No Postconviction Do‑Over on Competency and No Ineffectiveness for Futile Evaluations: The Florida Supreme Court’s Clarification in Damas v. State
Court: Supreme Court of Florida
Decision date: October 1, 2025 (Corrected Opinion)
Cases: Mesac Damas v. State of Florida (No. SC2023-1476); Mesac Damas v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (No. SC2024-0565)
Author: Couriel, J. (Labarga, J., specially concurring)
Introduction
In this consolidated capital case, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the denial of Mesac Damas’s initial postconviction motion under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.851 and denied his petition for writ of habeas corpus. The opinion addresses three principal clusters of issues:
- Whether Damas’s competency could be re-litigated via postconviction claims and whether trial counsel were ineffective for not pressing further competency proceedings;
- Whether trial counsel’s mitigation investigation and presentation were constitutionally deficient under Strickland v. Washington;
- Whether denials of expansive public-records requests and the asserted ineffective assistance of appellate counsel warranted relief.
The Court’s outcome rests on two central propositions that will guide future practice in Florida capital and serious felony litigation:
- Competency claims are procedurally barred in postconviction and cannot be repackaged as ineffective assistance absent a bona fide basis that counsel ignored; and
- Counsel is not ineffective for declining to pursue additional competency evaluations when the defendant is persistently uncooperative and no bona fide doubt exists—especially after restoration to competency and multiple expert findings of competence.
The Court also clarifies that a defense stipulation to proceed on written expert reports does not equate to a stipulation that the defendant is competent, reinforces limits on public-records “fishing expeditions” under Rule 3.852, and confirms the high bar for habeas claims of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
Summary of the Opinion
The Court affirmed the circuit court’s denial of Damas’s amended 3.851 motion and denied his habeas petition. It held:
- Competency is procedurally barred on postconviction. Challenges to competency determinations must be raised on direct appeal; they cannot be revived in postconviction. The trial court applied the correct Dusky standard and properly relied on expert reports with the parties’ agreement to the method of decision-making.
- No ineffective assistance regarding competency. Trial counsel were not deficient for failing to seek additional competency evaluations where multiple experts found Damas competent, he had been restored to competence, and he persistently refused to cooperate. Futility and lack of a bona fide doubt defeated the claim.
- No ineffective assistance in mitigation. Counsel undertook an extensive, years-long mitigation investigation: engaging mitigation specialists, neuropsychological and neurological experts, and a cultural expert (including fieldwork in Haiti); developing 47 mitigators; and presenting evidence despite Damas’s waiver of mitigation. Strategic timing choices about additional testing, disrupted by Damas’s sudden guilty plea and mitigation waiver, were reasonable and not prejudicial in light of overwhelming aggravation.
- Public records requests properly denied. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in denying broad requests under Rule 3.852 and chapter 119 that were not tied to colorable postconviction claims.
- Habeas ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claims failed. The unpreserved sentencing-reference issue did not amount to fundamental error; the funding denial was within the trial court’s discretion (especially after a mitigation waiver); and the self-representation issue had been litigated and therefore could not be revived through habeas.
Justice Labarga concurred specially to underscore the robust record: twelve competency evaluations by five experts over eight years, two competency findings in 2014 (first incompetent with commitment, then restored), and again competent in 2017. Persistent uncooperativeness and multiple findings of malingering informed counsel’s strategy and undermined any Strickland deficiency or prejudice.
Analysis
Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Procedural bars on postconviction claims: Barnes v. State; Reynolds v. State; Barwick v. State reinforce that postconviction is not a second appeal—issues that were or could have been raised on direct appeal are barred. Applying this framework, the Court held that competency challenges cannot be revived in a 3.851 motion (Dougherty v. State; Wickham v. State; Carroll v. State).
- Competency standards: Dusky v. United States defines the operative test; Godinez v. Moran and Noetzel v. State confirm that the same competence standard governs standing trial, pleading guilty, and waiving counsel. Peede v. State, Carter v. State, and Rules 3.210–3.212 (with § 916.12, Fla. Stat.) codify procedures and criteria for competency determinations and restoration.
- Use of reports to decide competency: Dougherty authorizes trial courts to decide competence based on written expert reports by agreement of the parties and the court, while cautioning that a defendant may not stipulate to being competent—especially after an earlier incompetency adjudication.
- Strickland framework and deference: Strickland v. Washington controls ineffective assistance claims; the Court applies a mixed standard of review (Davis v. State; Sheppard v. State). Counsel is not deficient without a good-faith basis to suspect incompetence (Nixon v. State), and a presumption of competence attaches after a competency determination (Boyd v. State) absent a newly raised bona fide doubt.
- Client noncooperation and futility: Smith v. State; Brown v. State; Cherry v. State; Sims v. State recognize that defendants cannot manufacture ineffectiveness by refusing to cooperate; counsel is not required to pursue futile investigations.
- Mitigation investigation duties and strategy: Valentine v. State; Riechmann speak to the “strict duty” to investigate mitigation in capital cases. Yet Strickland recognizes that counsel’s reasonableness is influenced by the client’s statements/actions; Foster v. State; Rodriguez v. State; Rose v. State support the view that reasonable strategic choices, informed by client constraints, are not deficient. Occhicone v. State confirms deference to strategic timing and scope decisions when reasonable under professional norms.
- Public records limits in postconviction: Tanzi v. State (2025); Cole v. State (2024); Sims (2000); Asay v. State (2017); Valle v. State; Moore v. State stand for the principle that Rule 3.852 does not authorize exploratory fishing; requests must be tailored to colorable claims or relevant subject matter.
- Habeas ineffective assistance of appellate counsel (IAAC): Rutherford v. Moore authorizes IAAC claims via habeas, applying Strickland (Knight v. State; Mungin v. State). Hendrix v. State bars IAAC based on unpreserved issues unless the omission rose to fundamental error (Smiley v. State; Card v. State). State v. Murray cautions against relitigating issues already decided. Discretionary expert funding denials are reviewed for abuse of discretion (San Martin v. State; Martin v. State).
Legal Reasoning and Application
1) Competency challenges and counsel’s duties
The Court first enforced the procedural bar: Damas’s competency arguments could have been raised on direct appeal, especially given the record of repeated competency hearings and orders (2011, 2014 twice, 2017). On direct appeal he pursued the opposite theory—asserting the trial court erred by denying self-representation—while explicitly embracing his capacity to waive counsel and plead guilty. Under Godinez and Noetzel, the same Dusky competency standard governs those waivers, foreclosing a contrary postconviction posture.
Turning to ineffective assistance, the Court separated method from substance: defense counsel did not stipulate to competency; they stipulated only to allow the court to decide competence on written reports, a procedure expressly permitted by Dougherty when all parties and the judge agree. The trial court nonetheless made an independent decision and entered orders finding competence.
On deficiency, the Court found counsel had no good-faith basis to suspect current incompetence after restoration and multiple expert assessments; counsel also faced a consistently uncooperative client whom several evaluators found to be malingering. Under Nixon, Boyd, Smith, Brown, Cherry, and Sims, counsel is not obliged to demand redundant or futile evaluations when the defendant refuses to participate and no bona fide doubt emerges. This record, reinforced by Justice Labarga’s concurrence, eliminated both Strickland prongs: no deficient performance and, separately, no plausible prejudice that Damas was prosecuted while incompetent.
2) Mitigation investigation and presentation
The Court acknowledged the heightened duty in capital cases to investigate mitigation but found that duty amply satisfied here. Across multiple counsel and years, the defense engaged a mitigation specialist, cultural expert (with on-the-ground research in Haiti), a neuropsychologist, and a neurologist; they compiled school, employment, and medical records; interviewed family and coworkers; and developed 47 mitigation factors. Even after Damas pleaded guilty and waived a penalty-phase jury and mitigation, counsel continued to develop and present mitigating evidence at the Spencer hearing.
As to timing and scope, counsel reasonably planned further neuroimaging/testing based on how the guilt phase unfolded, but Damas’s sudden guilty plea and mitigation waiver disrupted those plans. The trial court later denied funding for additional MRI/PET and an out-of-state expert after the waiver, and the sentencing court still credited mental-health mitigation to some degree. Under Occhicone and Strickland, these were reasonable strategic choices under the circumstances, not deficient performance. And in light of five powerful aggravators (including CCP, victims under 12 and under custodial authority, HAC for three victims, and contemporaneous violent felonies across six murders), there was no reasonable probability that additional testing would have changed the outcome.
3) Public records: Rule 3.852 is not a fishing license
The Court applied settled doctrine (Tanzi; Cole; Sims; Asay; Valle; Moore) to hold that the circuit court properly denied wide-ranging requests that were not connected to specific, colorable postconviction claims or likely to lead to admissible evidence. Damas effectively sought to discover if claims existed, rather than to support claims he had, which Rule 3.852 does not permit.
4) Habeas IAAC: No fundamental error, no abuse of discretion, no relitigation
The Court rejected Damas’s three IAAC theories. First, appellate counsel was not ineffective for omitting an unpreserved claim based on the sentencing court’s references to competency materials—the alleged error did not qualify as fundamental given Damas’s waivers and overwhelming aggravation. Second, counsel was not ineffective for failing to challenge the denial of additional expert funding and testing; the trial court’s decision—particularly in the wake of a knowing mitigation waiver and existing imaging—fell within its discretion. Third, the Faretta denial issue had been litigated on direct appeal and could not be replayed through habeas.
Impact and Forward-Looking Significance
- Raised bar for postconviction competency claims. This decision fortifies the procedural bar and will curb attempts to reopen competency questions in 3.851 proceedings absent a preserved direct-appeal challenge or newly emergent facts creating a bona fide doubt.
- Practical guidance on using written reports. Trial courts may decide competency on written expert reports if the parties and court agree; practitioners should create a clear record that any stipulation is to the method (reports), not to the fact of competency itself.
- Futility principle in competency practice. Defense counsel has no constitutional duty to seek additional competency evaluations when an uncooperative defendant—especially one previously restored to competence—provides no good-faith basis to suspect current incompetence.
- Mitigation strategy deference. Reasonable, documented strategic decisions about the timing and extent of mitigation investigation—including the decision to await developments in the guilt phase—are insulated under Strickland, particularly when counsel continues to present mitigation despite a client’s waiver.
- Funding after mitigation waiver. Trial courts retain broad discretion to deny additional expert funding and testing where the defendant has knowingly waived mitigation and the existing record supports the court’s penalty analysis.
- Public records discipline. Rule 3.852 demands targeted requests tethered to specific postconviction issues; courts will reject overbroad requests aimed at exploratory fishing.
- IAAC limits reaffirmed. Habeas is not a vehicle to reargue resolved issues, pursue unpreserved claims absent fundamental error, or second-guess discretionary funding rulings that fall within the trial court’s ambit.
Complex Concepts Simplified
- Competency to proceed (Dusky standard): A defendant must have a present ability to consult with counsel with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and a rational and factual understanding of the proceedings.
- Godinez equivalence: The same competency standard applies to standing trial, pleading guilty, and waiving the right to counsel.
- Restoration and presumption of competence: Once a court finds a defendant competent, a presumption of competence attaches in later proceedings; another hearing is required only when a bona fide question arises.
- Stipulation to reports vs. stipulation to competence: Parties may agree that a court can decide competence on written expert reports. That is not the same as stipulating that the defendant is in fact competent.
- Strickland test (ineffective assistance): The defendant must prove deficient performance and resulting prejudice (a reasonable probability of a different outcome but for counsel’s errors).
- Malingering: Feigning or exaggerating symptoms (e.g., mental illness) for secondary gain, such as to appear incompetent.
- Koon/Spencer procedures: In Florida capital cases, Koon v. Dugger addresses waiver of mitigation; a Spencer hearing allows the court to consider additional information and mitigation before sentencing.
- Rule 3.851: Florida’s capital postconviction mechanism for raising constitutional claims after direct appeal.
- Rule 3.852 and chapter 119: Structures public-records access in capital postconviction; requests must be relevant and cannot be fishing expeditions.
- Fundamental error: An unpreserved error so serious that it reaches down into the validity of the trial itself; appellate counsel need not raise unpreserved issues that are not fundamental.
Practice Notes and Lessons
- When competency is litigated multiple times with consistent findings and a defendant is restored, counsel should contemporaneously document the absence of bona fide doubts and the client’s cooperation (or lack thereof); this record will be decisive under Strickland.
- When agreeing to paper competency determinations, make an explicit record that the stipulation is to the procedure (use of reports) and not to competency itself.
- Continue mitigation work even after a client’s waiver; be prepared to present mental-health or social-history evidence at a Spencer hearing where ethically and legally appropriate.
- Tie public-records requests to specific, pled postconviction claims and explain how the sought records will likely produce admissible or lead to admissible evidence.
- On appeal, focus on preserved, meritorious issues. Unpreserved claims should be pursued only when they plausibly amount to fundamental error.
Conclusion
The Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Damas delivers a clear message for capital postconviction litigation: competency determinations are not open to relitigation via 3.851, and counsel is not constitutionally ineffective for declining redundant or futile competency evaluations—particularly in the face of repeated expert findings of competence, documented malingering, and a persistently uncooperative client. The Court’s treatment of mitigation investigation underscores robust deference to reasonable strategy and recognizes that a defendant’s waiver can legitimately inform funding and presentation decisions. The opinion also fortifies the disciplined use of Rule 3.852 public records and reaffirms the high threshold for habeas IAAC claims.
Collectively, these holdings stabilize key fault lines in Florida’s capital jurisprudence: they protect the integrity of competency protocols, refine counsel’s obligations in difficult client circumstances, and streamline postconviction practice to focus on genuinely colorable claims supported by the record. As Justice Labarga emphasizes, the depth of the competency record here—twelve evaluations by five experts over eight years—provides a model for the kind of evidentiary foundation that will be necessary to defeat later claims of deficiency or prejudice.
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