John Middleton was convicted of the first-degree murder of Alfred Pinegar and sentenced to death by a Missouri trial court. The Supreme Court of Missouri affirmed the conviction and sentence on direct appeal,
State v. Middleton,
I.
We recite the facts as set forth by the Supreme Court of Missouri in its opinion affirming the denial of post-conviction relief. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e). On June 10, 1995, police arrested several individuals in Harrison County, Missouri, on methamphetamine-related charges. John Middle *814 ton, a local methamphetamine user and dealer, was not arrested at that time. About ten days later, he told a friend that “the snitches around here are going to start going down.” He said he had a “hit list,” which included Alfred Pinegar, another methamphetamine dealer and an associate of Middleton’s. Two days after making these comments, Middleton told the same friend that he was “on his way to Ridgeway, Missouri, to take Alfred Pine-gar fishing.”
Pinegar lived with his fiancée, Priscilla Hobbs, in Davis City, Iowa, just north of Harrison County. On June 23, 1995, Hobbs passed Middleton on the road on her way to Davis City. Middleton and his girlfriend were in a white Chevrolet pickup truck. When Hobbs arrived at home, Pinegar was gone, and the yard had been only partly mowed. Also missing were about $200 and a twelve-gauge shotgun that Pinegar habitually carried.
Around noon of that day, Middleton entered a Wal-Mart in Bethany, Missouri, with his girlfriend, Maggie Hodges, and a man believed to be Pinegar. They approached the sporting goods department where Middleton purchased six boxes of nine-millimeter ammunition and two boxes of twelve-gauge buckshot.
After leaving Wal-Mart, the three drove several miles to the vicinity of Ridgeway, where they parked in a field. When Middleton brandished Pinegar’s shotgun, Pine-gar fled. Middleton shot him twice in the back and then killed him with a shot to the face. Middleton dumped Pinegar’s body over a fence.
Middleton and Hodges then returned to the Bethany Wal-Mart, where Middleton exchanged the nine-millimeter rounds for ammunition of another caliber. Later in the afternoon, Gerald Parkhurst saw Middleton and Hodges standing beside their pickup on a road near Bethany. Explaining that the truck had broken down, Middleton and Hodges asked for a ride. Park-hurst agreed. The couple took five or six guns, including the shotgun, out of the pickup truck and placed them in Park-hurst’s car. Parkhurst drove them to Spickard, Missouri, where they took the guns and left.
On June 25, 1995, John Thomas visited Middleton to discuss possible drug informants. Middleton said that “something had to be done about them.” He told Thomas that he had Pinegar’s shotgun and that Pinegar “wouldn’t be needing it no more.” The following day, Pinegar’s body was discovered. Police also found at the crime scene a piece of leather fringe, an empty box of twelve-gauge shells, a pair of sunglasses with a missing lens, and a small plastic clock.
Several months later, while in jail, Middleton admitted to a fellow inmate that he killed Pinegar out of fear that Pinegar would “snitch” on him. Middleton described the murder to the other inmate, and said he was worried that he may have left some fringe from his leather jacket at the scene.
Middleton was tried and convicted of the first-degree murder of Pinegar. He presented no evidence in his defense in the guilt phase of the trial. In the punishment phase, the State presented evidence that he had subsequently murdered one Randy Hamilton and his girlfriend, Stacey Hodge, as part of his effort to eliminate informants. The jury recommended a death sentence, and the circuit court imposed it. Later, in a separate trial, Middleton was also sentenced to death for the other two murders.
See Middleton v. Roper,
II.
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), 28 *815 U.S.C. § 2254(d), a federal court may grant a writ of habeas corpus only if the state court’s determination:
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
“A decision is ‘contrary to’ federal law ... if a state court has arrived ‘at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme Court] on a question of lav/ or if it ‘eonfront[ed] facts that are materially indistinguishable from a relevant Supreme Court precedent’ but arrived at an opposite result.”
Davis v. Norris,
A.
Middleton first claims that he was denied his right to effective assistance of counsel and to due process of law when the state trial court refused to grant his requests for a continuance of the trial. Middleton complains that the State endorsed twenty-three new witnesses only three weeks prior to trial, and that as a result, his counsel were unable adequately to prepare his defense. He contends that counsel were forced to conduct depositions in the evening during the trial instead of readying themselves for the following day’s cross examinations, and that their effectiveness at trial suffered as a consequence.
By the time Middleton went to trial, about a year and four months had elapsed since an information was filed against him. His first counsel entered her appearance the day after the information was filed. In June 1996, eight months after the information was filed, his counsel requested and received a continuance from October 7, 1996, to February 24, 1997. Two more attorneys joined Middleton’s team in the summer or early fall of 1996. Middleton moved for a continuance several times during the final three weeks before trial, but the trial court adhered to the scheduled trial date in February 1997.
Middleton’s first request for a continuance, made three weeks before the February trial date, argued that counsel were unable to complete their preparation due to the unexpected length of depositions, the need to defend against accusations of two additional murders in the penalty phase, the recent discovery of additional reports and evidence, and the fact that some of the witnesses were difficult to locate. The trial court denied the motion, saying that “this is the- kind of case that never would be ready for trial,” because “there are always other witnesses to find or discovery or some new facet that comes up or something.” (T. Tr. 615). The court also reasoned that it was required to recognize the speedy trial rights of the defendant, who had been in confinement for an extended period of time. After the State endorsed its new witnesses, the trial court found that the defense would not be prejudiced by the endorsement and denied a second motion to continue, but granted Middleton leave to object to the presenta *816 tion of the witnesses if unforeseen discovery problems arose. In a third motion to continue that was filed five days before trial, Middleton’s lawyers argued that they were still not prepared to go to trial, citing a potential conflict of interest over the representation of a prosecution witness, the asserted unavailability of their own recently-endorsed penalty phase expert witness, continuing efforts to obtain discovery materials and other information from the State, and the need to have certain fiber evidence analyzed. The court denied the motion saying that “even if we continued it for six months, right before trial there are always those crises and problems and things that arise, and no matter how you went, six months or a year, you would have problems of that kind and that nature.” (T. Tr. 758). The court concluded that “the case is in the stage that it can be tried with fairness to Mr. Middleton,” but pledged to consider “additional protections” if Middleton raised “particular instances where relief is required from the Court” to ensure a fair trial. (Id.).
At trial, the State eventually called eleven of the twenty-three late-endorsed witnesses to testify. Middleton did not renew an objection to several of these witnesses, and others testified only briefly regarding perfunctory matters, such as the chain of custody of physical evidence. The court eventually granted Middleton’s motion to exclude the testimony of the witness with the asserted conflict of interest. The court denied objections to the testimony of the remaining late-endorsed witnesses.
On direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Missouri held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the motions to continue. The court observed that many of the twenty-three witnesses endorsed shortly before trial were “chain-of-custody” witnesses who verified the proper handling of physical evidence, that others already had been deposed by the defense or had testified in pre-trial proceedings, and that still others had been endorsed previously by the prosecution or the defense, or at least had been identified in police reports. The court distinguished its precedents in which the State failed to disclose key evidence until the morning of trial, and determined that in this case, Middleton had not established that he was prejudiced by the denial of his requests for a continuance.
Middleton argues that the trial court’s decisions resulted in a violation of his rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, and that the state supreme court unreasonably applied clearly established law in denying relief. Two Supreme Court precedents principally govern an accused’s constitutional right to a continuance. In
Ungar v. Sarafite,
Subsequently, in
Morris v. Sloppy,
These decisions of the Supreme Court state the governing constitutional rule at a high level of generality. In applying the deferential standard of AEDPA, “[t]he more general the rule, the more leeway courts have in reaching outcomes in case-by-case determinations.”
Yarborough v. Alvarado,
The Supreme Court of Missouri reasonably could conclude that the decisions of the state trial court recounted above were not an “unreasoning and arbitrary” insistence on proceeding to trial in the face of a justifiable request for delay.
See Slappy,
B.
Middleton’s second claim is that the trial court, by reciting the Missouri *818 Approved Jury Instructions at the penalty phase rather than a set of instructions requested by Middleton, precluded the jury from giving consideration to mitigating evidence, as required by the Eighth Amendment. The instructions employed by the trial court first asked the jury to determine whether any statutory aggravating factors had been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. (App. at 903). If so, then the jury was instructed to determine “whether there are facts and circumstances in aggravation of punishment which, taken as a whole, warrant the imposition of a sentence of death upon the defendant.” (I'd at 904). Next, the jury was advised that if it found that the aggravating circumstances “warrant the imposition of a sentence of death,” then it “must determine whether there are facts or circumstances in mitigation of punishment which are sufficient to outweigh the facts and circumstances in aggravation of punishment.” (Id at 905). This instruction required the jury to consider two statutory mitigating factors, as well as “any other facts or circumstances which you find from the evidence in mitigation of punishment.” (Id).
Middleton contends that the jury was likely to misunderstand these instructions, and that his “simple, clear, and understandable” alternatives should have been given instead. He argues that the court’s instructions were structured in a way that precluded the jury from giving effect to mitigating evidence. In addition to a general argument of confusion, he asserts that the instruction on aggravating circumstances called upon the jury to make the “death decision in isolation, solely on the basis of aggravating circumstances,” and that the jury was not told until the next instruction, “after they have already decided that death is the appropriate punishment,” that they should consider mitigating circumstances.
On direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Missouri held that the trial court did not err by using the Missouri Approved Instructions rather than Middleton’s proposed alternatives. The court concluded that the catch-all paragraph on mitigating circumstances was sufficient to permit the jury to give effect to any mitigating evidence.
Middleton
I,
We have held previously, even without the deferential lens of AEDPA, that the Missouri Approved Instructions are consistent with the Eighth Amendment. In
Ramsey v. Bowersox,
Middleton’s argument is phrased a bit differently, but we again perceive no constitutional flaw in the instructions, and thus no unreasonable application of established law. Viewing the instructions as a whole rather than in artificial isolation,
see Boyde v. California,
In a related argument, Middleton contends that his trial counsel were ineffective because they failed to object to the pattern instructions and to present evidence of scientific studies by Dr. Richard Wiener, a psychologist. According to Dr. Wiener, his studies show that jurors do not understand the standard Missouri instructions, that it is possible to improve juror comprehension by rewriting the instructions, and that jurors who do not comprehend the instructions may be more likely to impose the death penalty.
The state post-conviction trial court found that Dr. Wiener’s findings and conclusions were “not persuasive” and did not establish that the Missouri pattern instructions were confusing or misleading to the jury. Accordingly, the court ruled that trial counsel were not ineffective for declining to object to the pattern instructions or in failing to present Dr. Wiener’s studies. The Supreme Court of Missouri summarily affirmed the trial court’s ruling, citing several decisions in which it had rejected similar arguments based on Dr. Wiener’s studies.
Middleton II,
We conclude that the Supreme Court of Missouri did not unreasonably apply
Strickland v. Washington,
C.
Middleton’s third contention is that the trial court’s admission of a videotape and photograph showing the bodies of Middleton’s murder victims in an uncharged case
*820
was so unfairly prejudicial that it violated his rights under the Due Process Clause. The disputed videotape shows the scene where the bodies of Stacey Hodge and Randy Hamilton were discovered in the trunk of a car. The district court found that the videotape was “admittedly gruesome, showing the two victims’ skeletized remains found a month after they had been killed.”
Middleton v. Roper,
No. 4:03CV543,
On direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Missouri held the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this evidence.
Middleton I,
The only Supreme Court precedent on which Middleton relies is
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
The disputed videotape and photograph in this case were relevant to prove Middleton’s other criminal acts. These acts, in turn, were relevant to the sentencing decision.
See Zant v. Stephens,
Middleton contends that the videotape, in particular, was cumulative of testimony from law enforcement officers, but the Supreme Court has never held that the admission of indisputably relevant evidence amounts to a denial of due process. Our own precedents, which have upheld the admission of similar evidence against due process challenges prior to AEDPA, provide support for the view that the state court’s application of Supreme Court prec
*821
edent was at least objectively reasonable.
See Clark v. Wood,
D.
Middleton’s final claims concern the proportionality of his punishment. He contends that his sentence of death is not proportionate to the punishment imposed in similar Missouri cases, and that Missouri’s system of proportionality review fails to provide an appropriate comparison among cases. The Supreme Court of Missouri rejected Middleton’s challenges to proportionality review, citing this court’s decision that “Missouri’s proportionality review does not violate the Eighth Amendment, due process, or equal protection of the laws.”
Middleton I,
The Eighth Amendment does not require proportionality analysis,
Pulley v. Harris,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Catherine D. Perry, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
