Arlester Scott sought habeas relief by petition filed in March 1988 for redress of alleged errors in two successive trials for the same first degree robbery charge, each resulting in a 25-year sentence. The district court
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granted his petition on its first of seven points, double jeopardy.
Scott v. Jones,
I. BACKGROUND
Scott has been twice tried and convicted for the robbery of a Kansas City food store which occurred in March 1981. Both convictions relied heavily on certain fingerprint evidence on cardboard from a duct-tape container used in the robbery and an in-court ID of Scott as the taller of the two robbers. Whether Scott wore a beard at
II. DISCUSSION
Scott advanced six points in the district court and here. We take them seriatim from the district court’s order of denial of last August. See Designated Record at 272-83.
First Scott argues that the evidence from his second trial was insufficient to support conviction.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Second Scott argues that the fingerprint evidence from the duct-tape was inadmissible because the state failed to show a proper chain of custody. This was, in part, the reason the Missouri Court of Appeals reversed Scott’s first conviction.
Scott,
Scott’s next ground fails as well. He alleges that his cause challenges of certain jurors should have been granted because those jurors indicated that they would take the testimony of police officers more seriously than that of lay witnesses. However, as the district court pointed out, the trial transcript indicates that all the challenged jurors responded that they would weigh all testimony, according to instructions, based solely on what they heard from the stand and the demeanor of each witness. See Second Trial Transcript at 81-84.
Ground four of this appeal is the first of Scott’s two ineffective assistance claims. He argues that his state appellate counsel was deficient for failing to brief a certain point from his motion for new trial after his second conviction. That point argued an evidentiary error in the admission of certain testimony concerning Scott’s wearing a beard at the time of the crime as irrelevant. As with the fingerprint evi
The next ground addressed by the district court was that Scott was denied his right to take the stand in his own defense and denied his right to counsel, because of the trial court’s decision to abide by the Missouri statute on impeachment of witnesses. According to Scott, because Missouri law
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permits a witness to be impeached by the introduction of prior convictions and because the trial court refused to limit such introductions in the event that Scott testified, he and his trial counsel were prevented from making their own decision on whether or not he should testify. The district court concluded that this argument did not make a claim cognizable in habeas review. Earlier, the Missouri Court of Appeals had rejected this argument on appeal of Scott’s first conviction,
Scott,
The last ground from Scott’s petition and addressed by the district court is Scott’s second ineffective assistance claim. Second trial counsel for Scott declined to call certain witnesses, most particularly Scott’s former girlfriend, who could have testified as to an alibi and whether Scott wore a beard. The district court’s careful analysis of this claim cannot be usefully supplemented by us.
See
Designated Record at 277-83. We agree with it that Scott’s second trial counsel’s decisions were not unreasonable and that they did not result in ineffective assistance under
Strickland v. Washington,
Scott’s appeal also advances a cumulative error theory. This court has said that cumulative error does not call for habeas relief, as each habeas claim must stand or fall on its own.
Byrd v. Armontrout,
III. CONCLUSION
Finding no grounds for habeas relief and no error in the district court’s denial of Scott’s grounds for habeas relief, we affirm that denial in all respects.
Notes
. The Late Honorable John W. Oliver, Senior United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Our review considers the fingerprint evidence, despite Scott's protestations, because we have resolved this issue against him in our continuing discussion.
. The current version of the statute of which Scott complains is at Mo.Rev.Stat. § 491.050 (1986).
. In
Drake v. Wyrick,
