Alan Bannister was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death for the murder of Darrell Reustman. His conviction
and
sentence were affirmed on direct appeal.
State v. Bannister,
We first address-Bannister’s fifth and sixth amendment challenges to an August 23, 1982 interrogation. The relevant facts are as follows.
Rexistman lived in a trailer park in Springfield, Missouri with Linda McCormick. Around 10:00 p.m. on August 21,1982, Reust-man answered a knock' at the front door of the trailer. After Reustman opened the door, he was shot in the head. Reustman died a short time later, without identifying his assailant. Although McCormick was in the trailer at the time of the shooting, she was in the back and did not see who shot Reustman. However,-McCormick and othérs had seen Bannister around the trailer earlier in the evening.
Around 5:15 a.m. on August 22, 1982, police officers arrested Bannister at a Joplin, Missouri bus station. After the officers read Bannister his Miranda 2 rights, Bannister told them he would wait to talk to an attorney. The officers took Bannister to the Joplin city jail, where they again advised him of his Miranda rights. He again refused to talk and said he wanted to talk to-an attorney. However, as the officers discussed going to a nearby motel to determine if Bannister had registered there, Bannister volunteered that he had registered under an alias.
While Bannister was being transported to the county jail, he asked officer Marshall Matthews about the criminal charges and the penalties. Matthews told Bannister he was being charged with capital murder and that the penalty was death or life imprisonment. Bannister asked what the penalty would be for a reduced charge. When the police car pulled onto the jail parking lot, Bannister stated he should have “stuck to [his] own profession.” When Matthews asked what it was, Bannister replied “robbing banks. I never got caught.” Matthews told Bannister that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) would be interested in talking to him and Bannister asked if the FBI would be involved in the investigation.
On entering the jail, Bannister told Matthews he would like to talk to the person in charge. Matthews took Bannister to Sheriff Joe Abramowitz. At that time, Abramowitz did not want to talk to Bannister, but advised him it would be in his best interest to cooperate.
At 10:30 a.m. the next day, August 23rd, Bannister met with Abramowitz and officers Don Richardson and Bob Barnett. After being read his Miranda rights, Bannister stated he understood his rights and wanted to talk. Bannister then signed a waiver form. Bannister told the officers that he had *1437 been living in Peoria, Illinois with Rick Wooten and that Wooten had asked him if he would like to make some money killing a man. Wooten explained that McCormick’s husband wanted Reustman killed, and would pay $4,000.00. Bannister agreed and Wooten gave him a $1,500.00 down payment, a gun, a bus ticket, and a slip of -paper with Reust-man’s name and address.
After the officers had shown Bannister a gun they had recovered from a field near Reustman’s trailer, Bannister agreed to take them back to the field to search for additional evidence. En route to the field, Bannister showed the officers a vacant house where he had test-fired the gun. At the field, Bannister directed the officers to the torn-up slip of paper with Reustman’s name and address and live ammunition.
Before trial, Bannister moved to suppress his statements. On October 25, 1982, Bannister, who was represented by a- public defender, testified at a suppression hearing. Bannister asserted that the statements were involuntary because he had been denied medical attention. Bannister testified that he had repeatedly requested medical attention for pain from old stab wounds, but did not receive any attention until he talked. Officer Richardson testified that although Bannister had complained about pain, he did not ask to stop the interview or to see a doctor. Abra-mowitz testified that Bannister did not appear to be in pain. The court denied Bannister’s suppression motion.
At trial, Bannister was represented by public defender Ray Gordon. Gordon objected to officer Barnett’s testimony concerning Bannister’s statements. 3 The trial court indicated that it thought the matter had been resolved at the suppression hearing. Gordon responded that he believed that Bannister had been appointed an attorney before the interrogation. The state replied that the court had already ruled on the matter at the suppression hearing, and the record would reflect when an attorney had been appointed. The trial court noted that the docket sheet showed that Bannister had appeared before a magistrate sometime on August 23, but did not indicate the time. 4 The court then overruled the objection.
In addition to testimony about Bannister’s statements and evidence derived therefrom, the state introduced testimony of residents who had seen Bannister in the vicinity of the trailer. However, no one could identify Bannister as the person who shot Reustman or the person seen running from Reustman’s trailer. The state also introduced physical evidence which the police had obtained independently of Bannister’s statements. On August 22, the police searched a field next to Reustman’s trailer and recovered a gun, a shell, a shirt, and a baseball cap. In addition, at the time of Bannister’s arrest, officers administered a gun residue test and took fingernail, hair, and soil samples. Although Dr. Philip Whittle, the state’s expert, testified that the gun recovered at the field was the murder weapon, he could not link the gun to Bannister. There were no identifiable prints on the gun, and the gun residue test was negative. Dr. Whittle stated that tests could not establish the presence of blood on the shirt, baseball cap or fingernail clippings. Moreover, comparison of soil samples taken from the field and from Bannister’s shoes was “not an exact comparison by any means.”
*1438 The jury convicted Bannister of capital murder. At the penalty phase, Gordon presented no mitigating evidence, but argued against the death penalty on religious grounds. As the state urged it to do, the jury returned the death sentence, finding two statutory aggravating circumstances — that the murder was committed for the purpose of receiving money and that Bannister had a substantive history of serious assaultive convictions. 5
On direct appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court, Bannister argued that admission of the statements violated his fifth amendment rights. In his brief Bannister claimed that his request for counsel occurred at 5:15 a.m. on August 22,1982 and acknowledged that he asked to talk to Sheriff Abramowitz at 7:30 that morning. Bannister argued that “even if [he] initiated the contacts with the law officers for the interrogation,” the statements were inadmissible under
Miranda
because counsel had not been afforded and requested medical attention had been denied. Although Bannister acknowledged that “at the time [he] requested to talk to an attorney, the officers ceased questioning him,” without explanation, he, claimed that the police did not honor his request.
See Michigan v. Mosley,
Bannister also alleged that the admission of the confession violated his sixth amendment rights. He, however, did not cite any sixth amendment eases. Moreover, he did not mention, as he suggested to the trial court in his objection to Barnett’s testimony, that he had been appointed counsel before the interrogation.
The state supreme court analyzed the claim under
Edwards v. Arizona,
The state court found that the statements were admissible because Bannister hadinitiated the conversations leading to the interrogation and that the waiver of
Miranda
rights was voluntary.
In his federal habeas petition, Bannister renewed his challenge to the admission of the statements. He asserted that he requested counsel on August 22, 1982 and argued that the statements were coerced because he had *1439 not consulted with counsel or been treated by a doctor.
The district court rejected Bannister’s arguments. The court applied the presumption of correctness under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) to the state court’s finding that Bannister had initiated conversations with the police and, based on its independent review, held that the waiver was voluntary.
Bannister v. Armontrout,
On appeal, Bannister argues that the district court erred in applying the presumption of correctness to the state court finding that he initiated the conversations leading to the statements. He does not contest that a finding of initiation is subject to a presumption of correctness.
See Self v. Collins,
The state suggests that review of Bannister’s claim concerning the effect of his initial arraignment is procedurally barred. We agree. Bannister did not present the factual and legal bases of his' claim that he was appointed counsel at 9:00 a.m. on August 23, 1982 to the state courts. In the state courts, Bannister alleged that he requested counsel on August 22, and argued that even if he had initiated the conversation, the statements were involuntary because he had been denied medical attention.
This court has held that “the same facts and legal arguments must be present in both the state and federal claims or federal review is barred.”
Bolder v. Armontrout,
In
Keeney,
a petitioner failed to present material facts in support of a constitutional claim in the state courts. He sought' an evidentiary hearing in the district court. The Supreme Court held that he was not entitled to a hearing unless he could “show cause for his failure to develop the facts in state-court proceedings and actual prejudice resulting from that failure[ ]” or “show that a fundamentál miscarriage of justice would result from failure to hold a federal evidentiary hearing.”
Id.
at-,
In reply to the state’s argument, Bannister does not assert cause and prejudice in an attempt to overcome the bar; nor does he request a remand for an evidentiary hearing to establish his claim. Rather, he maintains the record supports his claim that he requested and was appointed counsel at 9:00 a.m. on August 23, 1982. He is mistaken. Although the trial court docket sheet indicates Bannister, appeared before a magistrate on the 23rd and that his case was “referred” to.a public defender, as the trial court noted, it does not state the time of the appearance. Bannister attempts to overcome this obvious problem by citing to an undated affidavit, in which he states that he appeared before the magistrate at 9:00 a.m. on August 23rd. However, based on our review of the record, it appears the first time Bannister attempted to submit the affidavit to any court was to the district court in connection with his suggestions in support of a post-judgment motion pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 59(e). In addition, the Rule 59(e) motion was the first time Bannister made the legal arguments he advances on appeal.
7
A Rule 59(e) motion “ ‘cannot be used to raise arguments which could, and should, have been made’ before the trial court entered final judgment.” Woods
v. City of Michigan City,
Although we do not consider Bannister’s fifth and sixth amendment claims as they relate to his August 23 appearance, we will consider his fifth amendment claim that the statements were involuntary because Abramowitz told him it would be in his best interest to cooperate. Even though Bannister did not precisely articulate the issue in the state court, we believe he fairly presented b.oth the factual and legal bases of the claim to the state supreme court,
see Kenley v. Armontrout,
We, however, find no merit to Bannister’s argument that the statements were coerced by a promise of leniency. In
Bolder v. Armontrout,
We next address Bannister’s challenge to the trial court’s denial of his pro se motion for a psychiatric examination and his counsel’s effectiveness in investigating his mental condition. In the motion Bannister stated, “I think I need psychiatric help.” On January 18, 1983, Bannister appeared at a hearing. He told the court he needed a mental examination because while in prison he had had trouble sleeping and had become irritable *1441 and forgetful. ■ Bannister denied having a personal or family history of mental illness or having had a mental examination in ten years. He was able to respond to the court’s questions concerning his family, education, and date. The court denied the motion, noting that Bannister was well-oriented and that there was “no indication that he was 'in anything other than good mental state of health.”
Bannister did not challenge the trial court’s denial of the motion on direct appeal. The claim is not barred, however, because the state courts considered the merits of his claim in Bannister’s Rule 27.26 motion.
8
See Ylst v. Nunnemaker,
- U.S. -, -,
At the hearing, only trial counsel Gordon testified on Bannister’s behalf. Gordon stated that although he had reviewed statutory mitigating factors, other than age and “to the extent the information was divulged in the discovery given by the state,” he did not investigate statutory factors or any non-statutory mitigating factors. Gordon also did not interview any family member, but indicated he thought Bannister’s mother had contacted the public defender’s office. Gordon testified that during his conferences with Bannister, Bannister was able to respond to questions and make decisions. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court allowed Wolfram an additional week to submit evidence.
Wolfram failed to submit additional evidence, and the court denied the motion. Bannister appealed the denial to the Missouri court of appeals, arguing that the trial court’s denial of his motion for a psychiatric examination violated his due process rights. Bannister relied on
Ake v. Oklahoma,
The Missouri court of appeals disagreed that Bannister met his burden under
Ake. Bannister v. State,
In his habeas petition, Bannister renewed his challenges to the trial court’s denial of his motion for a psychiatric examination and counsel’s effectiveness for failing to investigate his mental condition. Apparently in support of both claims, Bannister sought to expand the record with his affidavit arid affidavits from family, acquaintances, and Kerry Hough. In his affidavit, Bannister admitted shooting Reustman, but claimed he did not murder him for the money, but only *1442 wanted to hurt him “badly” out of revenge. In his affidavit, Hough, who had a masters degree in special education, stated he had treated Bannister in the 1970’s and that Bannister’s problems “were in the areas of temper and disobedience of all authority.” Affidavits from family and acquaintances generally alleged that Bannister had been a good person until he met Wooten.
The district court denied Bannister’s motion to supplement the record.
On appeal, Bannister argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to supplement the record. We disagree.
10
Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
- U.S. at -,
This ease is very similar to
Bolder v. Armontrout,
As to the merits of Bannister’s
Ake
claim, we believe that Bannister failed to meet his burden of demonstrating that his mental condition was likely to be a significant issue at trial or at sentencing. “Where a defendant offers ‘little more than undeveloped assertions that the requested assistance would be beneficial, we find no deprivation of due process in the trial judges’s decision.’ ”
Bowden v. Kemp,
We next consider Bannister’s sixth amendment juror bias claims. During voir dire, venireperson R.E. Morris volunteered that he did not want to put Bannister in jail at taxpayer’s expense. After the trial court denied Bannister’s motion to remove Morris for cause, Bannister used a peremptory challenge to remove Morris. Although Morris’ remark is troubling, Bannister’s sixth amendment claim is “foreclosed by
Ross v. Oklahoma,
Bannister also challenges the trial court’s exclusion of venireperson Robert Melton. During voir dire, Melton, an ordained minister, stated it was against his conscience to consider the death penalty. Later, he stated that although he would consider the death penalty, “he probably would come up with the same answer.” To clear up any
*1444
confusion, the trial court asked Melton whether there were any circumstance in which he would vote for the death penalty. Melton responded that “as a pastor, I would feel it would ruin my entire ministry if I would say yes.” The trial court removed Melton for cause, and under
Wainwright v. Witt,
On appeal, Bannister argues that the presumption of correctness should not apply because the trial court failed to make factual findings in support of its decision. This argument is without merit. In
Wainwright v. Witt,
We turn to Bannister’s argument that the trial court violated his eighth and fourteenth amendment rights when it answered a jury question about parole. During penalty phase deliberations, the jury asked the trial court whether “life imprisonment would be for fifty years without any possibility of parole ... or does it come up for review every ten years, or five years, or seven years?” The court first told the jury, “The law is stated in the instructions, and that’s the way it is. That’s the law.” The jury then asked, “There’s no way he would be eligible for parole?” The court responded, “Under the law that exists, there is none now.”
On appeal, Bannister argues, as he did in the state and district courts, that the trial court’s comment prejudiced him because the jury impermissibly considered the possibility of parole in deciding to recommend the death sentence. Bannister relies on
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
Bannister’s argument is without merit. In
Gilmore v. Armontrout,
We next address Bannister’s contention that the district court erred in concluding that certain evidentiary and instructional penalty phase claims were procedurally
*1445
barred. On direct appeal, Bannister argued that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence an exhibit which showed that he had been paroled on a previous conviction. Bannister argued that the admission of the exhibit prejudiced him, as demonstrated by the jury question about parole. Bannister also argued that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury that it could consider as mitigating evidence that he was acting under the domination of Wooten. The state supreme court rejected both claims under plain-error review. The court upheld the admission of the exhibit, noting it was relevant to punishment.
In his habeas petition, Bannister renewed these evidentiary and instructional claims. The district court found that the claims were barred, despite the fact that the Missouri Supreme Court had reviewed the claims for plain error.
We, however, find the claims to be, without merit. Because the jury could consider the possibility of parole, there was no error in the admission of the exhibit showing that Bannister had been paroled. We also find- Bannister’s claim regarding the failure of the trial court to submit an under-the-domination-of-another . instruction without merit. In this murder-for-hire case, the Missouri Supreme Court’s finding that Bannister failed to produce sufficient evidence to warrant submission of the instruction is supported by the record.
See Williamson v. Jones,
Bannister claims that the state deprived him of due process by its late notice of its intent to seek the death penalty. Bannister first raised the claim in the district court in a Rule 59(e) motion. The district court correctly found that presentation of the claim in a 59(e) motion was the functional equivalent of a second petition, and as such was subject to dismissal as abusive. As previously explained, a Rule 59(e) motion cannot be used to raise arguments that could have been raised before judgment was entered.
Cf. Guinan v. Delo,
*1446 As indicated, the judgment of the district court denying Bannister’s petition for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 should be, and hereby is, affirmed.
I concur in the result.
Notes
. The Honorable D. Brook Bartlett, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
.
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
. Bannister’s statements were not reduced to writing or recorded; they were introduced through witnesses’ testimony.
. Apparently the trial court was referring to the following docket entry:
Defendant appears in custody. State appears by Prosfecuting] Attorney. Complaint read to Defendant and Defendant states he understands charges and acknowledges receipt of copy thereof. Defendant advised of right to counsel and right to confer with counsel ... before further proceedings. Defendant claims indigency and files written application for appointment of Public Defender. Found eligible. Case referred to Public Defender. Formal arraignment continued to August 24 ... Defendant remanded to custody of sheriff on failure to post bond.
The date on the copy of the docket sheet included in the record on appeal appears to be August 23, 1982, but the notation of the date is difficult to read. In his opening brief, Bannister asserts he appeared before a magistrate on August 23, but in his reply brief he states he appeared on August 22. However, at oral argument and in an affidavit, Bannister asserted the date of his appearance was August 23, 1982.
. The state introduced evidence that Bannister had previously been convicted of armed robbery, rape and deviate sexual assault.
. This case well may illustrate reasons why the Supreme Court has insisted on fair representation and full factual development of claims in the state courts. Bannister's suppression hearing occurred in October 1982, about two months after his arrest and appearance before a magistrate. At that time, it probably would have been possible to determine whether Bannister appeared before the magistrate at 9:00 a.m. on the 23rd. Now over ten years later, even assuming witnesses would be available, it might be difficult to establish the time at which Bannister appeared before the magistrate.
. Bannister could not rely on
Michigan v. Jackson,
. Rule 27.26 was abolished effective January 1, 1988.
.For example, the district court applied a presumption of correctness to the trial court's finding that Bannister was well-oriented and in good mental health. Bannister argues the state court findings are not entitled to a presumption of correctness because the state courts focused on his sanity and not his mental condition, especially as it related to his presentation of mitigating evidence at sentencing. We are not persuaded. "We assume
arguendo,
without deciding, that a defendant charged with capital murder has a ... due process right to expert assistance if his mental state is to be a 'significant factor’ at the sentencing phase of trial.”
Guinan v. Armontrout, 909
F.2d 1224, 1227 (8th
Cir.1990), cert. denied,
. We also hold that the district court properly refused Bannister's request for a psychiatric examination.
. Bannister’s reliance on
Kenley v. Armontrout,
. Bannister suggests without explanation that post-conviction counsel had insufficient time to obtain the evidence. We note that counsel had been appointed three months before the hearing and that the post-conviction court gave counsel an additional week to submit evidence. Counsel never submitted the evidence or requested additional time. In present circumstances, however, even if post-conviction counsel had been ineffective in failing to obtain evidence, that failure would not constitute cause.
See Nolan v. Armontrout,
. On the record as presented to the state court, we agree with the district court that Bannister had not demonstrated that Gordon was ineffective in failing to investigate his mental condition. As to the prejudice prong of
Strickland v. Washington,
. Bannister does not raise, and we do not address, any due process claims under
Ross v. Oklahoma. See Ross,
. Although we need not address Bannister’s argument that the district court erred in refusing to consider Gordon’s affidavit stating that two jurors would have voted for life if not for the trial court's comment about parole, we believe the court correctly refused to consider the affidavit. It was hearsay and violated Fed.R.Evid. 609(b).
Nor do we address Bannister’s argument that the trial court’s comment violated state law.
See Monroe v. Collins,
. We do not suggest that in every case plain-error review is sufficient to permit federal habeas review.
See Hayes v. Lockhart,
