In 1996, a Texas jury convicted and sentenced to death Dennis Wayne Bagwell for the exceedingly brutal murders of his mother, half-sister, four-year-old niece, and another young woman. After direct appeal and petition for state habeas corpus were unsuccessful, Bagwell raised seventeen grounds for relief in a § 2254 petition before the federal district court. The district court rejected all of the claims, dismissed Bagwell’s petition, and declined to grant a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on any issue raised.
Bagwell seeks a COA from this court on two issues: (1) whether he was denied due process and the presumption of innocence as a result of being shackled in the courtroom throughout the trial, and (2) whether trial counsel coerced him into waiving his right to testify in violation of his Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights to a fair trial. For the reasons set forth below, we deny a COA on both claims.
I. BACKGROUND
On November 21, 1995, Bagwell was indicted for the capital murders of Leona McBee, Libby Best, Reba Best, and Tas-sy Boone. 1 Before trial, the prosecution moved to have Bagwell restrained while in the courtroom. At this hearing, Wilson County Deputy Sheriff Johnny Deag-an testified that: (1) Bagwell had made numerous threats against law enforcement personnel during his pretrial detention; (2) unidentified members of the victims’ families had threatened Bagwell; and (3) restraining Bagwell through the use of a leg brace would aid court security personnel in the event Bagwell needed to be removed from the courtroom and would reduce Bagwell’s ability to retaliate against anyone who attacked him. Calvin Pundt, an investigator for the Wilson County Sheriffs Department, testified Bagwell threatened several law enforcement personnel, vowing to “take one of you out before we hit the floor.” While Bagwell had not physically assaulted anyone during his pretrial detention, the defense did not rebut the testimony concerning Bagwell’s threats against law enforcement.
The state trial court granted the motion and directed that (a) the leg restraints must be worn beneath Bagwell’s clothing, *752 (b) Bagwell must not be shown to the jury or any prospective juror in any restraint, and (c) Bagwell’s legs must be concealed while he was seated in the courtroom. Bagwell did not object to the leg restraints throughout the pendency of the trial or on direct appeal.
At trial, the state offered several witnesses, including Victoria Wolford, Bag-well’s girlfriend, who testified that she was with Bagwell when he committed the gruesome murders, and she had led police to various locations along the getaway route where Bagwell had discarded incriminating evidence. Law enforcement officers and scientific experts linked significant physical evidence from the murders to Bagwell. 2 The defense countered with witnesses of their own. 3 However, Bag-well did not testify. According to Bagwell, trial counsel concluded that his testimony would unduly risk the introduction of Bag-well’s extensive criminal history.
After deliberating for three hours, the jury returned a guilty verdict. The case then proceeded to the punishment phase. The state presented, inter alia, evidence and testimony concerning Bagwell’s past convictions, his violence during pretrial detention, his bad disciplinary record during previous incarcerations, and his parole records. The defense offered five witnesses, including Bagwell’s ex-wife and former parole officer, who each testified that Bag-well should receive a sentence of life imprisonment rather than the death penalty. Bagwell did not testify during the penalty phase. After a four-hour deliberation, the jury sentenced Bagwell to death.
Bagwell appealed both his conviction and sentence of death to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
Bagwell v. State,
No. 72,699 (Tex.Crim.App. March 31, 1999). The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Bagwell’s conviction in all respects. Bag-well then filed a state habeas application in the trial court. Based on the trial court’s findings of facts and conclusions of law, and its own review, the Court of Criminal Appeals denied habeas relief.
Ex Parte Bagwell,
No. 42,341-01 (Tex.Crim.App. September 29, 1999) (unpublished). Bag-well then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the federal district court. The district court rejected Bagwell’s seventeen assignments of error and declined to grant Bagwell’s request for a COA.
Bagwell v. Cockrell,
No. SA-99-1133-OG,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Bagwell’s § 2254 habeas petition is subject to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”).
See Penry v. Johnson,
A COA will issue only if the petitioner makes “a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2) (2000);
Miller-El,
Ultimately, “[t]o prevail on a petition for writ of habeas corpus, a petitioner must demonstrate that the state court proceeding ‘resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.’ ”
Robertson v. Cockrell,
III. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Bagwell asserts that he was denied due process and the presumption of innocence as a result of being shackled in the courtroom throughout the trial and that his trial counsel coerced him into waiving his right to testify in violation of his Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to a fair trial.
A. Use Of Shackles During Trial
Bagwell argues that the state trial court’s decision to shackle him was not the “least restrict alternative” and therefore constitutionally infirm. This claim is
*754
without merit. “We begin with the threshold premise than an accused is presumed innocent and, as such, is entitled to all of the trappings of innocence during trial.”
United States v. Nicholson,
These important due process concerns “must be balanced against the court’s obligation to protect the court and its processes, and to attend to the safety and security of those in the courtroom.”
Nicholson,
Bagwell has failed to make a substantial showing that the use of leg restraints violated his constitutional due process rights. The state trial court determined that several factors, including Bagwell’s overt threats against law enforcement officers during his pre-trial detention, warranted shackling. Bagwell did not rebut the evidence of his threats. Moreover, the trial judge had Bagwell wear the restraints underneath his clothing and took significant measures to ensure that the restraints would not be visible to the jury. No reasonable jurist could conclude that the state court’s rejection of Bagwell’s claim constituted an unreasonable application of federal law. 5
What’s more, Bagwell’s entire rejoinder consists of a hearsay affidavit from his investigator. In the affidavit, the investigator asserts that a juror correctly deduced that Bagwell was restrained, which led the juror to believe Bagwell was dangerous. The state court rejected the proffer because Bagwell failed to offer an affidavit directly from the juror. However, even if Bagwell had secured direct testimony, such evidence does not rise to a constitutional dimension; under proper circumstances the trial court could have placed Bagwell in visible restraints and remained within constitutional bounds.
See Allen,
B. Right to Testify
Bagwell next argues that his trial counsel unconstitutionally coerced him into not testifying at trial. The district court determined that Bagwell procedurally defaulted and failed to exhaust available state remedies. On appeal, Bagwell argues that he fairly presented his claim to the state courts. We disagree.
“[Procedural default ... occurs when a prisoner fails to exhaust available state remedies and the court to which the petitioner would be required to present his claims in order to meet the exhaustion requirement would now find the claims procedurally barred.”
Nobles v. Johnson,
First, Bagwell’s failure to exhaust state remedies is beyond debate. “To exhaust, a petitioner must have fairly presented the substance of his claim to the state courts.”
Wilder v. Cockrell,
Bagwell’s state habeas application did not allege that he was denied the right to testify at his capital murder trial or even an ineffective assistance of counsel claim raising a similar concern. At no time during the pendency of the state habeas proceeding did Bagwell seek permission to amend his petition to include such a claim. In fact, Bagwell’s state habeas proposed factual findings and conclusions of law, which included several ineffective assistance of counsel claims, did not set forth a claim that he was denied the right to testify. Bagwell concedes as much.
6
Nev
*756
ertheless, Bagwell contends that his testimony, during the state habeas evidentiary hearing, concerning his desire to testify sufficiently presented the issue for review. Bagwell’s factual testimony regarding his dissatisfaction with trial counsel does not satisfy our exhaustion requirement.
See Gray v. Netherlands,
Second, Texas courts would find Bag-well’s claim procedurally barred. Texas does not generally permit successive habe-as applications.
See
Tex.Code CRiM. PROC. ANN. art. 11.071, § 5 (Vernon Supp.2003). Article 11.071 does, however, provide three exceptions: (1) the claim could not have been presented in the initial application because the factual or legal basis of the claim was unavailable at that time; (2) the petitioner would not have been convicted absent the constitutional violation; or (3) the jury would not have answered in the state’s favor on a special issue absent the constitutional violation.
Id.
at § 5(a)(1)-(3). Bagwell does not qualify for any of these limited exceptions. Bagwell was able to (and argues to this court that he in fact did) present the factual basis for his right to testify claim in a timely initial application. Likewise, the legal right to testify in one’s own defense certainly predates Bagwell’s initial habeas petition.
See Rock v. Arkansas,
Last, Bagwell does not qualify for § 2254(b)’s narrow exceptions: “cause and actual prejudice” or “miscarriage of justice.”
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(B). To prove “cause” Bagwell must establish that some “external force” impeded the defense’s efforts to comply with the procedural rule.
Coleman,
Bagwell also cannot establish that procedural default would occasion a miscarriage of justice. To meet the “miscarriage of justice” test, Bagwell needed to supplement his constitutional claim with a colorable showing of factual innocence,
ie., “a
fair probability that, in light of all the evidence, including that ... evidence tenably claimed to have been wrongly excluded or to have become available only after the trial, the trier of the facts would have entertained a reasonable doubt of his guilt.”
Sawyer v. Whitley,
In sum, Bagwell failed to present this claim to the state courts, would be barred under Texas law from raising it in a successive habeas petition, and does not qualify for the equitable exceptions carved out in § 2254(b). Because the district court’s procedural default ruling is not debatable, we do not reach the question whether the merits of Bagwell’s underlying right-to-testify claim are debatable.
IV. CONCLUSION
Because we DENY Bagwell’s application for COA on both issues raised, we lack jurisdiction to review the district court’s denial of habeas relief.
COA DENIED.
Notes
. Ron Boone, Leona McBee's common-law husband, discovered the victims' bodies. Bagwell was related to three of the four victims. Leona McBee was Bagwell's mother, Libby Best was his half-sister, and Reba Best was Leona's four-year-old granddaughter. Tassy Boone was the teenage granddaughter of Ron Boone. Under Texas law, murdering more than one person during the same criminal transaction is a capital offense. See Tex. Pen.Code § 19.03(a)(7)(Vernon 2003).
. Specifically, law enforcement officers testified that they recovered, based on information Wolford provided, numerous items taken from the Boone residence, including a pair of tennis shoes and a pair of shorts. An expert witness testified that one of the tennis shoes matched a bloody shoe print found at the crime scene under the body of Tassy Boone. Other witnesses testified that the tennis shoes in question belonged to Bagwell. Furthermore, a firearms expert testified that the bullet fragments removed from Libby Best's cranium matched the shattered rifle the law enforcement officers recovered.
. The defense's psychiatric expert testified that cocaine ingestion can raise a person's energy level, increase aggressiveness, lead to manic episodes involving hyperactivity and unclear thought, and cause psychotic, paranoid behavior. Other witnesses testified to Bagwell's depressed and upset demeanor in the days following the murders. Further, in their effort to suggest that Monica Boone, Tassy Boone’s mother, committed the crime, the defense offered evidence to show that Monica and Tassy had a difficult relationship, that Monica physically abused Tassy, and, on the night of the murders, a woman who bore a resemblance to Monica appeared at a bar near the crime scene intoxicated and mumbling about having lost her hammer. On rebuttal, the state called Monica Boone to establish that she had been in California at the time of the murders. The state also presented testimony to establish that law enforcement officers had identified the woman at the bar, determined that she was not Monica Boone, and ruled the woman out as a suspect.
. A state court’s decision is "contrary to ... clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States ... if the state court arrives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by the Court on a question of law or if the state court decides a case differently than the Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
Williams
v.
Taylor,
.
See, e.g., Bigby v. Cockrell,
. Although Bagwell concedes on appeal that no such claim was presented in his writ application before the Texas courts, he argues that the omission of the right to testify claim was the result of strategic conflict with his state habeas counsel. As discussed infra, Bagwell does not have a constitutional right to habeas counsel and he therefore bears the burden of his counsel’s decisions.
See Coleman,
. Bagwell, in his effort to establish that Texas does not regularly adhere to article 11.071’s successive habeas prohibition, argues that Texas appellate courts have discretion to consider unassigned error or order remand for additional fact-finding.
See Ex parte Jordan,
