
106 MARKS V. DAVIS
THE DEFENDANT: He has the right, he has
brought out my whole career.
THE COURT: Do you understand that
you—you understand if you decide not to
testify that he could not comment on that fact,
that he could not comment to the jury that
they should—
THE DEFENDANT: I think—I think open
field if he took the stand.
THE COURT: Do you understand?
THE DEFENDANT: I’m fully competent,
magistrate. I’m fully comprehend of what
you say, magistrate and my wishes are to take
the stand.
THE COURT: Okay. Thank you very much.
Okay. Thank you.
In a state habeas petition, Marks alleged that the state
trial court violated his Fifth Amendment right to remain
silent and his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial because
the record was inadequate to show that he knowingly and
intelligently waived the right to remain silent. He further
alleged that the trial court ultimately “abandoned repeated
efforts to determine Mr. Marks’s degree of understanding of
the legal consequences of a decision not to testify.” The
California Supreme Court summarily rejected this claim,
and the district court denied relief under § 2254(d), holding
that there was a reasonable basis for the state court to
conclude that Marks understood his right not to testify.
MARKS V. DAVIS 107
B. Discussion
A criminal defendant has a “Fifth Amendment right not
to testify at trial.” United States v. Olvera, 30 F.3d 1195,
1198 (9th Cir. 1994). As the Supreme Court explained in
Harris v. New York, “[e]very criminal defendant is
privileged to testify in his own defense, or to refuse to do
so.” 401 U.S. 222, 225 (1971). The waiver of the right to
testify “must be knowing and voluntary,” United States v.
Pino-Noriega, 189 F.3d 1089, 1094 (9th Cir. 1999), but a
court has no duty to advise the defendant of this right or
“ensure that an on-the-record waiver has occurred,” United
States v. Edwards, 897 F.2d 445, 446 (9th Cir. 1990).
Although these principles apply to the waiver of the right to
testify, we assume that they extend to a waiver of the right
not to testify, because “the right not to testify counterpoises
the right to testify, and the exercise of one is the waiver of
the other.” United States v. Joelson, 7 F.3d 174, 178 (9th
Cir. 1993) (quoting United States v. Martinez, 883 F.2d 750,
757 (9th Cir. 1989), vacated on other grounds, 928 F.2d
1470 (9th Cir. 1991)). The State does not contend otherwise.
As a threshold matter, Marks argues that his waiver of
his right not to testify at trial was unknowing because he was
mentally incompetent to stand trial. We recognize that
competence to stand trial and the knowing waiver of one’s
Fifth Amendment rights present related, if not identical,
inquiries. As the Supreme Court explained in Cooper v.
Oklahoma, “[c]ompetence to stand trial is rudimentary, for
upon it depends the main part of those rights deemed
essential to a fair trial, including . . . the right to testify on
one’s own behalf or to remain silent without penalty for
doing so.” 517 U.S. 348, 354 (1996) (quoting Riggins v.
Nevada, 504 U.S. 127, 139–40 (1992) (Kennedy, J.,
concurring in the judgment)). The state court finding that
108 MARKS V. DAVIS
Marks was competent to stand trial, however, was not
objectively unreasonable, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), and has
not been rebutted “by clear and convincing evidence,” id.
§ 2254(e)(1).
More broadly, we hold that there was a reasonable basis
for the California Supreme Court to conclude that Marks’s
waiver of his right not to testify was knowing and voluntary.
Marks was unequivocal in stating that he wished to testify;
defense counsel agreed with Marks’s decision to testify;
defense counsel had discussed the right not to testify with
Marks over a period of months; Marks understood that he
had “the right to remain silent if I wish to”; Marks confirmed
that he had understood his discussions with counsel
regarding the constitutional right to remain silent; Marks
understood that he had a right to testify; and Marks
understood that, if he did not testify, the jury would be
instructed that it could not infer guilt from his silence. Marks
focuses on the fact that the trial court attempted four times
with limited success to confirm that Marks understood that,
if he did not testify, the prosecution would not be able to
comment on his silence. 25 But on the court’s fourth try
Marks said, “I’m fully competent, magistrate. I’m fully
comprehend of what you say, magistrate and my wishes are
to take the stand.” The state court reasonably could have
concluded that this statement demonstrated Marks’s
understanding of the consequences of his decision.
25
Although “[t]he Constitution does not require that a criminal suspect
know and understand every possible consequence of a waiver of the Fifth
Amendment privilege,” Colorado v. Spring, 479 U.S. 564, 574 (1987),
we assume for purposes of our analysis that Marks’s failure to
comprehend that the prosecution could not comment on his decision not
to testify would have rendered his waiver unknowing.
MARKS V. DAVIS 109
V. FUNDING FOR A MENTAL HEALTH EXPERT
Marks argues that he was denied his Sixth Amendment
right to the effective assistance of counsel because his trial
attorneys failed to seek the appointment of a mental health
expert during trial. He contends that an expert would have
concluded that he was incompetent to stand trial, which
would have triggered a second competency hearing at which
he would have been deemed incompetent. The district court
denied this claim under § 2254(d). We affirm.
A. Background
Defense counsel moved once on the eve of trial and twice
during trial for a second competency determination. The
trial court denied the motions and the trial proceeded.
Defense counsel Thews later stated that, “[b]ecause the court
denied our motions for psychiatric examination, we had no
choice but to go forward.”
In a state habeas petition, Marks argued that counsel’s
failure to do more to prompt a second competency
determination amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel.
He pointed out that California Penal Code section 987.9(a)
authorizes defense counsel in capital cases to petition a trial
judge, other than the presiding judge, for funds to hire
experts for the preparation or presentation of the defense. 26
26
In 1994, Penal Code section 987.9(a) stated:
In the trial of a capital case or a case under subdivision
(a) of Section 190.05 the indigent defendant, through
the defendant’s counsel, may request the court for
funds for the specific payment of investigators,
experts, and others for the preparation or presentation
of the defense. The application for funds shall be by
110 MARKS V. DAVIS
He argued that counsel could have employed this provision
to obtain funding to retain a mental health expert who would
have concluded that he was incompetent to stand trial. He
argued that this finding would have triggered a second
competency hearing, see People v. Stankewitz, 648 P.2d 578,
584 (Cal. 1982), at which he would have been found
incompetent.
The California Supreme Court summarily rejected this
claim, and the district court denied relief under § 2254(d).
B. Discussion
To establish ineffective assistance of trial counsel, Marks
must show both deficient performance and prejudice. See
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. To establish prejudice, he “must
show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
would have been different.” Id. at 694.
affidavit and shall specify that the funds are
reasonably necessary for the preparation or
presentation of the defense. The fact that an
application has been made shall be confidential and
the contents of the application shall be confidential.
Upon receipt of an application, a judge of the court,
other than the trial judge presiding over the case in
question, shall rule on the reasonableness of the
request and shall disburse an appropriate amount of
money to the defendant’s attorney. The ruling on the
reasonableness of the request shall be made at an in
camera hearing. In making the ruling, the court shall
be guided by the need to provide a complete and full
defense for the defendant.
Cal. Penal Code § 987.9(a) (1994). The current version of section
987.9(a) is substantially similar.
MARKS V. DAVIS 111
We agree with the district court that there was a
reasonable basis for the California Supreme Court to deny
this claim. Even assuming counsel performed deficiently by
failing to retain an expert under section 987.9(a), the state
court reasonably could have concluded that there was no
reasonable probability that Marks would have been found
incompetent at a second competency hearing. In July 1992,
a jury found Marks competent to stand trial notwithstanding
testimony to the contrary from several mental health experts.
The state court reasonably could have concluded that a
second hearing would have produced the same result.
VI. FAILURE TO OBJECT TO CLOSING
ARGUMENT
Marks contends that his attorneys provided ineffective
assistance of counsel by failing to object to statements made
by the prosecution during penalty-phase closing argument.
The district court declined to consider this claim on the
grounds that Marks neither “properly presented this
argument to the state courts” nor “properly raise[d] this
argument in his federal habeas petition.” We agree. 27
27
We grant a certificate of appealability. See Gonzalez v. Thaler, 565
U.S. 134, 140–41 (2012) (“When, as here, the district court denies relief
on procedural grounds, the petitioner seeking a [certificate of
appealability] must show both ‘that jurists of reason would find it
debatable whether the petition states a valid claim of the denial of a
constitutional right and that jurists of reason would find it debatable
whether the district court was correct in its procedural ruling.’” (quoting
Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 484 (2000))).
112 MARKS V. DAVIS
A. Background
During penalty-phase closing argument, the prosecution
suggested that the mental health experts who had examined
Marks had found nothing wrong with him:
One way or another Mr. Wies, who is a
very good lawyer, will try and convince at
least one of you, that Delaney is crazy and
you got to spare his life because he’s sick.
There is nothing, nothing medically or
psychiatrically wrong with this man down
here at the end of the table at all. You look at
his conduct, you say that’s crazy. You hear
him perform in here, you say that’s crazy.
That’s because he doesn’t operate by our
rules. If there was anything, anything
psychiatrically or medically wrong with him,
you would have heard it. He’s got two
lawyers. He had a battery of three lawyers
before he assaulted Mr. Najpaver. He’s had
investigators. And as he said when he
testified there were a whole lot of
psychiatrists and psychologists that
examined him. And if there was anything, a
scintilla of anything that his lawyers could
have grabbed a hold of to bring to you, they
would have. They would have.
...
. . . If there was anything wrong that his
attorneys could bring to point to this man to
say here he’s crazy, and here’s the proof of it,
you would have heard it. Wild horses
MARKS V. DAVIS 113
couldn’t keep them from bringing it in here.
They would love to have something like that,
love to. Not to mention the other disorders
that are, you know, paranoid schizophrenia.
The prosecution added:
This is what his attorneys would love to
see, that there be something here that they
could give to you, something that you could
grab ahold of, that they could argue to you is
some explanation for his behavior. And there
isn’t any. There isn’t.
I mean, how many shrinks examined him?
There’s Karen Gudiksen, Dr. Cormos, Dr.
Silver, Burstein, Rosenthal, there was—well,
half a dozen, as he said himself, a lot. And of
those six, not one could come up with one of
those, a mental disease or a defect, that could
say that he could not conform his conduct or
that he didn’t know what he was doing. Not
one. 28
The last paragraph alluded to California Penal Code section 190.3(h),
28
which at the time stated:
In determining the penalty, the trier of fact shall take
into account any of the following factors if relevant: .
. . (h) Whether or not at the time of the offense the
capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality
of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
requirements of law was impaired as a result of mental
disease or defect, or the affects of intoxication.
Cal. Penal Code § 190.3(h) (1994). The current version is identical.
114 MARKS V. DAVIS
The psychiatrists and psychologists who examined
Marks found that he did, in fact, have psychological
problems. Dr. Karen Gudiksen had been appointed by the
court to examine Marks in 1992. She concluded that he “has
an organic mental disorder with psychotic features,” and was
“a mentally incompetent person” within the meaning of
Penal Code section 1368. Dr. Rosenthal was also appointed
by the court to examine Marks in 1992. He found
“indications of a major mental disorder” and agreed with Dr.
Gudiksen that Marks “was not mentally competent to stand
trial.” Dr. Stein examined Marks in 1992 and found
significant brain impairments. Dr. Burstein examined Marks
in 1992 and agreed with Drs. Gudiksen and Rosenthal that
he was incompetent to stand trial. The prosecution was
aware of these findings. Accordingly, the prosecution’s
arguments arguably were subject to an objection. Cf. Miller
v. Pate, 386 U.S. 1, 3–7 (1967) (deeming a conviction
invalid where “[t]he prosecution deliberately misrepresented
the truth”).
The defense did not object to the prosecution’s
statements, but Wies did respond to them during the defense
closing:
And I want to address first of all some of
Mr. Burr’s remarks yesterday and today, in
terms of rebuttal. I don’t want them just left
unanswered.
Is Delaney crazy? We’ve never said so.
We have never intimated, I would hope, by
anything we’ve done, to make you think that
there was an insanity defense or that he was
not responsible for his actions. We’ve never
said that. But you have seen Delaney here in
MARKS V. DAVIS 115
court, you’ve seen him on the stand on three
occasions, and you can form your own
opinions about what Delaney is all about.
Mr. Burr said there was nothing
medically wrong with Delaney. Well, you
heard Delaney tell you from the stand that he
has epilepsy, that he suffers from a seizure
disorder, that he takes an anticonvulsive
medication. Well, to take a page from Mr.
Burr’s book, you can bet if that weren’t true,
Mr. Burr would have 16 tons of evidence of
medical records showing you we’ve
examined all these and there’s no evidence
he’s taking medication.
That’s not an excuse. Nobody is saying
spare Delaney’s life because he has an
epileptic condition or he’s taking medication.
We’re not offering it for that purpose. We’re
offering it to show this is what Delaney is.
In his state habeas petition, Marks alleged that “[t]he
prosecutor intentionally and affirmatively misled the jury to
believe mistakenly that petitioner did not suffer from any
mitigating mental or emotional condition, and that no
evidence existed of a mitigating mental illness or disorder.”
He set out the prosecution’s statements in detail and
explained why the statements were contrary to facts in the
record. Then, some sixty pages later, the petition alleged as
follows:
By virtue of defense counsel’s failures,
including, but not limited to, the (a) failure to
conduct a minimally competent investigation
116 MARKS V. DAVIS
and prepare and present evidence in
mitigation, (b) failure to conduct a minimally
competent investigation and prepare and
present evidence in rebuttal of aggravation
evidence, (c) failure to diligently advocate on
[behalf] of petitioner during prosecutorial
misconduct and closing arguments,
(d) failure to conduct a minimally competent
investigation and prepare and present
impeachment evidence for key prosecution
witnesses, and (f) failure to challenge
inadmissible and prejudicial evidence, Mr.
Marks was denied the effective assistance of
counsel, and the fair and reliable
determination of penalty to which he was
entitled.
(Emphasis added.) The California Supreme Court
summarily denied this claim, after which Marks reasserted
the claim, in substantially the same form, in his federal
habeas petition. The district court declined to consider the
claim, citing Marks’s failure to properly present the claim to
the state courts or plead the claim in his federal petition.
B. Discussion
We agree with the district court’s analysis. First,
“exhaustion of state remedies requires that petitioners ‘fairly
presen[t]’ federal claims to the state courts in order to give
the State the ‘opportunity to pass upon and correct alleged
violations of its prisoners’ federal rights.’” Duncan v.
Henry, 513 U.S. 364, 365 (1995) (per curiam) (alteration in
original) (quoting Picard v. Connor, 404 U.S. 270, 275
(1971)). To fairly present a claim, a petitioner must “present
the substance of his claim to the state courts, including a
MARKS V. DAVIS 117
reference to a federal constitutional guarantee and a
statement of facts that entitle the petitioner to relief.” Kyzar
v. Ryan, 780 F.3d 940, 947 (9th Cir. 2015) (quoting
Gulbrandson, 738 F.3d at 992). Here, Marks alleged only
counsel’s “failure to diligently advocate on [behalf] of
petitioner during prosecutorial misconduct and closing
arguments.” He did not specifically allege what counsel
purportedly failed to do—object to the closing argument
discussed some sixty pages earlier. Marks thus did not fairly
present this claim to the state courts. See Rose v. Palmateer,
395 F.3d 1108, 1111 (9th Cir. 2005) (“In addition to
requiring specificity in pleading the federal nature of a claim,
we also require a petitioner to articulate the substance of an
alleged violation with some particularity.”); see also Davis
v. Silva, 511 F.3d 1005, 1009 (9th Cir. 2008) (“[T]o exhaust
the factual basis of the claim, the petitioner must . . . provide
the state court with the operative facts, that is, ‘all of the facts
necessary to give application to the constitutional principle
upon which [the petitioner] relies.’” (last alteration in
original) (quoting Daugharty v. Gladden, 257 F.2d 750, 758
(9th Cir. 1958))).
Second, we agree with the district court that Marks failed
to properly plead this claim in his federal petition. Rule 2(c)
of the Rules Governing § 2254 Cases states that a habeas
petition must “(1) specify all the grounds for relief available
to the petitioner” and “(2) state the facts supporting each
ground.” This rule “demand[s] that habeas petitioners plead
with particularity.” Mayle v. Felix, 545 U.S. 644, 656
(2005). Here, Marks’s federal habeas petition, like his state
petition, failed to specify what it was that his attorneys failed
to do—object to the prosecution’s closing argument
mentioned in the petition some fifty pages earlier. Marks
therefore failed to adequately plead the claim.
118 MARKS V. DAVIS
In sum, the district court properly declined to consider
this claim. 29
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the district court on Marks’s
competency, judicial bias, Fifth Amendment, and ineffective
assistance of counsel claims. We vacate the judgment with
respect to Marks’s Atkins claim and remand for de novo
review of the claim. Each party shall bear its own costs on
appeal.
AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART;
REMANDED.
29
Even if the claim were properly presented, it would be unlikely to
succeed. Marks did not present evidence of mental illness or argue that
his mental condition was a reason for leniency. Defense counsel thus
had little reason to object to the prosecution’s misleading
characterizations of Marks’s psychological history, and counsel
reasonably could have elected to address the prosecution’s
misstatements during defense closing rather than by objecting. See
Cunningham v. Wong, 704 F.3d 1143, 1159 (9th Cir. 2013) (“[B]ecause
many lawyers refrain from objecting during opening statement and
closing argument, absent egregious misstatements, the failure to object
during closing argument and opening statement is within the wide range
of permissible professional legal conduct.” (quoting United States v.
Necoechea, 986 F.2d 1273, 1281 (9th Cir. 1993))); see also Weeden v.
Johnson, 854 F.3d 1063, 1069 (9th Cir. 2017) (“Our review of the [state
court’s] holding that . . . counsel was not deficient is ‘doubly’ deferential,
because Strickland requires state courts to give deference to choices
made by counsel and AEDPA in turn requires us to defer to the
determinations of state courts.” (quoting Harrington, 562 U.S. at 105)).
MARKS V. DAVIS 119
BERZON, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
in part:
The majority holds that “the state court’s adjudication of
Marks’s Atkins claim was based on an unreasonable
determination of the facts” as to expert testimony by Dr.
Cowardin and Dr. Woods. Maj. Op. at 97. But the state
court’s similar treatment of Dr. Gur’s expert testimony, the
majority says, was reasonable. See id. at 77-78. I strongly
disagree. I am also of the view that the state court’s factual
findings as to other aspects of the record on the Atkins issue
were similarly unjustifiable.
Given the state court’s unreasonable factual
determinations in discrediting the Atkins testimony, I join the
majority in reversing the district court’s decision rejecting
Marks’s Atkins claim and concur in remanding to the district
court on that issue. As the majority does not reach the merits
of the Atkins issue, I shall not do so in this dissent. Instead, I
confine this dissent to explaining why the relevant record for
de novo review should include Dr. Gur’s expert evidence, as
well as some additional material. I therefore dissent from
Part II to the extent reflected in this dissent, including those
portions of the majority opinion that discuss the state court’s
treatment of Dr. Gur’s credibility. 1
I.
I agree with the majority that the state court’s
adjudication of Marks’s Atkins claim “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)(2). In support of its
1
I concur in Parts I, III, IV, V, and VI of the majority opinion.
120 MARKS V. DAVIS
§ 2254(d)(2) holding, the majority opinion details the state
court’s patently unreasonable factual determinations as to
the expert testimony of Dr. Cowardin and Dr. Woods. See
Maj. Op. at 76-97. I agree with that thorough analysis, which
highlights the state court’s egregious treatment of those two
experts’ testimony, including discrediting them based on the
court’s outright false statements about their conclusions and
on its own misrepresentations of the factual record.
Moreover, the state court repeatedly relied on its factual
errors about Dr. Cowardin’s and Dr. Woods’s testimony to
draw unwarranted negative and personal inferences about
their motivations and to reject entirely their credibility as
expert witnesses.
The state court’s treatment of both Dr. Cowardin and Dr.
Woods evinces a pattern of mischaracterization and bias in
assessing the testimony of Marks’s expert witnesses. It is
unsurprising that, as described below, this disturbing pattern
extends to the state court’s treatment of Marks’s third expert
witness as well.
II.
Marks argues that the state court unreasonably rejected
Dr. Gur’s expert testimony and conclusions. He is right.
The state court discredited Dr. Gur’s professional
opinion based on its findings that he had made several
statements with which the court took issue. But the record
shows that Dr. Gur did not make five statements the state
court attributed to him; that Dr. Gur’s testimony, in context,
did not have the meaning the state court assigned to it; and
that the erroneously attributed statements constituted the
bulk of the court’s basis for rejecting Dr. Gur’s opinion and
his credibility as an expert.
MARKS V. DAVIS 121
A.
Throughout its discussion of Dr. Gur, the state court
consistently attributes certain language, demarcated with
quotation marks, to Dr. Gur. Time and again, however, the
quoted language attributed to Dr. Gur did not come from Dr.
Gur.
The majority opinion discounts Marks’s concerns with
the state court’s treatment of Dr. Gur by framing the court’s
use of “quotation marks when paraphrasing Dr. Gur’s
testimony” as a quirk—a “stylistic choice rather than a
factual error.” Maj. Op. at 77. The state court, the majority
contends, “[s]ubstantively . . . drew reasonable inferences
from the record” in drafting the language it framed as direct
quotes by Dr. Gur. Id at 78.
I cannot so lightly “[p]ut[] aside the use of quotation
marks to summarize Dr. Gur’s testimony.” Id. at 80.
Concluding that “the [state] trial court’s reasoning is not
objectively unreasonable” while disregarding that the court
represented that Dr. Gur said things he did not say
compromises not only grammar but common sense. Id.
There is just no reason a judge, trained in the need for detail
and accuracy, as well as in basic writing principles, would
put quotation marks around testimonial language if he did
not mean that the speaker meant to convey those words, not
something sort of similar but lacking the nuance and
qualifications of what was actually conveyed.
The state court’s misuse of quotation marks reveals three
specific problems with its analysis of Dr. Gur’s testimony.
First, the state court, after treating the misattributed
statements as direct quotations from Dr. Gur, rejected his
testimony based on the often-reductive phrasings of the
misquotations. The misquotations stand in stark contrast to
122 MARKS V. DAVIS
Dr. Gur’s actual nuanced testimony. Second, even accepting
the misattributed quotes as a bizarre attempt by the state
court to demarcate paraphrased testimony, the resulting
quotations so significantly misrepresent Dr. Gur’s actual
opinions as to be wholly unreasonable, and reveal the state
court’s lack of engagement, either by design or through
incompetence, with the substance of his expert testimony.
Third, in some instances, even if Dr. Gur had offered the
testimony the state court attributed to him (which, again, he
did not), such testimony would have been reasonable on the
factual record and so provides no support for the state court’s
venomous attack on Dr. Gur’s credibility. The upshot is that
each of the five direct quotations the state court wrongly
attributed to Dr. Gur cannot bear the weight the state court
placed on it to impugn Dr. Gur’s character and reject his
expert testimony. The majority opinion’s attempts to explain
and to place in context the state court’s discussions cannot
camouflage the unreasonableness of these errors.
First, during Dr. Gur’s evaluation of Marks’s family
members’ testimony at the 1994 trial, it was a lawyer—not
Dr. Gur—who described such testimony as “self-serving.”
Dr. Gur’s own comments on the 1994 testimony—which
was perceived to be in tension with later declarations filed in
2002—did not “dismiss[]” or “brush this most significant
evidence aside . . . with the back of his hand,” as the state
court stated. Instead, Dr. Gur offered a reasoned explanation
as to why the testimony of family members in 1994 may not
be probative of Marks’s actual childhood circumstances,
noting both that “[i]t’s quite usual for members of the family
to not see a lot of the difficulties that a family has” and that
Marks’s brother “may have thought that if he described his
brother [Marks] as kind and nice, that it would spare his
brother’s life.” Accordingly, Dr. Gur provided an opinion on
MARKS V. DAVIS 123
the weight of Marks’s family members’ 1994 testimony
sensitive to the context in which that evidence was offered.
Even if Dr. Gur had described the 1994 testimony as
“self-serving,” that would hardly have been, as the state
court asserted, “preposterous” or indicative of a “significant
lack of objectivity or impartiality.” Providing positive
testimony about Marks during the 1994 penalty phase of his
trial could fairly be described as “self-serving” in three ways.
Doing so would have served his family members’ interests
by (1) portraying Marks in a more favorable light in court,
(2) avoiding reliving or publicly revealing the difficult
circumstances of their own childhoods, and (3) cohering
with the defense lawyer’s chosen strategy of emphasizing
Marks’s family members’ enduring support for him. The
state court’s conclusion that “there is nothing in what the
family members and others stated in their 1994 testimony
which can reasonably or even remotely be classified as ‘self-
serving’”—and its discounting of Dr. Gur’s testimony based
on erroneously attributing that description to him—is thus
unreasonable. Put another way, and contrary to the
majority’s conclusion, the state court’s analysis did not
“dr[a]w permissible inferences from [Dr. Gur’s] testimony.”
Maj. Op. at 80.
Second, Dr. Gur did not testify that a description of
Marks as “act[ing] like a good-natured kid” while in the
Navy “constituted a symptom of mental retardation,” as the
state court found. Instead, Dr. Gur testified that such a
description was actually an observer’s “perceptive
observation that is consistent with,” not a symptom of,
“mental retardation,” presumably because individuals with
mental retardation, like anyone else, can appear, or make an
effort to appear, good-natured to others. The state court’s
negative inference from its misattributed quote—namely,
124 MARKS V. DAVIS
that Dr. Gur was biased and providing compromised
testimony because he believed that “abnormal or normal
behavior [from Marks would] both corroborate the diagnosis
of mental illness”—was patronizing and unreasonable.
Third, Dr. Gur did not say that Marks “probably made no
sense” when he spoke to declarant Raymond Bradley.
Instead, after a lawyer asked him “why [he] would . . .
conclude that [Marks] didn’t make sense to” Bradley, Dr.
Gur expressly replied, “I didn’t say that [Marks] didn’t make
sense to” the declarant. Nothing in the record indicates that
Dr. Gur made the probabilistic remark attributed to him.
Moreover, the state court disparaged Dr. Gur’s testimony as
“utter speculation, wholly unsupported by any evidence”
that “casts doubt on [his] v[e]racity.” But Dr. Gur’s
testimony, as solicited by the lawyer examining him,
emphasized the tentative nature of his opinions in this area
and his reluctance to offer a conclusion about Marks’s
coherence when speaking to Bradley. As recorded in the
transcript, the same attorney asked Dr. Gur, “Did what he
[Marks] say didn’t make sense then?,” to which Dr. Gur
replied, “I would assume it didn’t. I don’t know for sure,”
while making clear that he was offering only “[his] best
guess at this moment” rather than a concrete assessment of
the interaction between Marks and Bradley. Honesty about
what one does not know but considers possible, grounded in
professional experience, does not “cast[] doubt on [one’s]
v[e]racity.” To the contrary, Dr. Gur was completely
forthright about the extent of his knowledge and the basis for
his “guess.”
Fourth, as the district court found, Dr. Gur never said
that Marks “should have had a social network to prevent”
eviction; Dr. Gur instead testified about specific indicia of
healthy adjustment, noting that “someone in that age [who
MARKS V. DAVIS 125
does] not . . . have anybody who could make sure his stuff is
not thrown into the street does not have the kind of
vocational, social, and occupational adjustment from a
healthy individual.” The point was not that Marks should
have been able to prevent an eviction but, rather, that Marks
should have been able to find someone to help him with his
“stuff.” The state court’s misattributed quote fails to reflect
Dr. Gur’s actual testimony in other ways, too; having
“anybody” (i.e., an individual) to help, as Dr. Gur
referenced, is quite different from having a full “social
network” to assist, as the court referenced instead. The state
court’s description is thus inaccurate both as a direct quote
and as a paraphrase of this section of Dr. Gur’s testimony.
Based on this false gloss, the state court offered an
overblown and emotionally laden characterization of the
quoted language it misattributed to Dr. Gur, inexplicably
describing his testimony as “arrogant and presumptuous.”
Finally, as the district court also recognized, there is
simply “no support” in the record for the state court’s finding
that Dr. Gur described as “irrational” a purported desire by
Marks for a woman lawyer.
To begin, contrary to the majority opinion’s suggestion
that “Dr. Gur understood that Marks preferred a female
lawyer” generally, Maj. Op. at 89, the testimony
demonstrates that Dr. Gur correctly understood Marks’s
preference for working with a particular woman lawyer on
his legal team. What Dr. Gur said was that “there was a
woman lawyer that [Marks] was able to relate to and usually
spoke with her or through her.” Here, too, the state court’s
errors compound: even if Dr. Gur had made the statement
that Marks had a preference for woman lawyers that was
irrational, it would not have supported the state court’s
unreasonable extrapolation—with no reference to any
126 MARKS V. DAVIS
specific condition or diagnostic criterion—that
characterizing Marks’s purported desire as irrational would
be “presumably supportive of [Dr. Gur’s] various diagnoses
of mental and psychological impairments.” The state court
thus acted unreasonably in faulting Dr. Gur for unwarranted
implications that the court speculated would attach to a
remark he did not even make.
The state court also disregarded Dr. Gur’s testimony on
Marks’s relationship with his lawyers more generally.
During a colloquy about Marks’s ability to identify goals and
rationally pursue them, Dr. Gur noted that Marks’s
delusional belief that “his lawyers were collaborating with
the district attorney” to hurt his case did not reflect “a
conscious perception of someone’s [Marks’s own] needs and
the logical pursuit of their accomplishment.” That is a far cry
from the state court’s summary of Dr. Gur’s testimony,
which was that Dr. Gur had “attributed” Marks’s desire for
a woman lawyer “to mental illness or psychological
impairment,” and faulted him for that attribution.
To summarize: in all five instances, Dr. Gur did not make
the statements the state court attributed to him, whether the
attributed statements are viewed as quotations, as presented,
or—inconsistently with the format the state judge repeatedly
used—as paraphrases. The state court erred by concluding
otherwise, and its errors were objectively unreasonable.
Moreover, the state court evinced a consistent pattern of
hyperbolic and inaccurate characterizations of the testimony
it falsely attributed to Dr. Gur, layering unreasonable error
upon unreasonable error to arrive at a seriously distorted
view of both the factual record and Dr. Gur’s credibility.
This pattern is consistent with the state court’s treatment of
Dr. Cowardin’s and Dr. Woods’s expert evidence, reviewed
in detail in the majority opinion. As with its
MARKS V. DAVIS 127
mischaracterization of testimony by those two experts, the
state court did not comprehend—or at least did not take into
account and substantively consider—what Dr. Gur actually
said in his extensive, detailed, and nuanced testimony.
Accordingly, the state court’s factual determinations as
to Dr. Gur, including its rejection of his expert testimony,
warrant no deference. 2
B.
Both prongs of the Taylor formulation for determining
when a state court’s fact-finding is unreasonable for
purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2) are satisfied with respect
to Dr. Gur. See Taylor v. Maddox, 366 F.3d 992, 1001 (9th
Cir. 2004), abrogated on other grounds as stated in Murray
v. Schriro, 745 F.3d 984, 999-1000 (9th Cir. 2014). First, the
2
The state court also faulted Dr. Gur for not reviewing certain evidence
about Marks’s efforts to obtain general assistance benefits. The majority
suggests that the state court’s inference—namely, that Dr. Gur’s
testimony about those records demonstrated his “lack of objectivity or
impartiality”—“was, while debatable, not objectively unreasonable.”
Maj. Op. at 77. I disagree.
Dr. Gur testified that, despite not reviewing the documents themselves,
he recalled “references to [Marks’s efforts to receive benefits]” in the
records he did review. He noted that, “in cases where you have a real
tough diagnostic dilemma”—in contrast to Marks’s case—“obviously
those things [viz. documentation of efforts to obtain benefits] can help,”
but that “there is a point as a clinician [when] you have to say, ‘Enough,
I have what I need and I can make the diagnosis and move on.’” Dr. Gur
was familiar with the type of records at issue even if he had not reviewed
the documents themselves, and he was entitled to determine that Marks’s
case did not pose a “real tough diagnostic dilemma” in which those
records might be probative. Even if Dr. Gur’s professional judgment
about the need to review those documents was misplaced, it is not at all
clear why such error would indicate that he lacked objectivity or
impartiality.
128 MARKS V. DAVIS
state court “plainly . . . misapprehend[ed] the record” by
finding that Dr. Gur made five statements he did not make
and then faulting him as partisan and lacking objectivity
based on those misattributed statements. Taylor, 366 F.3d at
1001. Second, this misapprehension “goes to a material
factual issue . . . central” to Marks’s claim: Dr. Gur’s
credibility. Id. Like Dr. Woods and Dr. Cowardin, Dr. Gur
testified that Marks was intellectually disabled. There was,
again, no expert testimony contradicting these opinions.
Thus, Dr. Gur’s credibility was both a material factual issue
and central to Marks’s claim.
Nor can the state court’s errors as to Dr. Gur be
dismissed as “inconsequential,” as Judge Nelson’s dissent
suggests. Nelson Dissent at 142. The state court was
repeatedly wrong in attributing several statements to Dr.
Gur, whose testimony did not contain the remarks in
question, either directly or as paraphrase. As discussed
above, Dr. Gur did not make any of the five statements for
which the state court faulted him, and the state court’s
understanding of what he did say is belied by the content and
context of his statements. Nonetheless, the state court placed
significant weight on its false conclusions that Dr. Gur had
made those statements, repeatedly suggesting that they
showed that Dr. Gur was deliberately misreading record
evidence to confirm his diagnosis of Marks as intellectually
disabled regardless of what the evidence properly indicated,
and that Dr. Gur was therefore not credible. With regard to
the five statements it falsely attributed to Dr. Gur, the state
court declared that:
• On the wrongly attributed statement about Marks’s
family members’ 1994 testimony as self-serving: “I find
these statements both preposterous and at the same time
MARKS V. DAVIS 129
illuminating of a significant lack of objectivity or
impartiality on the part of the witness,” such that they
“confirm[] a growing suspicion in my mind that Dr. Gur,
and to an extent both of the other experts, are not wholly
impartial, and not wholly objective, but are instead, to a
certain degree (in Dr. Gur’s case, perhaps to a rather
considerable degree) simply partisans attempting to
achieve a partisan result.”;
• On the wrongly attributed statement that Marks’s
perceived good-naturedness was symptomatic of
intellectual disability: “I find it hard, if not absolutely
impossible, to believe that this conclusion can
reasonably be drawn from the simple statement that the
defendant ‘acted like a good-natured kid.’ If that should
be the case, then I suppose that every pleasant and good-
natured young person in the world can be so labeled, at
least in Dr. Gur’[s] mind. To pursue this a bit further: this
example reflects a pattern of opinions apparently shared
by Dr. Cowardin—that statements such as that of Mr.
Langlois, that the defendant acted like a ‘good natured
kid’ or (in the case of Dr. Cowardin, that of Jude Bullock,
who stated that the defendant ‘talked so much’) are
examples of the defendant ‘masking’ his mental or
psychological deficits. I submit that what this kind of
analysis produces is a ‘no-win’ situation by the person
being evaluated—abnormal or bizarre behavior is of
course suggestive of mental or psychological
impairments; seemingly normal behavior is simply an
‘act’ (according to Dr. Gur), or an attempt to ‘mask’
one’s deficits (according to Dr. Cowardin). Either way,
abnormal or normal behavior both corroborate the
diagnosis of mental illness. Joseph Heller could not have
said it better. But while this kind of approach had a kind
130 MARKS V. DAVIS
of ironic humor in Heller’s novel ‘Catch 22;’ it has far
more serious overtones in our setting, where it seems not
to matter how the defendant acts—normal or abnormal,
ordinary or bizarre—it all leads to the same result with
these expert witnesses: a diagnosis of mental illness or
psychological impairment.”;
• On the wrongly attributed statement that Marks probably
made no sense when speaking to a certain declarant:
“[T]his kind of utter speculation, wholly unsupported by
any evidence, only casts doubt on the v[e]racity of the
witness (Dr. Gur) in other particulars,” because “such
speculation is ‘unbelievable, unreasonable [and]
unsupported by the evidence.’”;
• On the wrongly attributed statement that Marks should
have had a social network to prevent eviction: “This
more than somewhat arrogant and presumptuous
statement regarding what should be expected of an
incarcerated defendant in terms of a ‘social network’
tells us more about Dr. Gur, I submit, than it does about
the defendant.”; and
• On the wrongly attributed statement that Marks’s
purported desire for a woman lawyer was irrational: “But
the choice surely cannot, reasonably, be considered per
se ‘irrational,’ and thus be attributed to mental illness or
psychological impairment.”.
The state court’s unsupported criticism of Dr. Gur did
not speak to his credibility at all, because Dr. Gur had not
made the statements nor conveyed the meaning on which the
state court based its excoriating and often highly personal
critique. Yet the state court gave that criticism significant
weight in rejecting Dr. Gur’s testimony, relying on the
MARKS V. DAVIS 131
misattributed statements to devalue Dr. Gur’s credibility and
impugn him personally as partisan and fixated on reaching a
predetermined result regardless of the evidence. The state
court, of course, offered similarly unsupported criticism of
Marks’s other experts to undermine their credibility, which
the majority does identify as unreasonable. Dr. Gur’s
testimony, along with Dr. Cowardin’s and Dr. Woods’s,
should therefore be considered in a de novo analysis of
Marks’s Atkins claim.
III.
I part ways with the majority’s Atkins analysis on other
fronts as well.
The state court found that the three expert witnesses, and
“in particular Dr. Gur, all relied, and relied very heavily, in
support of their diagnoses of various mental and
psychological impairments of the defendant, including
mental retardation, upon the factual allegations contained in
a number of declarations filed by various people in the year
2002.” The majority holds that this finding was objectively
reasonable.
The record, however, contradicts that description of how
Dr. Cowardin, Dr. Woods, and Dr. Gur reached their
respective diagnoses. The three experts did each refer to the
2002 declarations occasionally, but did not do so specifically
with respect to the issue of mental disability. 3 Instead, as the
3
The 2002 lay declarations about Marks’s childhood and family
circumstances were included in Marks’s state habeas petition (and cited
in his federal habeas petition) primarily to support his claims concerning
competency and ineffective assistance of counsel. The Atkins claims in
those petitions did not specifically cite to any of the 2002 lay declarations
132 MARKS V. DAVIS
majority elsewhere acknowledges, 4 the experts primarily
relied upon Marks’s IQ testing, academic records, teacher
evaluations, and statements about his childhood behavior to
make their mental disability diagnoses, as opposed to
depictions of Marks’s childhood circumstances. 5 The state
court’s characterization of these experts’ reliance on the
2002 declarations for Atkins purposes as “very heav[y],” and
its resulting rejection of their assessments as “not
compelling” and “suspect,” was without doubt objectively
unreasonable.
It was also unreasonable for the state court to reject
wholesale the 2002 declarations’ portrayal of Marks’s
childhood as difficult and traumatic. The majority concedes
that the state court “significantly overstated both the
existence and the relevance” of contradictions between
penalty-phase testimony from 1994 and lay declarations
filed in 2002 concerning Marks’s childhood circumstances.
Maj. Op. at 90. Thirty-seven lay witnesses submitted
or the information in them (although there was, as is usual, a general
incorporation of other allegations).
4
See Maj. Op. at 89-90. The majority opinion features an internal
tension, deeming it “reasonable” that the state court found the expert
witnesses relied heavily on the 2002 declarations in making their
diagnoses, id. at 89, but “persuasive” that lay witness statements about
Marks’s childhood did not contribute heavily to the same experts’
diagnoses, id. at 90.
5
For example, Dr. Cowardin discussed teacher comments in school
records documenting Marks’s learning difficulties, slowness,
immaturity, and need for remedial work. Dr. Woods discussed Marks’s
difficulties with language, including “a tremendous amount of verbal
output . . . consistent with the types of impairments you see in frontal
lobe disease.” And Dr. Gur discussed Marks’s “history of significant
limitations in social, academic and occupational functioning” in the
context of Marks’s “significantly subaverage” IQ metrics.
MARKS V. DAVIS 133
declarations in 2002, of whom only two or three, according
to the majority, contradicted their earlier testimony from
1994. Moreover, twenty-nine of those witnesses had not
testified in 1994. The state court responded to the fact that,
at most, three witnesses’ 2002 statements on Marks’s
childhood diverged from their 1994 testimony by
systematically discounting all thirty-seven lay witnesses’
declarations as to this issue. There is simply no reasonable
basis for rejecting as not credible, without a hearing enabling
an in-person assessment of credibility, such a large number
of sworn declarations submitted by individuals who had
never previously testified and so had no earlier testimony to
contradict. I therefore cannot agree with the majority that the
state court’s “decision to reject the 2002 declarations’
portrayal of Marks’s childhood was objectively reasonable.”
Id. at 91. 6
More importantly, the trial court’s emphasis with regard
to the Atkins claim on family circumstances during Marks’s
childhood was misplaced. The lay testimony and
6
The state court, after quoting extensively from the CALJIC penalty
phase jury instructions’ technical discussion of “mitigating
circumstance[s],” declared that “[t]here is simply no conceivable reason
or motive why these witnesses” would not mention “powerful evidence
in mitigation” about Marks’s childhood circumstances, “if those facts
existed.” I note again that there were rational incentives for witnesses
testifying at the 1994 penalty-phase trial to soften or omit aspects of
Marks’s difficult childhood. See infra Section II.A. Further, Marks’s lay
witnesses can hardly be faulted for failing to realize in 1994 that
presenting Marks’s adverse childhood circumstances in full at the
penalty phase of his trial “might have provided significant evidence in
mitigation.” They are not lawyers and cannot be expected to know what
factors can be mitigating in a capital trial’s penalty phase. Nor is there
any basis for supposing that the lay witnesses would have read or been
apprised of the jury instructions before testifying.
134 MARKS V. DAVIS
declarations about Marks’s childhood—in both 1994 and
2002—were not focused on Marks’s intellectual function, as
would be relevant to the Atkins analysis. Factual disputes
about Marks’s parents’ treatment of him and his siblings are
not directly pertinent to Marks’s intellectual functioning and
adaptive behavior as a child; at most, those circumstances
might shed light on why he developed as he did, not how he
actually developed. Instead, the gravamen of Marks’s Atkins
claim rests on the unanimous testimony of the three expert
witnesses who testified to Marks’s intellectual limitations
based on the evidence regarding his intellectual and adaptive
functioning as a child, including school and testing records
and declarations from childhood acquaintances and teachers
concerning his development, behavior, and academic
performance.
IV.
Marks’s Atkins claim was considered exhaustively in the
2006 state court proceedings, but the state court’s
determination of the facts, as I have explained, was patently
unreasonable. The majority, after determining that Marks
satisfies the requirements of § 2254(d)(2), remands to the
district court for de novo review. Although I might prefer to
decide the Atkins issue ourselves, I concur in that
disposition. As the majority does not reach the merits of the
Atkins claim, I do not do so in this dissent. Instead, I
emphasize my view that the district court’s review on
remand should include the full record properly before it,
unconstrained by the state court’s avalanche of unreasonable
factual determinations, including Dr. Gur’s expert evidence
and the additional material discussed above. To that extent,
I respectfully dissent.
MARKS V. DAVIS 135
R. NELSON, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part:
The majority properly rejects almost all of Marks’s
habeas claims. I concur in Parts I, II(A), II(C), and III–VI of
the majority opinion. I disagree, however, with the
conclusion in Part II(B) that the record as it relates to Dr.
Cowardin and Dr. Woods suggests petitioner may be
intellectually disabled and thus ineligible for the death
penalty. See Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304 (2002). This
claim has been rejected by multiple courts as non-
meritorious. We give deference to that holding by the state
court. And the majority properly rejects the most relevant of
Marks’s arguments even for this claim and I join those
portions including the discussion in full as to Dr. Gur.
Ultimately, however, the majority strains both the record and
the law, giving Marks another bite at his decades-old Atkins
claim. I therefore dissent.
I
Delaney Marks was convicted of capital murder by a jury
in 1994. At the penalty phase trial, Marks’s counsel
presented evidence that Marks had a good childhood but
turned violent after traumatic events later in life. This
narrative was supported by seven lay witnesses who knew
Marks as a child. The witnesses testified that Marks grew
up in a good family environment with no drug or alcohol
abuse, no domestic violence, and an encouraging father. No
evidence was presented that Marks was intellectually
disabled, despite this being a potentially legitimate
mitigating factor at sentencing. See, e.g., Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. 362, 370–71, 395–96 (2000) (evidence of
intellectual disability is “significant mitigating evidence”
and defense counsel was constitutionally ineffective for
failing to introduce such evidence at the penalty phase of
136 MARKS V. DAVIS
petitioner’s capital murder trial). The jury sentenced Marks
to death.
Eight years later, the Supreme Court issued its landmark
decision, Atkins v. Virginia. Atkins held that the execution
of an intellectually disabled criminal constitutes cruel and
unusual punishment. 536 U.S. at 321. Atkins did not define
how a state court should adjudicate a defendant’s intellectual
disability, see id. at 317, but gave states the “task of
developing appropriate ways to enforce the constitutional
restriction upon their execution of sentences.” Id. (cleaned
up).
California enacted Penal Code section 1376 to satisfy
Atkins’s directive. In re Hawthorne, 105 P.3d 552, 554 (Cal.
2005). Section 1376 “sets forth the standards and procedures
for determining whether a defendant against whom the
prosecution seeks the death penalty is [intellectually
disabled] within the meaning of Atkins.” Id. Postconviction
claims “should be adjudicated in substantial conformance
with” section 1376. Id.
In 2005, at Marks’s request, the Supreme Court of
California ordered the State “to show cause in Alameda
County Superior Court . . . why [his] death sentence should
not be vacated . . . on the ground that he is [intellectually
disabled] within the meaning of Atkins v. Virginia.” This
was the same trial court (and judge) that conducted Marks’s
original criminal and penalty phase trials in 1994.
The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing. The
hearing substantially conformed to the procedure outlined in
section 1376. The burden was on Marks “to show by a
preponderance of the evidence that [he] suffered from
(1) significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning
[that manifested] prior to age eighteen; and (2) deficits in
MARKS V. DAVIS 137
adaptive behavior that manifested prior to age eighteen.”
The trial court was “not . . . bound by the opinion testimony
of expert witnesses or by test results, but [was permitted to]
weigh and consider all evidence bearing on the issue.”
Hawthorne, 105 P.3d at 555.
Marks presented evidence in support of his claim of
intellectual disability. To support his subaverage intellectual
functioning claim, Marks relied on his IQ scores between the
ages of six to eleven and his school performance records.
For his subaverage adaptive functioning claim, Marks relied
on the declarations of three lay witnesses who knew him as
a child.
Marks also presented expert testimony—including from
Drs. Gur, Cowardin, and Woods—each of whom concluded
that Marks was intellectually disabled. These experts “relied
very heavily” upon declarations submitted by lay witnesses
in 2002. And those witnesses had relied on evidence from
decades earlier. Some of these same lay witnesses had
testified contradictorily at the penalty phase of Marks’s
original trial.
In 2006, the trial court denied Marks’s petition. The trial
court made two factual determinations. First, Marks failed
to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he had
significantly subaverage intellectual functioning that
manifested before age eighteen. The trial court reasoned that
Marks’s IQ scores were inconclusive and could instead
support that Marks had average intellectual ability “with at
least equal weight and equal convincing force.” The trial
court also analyzed Marks’s school records and determined
that they, too, did not support a finding that Marks had
“subaverage” intellectually functioning. Marks, for
138 MARKS V. DAVIS
example, “managed to graduate” from high school, which
cut against his claim.
Second, the trial court determined that Marks failed to
prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he had
subaverage adaptive functioning that manifested before age
eighteen. This determination was especially influenced by
the credibility of Marks’s lay witness declarants. In 2002,
lay witnesses who knew Marks as a child submitted
declarations in support of his habeas petition. These
declarants depicted Marks’s childhood as dark and
traumatic. For example, Marks’s sister Elaine stated in her
declaration that both of her parents abused alcohol and that
she was in a car accident with her mother because her mother
was driving drunk and high. Many of these same declarants,
however, had testified at the penalty phase of Marks’s
original 1994 trial. At that time, these lay witnesses testified
that Marks had a good childhood. The lay witnesses
included Elaine, who testified in 1994 that she and Marks
grew up in a “great home” and that neither of their parents
abused alcohol.
The trial court directly weighed the credibility of the
1994 live testimony against the 2002 declarations. The trial
court determined that the live witnesses in 1994 were telling
the truth then and that in 2002 they (and the other declarants)
were not. This is because, the trial court reasoned, if Marks’s
childhood had indeed been as dark and traumatic as
described in the 2002 declarations, the same declarants who
testified in 1994 would have had incentive to so state.
Evidence of intellectual disability was a legitimate
mitigating factor against the death penalty even then. See,
e.g., Williams, 529 U.S. at 371, 395–96. But they did not.
MARKS V. DAVIS 139
Because it rejected the credibility of the 2002 declarants,
the trial court relied on the testimony of Marks’s cousin,
Michael Richard, to assess whether Marks had subaverage
adaptive functioning before age eighteen. Richard testified
that he never personally saw any signs of intellectual
disability in Marks. Richard’s testimony was corroborated
by the live testimony given by Marks’s friends and family
members, which the trial court determined to be truthful, at
the penalty phase of Marks’s original trial. The trial court
also found Richard to be truthful, with no apparent bias
against Marks.
The trial court also found that Marks’s expert
witnesses—Drs. Gur, Cowardin, and Wood—lacked
credibility for several reasons. Most significantly, all three
“relied heavily upon statements contained in the various
2002 declarations” but not upon the 1994 live testimony.
This was the primary reason the trial court found the expert
witnesses’ testimony “not compelling” and “suspect.” For
example, the trial court noted that Dr. Gur’s statements that
the 1994 testimony was “self-serving” and “the ‘rose-
colored-glasses outlook of family members’” were “both
preposterous and at the same time illuminating of a
significant lack of objectivity or impartiality on the part of
[Dr. Gur.]”
Marks sought a second petition for habeas relief on his
Atkins claim. The Supreme Court of California summarily
denied his Atkins claim in 2010. Marks now brings his
habeas claims to federal court.
The district court granted summary judgment for the
State on Marks’s intellectual disability claim because the
trial court’s decision was objectively reasonable. Marks v.
Davis, 112 F. Supp. 3d 949, 993 (N.D. Cal. June 25, 2015).
140 MARKS V. DAVIS
The district court held that the trial court’s determination that
Marks’s IQ scores and school records did not support that
Marks had subaverage intellectual ability before age
eighteen was not objectively unreasonable. Id. at 989. The
district court also explained that the trial court’s
determination that the 1994 testimony was the most reliable
indicator of Marks’s childhood, as opposed to the 2002
declarations, was objectively reasonable. Id. at 993. The
district court explained that “[t]his factual determination was
also critical to the trial court’s evaluation of [Marks’s] three
expert witnesses,” and the “trial court ultimately found the
experts less than credible because they” relied heavily on the
2002 declarations. Id. Accordingly, the district court held
that the trial court’s two factual findings were objectively
reasonable considering the record as a whole. Id.
We look to the underlying state trial court’s ruling. See
Wilson v. Sellers, 584 U.S. 122, 125 (2018) (“federal court
should ‘look through’ [a summary denial] to the last related
state-court decision that does provide” a reasoned decision).
I agree with the district court that the trial court’s factual
determinations were objectively reasonable.
II
It is undisputed that AEDPA applies here. Under
AEDPA, habeas relief is unavailable 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). The majority vacates the
federal district court’s ruling on Marks’s Atkins claim under
MARKS V. DAVIS 141
prong (2) of 2254(d). The plain text and legislative purpose
of AEDPA, as well as prior precedent, however, preclude
such a result. There is also ample evidence to support the
district court’s determination of the facts as reasonable.
A
To find that a state court’s decision is “based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts,” § 2254(d)(2), a
federal court “must be convinced that an appellate panel,
applying the normal standards of appellate review, could not
reasonably conclude that the finding is supported by the
record before the state court,” Hurles v. Ryan, 752 F.3d 768,
778 (9th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). The
factual determination must also have influenced the decision
“in some material way.” Taylor v. Maddox, 366 F.3d 992,
1000 (9th Cir. 2004), abrogation on other grounds
recognized by Murray v. Schriro, 745 F.3d 984, 999–1000
(9th Cir. 2014); see also § 2254(d)(2) (federal court may
reverse only where the state court’s decision was “based on
an unreasonable determination of the facts”) (emphasis
added). This court must also be “particularly deferential” to
the state court where it is reviewing its fact-finding process.
Weaver v. Palmateer, 455 F.3d 958, 963 n.6 (9th Cir. 2006)
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
The majority holds the state court’s Atkins decision was
based on an “unreasonable determination of the facts.” Maj.
at 91–97. The majority properly rejects alleged factual
errors regarding Dr. Gur and the lay witnesses. Id. at 76–91.
But the majority identifies two other “errors” related to Drs.
Woods and Cowardin. Id. at 91–97. The majority points to
the trial court’s statement that Dr. Woods had not reviewed
the 1994 testimony, when, in fact, he testified that he had.
Id. at 96–97. And the majority notes that the trial court
142 MARKS V. DAVIS
mischaracterized part of Dr. Cowardin’s testimony. Id. at
93–96. Dr. Cowardin at first told the trial court that she was
not using the AAMR’s clinical definition of intellectual
disability, but that she “made up” the definition she cited.
But she later clarified that she had accurately quoted the
AAMR definition. The trial court, nonetheless, stated that
Dr. Cowardin had used the incorrect definition and did not
mention her clarification when discussing her credibility.
The majority concludes that these two technical
misstatements by the trial court satisfy § 2254(d)(2). But
“[t]he question under AEDPA is . . . not whether a federal
court believes the state court’s determination was incorrect,
but whether that determination was unreasonable.” Shoop v.
Twyford, 596 U.S. 811, 819 (2022). In Taylor, we held that
“[f]ailure to key consider aspects of the record is a defect in
the fact-finding process.” 366 F.3d at 1008. “How serious
the defect, [however], depends on what bearing the omitted
evidence has on the record as a whole.” Id.; see also id. at
1007 (“the philosophy of our common-law fact-finding
process [is] that the various pieces of evidence and testimony
in the record must be considered in light of all the others”).
Thus, a state court’s misstatement “render[s] the resulting
factual finding unreasonable,” only where it “goes to a
material factual issue that is central to petitioner’s claim.”
Id. at 1001. A properly deferential analysis establishes that
the trial court’s technical misstatements were not material
and capable of rendering its credibility determinations
“objectively unreasonable,” see Maj. 91–97, but were
inconsequential.
The trial court engaged in a “dynamic, holistic [fact-
finding] process” in concluding that both Dr. Cowardin’s
and Dr. Woods’s testimony should be discredited as
irreconcilable with the 1994 testimony. See Taylor, 366 F.3d
MARKS V. DAVIS 143
at 1007. First, for Dr. Cowardin, the trial court found her
decision to rely upon a definition of intellectual disability
that used the word “manifest,” as opposed to “originate,” as
required by section 1376, constituted “[a] surprising
example of lack of impartiality and of partisanship.” The
trial court thought this was part of a deliberate strategy on
the defense team’s part to “conceal or ignore” the 1994
testimony. The motive was clear: if Marks had to
demonstrate that his intellectual disability “manifested”
before age eighteen, then the most reliable evidence of his
childhood—the 1994 testimony—would have been most
probative. And that 1994 testimony strongly suggested, if
not demanded, that the trial court rule against Marks because
it was inconsistent with a finding that his intellectual
disability was “easily understood and recognized” before
age eighteen. Thus, the fact that the trial court did not
mention Dr. Cowardin’s clarification on the record of the
AAMR definition could not possibly be a “material
subsidiary fact” because it has no bearing whatsoever on
whether she engaged in this deceptive and disqualifying
strategy.
Likewise, for Dr. Woods, the trial court found he lacked
credibility because he ignored the 1994 live testimony. The
majority argues that the trial court offered two reasons for
discrediting Dr. Woods—that he relied on the 2002
declarations and did not review the 1994 testimony—and
that the former without the latter would have been
insufficient to reject him. Maj. 92–93. But given that the
trial court found the 2002 declarations to be demonstrably
false considering the 1994 testimony, the fact that he
reviewed both is even more consistent with his participation
in a deliberate and concerted effort to “conceal or ignore”
144 MARKS V. DAVIS
the testimony, not less. This is because the 1994 testimony
directly undermined his findings.
The majority’s position that the trial court’s “error” was
material because Dr. Woods otherwise relied on other less
probative information, see Maj. 92–93, cannot support
habeas relief. The only other information that Dr. Woods
relied upon to conclude that Marks had subaverage adaptive
functioning before age eighteen was the 2002 declarations. 1
But the majority agreed that the trial court’s decision to
reject these declarations, because they directly conflicted
with the 1994 testimony, was objectively reasonable. Maj.
90–91. In that light, the majority’s assessment that the trial
court was objectively unreasonable for rejecting Dr.
Woods’s testimony for heavily relying on these same
declarations is not supported by the record.
B
The majority recites and affirms other evidence assessed
by the trial court. The majority, however, ignores that this
other evidence fully supports the trial court’s determination.
For example, the non-expert evidence alone supports the
trial court’s finding that Marks did not meet his burden of
proof, which was dispositive as a matter of state law. See,
1
The other probative information that the majority cites either relates to
the issue of whether Marks had subaverage intellectual functioning
before age eighteen (i.e., his school records and IQ scores) or concerned
evidence of Marks’s brain functioning impairment that did not manifest
until adulthood. As Dr. Woods’s report explained, Marks’s family
observed a significant change in him after his return from the Navy,
which they attributed to his “increasing drug use and some unknown
event that occurred during his years of service.” After that, Dr. Woods
described Marks’s subsequent mental deterioration in adulthood, of
which he suggests casual factors may have originated in Marks’s
childhood.
MARKS V. DAVIS 145
e.g., Hawthorne, 105 P.3d at 554. The trial court was also
justified in rejecting Marks’s experts on multiple other
independent bases, including that the experts’ decision to
rely on the 2002 lay declarations was suspect. While the
majority affirms these other bases, it fails to explain why
these grounds independently do not support the trial court’s
findings. See Maj. at 90–91.
This approach is wrong. The Supreme Court has held
that “a federal court must carefully consider all the reasons
and evidence supporting the state court’s decision.” Mays v.
Hines, 592 U.S. 385, 391 (2021) (emphasis added). This
includes “rebutting” all the trial court’s “justifications.” Id.
at 391–92. The appellate court must also give the trial court
the “benefit of the doubt” with respect to those reasons.
Woodford v. Visciotti, 537 U.S. 19, 24 (2002). Properly
applying this precedent, the record as a whole supports the
trial court’s twin factual determinations.
Finally, the majority’s approach also conflicts with the
purpose of AEDPA. Congress enacted AEDPA “to reduce
delays in the execution of state and federal criminal
sentences, particularly in capital cases, and to advance the
principles of comity, finality, and federalism.” Shoop, 596
U.S. at 818 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
The majority violate these principles. It obfuscates the
underlying rationale in the state court’s rejection of Marks’s
Atkins claim, which involved a question of fact under state
law. And it sends this aging case back to the district court
even though the state court’s factual determinations were not
truly “objectively unreasonable.” This is improper. I
dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT DELANEY G.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT DELANEY G.
02RONALD DAVIS, Warden, OPINION California State Prison at San Quentin, Respondent-Appellee.
03Koh, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted December 14, 2022 Pasadena, California Filed July 8, 2024 Before: Mary H.
04Opinion by Judge Murguia; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Berzon; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge R.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT DELANEY G.
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