Lynn Murphy Creel appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. A Texas jury convicted Creel of capital murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment. He argues that the district court erred in ruling (1) that a lesser-ineluded-offense instruction was not warranted; (2) that undisclosed perjury of a witness was not material to his case; (3) that the state did not violate his Sixth Amendment right to counsel; (4) that an evidentiary hearing should not be held on his claim of actual innocence; and (5) that his trial counsel did not render ineffective assistance. We affirm.
I
Creel met Wilson Smith (“Smith”), the man whom Creel was later convicted of murdering, through Irene Plangman. Plangman had become acquainted with Mrs. Joan Smith (“Joan”) through business dealings, and Plangman lived briefly with the Smiths. During that time, Plangman and Creel were sexually intimate. Creel sold Joan some jewelry, and Plangman acted as an intermediary in the transaction. When Joan was unable to raise the purchase price, Creel became angry over the sale and Plangman’s friendship with the Smiths. Creel contacted Julie Woodley about posing as a potential buyer for some property that the Smiths had for sale. According to Woodley, Creel wanted to talk to the owners about .money owed to him. Woodley arranged by telephone for Smith to meet her, and then called Creel to tell him of the arrangement. The next morning, Smith left to meet the potential buyer; Joan never saw Smith again.
Creel arrived later that day at Plangman’s house and told her he had Smith in his van. He wanted her assistance and advice in deciding what to do with Smith. When Plang-man expressed disbelief, Creel declared he “would handle things himself.” At Plang-man’s suggestion that he let Smith go, Creel responded that he, “wasn’t going to spend the rest of his life in jail for kidnaping someone and then [having the victim] talking about it later.” When Creel called Plangman the next day he told her, “Well it’s all over. It’s finished.” Creel remarked, “what happened to a person as they got older, did they just give up the fight to live, or did they just not care, or did they just become hard and— refused to fight for life.”
While borrowing the van a few days later, Plangman found some of Smith’s jewelry and belongings in a side pocket. When questioned about the jewelry, Creel stated he intended to sell it. An employee at a local jewelry store, Charles Goodnough, testified that Creel sold him a ring similar to one Smith was wearing when he disappeared.
Joan reported Smith’s disappearance and gave Adolpho Cuellar, a Texas Ranger, the names of Plangman and Creel as possible suspects. Cuellar interviewed Plangman, who became his chief source of information. Plangman related the jewelry discovery to Cuellar the day after it occurred.
Others testified against Creel. Randal Graham testified that prior to Creel’s arrest, Creel stated, “I’ve killed a man and I’ve got his body in the back of the van, and I need you to help me get rid of it.” Graham’s wife Catherine corroborated this testimony. The Grahams left, declining to aid Creel.
After Medina County charged Creel with aggravated kidnapping and aggravated robbery, Plangman disclosed communications she had with Creel while he was incarcerated. Plangman testified that Creel’s letters to her contained coded instructions on how to dispose of Smith’s body. Creel received information from his cell mate, Jay Martinez, regarding the appropriate mix of acids to dissolve a body. Creel then directed Plang-man to give a friend of his, David Wolf, information on buying acids to dissolve the body. Wolf testified that Plangman attempted twice to give him maps, reportedly from Creel, that led to the body. He looked at the second map briefly before throwing it away. In response to Cuellar’s repeated requests for the location of Smith’s body, Plangman insisted she did not know.
*388 The Medina County Grand Jury returned indictments for aggravated robbery and aggravated kidnaping of Smith. At a meeting the next day, Cuellar questioned Plangman about the body’s location and Plangman said, “Let’s just drive.” She directed Cuellar to a rural residence in disrepair in Bexar County and suggested the possibility that the body was buried there. She told Cuellar she led him there because she had been there with Creel. Cuellar returned the next day and found Smith’s body in a barn. Plangman also returned the next day and, upon hearing that Cuellar found Smith’s body, said, “I did it.” She testified later that her statement was caused by the emotional stress and shock of finding the body.
The chief medical examiner testified about the results of the autopsy on Smith’s body, which was identified by his dentures. Smith’s severely decomposed body did not reveal trauma such as bullet holes or fractures. Silver-colored duet tape covered the mouth but not the nose area; however, rodents had eaten the nose, making it impossible to know whether the tape originally covered all breathing passages. Removing the duct tape revealed a knotted red cloth wedged in the mouth. Based on the state of decomposition, the examiner testified that the body had been buried for months.
The medical examiner expressed the opinion that the manner of death was “homicide,” based upon the fact that the person was bound, the mouth was stuffed with a gag, and the hands and feet were tied and bound. Although the autopsy revealed that Smith suffered from moderate coronary artery disease and the examiner admitted it was possible that heart failure caused the death, the examiner insisted he would still classify the death as a homicide. According to the examiner, the gag in the mouth was more dangerous than the duct tape, because a gag typically works its way back to block the airway and eventually causes death by choking.
A jury convicted Creel of capital murder in the 144th District Court of Bexar County, Texas. At the sentencing phase of trial, the jury sentenced Creel to life imprisonment. After his conviction was affirmed on direct and state collateral review, Creel filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
A magistrate held an evidentiary hearing on five of Creel’s alleged grounds for relief. Much of the evidence concerned Plangman. Cuellar testified Plangman had begun acting as an informant six days before Creel’s arrest, and that, although Cuellar did not instruct Plangman to obtain information, he was hopeful she would supply it to him. Creel testified that when he was in jail Plangman urged him to write her letters. Creel argued Plangman assisted Cuellar in finding Woodley in exchange for Cuellar’s help in getting the jewelry returned from Joan. Creel testified he did not know Plang-man provided information to Cuellar until Cuellar later named her as an informant at a court hearing.
Creel also presented newly discovered evidence of his alleged innocence. Creel proffered evidence that Smith had signed a document transferring title to a car after Creel had been arrested. Creel argued that, because he was in jail, he could not have killed Smith.
The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation to deny habeas. Creel appeals this denial, having obtained a Certificate of Probable Cause (“CPC”) from the district court.
1
In considering a federal ha-beas corpus petition by a prisoner in state custody, federal courts must generally accord a presumption of correctness to any state court factual findings.
See Mann v. Scott,
*389 II
Creel argues that the district court erred in finding he was not entitled to a lesser-included-offense instruction. The state trial court denied Creel’s request for an instruction on the lesser included offense of felony murder, which differs from capital murder in that felony murder does not require the prosecution to prove an intent to kill.
See Creel v. State,
Creel argues that due process requires that juries in capital murder cases receive a lesser included offense instruction when it is supported by the evidence. Creel cites
Beck v. Alabama,
We have applied
Beck
to cases in which a state trial court refuses a lesser-included-offense instruction.
2
See Cordova v. Lynaugh,
Creel maintains that the trial evidence supported the “third option” of an instruction for felony murder. Creel argues that a jury could rationally convict him of felony murder and acquit him of capital murder, because the evidence is consistent with accidental death and does not establish intent to kill Smith. He points to the autopsy report that indicates heart failure as a possible cause of death, the absence of tape on Smith’s nose, and the possible use of the gag to quiet Smith, rather than to kill him. He states his comment to the Grahams that “he killed a man” does not establish it was intentional, and that his comments to Plangman were, inconclusive due to their vagueness. He argues that, because a jury could acquit him of *390 capital murder, he was entitled to an instruction on the “third option” of felony murder.
The State argues that, because Creel is sentenced to life imprisonment rather than death, we should treat the case as a non-capital case. The cases since
Beck
in which we have considered entitlement to a lesser-included-offense instruction have been “purely” capital cases in which a jury convicted a defendant
and
sentenced him to death.
See, e.g., Lincecum v. Collins,
Several circuits classify cases in which the death penalty is sought, but not imposed, as noncapital cases.
See Pitts v. Lockhart,
Creel urges us to treat his case as a capital one because the judge must decide, before any sentence is imposed, whether to instruct on a lesser included offense. The imposition of a life sentence, Creel contends, does not change the nature of the case at the stage where the jury determines guilt. We reject Creel’s argument. The only circuit to treat these cases as capital cases, as Creel urges, also performs a harmless-error analysis.
See Rembert v. Dugger,
We hold that a case in which the death penalty is sought but not imposed ultimately is classified as a noncapital case for the purposes of a
Beck
analysis. “In a non-capital murder case, the failure to give an instruction on a lesser included offense does not raise a federal constitutional issue.”
See Valles v. Lynaugh,
Ill
Creel alleges that the state used perjured testimony when it allowed Plangman to testify that she lacked knowledge of the body’s location prior to when it was found. A state denies a criminal defendant due process when it knowingly uses perjured testimony at trial or allows untrue testimony to go uncorreeted.
See Giglio v. United States,
Creel argues that Plangman testified falsely at trial that she did not know the location of the body, and that the state knew the falsity of the testimony. Cuellar’s police progress report, which Creel obtained after his conviction, is “hardly a font of clarity or consistency,” as the district court acknowledged. The report states: “She was asked if she knew where the body was and she stated she had no idea where it might be and she refused to tell. She further stated that she had learned it’s [sic] location just recently by taking messages to David Wolf from Lynn Creel who is in jail.” Creel argues that the report evidences Plangman’s perjury, and that, on direct examination at trial, prosecutors elicited testimony in which Plangman denied knowing the body’s location prior to when the police discovered the body.
The State responds that, even though Plangman testified falsely, it did not knowingly use perjured testimony. Former Bexar County Assistant District Attorney Raymond Fuchs, one of the members of the prosecution team, testified at the federal evidentiary hearing that they were concerned that Plangman was not a credible witness. He found her explanation that a lucky guess enabled her to direct Cuellar to the body almost “preposterous” and “awfully peculiar.” Fuchs testified further that, although Plangman was unresponsive to questions, he knew of no evidence that she committed perjury at trial. Although there is no evidence that the prosecutors in this case had seen Cuellar’s report, Cuellar testified that he prepared the report and placed it in his file. This serves to create constructive notice of the contents of the file.
See United States v. Miranne,
To find a violation of due process, however, the perjury must have been material to Creel’s conviction. “The mere
possibility
that an item of undisclosed information might have helped the defense, or might have affected the outcome of the trial, does not establish ‘materiality’ in the constitutional sense.”
United States v. Agurs,
Creel advances two principal reasons that Plangman’s perjury was material. Creel alleges first that, if the perjury had been disclosed, it would have affected Plangman’s credibility as a key witness. Plangman’s testimony regarding whether she knew the body’s location was not probative that Creel murdered Smith, and there was no genuine dispute at trial about the circumstances surrounding the discovery of the body.
See United States v. Washington,
Creel alleges second that the perjury was material because disclosing the perjury could have convinced the juiy that Plangman was the murderer and that she lied to frame Creel. 4 Creel suggests this theory best explains Plangman’s utterance of “I did it” upon the discovery of the body. Based on Plangman’s explanation that she made this utterance in shock, and the substantial circumstantial evidence from the other witnesses, there is not a reasonable likelihood that the jury would have acquitted Creel, believing that Plangman committed the murder. Further, if the jury believed the police report, then they would believe merely that Plangman learned the body’s location from Creel’s letters, and not that she framed Creel.
We find that there does not exist a reasonable likelihood that Plangman’s perjury could have affected the judgment of the jury. See
Kirkpatrick,
IV
Creel contends that Plangman, acting as an agent of the state, obtained incriminating information from Creel in violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The district court ruled that Plangman did not act as an agent of the state and that it was not error to introduce information she had received from Creel. We have yet to address the standard of review for determining whether a person is an informant or agent under the Sixth Amendment. Some courts consider the determination a factual one.
See United States v. Malik,
In
Massiah v. United States,
Before we consider whether Plangman “deliberately elicited” statements from Creel, we must find, apart from Plangman’s status as an informant, that she acted as a government agent.
See, e.g., United States v. Taylor,
Creel objects to the test, asserting that each prong is contrary to Supreme Court precedent. According to Creel,
Maine v. Moulton,
Having disposed of Creel’s specific objections to the test, we address whether Plangman can be considered a government agent under the first prong, a quid pro quo agreement. Plangman is a State agent, Creel argues, because Plangman received benefits in exchange for her aid to Cuellar. Specifically, the authorities never prosecuted Plangman and, in exchange for Woodley’s name, Plangman received Cuellar’s help in retrieving jewelry from Joan. Creel presented no evidence, however, that anyone promised Plangman not to pursue charges in exchange for her assistance or testimony. The district court found further that no credible evidence existed that Cuellar undertook to return the jewelry in exchange for Plangman’s agreement to solicit incriminating evidence. No credible testimony existed regarding when Plangman first learned Woodley’s name or that she learned of Woodley from Creel. The district court notes that Creel’s counsel stated in a pretrial motion that Cuellar had secured information establishing Woodley’s identity during a search a Creel’s residence.
*394 Creel alleges Plangman received other benefits in exchange for her assistance. Plangman testified at trial that she had romantic liaisons with Cuellar. Cuellar denied the sexual involvement, and testified that Plangman told him that she had fabricated the story. Plangman testified at trial that she received conjugal visits with Creel in jail, as a result of special leniency in visitation rules. Prison officials testified that Plang-man’s visits with Creel were supervised. Creel admitted that his letters to Plangman contradict his testimony regarding the dates on which he had sexual relations with Plang-man. The district court found the testimony regarding Plangman’s involvement with Cu-ellar and the conjugal visits with Creel to be “wholly incredible.”
The district court found no credible testimony or other evidence that the government promised or gave Plangman a benefit in exchange for soliciting statements from Creel. Creel presented no evidence that Plangman’s motivation was anything other than her desire to assist in locating the decedent’s body. Thus, considering the evidence presented at the federal evidentiary hearing, the district court’s factual finding on the first prong, that Plangman was not promised and did not receive a benefit, was not clearly erroneous.
We consider next whether Plangman is an agent under the second prong, that is, whether Plangman acted pursuant to instructions from the State, or otherwise submitted to the State’s control. Creel argues that Cuellar began directing Plangman when, in response to her offer to bring Creel’s van for Cuellar to search, Cuellar told her that he would instead use her information to obtain a warrant to search Creel’s house. Creel alleges that, on the day of Creel’s arrest, Cuellar asked Plangman to go to Creel’s house to “see if [she] could find the ... jewelry” belonging to Smith. These incidents cannot be considered Sixth Amendment violations because they occurred prior to Creel’s arrest when he invoked his Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
See United States v. Howard,
Creel argues also that Plangman became an agent when she helped Cuellar locate Smith’s body. Plangman testified that one of her reasons for visiting Creel was to “help seek any information to find the body.” Yet, the fact that Plangman wanted to help the police to solve a murder case does not necessarily make her an agent for Sixth Amendment purposes.
See Malik,
On the facts of this case, Plangman was not a government agent. Creel failed to meet the two-pronged test formulated by the district court.
6
Plangman did not receive, nor was she promised, any benefits in exchange for eliciting information from Creel. Plangman acted at her own discretion in her dealings with Creel. In the absence of a
quid pro quo
between Plangman and Cuellar, and in the absence of instruction or control by the State, we hold that Plangman was not a government agent. Even if Plangman had “deliberately elicited” incriminating information from Creel, his right to counsel was not violated because she was not an agent of the state.
See Massiah,
*395 V
Creel alleges that the district court should have extended the federal evidentiary hearing to include his claim of actual innocence based on newly discovered evidence. Irrespective of whether a case is capital or noncapital, we have reaffirmed that newly discovered evidence of innocence, “absent an independent constitutional violation occurring in the underlying state criminal proceeding,” is not a ground for habeas relief.
Jacobs v. Scott,
VI
Creel argues lastly that the district court erred in finding that his trial lawyer Charles Conaway was not ineffective. In order to prove ineffective assistance of counsel, Creel must show that (1) Conaway’s representation “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and (2) that the performance resulted in actual prejudice.
Strickland v. Washington,
Creel contends first that Conaway rendered ineffective assistance because he failed to raise a jurisdictional defect. Medina County indicted Creel on kidnaping and robbery charges; after the police discovered Smith’s body in Bexar County, Creel was indicted and convicted of capital murder in Bexar County. The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides that “[w]hen two or more courts have concurrent jurisdiction of any criminal offense, the court in which an indictment or a complaint shall first be filed shall retain jurisdiction.” TEX.CODE CRIM. P.ANN. art. 4.16 (West 1977). Conaway failed to move to dismiss the Bexar County proceedings on the ground of Medina County’s priority of jurisdiction, which operated as a waiver of the jurisdictional defect.
See Reynosa v. Segall,
To determine whether Conaway provided ineffective assistance, we must decide whether the jurisdictional waiver was prejudicial.
See Strickland,
Conaway’s failure to move to dismiss could not have affected the proceedings because the charges in Medina and Bexar County were not for the same offense, which renders Article 4.16 inapplicable. Creel argues that the kidnaping and robbery charges should be considered lesser charges of the capital murder charge, and that double jeopardy would have barred his capital prosecution in Bexar County under Article 4.16. Texas courts interpret the statute differently:
[W]e are not here dealing with a question of double jeopardy.... Article 4.16 refers to courts having concurrent jurisdiction “of any criminal offense” as opposed to jurisdiction of the transaction out of which several offenses may develop.
Flores v. Texas,
Creel alleges that Conaway’s failure to investigate evidence of Creel’s innocence also rendered his assistance ineffective. He cites Conaway’s failure to investigate the bankruptcy of a company owned by Smith. When Creel investigated the company later,
7
he discovered evidence indicating that someone had signed Smith’s name to a truck title while Creel was incarcerated. Creel argues that the evidence proves his innocence because it proves that Smith was killed while Creel was in jail. The evidence does not establish, however, that Smith personally signed the truck title on that date. Creel has not shown how investigating Smith’s bankruptcy would have benefitted his defense, because the evidence does not exculpate him.
See United States v. Green,
We cannot say the attorney rendered ineffective assistance. Creel has not proven the objective unreasonableness of Conaway’s actions or that they prejudiced him. The district court correctly denied Creel’s claim.
VII
We AFFIRM all rulings of the district court.
Notes
. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act ("AEDPA”) is inapplicable to Creel’s case, because he filed his first petition for habeas relief prior to April 24, 1996, the effective dale of the AEDPA.
See Lindh v. Murphy,
. The State argues that Creel relies mistakenly on
Beck,
because in
Livingston v. Johnson,
. Creel contends we should not review this issue because the State did not argue it to the district court. We resolve the issue because uncertainty exists with respect to a pure question of law.
See Singleton v. Wulff,
. We reject also Creel’s contention that we consider the perjury in light of what a skilled lawyer would have done with the evidence.
See Agurs,
. The stale habeas court made no factual findings on this issue, and so 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) is inapplicable. Creel alleges the district court’s ruling on the claim is open to plenary review; however, we review the district court’s fact findings for clear error.
. We decline to address whether a defendant must prove both prongs of the test, because Creel failed to prove either prong.
. Creel has explained that, while in jail, he located a San Antonio Police Department report pertaining to a theft of one of Smith’s business vehicles. This led Creel to seek a certified Texas title history of the truck.
