Antonio Evans, a Missouri inmate serving a life sentence for first degree murder, appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus petition. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In the early morning hours of October 30, 1982, Richard Cunningham was shot to death while sitting in his car. The police took Evans, age seventeen, into custody at about 7:00 a.m. that morning and informed him of his Miranda rights. Evans had in his possession two rings belonging to Cunningham and cash in denominations Cunningham had been carrying shortly before his death. Police seized a gun from the house in which Evans was arrested, but ballistics tests proved inconclusive as to whether the gun was the murder weapon. Police found Evans’s fingerprints on the window of Cunningham’s car.
Evans denied having anything to do with Cunningham’s death but told the police that Charles Shurn told him that Shurn and another person committed the crime. Evans remained in custody until approximately 1:30 p.m. the following day when the police took him to the prosecutor’s office to make a statement concerning Shurn.
At the prosecutor’s office, Evans reportedly told another witness that he committed the crime. Police then questioned Evans before a video camera. He continued to maintain his innocence and denied being at the scene of the crime. The questioning officer terminated the interrogation and turned off the equipment. According to the officer, Evans then spontaneously admitted being present at the crime scene, and the officer resumed the taped interrogation. Although Evans again admitted his presence at the scene, he continued to deny involvement in the murder. The interrogating officer repeatedly told Evans that he did not believe him, that police had eyewitnesses who would say Evans shot Cunningham, and that if he did not tell the truth, he would be returned to his cell to wait. Evans then confessed to the crime.
Evans moved for suppression of the confession, asserting it was coerced. He claimed the police beat him and tricked him into confessing by implying his statement would be used only to incriminate Shurn, not himself. The trial court denied the suppression motion, and played the taped confession for the jury. Evans appealed his conviction to the Missouri Court of Appeals, but after that court affirmed, did not apply for transfer to the Missouri Supreme Court. He later filed a petition for post-conviction relief under Missouri Rule 27.26, again claiming an involuntary confession and adding a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in not getting the confession suppressed. He did not appeal the denial of the petition.
Evans then filed this section 2254 petition. He once again claimed the confession was involuntary. He also claimed ineffective assistance of counsel at trial, on appeal, and in the Rule 27.26 proceedings because counsel abandoned him on appeal of the denial of the petition. The district court concluded that ineffective assistance of counsel in postconviction proceedings is not a ground for habeas relief, that Evans defaulted on his involuntary confession claim, and that in any event the state courts’ factual findings as to the voluntariness of the confession bound the federal court.
II. DISCUSSION
A procedural default potentially occurred at two points in the state court proceedings. First, Evans failed to apply for a transfer to the Missouri Supreme Court following the affirmance of his conviction on direct appeal. Transfer to the supreme court, however, is not an appeal of right and is granted only in limited circum
*741
stances.
See
Mo.R.Civ.P. 83.02, 83.03.
1
At oral argument the state conceded that this court has previously questioned whether an application for transfer is required for exhaustion purposes, given the low percentage of cases in which transfer is approved.
See Brown v. Armontrout,
Evans may have defaulted, however, when he failed to appeal the denial of his Rule 27.26 petition. Thus, absent a showing of cause and prejudice, he would be barred from pursuing the claim in federal court.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
State courts’ resolutions of factual questions are entitled to a presumption of correctness, but a federal court must determine the ultimate legal question of the voluntariness of a confession.
Miller v. Fenton,
We conclude that Evans’s remaining claim of psychological coercion through subterfuge and implied threats, although á closer question than the one of physical abuse, must fail as a matter of law. A suspect’s state of mind alone is insufficient to make a confession involuntary.
Colorado v. Connelly,
We do not condone all of the police tactics in this case. Nevertheless, upon the whole record, we cannot conclude that the officer’s misstatement of the purpose of the interrogation, statements of disbelief, untrue suggestions of eyewitnesses, and statement that Evans would be returned to his cell amount to unconstitutional coercion as envisioned by
Connelly, Jorgensen,
and
Rohrbach. See Jorgensen,
None of the actions by themselves would make the confession involuntary. The totality of the circumstances determines whether a confession was coerced.
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. Mo.R.Civ.P. 83 governs transfer of criminal appellate cases. Mo.R.Crim.P. 30.27. Rule 83.02 provides that a case may be transferred by order of the court of appeals because of the general interest or importance of the question presented or to reexamine existing law. Rule 83.03 provides that if the court of appeals denies an application for transfer, the supreme court may grant a transfer for the reasons stated in Rule 83.02 or if the opinion filed conflicts with a previous decision of an appellate court of the state.
. We commend the Assistant Missouri Attorney General for his forthright concession during oral argument that Evans had not defaulted by failing to apply for transfer and for focusing much of the argument on the merits.
