Anthony J. LaRette, a Missouri inmate under sentence of death, appeals the district court judgment 1 denying his fourth amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
At 11:00 a.m. on July 25, 1980, eighteen-year-old Mary Fleming, bleeding profusely, ran across a street in St. Charles, Missouri, and collapsed on the doorstep of a neighbor who immediately called the police. Fleming was naked except for a pulled-up bikini top. She had been stabbed several times in the chest, and her neck was slashed from ear to ear. Her forehead and right arm were bruised, and her fingers and hands had numerous cuts, suggesting a struggle. Despite efforts by emergency medical personnel, Fleming bled to death. Police found blood scattered throughout her apartment, the obvious scene of the crime.
As Fleming ran out the back door of her apartment, a witness saw a man run out the front door of the apartment to a cream-colored convertible and drive away. Police traced the car to Richard Roberson, who told them that LaRette had borrowed the car that day for a job interview. Two days after the murder, LaRette left St. Charles for his home in Kansas. He later admitted killing Fleming in telephone conversations with Roberson, who allowed a police officer to listen in on one of these conversations.
St. Charles police initially interviewed LaRette at a jail in Shawnee County, Kansas. LaRette stated that a hitchhiker was responsible for the murder. The next day, police transported him to St. Charles, where he was again interviewed and admitted killing Fleming. Prior to both interviews, LaRette signed a written waiver of his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
LaRette was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed on direct appeal.
State v. LaRette,
LaRette then commenced this federal ha-beas corpus proceeding. The case was stayed twice in the district court to permit LaRette to exhaust additional state court remedies. First, he filed a successive Rule 27.26 motion, which was denied primarily for that reason.
See LaRette v. State,
In a series of exhaustive memorandum opinions, the magistrate judge 2 considered this additional medical evidence and recommended that habeas relief be denied without an evidentiary hearing, and the district court accepted that recommendation and denied the petition for a writ of habeas corpus. This appeal followed.
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel-Failure To Investigate and Present Evidence of Mental Illness
LaRette's primary argument on appeal is that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to adequately investigate his mental condition and in not introducing evidence of that condition at either the guilt or sentencing phase of the trial. LaRette argues that further investigation would have uncovered "a plethora of records from hospitals and doctors" revealing a twenty-year history of temporal lobe epilepsy, head injuries, brain damage, and seizures. Larette contends that this evidence would have provided both a defense at the guilt phase and a mitigating circumstance at the penalty phase by establishing that the murder was "precipitated by [LaRette's] mental ifiness which causes intermittent rage behavior which he cannot control."
This claim was the subject of a post-conviction evidentiary hearing in state court. La-Rette's trial counsel testified that he requested a psychiatric evaluation the day after he was appointed to represent LaRette. Dr. Henry Bratkowski examined LaRette and reported that he was of average intelligence, was competent to stand trial, and did not suffer from any mental disorder that would excuse him from criminal responsibility. Counsel further testified that he discussed the possibifity of presenting a mental illness defense with his client. LaRette told counsel that he (LaRette) had no mental problems at the time of the murder and instructed counsel not to present a mental illness defense because LaRette "would rather die than go back to a mental hospital." At all their pretrial meetings, counsel considered LaR-ette to be lucid and in control of his faculties.
At the guilt phase of the trial, LaRette instructed counsel to present the defense that LaRette was innocent because a hitchhiker had murdered Mary Fleming. After the jury found LaRette guilty of the crime, counsel spent the entire recess before the sentencing phase urging LaRette to testify about mitigating circumstances, including his history of mental illness beginning with a childhood head injury, and his marital problems immediately prior to the murder. La-Rette refused to testify. During the sentencing phase, counsel introduced testimony by LaRette's mother as to his emotional state and marital problems at the time of the murder.
LaRette first argues that counsel ineffectively investigated LaRette's mental condition. Though counsel obtained a psychiatric evaluation which did not support a competency defense, LaRette contends that this evaluation was flawed because the examiner did not have LaRette's prior medical records. Therefore, counsel should have obtained those records and requested a second evaluation. However, as the state courts noted, this failure to investigate claim must be considered in light of what LaRette told his counsel-that he was competent at the time of the murder and that counsel should not pursue a competency defense.
In any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel's judgments.
The reasonableness of counsel's actions may be determined or substantially influenced by the defendant's own statements or actions. Counsel's actions are usually based, quite properly, on informed strategic choices made by the defendant and on information supplied by the defendant. [W]hen a defendant has given counsel rca- *686 son to believe that pursuing certain investigations would be fruitless or even harmful, counsel’s failure to pursue those investigations may not later be challenged as unreasonable.
Strickland v. Washington,
LaRette also argues that counsel was ineffective in not presenting evidence of mental illness at the guilt and sentencing phases of the trial. The state courts concluded that counsel did not provide constitutionally ineffective assistance (i) because counsel followed LaRette’s instruction in not presenting such evidence during the guilt phase, and (ii) because LaRette’s refusal to testify frustrated counsel’s attempt to address this issue during the sentencing phase.
LaRette,
III. The Aggravating Circumstance Instruction
Following the jury’s guilty verdict, the trial court conducted the penalty phase of LaR-ette’s trial. Under the statute then in effect, Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.012 (Supp.1980),
3
if the jury found at least one statutory aggravating circumstance beyond a reasonable doubt, it must then consider whether the death penalty should be imposed, taking into account all evidence in aggravation and mitigation of punishment presented during the guilt and penalty phases of the trial, and it must set out in writing the statutory aggravating circumstance(s) found if it returned a verdict of death.
See generally State v. Shaw,
The trial court submitted to LaRette’s jury one statutory aggravating circumstance based on Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.012.2(7):
[Y]ou must first unanimously determine whether the murder of Mary Fleming involved torture or depravity of mind and that as a result thereof it was outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman.
$ * ‡ ‡ ‡ ‡
[I]f you do not unanimously find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the foregoing circumstance exists and that it is an aggravating circumstance, you must return a verdict fixing the punishment of the defendant at imprisonment for life....
The jury returned a verdict fixing the punishment at death. The verdict form recites that it found beyond a reasonable doubt both the statutory aggravating circumstance, “Torture, Depravity of mind and that as a result it was outrageous and wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman,” and a non-statutory aggravating circumstance, LaRette’s 1974 rape conviction in Douglas County, Kansas.
LaRette argues that this instruction is unconstitutionally vague because the term “depravity of mind” does not provide clear and objective standards that adequately channel the sentencer’s discretion in a way that can be rationally reviewed, citing
Godfrey v. Georgia,
IV. Procedurally Barred Claims
LaRette raises numerous claims that were not presented to the state courts on direct appeal or in the post-conviction Rule 27.26 proceedings. These claims are procedurally defaulted under Missouri law. See Kennedy v. Delo,
LaRette first argues that the district court erred in concluding that his sentencing claims are procedurally barred because the governing Missouri statute required the Missouri Supreme Court to independently review all errors in sentencing. See Mo.Rev. Stat. § 565.014.3. This contention is foreclosed by our recent decision in Nave v. Delo,
LaRette next argues that he should not be procedurally barred because Missouri made its post-conviction procedures more restrictive after the time of his procedural defaults. This claim is, at the least, factually unsound. On January 1, 1988, Missouri Rule 27.26 was replaced with Rule 29.15, which expressly limits an inmate to one post-conviction motion. However, in 1987, before that change took effect, LaRette's second Rule 27.26 motion was denied because he failed to present any grounds that could not have been presented in his first Rule 27.26 motion. In other words, LaRette's procedural defaults occurred before the adoption of Rule 29.15, the change in Missouri procedure to which he now objects.
LaRette next contends that he has demonstrated cause excusing his procedural defaults in state court. "[TJhe existence of cause for a procedural default must ordinarily turn on whether the prisoner can show that some objective factor external to the defense impeded counsel's efforts to comply with the State's procedural rule." Coleman v. Thompson,
LaRette next argues that the ineffective assistance of his trial and appellate counsel should excuse his procedural defaults. However, those claims are defaulted because he failed to present them to the state courts in his initial Rule 27.26 motion. His further contention that the ineffective
*688
assistance of his state post-conviction counsel is cause excusing procedural defaults is foreclosed by our recent decision in
Foster v. Delo,
Alternatively, LaRette argues that his procedural defaults must be excused under the “actual innocence” exception to procedural bar because the new evidence of his mental illness demonstrates that he is actually innocent of capital murder. This contention is fatally flawed in a number of respects. First, as the district court noted, it was not timely raised in this federal habeas proceeding. Second, the actual innocence exception applies “where a constitutional violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent.”
Murray,
For the foregoing reasons, we agree with the district court that LaRette is procedurally barred from obtaining federal habeas relief on the claims that he procedurally defaulted in state court.
Y. Proportionality Review of Sentence
LaRette argues that the Missouri Supreme Court violated his Eighth Amendment and Fourteenth Amendment rights by the manner in which it reviewed the proportionality of his sentence under Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.014.3. This contention is foreclosed by our recent decisions in
Foster,
VI. Admission of Incriminating Statements
LaRette argues that his incriminating statements to police were improperly admitted at trial because they were involuntary and because his mental condition prevented him from knowingly and intelligently waiving his
Miranda
rights. After painstaking review of the trial record, the Supreme Court of Missouri rejected LaRette’s claim of involuntariness.
See LaRette,
VII.Exclusion of a Prospective Juror
LaRette argues that a prospective juror was improperly excluded because she stated that she would vote against the death penalty unless the victim “was extremely close to [her].” The state courts rejected this claim, finding that this juror’s views on capital punishment would “prevent or substantially impair” the performance of her duties as a juror, the proper Sixth Amendment standard under
Wainwright v. Witt,
VIII.Testimony of Witness Who Underwent Hypnosis
Rochelle Hord identified LaRette at trial as the man she saw run from Fleming’s apartment to Roberson’s ear on the morning of the murder. Prior to trial, shortly after she initially described the man to police, Hord underwent hypnosis in an attempt to enhance her memory. LaRette argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for not objecting to Hord’s in-court identification as hypnotically-induced, for not cross examining Hord on discrepancies in her initial description to police, and for not offering expert rebuttal testimony as to the suggestive nature of hypnosis.
Counsel’s pre-trial motion to suppress this evidence was denied. This ruling was consistent with Missouri law at that time.
See State v. Little,
At the Rule 27.26 evidentiary hearing, LaRette’s counsel explained that he did not pursue the hypnosis issue at trial because Ms. Hord had initially given a detailed description of LaRette that was the same as her description after hypnosis and therefore her in-court identification was not affected by hypnosis. The state court rejected the claim on the ground that “no new evidence was acquired as a result of’ the hypnosis. The record does not reflect that this ruling was appealed, so the issue is probably procedurally barred. In any event, although the Supreme Court of Missouri subsequently held hypnotically-induced testimony inadmissible,
see Alsbach v. Bader,
IX.Conclusion
We have carefully considered LaRette’s many other claims of constitutional error and conclude they are without merit. In addition, we agree with the district court that LaRette did not establish the right to an evidentiary hearing on questions of procedural bar or the merits of his habeas claims.
See generally Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
— U.S. -, -,
Notes
. The HONORABLE EDWARD L. FILIPPINE, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. The HONORABLE DAVID D. NOCE, United States Magistrate Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. All citations will be to the statutes in effect when LaRette was tried in 1981. These statutes were later repealed, and new, recodified sections went into effect in 1984.
. LaRette argues that Missouri is a weighing State, and therefore the Supreme Court of Missouri did not cure the defect in the depravity-of-mind instruction because it failed to reweigh the applicable aggravating and mitigating circumstances. See Clemons v. Mississippi,
. This court has held that
Sawyer's
actual innocence standard applies to guilt as well as penalty phase issues.
See Cornell v. Nix,
