Bernard BOLENDER, Petitioner,
v.
Richard L. DUGGER, Respondent.
Bernard BOLENDER, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida.
Larry Helm Spalding, Capital Collateral Representative, Billy H. Nolas, Chief Asst. CCR, and Julie D. Naylor and Gail E. Anderson, Asst. Staff Attys., Office of the *1058 Capital Collateral Representative, Tallahassee, for petitioner/appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., and Fariba N. Komeily, Asst. Atty. Gen., Miami, for respondent/appellee.
PER CURIAM.
Bernard Bolender, a prisoner for whom a second death warrant has been signed, petitions the Court for habeas corpus relief and appeals the trial court's denial of his Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 motion. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(1), (9), Fla. Const. We deny the petition, affirm the trial court's denial of relief, and dissolve our previously entered stay of execution.
On direct appeal we affirmed Bolender's convictions of first-degree murder and his four death sentences. Bolender v. State,
On February 12, 1990 the trial court denied the 3.850 motion, but allowed Bolender access to files on Paul Thompson, Bolender's codefendant who had been declared incompetent but who, apparently, had pled guilty to unspecified charges prior to that date. On March 9 the Court held another hearing on what Bolender had gleaned from Thompson's files and confirmed its earlier summary denial of relief. We stayed Bolender's execution the day before the warrant expired and set these cases for oral argument. After considering the issues presented, we find no relief warranted.
Bolender raised eleven issues in appealing the denial of his postconviction motion, only one of which merits discussion.[1] In that issue Bolender claims that the trial court refused to consider, and that trial counsel felt constrained in developing and presenting, nonstatutory mitigating evidence, thereby violating Hitchcock v. Dugger,
The United States Supreme Court filed Lockett on July 3, 1978. On December 21, 1978 we filed our opinion on rehearing in Songer v. State,
*1059 Turning to the habeas petition, Bolender claims that his appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not raising on appeal, or, alternatively, by not convincing this Court to vacate his death sentences regarding, the other nine issues in the petition: 1) the trial court improperly doubled up three pairs of aggravating factors by basing them on the same facts; 2) the avoid arrest and hinder law enforcement aggravating factors are applied overbroadly; 3) this Court's failure to remand for resentencing violated Elledge v. State,
This Court fully considered the propriety of Bolender's sentences on direct appeal. Habeas corpus is not to be used to relitigate issues determined in a prior appeal. Porter v. Dugger,
Additionally, issues (6) through (9) have been rejected by this Court. E.g., Smith v. Dugger,
Thus, the only reasonably colorable claim of ineffective assistance presented in this petition is that the instructions improperly directed a verdict for the state and that counsel erred in not raising the issue on appeal. The court began its instructions by telling the jury that "[t]here is no argument but that a homicide did take place." Contrary to Bolender's contention, the court did not tell the jury that it had to find that Bolender committed the murders. The state established corpus delicti in this case, the quoted statement merely recited the obvious, and the instructions did not direct a verdict for the state. If this issue had been raised on direct appeal, it would have been found meritless. The failure to raise nonmeritorious issues is not ineffective assistance. Mills v. Dugger,
We therefore deny the petition for writ of habeas corpus, affirm the trial court's denial of relief, and dissolve the stay previously entered by this Court.
It is so ordered.
EHRLICH, C.J., and OVERTON, McDONALD, SHAW, BARKETT, GRIMES and KOGAN, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The other issues were raised on appeal or in Bolender's first postconviction motion or could and should have been raised before now. The following issues are, therefore, procedurally barred: 1) ineffective assistance (two claims); 2) improper override; 3) cold, calculated instruction unconstitutional; 4) heinous, atrocious instruction unconstitutional; 5) burden on defendant to show life to be proper penalty; 6) automatic aggravating factor; 7) Gardner v. Florida,
[2] The jury recommendation of life rendered any Hitchcock v. Dugger,
[3] Bolender also raised issues (4) and (6) through (9) in his Fla. R.Cr.P. 3.850 motion.
