Buddy Eаrl Justus appeals from the judgment entered in favor of the Virginia Department of Corrections on his petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Although on different reasoning, we affirm.
I
On October 3, 1978, Ida Mae Moses was found murdered in her home in Montgomery County, Virginia. She had been shot twice in the face and once in the back of the head; any one of the wounds would have been fatal. Forensic tests showed that Moses, who was 8V2 months pregnant at the time of the murder, had also been raped. Further, it was determined that she had been killed by her own gun, a snub-nosed .22 caliber pistol, which was stolen during the incident.
See Justus v. Commonwealth of Virginia,
On October 11, 1978, petitioner was arrested in Grundy, Virginia, pursuant to an arrest warrant for a Georgia murder. He waived his Miranda rights and confessed that he had burglarized the Moses’ home and had murdered Moses. However, he denied raping her. In January 1979 petitioner was indicted for capital murder during the commission of a rape, in violation of Va.Code §§ 18.2-31(5), 18.2-32.
At trial, Justus did not deny committing the murder. Instead, he used his confession of the burglary and murder to bolster the credibility of his denial of thе rape. While this strategy conceded the commission of a first degree murder, if successful, it would have defeated the capital murder charge, and with it, the potential for the death penalty. 1 The strategy proved unsuccessful and Justus was convicted of capital murder. On a recommendation from the jury, he was sentenced to death.
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Virginia reversed the conviction because of an error in jury selection.
Justus,
Justus sought habeas relief in state court. On February 13-14, 1985, a hearing was held оn his petition. In August 1985, the petition was denied in full. The Virginia Supreme Court denied a petition for appeal, as well as a petition for rehearing. Likewise, the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari.
Justus v. Barss,
Justus next turned to the federal courts, filing a federal habeas petition in April, 1987. By consent of the parties, the petition was dismissed without prejudice becаuse it contained unexhausted claims. Justus then filed directly in the Virginia Supreme Court another habeas petition which raised the unexhausted claims. That petition was denied by order dated February 22, 1988, on the grounds that all of Justus’ claims were procedurally defaulted.
Finally, on May 6, 1988, the instant habe-as petition was filed in district court. The petition was referred tо a magistrate who, in a lengthy and thorough report, recommended that the petition be dismissed. Both petitioner and the Commonwealth filed objections to the report. The district court denied the objections and by order dated April 12, 1989, the petition was dismissed. This appeal followed.
II
Before this Court, appellant raises seven assignments of еrror. For purposes of our discussion, these assignments can be considered in three categories, grouped according to the claims’ respective procedural postures. We address these categories se-riatim.
1. Two of appellant’s claims — one involving the effectiveness of his counsel during the penalty phase of his trial and the other involving the denial of his request for a court-appointed psychiatrist to help him prepare for the penalty phase — were not procedurally defaulted in any manner. The district court rejected these claims on the merits, on the reasoning of the magistrate’s report. We also find the magistrate's report persuasive and, accordingly, affirm the district court’s disposition of these claims.
2. One of appellant’s claims, concerning the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his death sentence, was not raised on direct appeal. In state habeas, this claim was rejected as procedurally defaulted under the rule of
Slayton v. Parrigan,
3. The remainder of appellant’s assignments of error stand in a rather peculiar procedural posture. 2 First, none of these *712 claims was raised on direсt appeal. In state habeas, appellant raised these issues and offered ineffective assistance of counsel as cause for his failure to raise them on direct appeal. The ineffective assistance of counsel claims were rejected by the state habeas trial court and, consequently, the underlying substantivе claims were found procedurally defaulted under Slayton.
In his petition for appeal from the state habeas decision, appellant failed to assign as error the ineffective assistance of counsel rulings. Consequently, when he finally presented these claims to the Virginia Supreme Court in this second state habeas petition, they were also found to be defaulted under Slayton. Therefore, appellant has procedurally defaulted on both the substance of his remaining claims as well as the ineffective assistance of counsel claims he offered in state court as cause to excuse the substantive defaults.
Before the district court, appellant raised his procеdurally-defaulted substantive arguments and again offered the procedurally-defaulted ineffective assistance of counsel claims as cause. The Commonwealth argued that this double-default, so to speak, left the substantive claims “not reviewable in any manner.” It contended that under Wainwright and Murray, the procedural default of the ineffective assistаnce of counsel claims must be respected and, consequently, that those claims could not serve as cause to excuse the defaults of the underlying substantive claims. The district court rejected this argument.
The lower court rested its analysis on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Murray.
In
Murray,
the Court held that before a claim of ineffective assistancе of counsel can be used in a federal habeas proceeding as cause to excuse a procedural default, the ineffective assistance of counsel claim must first be presented to and exhausted in the state courts.
Id.
at 488-89,
A. It is beyond question that ineffective assistance of counsel claims offered as cause to excuse procedural defaults of other constitutional claims are separate and distinct from those other constitutional claims.
Kimmelman v. Morrison,
When first presented to the Virginia Supreme Court, appellant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims were unambiguously rejected as defaulted under
Slayton.
We have previously recognized that such defaults, when made on collaterаl appeal and relied upon by the Virginia courts to reject constitutional challenges, generally preclude federal habeas review absent a cause- and-prejudice showing.
Whitley v. Bair,
B. In
Murray,
the precise issue before the Court was whether a competent defense counsel’s inadvertent failure to raise a substantive claim on appeal could constitute cause excusing the procedural default of the claim.
Murray,
The doctrine of exhaustion and the procedural default rule are two different things. Exhaustion generally requires that before a federal court will review a constitutional claim in habeas, the claim must first be fairly presented to the state court system. The requirement is “principally designed to protect the statе courts’ role in the enforcement of federal law and prevent disruption of state judicial proceedings.”
Id.
at 489,
The foundation of the Murray decision rests firmly on a sense of respect for the procedural default rule in the appellate context:
A State’s procedural rules serve vital purposes at trial, on appeal, and on state collateral attack_ [Appellate procedural rules promote] not only the accuracy and efficiency of judicial decisions, but also the finаlity of those decisions.... These legitimate state interests ... warrant our adherence to the conclusion to which they led the Court in Reed v. Ross [468 U.S. 1 ,104 S.Ct. 2901 ,82 L.Ed.2d 1 (1984)] — that the cause and prejudice test applies to defaults on appeal as to those at trial.
Murray,
C. We turn to the proper way to analyze the remaining four claims of appellant. As the district court correctly recognized, the substance of these claims was defaulted under Slayton. This procedural bar precludes our review of these claims under Wainwright unless appellant can make the cause and prejudice showing. Appellant has offered as cause four respective claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. As the district court correctly noted, these separate claims were also defaulted under Slayton. Thus, we cannot review the merit of these claims under Wainwright unless appellant can make another cause and prejudice showing. Appellant has made no showing of cause whatsoever to excuse the default of his ineffective assistance of counsel сlaims. Therefore, we cannot review the merits of those claims and they cannot serve as cause to excuse the underlying procedural defaults. Furthermore, because these claims were the only offer of cause to excuse the default of the substantive claims, Wainwright also precludes our review of the merits of those issues.
This conclusion, however, does not end our inquiry. In
Murray,
the Supreme Court made clear that “in an extraordinary case, where a constitutional violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent, a federal habeas court may grant the writ even in the absence of a showing of cause for the procedural default.”
Murray, 477
U.S. at 496,
The evidence of appellant’s guilt is overwhelming. There simply can be no serious question on this record that appellant did, in fact, commit the crime for which he stands convicted. Further, as the magistrate’s report makes clear, besidеs being procedurally defaulted, his assignments of error are without merit. Consequently, we have no difficulty in upholding appellant’s conviction in the face of these four assignments of error.
Ill
In sum, although on different reasoning, we affirm the dismissal of the petition.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On the facts, the case against Justus was very strong. Besides his confession to the police, he had bragged about the murder and rape to a third party, he was found in possession of the murder weapon, and secretion tests indicated that Justus "could not be excluded” as a possible source of the seminal fluid found in decedent's vagina.
Justus,
. Briefly, the substance of these claims is: (1) the trial court erred in excluding potentially mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of appellant’s trial; (2) the trial court’s instructions in the penalty phase failed to adequately guide appellant’s jury in the use of its sentencing discretion; (3) the trial court’s instructions during the guilt phase of the trial violated appellant’s *712 Sixth Amendment rights; and (4) the jury instructions and verdict form used in the guilt phase of the trial denied appellant his right to a unаnimous jury (hereinafter the “substantive” claims).
. Apparently, the district court reached this conclusion because the Murray Court was silent as to whether the procedural default rule also applied to ineffective assistance of counsel claims offered as cause. As is clear from our discussion below, we interpret the Murray Court’s silence оn this point to imply nothing more than the Court’s assumption that the Wainwright rule applies to all constitutional claims raised in federal habeas.
. As an alternative grounds for our decision, we note that the district court’s conclusion that the ineffective assistance of counsel claims were meritless and that, consequently, appellant’s underlying substantive arguments were procedurally defaulted, was correct.
. For a similar analysis,
see Gilmore v. Armontrout,
