Kavin Wayne Lincecum, a Texas prisoner under a sentence of death, appeals the *1273 dismissal of his petition for a writ of habe-as corpus. Although Lincecum raised 18 claims in the district court, his appeal involves only three issues: (1) whether the state trial court erred in refusing to give his requested instruction on the lesser included offenses of murder and voluntary manslaughter; (2) whether the district court erred in denying his motion for an evidentiary hearing on the claims that (a) his trial counsel rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance and (b) the Texas death penalty statute is unconstitutional because no rational jury can answer the second special issue relating to future dangerousness; and (3) whether the Texas capital sentencing statute was unconstitutionally applied because the jury had no vehicle through which to consider his mitigating evidence of a troubled childhood and emotional difficulties around the time of the crime. Having carefully considered all three issues, we affirm the denial of habe-as relief.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Lincecum was convicted of capital murder in a Texas court for killing Kathy Ann Coppedge during the course of a kidnapping, robbery and attempted sexual assault. The jury answered the three special issues in the affirmative and sentenced Lincecum to death. The facts are fully presented in the opinion of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirming Linceeum’s conviction on direct appeal,
Lincecum v. State,
On August 11, 1985, Lincecum encountered Kathy Ann Coppedge and her son, Casey, at a parking lot across the street from a church in Brenham. As Kathy and Casey entered Kathy’s car, Lincecum forced his way in and drove off toward the town of Burton. After driving a few miles, he turned off on a gravel road and stopped. He went through Kathy’s purse and took her money. He then told Casey to get in the back seat, and, when Casey asked him not to hurt his mother, Lincecum replied that he would not.
Lincecum ordered Kathy out of the car and told her to take off her clothes. They got back in the car, and Kathy picked up Lincecum’s knife and stabbed him in the left side. Lincecum retrieved the knife, folded it up, and proceeded to choke her. 2 He then bound Casey’s hands with the strap from Kathy’s purse and placed Casey in the trunk. He eventually bound Kathy’s hands and placed her in the trunk as well. He drove the car to another location and abandoned it, taking Kathy’s rings and watch. The evidence showed that the temperature that day exceeded 100 degrees. Kathy and Casey Coppedge were found dead in the trunk of the car later that night.
The evidence showed that Kathy most likely died as a result of strangulation rather than being placed in the trunk, while Casey probably was still alive when placed in the trunk. Aurelio Espinóla, the chief deputy medical examiner for Harris County who testified concerning the post mortem examination, testified that the ligature marks around Kathy’s neck indicated that she probably was strangled for a long period of time. He estimated that she would have lost consciousness after about three minutes, but that the ligature probably was held around her neck for approximately three more minutes.
Two persons testified at trial that they saw a black man drive off from the parking lot in a blue car with a woman, and both *1274 testified that they heard cries for help. There also was testimony from a state forensic serologist that Kathy Coppedge’s dress had male semen stains all over the inside of the skirt part of the dress. Testing disclosed that a person having Lince-cum’s blood type could have deposited the semen on the dress. When Kathy was found, her dress and bra were ripped, and her panties were found beneath her legs.
Lincecum did not offer any evidence at the punishment phase of the trial. During the guilt phase, however, his aunt, Eula Belle Moore, testified that in June of 1985 she discussed Lincecum’s state of mind with Lincecum’s parole officer, Mary Kathryn Hebert. Moore had been concerned that Lincecum was not talking much, and asked Hebert whether she could encourage Lincecum to see a psychiatrist. She told Hebert that she thought Lincecum “was disturbed ... he was down under and I could see he was very quiet. I felt he needed to talk to somebody.” Later, Moore testified that she thought Lincecum “felt that his momma didn’t care for him.” Hebert confirmed the discussions with Moore about Lincecum’s welfare. Reading from her notes, she stated that Moore had told her that Lincecum did not want to talk and that Lincecum’s problems may have stemmed from feeling unloved by his mother.
Lincecum’s conviction and sentence were affirmed on appeal.
Lincecum v. State,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Failure to Instruct on Lesser Included Offenses
At trial, Lincecum requested instructions on the lesser included offenses of murder and voluntary manslaughter. The trial judge refused, instructing the jury only on the offense of capital murder. Lincecum argues that the failure to instruct on the lesser included offenses violated his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
In
Beck v. Alabama,
In federal trials, “a lesser included offense instruction should be given ‘if the evidence would permit a jury rationally to find [a defendant] guilty of the lesser offense and acquit him of the greater.’ ”
Hopper,
1. Murder
Lincecum was convicted for the offense described in section (a)(2) of the Texas capital murder statute. The statute, Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 19.03, provides in relevant part:
§ 19.03 Capital Murder
(a) a person commits an offense if he commits murder as defined under Section 19.02(a)(1) of this code and:
(2) the person intentionally commits the murder in the course of committing or attempting to commit kidnapping, burglary, robbery, aggravated sexual assault, or arson_
The murder statute in Texas, Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02, provides in relevant part:
§ 19.02 Murder
(a) A person commits an offense if he:
(1) intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual;
(2) intends to cause serious bodily injury and commits an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes the death of an individual; or
(3) commits or attempts to commit a felony, other than voluntary or involuntary manslaughter, and in the course of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt, or in immediate flight from the commission or attempt, he commits or attempts to commit an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes the death of an individual.
The district court, in rejecting the claim that a murder instruction should have been given, held that a jury could not rationally have convicted Lincecum of murder because the only evidence that Lincecum was at the scene placed him there in the course of the commission of a robbery, kidnapping or aggravated sexual assault. Lincecum argues that this analysis is erroneous in that it assumes that under Texas law the jury could not have found him guilty of a murder committed in the course of one of the three underlying offenses yet acquitted him of capital murder. A jury rationally could come to this conclusion, he points out, because capital murder under § 19.-03(a)(2), in addition to requiring proof that the murder was caused while in the course of committing one of the underlying offenses, requires proof that the defendant acted knowingly and intentionally in causing the victim’s death. Because the crimes described in §§ 19.02(a)(2) and (3) do not require an intent to kill, he could have been convicted of one of the lesser included offenses even if the same evidence which *1276 placed him at the scene of the murder (chiefly, his own confession) showed that he had committed a robbery, kidnapping or aggravated sexual assault.
Lincecum is correct that the intent element of capital murder makes it possible for him to have been acquitted of that crime yet convicted of murder. Not every death which is caused in connection with a robbery, kidnapping or aggravated sexual assault leads to a conviction for capital murder; a person can be convicted of the lesser included offense of murder if he caused the death in connection with one of these offenses with intent only to cause serious bodily injury (§ 19.02(a)(2)) or if his only intent was to commit the underlying offense. (§ 19.02(a)(3)). 4 The question whether an instruction on murder was warranted therefore depends on whether a rational jury could have found that Lincecum did not intend to kill Kathy Coppedge.
On the evidence in this case, we hold that such a jury finding would have exceeded the bounds of rationality, for the evidence of Lincecum’s intent to kill was simply overwhelming. Lincecum attempts to demonstrate otherwise by pointing to that part of his confession in which he allegedly told Casey Coppedge that he would not hurt Kathy Coppedge. This statement, viewed in light of Lincecum’s actions shortly after making it, does not evince a lack of intent to kill Kathy Coppedge, but rather an intent to mollify or reassure Casey. It is entirely inconsistent with the brutal treatment of Kathy that followed. By Lince-cum’s own admission, the statement was made before he ordered Kathy Coppedge out of the car, before she stabbed him with his knife, before he choked her and before he locked her in the trunk. Given the evidence that Lincecum continued choking Kathy for approximately three minutes after she lost consciousness, no rational juror could have taken his statement to Casey as demonstrating a lack of an intent to kill. Quite the contrary, the significant amount of time he choked Kathy is strong evidence of his intent to kill.
Cf. Fearance v. State,
Even if the jury disbelieved the expert medical testimony that the choking continued after Kathy Coppedge was dead 5 — and therefore proceeded on the assumption that she was still alive when placed in the trunk — Lincecum’s action in locking her in the trunk on a day in which the temperature exceeded 100 degrees clearly reveals an intent to kill. Lincecum focuses exclusively on the statement he allegedly made to Casey, but the rest of his statement, as well as the physical evidence, can lead only to the conclusion that he intended to kill Kathy Coppedge.
2. Voluntary Manslaughter
Lincecum also was not entitled to an instruction on voluntary manslaughter. The voluntary manslaughter statute in Texas, Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 19.04, provides in relevant part:
§ 19.04 Voluntary Manslaughter
(a) A person commits an offense if he causes the death of an individual under circumstances that would constitute murder under Section 19.02 of this code, except that he caused the death under the immediate influence of sudden passion arising from an adequate cause.
Sudden passion is defined as “passion directly caused by and arising out of provocation by the individual killed or another acting with the person killed which passion arises at the time of the offense and is not solely the result of former provocation.” Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 19.04(b). Adequate cause is defined as “cause that would commonly produce a degree of anger, rage, resentment, or terror in a person of ordi *1277 nary temper, sufficient to render the mind incapable of cool reflection.” Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 19.04(c). Lincecum contends that the evidence from his confession that he strangled Kathy Coppedge only after she stabbed him with his knife could lead a rational jury to find that he acted with sudden passion arising from adequate cause.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals observed that Kathy Coppedge stabbed Lincecum in self defense and in the defense of her son. Under these circumstances, the court held, Lincécum, even if assumed to be acting under sudden passion, could not claim that he acted with adequate cause.
Lincecum,
According to Lincecum’s own confession, he retrieved the knife from Kathy Cop-pedge, folded it up, and then proceeded to strangle her and place her in the trunk, all while committing one of the underlying offenses of § 19.03. Texas law plainly does not consider adequate cause to arise under these circumstances. Thus, because the jury was precluded as a matter of state law from finding that Lincecum committed voluntary manslaughter, the trial judge’s failure to instruct the jury on this offense was not constitutional error. 6
B. Refusal to Grant Evidentiary Hearing
Lincecum next argues that the district court erred in denying, without holding an evidentiary hearing, his claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that the inability of a jury rationally to determine the future dangerousness of convicted murderers renders unconstitutional the Texas capital sentencing statute.
1. The Ineffective Assistance Claim
In the district court, Lincecum alleged thirteen separate ways in which his ap
*1278
pointed trial counsel, Robert J. Kuhn, provided ineffective assistance. The district court found that all the allegations were too conclusory to raise an ineffectiveness claim under
Strickland v. Washington,
To succeed on an ineffectiveness claim, Lincecum must show (1) that counsel’s performance was deficient in that it fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) that the deficiency actually prejudiced the defense.
Strickland,
In the state collateral proceedings, Lince-cum raised substantially the same allegations of ineffectiveness in Kuhn’s failure to investigate and present mitigating evidence as he raised in the district court. He did not, however, offer any affidavits or other evidence which would indicate that other persons were in fact willing to testify on his behalf had they been contacted, nor did he reveal what the likely substance of the undiscovered mitigating evidence would have been. The court ordered Kuhn to respond to all of Lincecum’s allegations of ineffective assistance. ’ Kuhn did so in a detailed affidavit, explaining that he pursued all potential avenues of mitigating evidence but decided that only Lincecum’s aunt and parole officer could be of assistance. He further stated that Lincecum’s former girlfriend, Rita Mathis, had turned out to be antagonistic toward Lincecum and that, despite attempts to locate additional character witnesses, he was aware of no one else who could have testified in Lincecum’s behalf and of no other evidence that could have helped. He also pointed out that he decided to abandon any defense based on a mental defect after the psychologist who interviewed Lincecum told Kuhn that she did not believe Lincecum suffered from any such defect. Finding the assertions in Kuhn’s affidavit to be true, the state court concluded that Lincecum had received the reasonably effective assistance of counsel demanded by the Constitution with respect to the presentation of mitigating evidence. 7
A federal evidentiary hearing on a constitutional claim must be held only where the state court has not provided a hearing, where the petitioner alleges facts which, if proved, would entitle him to relief, and where the record reveals a genuine factual dispute.
Johnson v. Estelle,
*1279
L.Ed.2d 722 (1981);
King v. Collins,
We disagree with Lincecum’s characterization of the scope of the state court finding. Immediately before the language quoted above, the court stated that “[t]he facts related in the affidavit of Robert J. Kuhn filed in this cause pursuant to court order are true, and present an accurate recitation of defense counsel’s pretrial and trial preparation and strategy.” Kuhn’s affidavit describes not only the mitigating evidence he knew about, but also his inability to locate additional witnesses who could have been beneficial to Lincecum. The state court’s finding is not limited to Kuhn’s actions with respect to mitigating evidence he already knew about, but encompasses a conclusion about all of Kuhn’s actions in investigating the available mitigating evidence. It is, therefore, a finding with respect to the facts relevant to Lince-cum’s claim.
Lincecum also cannot detract from the presumption of correctness by arguing that the state court’s decision to rely solely on Kuhn’s affidavit deprived him of a full and fair hearing. State courts do not necessarily have to hold live evidentiary hearings for the presumption to attach, but may, in appropriate circumstances, resolve factual disputes on the basis of written affidavits.
May v. Collins,
The legal conclusion of the state court and the district court that Lincecum was not deprived of effective assistance of counsel was correct. This is not a case like
Wilson v. Butler,
Lincecum asserts that various family members, including his mother (Louisa Gentry), his grandmother, his younger brothers and his uncle, would have testified regarding his disadvantaged background and diminished mental capacity. He also mentions several persons in the Fort Worth area, including his former girlfriend Sheila Harris, who could have provided similar testimony. Finally, he refers to records of institutions in which he resided which would show limited intelligence, borderline to mild mental retardation and other unspecified mitigating factors. He faults Kuhn for failing to provide this information both to the court-appointed psychologist who evaluated him and to the jury. The only indication that any of his friends and relatives could have provided mitigating evidence, however, comes from the affidavits of Gentry and Christopher Kallaher, Lince-cum’s counsel in the federal habeas proceeding. Neither requires an evidentiary hearing. Even assuming that Kuhn’s failure to contact Gentry was unreasonable, she avers in her affidavit that she would have testified to the fact that she left Lincecum with Eula Belle Moore (her sister) and that Lincecum may have harbored some resentment for this. This is precisely the same testimony Eula Belle Moore gave at trial. Thus, Gentry’s testimony would merely have been duplicative and could not have had an effect on the jury’s decision to assess the death penalty.
See Lavernia v. Lynaugh,
As for Kallaher’s affidavit, we are loathe to accept the self-serving statements of habeas counsel as evidence that other persons were willing and able to testify on Lincecum’s behalf. None of these persons has submitted an affidavit indicating that he or she would have aided Lincecum had he or she been asked, so we are left simply with Lincecum’s assertions that unspecified mitigating evidence existed. Absent any concrete indication of the substance of the mitigating evidence his friends and family would have provided, the law is clear that an evidentiary hearing is not called for.
Byrne v. Butler,
As for the evidence of mental impairment, there is nothing in the record to demonstrate that Kuhn failed to present Lincecum’s records to the psychologist aside from the self-serving affidavit of Lincecum’s habeas counsel. There is no affidavit from the psychologist indicating what was presented or suggesting that the records to which Lincecum refers would have altered her evaluation. The argument that Kuhn was ineffective for failing to present the records as mitigating evidence to the jury, apart from the alleged failure to present them to the psychologist, was never argued to the district court and
*1281
therefore will not be considered on appeal.
Alexander v. McCotter,
2. Unconstitutionality of the Texas Death Penalty Statute
Lincecum also was denied an evidentiary hearing on his claim that the inability of juries accurately to predict future dangerousness renders the Texas capital sentencing statute unconstitutional. At the time of Lincecum’s trial, the Texas capital sentencing statute required the jury, after finding a defendant guilty of capital murder, to answer up to three “special issues” to determine whether the punishment should be death or life imprisonment. Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 37.-071. 9 First, the jury must decide whether the defendant acted deliberately. Id. art. 37.071(b)(1). Next, the jury must determine whether there is a probability that the defendant would commit acts of violence in the future that would constitute a continuing threat to society. Id. art. 37.071(b)(2). In appropriate cases, including this one, the jury may be asked to determine whether the conduct of the defendant was unreasonable in response to provocation by the victim. Id. art. 37.071(b)(3). If the jury answers “yes” to all three special issues, punishment is assessed at death. Lincecum submitted research performed by Professors James Marquart, Sheldon Ekland-Olson and Jonathan Sorensen of Sam Houston State University in which it was concluded that defendants sentenced to death are no more likely to commit violent acts in the future than defendants sentenced to life imprisonment and released into the general prison population. 10 Lincecum contends that a hearing is necessary to resolve the factual questions raised by this research before a court can review his constitutional claim. We disagree.
The Supreme Court has never intimated that the factual correctness of the jury’s prediction on the issue of future dangerousness, either in a particular case or over time, bears upon the constitutionality of the Texas capital sentencing statute. In
Jurek v. Texas,
*1282
Later decisions which emphasize the centrality of the defendant’s ability to present all relevant mitigating evidence,
e.g., Eddings v. Oklahoma,
C. Instruction on Mitigating Evidence
Relying on the principle of
Penry v. Lynaugh,
Initially, we note that Lincecum’s trial counsel’s failure to request an instruction on the uses the jury may make of mitigating evidence does not operate as a state procedural bar which would preclude federal review. Under Texas law, a
Penry
claim is preserved even if no instruction on mitigating evidence is requested or no objection is made to the instructions given at trial.
Selvage v. Collins,
Lincecum’s mitigating evidence consisted primarily of the testimony (during the guilt-innocence phase) of his aunt, Eula Belle Moore. She testified that she had raised Lincecum until the age of four because his mother was still in high school when he was born. At four, Lincecum moved back with his mother in Fort Worth. She further testified that in June 1985, two months before Kathy Coppedge was murdered, she noticed that Lincecum “was dis *1283 turbed,” “was down under,” and “was very quiet.” She “felt he needed to talk to somebody,” so she recommended to Lince-cum’s parole officer, Mary Kathryn Hebert, that Lincecum obtain psychiatric counseling. Moore also testified that she told Hebert that she thought Lincecum always felt his mother did not care for him. Hebert corroborated the substance of these discussions with Moore.
As noted earlier, the Supreme Court in
Jurek
upheld the constitutionality of Texas’ decision to have the jury answer two or three specific questions in order to determine whether a death sentence is warranted. The Court was satisfied that the second special issue, as construed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, satisfied the Eighth Amendment’s requirement that the jury be permitted to consider any and all mitigating evidence which might counsel against a death sentence.
See Jurek,
The following year, however, the Court held in
Penry
that the special issues gave the jury no vehicle to express the view that Penry’s evidence of organic brain damage, mental retardation and a troubled childhood reduced his culpability for the crime.
See Penry,
Our recent en banc opinion in
Graham v. Collins,
*1284 Lincecum contends that Graham sharpens the contrast between what is and is not “Penry -type” evidence. We agree, but do not believe that the conclusion necessarily follows that simply because Lincecum’s mitigating evidence did not consist of the transitory factor of youth, it falls in the category of Penry -type evidence. The evidence Lincecum has emphasized most strenuously throughout these proceedings is that of a troubled childhood. Yet close examination of Moore’s testimony at trial reveals that she merely stated that Lince-cum had been left to live with her for the first four years of his life because his mother was very young when he was born. Viewing this testimony in the most favorable light possible, this hardly demonstrates the kind of troubled childhood marked by savage abuse that was present in Penry. As with the evidence that Graham’s mother had a nervous condition, there is simply no showing that living with his aunt produced such a turbulent and unsteady family situation that Lincecum suffered from emotional problems which would reduce his moral culpability for his crime. Moore gave no details about Lince-cum’s childhood apart from his place of residence for the first four years of his life, and none appear in the record. The only indication that this had a lasting emotional effect on Lincecum comes from Moore’s opinion that Lincecum thought his mother did not care for him. This is hardly evidence of “a disturbed childhood and adolescence which left him bitter and resentful,” as Lincecum claims.
Moore’s testimony that in June 1985 Lincecum seemed “disturbed,” was “quiet,” and seemed like he needed to talk to someone likewise does not fall within the category of
Penry
evidence necessitating a special instruction. In
Graham,
we characterized “being under some particular emotional burden at the time [of the crime]” as similar to youth in that its transitory nature can be taken into account in answering the second special issue.
On the other hand, to the extent Moore’s testimony showed that Lincecum had emotional difficulties the significance of which transcended the special issues, our opinion in
Graham
leads to the conclusion that the evidence falls short of that proffered in
Penry.
In
Graham,
we emphasized the importance of the fact that Penry’s evidence showed he was burdened, through no fault of his own, with “uniquely severe permanent handicaps” including mental retardation, organic brain damage, and childhood abuse.
III. CONCLUSION
For all the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of habeas relief is AFFIRMED, and the stay of execution previously entered by this court is VACATED.
Notes
. The confession was introduced at trial. Lince-cum did not testify in his own behalf.
. Lincecum stated in his confession that he choked her with her panty hose, but Aurelio Espinóla, the chief deputy medical examiner for Harris County who testified regarding the post mortem examination conducted on Kathy Cop-pedge, disputed that panty hose was the ligature used to strangle her. He contended that it was more likely that Lincecum used the strap from her purse or a length of twine found underneath the bodies.
. The record of the state habeas proceedings shows, and the State agrees, that Lincecum exhausted the claims presented in his federal petition in state court.
. For example, felony murder under § 19.-02(a)(3) requires only the intent to commit the underlying offense.
Livingston
v.
State,
. A rational jury might have disbelieved this testimony, as it contradicted Lincecum’s statement.
. As in
Hill V. Black,
. The state court did not address the prejudice prong of Strickland.
. Lincecum has not suggested that counsel was unable to develop the record In state court due to time constraints imposed by the court, as in
Streetman v. Lynaugh,
. The statute has since been amended, but the new procedures apply only to trials held after September 1, 1991. For discussion, see
Graham v. Collins,
. The study compared life-sentenced inmates with defendants whose death sentences were commuted following
Furman v. Georgia,
.The Court’s later holding in
Penry
v.
Lynaugh,
. Despite the fact that Lincecum's conviction became final before
Penry,
the rule of
Penry
may be applied retroactively because it does not enunciate a "new" rule for purposes of
Teague v. Lane,
