ORDER
This mаtter is before the court on petitioner Malcolm Rent Johnson’s Petition for Rehearing. The petition is denied. Mr. Johnson correctly maintains, however, that the opinion of December 28, 1998, did not correctly address one issue raised in his appeal. The accompanying amended opinion addresses that issue.
The suggestion for rehearing en banc was transmitted to all of the judges of the court who are in regular active service as required by Fed. R.App. P. 35. As no member of the panel and no judge in regular active service on the court requested that the court be polled, the suggestion is also denied.
The opinion filed on December 28, 1998, is withdrawn and reissued. A copy of the amended opinion is attached. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Malcolm Rent Johnson filed an amended petition for habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in February 1994, in which he raised thirty-one grounds of constitutional error in his conviction and death sentence. The United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma denied this petition in its entirety on August 12, 1996, finding some of the asserted claims procedurally barred and the rest meritless. Johnson now appeals the district court’s denial of-the writ, raising thirteen claims of error, alleging violations of the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. In addressing his claims, we hold, inter alia, that a party challenging as discriminatory the exercise of peremptory challenges pursuant to
Batson v. State of Kentucky,
I
On the evening of October 27, 1981, Frank Thompson found his aunt, Ura Alma Thomp *1244 son, an elderly white woman, deceased on the floor of her Oklahoma City apartmеnt. Following an autopsy, the medical examiner found evidence of forcible sexual intercourse before death. He concluded that although Thompson was not strangled, she died of asphyxiation either because of pressure on her chest during the intercourse or because her assailant covered her mouth and nose.
On October 27, 1981, police arrested Johnson on an unrelated weapons charge at his apartment, where they seized several items later identified as belonging to Thompson. On October 28,1981, the police obtained hair, saliva, and blood samples from Johnson. In interviews with police after his arrest, Johnson denied knowledge of the homicide, but when told that semen found in Thompson’s body matched his own, he reportedly responded, “you couldn’t have found my semen in her, I didn’t come.” Trial Tr. at 913.
At the first stage of trial, Joyce Gilchrist, a state forensic chemist, testified that semen found on the bed coverings in Thompson’s apartment matched Johnson’s blood type. She also testified that several strands of hair found at the scene of the crime were “consistent microscopically” with petitioner’s hair. Trial Tr. at 1033, 1038-39. The defense did not present any witnesses. Petitioner was found guilty on March 22,1982.
At the second stage of trial, the state introduced evidence about Johnson’s prior Illinois convictions for raping two different women, two separate charges of armed robberies, and one burglary. Four women testified that petitioner had raped or attempted to rape them or attempted to rob them with a firearm. These latter offenses were unad-judicated at the time of trial.
Sixteen of Johnson’s relatives testified that he came from a broken and abusive home, and that at the age of two he spent two months, often under restraint, in the hospital for an undiagnosed debilitating illness. They also testified that Johnson, the oldest of four children, was responsible for his siblings’ care and for other household duties. His girlfriend testified that he assumed a parental role with her five-year old son. Neither side offered psychiatric testimony.
The court submitted three aggravating circumstances for the jury’s consideration: (1) prior conviction of a felony; (2) continuing threat to society; and (3) especially heinous, cruel, or atrocious killing. The jury rejected the third aggravator but found that the other two outweighed the evidence of mitigation. Petitioner was sentenced to death.
II
Before we deal with the merits of petitioner’s claim, we address the applicability of the habeas corpus amendments enacted as Title I of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), signed into law on April 24,1996. Mr. Johnson filed this amended petition for federal habeas corpus relief in the district court on February 11, 1994. Thus, the pre-AEDPA version of the Act applies.
1
Cf. United States v. Kunzman,
125
F.3d
1363, 1364 n. 2 (10th Cir.1997) (citing
Lindh v. Murphy,
III
Johnson alleges that the trial court unconstitutionally denied him, an indigent defendant, the “basic tools of an adequate defense” in violation of his rights under the Due Process Clause.
See Ake v. Oklahoma,
A. Psychiatric Expert
Johnson repeatedly requested funds to retain a psychiatric expert. The trial court denied these requests, and petitioner presented no psychiatric evidence at either the guilt or sentencing phase of trial. The district court denied habeas relief, finding that Petitioner had failed to make the requisite preliminary showing that his sanity would be a significant factor at trial.
1. Guilt Phase
Due process requires that “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.”
Ake,
We agree with the district court that petitioner does not make the threshold showing with respect to the guilt phase. He simply fails to present, upon consideration of the entire record, evidence that his sanity at the time of the offense was likely to be a significant factor at trial.
Cf. Castro,
2. Sentencing Phase
Johnson further contends that the denial of funds for psychiatric assistance was unconstitutional in light of the State’s use of the “continuing threat” aggravating circumstance. At the sentencing phase, the State did not present psychiatric evidence on the “continuing threat” aggravator. It presented evidence of Johnson’s prior convictions on rape, robbery, and burglary charges as well as evidence of four unadjudicated offenses including rape, attempted rape, burglary, and robbery. We have held, however, that “[a]n expert must be appointed if the State presents evidence,
psychiatric or otherwise,
of the defendant’s future dangerousness or continuing threat to society during the sentencing phase, and the indigent defendant establishes the likelihood his mental condition is a significant mitigating factor.”
Castro,
We conclude that Johnson has met the threshold showing of a likelihood that mental condition could have been a mitigating factor at the sentencing stage.
See Moore,
The denial of this entitlement leads us to harmless error analysis, and, in this particular context, to the following inquiry: “Do [we] harbor a significant doubt that this evidence would have caused at least one juror to choose life rather than death?”
Moore,
B. Forensic Expert
At trial, petitioner’s counsel sought funds for a forensic expert to rebut the testimony of forensic chemist Joyce Gilchrist, a prosecution witness who presented evidence that hair, fiber, and semen samples found on the victim match those of petitioner. The trial court denied the request, and the district court, on two grounds, rejected petitioner’s Ake challenge to the trial court’s decision.
First, the district court found that “defense counsel effectively cross-examined the [forensic] witnesses to fully develop the limitations of the tests performed on the evidence.”
Johnson v. Reynolds,
No. CIV-94-121-C (W.D. Okla. Aug 12, 1996) at 31 (hereinafter Mem. Op.). Second, it concluded that “in light of the entire reсord and the nature of the evidence presented by the prosecution at trial, petitioner has failed to establish the denial of expert assistance in developing affirmative evidence, such as testing by electrophoresis, resulted in a fundamentally unfair trial.” Mem. Op. at 32 (citing
Yohey v. Collins,
In assessing due process challenges to denial of funds for non-psychiatric experts, “we consider three factors: (1) the effect on [the petitioner’s] private interest in the accuracy of the trial if the requеsted service is not provided; (2) the burden on the government’s interest if the service is provided; and (3) the probable value of the additional service and the risk of error in the proceeding if such assistance is not offered.”
Moore,
The first and second prongs of this test are easily satisfied because as the Supreme Court has held, “[t]he private interest in the accuracy of a criminal proceeding that places an individual’s life or liberty at risk is almost uniquely compelling,” and although the State’s interest in financial economy may weigh against the provision of experts to indigent defendants, its “interest in prevailing at trial—unlike that of a private litigant—is necessarily tempered by its interest in the fair and accurate adjudication of criminal cases.”
Ake,
In
Kennedy,
a federal non-capital defendant argued that by refusing to provide funds for additional paralegals, airfare, and accounting services, the district court violated his due process rights to “the ‘basic tools’ and ‘raw materials integral to’ the presentation of an adequate defense.”
In
Moore,
which involved a petition for habeas corpus in a state death penalty case, we rejected a due process claim based on the denial of a forensic expert, аnd held that the petitioner’s “arguments as to what the requested experts might have said [were] entirely speculative,”
Moore,
Here, petitioner offers evidence—letters from two forensic experts—raising arguments that go beyond the level of bare speculation about whether expert testimony would have rebutted the prosecution’s testimony about the hair and fiber evidence. Other than merely undermining certain aspects of the prosecution’s forensic evidence, however, petitioner’s proffered expert rebuttal evidence does not purport to show that he could not have committed the ci’ime. Therefore, upon review of the record we conclude that petitioner fails to show that denial of his request for
expert
assistance substantially prejudiced his case at the guilt phase of trial.
See Moore,
C. Travel Funds
Petitioner alleges that by denying his requests for funds to travel to Chicago, Illinois, to gather mitigating evidence for the second stage of trial, the trial court deprived him of his right to an adequate defense. We agree with the district court that petitioner fails to show how this ruling substantially prejudiced his defense.
Cf. Kennedy,
IV
Petitioner claims that the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to strike all three black jurors on the venire, resulting in the selection of an all-white jury, violated
Batson v. State. of Kentucky,
Johnson’s conviction was on direct appeal when the Supreme Court issued Batson,
2
Accordingly, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) remanded the
Johnson
proceeding for an evidentiary hearing on his claim that race discriminatiоn tainted the jury selection process. At the hearing, petitioner established that the prosecution exercised its peremptoxy challenges in a manner that gave rise to the inference that it “exclude[d] the [black] venire members from the petit jury on account of their race.”
United States v. Johnson,
On habeas review, we presume the state court’s factual determinations to be correct unless we find that they are not fairly supported by the record.
See Sena v. New Mexico State Prison,
Petitioner now offers troubling evidence of the pretextual character of the prosecutor’s ostensibly neutral reasons. A black juror and a white juror shared similar characteristics; the prosecutor, relying on those characteristics, struck only the black juror.
Cf. Turner v. Marshall,
V
Petitioner raises a due process claim based on allegations of prosecutorial misconduct. Petitioner claims that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct when he referred to the police chemist’s testimony as “conclusive.” Petitioner also notes that although the state had refused to provide him with expert assistance, the prosecutor told the jury at sentencing that petitioner offered no medical testimony in mitigation. Petitioner also objects to a number of other allegedly prejudicial remarks at trial. The district court found that petitioner procedurally defaulted his challenge to all of these remarks but one.
First, we address the district court’s finding of procedural bar. “On habeas review, we do not address issues that have been defaulted in state court on an independent and adequate state procedural ground, unless cause and prejudice or a fundamental miscarriage of justice is shown.”
Steele v. Young,
Johnson, however, alleges that the OCCA did not in fact apply a contemporaneous objection rule, but instead actually reviewed all of the allegedly erroneous comments under a “fundamental error” standard of review. Fundamental error review implicates the merits of federal constitutional claims and as such is not an independent state ground for decision. Johnson cites Oklahoma cases standing for the proposition that prosecutorial misconduct is reviewed on appeal for fundamental error even absent contemporaneous objection. The fundamental error exception does not apply, however, to claims raised for the first time in post-conviction proceedings.
See Brecheen v. Reynolds,
Johnson’s argument that the Oklahoma court in fact reviewed the claims of misconduct on the merits is not supported by the court’s language. Moreover, the court stated that the prosecutorial claim was “[t]he one new assignment” raised by petitioner, further suggesting that it treated the claim as one raised for the first time in post-conviction proceedings and thus not subject to fundamental error review.
Consequently, given that the court applied a procedural bar, the question then is whether that bar was an adequate state ground for the denial of relief. If Oklahoma does not consistently apply a contemporaneous objection rule to claims of prosecutorial misconduct, then this cannot be an adequate state ground for barring the claim.
See Steele,
Petitioner accurately points out, however, that he did not fail to raise the numerous alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct, but rather the OCCA simply did not address them.
See Johnson v. State,
We turn to the merits of petitioner’s claims of prosecutorial misconduct. Johnson
*1250
contends that the allegedly improper remarks regarding forensic and psychiatric assistance violated a specific constitutional right to an adequate defense. Perforce, he argues, to establish a claim for habeas relief he need not show that the entire trial was rendered fundamentally unfair.
See Mahorney v. Wattman,
With respect to the prosecutor’s disparaging remarks about defense counsel, after careful review of the totality of circumstances of the trial, we agree with the district court that the comments, while improper, did not—given the trial court’s admonition to the jury to disregard the remark—render petitioner’s trial fundamentally unfair.
See Donnelly,
Johnson also contends that the district court erred in considering separately the three surviving allegations of prosecutorial misconduct: exploitation of his indigence at the first and second phases of trial, and the disparaging remarks about defense counsel. He additionally claims that the district court erred in failing to consider, cumulatively with these instances, those instances it found procedurally barred. We agree that, under these circumstances, application of the procedural bаr rule was inappropriate. Yet even considering the entire catalog of allegedly prejudicial prosecutorial comments taken as a whole, the alleged misconduct is similar to that which we held, in
Brecheen,
not to constitute a due process violation under
Donnelly,
VI
Petitioner insists that the State’s failure to prove and the trial court’s failure to properly instruct the jury regarding his intent to kill violated his rights under the Eighth Amendment.
See Enmund v. Flori
da,
[TJhe reckless disregard for human life implicit in knowingly engaging in criminal activities known to carry a grave risk of death represents a highly culpable mental state, a mental state that may be taken into account in making a capital sentencing judgment when that conduct causes its natural, though also not inevitable, lethal result.
Id.
at 157,
VII
Johnson claims that his death sentence violated
Beck v. Alabama,
In
United States v. McVeigh,
the defendant argued that it was unconstitutional under
Beck
to force the jury to choose between convicting him of a capital offense and acquitting him.
See
VIII
We consider next whether the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to try the defendant because he was charged with felony murder by an information that did not set forth all of the elements of the underlying felony of rape, and therefore was fatally and jurisdictionally defective under Oklahoma law. The district court found this claim to be procedurally barred under state law because petitioner raised it for the first time on application for post-conviction relief.
See Johnson v. State,
Petitioner contends that, because the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals recognizes jurisdictional flaws sua sponte, citing
Duvall v. State,
*1252
Even assuming, arguendo, that petitioner’s claim is not procedurally barred, it fails to constitute a claim upon which habe-as relief can be granted. Insofar as petitioner challenges the adequacy of the information under Oklahoma law, this is a question of state law. On federal habeas review, we are not empowered to correct all errors of state law.
See Jackson v. Shanks,
IX
The claim that the trial court submitted duplicative and cumulative aggravating circumstances to thе jury is meritless. As the federal district court correctly noted, the aggravating circumstance of future dangerousness and prior felony conviction are not duplicative. The former is supported by evidence of the petitioner’s potentiality for future dangerous acts, the latter by evidence of petitioner’s past acts.
See, e.g., Berget v. State,
Petitioner relies on
United States v. McCullah,
Likewise, in
Davis v. Executive Director of Dept. of Corrections,
X
We have previously rejected petitioner’s challenge to the use of unadjudicated offenses to support the continuing threat aggravating circumstance.
See Williamson v. Ward,
XI
Pre-indictment delay rises to the level of a constitutional violation when it results in substantial prejudice to the defense, or upon a showing that the reasons for the prosecutor’s delay were improper.
See Gutierrez v. Moriarty,
XII
Johnson argues that the district court erred in denying his request for an evidentia-ry hearing on the issues raised by the denial of funds for expert assistance. In support, Johnson states he was prevented from developing and presenting evidence in support of claims regarding denial of funds for a forensic expert, denial of funds for a psychiatrist, denial of funds to investigate mitigating evidence, ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, and ineffective assistance of trial counsel. More specifically, Johnson alleges that he was denied the opportunity to present evidence demonstrating ineffective assistance of trial counsel arising out of the denial of funds for expert assistance and travel to gather mitigation evidence.
We review the district court’s denial of an evidentiary hearing for abuse of discretion.
See Lasiter v. Thomas,
XIII
In a July 5,1996, motion, petitioner sought to dismiss his appointed lead counsel in the federal habeas action, Thomas M. Lahiff, and substitute LahifPs co-counsel, Vicki Werneke of the Office of the Federal Public Defender, as lead counsel. We consider the argument that the district court’s denial of petitioner’s pro se motion to dismiss appointed counsel and appoint substitute counsel constitutes grounds for remand to the district court. 4 The district court denied the motion on the grounds “[p]etitioner fails to indicate service of the motion on current counsel and the motion was filed by petitioner long after the briefing was completed on his petition for habeas relief.” Mem. Op. at 73. Shortly thereafter, on August 27, 1996, the district court granted Lahiffs motion to withdraw, stating that “[t]he Office of the Federal Public Defender will continue to represent Mr. Johnson.” R., Doc. 39, at 1.
Although habeas petitioners have no independent Sixth Amendment right to counsel, see
Pennsylvania v. Finley,
481
*1254
U.S. 551, 555,
Although it appears that the distriсt court failed to make the required inquiry, petitioner’s claim is moot, as he is now represented by the substitute counsel he requested. His claims that Lahiffs performance was, essentially, so ineffective as to violate McFarland v. Scott are too lacking in specificity to support a conclusion that he was prejudiced by Lahiffs allegedly deficient performance. Although we agree with petitioner that counsel could have raised his Batson and subject matter jurisdiction claims in a more comprehensive fashion in his petition, given our resolution of those issues today, we cannot say he was prejudiced by the presentation of those issues below.
XIV
We have previously rejected the argument that a trial court violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment by failing to inform the jury that it has the option of returning a life sentence even upon a finding of an aggravating circumstance.
See Duvall v. Reynolds,
XV
The final issue before us is the contention that the prosecution withheld, in violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
17. The name of any criminal defendants prosecuted in the last eighteen (18) months by the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s Office for raping women fifty-five (55) years or older.
18. A list of any alleged suspect to this crime before the apprehension of Malcolm Johnson.
19. All information regarding any unsolved rapes occurring on the north side of Oklahoma City from January 1, 1980 to January 15,1982 involving rapes of women ■ over fifty-five (55) years old.
Direct Crim. Appeal R. at 19.
To establish a
Brady
violation, the petitioner must show that evidence was: (1) suppressed by the prosecution; (2) favorable to petitioner; and (3) material.
See Stafford v. Ward,
Petitioner is correct that a request for specific information, as opposed to a general request for “all
Brady
evidence,” can lower the threshold of materiality necessary
*1255
to establish a violation.
See Smith v. Secretary of New Mexico Dept. of Corrections,
We consider the contention that the prosecution withheld information regarding one Lamar Hamilton—information perhaps suggesting that he was possibly a suspect in the additional, uncharged rapes used against Johnson during the sentencing phase of trial. Failure to disclose the arrest of other suspects for the same crime can violate
Brady. See Banks v. Reynolds,
Petitioner apparently contends that his inability to point to specific exculpatory evidence stems from the failure of his previous habeas counsel to file a motion for discovery in the district court. While such a failure, if unexcused, might go to a claim of ineffective assistance, assuming such a claim were cognizable in this context, it cannot create a showing of exculpatory, material evidence where there is none.
Nor are we told of the material relevance of copies of “the crime incident report, the report from Mr. Johnson’s arrest, and the inventory sheet of the items removed from Mr. Johnson’s apartment.” Appellant’s Supp. Br. at 6.
Brady
does not require the prosecution to “make a complete and detailed accounting to the defense of all police investigatory work on a case.”
Banks,
Considering the allegedly suppressed evidence collectively,
see Kyles,
XYI
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The new Act amended existing habeas provisions in 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244, 2254, and 2255.
. Although
Batson
had not been decided at the time of voir dire in this case, there is no dispute that it applies here. In
Griffith v. Kentucky,
. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that "[t]he [prosecutor’s] explanations were both neutral and logical based upon the record before him.”
Johnson v. State,
. In amending 28 U.S.C. § 2254, AEDPA added 28 U.S.C. § 2254(i), which provides that "[t]he ineffectiveness or incompetence of counsel during Federal or State collateral post-conviction proceedings shall not be a ground for relief in a proceeding arising under section 2254.” In cases such as this one, however, we follow instead the dictate of
Lindh v. Murphy,
