Lead Opinion
Michael Lindsey, an Alabama prisoner under sentence of death, appeals the denial by the district court of his petition for habeas corpus. The district court denied relief on grounds that several of appellant’s claims are procedurally barred and that the remaining claims are without merit. We conclude that appellant has not demonstrated that he is entitled to habeas relief. Accordingly, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Appellant was convicted in 1982 for the December 1981 murder of Rosemary Rut-land, a 63-year-old widow. Mrs. Rutland was killed in her home by stabbing and a pistol shot. She had been gagged and her hands bound behind her; her house was ransacked. Appellant, a neighbor of Mrs. Rutland, was arrested the morning following the murder after he attempted to use credit cards belonging to the victim.
Appellant’s first trial was declared a mistrial after the jury twice informed the judge that it could not reach a verdict. On retrial, appellant’s wife and other members of his household testified that on the evening of the murder appellant made a series of trips to bring household items into their home, but that he refused to state where he had obtained the merchandise. These items were identified at trial as belonging to the victim. An eleven-year-old boy who lived in appellant’s house testified also that he saw appellant driving the victim’s car on the night of the murder and that he saw a pistol stuffed into appellant’s pants. The only evidence discovered inside the victim’s home to link appellant to the crime was his palm print on an air pump found in an open suitcase in a bedroom.
The most significant evidence against appellant at the second trial was testimony by Officer Hubert Bell that appellant had given an unrecorded statement in which he admitted killing Mrs. Rutland. Bell stated that appellant confessed to him immediately following a recorded session during which appellant was questioned by several officers. He testified that he and appellant were awaiting the arrival of guards to transfer appellant back to the jail when appellant admitted that he had killed the
At the second trial the jury found appellant guilty of capital murder and recommended by a vote of eleven to one that the judge sentence him to life in prison. The judge, however, found that “aggravating factors far outweigh[ed] any mitigating factors,” and imposed the death penalty.
After the Alabama Supreme Court set an execution date, appellant’s state court trial counsel filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis in Alabama circuit court. The court denied the petition without a hearing and without opinion. The Alabama Supreme Court denied a stay of execution pending appeal to that court, and appellant immediately filed his petition for habeas corpus in federal district court. Only hours before the scheduled execution, the district court entered a stay.
In his petition for federal habeas corpus, appellant asserts numerous claims challenging the constitutionality of various aspects of the guilt phase of his trial, his sentencing, and the Alabama capital punishment statute.
The court subsequently held an evidentiary hearing to determine whether appellant could establish cause under Wainwright v. Sykes,
II. PROCEDURAL BAR
On appeal, appellant contends that the district court erred in finding him procedurally barred from raising several of his claims and in denying his remaining claims on the merits. On the issue of procedural bar, appellant notes that the state court that denied his coram nobis petition did not clearly indicate that it relied on procedural grounds, but instead simply marked the petition “denied.” Thus, he asserts, the claims must be presumed to have been resolved on the merits and therefore properly before the federal habeas court. See Oliver v. Wainwright,
Whether a state court’s denial without opinion of a petitioner’s claims should be construed by a federal habeas court as a decision on the merits is a question that this court has agreed to consider en banc. See Hargrave v. Wainwright,
One of the federal habeas claims asserted by appellant was not raised in the state coram nobis proceedings, and thus properly was found by the district court to be procedurally barred. In his fourth amended habeas petition, appellant, who is black, contended that the exclusion of blacks from his jury by the use of peremptory strikes by the prosecutor was part of a broader, consistent pattern of racially based exclusions and therefore constituted an equal protection violation under the standards set forth in Swain v. Alabama,
Moreover, appellant never raised a facially sufficient Swain claim before any state court. At trial, appellant’s attorney cited Swain in objecting to the prosecutor’s peremptory strikes of black venire members, but he did not allege the systematic discriminatory exclusions necessary to establish a Swain violation. On direct appeal, appellant did not assert any claim alleging the racially based exclusion of jurors. Under Alabama law, such a failure to raise an available claim either at trial or on direct appeal constitutes a procedural bar to the assertion of the claim in a subsequent collateral proceeding. E.g., Ex parte Ellison,
This court has suggested in dicta that a federal habeas court will not consider a particular claim to be procedurally barred on state law grounds unless a state court, either explicitly or implicitly, previously has made that determination. See Nichols v. Wainwright,
Furthermore, we conclude that the district court properly found that appellant not establish cause to excuse his failure to raise the Swain claim in the state courts. See, e.g., Sykes, supra. At an evidentiary hearing, appellant attempted to show cause for his procedural default by demonstrating that his representation at trial and on appeal was so defective as to violate his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. See Murray v. Carrier,
Under Strickland, convicted defendants may succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel only if they establish both that their representation “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and that they were prejudiced by this deficient performance. Id. at 687-88,
Here, however, when given the opportunity to present evidence that his counsels’ failure to assert the Swain claim was unreasonable in light of the particular facts of the case, appellant offered nothing but the legally unsupportable contention that a decision not to raise any claim constitutes ineffective assistance. Indeed, the only evidence presented in the district court that even touched on the merits of the Swain claim consisted of testimony by one of appellant’s counsel that he did not include the Swain claim on direct appeal because he considered it a “loser” that would detract from the claims that he believed were more viable. See Smith v. Murray,
In contrast to the Swain claim, the other claims found by the district court to be procedurally barred were properly asserted in appellant’s state coram nobis petition. We need not now determine, however, whether the state coram nobis court’s summary denial of the petition should be construed as a decision on the merits of these claims. For, assuming arguendo that appellant is not procedurally barred from asserting these claims, see Smith v. Wain
III. JURY COMPOSITION
In addition to the procedurally barred Swain claim, appellant raises two other challenges to the composition of the trial jury: he contends that in his own trial the prosecution unconstitutionally used peremptory challenges along racial lines and that the trial court improperly dismissed one juror who expressed feelings in principle against the death penalty.
A. Batson Claim
To the extent that appellant challenges on equal protection grounds the exclusion of black jurors in his own particular trial, see Batson v. Kentucky, supra, the claim is precluded by Allen v. Hardy, supra, which held that Batson is not retroactive to cases in federal habeas corpus proceedings. Appellant’s challenge to the exclusion of black jurors in his own trial similarly fails to state a sixth amendment claim that would entitle him to habeas relief.
In McCree, the Supreme Court did not foreclose the possibility that the sixth amendment offers some protection against the exclusion of blacks from petit juries by use of peremptory challenges. As an alternative rationale for its holding that death-qualified juries do not violate the fair cross-section requirement, the Court noted that “groups defined solely in terms of shared attitudes” are not among those “distinctive groups in the community” upon which the fair cross-section requirement traditionally has focused.
Yet, we need not decide here when, if ever, the sixth amendment’s fair cross-section requirement prohibits the use of peremptory strikes to eliminate blacks from a petit jury, but see United States v. Dennis,
Admittedly, a jury composition claim brought under the equal protection clause differs in some respects from one brought under the sixth amendment. Compare Batson,
Moreover, both claims are based upon the notion that “[t]he exclusion of [blacks] from jury service, like the arbitrary exclusion of any well-defined class of citizens, offends a number of related constitutional values.” Peters v. Kiff,
B. Witt Claim
Appellant’s second challenge to the composition of the jury that tried him is his claim that one potential juror was improperly dismissed for cause after expressing “feelings in principle against the death penalty.” A review of the voir dire demonstrates, however, that this potential juror did not express mere “feelings in principle against the death penalty,” but rather an unequivocal conviction that she could not vote to impose the death penalty under any circumstances.
IV. TRANSCRIPT OF PRIOR TRIAL
Appellant next asserts that he is entitled to habeas relief because the state refused to provide him with a free transcript of his first trial. In Britt v. North Carolina,
Similarly, in this case, both the Alabama Criminal Court of Appeals and the Alabama Supreme Court determined on direct appeal that the transcript of appellant’s second trial demonstrated that appellant had available adequate substitutes that permitted him to engage in an effective defense.
Appellant, moreover, has failed to establish the applicability of any of the statutory exceptions to this presumptive correctness. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)-(8). Despite appellant’s contention that the state court has not held an evidentiary hearing on the claim, the appellate process itself constitutes a “hearing” within the meaning of the federal habeas corpus statute. Sumner v. Mata, supra. And although appellant claims that the trial court record “is replete with difficulties encountered by his attorneys in the inability to retrieve testimony from the first trial,” we conclude that the Alabama appellate court findings are fairly supported by the transcript of
Y. THE CONFESSIONS
Appellant presents two claims challenging the admission into evidence of his recorded robbery confession and his unrecorded murder confession to Officer Bell. He contends that the manner in which the police officers elicited the statements violated both his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination and his sixth amendment right to counsel. Additionally, he claims that his trial was rendered fundamentally unfair by the failure of the prosecution to disclose prior to trial the existence of his confession to Officer Bell. We conclude that neither claim has merit.
A. Voluntariness
In contending that the statements were improperly obtained in violation of his fifth and sixth amendment rights, appellant alleges that an attorney that his wife retained for him had instructed both the police and appellant not to engage in questioning unless the attorney was present. Thus, he urges, the statements were improperly elicited unless he both initiated the subsequent discussions with the police and knowingly and voluntarily waived his fifth and sixth amendment rights. See Oregon v. Bradshaw,
At a hearing conducted by the trial court to consider appellant’s objections to the admission of the confessions, Officer Bell testified that he and another officer were searching appellant’s house pursuant to a warrant when appellant attempted to place a collect telephone call from jail to his wife. Bell answered the phone and informed the operator that appellant’s wife was not in but that he would accept the call. He then advised appellant that his wife was out and, in response to appellant’s questions, explained his own presence at the house. Bell testified that at that point appellant said: “ ‘[W]ell I’ll talk to you.’ ” Bell asked whether appellant wanted to talk on the telephone or at headquarters, and appellant responded: “ ‘I’ll talk to you when you come to headquarters.’ ”
We conclude similarly that in giving the statements appellant validly waived both his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination and his sixth amendment right to counsel. For a waiver of these rights to be effective, the prosecution at trial must meet a “heavy burden of establishing ‘an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.’ ” Martin v. Wainwright,
Applying this standard, we conclude that appellant gave the statements voluntarily. As previously noted, appellant himself initiated the conversation with the police. Pri- or to giving the statements, he was informed of his Miranda rights and indicated verbally both that he understood the rights and that he was willing to relinquish them. He also signed a written waiver of those' rights. Appellant’s prior experience with the judicial system and his attorney’s explicit instructions not to talk to the police further indicate that he fully understood the rights he waived. Moreover, his attempt to blame “Bob” for the murder demonstrates that appellant’s decision to give the statements was a strategic choice voluntarily made.
Appellant’s contention that his will was overborne by police coercion during the course of the questioning similarly is unavailing. Appellant testified at the trial court hearing that officers told him that he would be charged with capital murder unless he gave a statement. This was the only factual assertion that appellant raised to support his motion to suppress the confessions, and it was denied by police officers. The trial court’s determination that the statements were given voluntarily thus contains an implicit factual finding against appellant’s credibility. See LaVallee v. Delle Rose,
B. Late Disclosure of the Unrecorded Confession
In addition to challenging the voluntariness of his statements to police, appellant claims that his trial was rendered fundamentally unfair by the late disclosure of his unrecorded murder confession to Officer Bell. Pursuant to Alabama rules of criminal discovery, appellant made a request prior to his first trial for all prosecution information regarding statements made by him. In response, the prosecution produced only a transcript of the recorded statement in which appellant admitted participating in the robbery of the victim’s home but denied killing the victim. Prosecution counsel had assured appellant that they had produced all statements of appellant and had offered no other statements at the first trial.
Only when Officer Bell was called to testify at the second trial did the prosecution indicate the existence of the murder confession. Appellant’s counsel moved for a mistrial on grounds that admission of the undisclosed confession constituted undue “surprise.” The prosecutor told the court that he had not intentionally failed to disclose the confession, but rather had simply overlooked in his files the notation regarding the conversation between Bell and appellant. He said that another officer informed him of the confession that morning. The court granted defense counsel an opportunity to question Bell, but subsequently denied the motion for a mistrial and allowed Bell’s testimony to be admitted into evidence.
Although due process requires that prosecutors disclose “evidence favorable to the accused,” Brady v. Maryland,
Here, there is little question that the unrecorded murder confession played a significant role in the appellant’s conviction. Appellant, however, has not alleged that the trial outcome would have been different if the prosecution had disclosed the confession earlier, nor has he alleged any facts to suggest that an earlier disclosure would have yielded a different result. Appellant contends only that he was unable either to challenge the statement or to structure his defense with the knowledge that the statement would be part of the prosecutor’s case. He fails to suggest, however, in what way prior knowledge of the statement could have enabled his attorney to challenge the testimony more effectively, or how a different defense could have militated against its effects. Moreover, appellant’s counsel requested and received a recess to question Officer Bell. After this recess, counsel vehemently cross-examined Bell concerning his failure to testify at the first trial. Appellant does not now suggest how Bell’s testimony could have been impeached more effectively. Indeed, although appellant argues that the confession had a “devastating effect” on his defense, he fails to show how advance knowledge that it would be introduced could have made the evidence any less devastating.
VI. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
Appellant contends that by failing to call alibi witnesses to testify in his defense, his trial counsel was so ineffective as to violate appellant’s right to counsel protected by the sixth and fourteenth amendments. After conducting an evidentiary hearing on this claim, the district court concluded that the representation of appellant by his trial counsel did not fall below an objective standard of reasonableness, and thus did not meet the threshold requirement of Strickland v. Washington,
VII. SENTENCING
Appellant raises several claims challenging the imposition of the death penalty by the trial judge. He urges that three aggravating circumstances found by the trial judge either were absent in this case or are constitutionally insufficient to warrant the death penalty. He also claims that during the sentencing hearing the trial judge improperly considered prior uncounseled convictions, non-convictions, and nonstatutory aggravating factors. He further contends that the resulting death sentence is disproportionate to the facts of this case. Moreover, he claims that neither the trial judge nor the Alabama appellate court sufficiently compared the proportionality of the penalty as applied in this case with those of similar cases. Based on these alleged errors in his own sentencing, appellant challenges the constitutionality of the Alabama capital punishment statute on grounds that it lacks adequate procedures at sentencing and that it is generally unreliable. We conclude that appellant cannot prevail on these claims.
A. Aggravating Circumstances
After the sentencing hearing in appellant’s trial, the jury, by a vote of eleven to one, recommended a sentence of life in prison. The judge, however, imposed a sentence of death.
Appellant’s assertion that murder during the course of a burglary is invalid as an aggravating factor is based upon a misconstruction of Proffitt v. Wainwright,
In finding that the habeas petitioner was entitled to resentencing, this court clearly did not conclude either that the aggravating circumstance of murder committed during the course of a burglary was constitutionally invalid or that this circumstance alone could not justify the imposition of the death penalty. To the contrary, this court gave full recognition to the Supreme Court’s earlier determination that this and other aggravating circumstances contained in the Florida capital punishment statute were facially sufficient to prevent the imposition of the death penalty in an arbitrary or capricious manner. Proffitt v. Florida,
Appellant’s claim that the crime was not “heinous, atrocious or cruel” similarly is without foundation. The victim was bound and gagged prior to being both stabbed and shot. Bruises on the victim’s body indicated that she otherwise had been abused. The evident physical and mental torture is sufficient for the trial court validly to have concluded that the heinousness of the murder was an aggravating circumstance. See, e.g., Francois v. Wainwright,
We also reject appellant’s challenge to the aggravating circumstance of being under sentence of imprisonment at the time of the capital offense. He contends that this circumstance is insufficient to support a sentence of death because he in fact was on parole when the murder was committed. Although the Supreme Court has characterized the fact of being out on parole as a “relatively weak aggravating circumstance,” Barclay v. Florida,
B. Proportionality Review
Appellant raises two claims challenging the proportionality of the death penalty as applied to the crime for which he was convicted. One claim, which apparently seeks to have a federal habeas court conduct a de novo proportionality review, is precluded by Moore v. Balkcom,
We also reject appellant’s claim that the trial court and the Alabama appellate courts violated his constitutional rights by not conducting a detailed determination of the proportionality and appropriateness of his death sentence in comparison with other capital murders. The Constitution does not require a proportionality review. Pulley v. Harris,
C. The Alabama Capital Punishment Statute
Having determined that the Alabama capital punishment statute was constitutionally applied in appellant’s case, we reject appellant’s conclusory facial attacks on the statute. His contention that the statute lacks standards for determining the burdens of proof and persuasion in the sentencing phase is refuted by the language of the statute itself. In support of this claim, appellant asserts only that the statute permits the court to consider a presentence report but does not permit the defendant either to rebut the information in the report or to present further mitigating circumstances to offset the information. The statute, however, expressly provides that the pre-sentence report be made available to the defendant and that the defendant be permitted to “respond to it and to present evidence to the court about
VIII. OTHER CLAIMS
Appellant’s remaining claims also are without merit. His assertion that the declaration of a mistrial in his first trial violated his right against double jeopardy is unfounded. A “trial judge’s belief that the jury is unable to reach a verdict” is a “classic basis for a proper mistrial.” Arizona v. Washington,
Similarly unfounded is appellant’s claim of unconstitutional prosecutorial misconduct. Although calling a defendant “scum” during the course of a closing argument might be a breach of propriety, the statement did not “ ‘so infect[ ] the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.’ ” Darden v. Wainwright, — U.S. -,
Finally, appellant’s claim that electrocution as a method of execution is cruel and unusual is precluded by Johnson v. Kemp,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court denying habeas relief is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. By separate order entered this day, the opinion previously issued in this case, Lindsey v. Smith, No. 86-7162, slip op. 1774 (11th Cir. Feb. 6, 1987), was withdrawn, and this opinion substituted.
. The Alabama capital punishment statute provides for a trifurcated process. The jury first determines whether the defendant is guilty of an enumerated capital offense. Ala.Code § 13A-5-43. If the jury finds the defendant guilty of such an offense, the court then conducts a sentencing hearing, after which the jury renders an advisory sentencing verdict. Id. §§ 13A-5-45, 46. Finally, based on evidence presented at trial, in the sentencing hearing, in a pre-sentence investigative report, and in any rebuttal to the investigative report, the trial court issues written findings and imposes sentence. Id. § 13A-5-47. In deciding the sentence, the court must consider the jury’s advisory verdict, but is not bound by it. Id.
. Appellant’s petition listed eighteen enumerated claims. A careful reading of the petition, however, indicates that the petition in fact raised the following sixteen claims:
(1) Improper exclusion of blacks from the jury through the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges; (2) improper refusal of the trial court to provide a free transcript of the mistrial prior to retrial; (3) failure of the prosecution to disclose to petitioner prior to trial the existence of the unrecorded confession; (4) double jeopardy due to the improper declaration of a mistrial in appellant's first trial; (5) improper admission into evidence of the uncounseled confessions; (6) absence and/or constitutional invalidity of the following statutory aggravating factors: (a) murder during the commission of a burglary; (b) heinousness of the crime; and (c) commission of crime while under "sentence of imprisonment”; (7) improper consideration during sentencing of uncounseled convictions, non-convictions, and nonstatutory aggravating circumstances; (8) disproportionality of the death sentence in this case; (9) failure of the Alabama trial and appellate courts to conduct a sufficient proportionality review as required by state law; (10) absence of procedures under Alabama capital punishment statute for allocating burdens of proof and persuasion at sentencing; (11) general unconstitutionality of Alabama capital punishment law; (12) electrocution violative of prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment; (13) improper, exclusion of juror who expressed reservations against capital punishment; (14) prosecutorial misconduct; (15) ineffective assistance of counsel; and (16) unconstitutional usurpation of legislative power by Alabama courts in their interpretation of the Alabama capital punishment law. (Claims 15 and 16 were raised by the appellant only, and were not joined by his counsel.)
. The record does not disclose the disposition by the Alabama Supreme Court of appellant’s appeal from the denial of his state coram nobis petition.
. The district court determined that appellant's failure to raise at trial Claims 6, 8, 11, 14, and 16 listed in footnote 3, supra, constituted a procedural default under Alabama law. The court determined that appellant was procedurally barred from raising Claims 1 and 3 due to his failure to raise the issues on direct appeal. As noted in footnote 6, infra, Claims 11 and 16 were also dismissed on other grounds. One element of Claim 1 (consistent exclusion of blacks from juries in violation of Swain v. Alabama,
. Of the claims listed in footnote 3, supra, the district court dismissed pursuant to Habeas Rule 4 Claims 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 16, and 6(a) and (c) either for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted or for the absence of sufficiently specific allegations. Based on the state court record, the court dismissed on the merits Claims 2, 4, and 5.
. Due to the lack of clarity of the petition, the district court did not rule on Claim 7 listed in footnote 3, supra.
. Wainwright v. Sykes, supra, required a showing of cause and actual prejudice before a-federal habeas court could review a claim barred by state procedural rules requiring certain claims to be raised at trial. The district court, under the authority of Griffin v. Wainwright,
. The Supreme Court decided Batson solely on equal protection grounds, specifically declining to consider the sixth amendment issues on the merits.
Two federal courts of appeal, in cases that the Supreme Court subsequently vacated and remanded in light of Batson and Allen v. Hardy, had granted relief on fair cross-section challenges to the use of peremptory strikes against blacks. See Booker v. Jabe,
. We express no opinion whether Allen v. Hardy, supra, would preclude a fair cross-section challenge to a petit jury where the case had completed direct appeal prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Batson, supra, but where the claim could not have been raised on equal protection grounds — e.g., a man challenging the exclusion of women by peremptory challenge. Cf. Griffith v. Kentucky, — U.S.-,
. Under Batson, the state may rebut the defendant’s prima facie case of purposeful discrimination by presenting a "neutral explanation for challenging black jurors.”
. We emphasize that the claims at issue here are dependent upon the same factual predicate: the exclusion from the petit jury by peremptory challenge of blacks qua blacks. They do not merely arise from the same event, as would be the case, for example, where a suspect under police interrogation could implicate both the fifth amendment right against self-incrimination and the sixth amendment right to counsel by uttering a single statement. In that situation, the single statement could support the different factual predicates necessary to establish the separate claims, i.e., that the individual asserted the right to remain silent and the right to counsel.
. During voir dire questioning, appellant’s counsel asked the juror, "[I]f the evidence came out and it looked like you were supposed to vote one way or another as to the guilt or the innocence of [appellant] would you be able to do that?” She replied, "I would have to vote against the chair.”
. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals stated:
For aught that appears in the record before us, the appellant had access to and took advantage of adequate alternatives or substitutes for the requested transcripts. Appellant's attorneys in the trial below and on this appeal also represented him during the mistrial. There was nothing in the record to indicate that they were denied access to the court reporter from the mistrial for recitation of any portion of the reporter’s notes or that any portion of the appellant's defense in the second trial was weakened due to the absence of a court-ordered free transcript.
The Alabama Supreme Court found: Lindsey’s attorneys attacked the weaknesses in the State's case and established the theory of their defense in cross-examining the State’s witnesses. They had transcripts of the prior testimony of three of the principal witnesses (two officers and the forensic pathologist) and statements given to the police by two other key witnesses (members of Lindsey’s household). In closing arguments, Lindsey’s attorneys emphasized the inferences to be drawn in his favor, chiefly from inconsistencies among the witnesses’ testimony and from questions raised about the State’s handling of the case.
. Appellant has not alleged, nor does the record clearly indicate, that adversarial judicial proceedings necessary to trigger appellant’s sixth amendment right to counsel had been initiated prior to the time he gave the statements. See Moran v. Burbine,
. The transcript contains the following questioning of appellant by Bell:
Q: You called back, a collect call.
A: Yeah.
Q: He answered the phone first, Sergeant Williams. The phone rang again and I answered it.
A: Well was you there?
Q: And you said, "who is this” and I said "Sergeant Bell.” And the operator said it was a collect call. I said, well this is Sergeant Bell and ask him does he want to talk to me. And you said, “yeah, let me talk to him.” And I talked to you.
A: Yeah.
Q: And you said you wanted to talk to me last night and you couldn't and you wanted to talk to me today. ...
. No court previously has found as fact that appellant initiated the conversation. Although the district court below accorded a presumption of correctness to such a "finding” by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, that court simply noted that Officer Bell testified at the suppression hearing that appellant initiated the conversation.
The absence of a prior factual finding does not require that we remand to the district court. In "a habeas corpus case in which the facts are contained primarily in the state court records," the facts are “equally available to us as to the federal court[ ] below.” Neil v. Biggers,
. Appellant claims that the admission of the unrecorded confession after the late disclosure of its existence violated Alabama law. See Ala. R.Crim.Pro. 18.1(a)(2) (requiring disclosure upon request of any statement made by a defendant to a law enforcement official), 18.5(a) (authorizing court upon discovery of noncompliance with criminal discovery requests to "grant a continuance," prohibit introduction of "evidence not disclosed,” or “enter such other order as the court deems just under the circumstances"). Whether the admission of the confession in fact violated Alabama evidentiary rules is not an issue properly before this court; our sole concern is whether the evidentiary ruling denied appellant's constitutional right to a fundamentally fair trial. See, e.g., Osborne v. Wainwright,
. Because appellant has failed to allege facts that in any way challenge the reliability of the trial outcome, we need not consider what de
. The Alabama capital punishment statute provides that the court impose sentence with the aid of an advisory sentencing verdict from the jury. See note 2, supra.
. Appellant did not challenge the trial court’s finding of the aggravating circumstance that the capital crime was committed by an individual previously convicted of a felony involving the use or threat of violence.
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
Although I agree that our circuit precedent permits the majority to entertain the merits of petitioner’s claims, I write to object to our decisional law that permits the majority to entertain a district court order that does not dispose of all of the petitioner’s claims. The district court never ruled on one of petitioner’s claims. Ante at 1142 n. 7. The trial court thus erroneously entered a “final judgment,” which, by definition, purported to terminate the litigation in full. In my view, Supreme Court precedent, see Andrews v. United States,
