Glеnnon Sweet, a prisoner on Missouri’s death row, appeals from the judgment of the District Court 1 denying his petition for habeas corpus. We affirm.
I.
On February 8, 1987, Sweet sped past Trooper Russell Harper of the Missouri State Highway Patrol on a highway outside of Springfield, Missouri. Harper turned on his signal lights and gave chase, following Sweet as he turned onto a side road. After Sweet stopped and opened the door of his truck, Harper slowly drove up behind him. Sweet jumped out of the truck, aimed his semi-automatic assault rifle at the trooper’s car, and fired several bursts. Twenty-nine bullets hit Harper’s vehicle; one struck Harper in the head, killing him. Harper never even unbuttoned the holster flap covering his service revolver.
Sweet was arrested and charged with first-degree murder. After a change of venue to Clay County, he was tried and found guilty. Finding as aggravating circumstances that the murder was committed against a peace officer engaged in his official duties and that it was committed for the purpose of avoiding a lawful arrest, the jury on December 12, 1987 fixed the punishment at death. Following the denial of his motion for a new trial, on January 20,1988, Sweet was sentenced to death. Sweet took a timely direct appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court and also, pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule 29.15, 2 *1148 filed a pro se post-conviction motion in Clay County Circuit Court, raising a number of constitutional claims. The motion court appointed counsel for Sweet. More than four months after counsel was appointed, Sweet amended his 29.15 motion to assert additional claims. This amended petition was not timely, however, because Sweet was required to file any amendment no later than sixty days after the appointment of counsel. See Mo. Sup.Ct. R. 29.15(f). The motion court denied Sweet’s 29.15 motion in September 1989.
In the consolidated appeal, the Missouri Supreme Court held that the claims raised for the first time in Sweet’s amended 29.15 motion were not properly raised and declined to consider them.
See State v. Sweet,
Days later, Sweet filed this habeas corpus action in federal district court. Counsel was appointed, and Sweet amended his petition several times. The State moved to dismiss, and the District Court ultimately denied relief and dismissed the action on November 22, 1995. Sweet then filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e). The court denied Sweet’s motion on May 9, 1996, and Sweet appealed to this Court. 4 We granted Sweet a certificate of appealability pursuant to § 102 of the then-newly-enacted Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (codified at 28 U.S.C.A. § 2253 (West Supp.1997)). Following a dispute about the scope of the certificate of appealability, the appeal proceeded. 5
In this appeal, Sweet raises nineteen claims, which we summarize under twelve *1149 headings as follows: (1) ineffective assistance of trial counsel during the guilt phase of the trial in (a) failing to investigate certain witnesses and evidence, (b) failing to request a curative instruction or a mistrial during the prosecution’s closing argument, (c) failing to investigate and present evidence in support of his motion to suppress evidence, and (d) allegedly being addicted to cocaine during the trial; (2) ineffective assistance of trial counsel during the penalty phase of the trial in (a) failing to object appropriately to the prosecutor’s cross-examination of one of Sweet’s witnesses, (b) failing to investigate and present certain mitigating evidence, and (c) failing to make an offer of proof to preserve for appeal certain mitigating testimony; (3) misconduct of the prosecutor in (a) introducing a prior bad act during the guilt phase, (b) failing to provide proper notice of the witnesses and evidence to be introduced during the penalty phase, and (c) using Sweet’s arrest record to cross-examine one of Sweet’s witnesses during the penalty phase; (4) improper exclusion of a juror; (5) improper exclusion of exculpatory evidence during Sweet’s cross-examination of one of the prosecution’s witnesses; (6) unlawful search and seizure of Sweet’s property; (7) improper jury instruction defining reasonable doubt; (8) exclusion of certain mitigating evidence during the penalty phase; (9) improper admission of evidence of a prior bad act during the guilt phase; (10) improper jury instruction on mitigating circumstances during the penalty phase; (11) failure of the Missouri Supreme Court to conduct a meaningful proportionality review; and (12) ineffective assistance of appellate and post-conviction counsel.
II.
We begin by discussing those of Sweet’s claims that are not properly before us for one reason or another.
A.
As a rule, we do not considеr claims that have not been presented to the District Court.
See Hornbuckle v. Groose,
Sweet’s sixth claim is also improper for another reason. A Fourth Amendment claim of an unconstitutional search or seizure is not cognizable in a habeas corpus action unless the state has not “provided an opportunity for full and fair litigation” of the claim.
Stone v. Powell,
B.
Next we discuss those of Sweet’s claims that are proeedurally defaulted. Sweet defaulted two of his claims by failing to present them to the Missouri courts at any stage of his direct appeal or his post-convietion proceedings.
See Nave v. Delo,
Still other claims are barred because they were first raised in state court in Sweet’s untimely amended 29.15 motion, as the Missouri Supreme Court held.
See Sweet,
One of these ineffective-assistance claims requires further discussion. Although it was not raised in a timely 29.15 motion, the Missouri Supreme Court considered one issue on the merits: whether trial counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate or call Freddie Hensley as a witness (part of Sweet’s claim # la).
See id.
at 616. When a state court decides an issue on the merits despite a possible procedural default, no independent and adequate state ground bars consideration of that claim by a habeas court.
See Harris v. Reed,
Sweet argues that many of these claims are properly before us because he raised them in state court in both a motion to recall the mandate and a state petition for habeas corpus. We disagree. A motion to recall the mandate is a proper means of preserving an issue for habeas review only in very limited circumstancеs, as we explained in
Nave,
Much of Sweet’s argument is aimed at the wrong target. Sweet relies, for example, on
Simpson v. Camper,
C.
Finding these claims defaulted, we turn to Sweet’s argument that he has established cause and prejudice for the defaults.
In all cases in which a state prisoner has defaulted his federal claims in state court pursuant to an independent and adequate state procedural rule, federal habeas review of the claims is barred unless the prisoner can demonstrate cause for thе default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law, or demonstrate that failure to consider the claims will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.
Coleman,
As cause for failing to raise his claims properly in state court, Sweet argues that he received ineffective assistance of post-conviction counsel.
8
A defendant, however, has no constitutional right to effective assistance of post-conviction counsel.
See Coleman,
Sweet also claims that a fundamental miscarriage of justice will result if we do not review his defaulted claims on the merits.
*1152
He does not claim that he is actually innocent of the murder for which he was convicted; he merely repeats the claimed constitutional errors in his trial and pleads for justice.
9
Sweet’s argument falls far short of the showing of actual innocence that is required to meet the miscarriage-of-justice exception.
See Schlup v. Delo,
We therefore conclude that Sweet has shown no reason why we may consider his defaulted claims, and we do not discuss them further.
III.
We now turn to two claims that the Missouri Supreme Court reviewed for plain error even though Sweet did not preserve them properly for appeal. We have remarked recently that our decisions on plain error review and procedural bar are in apparent disagreement.
See Hornbuckle,
Sweet’s tenth claim is that the jury instruction on mitigating circumstances violated
Mills v. Maryland,
In his direct appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court, Sweet complained that the prosecutor failed to comply with a Missouri statute governing disclosure of witnesses to be called at the penalty phase of
*1153
the trial.
See
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.005 (1986). The court reviewed that claim for plain error and found it wanting.
See Sweet,
IY.
We now consider on the merits the claims Sweet has preserved for our review.
A.
We begin with the claim that Sweet’s trial counsel was ineffective in failing to call Freddie Hensley as a witness (# la). As we have noted above, this claim was apparently defaulted, but the Missouri Supreme Court reviewed it on the merits, clearing the way for habeas review. To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a petitioner “must establish that counsel’s performance was deficient and that he was prejudiced by that deficient performance.”
Preston v. Delo,
*1154
The proceedings in state court indicate that Hensley contacted Sweet’s counsel with information that she had seen a man who resembled Sweet driving a truck similar to Sweet’s in the Springfield area shortly after the shooting. Counsel drove by the address Hensley gave him, noticed that the truck’s door was a different color from the doors of Sweet’s truck, and decided not to put Hensley on the witness stand.
See Sweet,
B.
Next we address Sweet’s claim of prosecutorial misconduct based on the prosecutor’s introduction of evidence of a prior bad act (#3a). During the guilt phase of the trial, the prosecutor elicited from witness Donald Bills evidence that at the time of the murder, Sweet was under an outstanding Texas warrant arising out of an incident involving cocaine аnd a gun. The purpose of this evidence, according to the prosecutor, was to show that Sweet’s motive for killing Harper was to avoid being arrested and returned to Texas. The Missouri Supreme Court held that the evidence was admissible on the issue of motive.
See Sweet,
The problem with Sweet’s claim is that he cannot show that the prosecutor knew that this evidence was irrelevant and inflammatory. In fact, the Missouri Supreme Court concluded just the opposite: the evidence was relevant and admissible.
See Sweet,
C.
Sweet next argues that the prosecutor was guilty of misconduct in cross-examining a witness during the penalty phase (claim # 3c). Sweet presented Judy Meyer during the penalty phase to testify about Sweet’s good character. On cross- examination, the prosecutor sought to test Meyer’s knowledge
*1155
of Sweet’s reputation by asking her whether shе was aware that Sweet had been arrested on a number of charges on different occasions.
See generally Michelson v. United States,
The District Court concluded that Sweet’s claim was without merit. We might well agree if we were to reach the merits, but we conclude that Sweet is not entitled to relief under the doctrine of
Teague v. Lane,
Our
Teague
inquiry has three steps.
See O’Dell v. Netherlands
— U.S. -, -,
Only a new rule, therefore, would help Sweet. The third step of our inquiry is whether this new rule “nonetheless falls within one of the two narrow exceptions to the
Teague
doctrine.”
O’Dell
, — U.S. at -,
D.
Sweet’s fourth claim is that venireperson Charlene Gill was struck improperly for cause. Because Gill had expressed doubts about the death penalty but had indicated that her feelings about the death penalty would not prevent or substantially impair her from performing the duties of a juror, Sweet claims, her exclusion violated his Sixth Amendment rights under
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
The transcript of voir dire reveals that Gill was unsure how she felt about capital punishment, but she eventually stated that she could votе for the death penalty. Later, the court inquired about events in Gill’s personal life, and Gill indicated that her son was about to have a birthday and that her husband, who was in night school, would be unable to be with her son. She said that she would be worried about her son, but she later stated that she would be able to decide the case fairly and impartially nevertheless. The prosecutor moved to strike Gill for cause, and the court denied that motion. The trial judge later moved Gill to the back of the panel on his own motion, however, citing his regular policy of handling venirepersons with problems in their personal lives in cases in which there are sufficient venirepersons without such problems to fill a jury panel.
The Missouri Supreme Court rejected Sweet’s constitutional argument because “Gill was not actually removed from the venire panel.”
Sweet,
Nevertheless, the trial judge stated that he was moving Gill not because of her scruples about the death penalty, but because of issues in her personal life. Sweet has given us no reason to disregard the court’s stated reason for its action and to conclude instead that the court was motivated by Gill’s position on capital punishment. Neither the invocation of the Sixth Amendment by Sweet’s counsel nor the court’s inquiry of the prosecutor whether, in light of the constitutional objection, he still wanted Gill excluded suffices to alter the nature of the court’s action; in fact, immediately after this exchange, the judge reaffirmed that he was adhering to his policy. We are unable to conclude that the trial court’s action had anything to do with issues of capital punishment; instead, we believe that the court’s policy was a nеutral, humanitarian method of enabling venirepersons to escape jury duty when events in their personal lives directed their attention elsewhere. Whether the trial court’s policy comported with state law on strikes for cause is not an issue for our consideration.
See McGuire,
To the extent that Sweet is suggesting that some sort of pretext analysis should apply to facially constitutional juror strikes or that Witherspoon’s limitation on strikes “for cause” applies to strikes for any sort of cause, rather than merely to strikes based on the venireperson’s feelings about capital punishment, any such argument is foreclosed by the Teague principles we have discussed above. 17 We conclude only that the trial court’s movement of Gill to the back of the venire panel for personal reasons did not violate Sweet’s Sixth Amendment rights.
E.
Sweet next complains that he was not permitted to introduce exculpatory evidence during his cross-examination of Donald Bills during the guilt phase (claim #5). Bills testified on direct examination that on the day of thе murder, Sweet began to repaint his truck, changed its tires, listened to a police scanner continuously, and shaved off his moustache. On cross-examination, Sweet sought to ask Bills whether Sweet had ever denied involvement in the crime. The court sustained the prosecutor’s hearsay objection over Sweet’s argument that the statement was admissible on the issue of state of mind. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed.
See Sweet,
We again reject Sweet’s attempt to reargue an issue of state law, namely admissibility.
See McGuire,
F.
We now turn to Sweet’s argument that the trial court’s exclusion of evidence during the penalty phase violated his Eighth Amendment rights under
Lockett v. Ohio,
Lockett
stands for the proposition that “the State cannot bar relevant mitigating evidence from being presented and considered during the penalty phase of a capital trial.”
Parks,
We have little guidance on what constitutes relevance for
Lockett
purposes, but we know that “the mere declaration that evidence is ‘legally irrelevant’ to mitigation cannot bar the consideratiоn of that evidence if the sentencer could reasonably find that it warrants a sentence less than death.”
McKoy v. North Carolina,
Assuming arguendo that the Eighth Amendment required the trial judge to admit the photographs, their exclusion was harmless error.
See Hitchcock,
G.
Sweet’s elеventh claim is that the Missouri Supreme Court did not conduct a meaningful and proper proportionality review of his death sentence. By “proper,” Sweet apparently means to argue that the state court did not comply with the state statute requiring proportionality review of capital cases.
See
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.035 (1986). We have rejected many arguments by Missouri petitioners that they are entitled to habeas relief because of the Missouri courts’ perceived failure to comply with § 565.035.
See Bannister,
The Eighth Amendment does not require a state appellate court to undertake a proportionality review.
See Pulley v. Harris,
H.
Sweet’s final claim (# 12) is that he received ineffective assistance of appellate and post-conviction counsel. We have held already that Sweet has no constitutional right to effective assistance of post-conviction counsel. The totality of Sweet’s argument regarding his appellate counsel is that “counsel for the consolidated appeal failed to present properly all issues on appeal.” Sweet Br. at 47. Sweet has waived this claim by failing to argue it with any specificity whatsoever.
See Sidebottom v. Delo,
In any event, we have had occasion to review appellate counsel’s work in our examination of the procedural-default issues, and we are satisfied that counsel’s representation was able and thorough. Counsel raised eighteen points of error in more than 150 pages of briefing in the Missouri Supreme Court, and she pursued two of these points in a certiorari petition. Sweet was not entitled to have counsel raise
“every
argument, regardless of merit,”
Evitts v. Lucey,
Y.
Finally, we address Sweet’s argument that the District Court abused its discretion in denying him an evidentiary hearing. Sweet sought a hearing on his claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel and his claim regarding the prosecutor’s use of his arrest record to impeach his character witness. Because the bulk of Sweet’s claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel are procedurally barred, a hearing on those claims would get him nowhere. The same reasoning applies to the issue of Sweet’s arrest record, which is barred by
Teague.
Only the issue of Freddie Hensley and the mystery truck possibly could be affected by further development of the facts. Sweet received a five-day hearing on his 29.15 motion and developed the factual basis of this claim at that time. He is entitled to an evidentiary hearing in federal court only if he can show cause and prejudice for his failure to develop the facts fully in state court.
See Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
VI.
We have considered the additional arguments that may be drawn from Sweet’s briefs, and we have concluded that they are without merit. The judgment of the District Court is affirmed. We thank appointed counsel for their diligent service.
Notes
. The Honorable Joseph E. Stevens, Jr., United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Rule 29.15, which became effective shortly before Sweet was sentenced, provides a post-conviction proceeding for,
inter alia,
claims “that the conviction or sentence imposed violates the constitution and laws of [Missouri] or the constitution of the United States.” Mo. Sup.Ct. R. 29.15(a). At the time Sweet was sentenced, Rule 29.15 required the defendant to file a motion in the sentencing court within thirty days after the transcript was filed in the direct appeal.
See
Mo. Sup.Ct. R. 29.15(b). The direct appeal was then suspended and later consolidated with the appeal from the judgment on the 29.15 motion.
See
Mo. Sup.Ct. R. 29.15(Z). Missouri has since abandoned the consolidated appeal procedure. A
*1148
Rule 29.15 motion is now filed after the disposition of the direct appeal.
See
Mo. Sup.Ct. R. 29.15(b) (effective Jan. 1, 1996);
Sloan v. Bowersox,
. Several months after affirming Sweet's conviction, the Missouri Supreme Court developed a doctrine of "abandonment” to mitigate the harsh consequences of appointed counsel’s failure to comply with the strict deadlines of Rule 29.15.
See Sanders v. State,
. We reject the State’s argument that Sweet appealed only the denial of his Rule 59(e) motion and not the District Court’s earlier denial of habeas relief. The State’s contention is belied by the language of Sweet's notice of appeal ("Sweet appeals ... from the final judgment denying petitioner habeas relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2254 and denying petitioner's motion for relief pursuant to Rule 59(e) ....”) and by common sense. We cannot imagine that a prisoner under a death sentence would abandon his substantive claims and appeal only a procedural motion, and we certainly do not believe that Sweet has done so in this case.
.The State objected to our granting the certificate without specifying the issue or issues as to which Sweet hаd made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.
See 28
U.S.C.A. § 2253(c)(2)-(3) (West Supp.1997). We denied the State’s objection. More recently, our Court has held that § 2253, as amended by the AEDPA, applies to appeals filed after the enactment of the AEDPA and that certificates of appealability must specify the potentially meritorious issues raised by the petitioner.
See Tiedeman v. Benson,
. Although we have held that Sweet’s substantive Fourth Amendment, claim is barred by the doctrine of
Stone v. Powell,
his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel with regard to the search- and-seizure issue is cognizable in a habeas action.
See Kimmelman v. Morrison,
. We also note that the relevant claim in
Simpson
was a claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, a type of claim that may be raised for the first time in a motion to recall the mandate.
See Nave,
. At times, Sweet seems to ignore the issue of cause and argues that the prejudice he suffered from the ineffective assistance of his trial counsel is, by itself, enough to excuse his default. Another way of reading Sweet’s argument is that the ineffective assistance of his trial counsel is cause for his failure to raise his claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. We cannot endorse Sweet's attempt to bootstrap himself into habeas relief, which would have the effect of reducing the "cause” requirement to a nullity. In any event, the argument makes no sense, because it was not trial counsel’s duty to raise the issue of his own ineffectiveness; that was the duty of Sweet and his post-conviction counsel.
See Oxford v. Delo,
. In a pro se filing in this Court, Sweet states that he is claiming actual innocence and requests time and funds to develop his claim. We have held recently that a "bare, conclusory assertion” that a petitioner is actually innocent is insufficient to excuse a procedural default, and we also have rejected the argument that a prisoner is entitled to a hearing to assist him in developing evidence of actual innocence.
Weeks v. Bowersox,
. Sweet's related contention that the instruction informed the jurors that they "may” consider any mitigating factors rather than telling them that they "must” consider such factors was not presented to the District Court. In any event, we have rejected the same argument in other cases.
See Reese,
. Sweet also alleges that the prosecutor improperly refused to disclose the evidence that the State planned to introduce at the penalty phase. This argument was not presented on appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court at all, even as plain error, and we decline to consider it further.
. This reasoning applies equally to several of Sweet’s defaulted claims. For example, Sweet argues that he presented the “substance” of some of his claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel in his timely 29.15 motion and therefore did not default them. In reality, Sweet raised claims based on the same facts as his ineffective-assistance claims, but he raised them under different legal theories. (He also raised some claims based on the same thеories he now argues but different facts.) This is an insufficient method of presenting claims to the state courts under Abdullah, and so we reaffirm our conclusion that these claims were defaulted.
. We note that even if Sweet had surpassed the procedural bar, his claim would founder on retroactivity grounds. The Supreme Court held recently that a similar claim of inadequate notice of penalty-phase evidence could succeed only if the Court established a new constitutional rule.
See Gray,
- U.S. at---,
. The amendments to § 2254(d) enacted by the AEDPA do not apply in this case.
See Lindh v. Murphy,
- U.S. -, -,
. In cases where the petitioner alleges that both the court’s action in admitting the evidence and the prosecutor’s action in presenting the evidence violate due process, we have conflated the two issues and applied the same test, looking to see whether the admission of the evidence was so egregiously improper as to deny the petitioner a fair trial. See Anderson v. Goeke, 44 F.3d 675, 678-79 & n. 2 (8th Cir.1995). In this case, where the trial court's aсtion is no longer an issue, we take Sweet’s claim of misconduct as he presents it to us.
. At times in his argument, Sweet also claims that the prosecutor’s questions were false, inaccurate, or distorted. Sweet presents nothing to indicate that the facts subsumed in the prosecutor’s questions — namely, that Sweet was arrested on particular charges on particular dates — are in any way inaccurate. Before the District Court, Sweet argued only that the questions were misleading because they failed to include the eventual outcomes of the arrests. We therefore limit our inquiry to this issue.
. Sweet argues that
Parker v. Dugger,
. We apply the
Chapman
standard rather than the more deferential standard of
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
