Before the Court is the Commonwealth of Virginia’s motion to vacate a stay of execution entered by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The stay was entered on the basis of a petition for writ of habeas corpus filed by Earl Clanton, Jr., who challenges a death sentence scheduled to be carried out in his case. Having reviewed the record in this expedited appeal and heard oral argument, we now grant the Commonwealth’s motion and vacate the stay.
I.
In the seven years that have elapsed since a jury convicted Earl Clanton, Jr. of the capital murder of Wilhelmina Smith, his sentence for that crime has been reviewed by both state and federal courts on no less
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than ten occasions, Those courts have addressed numerous questions in a sober and measured fashion, and determined that Clanton’s trial and sentencing satisfied constitutional requirements. The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed Clanton’s conviction on direct review.
Clanton v. Commonwealth,
Clanton began the latest series of collateral proceedings in state court on April 4, 1988, ten days before his sentence was scheduled to be carried out. The Virginia Circuit Court for the City of Petersburg denied his state habeas corpus petition, holding, inter alia, that Clanton’s claims were procedurally defaulted. The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed. Clanton then filed a federal habeas corpus petition in the Eastern District, seeking a stay of execution pending the district court’s review of the petition. The district court granted the stay.
The situation we face here is similar to that in
Alabama v. Evans,
The stay granted by the district court is grounded upon a successive petition for habeas corpus. Such a petition may be the basis for a stay of execution only in the “presence of substantial grounds upon which relief might be granted.”
Barefoot v. Estelle,
II.
The district court’s grant of the stay focused on Clanton’s claim that he was incompetent at the sentencing phase of his trial. Clanton contends on the basis of affidavits from several health care professionals that a psychological disability prevented him from advising his counsel of facts concerning his abused childhood. This disability is alleged to have rendered Clanton incompetent to assist his trial counsel in preparation for his sentencing proceeding. Although Clanton’s previous habeas petition was based on the lack of child abuse evidence in the sentencing phase of his trial,
see Clanton v. Bair,
This eleventh hour attempt to repackage issues presented by Clanton at the time of his initial federal petition constitutes an abuse of the writ. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b). It is undisputed that Clanton revealed facts about his abused childhood to counsel prior to the hearing on the previous federal petition, and that counsel knew that those revelations were inconsistent with his earlier statements. At this point,
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Clanton’s counsel had the opportunity to determine what legal grounds for relief might be available on the basis of those facts. There is no apparent reason why the possibility that there might be a psychological condition underlying this inconsistency was not pursued and presented at that time. Indeed, counsel’s failure to retain a psychiatrist to explore Clanton’s childhood even earlier in the proceedings was the basis of his first federal petition.
See Clanton v. Bair,
This case presents the situation addressed by the Supreme Court in
Woodard v. Hutchins,
In addition to the infirmity of Clan-ton’s incompetency claim under § 2244(b), it is also barred by reason of the procedural default found by the state habeas court. The state court found that the incompetency claim was defaulted because Clanton knew of the facts underlying the claim at the time of his prior state petition.
See
Va.Code Ann. § 8.01-654 B 2 (1984). This is a factual finding with regard to prior knowledge, and it was entitled to a presumption of correctness from the federal district court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). State courts as well as federal are equally charged with protecting constitutional rights, and the “interest in federalism recognized by Congress in enacting § 2254(d) requires deference by federal courts to factual determinations of all state courts.”
Sumner v. Mata,
The district court did not make the statement of reasons required where a district court declines to follow state factual findings,
see id.
at 551,
The nature of the procedural default found by the state court removes the possibility that Clanton could establish the “cause” required to raise a defaulted claim.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
III.
We next address the four other claims included in the petition on which the stay depends. None of them reveals the “substantial grounds on which relief might be granted” that could have made entry of the stay a proper exercise of the district court’s discretion.
A.
The first of these claims is a contention that Clanton’s sentence must be set aside because the jury was not properly instructed on the effect of mitigating evidence. It is uncontested that Clanton did not present this claim at trial, on appeal, or in his first state habeas corpus proceeding. For this reason, the state courts have held that this claim is procedurally defaulted. It therefore cannot be the basis for a grant of federal habeas corpus unless Clanton establishes “cause” for the default.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
Clanton cannot, however, show that the
Franklin
claim was not “available at all” as is required to establish cause.
Smith v. Murray, 477
U.S. 527,
The basis of Clanton’s claim was available at the time of all of the prior proceedings in this case. The Fifth Circuit addressed such a claim in a 1978 published opinion. Although the court held that the petitioner there was required to present his claim to a state court in the first instance, the court stated on the basis of Supreme Court precedent that a claim of insufficient instruction of the jury on mitigating factors implicated a “substantial denial of a federal constitutional right.”
Chenault v. Stynchcombe,
Aside from the obvious procedural default, we consider it important to emphasize that Clanton’s depiction of his case as one turning upon an eagerly awaited Supreme Court decision is baseless.
Franklin
presents a question concerning jury instructions as to the effect that mitigating evidence has under the Texas capital punishment statute.
See
B.
Clanton’s next claim presents a similar situation. He contends that the Virginia statutory aggravating circumstances that were found to be present in his case, “vile
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ness” and “future dangerousness,” are unconstitutionally vague, speculative, and arbitrary, and fail adequately to objectify the sentencing decision. Clanton asserts that this claim, which also was procedurally defaulted in state court, was not available at the time of the prior proceeding, but has now become so due to the grant of certiora-ri in
Maynard v. Cartwright,
— U.S. -,
The novelty required to establish cause under
Smith v. Murray
is again lacking. In upholding the petitioner’s claim in the
Cartwright
case itself, the Tenth Circuit relied heavily on
Godfrey v. Georgia,
What is more, this claim too is an attempt to overstate the relevance of a grant of certiorari. This question presented in
Cartwright
is whether Oklahoma’s “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel” aggravating factor has been interpreted by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals in an unconstitutionality broad manner.
See
C.
The state habeas court refused in the second state collateral proceeding to hear evidence that Clanton sought to introduce concerning his abused childhood. Clan-ton’s petition asserts that the state habeas court’s refusal to hear this evidence constituted a violation of Clanton’s federal constitutional rights.
This contention is groundless. The state court refused to hear the evidence of child abuse on the ground that it was procedurally defaulted and that it failed to satisfy Virginia’s criteria for newly discovered evidence,
Lewis v. Commonwealth,
D.
Clanton’s final claim is a reassertion of the claims previously made in the initial federal petition. These claims cannot form the basis of a meritorious successive petition. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b).
IV.
Our review of the claims presented in Clanton’s petition leaves no doubt that a stay of execution could not properly be entered on the basis of the petition. All aspects of Clanton’s case have been conscientiously reviewed by numerous courts over the past seven years. We are convinced that this latest petition is an illustration of the “danger that a condemned inmate might attempt to use repeated petitions and appeals as a mere delaying tactic.”
Barefoot v. Estelle,
The stay of execution is hereby vacated. The mandate will issue on the filing of this opinion.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
Clanton’s suggestion that he was under no obligation to present the incompetency claim in his first federal petition because it had not yet been exhausted is without merit. A petitioner is not entitled to avoid diligent pursuit of available claims in the expectation that they may be brought through a new round of state and federal petitions, avoiding dismissal of the successive federal petition by stating that the claim was initially unavailable because unexhausted.
Cf. Woodard
v.
Hutchins,
