KISTLER, J.
Petitioner raises two issues in this post-conviction proceeding. The first is whether
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
530 US 466, 120 S Ct 2348, 147 L Ed 2d 435 (2000), applies retroactively. Petitioner acknowledges that this court has held that it does not,
see Page v. Palmateer,
336 Or 379, 84 P3d 133 (2004) (so holding), but he argues that later cases have undermined
Page’s
reasoning. If
Apprendi
does not apply retroactively, the second issue is whether petitioner’s trial counsel was constitutionally inadequate for failing to anticipate and argue for the federal rights that
Apprendi
later recognized.
In January 1998, petitioner entered a high school, grabbed a 16-year-old girl by the arm, reached up her skirt, and touched her vagina. The victim broke away, and petitioner again grabbed her and reached up her skirt. After the victim broke away a second time, petitioner blocked the door to prevent her from escaping. The state charged petitioner with one count of first-degree unlawful sexual penetration, ORS 163.411; one count of first-degree sex abuse, ORS 163.427; two counts of first-degree burglary, ORS 164.225; and one count of attempted first-degree rape, ORS 163.375. A jury convicted petitioner of all the charges except first-degree unlawful sexual penetration.
The trial court held a sentencing hearing on August 12, 1998. At that hearing, the state argued that the court should sentence petitioner as a dangerous offender because, among other things, he had committed a Class A felony and was suffering “from a severe personality disorder indicating a propensity toward crimes that seriously endanger the life or safety of another.”
See
ORS 161.725(1) (stating criteria for dangerous offender sentence).
If imposed, a dangerous
offender sentence would exceed the maximum sentence that the trial court otherwise could have imposed on petitioner.
See
ORS 161.725(1) (authorizing maximum indeterminate sentence of 30 years for dangerous offenders); ORS 161.737(1) and (2) (authorizing maximum determinate sentence equal to twice presumptive sentence for dangerous offenders).
In arguing that the court should sentence petitioner as a dangerous offender, the state relied primarily on the presentence investigation (PSI) report. The PSI revealed that petitioner had 10 prior convictions, including a robbery conviction, four prior convictions for exposing himself to women, and a conviction for battery in which, similarly to this case, he had grabbed a woman while exposing himself. The state also relied on a psychological evaluation, which concluded that petitioner is
“a
seriously character-disordered individual who is not amendable to community-based sex offender treatment and who poses a substantial threat to the safety and welfare of the community relative to commission of further sex crimes.”
At the sentencing hearing, petitioner did not challenge the trial court’s authority to sentence him as a dangerous offender, he did not contest the accuracy of his criminal history set out in the PSI, and he did not seek to cross-examine the psychologist on whose report the state relied. Defense counsel explained that he had been present during the psychological examination, that he had reviewed the psychologist’s report, and that he did not “think there’s much to be gained by having him present today.” The only evidence that defense counsel offered at the sentencing hearing was an unsworn statement from a person who had worked with petitioner at Good Samaritan Ministries. She stated that, in her opinion, “if [petitioner] were to have a focused, intensive, concise program, he could be rehabilitated.”
Defense counsel acknowledged that the trial court could sentence petitioner as a dangerous offender but asked the court to impose a 75-month rather than a 30-year sentence. He told the court: “Clearly, based on [petitioner’s] history, if you want to apply that statute, you can do it, but I ask if you consider doing that to use the 75 months as the base sentence.” Counsel argued that a 75-month sentence both would give petitioner sufficient incentive to take advantage of various programs and also would be adequate to protect society.
Relying on the PSI and the psychological evaluation that the state had submitted, the trial court found that petitioner was a dangerous offender. The court reasoned:
“[Petitioner’s] situation is one where I think the [c]ourt would be, quite frankly, really not living up to its obligation as one of the linchpins of an ordered society to say anything other than that he certainly fits the criteria for dangerous offender sentencing. You just have to take [the psychological] reports and evaluations and just drop them in the dust bin to say otherwise.”
Pursuant to the dangerous offender statute, the trial court imposed, on petitioner’s two burglary convictions, concurrent 96-month determinate sentences and concurrent 30-year indeterminate sentences. The court imposed guidelines sentences on petitioner’s other convictions and ruled that those sentences would rim concurrently with the dangerous offender sentences. Petitioner did not appeal from the resulting judgment.
Almost two years after petitioner’s conviction became final, the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in
Apprendi.
Relying on the Sixth Amendment and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court held that, “[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” 530 US at 490.
Shortly after the Court issued its decision in
Apprendi,
petitioner filed a petition for post-conviction relief. Relying on
Apprendi,
he alleged that the trial court had imposed his sentence in violation of the Sixth Amendment
and the Due Process Clause because a jury had not found beyond a reasonable doubt that he was a dangerous offender. Alternatively, he alleged that his trial counsel had been constitutionally inadequate for failing to assert that he had a right under the federal constitution to have a jury make the requisite factual findings beyond a reasonable doubt. The post-conviction court denied both claims for relief.
Petitioner appealed, renewing the arguments that he had made to the post-conviction court. While petitioner’s case was on appeal, this court issued its decision in
Page v. Palmateer,
holding that
Apprendi
does not apply retroactively to judgments that became final before the decision in
Apprendi
issued. The Court of Appeals affirmed the post-conviction court’s judgment from the bench, presumably relying on this court’s decision in
Page
and its own decision in
Teague v. Palmateer,
184 Or App 577, 591-92, 57 P3d 176 (2002),
rev den,
335 Or 181 (2003), holding that trial counsel had not been inadequate in failing to foresee
Apprendi.
We allowed review primarily to consider petitioner’s argument that our decision in
Page
is no longer good law in light of later developments in federal law. In analyzing that issue, we begin with a discussion of our decision in
Page
and a later United States Supreme Court decision addressing whether
Apprendi
applies retroactively. We then turn to petitioner’s arguments and explain why they do not persuade us that we should retreat from our holding in
Page.
Procedurally, the facts in
Page
are identical to the facts here. In
Page,
as in this case, the trial court sentenced the petitioner as a dangerous offender pursuant to ORS 161.725(1) and imposed a 30-year indeterminate sentence. 336 Or at 381-82. The petitioner’s conviction in
Page
became final in 1998, as did petitioner’s conviction.
Id.
at 382;
see Caspari v. Bohlen,
510 US 383, 390, 114 S Ct 948, 127 L Ed 2d 236 (1994) (defining when convictions become final for purposes of retroactivity analysis). Approximately two years later, the Court issued its decision in
Apprendi,
and the petitioner in
Page
filed a petition for post-conviction relief, arguing that the trial court had imposed his sentence in violation of
Apprendi. Id.
As in this case, the petitioner in
Page
did not dispute that
Apprendi
had announced a new rule or that his conviction became final before the Court issued its decision in
Apprendi.
The only question before the court in
Page
was whether
Apprendi
applied retroactively.
Page,
336 Or at 383. On that issue, this court explained that federal retroactivity principles govern whether a new federal rule applies retroactively in state court.
Id.
at 385-87.
Following the principles announced in
Teague v. Lane,
489 US 288, 109 S Ct 1060, 103 L Ed 2d 334 (1989) (plurality), this court explained that, with two exceptions, a new federal constitutional rule does not apply retroactively.
Page,
336 Or at 388. The petitioner in
Page
did not argue that the first exception that
Teague
recognized — for rules that “placet ] certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of criminal law-making authority”— applied.
See Teague,
489 US at 307 (describing first exception). He argued, however, that the second
Teague
exception — for rules that “requir[e] the observance of those procedures that * * * are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” — did apply.
See id.
(describing second exception). It followed, he concluded, that
Apprendi
applied retroactively.
This court reached a different conclusion. It observed that the second
Teague
exception applies only to “ ‘watershed rules’ ” of criminal procedure, “ ‘without winch the likelihood of an accurate conviction is seriously diminished.’ ”
Page,
336 Or at 389 (quoting
Teague,
489 US at 311, 313). The court reasoned that the rule announced in
Apprendi
— requiring any fact that increases a defendant’s
sentence
beyond the statutory maximum, other than the fact of a prior conviction, be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt — is not a “watershed” rule because “[t]he rule [in
Apprendi],
by its terms, is not concerned with ensuring the accuracy of a criminal defendant’s
conviction.” Id.
at 390 (emphasis added). It followed, under
Teague,
that
Apprendi
did not apply retroactively.
Id.
After this court’s decision in
Page,
the United States Supreme Court held in
Schriro v. Summerlin,
542 US 348, 124 S Ct 2519, 159 L Ed 2d 442 (2004), that the jury-right aspect of
Apprendi
— requiring that a jury find each fact
increasing a criminal defendant’s sentence beyond the statutory maximum — is not a watershed rule of criminal procedure that applies retroactively. The Court explained that “we cannot confidently say that judicial factfinding
seriously
diminishes accuracy.”
Id.
at 356 (emphasis in original). The Court was careful to note, however, that the reasonable doubt aspect of
Apprendi
— requiring that each fact increasing a criminal defendant’s sentence beyond the statutory maximum be proved beyond a reasonable doubt — was not at issue in that case.
Id.
at 351 n 1.
On review in this case, petitioner points out that the reasoning in
Schriro
does not apply to the reasonable doubt aspect of
Apprendi,
and he argues that the cases decided since
Apprendi
demonstrate that the reasoning in
Page
is unsound. With regard to
Schriro,
petitioner reasons that, although judicial factfinding may not “seriously diminish” the accuracy of a criminal proceeding, as the Court held in
Schriro,
the failure to apply a reasonable doubt standard does. Noting that the Court has described the reasonable doubt standard as “a prime instrument for reducing the risk of convictions resting on factual error,”
In re Winship,
397 US 358, 363, 90 S Ct 1068, 25 L Ed 2d 368 (1970), petitioner contends that this court should recognize that the reasonable doubt aspect of
Apprendi
is a “watershed” rule of criminal procedure that applies retroactively.
With regard to
Page,
petitioner argues that this court’s distinction between new rules that affect a defendant’s conviction and new rules that affect a defendant’s sentence is not good law in light of
Blakely v. Washington,
542 US 296, 124 S Ct 2531, 159 L Ed 2d 403 (2004).
Blakely
made clear, petitioner contends, that any fact that enhances a defendant’s sentence — whether it is a necessary prerequisite to a finding of guilt or a sentencing factor — is an element of the crime for the purposes of the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial and the due process right to proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Petitioner’s argument that the reasonable doubt aspect of
Apprendi
is a watershed rule is difficult to square with the retroactivity analysis in
Teague
and the Court’s consistent application of that analysis. As noted, a plurality of
the Court reasoned in
Teague
that, with two narrow exceptions, new federal constitutional rules do not apply retroactively. 489 US at 310. Petitioner does not rely on the first
Teague
exception; he bases his argument instead on the second exception. The plurality in
Teague
explained, however, that the second exception includes only those watershed rules of criminal procedure that “ ‘alter our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements’ ”
essential to the fairness of a proceeding.
Id.
at 311 (quoting
Mackey v. United States,
401 US 667, 693-94, 91 S Ct 1160, 28 L Ed 2d 404 (1971)) (emphasis in original). The plurality observed that, for a new rule of procedure to fall within this exception, it must be a rule that is both an “absolute prerequisite to fundamental fairness” and one “without which the likelihood of an accurate conviction is seriously diminished.”
Id.
at 313-14.
The plurality envisioned that few rules would meet those criteria, stating:
“Because we operate from the premise that such procedures would be so central to an accurate determination of innocence or guilt, we believe it unlikely that many such components of basic due process have yet to emerge.”
Id.
at 313. Since
Teague,
the Court has not identified any new rule that would qualify as a watershed rule under the second exception, and it has pointed “only” to the right to counsel recognized in
Gideon v. Wainwright,
372 US 335, 83 S Ct 792, 9 L Ed 2d 799 (1963), as the kind of rule that would qualify.
See Beard v. Banks,
542 US 406, 417-18, 124 S Ct 2504, 159 L Ed 2d 494 (2004) (describing second
Teague
exception). The rule in
Gideon
would qualify as a watershed rule, the Court explained, because that decision “alter [ed] our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding.”
Id.
at 418 (emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted). To date, no other rule has had “the primacy and centrality of the rule adopted in
Gideon.” Id.
at 420.
Consistently with that view of the second
Teague
exception, the Court has explained that the fact that a new rule advances the “accuracy and fairness of capital sentencing judgments” is not enough to make it a watershed rule.
Sawyer v. Smith,
497 US 227, 242, 110 S Ct 2822, 111 L Ed
2d 193 (1990). “More is required. A rule that qualifies under [the second] exception must not only improve accuracy, but also must alter our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of the proceeding.”
Id.
(emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted).
The Court accordingly held in
Sawyer
that a new constitutional rule preventing prosecutors from diminishing a jury’s sense of responsibility for imposing the death penalty did not apply retroactively. The Court reasoned that a capital defendant always could have claimed that the prosecutor’s remarks rendered the proceeding fundamentally unfair.
See id.
at 243-44 (citing
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
416 US 637, 94 S Ct 1868, 40 L Ed 2d 431 (1974)). It followed, the Court concluded, that the new rule enhanced the fairness and accuracy of capital sentencing only incrementally — a change that was not sufficient to make it a watershed rule.
Id.
at 244.
Similarly, in
Beard,
the question was whether a new rule that states may not require juries in death-penalty cases to find mitigating circumstances unanimously came within the second
Teague
exception.
See
542 US at 408, 419-20 (stating question). The Court recognized that the new rule increased the likelihood that juries would be able to consider capital defendants’ mitigating evidence fully and thus avoided situations that the Court previously had described as the “height of arbitrariness.”
Id.
at 419 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court explained, however, that “the fact that a new rule removes some remote possibility of arbitrary infliction of the death sentence does not suffice to bring it within Teague’s second exception.”
Id.
at 419-20.
With that background in mind, we turn to the question whether the reasonable doubt aspect of
Apprendi
constitutes a watershed rule within the meaning of
Teague.
We begin by recognizing that, as petitioner argues, applying a reasonable doubt standard to sentencing factors decreases the risk of an erroneous enhanced sentence. However, to qualify as a “watershed” rule of criminal procedure under
Teague,
it is not enough that the rule enhances the accuracy of a criminal proceeding.
Sawyer, 4Q1
US at 242. The rule “also must alter our understanding of the
bedrock procedural
elements
essential to the fairness of the proceeding.”
Id.
(emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted).
We are not persuaded that Apprendis application of the reasonable doubt standard meets that test for two reasons. First, we do not believe that the rule announced in
Apprendi
is an “absolute prerequisite to fundamental fairness” because the extent to which the rule plays a role in criminal proceedings is dependent on the sentencing scheme that the legislature devises. As one court has put it, the rule “floats and flows with the tide of legislative pronouncements.”
United States v. Moss, 252
F3d 993, 1000 (8th Cir 2001). The Court’s recent decision in
United States v. Booker,
543 US 220, 125 S Ct 738, 160 L Ed 2d 621 (2005), illustrates the point.
In
Booker,
the Court held that the federal sentencing guidelines were in conflict with the rule announced in
Apprendi
because, if a sentencing court made certain findings, the guidelines required the court to enhance a defendant’s sentence beyond that authorized by the jury verdict alone.
See
125 S Ct at 748-52. After concluding that the guidelines conflicted with
Apprendi,
the Court sought “to determine what Congress would have intended in light of the Court’s constitutional holding.”
Id.
at 757 (internal quotations omitted). The Court determined that it would deviate less from Congress’ intended sentencing scheme by severing the portions of the guidelines that made them mandatory, rendering the guidelines merely advisory.
Id.
at 756-57.
The Court’s chosen remedy in
Booker
allows federal sentencing courts to sentence defendants anywhere between the statutory minimum and maximum after taking the factors set out in the guidelines into consideration.
Id.
In doing so, sentencing courts, without running afoul of
Apprendi,
may make any finding by a preponderance of the evidence that they deem appropriate in determining the sentence. The Court explained:
“We have never doubted the authority of a judge to exercise broad discretion in imposing a sentence within a statutory range. * * * [W]hen a trial judge exercises his discretion to
select a specific sentence within a defined range, the defendant has no right to a jury determination of the facts that the judge deems relevant.”
Id.
at 750.
The Oregon legislature, without running afoul of the rule announced in
Apprendi,
could devise a similar system, creating wide sentencing ranges that it deemed appropriate and allowing sentencing courts to impose sentences within that range after making any findings that it deemed relevant — including whether a defendant is a “dangerous offender.”
See Apprendi,
530 US at 490 n 16 (recognizing that states could devise such a system without running afoul of Sixth or Fourteenth Amendments). In our view, a rule like that in
Apprendi
that is so dependent on legislative choice cannot be considered a “watershed” rule of criminal procedure that is an “absolute prerequisite to fundamental fairness.”
See Beard,
542 US at 418-20 (recognizing that rules that apply only incrementally or situationally do not constitute watershed rules under the second
Teague
exception).
A second consideration supports our conclusion. The Court has held in another context that the failure to submit an element of a criminal offense to a jury can be harmless error because, on the facts of a particular case, the error may not have “seriously affect[ed] the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of [the] judicial proceedings.”
Johnson v. United States,
520 US 461, 469-70, 117 S Ct 1544, 137 L Ed 2d 718 (1997).
In reaching that conclusion, the Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the right to have a jury find each element of the charged crime beyond a reasonable doubt was so fundamental to a fair trial that its omission should be considered, like the failure to provide counsel, structural error.
Id.
at 466. Given the Court’s rejection of that argument, we cannot say that the new rule that
Apprendi
announced is, like the right to counsel, a bedrock procedural element essential to fundamental fairness.
See Sawyer,
497 US at 244-45 (looking to Court’s treatment of new rule in other contexts to determine whether it came within second
Teague
exception).
Having concluded that the rule announced in
Apprendi
does not apply retroactively, we turn to petitioner’s alternative claim that his trial counsel was constitutionally inadequate in violation of Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution and the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. We begin with Article I, section 11.
See Lichau v. Baldwin,
333 Or 350, 358-59, 39 P3d 851 (2002) (court should consider state constitutional claims before federal constitutional claims). In determining whether petitioner received constitutionally inadequate assistance of counsel under Article I, section 11, we consider two issues:
“ ‘First, we must determine whether petitioner demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that [his lawyer] failed to exercise reasonable professional skill and judgment. Second, if we conclude that petitioner met that burden, we further must determine whether he proved that counsel’s failure had a tendency to affect the result of his trial.’ ”
Burdge v. Palmateer,
338 Or 490, 492, 112 P3d 320 (2005) (quoting
Lichau,
333 Or at 359).
On the first issue, petitioner contends that constitutionally adequate counsel would have foreseen the holding in
Apprendi
and argued, at petitioner’s sentencing hearing, that the federal constitution required a jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioner was a dangerous offender.
Petitioner acknowledges that the Court did not decide
Apprendi
until almost two years after his sentencing hearing. He argues, however, that three United States Supreme Court decisions foreshadowed the Court’s later holding in Apprendi.
This court has explained that, in reviewing whether counsel exercised reasonable professional skill and judgment, it must “ ‘make every effort to evaluate a lawyer’s conduct from the lawyer’s perspective at the time, without the distorting effects of hindsight.’ ”
Burdge,
338 Or at 492 (quoting
Lichau,
333 Or at 360). Accordingly, we look to the decisions that preceded petitioner’s sentencing hearing and ask whether, in the exercise of reasonable skill and judgment, petitioner’s counsel should have foreseen the Court’s decision in
Apprendi.
Before petitioner’s sentencing hearing in August 1998, the Court twice had considered and rejected the argument that a sentencing factor constituted an “element” of the crime, which a jury had to find beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
523 US 224, 118 S Ct 1219, 140 L Ed 2d 350 (1998);
McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
477 US 79, 106 S Ct 2411, 91 L Ed 2d 67 (1986) (illustrating proposition). The statute at issue in
McMillan
authorized a trial court to impose a mandatory minimum sentence if it found by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant “visibly possessed a firearm” while committing certain underlying crimes. 477 US at 81. The statute explicitly stated that visible possession of a firearm was not an element of the underlying crime.
Id.
at 83.
Reaffirming its decision in
Patterson v. New York,
432 US 197, 97 S Ct 2319, 53 L Ed 2d 281 (1977), the
McMillan
Court reasoned that, “[w]hile there are obviously constitutional limits beyond which the States may not go in this regard, the applicability of the reasonable doubt standard * * * has always been dependent on how a State defines the offense that is charged in any given case[.]” 477 US at 85 (internal quotation marks omitted). Under the terms of the statute, “visible possession” was not an element of the crime, which the state had to prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt, and the Court rejected the petitioners’ arguments that the Sixth Amendment and the Due Process Clause required a different conclusion.
Id.
at 86-91.
In the course of rejecting the petitioners’ argument, the Court observed that their argument “would have at least
more superficial appeal if a finding of visible possession exposed them to greater or additional punishment” rather than a mandatory minimum sentence.
Id.
at 88. Although the Court’s recognition of that distinction appears to provide some support for petitioner’s inadequate assistance claim here, the Court’s later decision in
Almendarez-Torres
negated whatever support
McMillan
provided.
In
Almendarez-Torres,
a federal statute authorized sentencing courts to impose two-year sentences on deported aliens who returned illegally to the United States; it also authorized an enhanced sentence of up to 20 years if the court found by a preponderance of the evidence that the returning alien had a prior felony conviction.
See
523 US at 226 (describing federal statute). Having received an enhanced sentence under that statute, the petitioner in
Almendarez-Torres
argued that, because a prior conviction authorized imposition of a sentence in excess of the statutory maximum rather than a mandatory minimum sentence, the fact of a prior conviction was an “element” of the offense that the government had to prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Court rejected the petitioner’s argument.
Id.
at 245. It reasoned that whether a sentencing factor triggers an increased maximum sentence or a mandatory-minimum sentence, which the Court had held constitutional in
McMillan,
is not dispositive because “the risk of unfairness to a particular defendant is no less, and may well be greater, when a mandatory minimum sentence, rather than a permissive maximum sentence, is at issue.”
Id.
Thus, the Court declined to “adopt a rule that any significant increase in a statutory maximum sentence would trigger a constitutional ‘elements’ requirement[,]” reasoning that “such a rule would seem anomalous in fight of existing case law[.]”
Id.
at 247.
Although later cases have recast
Almendarez-Torres
as establishing only a “prior conviction” exception to the rule in
Apprendi,
the decision in
Almendarez-Torres,
read on its own terms, stands for a far broader proposition: The Court held
in Almendarez-Torres
that, as a general rule, sentencing factors that enhance the statutory maximum sentence do not
constitute elements of an offense that the state must prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
Indeed, the dissent in
Almendarez-Torres
invited the majority to apply the constitutional rule that the Court later announced in Apprendi— an invitation that the Court declined.
See
523 US at 251 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (urging rule later adopted in
Apprendi)
Far from foreshadowing the rule in
Apprendi,
the Court’s decision
in Almendarez-Torres
appeared to reject it.
Almendarez-Torres
was the controlling United States Supreme Court decision when the trial court imposed a dangerous offender sentence on petitioner. Measured against the law in effect at the time of petitioner’s sentencing hearing, the performance of petitioner’s trial counsel was constitutionally adequate. Counsel was not required to anticipate that two years later the United States Supreme Court would reverse course in
Apprendi,
interpret the Sixth Amendment and Due Process Clauses as the dissent had urged in
Almendarez-Torres,
and read its decision in
Almendarez-Torres
as establishing only a narrow exception to the new rule announced in
Apprendi.
Petitioner’s trial counsel did not fail to exercise reasonable professional skill and judgment.
See Burdge,
338 Or at 492 (stating standard).
We turn finally to petitioner’s argument that his trial counsel was constitutionally inadequate under the Sixth Amendment. To prevail on that claim, petitioner must demonstrate that his trial counsel’s performance “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness * * * under prevailing professional norms” and that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Strickland v. Washington,
466 US 668, 688, 694, 104 S Ct 2052, 80 L Ed 2d 674 (1984). The Court has cautioned that “[a] fair assessment of attorney performance requires that every effort be made to
eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
Id.
at 689. For the reasons discussed above, we conclude that trial counsel’s performance did not fall below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.
Having considered petitioner’s arguments, we hold that
Apprendi
does not apply retroactively and that petitioner’s trial counsel’s performance did not fall below the minimum standard that Article I, section 11, and the Sixth Amendment require.
The decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court are affirmed.