Petitioner Keith Daniel Williams, sentenced to death for committing three murders, appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We *1468 have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253. Although we agree that some of Williams’ claims identify defects in his sentencing, none of these flaws rise to the level of prejudicial or harmful error warranting habeas relief. We therefore affirm.
I
Keith Daniel Williams, Robert Tyson, and three others were out driving on Saturday, September 30, 1978, when their car broke down. Williams and Tyson decided to rob a nearby camper. They forced the couple occupying the vehicle out and, as the couple fled, Williams fired several shots over then-heads into the air.
In part to sell off the contents of the camper, Williams, Tyson and others 1 held a yard sale. On Friday, October 6, Miguel Vargas, Salvadore Vargas and Lourdes Meza came to the sale. Miguel expressed interest in selling his car for $1500. He returned the next day with Meza and agreed to sell the car. One of the members of the group wrote out a check on a checkbook stolen from the camper. Vargas also expressed interest in buying Williams’ Beretta.
After Vargas and Meza left, Williams told Tyson how еasy he thought it would be to “just get rid of them.” A rough plan was formed to go to their place in Merced and retrieve the bad check; Williams intended to kill the three. Williams proceeded to clean his and Tyson’s guns. That night, he sent two of the women in the group out to hustle money or prostitute themselves in order to obtain gas money. When that failed, Williams himself went out Sunday morning and sold a camera, and others in the group cashed more checks from the stolen checkbook. With money for gas, Williams and Tyson then left for the Vargas’ farmhouse. They stopped along the way and had at least two beers.
Upon arrival, Williams and Tyson found Miguel Vargas, Salvadore Vargas, Meza, and three others. They drank and discussed selling Williams’ gun. After the others left, Williams and Tyson retrieved their guns from the car. Williams pulled a gun on Miguel Vargas, but Tyson turned the situation into a joke and Williams and Tyson left briefly, purportedly to get beer. They returned within 15 minutes with guns drawn. Williams ordered Tyson to guard Miguel while he went upstairs. There he found Salvadore and Meza. Williams ordered Tyson to bring Miguel upstairs and take Meza downstairs and “take care of her.” After asking where the bad $1500 check was, Williams shot Salvadore and Miguel twice each.
Williams retrieved two guns, Meza’s purse, and the cheek, and the three then left the farmhouse. They drove for more than an hour, during which time Williams had intercourse with Meza in the back seat. When the three finally stopped in a remote area, Williams took Meza from the car and shot her four times. Meza’s naked body was left abandoned in a field.
During this entire period, Williams consumed a disputed amount of alcohol, morphine, codeine, heroin and marijuana.
Williams and Tyson returned to the Tyson’s place, and Williams then left for good. Tyson became nervous and confessed to the police within the week; Williams was picked up the next month and also confessed.
Williams was charged with murder with special circumstances under California’s 1977 death penalty law. He pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, and was examined by two court appointed psychiatrists, Drs. Brannan and Lloyd, each of whom found him sane. Williams’ defense proceeded on a theory of diminished capacity. Williams was found guilty on three counts of first-degree murder. The jury found nine of 10 special circumstances true — six multiple-murder circumstances, two robbery circumstances, and one kidnapping circumstance. It found not true the charged rape сircumstance. The jury then found Williams sane, and returned a sentence of death on all three counts.
*1469
Williams’ appeal and first state habeas petition were denied in their entirety.
People v. Williams,
We review de novo the district court’s denial of William’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Brown v. Borg,
II
Williams contends that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel at the guilt, sanity, and penalty phases of his trial. We review de novo the denial of this claim.
Paradis v. Arave,
Under the familiar
Strickland
test, Williams must establish both deficient performance by counsel and that that deficiency prejudiced him.
Strickland v. Washington,
A
The gravamen of Williams’ complaint is that his trial counsel, Roland Howard (“R. Howard”), failed to conduct an adequate investigation of a possible diminished capacity defense.
2
See Sanders v. Ratelle,
Like the district court, we decline to consider whether Williams has established cause, because we conclude that he cannot establish prejudice. 3 In reaching this conclusion, we need not ask whether introduction of the opinions of. the five favorable psychiatrists Williams has now found would have made a difference to the jury in 1979, as Williams would have us do. Instead, we consider whether, if Howard sought appointment of a psychiatric expert, and if, upon evaluation, that psychiatrist reached conclusions approximating those of Williams’ habe-as psychiatrists (rather than confirming the opinions of Brannan and Lloyd), such testimony, combined with the introduction of Williams’ medical records, would have made a difference. We can only conclude that it would not.
The defense proceeded on a theory of diminished capacity; Williams does not challenge this decision, arguing only that stronger evidence should have been identified and introduced. However, contrary evidence of Williams’ intent to kill and his ability to maturely and meaningfully reflect on his actions was simply overwhelming.
See
Cal.Penal Code § 188 (defining malice);
People v. Horn,
B
Williams argues that he need not show prejudice at the sanity phase because counsel’s abandonment of Williams “caused a breakdown in [the] adversarial system of justice.”
United States v. Swanson,
At the sanity phase, no witnesses were called; R. Howard instead read the entirety of Drs. Lloyd’s and Brannan’s reports into the record. Each had concluded Williams was sane. As Williams correctly notes, the jury’s decision in this phase was preordained.
*1471 It does not follow, however, that because the jury’s decision was a foregone conclusion, R. Howard abandoned his client. We do not equate an unwinnable case with abandonment. At the time of the trial, no experts had concluded Williams was not sane. Indeed, even today, none of Williams’ habeas psychiatrist declarations indicate Williams was not sane.
R. Howard’s response to this evidence contrasts sharply with the reaction of counsel in
Swanson,
on which Williams principally relies. In
Swanson,
counsel conceded in closing that the evidence was overwhelming and that there was no reasonable doubt as to his chent’s guilt.
Swanson,
Because R. Howard did not abandon his client, Williams’ claim must be measured under the usual Strickland standard. Williams can show no sanity-phase prejudice. No evidence existed then that Williams was not sane; even today, no psychiatrist has said Williams was not sane. 4
C
Finally, Williams argues that in addition to not adequately investigating a diminished capacity defense, 5 as previously discussed, R. Howard also failed to investigate other potential mitigating evidence, including evi-denee of childhood difficulties. Moreover, Williams argues that in reading Drs. Lloyd and Brannan’s reports to the jury during the sanity phase without seeking a proper limiting instruction, Howard introduced damaging information that the jury could then consider in aggravation. These errors, Williams contends, prejudiced him during the penalty phase of his trial. We are not persuaded.
Howard presented no mitigating evidence during the penalty phase trial. However, mitigating evidence was presented in the course of the guilt phase, which the jury was entitled to consider in its determination of sentence. Cal.Penal Code § 190.4(d).
6
This included evidence of Williams’ premature birth, early health problems, epilepsy, head injuries, voluntary psychiatric commitment, mother’s alcoholism, lack of contact with his natural father, and parental abuse, including beatings by Williams’ stepfather. The jury was never informed that Williams was illegitimate, or that he apparently suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome. While counsel could have provided more detail in support of these mitigating factors, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that “the jury was exposed to much of the evidence [Williams] complains was omitted due to counsel’s error.”
Williams,
Brannan and Lloyd’s reports, read into the record by R. Howard, contained numerous statements which Williams now challenges as prejudicial. These included statements from Williams that:
he thinks this whole trip is a bunch of “S.” He said he would just like to .get it over with and take what is coming to him.
He does not think jail will do him any good....
*1472 He said that if he does twenty years in prison he will get out and probably do the same thing again.
He sums it up by telling me that, one, he rejects authority and always will. Two, he does not go for the rehab bullshit. Three, he goes by the same code of ethics whether he is inside or outside of jail. Four, he is very prejudiced against Mexicans.
RT 4/10/79 at 1526. In addition, Dr. Bran-nan opined that “I think he remains a danger to the health and safety of others, himself included. The reason I say this is because I think he is sociopathic, impulsive, and acts without thinking....” RT 4/10/79 at 1528. The reports also recounted a substantial pri- or history of assaultive conduct. While some of this information came in at other portions of the trial (for instance, Williams himself testified that “I don’t particularly like Mexicans, period”), much of it did not.
We have no doubt that these statements did nothing to advance Williams’ cause. We cannot conclude, however, that they materially harmed him, because the evidence militating against leniency towards Williams was already overwhelming. Williams, indeed, was his own worst enemy; from his testimony alone the jury could already have drawn many of the same conclusions Dr. Brannan reached and related. 7 The corroboration of the Tysons further augmented the profile. In short, Brannan’s report, while highly unflattering, did not materially worsen Williams’ ease.
On this record, Williams cannot show that these alleged errors, including the failure to more fully investigate diminished capacity, prejudiced him. In light of the grievous nature of the crimes and Williams’ relentlessly indifferent attitude towards them, we find nо reasonable probability that the jury would have reached any verdict other than death.
Ill
Williams raises a second Sixth Amendment claim, arguing for reversal because his attorney represented him while subject to a conflict of interest, thereby depriving him of his right to effective assistance *1473 of counsel. According to Williams, the fact that payment for any investigation or psychiatric services could have come from counsel’s pocket forced counsel to choose between Williams’ interests and his own. We discern in this situation no conflict of constitutional dimension.
Because Williams raised no objection at trial, “[i]n order to establish a violation of the Sixth Amendment ... [he] must demonstrate that an actual conflict of interest adversely affected his lawyer’s performance.”
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
We decline Williams’ invitation to extend
Cuyler
from that recognized conflict of interest to the present situation. Representation of rich and poor alike is one of the nobler ideals of the legal profession: “nowhere is ... service [to clients] deemed more honorable than in case of appointment to represent an accused too poor to hire a lawyer.”
Frazer v. United States,
IV
Williams argues that he was denied his right to psychiatric assistance at trial, as defined by
Ake v. Oklahoma,
The due process guarantee of fundamental fairness requires that a state provide indigent defendants with the “basic tools of an adequate defense or appeal.”
Id.
at 77,
when a defendant demonstrates to the trial judge that his sanity at the time of the offense is to be a significant factor at trial, the State must, at a minimum, assure the defendant access to a competent psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate examination and assist in evaluation, preparation, and presentation of the defense.
Id.
at 83,
We need not delve into the murkier substantive issues involved in Williams’
Ake
claim, as the district court did, because we conclude that the necessary procedural predicate has not been met.
Ake
makes clear that psychiatric assistance is a contingent, not an absolute, right: it holds that
“when a defendant has made a preliminary shomng
that his sanity at the time of the offense is likely to be a significant factor at trial” the state must provide psychiatric assistance.
Ake,
Williams never moved for appointment of an independent psychiatrist, nor did he ever attempt to demonstrate to the judge that his mental state would be at issue. Williams’ counsel, Roland Howard (R. Howard) made only an informal, in camera inquiry as to whether any “investigatory funds” might be available; the “impression” he received was that none were. Such a nonspecific inquiry does not satisfy Williams’ obligation “to make an ex parte threshold showing” of the need for a psychiatrist. This failure to seek assistance is fatal to Williams’ Ake claim.
Williams suggests that
Smith
holds the failure to object to the denial of a psychiatrist immaterial, based on the following language: “Again, even if [petitioner] had not so objected, the principal basis of the
Ake
claim would still remain: he was not provided a psychiatric expert charged with assisting him in his defense.”
Smith,
y
Williams contends that the prosecution failed to disclose two deals it had cut with its chief witness, coconspirator Robert Tyson, then allowed Tyson to perjure himself by denying he had been promised anything for his testimony. After an evidentiary hearing, the district court concluded neither of the alleged deals existed. We will not reverse that factual finding absent clear error.
Amadeo v. Zant,
Robert Tyson was the state’s principle witness against Williams. At the time of his testimony, he had already been tried and sentenced. At the close of his testimony, he testified that the district attorney’s office had made no promises with regard to charges against him, and that no promises had been made in return for his testimony. According to Williams, this was perjury. He alleges that two deals existed, one rеgarding parole and the other regarding the death penalty. We consider each in turn.
A
Robert Tyson testified to irreconcilably different versions of the parole deal. In one version, given in 1988, he was contacted after his conviction by the District Attorney’s office. The District Attorney’s office threatened that he could “rot in prison” but offered not to oppose parole when he became eligible if he agreed to testify. In a second 1993 version, District Attorney Larry Howard (“L. Howard”) offered a deal to Tyson while he was in jail during his trial. Tyson discussed it with numerous other people and decided to testify against Williams. Finally, in live testimony during the 1990 evidentiary hearing, Tyson explained that he had not been contacted by the District Attorney about testifying, and in fact was surprised when a deputy arrived to pick him up from jail so that he could testify. In this version, Tyson was still set against testifying when he met L. Howard at the county courthouse, but Howard changed his mind by explaining that District Attorney’s office could keep him in jail, or cooperate with parole. Even so, Tyson testified that L. Howard said, “I can’t promise you nothing right now.” EH 9/24/90 at 8-9. 8
*1475 In light of this conflicting testimony, Tyson’s concession at the evidentiary hearing that L. Howard refused to make any promises, and L. Howard’s own testimony that he made no promises, the district court was entitled to conclude that no parole-related promises were made. Consequently, even if Tyson was motivated to testify by his subjective belief that it might improve his chances of parole, as it seems clear he was, his testimony that he had been made “no promises” was not perjurious.
B
In addition, a second deal allegedly existed in which the District Attorney would agree not to seek the death penalty in return for Tyson’s cooperation. L. Howard testified to the following conversation occurring while Tyson was leading Howard and several detectives to Meza’s body on October 13:
Q: Okay. So with regard to the death penalty then that Mr. Tyson was concerned about what was said, if anything, for example, by you, first of all, to Mr. Tyson with regard to the death penalty?
A: The only thing that I recall telling Tyson was that I told him that he was— asked him, really, if he was willing to testify. And he was very blunt. He said, “Sure, I’ll do anything.” And I said, “Is what you have told the investigators the truth?” And he said, “Yes.” And I said, “Do you understand that we have to do some investigating and check out what you’re saying to us? But if what you’re saying is corroborated by what we find out, then we’ll not seek the death pеnalty.”
Q: And you indicated that if [his story] cheeked out and so forth and that he continued to cooperate, that you wouldn’t be seeking the death penalty, correct?
A: We told him that.
L. Howard 9/17/90 Deposition at 9-11.
This testimony is ambiguous; it might or might not indicate a promise by the District Attorney not to seek the death penalty in return for a promise by Tyson to testify. L. Howard never explicitly made seeking that penalty contingent on Tyson testifying. L. Howard’s own interpretations are conflicting. In the same deposition, he denied that any deal was made limiting Tyson’s sentence in return for testimony. However, according to a parole board investigator, in 1987 “Howard recollected that Tyson agreed to testify in court against Williams, if the District Attorney’s Office would not seek the death penalty in his trial.” 1987 Parole Board Report of Investigation at 1.
Added to this ambiguity is the fact that out of all the testimony and declarations of Tyson, in not one does he ever mention any “testimony for no death penalty” deal. The one note of consistency in his story is that he was motivated to testify because he believed it would increase his chances of parole. The only other evidence of any such deal is the 1993 declaration of Nick Groen, who alleges thаt when he visited Tyson shortly after his arrest 14 years earlier, Tyson told him he’d been offered “no death penalty” and help with parole.
Whatever may have transpired on October 13, it appears that Tyson did not perceive that he had been promised no death penalty for his testimony. The district court’s conclusion that no deals were struck was therefore a permissible one in light of the evidence. We cannot say that Tyson’s testimony to the contrary was perjury. Consequently, we need not determine whether “ ‘there is any reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have [a]ffeeted the judgment of the jury.’”
United States v. Young,
VI
Williams argues that the state trial court erroneously failed to instruct on an element of the kidnapping special circumstance, that the jury’s finding this circumstance true was therefore invalid, and that this error is not subject to harmless error review. We agree that instructional error occurred, but it does not require reversal.
California’s 1977 death penalty statute uses special circumstances to narrow the *1476 death-eligible class. Cal.Penal Code § 190.2. Only once one or more special circumstances have been found will a separate penalty-phase trial ocсur. At that stage, jurors are provided a new list of factors which they can “consider, take into account, and be guided by.” Cal.Penal Code § 190.3. The special circumstances used to determine death-eligibility are included as part of one factor the jury may consider. Cal.Penal Code § 190.3(a).
Both the California Supreme Court and the district court properly found or assumed error in the kidnapping special circumstance instructions.
Williams,
Williams suggests that
Sullivan v. Louisiana,
— U.S. -,
Where the error involves a failure to provide a narrowing instruction on a death special circumstance, we begin by asking whether it can be concluded, in light of the other instructions, that the jury necessarily found the omitted narrowing element.
Wade,
The district court concluded that the jury necessarily found this element anyway.
Williams,
The state court took a slightly different tack, concluding that because the evidence against Williams was so overwhelming, no rational, properly instructed jury could have failed to find the omitted element.
Williams,
Because the instructional omission cannot be cured in either of these fashions, we must determine what effect consideration of this “invalid” aggravating factor may have had on the jury’s verdict. Under the Supreme Court’s doctrinal framework, what approach applies turns on whether California was a “weighing state” in 1977.
See Stringer v. Black,
Williams assumes without argument that California is. a weighing state, and that the Supreme Court’s weighing state precedents therefore apply. We disagree with this assumption. Undoubtedly California’s current death penalty scheme, passed in 1978, creates a weighing state regime, but the 1977 law under which Williams was sentenced was critically different.
The Supreme Court’s weighing/non-weighing distinction does not turn simply on whether or not the word “weighing” appears in a state’s statute.
See, e.g., Richmond v. Lewis,
— U.S. -, -,
Consequently, the Supreme Court’s weighing/non-weighing distinction may involve both procedural and substantive compo *1478 nents. 10 Procedurally, is the sentencer restricted to a “weighing” of aggravation against mitigation? Substantively, is the sentencer prevented from considering evidence in aggravation other than discrete, statutorily-defined factors? Our review of federal and state court decisions reveals that where both constraints are present, the regimes involved are uniformly treated as weighing 11 ; where neither is present, the regimes are uniformly treated as non-weighing 12 ; and where one but not the other is present, disagreement has arisen. 13
We need not deal with that disagreement or decide any further whether procedural or substantive constraints lie closer to the core of the distinction, because the statute we' are faced with involves neither constraint. As the California Supreme Court explained in *1479 discussing the change from the 1977 to the 1978 law,
The 1978 initiative, however, enacted a crucial change in the method by which the jury determines whether to impose the death penalty_ Under the 1977 version of section 190.3, the jury must ‘consider, take into account аnd be guided by the aggravating and mitigating circumstances’ enumerated in the section. The statute, however, provided no further guidance or limitation on the jury’s sentencing discretion. In the absence of such a limitation, the jury was free, after considering the listed aggravating and mitigating factors, to consider any other matter it thought relevant to the penalty determination. The 1978 initiative, by contrast, provided specifically that the jury ‘shall impose a sentence of death if [it] concludes that the aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating circumstances. If [it] determines that the mitigating circumstances outweigh the aggravating circumstances [it] shall impose a sentence of confinement in state prison for a term of life without the possibility of parole.’ By thus requiring the jury to decide the appropriateness of the death penalty by a process of weighing the specific factors listed in the statute, the initiative necéssarily implied that the matters not within the statutory list are not entitled to any weight in the penalty determination.
People v. Boyd,
Now, ladies and gentlemen, if during the course of the' argument you thought you heard a comment about the law as being that it says that you shall impose a sentence of death if you conclude' that the aggravating circumstances outweigh the mitigating circumstances, or you shall impose mitigating — excuse me, life imprisonment without possibility of parole if you feel that the mitigating circumstances outweigh the aggravating circumstances, I tell you that’s not the law that applies to the case.
You may use those. As the way in which you go about this. But the way you go about this is up to you. And the law does not say you shall do one or the other.
RT 4/11/79 at 1614.
Consequently, because neither of the previously-identifiéd constraints were placed on the sentencing-phase decisionmaking, we can safely say that the 1977 California death penalty 'law created a nonweighing regime. As such, it is governed by the rule of
Zant
that invalidation of one aggravating circumstance does not require reversal so long as other aggravating circumstances remain.
Zant,
YII
Williams suggests that the penalty-phase jury instructions in his ease failed to adequately guide the jury and ensure individualized sentencing in accordance with
Gregg v. Georgia,
A
Williams argues that he was improperly charged with more than one multiple-murder special circumstance. The jury was instructed on, and found true, six multiple murder special circumstances, two each for each of the three murders. At the рenalty phase, they were permitted to consider any special circumstances found true. The state concedes, and the California Supreme Court found, that this overcharging was error.
Williams,
Williams argues that
Richmond v. Lewis,
— U.S. -,
Even if this were not so, Williams would be entitled to no relief for a second reason. As we have previously discussed, after
Richmond, Stringer,
and
Clemons v. Mississippi,
B
Next, Williams argues that the trial court failed to instruct the jury that with regard to factor § 190.3(b),
15
it could consider any criminal activity only if proved beyond a reasonable doubt, as required by
People v. Robertson,
C
Next, Williams argues that it was error to read to the jury the entire list of factors the state considered relevant to the sentencing decision, even when some did not apply. To the contrary, the jury instructions expressly indicated that the jury was to consider each factor only “if applicable.” Moreover, “[i]t seems clear ... that the problem [of jury inexperience] will be alleviated if the jury is given guidancе regarding the factors about the crime and the defendant that the State, representing organized society, deems particularly relevant to the sentencing decision.”
Gregg v. Georgia,
D
Next, Williams objects to the giving of a “no sympathy” instruction during the guilt phase.
16
He argues that this instruction necessarily constricted the jury’s interpretation of the penalty phase instruction allowing consideration of any extenuating circumstances.
17
To the contrary, “no sympathy” instructions have been held by the Supreme Court to be consistent with its mandate in
Lockett v. Ohio,
We are not persuaded by Williams’ suggestion that
People v. Easley,
E
Fifth, Williams argues that a short curative instruction by the trial judge left the jury adrift to consider nonstatutory aggravating factors without any guidance. The full text of the instruction, quoted in § VI, makes clear no error occurred. After reading the list of potentially relevant statutory factors, the court explained that, contrary to an earlier prosecutorial argument, the jury was not required to weigh aggravating and mitigating factors, and was not under obligation to find
*1482
for life or death based on which factors predominated. Such an instruction violates no right of Williams. “A capital sentencer need not be instructed how to weigh any particular fact in the capital sentencing decision.”
Tuilaepa v. California,
— U.S. -, -,
F
Finally, Williams suggests that several prosecutorial comments deprived him of constitutional rights. Because none of the comments were objected to contemporaneously, we review only for plain error, error that is highly prejudicial and affects substantial rights.
United States v. Dischner,
Williams finds error in three comments. First, the prosecutor listed each § 190.3 factor. Again, we find no error in identifying for the jury the spectrum of factors the state considers relevant to the sentеncing decision. Second, describing one of the factors (victim participation), the prosecutor said, “I don’t mean to insult your intelligence, but its a factor, it’s either an aggravating or a mitigating factor.” The prosecutor then went on to argue how victim participation or consent was absent in this case. This did not require the jury to construe the absence of a mitigating factor as an aggravating factor, rather than simply a mitigating factor not present. In any event, the jury was instructed to only consider each factor “if applicable.” Finally, the prosecutor asked the jury, “How do you add these up?” and argued that it “shall” impose death if the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating circumstances. Any error here was cured by the instruction given by the trial court quoted above, which made clear that 'the jury was neither required to weigh nor stripped of discretion over what consequences should follow from any weighing it did. 19
VIII
Williams contends that the state trial court considered numerous improper factors in declining to modify Williams’ sentence. All factors considered were either permissible or harmless error.
During California’s penalty phase, “evidence presented at any prior phase of the trial” may be considered. Cal.Penal Code § 190.4(d). Under the 1977 statute, while the jury was to consider and be guided by the factors listed in § 190.3, it thereafter could “consider any other matter it thought relevant to the penalty determination.”
People v. Boyd,
Williams offers a litany of factors he believes the trial judge impermissibly considered in denying modification of his sentence. None of these considerations is reversible error. In reviewing the motion for modification, the trial judge worked through each of the statutory factors. The judge considered the fact that Meza was required to submit to sex, but this was not error both because evidence certainly supported this conclusion, and because the jury’s finding the rape special circumstance untrue did not mean they found she had not been raped.
20
The judge’s consideration of Williams’ commitment to the Youth Authority was error, as the state con
*1483
cedes, but it was harmless; in light of the numerous other considerations mentioned in his four-page ruling, the judge surely would have ruled the same way without considering it. The judge considered the shots Williams fired during the camper incident; again, even if this was error, it would not have affected his ruling. Williams’ trial demeanor was evidence the jury and judge could both consider,
United States v. Schuler,
Williams suggests that the trial judge in effect considered several invalid aggravating factors, requiring reweighing under
Stringer
and
Richmond.
To the contrary, the 1977 death penalty statute allows consideration of nonstatutory factors.
Harris,
IX
Next, Williams challenges three aspects of the district court proceedings: the form of the answer filed by respondent, the delay in deciding Williams’ case, and the refusal of the district court to grant a broader eviden-tiary hearing. We find no error.
A
Williams challenges the adequacy of respondent Calderon’s answer to his habeas petition, contending that because that answer failed to comply with Rule 5 of the Rules Governing § 2254 Cases, 28 U.S.C. foil. § 2254, the answer should be stricken and this case returned to the district court for the filing of a new answer. We disagree with both Williams’ premise and his conclusion.
When an answer to a petition is ordered pursuant to Rule 4, Rule 5 requires “[t]he answer [to] respond to the allegations of the petition.” The purpose of the answer is to frame the issues in dispute, as well as to ferret out unmeritorious petitions. See Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 5. Neither Rule 5, nor the Advisory Notes, nor subsequent case law set out any further restrictions on the form of the answer, unlike Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 8(b) and 8(d), which require fact-by-fact responses.
Nothing about Calderon’s answer violated Rule 5. The answer responded to the petition on the mеrits, laying out the state’s alternative view of the facts and the law. Nothing in Rule 5 prohibits the form used to frame the legal and factual issues. Moreover, to the extent that the answer failed to adequately frame the issue's for the district court, any harm became irrelevant once the district court issued a final decision. If Williams has a grievance, it must be with that decision, not the filings that preceded it.
B
Williams next argues that the 26-month delay before the district court finally denied his petition violated his due process rights. We disagree.
Williams relies on
Carter v. Thomas,
C
Williams suggests that on at least seven claims, the district court erred in declining to provide an evidentiary hearing. Williams has not established that he was entitled to a hearing on any of thеse claims.
“A habeas petitioner is,entitled to an evidentiary hearing on a claim if ‘(1) the petitioner’s allegations, if proved, would entitle him to relief, and (2) the state court trier of fact has not, after a full and fair hearing, reliably found the relevant facts.’ ”
Hendricks v. Vasquez,
Williams’ counsel contended vigorously at oral argument that, at the least, he should receive an evidentiary hearing on his ineffective assistance of counsel claim in Eght of
Hendricks
and
Siripongs v. Calderon,
Williams contends that the district court could only deny an evidentiary hearing if it made a credibility determination that Williams’ experts, who said he wаs suffering from diminished capacity, were not worthy of belief. However, in reviewing Williams’ Strickland claim, we must ask, not whether Williams suffered from diminished capacity, but instead whether, taking the experts’ testimony as true, introduction of the testimony of one of them 15 years ago might have made a difference. That latter question requires no credibility determinations, and it is that latter question which we answered firmly in the negative when we rejected the Strickland claim on the merits.
Nor do we find anything in
Siripongs
inconsistent with the denial of a hearing in this case.
Siripongs
does not establish a per se rule requiring an evidentiary hearing whenever a petitioner has made out a “colorable claim” of cause. It recognizes only that where such a claim has been made out, it is “generally likely” that a hearing will be required on the issue of prejudice.
Siripongs,
Each of Williams’ other six claims was also properly denied without a hearing. The district court could conclude, without resolving disputed facts not found by the state court, that no claim for relief wаs stated by any of the other claims for which Williams sought a hearing.
X
Finally, Williams alleges four different ways in which the death penalty scheme in effect in California between 1977 and 1978 . violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. Each of his contentions has previously been rejected by this court or the Supreme Court. We reaffirm these prior holdings.
The death penalty statute’s failure to label aggravating and mitigating factors is constitutional.
Harris v. Pulley,
XI
Whether considered separately or together, the errors in Keith Daniel Williams’ trial did not affect its outcome. Williams did not receive a perfect trial, but he did receive a fair one. He was entitled to no more.
Brown v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At the time, a group of five adults was living at the Tysons’, including Williams, Robert Tyson, Karen Tyson (Robert Tyson’s common-law wife), Cindy Williams (Williams' ex-wife), and "Betsy” (Cindy’s cousin).
. Williams also mentions in passing, without explication or argument, numerous other alleged defects in counsel’s performance. To the extent that this discussion properly preserved these issues on appeal, the district court addressed them correctly.
Williams,
. Furthermore, we applaud the district court's decision to rest its decision on this basis. An unfortunate offshoot of death-penalty litigation has been the recurrent demonization of prior counsel — no doubt sometimes justly, but sometimes not — through the inevitable filing of
Strickland
claims. Death penalty counsel, whether trial or appellate, face the most demanding challenges the profession has to offer.
Wade v. Calderon,
. This fact also defeats Williams' claim that R. Howard rendered ineffective assistance by failing to object to the giving of a M'Naghten insanity instruction. Absent any evidence of insanity, the error cannot create a reasonable probability of a different outcome.
. Counsel did in fact rely heavily on a diminished capacity defense, but the evidence introduced related almost exclusively to diminished capacity arising out of Williams’ ingestion of drugs and alcohol, rather than mental illness.
.All references in this opinion are to California's former § 190, in effect from August 1977 until November 1978.
. For instance, Williams discussed the murders in a taped confession played for the juiy:
A [Williams]: So, we went up there [to the Vargases' farmhouse] and, uh, went in — first there was a bunch of people there. We had something to drink. We was drinkin' and stuff and, uh, we left and (yawn) went back about a half-hour later, everybody was gone except for, uh, these two dudes and this chick. Uh, killed these two dudes upstairs in the bedroom.
Q [Officer]: Who killed them?
A: I did.
Q: You did. Well, how did — how did you do that?
A: Well, we went to the door. Bob threw down on them when we went to the door and I was still on the outside and he went in. The dude, the chick’s old man was downstairs, he's the one who answered the door.
Q: Which one was he? The smaller one or the bigger one?
A: I don't know, he was just a Mexican.
Q: Just a Mexican.
A: We backed 'em up. I went upstairs and the chick and the dude was upstairs, the chick was in the bathroom, the dude was cоming out of the bedroom, and I put him — both down on the ground on the landing there and then I called Bob, had him bring the other dude up, and told Bob to go down and take care of the chick. So he took her downstairs. I killed the two Mexicans upstairs, walked down and Bob, he couldn't — he couldn’t kill her.. So I started to shoot her there, but, it was, like he was getting all freaked out and everything so I told him to grab her ... and we left.
Q: How long were you with [Meza] before you went back to the car?
A: A minute, time to walk up there, shoot her, turn around and walk back. The reason I didn't, cause, I was gonna shoot Bob cause of the way he was acting and way he was doing things, he was just, you know, the dude was freakin' out on me and everything. I had full intentions of shooting him.
Q: Up there?
A: Yeah. So I was gonna shoot him too. And the dude started sniveling and crying and started telling me, I don't know, a bunch of shit, find that weak ... you know, and I threw down the gun when I went back to the car, I started talking to him through the open window and the dude started sniveling and crying and shit. I just got, you know, I was mad, and I just got in the car and took off. We went back to his house and, uh, I split.
Q: When you went up there, did you put her right down or something or did you, was she standing up when you shot her?
A: No. She was down. I just put her down and I shot her in the back of the head.
Q: How many times did you shoot her?
A: Four.
. This version is the most consistent with L. Howаrd's testimony and is probably the closest to the truth. Howard testified that he had no contact with Tyson prior to bringing him to Merced, and had only a short conversation after doing so, during which he made no "solid promises.”
. For instance, in his taped confession, Williams said that he wanted to shoot Meza at the farmhouse, but Tyson started to “freak[] out,” so they took her with them.
. As a further reflection of this possible dual interpretation, the Supreme Court has described a weighing state as a state in which "the death penalty may be imposed only where specified aggravating circumstances outweigh all mitigating circumstances.”
Parker v. Dugger,
.
See, e.g., Lawhorn v. State,
.
See, e.g., Zant v. Stephens,
. For instance, Delaware, Idaho and Missouri have regimes which require weighing but do not limit consideration to statutory aggravating factors.
See
Del.Code Ann. tit. 11, § 4209 (1994); Idaho Code § 19-2515 (1994) (as interpreted-by
State v. Creech,
. Six years earlier, the California Supreme Court described the 1977's law’s guidance provision as "essentially equivalent to the provision in the valid Florida statute requiring the sentencing authority to 'weigh' those factors in reaching its decision.”
People v. Frierson,
. Cal.Penal Code § 190.3(b) directs consideration of "[t]he presence or absence of criminаl activity by the defendant which involved the use or attempted use of force or violence or the express or implied threat to use force or violence.”
.The instructions read, "In performing this duty [deciding the facts] you must not be influenced by pity for a defendant or by passion or prejudice against him.” RT 4/5/79 at 1402. The jury was further instructed that they "must not be governed by mere sentiment, conjecture, sympathy, passion, prejudice, public opinion, or public feeling” during their sentencing deliberations. RT 4/5/79 at 1402.
. This instruction asked the jury to consider, if applicable, "Any other circumstance which extenuates the gravity of the crime even though it is not a legal excuse for the crime.” RT 4/11/79 at 1614.
. The “no sympathy” instruction at issue was identical to the one given in this case, although the additional “no pity” instruction was not at issue.
Brown,
. To the extent Williams means to also incorporate by reference the other claims he made before the district court regarding improper prose-cutorial comment, these other claims were properly rejected for the reasons stated in the district court’s opinion.
Williams,
. As the California Supreme Court correctly noted, they could have found the rape was not sufficiently contemporaneous with the murder, as the jury instruction seemed to require.
Williams,
