Herbert Welcome was convicted of two counts of first degree murder in the shooting deaths of Dorothy Guillory and Wallace Maturin. Welcome received a death sentence for the slaying of Guillory and life imprisonment for killing Maturin. He exhausted his state post-conviction remedies and then filed a petition for writ of habeas
*674
corpus in the district court. The district court initially stayed Welcome’s execution but subsequently denied the petition and dissolved the stay. Welcome filed an application for a certificate of probable cause with this court which was granted on August 28, 1985. The matter has been held since that time pending a decision by the United States Supreme Court in
Grigsby v. Mabry,
I
The Supreme Court of Louisiana de-. scribed the facts of the killings thus:
On August 21, 1981, defendant Herbert Welcome shot and killed his aunt, Dorothy Guillory, and her paramour, Wallace Maturin, outside the house in which defendant resided with his mother.
According to the testimony of eyewitnesses, as the victims, Guillory and Maturin, were visiting on the front porch of the house, Welcome quarrelled with Maturin about the ownership of a pocketknife. The argument developed into a scuffle between Welcome and Maturin in front • of the house. Dorothy Guillory entered the struggle by striking Welcome several times on the head with her purse.
A hand gun Welcome was carrying fell to the ground. Guillory shouted for Ma-turin to get the weapon, but Welcome grabbed it first and began shooting. He fired upon Maturin three times at close range and Maturin fled around the corner of the house. Welcome followed and shot him several more times. Maturin died almost immediately from his wounds.
Defendant returned to the front of the house and called out threats to Guillory as he reloaded his weapon. Guillory fled through the house and down a nearby street. Defendant ran Guillory down and shot her several times. She died three days later from multiple gunshot wounds.
State v. Welcome,
Welcome pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. At trial he presented testimony by a psychiatric expert to the effect that although he was not legally insane, he was mentally retarded. An intelligence test indicated that he possessed the mind of an eight-year old.
II
On appeal, Welcome contends that the trial court erred in charging the jury on insanity and intent. The court instructed the jury during the guilt phase of the trial that “any mental disability short of legal insanity, that is, inability to distinguish between right and wrong cannot serve to negate specific intent and reduce the degree of crime.” Welcome argues that since intent was the lone disputed element at trial, this instruction created an irrebuttable presumption on a material element of the offense charged. It not only relieved the State of its constitutional burden of proving each element of the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt but also stripped Welcome of the presumption of innocence and prevented him from presenting his only defense. Welcome contends that the instruction effectively precluded the jury from considering the testimony of his psychiatrists to the effect that his subnormal mentality impaired his ability to formulate the requisite intent, and thus denied him the right to present evidence.
The quoted portion of the charge which explained the legal definition of insanity is a proper statement of Louisiana law,
State v. Andrews,
*675 In reviewing allegations of error in jury instructions, an appellate court must determine whether the charge, considered as a whole, properly enabled the jurors to understand the issues to be tried. There is no merit in this objection when viewed in the context of the overall charge; a fortiori it presents no basis for relief from a federal habeas court. The structure and composition of the charge separated the concepts of insanity and intent. The jury was clearly advised that, if so disposed, it could find Welcome both sane and not guilty of murder in the first degree by concluding that he had not formed the requisite intent.
Ill
Welcome also challenges the Court’s failure to instruct the jury in the penalty phase of the trial that they could consider the evidence of Welcome’s mental defect not only in mitigation of his acts but also with regard to whether any aggravating circumstance was proven. The statutory aggravating circumstance advanced by the State in this case was that Welcome “knowingly created a risk of death or great bodily harm to more than one person.” La.C.Cr.P. art. 905.4(d). Welcome argues that his mental condition was obviously relevant not only to whether he could have formed the intent to kill but also to whether he “knowingly created a risk of death ...” and the jury should have been told that it was free to consider his mental defect in this aspect of the penalty phase of the trial.
The State counters Welcome’s argument with the assertion that the trial court had no obligation to provide such instructions
sua sponte,
and that Welcome failed to make a timely request for such an instruction. The State alternatively urges that the substance of such instructions was given. We hold that Welcome’s failure to request an instruction to the jury on this issue or to object to the lack thereof renders his contention meritless.
Henderson v. Kibbe,
IV
Welcome attacks his conviction on the grounds that the “death qualified” jury that found him guilty did not contain a constitutionally adequate cross-section of the community. During Welcome’s voir dire, the prosecution was allowed to excuse for cause seven prospective jurors with conscientious or religious objections to capital punishment. This procedure accorded with our decision in
Spinkellink v. Wainwright,
In
Lockhart v. McRee,
— U.S.-,
In addition, the Court went on to explain that even if they did feel compelled to apply the fair cross-section requirement to petit juries, they would not consider a death qualified jury to be a violation of the Sixth Amendment right to a jury comprised of a fair cross-section of the community. “The essence of a ‘fair cross-section’ claim is the systematic exclusion of ‘a “distinctive” group in the community.’ ”
Id.
citing
Duren v. Missouri,
V
Welcome contends that his conviction of first degree murder is not supported by the evidence. For Welcome to be convicted of first degree murder in Louisiana under the facts of this case, the prosecution was required to prove that he had “a specific intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm upon more than one person.” La. R.S. 14.30(A)(3). He asserts that his actions in separately pursuing and killing Maturin and Guillory do not fulfill the element. Welcome asserts Louisiana requires that to meet this requirement the accused intend by a single act to kill or inflict great bodily harm on more than one person. He insists that no rational trier of fact could have found that the elements of the offense were proved beyond a reasonable doubt and thus his conviction cannot stand.
Welcome’s theory might have carried more weight before the Louisiana Supreme Court decided
State v. Williams,
The Louisiana Supreme Court clarified the statutory language, however, in Williams when it decided that the aggravating circumstance set out in LSA.C.Cr.P. art. 905.4(d) 2 and the definition of first degree murder contained in La.R.S. 14:30(A)(3) 3 “should be construed similarly, despite the difference in statutory language.” Id. at 726. The court concluded that both statutes were intended to proscribe those murders
in which the murderers specifically intended to kill more than one person and actually caused the death of one person and the risk of death or great bodily harm to at least one other person, all by a single act or by a series of acts in a single consecutive course of conduct.
Id. (emphasis added) Welcome’s argument is foreclosed by Williams.
VI
Welcome contends that the statutory aggravating circumstance upon which the State relied in the penalty phase of his trial — that “the offender knowingly created a risk of death of great bodily harm to more than one person” — is unconstitutionally vague in that it fails to give notice of what behavior is proscribed. Welcome supports this attack with the same arguments he advanced in support of his previous argument. This challenge too must fail because, as Welcome’s brief concedes, the Louisiana Supreme Court corrected any possible ambiguities in its prior interpretations of this statute in
State v. Williams,
VII
Welcome also claims that the aggravating circumstance relied on to justify the imposition of the death penalty duplicates one of the elements of the crime of which he was convicted: first degree murder. Welcome asserts that this allows a jury which had already convicted him of that crime to use part of their guilt determination to find the identical aggravating circumstance “as a matter of course” — just as the prosecutor urged them to do. This, he
*677
asserts, impermissibly heightens the danger that the death penalty will be wantonly or arbitrarily imposed contrary to
Zant v. Stephens,
Jurek v. Texas,
Louisiana’s inclusion as an element of the crime of first degree murder of the aggravating circumstance of committing multiple murders in a single consecutive course of conduct serves to cull out of the class of all murders, a small group which the State makes eligible for the death penalty. But finding that circumstance present in the course of determining guilt does not fix punishment. It only serves to permissibly advance the sentencing jury to the stage of weighing mitigating as well as aggravating circumstances in order to make an individualized determination of life or death based on the character of the individual and the circumstances of the crime.
Zant v. Stephens,
An analagous argument was rejected by this court in
Gray v. Lucas,
Welcome’s charge that because Louisiana statutory scheme duplicates an aggravating circumstance in the underlying crime, it unconstitutionally fails to narrow the class of persons qualifying for the death sentence is sophistical. By classifying first degree murder as including certain aggravating circumstances the state has narrowed the class of those subject to the death penalty as effectively as if it allowed a broader class to be convicted but then limited those within the broader class who could be sentenced to death to only persons whose crimes are accompanied by specific aggravating circumstances.
VIII
Welcome asserts that the jury based its imposition of the death penalty on the finding of an aggravating circumstance (murder committed in an especially heinous, atrocious or cruel manner) that was unconstitutionally vague and wholly unsupported by the evidence. This argument begins by noting the fact that the State *678 argued and presented evidence on only one aggravating circumstance — that the offender “knowingly created the risk of death or great bodily harm to more than one person,” yet the trial court read, without explanation, the entire statutory list of aggravating and mitigating circumstances to the jury. As to the only conviction for which the death penalty was imposed — the murder of Guillory — the jury found both that Welcome “knowingly created the risk of death or great bodily harm to more than one person” and that the killing was “committed in an especially heinous, atrocious or cruel manner.”
Where the jury finds at least one aggravating circumstance that was valid and supported by the evidence, this Court has ruled that the refusal to review the validity of additional aggravating circumstances found by the jury is permissible as long as the jury’s finding of arguable invalid aggravating circumstances “affected none of petitioner’s substantial rights.”
Williams v. Maggio,
Welcome asserts that the jury’s unwillingness to impose the death penalty for the murder of Maturin demonstrates that they imposed the death penalty for his killing of Guillory based solely upon a finding of heinousness. Under
State v. Culberth,
There is an additional safeguard against the arbitrary imposition of the death penalty in this case. The Louisiana Supreme Court engaged in an elaborate capital sentence review. The procedure as described in
State v. Welcome,
Every sentence of death imposed in this state is reviewed by this court to determine if it is constitutionally excessive. In making this examination, this court determines whether the sentence was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice or any other arbitrary factors, whether the evidence supports the jury’s finding of a statutory aggravating circumstance, and whether the sentence is disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant. Id. at 1244.
The court found it reasonable for the jury to conclude that Welcome contemplated and caused the deaths of the two victims in a single consecutive course of conduct. In addition, the court made a
*679
detailed proportionality analysis which not only evaluated Welcome’s background but all other first degree murder prosecutions in the district of the crime. On reconsideration after
Pulley v. Hams,
IX
Welcome finally contends that his death sentence should be set aside because portions of the prosecutor’s closing argument were improper. Instead of emphasizing that the jury’s duty is to decide whether death is the appropriate punishment in the specific case before them, Welcome alleges that the prosecutor relied on society’s general interest in deterrence of crime, which violated Welcome’s constitutional right to an individualized decision by the jury.
“In order for a defendant to establish that the prosecutor’s remarks rendered his or her trial fundamentally unfair, he or she ‘must demonstrate either persistent and pronounced misconduct or that the evidence was so insubstantial that (in probability) but for the remarks no conviction would have occurred.’ ”
Willie v. Maggio,
While the prosecutor’s closing argument touched on the prospect of general deterrence, it also emphasized Welcome’s actions and the jury’s responsibility to make a sentencing determination that applied the death penalty to Welcome’s individual case.
Woodson v. North Carolina,
The judgment of the district court denying the writ of habeas corpus and dissolving the stay of execution is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Three circuits have upheld the action of state courts which follow the
M'Naughten
rule in excluding the proffer of psychiatric testimony to show diminished intent.
Wahrlich v. Arizona,
. "the offender knowingly created a risk of death or great bodily harm to more than one person.”
. "when the offender has a specific intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm upon more than one person____”
. The proof showed that after killing Guillory’s paramour, Maturin, in Guillory’s immediate presence and hearing, Welcome shouted threats to her as he reloaded his weapon. Welcome then chased Guillory through the house and down a nearby street before proceeding to shoot her five times as she begged for mercy. The shots were so placed that she lived for three days.
