MEMORANDUM OPINION
Petitioner Dennis Mitchell Orbe was convicted of capital murder in the Circuit Court for York County on August 13,1998, and thereafter sentenced to death in accordance with the jury verdict on October 27, 1998. After unsuccessfully challenging the imposition of the death penalty both on direct appeal and in state collateral proceedings, Orbe now petitions for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The matter is before the Court on respondent’s motion to dismiss the petition, which, for the reasons stated below, must be granted.
I. Facts 1
Dennis Mitchell Orbe was convicted of capital murder for shooting a convenience store clerk at a gas station in York County, Virginia, in the early morning of January 24, 1998. The incident was recorded on videotape by the store’s security camera system, and was eventually shown to the trial jury. At 3:38 a.m. on January 24, Orbe entered the store. He had been in the store twice on the previous day without buying anything. On this occasion, Orbe walked up to the check-out counter and pointed a revolver at the chest of the convenience store clerk, Richard Burnett. When Burnett opened the cash register drawer, Orbe shot him in the chest. As Burnett clutched his chest and struggled to remain standing, Orbe walked around the counter and removed some money from the cash register drawer. He then fled the store, taking with him the $90.65 he had taken from the cash register drawer.
Shortly thereafter, a customer discovered Burnett’s body and called for emergency assistance. A police investigator arrived to find Burnett’s lifeless body on the floor behind the cash register. 2 The video *753 tape from the security camera was recovered, and still images from the tape were disseminated to law enforcement and the media. The sheriffs office received several telephone calls identifying Orbe as the person in the pictures. Yet, Orbe was not apprehended until the conclusion of a high speed chase through the streets of Richmond on January 31, 1998. During this chase Orbe drove across a median, traveled down the wrong side of a street, and accelerated through a roadblock. He was eventually captured on foot after he jumped out of his vehicle and ran down an alley.
In the search pursuant to Orbe’s arrest, a partially loaded .357 magnum revolver was found tucked in the waistband of his pants. After examining the revolver and the bullet that had been removed from Burnett’s chest, a forensic scientist at the Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services concluded that the bullet had been fired from the revolver found on Orbe. The serial number of the gun matched that of a gun belonging to Orbe’s stepfather Willis Branch, which had been kept in the home Branch shared with Orbe. Branch had discovered that the gun was missing in the first or second week of January 1998.
The incident at the convenience store was part of a string of criminal acts Orbe committed over the course of ten days. The facts concerning these incidents were presented to the jury during the sentencing phase of the trial to prove Orbe’s future dangerousness. This evidence reflected that Orbe began his crime spree on January 21, 1998, when Lois Jones and Mark Scougal returned home to find Orbe in their bedroom. Orbe pointed the revolver at Scougal and ordered Scougal to drive him away because he was hiding from the police. While Orbe was forcing Scougal out to the car, Jones retrieved a firearm from her gun cabinet. Testimony was conflicting as to whether Jones fired a warning shot. In any event, Orbe clearly fired his revolver twice, hitting Jones in the leg on the second shot. After Scougal refused to give him the car keys, Orbe fled from the scene.
On the same day, Orbe approached two elderly men, Charles Powell and William Bottoms, who were sitting in the - front yard of Bottoms’s house in Richmond. Orbe showed the men his gun and ordered them to walk to the rear of the house: Telling the men he had “nothing to lose,” Orbe ordered both men to surrender their wallets and car keys. With these in hand, Orbe -left in Powell’s car. The shooting of Burnett occurred two and one half days later.
Thereafter, on January 30, 1998, Orbe was discovered inside a private residence in New Kent County when Karen Glenn,’ Patricia Tuck and another woman arrived to perform scheduled cleaning services. Orbe brandished his gun and yelled “Bitches, get down.” He hit Tuck between the shoulder blades with his gun. He then ordered the three women to crawl on their stomachs to a bedroom and into a closet. He nailed a piece of plywood across the closet door, sealing the women in the closet until the homeowner returned four and one half hours later.- Orbe told the women “I’m Dennis Orbe, I’m" wanted for murder, and it doesn’t matter what I do.” He took money, checks and other' valuables from the women, including the keys to Glenn’s car, which he stole.
During the sentencing phase of the trial, the jury also heard evidence in mitigation of the offense. Orbe’s mother and stepfather testified about his troubled childhood and his problems with alcohol abuse. A friend described a change in Orbe’s behavior shortly before the January 1998 incidents. The administrator of the regional jail where Orbe had been incarcerated tes *754 tified that he had received only one minor complaint about Orbe’s behavior during confinement.
Orbe also presented testimony from Dr. Thomas Pasquale, a clinical psychologist who had evaluated Orbe for the purpose of assessing his future dangerousness. Dr. Pasquale testified (i) that Orbe had exhibited suicidal tendencies for at least a year prior to the January 1998 incidents, (ii) that he was depressed, in part over his perceived failure as a father and husband, (iii) that he drank heavily, and (iv) that he had an impulse control dysfunction. Dr. Pasquale also noted that Orbe’s father had abandoned him at an early age, and that Orbe, who had recently located his father, may have been attempting to steal money for the purpose of visiting his father. In sum, Dr. Pasquale testified that Orbe was not a future danger in a prison setting, unless he had access to alcohol or was placed under duress while incarcerated, but that a “very dangerous, very risky” situation would result if he escaped.
II. Procedural History
Orbe was arrested on January 31, 1998, and indicted in York County for (i) the capital murder of Richard Burnett, (ii) robbery, and (iii) two firearms offenses. The Circuit Court for York County appointed Andrew Protogyrou as lead counsel and Damian Horne as co-counsel. Following a three day trial, August 10-13, 1998, the jury found Orbe guilty of all charges and on October 27, 1998, he was sentenced to death plus sixty years in accordance with the jury verdict. Still represented by Messrs. Protogyrou and Horne, Orbe appealed his convictions and death sentence on five grounds. The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed the convictions and the sentence on September 17,1999.
See Orbe v. Commonwealth,
On July 14, 2000, Orbe filed an original petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Supreme Court of Virginia. This petition was 113 pages long, exceeding by a substantial margin the 50 page limit on original habeas petitions in capital cases. See Rule 5:7A(g), Va. Sup.Ct. R. Orbe’s petition included a motion for leave to exceed the limit. The Supreme Court of Virginia denied the motion, ordering Orbe to file a petition in compliance with the Rule’s page limitations by August 28, 2000. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 (Va. July 27, 2000). Orbe did so, along with a motion to amend the petition to include three new claims. Orbe then filed a second motion to amend on June 20, 2001, adding one more claim and again requesting permission to exceed the page limit. The Supreme Court of Virginia denied the motions to amend and dismissed the petition on September 10, 2001. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 (Va. September 10, 2001). Orbe’s petition for rehearing was denied on November 2, 2001. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 (Va. November 2, 2001).
The Circuit Court of York County scheduled Orbe’s execution for December 13, 2001. On December 6, 2001 the execution was stayed by an Order of this Court.
See Orbe v. True,
Civil Action No. 01-1845-A (E.D.Va. December 6, 2001) (Order). Also on December 6, Orbe filed a writ of certiorari to review the habeas decision of the Supreme Court of Virginia, which was denied on February 29, 2002.
See Orbe v. Taylor,
Thereafter, pursuant to the prescribed schedule, 3 Orbe filed a 286-page petition *755 for -a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on May 10, 2002. The petition sets out the following grounds for relief:
I. Racial discrimination:
A. The prosecutor’s decisionmaking was tainted by improper considerations of race.
B. Defense counsel failed to protect Orbe from the prosecutor’s improper considerations of race.
II. Improper exclusion of venireman Conner:
A. The trial court improperly excluded Conner.
B. Defense counsel failed to challenge the exclusion at trial or on appeal.
III. Lesser included offense:
A. Orbe was deprived of his right to a first degree murder instruction.
B. Defense' counsel failed to present properly the lesser included offense ■ issue at trial and on appeal. .
1. Failed to ensure that the trial court- understood the state law on
■ first degree murder.
2. Failed to clarify the evidence regarding the hammer block on the gun.
3. Failed to adduce evidence regarding modifications making the gun easier to fire.
4. Failed to cite the Constitution and federal precedent on appeal. •
IV. Conflict of interest:
A. The defense expert also acted as the prosecution’s expert.
B. Defense counsel failed to protect Orbe’s confidences and secrets.
1. Failed to limit Dr. Pasquale’s communications with the prosecutor.
2. Failed to debrief Dr. Pasquale adequately.
3. Failed to inform and consult with Orbe.
V. Orbe was not provided proper expert assistance:
A. The appointed expert did not provide appropriate assistance.
B. Defense counsel failed to ensure that Orbe had proper expert assistance.
1. Failed to rely.on Ake with respect to the appointment of an ''expert,
2.. Failed to ensure that Orbe had the assistance of an independent expert.
3. Failed to investigate and provide the expert accurate information about Orbe’s supposed abuse of his former wife.
4. Failed to ensure that the expert had all necessary and relevant information from witnesses and documents.
.5. Failed to request assistance of a psychiatrist or neuropharmacologist.
VI. Ineffective assistance of counsel:
A., Defense counsel encouraged prospective jurors to disregard mercy in their sentencing decision.
B. Defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance during the sentencing phase.
1. Failed to investigate sexual, physical and emotional abuse'.
2. Failed to present evidence that Orbe may suffer from bipolar disorder.
3. Failed to obtain pertinent mental health records.
4. Failed to obtain and present evidence from family and friends.
C. Defense counsel failed to brief or argue assignment of error 16 on appeal (the antisympathy instruction).
*756 VII. Appointment of Horne:
A. Horne did not meet the Public Defender Commission’s qualifications.
B. Defense counsel failed to object to, inform Orbe of, or handle properly Horne’s lack of qualifications.
VIII. Juror misconduct:
A. Jurors were exposed to improper extraneous influences.
B. Defense counsel failed to investigate and disclose juror misconduct.
IX. The death penalty in Virginia is unconstitutional.
X. Defective verdict form:
A. Juror instructions and verdict forms were inconsistent and confusing.
B. Defense counsel failed to ensure that the forms corresponded to the instructions and the sentencing 'statutes and failed to argue properly the issue at trial and on appeal.
XI. Denial of federal constitutional protection in state habeas corpus proceedings. 4
Also pending before the Court is Orbe’s renewed motion for funds for the appointment of a psychiatrist under 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(9). ' '
III. Procedurally defaulted claims
A.
One set of claims presented by Orbe in his federal habeas petition was procedurally defaulted during the state court proceedings. The Supreme Court of Virginia, in ruling on Orbe’s state habeas petition, found that claims 1(A), 11(A), 111(A), IV(A), and V(A) were procedurally defaulted under the rule in
Slayton v. Parrigan,
For these five claims, Orbe asserts that ineffective assistance of counsel constitutes cause for the state procedural default. It is well established that attorney errors can serve as cause to excuse a default, but that the attorney’s performance in this respect must be so poor as to constitute constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment.
See Coleman v. Thompson,
Orbe also asserts independent ineffective assistance of counsel claims based on *757 the same fact situations. In claims 1(B), 11(B), III(B), IV(B), and V(B) Orbe argues that his counsel’s failures themselves are independent bases for relief. These claims are discussed individually below. Thus the same failures and omissions of defense counsel are used in two distinct ways by Orbe: First, he relies on them as cause to excuse the default of the underlying substantive claims, as in claim 1(A), and second, he asserts that they are independent grounds for relief in their own right, as in claim 1(B).
At the outset, Orbe contends that different standards of review are applicable to the consideration of ineffective assistance of counsel depending on whether the ineffective assistance is offered as cause for default, as in claim 1(A), or as an independent basis for relief, as in claim 1(B). When ineffective assistance claims are offered as independent bases for relief and were adjudicated on the merits in state court proceedings, a federal court must apply the deferential review standard established by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AED-PA), as codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
See Terry Williams,
Orbe correctly acknowledges that he must have' exhausted his independent ineffective assistance of counsel claims in order to raise cause-for-default ineffective assistance claims on federal habeas.
See Edwards v. Carpenter,
Orbe’s arguments are unpersuasive. Merely showing that cause for default is a federal question is insufficient to avoid § 2254(d)’s deferential review standard. All claims which may be considered on federal habeas review raise a federal question. See § 2254(a) (The federal court “shall entertain an application for a writ of habeas corpus ... only on the ground that [the petitioner] is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.”). Therefore, the scope of § 2254(d)’s deferential review standard cannot turn on whether or not a federal question is present. Nor can Orbe evade the deferential standard of § 2254(d) by arguing that the cause-for-default question is outside the scope of § 2254(d) because it is a federal procedural question. The statute requires deference with respect to “any claim” earlier adjudicated on the merits in state court, regardless of the procedural posture of the claim on federal habeas review. 8 Thus, § 2254(d) requires deference to an earlier state adjudication of a claim on the merits without regard to the posture of that claim on federal review. Put differently, § 2254(d)’s plain language requires a federal court on habeas review to apply that provision’s deferential review standard to a state merits adjudication of an ineffective assistance claim whether that claim is asserted as cause for default or as an independent, substantive claim for relief. 9
*759
Moreover, the case law regarding exhaustion of claims clearly refutes Orbe’s contention that cause-for-default ineffective assistance claims must be considered independently of substantive ineffective assistance claims adjudicated by the state. The very paragraph in
Carrier
on which Orbe relies to argue that the cause-for-default determination is an independent federal question makes clear that, as far as exhaustion of claims is concerned, no distinction is made between the two types of ineffective assistance claims. Specifically,
Carrier
makes clear that federal courts may decide the cause-for-default question without regard to exhaustion of a claim in state proceedings only if the federal court can adjudicate the question “without deciding an independent and unexhausted constitutional claim on the merits.”
Carrier, 477
U.S. at 489,
Finally, Orbe contends, unpersuasively, that cause-for-default ineffective assistance claims must be determined by a standard different from § 2254(d) to preserve the “robust function of cause and prejudice.” In support of this contention, Orbe points out that if identical standards were to apply to both types of ineffective assistance claims, then a petitioner able to use ineffective assistance to show cause for default would always also have an avenue for relief through a straightforward ineffective assistance claim. According to Orbe, this leaves ineffective assistance as cause for default with no independent role or function. While this is true in certain circumstances, it does not coinpel the conclusion that a different standard of review ought to apply to the two different types of ineffective assistance claims. To the contrary, the identical
Strickland
standard has long been applied to both types of claims.
See Edwards,
In the end, then, Orbe’s ineffective assistance claims asserted as cause to excuse default were decided on the merits by the Supreme Court of Virginia, and thus must be reviewed deferentially pursuant to § 2254(d). And, as discussed infra, Orbe has failed in each instance to show, as required by § 2254(d), that the Supreme Court of Virginia’s application of the Strickland test to his ineffective assistance claims was either “contrary to, or an unreasonable application of’ federal law, or that it was “based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented.” § 2254(d)(1) & (2). Therefore, Orbe cannot rely on these claims to excuse the default, and it follows that claims 1(A), 11(A), 111(A), IV(A) and V(A) are not cognizable on federal habeas, having been previously denied on an adequate, independent state procedural ground. 11
B.
A second set of claims offered by Orbe in his federal habeas petition, claims VII, VIII, IX, and X, are properly found to be procedurally defaulted because they were not “presented to the Supreme Court of Virginia on direct appeal nor in state habeas corpus proceedings.”
Gray v. Netherlands
Orbe initially filed a 113-page state ha-beas petition. State habeas petitions in death penalty cases in Virginia are limited to 50 pages, unless permission for a longer petition is granted by a justice of the court. See Rule 5:7A(g), Va. Sup.Ct. R. The Supreme Court of Virginia denied Orbe’s accompanying motion for permission to file a longer petition, and directed him to file a 50-page petition. Orbe filed a shorter petition as directed. On the same day, Orbe filed a motion to amend his petition “by leave of court” under Rule 1:8, Va. Sup.Ct. R., and also requested permission to exceed the 50-page limit. Orbe thereby sought to reintroduce claim VII, which had been omitted from the shortened petition, and two new claims, claims VIII and IX. A second motion for amendment added a proposed claim X. Orbe’s motions to amend were opposed by the Warden, who contended that granting the request for leave to amend under Rule 1:8 would simply circumvent the Rule 5:7A(g) page limit. The Supreme Court of Virginia denied Orbe’s motions to amend without comment, and did not address the merits of any of the claims proffered by Orbe in his motions to amend. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 (Va. September 10, 2001).
In order to exhaust state remedies, as required by § 2254(b)(1)(A) & (e), it is well established that petitioners “must give the state courts one full opportunity to resolve any constitutional issues by invoking one complete round of the State’s established appellate review process,” but they need not “invoke extraordinary measures” which are “alternatives to the standard review process.”
See O’Sullivan v. Boerckel,
Two cases help to illustrate the application of these principles. The Supreme Court in
Castille
held that filing a new claim in a post-conviction petition for allo-catur with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was not a “fair presentation” of that claim to the state court.
Castille,
Orbe contends that his motion for leave to amend and leave to exceed the page limit was not an extraordinary measure in the manner of the petition for allocatur in Castille, but rather an unexceptional mechanism for the presentation of new claims, similar to the motion to reopen the PCR proceeding in Baker. He argues that motions to amend under Rule 1:8 are routine, and “shall be liberally granted in furtherance of the ends of justice,” Rule 1:8, Va. Sup.Ct. R. Moreover, he argues that the 50-page limit established by Rule 5:7A(g) is discretionary, and serves administrative convenience only, because it can be waived by a single justice. See Rule 5:7A(g), Va. Sup.Ct. R. (“Except by permission of a justice of this Court..He asserts that “nothing in Virginia law prohibited the state court” from granting his motion to amend his petition and exceed the page limit. Therefore, he contends that the claims offered to the state court in his motions to amend were fairly presented to that court.
Orbe’s argument misstates the standard established by
O’Sullivan, Baker,
and
Cas-tille.
In determining whether a claim was “fairly presented,” it is not enough to establish that the state court was not legally barred from considering the merits of the claim; instead, the relevant inquiry focuses on whether the claim was presented according to the “statutorily prescribed mechanism for doing so,”
Baker,
Two considerations compel the conclusion that Orbe’s claims, which were presented in violation of Rule 5:7A(g)’s page limit, were not fairly presented. First, although motions to amend under Rule 1:8 may be routine, ordinary, and liberally granted, motions to exceed the page limit imposed by Rule 5:7A(g) are precisely the kind of extraordinary measure which does not constitute “fair presentation.” Indeed, the page limit appears to be a routinely-enforced rule, not a mere discretionary guideline. Consistent with this, Orbe offers only one Virginia state habeas case in which permission to exceed the page limit was granted.
See Bramblett v. Warden,
No. 992912 (Va. February 10, 2000). This single example hardly suggests that per
*763
mission to exceed the page limit is routine and ordinary. Even more telling is the fact that a violation of similar Virginia Rules establishing page limits for petitions for direct appeal and opening briefs results in procedural default, even though these Rules can also be waived by the discretion of a single justice.
See Mueller v. Angelone,
Second, both the majority and the dissent in
O’Sullivan
recognize that federal exhaustion and procedural default rules must not allow a petitioner to circumvent a state opportunity to review federal claims by presenting claims at the state level in a manner which violates a state procedural rule.
See O’Sullivan,
Finally, Orbe argues that the 50-page limit physically prevented him from bringing all of his viable constitutional claims before the state court because it was impossible to “cram” them into the petition and still argue them with the required thoroughness. He argues that because of this impediment to bringing his claims, “circumstances exist that render [the state corrective] process ineffective to protect the rights of the applicant,” making proper presentment to the state courts unnecessary.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(l)(B)(ii). Yet, the Fourth Circuit in
Weeks
flatly rejected the argument that page limits physically prevent petitioners from raising claims, noting that “[t]he fifty-page limit [for briefs on direct appeal] merely limited the manner in which [petitioner] could present his arguments; it did not wholly prevent him from presenting them.”
Weeks,
In 'sum, although claims VII, VIII, IX and X were included in Orbe’s motiohs to amend his state habeas petition, these claims were never presented to the Supreme Court of Virginia in compliance with the page limit established by Rule 5:7A(g), Va. Sup.Ct. R. Barring “special and important reasons” to grant Orbe leave to amend his petition and circumvent the page limit rule, the Supreme Court of Virginia could not, and did not, reach the merits of these claims. Therefore, according to
Castille,
these claims were not fairly presented to the state court.
See Castille,
IV. Merits Review
A. Claim 1(B): Defense Counsel Unreasonably Failed to Address the Prosecutor’s Racial Discrimination
Orbe claims that his original trial counsel unreasonably failed to protect Orbe from the prosecutor’s improper consideration of race. In this regard, Orbe contends that the prosecutor did, in fact, consider race as part of her decisions (i) to charge- Orbe with capital murder and (ii) to refuse his plea offer. He further contends that his counsel was or should have been aware of the prosecutor’s improper consideration of race, and therefore provided ineffective assistance by not confronting the prosecutor, moving for her recusal, moving to quash the indictment, or consulting Orbe about the prosecutor’s consideration of race. The Supreme Court of Virginia addressed the merits of this claim on state habeas review, finding that the claim failed “for lack of proof that there was racial discrimination in the prosecution of the case.” See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 2 (Va. September 10, 2001). Thus, relief may be granted on the basis of this claim only if the Supreme Court of Virginia’s ruling was “contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law.” See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). 13
To show ineffective assistance of counsel sufficient to create a violation of the Sixth Amendment, Orbe must show that his counsel (i) failed to offer “reasonably effective assistance,” and (ii) that there is “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
*765
different.”
See Strickland v. Washington,
The relevant facts concerning, the race discrimination claim are as follows: Six months prior to Orbe’s trial, a York County jury verdict resulted in Daryl Atkins receiving a death sentence for capital murder. Prior to Orbe’s trial, his counsel approached the prosecutor to discuss plea negotiations. According to trial counsel’s affidavit, the prosecutor refused to consider any agreement, and told him that “she could not agree to give a white man (Mr. Orbe) a life sentence when she had just asked for and obtained a death sentence for a black man (Daryl Atkins).” The prosecutor avers in her affidavit that she rejected the plea offer on the merits, because she considered Orbe’s case “clearly a capital murder.” She noted that the crime was “brutal” and the evidence of his guilt was “overwhelming.” She also noted that the murder was part of a “crime spree, including robbery, another shooting, abductions and a high-speed chase with the police in Richmond.” Finally, she states that she did not “see any distinction to be drawn between [Orbe’s and Atkins’s] cases in terms of the seriousness of 'the offenses or the evidence of the future dangerousness of the defendants.” She acknowledges making a statement regarding the need to be consistent between the two defendants regarding capital murder charges. Specifically, the prosecutor avers that “only as an afterthought, I remarked that I could imagine that if there was [sic] such a plea agreement in Orbe’s case, someone might allege that he received special treatment only because he was white.” On these facts, Orbe argues that the prosecutor impermissibly allowed race to play a part in her decisions regarding charging and plea negotiations, in violation of Orbe’s equal protection rights.
The legal principles that govern this claim are well-established. Decisions to prosecute “may not be based upon an unjustifiable standard such as race, religion, or other arbitrary classification.”
United States v. Armstrong,
As an initial matter, the prosecutor’s statement simply cannot bear the weight Orbe places upon it. According to the prosecutor’s affidavit, the statement came as an afterthought, after she had already rejected the life sentence plea on the merits because she viewed the incident as “clearly a capital murder.” Thus, this record does not contain the requisite “clear evidence” that impermissible race considerations infected the prosecutor’s decisions. At best, the record reflects that the prosecutor’s charging decisions and plea decisions were properly made on the merits and that she was conscious of race, but only to the extent that she had resolved not to let race affect her charging decisions. 15
Nor has Orbe demonstrated that the proffered legitimate reasons for the prosecutor’s refusal to negotiate a plea were pretextual. 16 Nothing in the record contradicts the prosecutor’s assertion that her decision to treat the cases similarly was a result of her conclusion that they were both clearly capital murder cases and that justice required that like cases should be treated alike. At most, Orbe suggests that Atkins’s crime may have been more serious than Orbe’s, and that Atkins had greater potential future dangerousness than Orbe. 17 Yet, this comparison does not, by itself, prove that the prosecutor wrongly refused a plea to a life sentence in Orbe’s case. Even assuming, arguendo, that Orbe’s crime was less serious than the Atkins crime, this does not contradict the prosecutor’s judgment that both crimes warranted a death sentence. Nor does it show that the prosecutor acted unreasonably in treating the cases alike.
Orbe also argues that his case was particularly appropriate for a plea, because he lacked prior convictions and because a jury could reasonably conclude that the shooting was accidental. Yet, the record factually refutes this argument; Orbe’s extensive and violent crime spree at the time of the murder negates the absence of prior convictions, and, as discussed infra at pp. 771-72, the evidence of accidental firing is nonexistent. Orbe further argues that a plea leading to a life sentence would have provided closure and punishment while sparing the state the costs of death penalty litigation and appeal. Of course, the same could be said about any death penalty case. In sum, there is simply no persuasive showing that Orbe’s case was especially appropriate for a plea to less than *767 capital murder, and therefore there is no showing that the prosecutor’s explanations for her decisions were pretextual.
Orbe has alleged an odd sort of reverse discrimination: He does not contend that he was treated differently from Atkins on account of their different races, but that he was treated the same as Atkins, when he should not have been, because their races differed. He accuses the prosecutor not of discriminatory motives herself, but rather of improperly considering race out of fear that she would be viewed as racially discriminatory.
18
Although such defensive reverse discrimination is not implausible and, if established, would constitute an impermissibly race-motivated prosecutorial decision, Orbe has not produced any persuasive evidence that this prosecutor im-permissibly used race as a factor in charging and plea negotiation decisions. Simply put, Orbe has not provided the “clear evidence” of prosecutorial bias required by
Armstrong
to overcome the presumption that the prosecutor did not violate Orbe’s right to equal protection of the laws.
B. Claim 11(B): Counsel Unreasonably Failed to Object to Venireman Conner’s Improper Exclusion
Orbe claims ineffective assistance of counsel based on his counsel’s failure to object, either at trial or on appeal, to the trial judge’s allegedly improper exclusion of potential juror Velma Conner. The Supreme Court of Virginia considered this claim on state habeas review and found that Orbe had failed to show ineffective assistance under
Strickland. See Orbe v. Warden,
No. 001708 at 2-3 (Va. September 10, 2001);
Strickland,
The trial judge discretionarily excused Velma Conner after apparently concluding that Conner’s own doubts about her ability to serve as a juror in a capital case would significantly impair her ability to serve as an effective and impartial juror in the case. The pertinent voir dire colloquy 19 reflects *768 that when asked “[D]o you have an opinion that would prevent you from convicting someone of an offense that is punishable by death,” Conner responded “it is a problem for me.” She also agreed that she would “feel better” if she were relieved of the duty of having to sit in judgment on a death penalty case. On the other hand, Conner did not state that she “could not impose” the death penalty, only that “the evidence would have to be very strong.” On the basis of these answers, the trial judge excluded this juror.
Analysis of the merits of a potential juror’s exclusion must begin with the recognition that the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments “guarantee[ ] a defendant on trial for his life the right to an impartial jury.”
Yeatts v. Angelone,
Conner candidly admitted that the death penalty “is a problem for me.” This problem apparently was not absolute; she indicated that she “could impose the death penalty” if the evidence was “very strong.” Thus, whether Conner’s exclusion was proper is determined by applying the “substantially impair” standard found in Morgan and Yeatts. In this respect, Orbe contends that Conner’s reservations concerning the death penalty were the sort of mere qualms that do not properly justify the exclusion of a juror. In support, he points out (i) that Conner does not elaborate on the nature of her “problem” with the death penalty, which apparently arose after the subpoena, (ii) that her requirement that the evidence be “very strong” does not conflict with the proper “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard, and (iii) that many citizens, feeling the heavy burden of service on a death penalty jury, would “feel better” if they were excused. Thus, Orbe argues Conner was improperly ex- *769 eluded and Orbe’s counsel unreasonably failed to raise the issue at trial or on direct appeal.
This argument, while not without some force, is ultimately unconvincing. Conner plainly had a “problem” with the death penalty and did not wish to serve as a juror in the case. Although the nature of her “problem” was not probed, it is fair to say there was more than a little ambiguity about her willingness or ability to impose the death penalty in an appropriate ease. In these circumstances, determinations of the trial judge, “who had the benefit of first-hand exposure to voir dire” are reviewed “with discretion,” and where responses reveal “some ambiguity about the willingness or ability to impose the death penalty, we presume the correctness of the trial court’s decision.”
Truesdale v. Moore,
Similar to the potential juror in
Tipton,
Conner gave ambiguous and arguably contradictory indications of her ability to impose the death penalty. What is clear is that she had a problem with the death penalty and did not wish to sit on the case. Conner’s statement that she could only impose the death penalty given “very strong” evidence gives rise to a valid concern that, in light of her problem with the death penalty, she would have difficulty following the trial court’s instructions in the case. In these circumstances, deference is appropriately accorded to the trial judge’s determination regarding the true depth of Conner’s reservations and feelings and whether these would “substantially impair” her ability to fulfill her duties as a juror in the case.
See Morgan,
Based on its review of the merits of Conner’s exclusion,- the Supreme Court of Virginia determined that it was not unreasonable, under Strickland’s first prong, for Orbe’s trial counsel to fail to object to Conner’s exclusion. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 3 (Va. September 10, 2001). Furthermore, given the deference extended to the trial judge’s decision on exclusion, the Virginia Supreme Court determined that Orbe had not shown that counsel’s failure to raise the issue on appeal resulted in prejudice, as required by *770 Strickland’s second prong. See id. Given the teachings of Morgan, Yeatts, and Tipton, there is no basis to conclude that the Supreme Court of Virginia’s determination in this respect was “contrary to” or “an unreasonable application of’ clearly established federal law. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). Therefore, Orbe’s juror exclusion ineffective assistance claim must be dismissed.
C. Claim 111(B): Counsel Unreasonably Failed to Ensure Proper Presentation of the Lesser Included Offense
Orbe contends that his Sixth Amendment right to counsel was violated by his counsel’s failure to present properly the issue of a lesser included offense instruction on first degree murder. This failure included counsel’s failure to correct the trial court’s alleged misunderstanding of the law on the issue (claim 111(B)(1)); counsel’s failure to clarify the evidence regarding how easily the gun could have been accidentally fired (claims 111(B)(2) & (3)); and counsel’s failure to call attention to the Constitution and to pertinent Supreme Court decisions in the argument on direct appeal (claim 111(B)(4)). Finding that no evidence supports Orbe’s theory that the firing of the gun was accidental, the Supreme Court of Virginia ruled that claims 111(B)(1), (2), and (3) failed under
Strickland’s
prejudice prong and claim 111(B)(4) failed under
Strickland’s
performance prong.
See Orbe v. Warden,
No. 001708 at 4-6 (Va. September 10, 2001);
Strickland,
It is true that a defendant’s constitutional rights are violated if the jury is not permitted to consider a lesser included offense when “the evidence would have supported such a verdict.”
Hopper v. Evans,
Thus, the merits of the lesser included offense claim turn on whether the evidence in Orbe’s case supports a verdict of first degree murder, the lesser offense. The Virginia Code defines capital murder, in part, as “[t]he willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing of any person in the commission of robbery or attempted robbery.” Va.Code § 18.2-31(4). First degree murder, in turn, is defined in relevant part as “[mjurder, other than capital murder, by poison, lying in wait, imprisonment, starving, or by any willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing, or in the commission of, or attempt to commit, ... robbery, ... except as provided in § 18.2-31 [capital murder].” Va.Code § 18.2-32. In other words, a defendant who kills “during the course of a robbery, but [does] not kill with willfulness, deliberation, and premeditation” is guilty only'of first degree murder, not capital murder.
Briley v. Bass,
Under Virginia law, “the evidence relied on to support a proffered instruction must amount to ‘more than a scintilla.’ ”
See Rosen v. Greifenberger,
In his habeas petition, Orbe claims that he shot Burnett “unintentionally, as a result of fear or confusion.” Orbe does not claim that some outside or intervening force caused him to shoot the gun accidentally, but rather that he pulled the trigger but did not really mean to shoot. Even though no such arguments were made at trial, Orbe asserts that “Orbe’s consistent theory at trial was that he was nervous, his hand shook or clenched involuntarily, and his stepfather’s gun discharged only because of its light trigger pull and the short distance the trigger had to traverse to reach the most rearward position.” Orbe provides no evidence to support this involuntary shooting theory. He claims that the jury could have inferred a lack of willfulness, deliberation, and premeditation based on the following evidence: (i) the videotape, which recorded only one frame per second and did not show the actual shooting, (ii) the fact that the gun had been modified and required only a light trigger pull in order to fire, (iii) the fact that Orbe did not use his gun when trying to evade capture, even though he had an opportunity to do so, and (iv) the fact that he fired only one shot. None of this evidence advances Orbe’s theory.
First, although the videotape does not capture the instant when the shooting occurred, it does not support the “unintentional shooting” theory. After Burnett was shot, Orbe simply walked around the counter, took the money, and left the store, showing neither concern for Burnett nor surprise that the gun had fired. Second, although the firearms expert testified at trial that the gun had a light action when the hammer was cocked, he also testified that the trigger still would have to be pulled back and held for the gun to fire. 22 Moreover, had Orbe actually presented this unintentional firing argument during the guilt phase of the trial, the prosecution could have easily shown that he was, in fact, quite familiar with the fight action of the gun. After all, Orbe had fired the gun at Lois Jones twice two days before shooting Burnett. Third, the shooting of Lois Jones also negates any positive inference the jury might draw concerning Orbe’s propensity to shoot the gun intentionally based on his failure to do so while attempting to evade capture. Finally, firing only one shot might be consistent with the accident theory, but it is hardly evidence that the shooting was accidental when no more than one shot was necessary to incapacitate and kill Burnett and complete the robbery. Moreover, Orbe’s calm response to the shot that killed Burnett belies the notion that it was inadvertent.
Mens rea
is frequently inferred from circumstantial evidence when a defendant
*772
has not himself provided insight into his state of mind. Here, the circumstantial evidence overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that Orbe pulled the trigger deliberately. In the face of this evidence, Orbe asserts that the shooting. was somehow involuntary. If this sort of tenuous assertion, without any evidentiary support, were sufficient to overcome the “more than a scintilla” burden required for the lesser included offense instruction, it is hard to imagine a situation where the instruction should
not
be granted. Given the absence of any evidence to support his accidental shooting theory, Orbe cannot, consistent with
Hopper
and
Hatcher,
show entitlement to an instruction on that theory. With no hope of success on the underlying claim, Orbe cannot show prejudice with respect to trial counsel’s failures to understand the law and present the available evidence, nor can he show that he was prejudiced by counsel’s failure to pursue the lesser included offense claim on appeal. It follows that Orbe’s ineffective assistance claims with regard to the lesser included offense - instruction were correctly dismissed by the Supreme Court of Virginia under
Strickland,
D. Claim TV(B): Ineffective Assistance of Counsel in Failing to Protect Orbe’s Confidences and Prevent a Conflict of Interest
Orbe claims his trial counsel was ineffective in his management of Dr. Pasquale, the psychological expert appointed to assist in his defense, resulting in the release of detrimental confidential communications to the prosecutor and the failure to discover or prevent Dr. Pasquale’s “recruitment” as a witness for the prosecution. 24 More specifically, Orbe contends (i) that counsel unreasonably failed to limit Dr. Pasquale’s communications with the prosecutor (claim IV(B)(1)); (ii) that counsel unreasonably failed to debrief Dr. Pasquale adequately after those consultations (claim IV(B)(2)); and (iii) that counsel unreasonably failed to inform and consult with Orbe (claim IV(B)(3)). The Supreme Court of Virginia dismissed these claims as “without any factual basis,” noting that there was no showing that confidential information was improperly disclosed or that Dr. Pasquale improperly served as a prosecution witness. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 7-8 (Va. September 10, 2001). Because this claim was adjudicated on the merits by the Supreme Court of Virginia, § 2254(d)’s deferential standard of review applies here.
Orbe contends that relief may be granted on this claim under § 2254(d)(1) because the Supreme Court of Virginia’s adjudication was “contrary to or an unreasonable application of’ federal law in that it neither mentioned
Strickland
explicitly, nor discussed its performance and prejudice prongs. This argument has already been rejected with respect to claim 1(B).
See supra
at n. 13. Simply put, the finding that the underlying claim was meritless resolves both
Strickland
prongs and ends the
Strickland
analysis.
See,
*773
e.g., Wright v. Angelone,
Orbe also seeks relief under § 2254(d)(2), arguing that the Supreme Court of Virginia’s adjudication of the claim “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.” The Supreme Court of Virginia’s ruling relies almost entirely on the affidavits of the prosecutor and Dr. Pasquale. Orbe argues that these affidavits were self-interested and should be discounted. However, even disregarding the affidavits by the prosecutor and Dr. Pasquale entirely, the record provides no evidence to suggest that the Supreme Court was unreasonable or incorrect in its factual findings.
The relevant facts regarding Dr. Pasquale’s contact with the prosecution are not disputed. At the direction of Mr. Pro-togyrou, Orbe’s trial counsel, Dr. Pasquale spoke with the prosecution by telephone twice before trial, for about one hour each time. Mr. Protogyrou directed Dr. Pasquale to accept these calls from the prosecution regarding his report in order to assist in the preparation of the defense. 25 In Dr. Pasquale’s post-trial affidavit, he avers that the conversations consisted merely of discussions of his submitted report, that no nonobvious defense strategies were discussed with the prosecution, and that he properly debriefed Orbe’s counsel after the calls. Yet, it is during these calls that Orbe contends, without factual basis, that Dr. Pasquale was recruited as a prosecution witness and that protected defense information was divulged.
In addition to these phone calls, Orbe contends that a particularly damaging piece of evidence should not have been provided to the prosecution. Specifically, Orbe’s counsel related to Dr. Pasquale in a letter that “Dennis is at a point where he has discussed the fact that he would just rather die than live the rest of his life in prison.” This letter was subsequently provided to the prosecution by Orbe’s counsel, because it had been listed in Dr. Pasquale’s report as a source of information for the report. Orbe contends that the letter should not have been provided or that this particular sentence should have been redacted. The prosecutor used this statement in arguing to the jury that Orbe would pose a higher risk of escape from prison because he would rather die than remain in prison for his whole life. This arguably undercut the defense argument that Orbe would not pose a future risk if incarcerated for life.
This record does not support Orbe’s contention that confidential information was improperly leaked to the prosecution through counsel’s mishandling of Dr. Pasquale. Orbe provides no evidence to contradict Dr. Pasquale’s post-trial affidavit denying that he improperly divulged confidential information during his discussions with the prosecution. The trial record does not show that the prosecutor used any psychological information obtained from the defense that was not contained in Dr. Pasquale’s official report, except for Orbe’s statement regarding his willingness to die rather than face life in prison. Yet, *774 as the Supreme Court of Virginia noted, it was Orbe’s.counsel, not Dr. Pasquale, who provided the prosecutor with the letter containing that statement. In short, the record simply does not provide any evidence that Dr. Pasquale improperly divulged any information.
The trial record likewise does not support Orbe’s assertion that Dr. Pasquale was recruited as a witness for the prosecution and operated under a conflict of interest. In this respect, Orbe argues that Dr. Pasquale decided, either on his own initiative or at the request of the prosecution, to serve as a witness for the prosecution or a neutral witness for the court, rather than an independent witness for the defense. In the absence of any evidentiary support for this claim, Orbe simply contends that Dr. Pasquale’s allegiance to the ethical rules of his profession made him improperly neutral. However, these ethical rules simply require forensic psychologists to avoid “misrepresentation of their evidence” and resist “partisan attempts to avoid, deny, or subvert the presentation of evidence contrary to their own position.” See Specialty Guidelines for Forensic Psychologists, 15 Law & Hum. Behav. 664 (referenced by Dr. Pasquale in his post-trial affidavit). Dr. Pasquale’s asserted allegiance to “the ethical boundaries” of his profession does not support the contention that he became a neutral ■yvitness at the service of the court or the prosecutor, thus abandoning his function to “assist the defense.” See Va.Code § 19.2-264.8:1(A). Surely, allegiance to ethical rules requiring honesty cannot constitute a betrayal of the duty to assist the defense. Put differently, Orbe is not constitutionally entitled to an unethical or dishonest expert to aid his case. Nor is Orbe constitutionally entitled to-an expert who serves as his champion and operates, in effect, as another lawyer.
Orbe also points to statements made by Dr: Pasquale regarding mitigating factors and future dangerousness which were damaging to Orbe’s case, contending that these statements are evidence that Dr. Pasquale was serving the prosecution, not the defense. A review of the transcript indicates that Dr. Pasquale provided some unfavorable information regarding the issue of Orbe’s future dangerousness. Moreover, while Dr. Pasquale did provide evidence of mitigating factors, he also disclosed facts that arguably undercut the mitigation case. 26 Because Dr. Pasquale provided on direct examination the type of statements that are usually elicited from a witness on cross examination, Orbe contends that Dr. Pasquale had, in fact, been improperly recruited by the prosecutor as a prosecution witness.
The mere fact that Dr. Pasquale presented balanced testimony with regard to the mitigating factors and Orbe’s future dangerousness does not indicate that he had improperly abandoned his, duty as an expert appointed “to assist the defense.” Even completely unfavorable testimony would not constitute evidence of conversion of or abandonment by the expert, provided it was reasonable and accurate. An indigent defendant is not constitutionally entitled to an expert of his own choosing or to an expert who will provide only favorable testimony. Instead, what is re
*775
quired is that the “State ... assure the defendant access to a competent psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate examination and assist in the evaluation, preparation, and presentation of the defense.”
Ake v. Oklahoma,
In sum, the Supreme Court of Virginia concluded, reasonably and correctly, that there is no factual support in the record showing either that confidences were divulged or that Dr. Pasquale was anything other than a competent psychologist for the defense. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 7-8 (Va. September 10, 2001). Therefore, Orbe’s claims of ineffective assistance on these grounds must fail under both prongs of Strickland, because he has not shown that trial counsel’s management of Dr. Pasquale was deficient, or that he was prejudiced by the alleged mismanagement of Dr. Pasquale. In other words, the Supreme Court of Virginia properly dismissed these claims as “without factual basis,” id. at 8, and Orbe’s corresponding claims must be likewise dismissed on federal habeas review.
Embedded within these arguments, Orbe seeks to present a new claim in his federal habeas petition. He contends that his confidences were improperly divulged by his trial counsel when counsel disclosed to the prosecutor a letter Orbe’s trial counsel had written to Dr. Pasquale. This letter contained the statement regarding Orbe’s willingness to die rather than spend his life in prison. Specifically, Orbe argues that his counsel (i) should never have included such sensitive information in a letter in the first place, (ii) should have refused to turn the letter over to the prosecution, or (iii) should have redacted this statement before turning the letter over. This claim regarding
counsel’s
disclosure of defense information was not presented or argued during the state habeas proceedings; instead, Orbe argued in his state habeas petition, incorrectly, that Dr. Pasquale had provided the prosecutor with Orbe’s statement.
28
Thus, because this claim was “not presented to the Supreme Court of Virginia on direct appeal nor in state habeas corpus proceedings,” it is procedurally defaulted under the rule in
Gray
unless Orbe can “demonstrate cause and prejudice for the default.”
Gray v. Netherland,
E. Claim V(B): Counsel Unreasonably Failed to Ensure that Orbe had the Appropriate Assistance of an Expert ■
The next set of claims also involves counsel’s performance in choosing, preparing, and managing Dr. Pasquale. Claims V(B)(1) through (4) were all addressed on the merits during the state habeas proceeding, and therefore the Supreme Court of Virginia’s dismissal of the claims under Strickland must be reviewed under § 2254(d)’s deferential standard. Claim V(B)(5) was apparently not addressed on the merits, and therefore will be reviewed de novo before this court.
In Claim V(B)(1), Orbe alleges that his counsel was ineffective because he relied only on Virginia law in requesting the appointment of a mental health expert, and did not cite
Ake v.
Oklahoma,
In Claim V(B)(2), Orbe alleges that his counsel unreasonably failed to ensure that his expert was independent, rather than neutral. This claim is essentially a reprise of the conflict of interest claim discussed above. According to Orbe, a neutral expert’s primary function is to- assist the court, while an independent expert, as Orbe puts it, “forms a conclusion and presents truthful testimony in the light most favorable to his client’s cause, and then, if asked explains (or explains away) on cross-examination the ways in which the facts might also support a different conclusion.” The Supreme Court of Virginia ruled that this claim was without merit, noting that no precedent supports Orbe’s argument that an expert is not “independent” simply because his testimony is not uniformly “favorable” to the defendant and that Orbe’s contention regarding a conflict of interest had already been found meritless. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 8 (Va. September 10, 2001).
This ruling is neither an incorrect nor an unreasonable application of federal law. An indigent defendant in a capital case is entitled to a psychiatric expert to “assist in preparation at the sentencing phase.”
Ake,
In claim V(B)(3), Orbe contends that counsel unreasonably failed to investigate and provide Dr. Pasquale with information about Orbe’s alleged physical abuse of his wife. During the sentencing phase of the trial, Dr. Pasquale testified repeatedly that Orbe struck his wife on multiple occasions. The accuracy of these statements is disputed. Dr. Pasquale’s report indicates that Orbe admitted hitting his wife only once, but that Orbe’s ex-mother-in-law, Sallie Clark, told Dr. Pasquale that Orbe hit his wife on multiple occasions. Yet, in a post-trial affidavit, Clark denies telling Dr. Pasquale that Orbe abused his wife. ' Orbe speculates that Dr. Pasquale did not accurately recall what Clark had told him, perhaps confusing Orbe with another of his patients. Orbe argues further that trial counsel knew or should have known that Dr. Pasquale was going to present testimony regarding Orbe’s spousal abuse and therefore had a duty to conduct his own investigation to determine if the information Dr. Pasquale had received was accurate.
In this respect,
Strickland
is clear: it requires, more than merely showing that additional efforts by counsel might have been beneficial; instead
Strickland
requires a showing that counsel’s representation “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and that there is a “reasonable probability” that counsel’s failure affected the outcome of the proceeding.
Strickland,
In claim V(B)(4), Orbe contends that his trial counsel failed to provide Dr. *778 Pasquale with information from his family, as well as school and health records, which information Orbe claims was necessary for an adequate presentation of the mitigating factors of mental illness and the extent of Orbe’s sexual and physical abuse as a child. The Supreme Court of Virginia denied this claim under both the performance and prejudice prongs of Strickland because “[m]ost of the information that [Orbe] claims should have been provided ... was, in fact, presented at trial through other sources,” and, given what was presented to the jury, “[t]he remaining evidence identified by [Orbe] ... would not likely have produced a different result at trial.” See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 9 (Va. September 10, 2001). A review of the trial record and the affidavits submitted by Orbe confirms that the Supreme Court of Virginia’s determination in this respect is neither contrary to Strickland, nor an unreasonable application of the rule in that case.
To begin with, virtually all of the mitigation information Orbe argues should have been introduced was, in fact, presented in some form in the sentencing hearing. Thus, Dr. Pasquale testified that Orbe’s father had abandoned him at an early age and that one of his stepfathers was an alcoholic who abused him. He also testified that Orbe was badly beaten and seriously injured at the age of seventeen by a group of teenagers at a basketball court, and that he did poorly in high school, ultimately dropping out. 32 Dr. Pasquale testified that Orbe had been an alcoholic since the age of fourteen. He also testified that Orbe suffered from chronic major depression, was preoccupied with the idea of suicide and had unsuccessfully sought help from a mental health clinic, including requesting to be admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
The only non-cumulative piece of new information provided in the post trial affidavits is a claim by Orbe’s brother that Orbe was sexually abused by his grandfather as an infant. Yet, counsel’s failure to uncover this information was not unreasonable. Orbe denied any sexual abuse during his interviews with Dr. Pasquale, and trial counsel was entitled to rely on Orbe’s statements in directing his investigation. As
Strickland
teaches, “when a defendant has given counsel reason to believe that pursuing certain investigations would be fruitless or even harmful, counsel’s failure to pursue those investigations may not later be challenged as unreasonable.”
Strickland,
Significantly, this case does not present a situation, as in
Terry Williams,
where counsel failed to uncover and present a wealth of mitigating information.
See Terry Williams,
In claim V(B)(5), Orbe contends that his trial counsel unreasonably failed to request the appointment of a medical doctor or a neuropharmacologist to testify that medications were available to treat and control Orbe’s mental problems and curb his dangerous behavior. 33 Orbe contends that such testimony would have been vitally important during sentencing, both with regard to the aggravating factor of future dangerousness and as a mitigating factor to lessen Orbe’s culpability for the offense.
The Supreme Court of Virginia rejected this claim without addressing its merits. Instead, the claim was summarily rejected on the grounds (i) that it was “purely speculative,” (ii) that there was no showing as to what a medical doctor or pharmacologist might have said, and (in) that, in any event, Orbe had the assistance of Dr. Pasquale, his chosen expert.
34
At the same time, the Supreme Court of Virginia denied Orbe’s motion for the appointment of a psychiatrist to provide the support lacking-in his claim. As a result, this claim, having been presented to the state courts and exhausted, but never addressed on the merits, is properly adjudicated here
de novo. See Weeks,
Under
Strickland,
Orbe must show that there is a “reasonable probability” that the outcome of his sentencing would have been different absent counsel’s failure to request the appointment of a medical doctor or pharmacologist.
See Strickland,
In contrast to Cardwell, where no psychological expert testified, the record in this case shows that the jury was fully informed concerning Orbe’s mental health conditions. Thus, Dr. Pasquale testified that Orbe suffered from chronic major depression. 37 Further, the jury was exposed to the possibility that Orbe’s illness might have been treatable through medication, and that Orbe had sought and had been denied treatment for his depression. In his discussion of mitigating factors, Dr. Pasquale also testified that
.. .there was no history of psychiatric treatment, so that this was not an individual — this was important to me at this point, too, that he had not been under treatment, was not on medication, he •was not having something that would perhaps assist him with this.
With regard to future dangerousness as an inmate, Dr. Pasquale also noted that Orbe might be given medication and treatment while in prison, stating:
... I understand that most prisons still have some medication programs, of course, I can’t guarantee that he would be placed in a circumstance where there would be medication, but I think that most of the maximum security penitentiaries, as far as my limited knowledge of that goes, I think that they have mental health circumstances involving medication there.
Thus, despite the lack of testimony from a medical doctor, the possible availability of medication as a mitigating factor was presented to the jury. At most, this presentation lacks only a more specific statement on the availability and reliability of medication for treating Orbe’s mental illness.
Even assuming, arguendo, that a psychiatrist or pharmacologist appointed in this case would testify as Orbe contends, namely “that medication administered by prison personnel could reliably and effectively control Orbe’s behavior,” it does not follow that there is a reasonable probability that this additional testimony would have altered the jury’s verdict. Importantly, Dr. Pasquale did tell the jury that Orbe would not pose a danger in prison, unless he had access to alcohol or was placed under du *781 ress. It is hard to see what, if anything, a psychiatrist’s testimony would have added. Arguably, a psychiatrist might have testified in addition that Orbe would not pose a danger in prison, provided he took his medication. But just as Dr. Pasquale could not guarantee that Orbe would not gain access to alcohol or come under stress in prison, so, too, the psychiatrist could not guarantee that Orbe would faithfully take his medicine. Similarly, neither Dr. Pasquale nor a psychiatrist could confidently predict how Orbe might act were he to escape from prison.
In sum, even assuming that a medical doctor or pharmacologist had testified as Orbe contends, namely that medications exist which can curb his dangerous behavior, Orbe has not shown that there is a “reasonable probability” that this additional testimony would have altered the jury’s verdict.
See Strickland,
F. Claim VI: Ineffective Assistance
Claim VI involves a series of ineffective assistance of counsel claims, some of which are repetitive of claims brought elsewhere in Orbe’s petition. They are discussed in sequence below.
In claim VI(A), Orbe contends that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by questioning potential jurors during voir dire in a manner that allegedly encouraged them to disregard their impulse for mercy. During voir dire, trial counsel asked most of the potential jurors “Do you think that the decision as to whether to impose a life sentence or a death sentence should be made just on the facts and that mercy should have nothing to do with it?”
38
Of the twelve jurors who decided Orbe’s sentence, ten answered this question “just the facts,” one was not asked the question, and one indicated that mercy should also be considered. Orbe contends that posing this question constituted ineffective assistance of counsel because the wording of the question led many jurors to believe, incorrectly, that mercy was legally irrelevant, contrary to both Orbe’s interests and the applicable law,
See Gregg v. Georgia,
Although the phrasing of this voir dire question may have been infelicitous, there is simply no reason to' conclude that any juror was misled by the question to believe that the law precluded consideration of mercy. Even assuming some jurors were misled, their mistake was only temporary, as the error was clearly corrected by the trial court’s instruction during the penalty phase. At that time, the jurors were properly instructed to
*782 consider any evidence presented of circumstances which do not justify or excuse the offense but which, in fairness or mercy, may extenuate or reduce the degree of moral culpability and punishment. 39
(emphasis added). The Supreme Court of Virginia concluded that the jury was properly instructed to consider all mitigating evidence under
Buchanan v. Angelone,
In claim VI(B), Orbe claims ineffective assistance of counsel during the sentencing phase of his trial because counsel failed to discover and present available mitigating evidence. The Supreme Court of Virginia found that each subpart of this claim failed under the Strickland test either because counsel’s performance was not inadequate, or because no prejudice was shown. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 11-12 (Va. September 10, 2001). The bulk of this claim has already been addressed and dismissed in relation to claims V(B)(3) & (4), in which Orbe alleged ineffective assistance of trial counsel in connection with managing and preparing Dr. Pasquale. 40
In claims VI(B)(1) and (4), Orbe contends that counsel unreasonably failed to investigate evidence of sexual, physical, and emotional abuse and that counsel unreasonably failed to gather and present this evidence from family and Mends. These claims have already been addressed in connection with claim V(B)(4).
See supra
pp. 777-79. In essence, counsel reasonably relied on Orbe’s own statements in refraining from looking for evidence of early childhood sexual abuse,
see Strickland,
In claim VI(B)(2), Orbe further contends that trial counsel unreasonably failed to *783 present evidence that Orbe might have suffered from bipolar disorder. According to Orbe, bipolar disorder, or manic-depressive illness, is “marked by uncontrolled and radical shifts from profound depression to extreme mania.” Orbe proffers affidavits from family members describing behavior that allegedly supports a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, and contends that his counsel should have performed a more thorough investigation and provided Dr. Pasquale with this information.
The record does not support Orbe’s contention that counsel failed to provide Dr. Pasquale with sufficient information. As the record plainly reflects, Dr. Pasquale gathered ample information from trial counsel, from his own lengthy discussions with Orbe, and from his interview with Orbe’s mother, to reach a reasoned diagnosis of Orbe’s condition. The record does not support Orbe’s contention that Dr. Pasquale was unaware of the manic aspects of Orbe’s behavior. 41 Most of the evidence now proffered by Orbe in support of a bipolar disorder diagnosis is cumulative of evidence actually considered by Dr. Pasquale. Thus, Orbe’s real complaint is his claim that Dr. Pasquale reached the wrong diagnosis.
Furthermore, to the extent that Orbe contends that counsel should have prevented Dr. Pasquale’s allegedly erroneous diagnosis of major chronic depression by providing more relevant detail with respect to Orbe’s family history and psychological background, Orbe turns the roles of psychological expert and legal counsel on their heads. It is well established that “[attorneys are generally not required to second-guess their experts’ examinations or opinions.”
See Pruett v. Thompson,
In sum, even assuming
arguendo
that Dr. Pasquale’s diagnosis was flawed, Orbe has not shown that counsel was unreasonable in relying upon it or in failing to conduct a more detailed investigation of his own.
See Goins v. Angelone,
In claim VI(B)(3), Orbe contends that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to present Chesterfield Mental Health Department records which would have confirmed that Orbe' was suicidal and had sought treatment for mental illness. These records indicate that on May 21, 1997, Orbe sought treatment for alcohol and drug abuse and reported “suicidal ideation” but “no plan.” Dr. Pasquale testified that Orbe told him that his “number one goal” during the ten day *784 episode was to die. 42 Orbe contends, therefore, that the Chesterfield medical records would have presented clear and objective documentation of the severity and duration of Orbe’s illness, and would have rehabilitated Dr. Pasquale’s testimony regarding suicidal intent.
The Supreme Court of Virginia dismissed this claim under the “performance” prong of
Strickland. See Orbe v. Warden,
No. 001708 at 12 (Va. September 10, 2001). Orbe argues that this ruling is an unreasonable application of
Strickland.
Assuming, without deciding, that this is so, the claim nonetheless must be dismissed under the “prejudice” prong in
Strickland
after
de novo
review. First, the Chesterfield records do not objectively corroborate Orbe’s suicidal intent. They indicate only that Orbe reported he was suicidal, not that he was found suicidal by a treating physician or given treatment for suicidal tendencies. Indeed, the records show that he was refused treatment on that basis. Second, although the jury was not shown the Chesterfield records, they were informed that Orbe sought mental health treatment before the January crime spree. Finally, as brought out at trial, other statements and actions by Orbe indicate a strong ambivalence with regard to suicide, with or without the addition of the Chesterfield records.
43
For these reasons, even assuming that the question of whether or not Orbe was suicidal at the time of the crime spree was relevant to the jury’s verdict, it is unlikely that the presentation of the Chesterfield records would have significantly altered the jury’s conclusion on that question. It follows that Orbe has not shown that there was a “reasonable probability” that presenting the Chesterfield records would have affected the outcome of the trial.
See Strickland,
After considering the various individual claims alleging ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to present mitigating evidence, it is necessary to also consider these claims as a whole and “evaluate the totality of the available mitigation evidence.”
See Terry Williams,
In weighing the overall prejudice caused by counsel’s omissions, courts must also consider the strength of the prosecution’s evidence offered in support of the jury’s finding of future dangerousness.
See Terry Williams,
In sum, when the mitigating and aggravating evidence is considered as a whole, there is no reasonable probability that the quantum of additional evidence that Orbe argues should have been presented at the sentencing phase of the trial would have affected the outcome. Thus, Orbe’s claims of. ineffective assistance of counsel with respect to the sentencing phase of his trial were properly dismissed by the Supreme Court of Virginia for failure to show prejudice under Strickland, both individually and when considered in the aggregate. Accordingly, under § 2254(d), this claim must be dismissed.
Finally, in claim VI(C), Orbe argues that appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to argue an alleged jury instruction error' on appeal. The penalty phase jury instructions included the following instruction:
You are the judges of the facts. The importance and worth of the evidence is for you to determine. You must avoid any influence of sympathy, sentiment, passion, prejudice or other arbitrary factors when imposing sentence. You should discharge your duties as jurors impartially, conscientiously and faithfully under your oaths and return such verdicts as the evidence warrants when measured by these instructions.
Counsel argued at trial that the instruction to “avoid any influence of sympathy” improperly directed jurors to disregard the mitigating evidence they heard during the sentencing. The trial court found the instruction to be proper, relying on
Saffle v. Parks,
As Orbe correctly points out, the Supreme Court in
Saffle
denied relief not on the merits, but because such a ruling would have constituted a “new rule” under
Teague v. Lane,
Though not foreclosed, Orbe’s claim with regard to the “antisympathy” instruction was quite weak.
Saffle
was ultimately decided on the
Teague
new rule grounds, yet the analysis associated with that ruling casts strong doubt on the merits of the “antisympathy” claim brought in that case. As noted in
Saffle,
“a large majority of federal and state courts” which considered similar antisympathy instructions found them to be constitutional,
id.
at 490,
*787 Orbe seeks to meet the Gray standard by arguing that this claim was clearly stronger than one of the claims his counsel did pursue, namely an argument concerning jury verdict forms that had already been proeedurally defaulted, but was presented on direct appeal. His counsel briefed and argued that issue, even though he had failed to file a timely assignment of error on the issue, and the Supreme Court of Virginia had already denied his motion to amend the assignments of error in order to add it. Nonetheless, given the substantive weakness of the antisympathy instruction claim, it is not “clearly stronger” than the defaulted verdict forms claim. Thus, counsel did not act unreasonably in choosing not to pursue this jury instruction claim in the face of other, stronger claims.
G. Claim XI: Denial of Federal Constitutional Protection in State Habeas Proceedings
The Supreme Court of Virginia denied Orbe’s motion requesting the appointment of a psychiatrist. Because he is indigent, Orbe was unable to provide such testimony on his own. As a result, Orbe contends that his due process and equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated because he was precluded by the state from pursuing his constitutional claim of ineffective assistance owing to his indigent status.
Orbe filed this claim on September 3, 2002, as an addition to his federal habeas petition, four months after he submitted his petition according to the deadline established by Order of this Court, 46 and on the final day before the expiration of the one-year statute of limitations for federal habeas petitions. 47 Because Orbe argued that the briefing schedule violated his right to the full one-year statute of limitations period established by 28 U.S.C. § 2244, he contended that leave of the Court under Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., was not necessary to file this addition to his petition. Orbe also requested in the alternative that leave be granted under Rule 15(a) if necessary. Assuming without deciding that such leave was necessary, this Court granted leave to add claim XI to the petition. 48
Under clear Fourth Circuit precedent, a challenge to state habeas corpus proceedings cannot serve as a basis for federal habeas relief.
See Wright v. Angelone,
These precedents barring habeas relief based on a violation of rights that occurs during post-conviction proceedings are in tension with the cases holding that failure to provide indigent petitioners equal access to post-conviction proceedings is a violation of the federal Constitution.
See Smith v. Bennett,
The “equality of access” guaranteed to indigents by
Smith, Lane,
and
Long
is not as broad as Orbe contends. It is well established, for example, that this “equal access” principle does not entitle indigents to state appointed counsel for post-conviction proceedings.
See Pennsylvania v. Finley,
Orbe’s request is properly treated under
Ross,
not
Smith.
The Supreme Court of Virginia’s refusal to consider Orbe’s claim V(B)(5) cannot be compared to a refusal to consider a post-conviction appeal because of failure to file a transcript or pay a docketing fee. After all, Orbe’s trial counsel could have requested that a psychiatrist be appointed, yet instead he chose a psychologist. Orbe’s request for an additional expert is more aptly equated with a
pro se
petitioner’s request for post-conviction counsel, which is clearly not a constitutionally protected right.
See Finley,
Finally, even assuming,
arguendo,
that the Supreme Court of Virginia’s refusal to appoint a psychiatrist gave rise to a constitutional violation, Orbe would still not be entitled to habeas relief because the error, if any, was harmless.
See Tuggle v. Netherland,
In sum, the Supreme Court of Virginia’s denial of Orbe’s request to appoint a psychiatrist does not constitute a complete denial of access to post-conviction proceedings, as was the case in
Smith, Lane,
and
Long.
Thus, Orbe’s claim XI, alleging constitutional error in a state post-conviction proceeding, is not cognizable on federal habeas under the rule in
Bryant. See Bryant,
V. Conclusion
For all of the reasons stated above, Orbe’s motion for funds for the appointment of a psychiatrist pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(9) must be denied and Orbe’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 must be dismissed in full. Accordingly, the stay of execution entered by Order dated December 6, 2001, must be vacated.
An appropriate order will enter.
The Clerk is directed to send a copy of this Memorandum Opinion to all counsel of record.
Notes
. The facts are drawn from the Supreme Court of Virginia's decision,
Orbe v. Commonwealth,
. The medical examiner who performed the autopsy on Burnett concluded that Burnett had suffered a single gunshot to his front left chest, which injured his heart, liver, and lung, and caused the bleeding that led to his death.
. See Orbe v. True, Civil Action No. 01-1845-A (E.D.Va. December 14, 2001) (Order).
. Claim XI was added to Orbe’s federal habe-as petition by a September 3, 2002 notice of addition.
. To establish ineffective assistance under
Strickland,
a defendant must show (i) "that counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness,"
id.
at 688,
. Under § 2254(d), federal courts "have only limited powers of judicial review" when .entertaining collateral attacks on state convictions.
See Bates v. Lee,
. Orbe contends that applying § 2254(d) deference in this instance would "preclude a federal court from finding cause — even if counsel’s performance was patently deficient *758 under Strickland — unless the state court's adjudication of the ineffective assistance claim also was contrary to or involved unreasonable application of Strickland." Yet, if counsel’s performance were patently deficient under Strickland, surely a finding by the state to the contrary would be "contrary to” or involve an “unreasonable application” of Strickland, in which case the additional hurdle imposed by § 2254(d) would be no hurdle at all. More interesting is the situation where counsel’s performance is not patently deficient under Strickland, but instead is in that region where courts might reasonably disagree as to its sufficiency under Strickland. In these instances, Orbe's contention becomes material; whether or not the federal court must defer to the state court's adjudication of the claim might affect the outcome of the federal court's analysis.
. See § 2254(d) ( "[A writ of habeas] shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in state court unless the adjudication of the claim [was an unreasonable application of or contrary to federal law].”) (emphasis added).
. Orbe further contends that § 2254(d), by its terms, should not apply in the cause for default analysis because § 2254(d) applies only to "granting" habeas relief, whereas the cause-for-default determination merely involves a decision whether to reach the merits of an otherwise defaulted claim, a determination which itself does not involve "granting” relief. This argument misreads § 2254(d) and ignores the plain meaning of the statute’s broad language. Although a finding of cause-for-default does not itself grant relief, it is, of course, an integral part of a decision to grant relief on the underlying defaulted claim. Again it is clear that § 2254(d) requires federal courts to give deference with respect to any claim adjudicated on the merits by the state, not merely to claims the federal court considers on the merits.
. Indeed, adopting Orbe's dual standard approach would add yet another layer of complexity to the already baroque federal habeas procedures.
See Edwards, 529
U.S. at 454,
. The procedural status of claim 111(A) is somewhat more complicated. In claim 111(A), Orbe argues that he was unconstitutionally deprived of his right to a lesser included offense instruction on first degree murder. On direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Virginia addressed this same claim, although the federal law basis for the claim was not explicitly cited. Specifically, the Supreme Court of Virginia held that Orbe was not entitled to the lesser included offense instruction owing to the lack of evidence supporting such an instruction.
See Orbe
v.
Commonwealth,
Orbe now argues that his federal claim 111(A) was, in fact, presented to the state court on direct appeal, but was never addressed on the merits, and therefore is reviewable de novo. To reach this result, Orbe must argue, contradictorily, that his federal claim was fairly presented through the language used on direct appeal and his state case citations which relied on federal law, but that the rejection of this claim on the merits did not also include rejection of the federal law claim on the merits. Orbe cannot have it both ways; either his federal law claim was presented to the state court, in which case it was rejected on the merits owing to the lack of evidentiary support, or, it was not presented to the state court, it which case it was properly found defaulted. In neither case is claim 111(A) eligible for de novo federal habeas review on the merits.
Even assuming that Orbe's federal claim was presented to the Supreme Court of Virginia on direct appeal and denied on the merits, it would be reviewable before this court only under § 2254(d)'s deferential standard. Given the lack of merit of the lesser included offense instruction claim, see infra at pp. 770-72, the Supreme Court of Virginia’s decision on the merits must be upheld as reasonable and not contrary to the evidence.
.As
Gray
explains, such claims are barred as procedurally defaulted even though they are exhausted at the state level.
Gray,
. Orbe argues that the Supreme Court of Virginia failed to address the merits of this ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Although the Supreme Court of Virginia did not explicitly discuss the application of Strickland to the race discrimination claim, it squarely addressed the merits of the underlying allegations of race discrimination. After finding the underlying claim meritless, the Supreme Court of Virginia did not proceed to address the adequacy of counsel's performance or its effect on the outcome of the trial. Yet, Orbe, seizing on the failure to address the Strickland factors with respect to this claim, contends that the Supreme Court of Virginia's treatment of the claim was contrary to or involved an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law. Orbe therefore seeks de novo review of this claim. This argument is inconsequential. Although the Supreme Court of Virginia did not explicitly mention Strickland in its adjudication of this claim, its ruling was not contrary to or an unreasonable application of the legal principles taught in Strickland. In any event, as the discussion infra reflects, the race discrimination claim fails whether it is reviewed de novo or deferentially pursuant to § 2254(d).
. A quirk of current habeas law allows defendants to resurrect defaulted claims in this manner for reconsideration through an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. See
Fitzgerald v. Thompson,
. Orbe’s counsel, the only witness to the prosecutor's statement, confirms her affidavit regarding the timing of the statement, and, in a second affidavit, makes clear that he did not think at the time that the prosecutor’s statement was "racially motivated.”
. Because race "may play no role” in prose-cutorial decisions,
see Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
.Unlike Orbe, Atkins had a lengthy criminal record, including 21 felonies, had recruited another person as a participant in the crime, had abducted the victim, and had fired eight shots, three of which were lethal.
. Orbe links this fear to the prosecutor’s bid for re-election a year hence.
. These portions of the transcript read as follows:
THE COURT: Mrs. Conner, do you have an opinion that would prevent you from convicting someone of an offense that is punishable by death?
VENIREMAN CONNER: I didn't think so at the time, that death would not be a problem. But when I got — once I got the subpoena, it is a problem for me.
THE COURT: Okay, I understand that.
VENIREMAN CONNER: I have to be honest with you.
THE COURT: I want you to be honest with me.
And you feel that you just could not impose the death penalty if you found the defendant guilty?
VENIREMAN CONNER: The evidence would have to be very strong for me to do that.
* £ !s« * * -Jfi
THE COURT: Ms. Conner, would you feel better if you were relieved of the duty of having to sit in judgment of somebody that you might have to impose the penalty?
VENIREMAN CONNER: I think so far as the death penalty, yes.
*768 THE COURT: All right. We’re going to— we're going to honor your thoughts and your conscience, and we’re going to find that you could not stand without bias or partiality because of your beliefs. And that's no — that's no discredit to you.
Thank you.
. It is worth noting that the underlying improper juror exclusion claim, if valid, could not be disposed of under the "harmless error” doctrine. To be sure, it is possible to argue that the exclusion of Conner was harmless (i) because the prosecutor may have had peremptory strikes' remaining and could have excluded her if the trial judge had not, (ii) because no showing was made that the juror who replaced Conner was more inclined than she to impose the death penalty, or (iii) because the case for death was strong regardless of the jury. Yet, none of these points matter because the right to an impartial jury is a "basic fair trial right[] that ‘can never be treated as harmless.’ ”
Gomez v. United States,
. There is some lack of clarity in the cases as to whether the Eighth Amendment or the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, or both, may be the constitutional source of this right.
See United States v. Beckford,
. The record reflects that a hammer block system prevented the gun from firing unless the trigger was pulled, thus eliminating the possibility that the cocked hammer fell and fired the gun merely due to inadvertent shaking of the gun.
. The record does not support trial counsel's contention in a post-trial affidavit that his strategy in the guilt phase of the trial was to obtain a first degree murder instruction through an accidental shooting theory. Review of the trial transcript reveals that the accidental shooting theory was neither mentioned in the opening statement nor argued in closing.
. These ineffective assistance claims are closely related to defaulted claim IV(A), in which Orbe alleged that Dr. Pasquale improperly served as the prosecution's expert as well as the defense expert, resulting in an impermissible conflict of interest and the disclosure of confidential defense information.
. Apparently, these calls were expected to assist the defense by providing Dr. Pasquale with a "rehearsal” for cross examination and providing defense counsel information regarding the prosecutor's likely arguments at trial.
. For example, on direct examination Dr. Pasquale volunteered the information that Orbe "was rather candid in telling me that he had hit his wife before they were married," and also that he "found out” that Orbe also struck his wife on other occasions when drunk. Also, when Dr. Pasquale testified that Orbe's "perceptions were distorted” at times during his crime spree, a possible mitigating factor, Dr. Pasquale also noted that Orbe is "still responsible for what occured.” Again, when Dr. Pasquale mentioned that Orbe -was not violent during the spree "when there was time to think,” he also stated that "one can also argue the fact that he shot somebody else, though.”
. The
filce
court explained that "[t]his is not to say, of course, that the indigent defendant has a constitutional right to choose a psychiatrist of his personal liking or to receive funds to hire his own.”
Id.; see also Pruett v. Thompson,
. The Warden pointed out in his motion to dismiss Orbe’s state habeas claim that trial counsel, not Dr. Pasquale, provided the prosecution with this information. The Supreme Court of Virginia noted this fact in dismissing the claim. See Orbe v. Warden, No. 001708 at 8 (Va. September 10, 2001). Orbe's reply brief opposing the dismissal did not argue that counsel’s disclosure was improper, nor did Orbe seek to amend his state habeas petition to raise the claims detailed above.
. Thus, the order granting the appointment of a mental health expert, which was drafted by Orbe's trial counsel, relied solely on Virginia Code § 19.2-264.3:1.
. Once again, Orbe argues that because the Supreme Court of Virginia did not explicitly address Strickland in its adjudication of this claim, that adjudication is contrary to federal law and the claim must therefore be reviewed de novo. As previously noted, the mere failure to cite Strickland does not indicate that the Supreme Court of Virginia applied the wrong legal principles. In any event, the claim is meritless whether reviewed de novo or pursuant to § 2254(d). See supra at n. 13.
. Orbe attempts, unsuccessfully, to downplay the degree to which the incidents that occurred during the ten day crime spree reflect his violent and dangerous nature. In this regard, Orbe contends that the record shows that many of the people Orbe threatened seem to have been strangely unafraid of him. For example, even while Orbe was holding Scougal at gunpoint, Scougal demanded that Orbe remove Scougal's sweater that he had taken and was wearing, and twice refused to give Orbe his car keys. Also at gunpoint, Bottoms and Powell refused Orbe's demand to enter the house. • Orbe also points out that he did not shoot at the police during his attempt to evade arrest. While all this is true, it is also true that during this brief ten day period he shot two' people, killed one, and terrorized several others.
. Orbe argues that the "few, dry, restrained references to childhood abuse could not adequately inform a jury about the severity and extensiveness of the traumas inflicted on Dennis Orbe....” Significantly, this argument attacks the manner in which Dr. Pasquale relayed the mitigating information, not the amount of information he provided. As such, this claim must be rejected, for as discussed supra at pp. 774-75 & n. 27, the fact that Dr. Pasquale was not an optimal advocate on Orbe’s behalf affords Orbe no grounds for constitutional relief.
. Although the Supreme Court of Virginia's ruling on this claim might be read to suggest that a psychologist, who is neither a medical doctor nor neuropharmacologist, is not qualified to testify as an expert regarding medication for mental illnesses, that is not a fair reading. To be sure, psychologists typically cannot prescribe medications. Yet, it does not follow that they are unqualified to testify concerning the availability and effects of medications. Indeed, neuropharmacologists may also be unable to prescribe medicines unless they are also medical doctors. Like pharmacologists, psychologists, by virtue of their training and clinical experience, may well be qualified to provide such testimony. In any event, the disposition of this claim in Orbe's federal habeas proceeding does not depend on any distinction between psychologists and psychiatrists.
. The Supreme Court of Virginia’s full discussion of claim V(B)(5) is as follows:
in claim V(B)(5), petitioner alleges .counsel was ineffective by failing to request the appointment of a medical doctor or neuro-pharmacologist, because, unlike a psychologist, such experts could have testified about available medications to treat and control petitioner’s mental problems. This claim is purely speculative. Petitioner has not shown what a medical doctor and neuro-pharmacologist would have said regarding petitioner's mental condition and whether any medications are available that would actually control petitioner's behavioral problems. Petitioner has no right to present speculative evidence regarding how he might respond to particular drug therapies. He received the full assistance of his personally chosen expert, Dr. Pasquale.
.As explained in
Cardwell,
in these situations "a complete expert report is clearly relevant, for it is impossible to evaluate whether [petitioner] was prejudiced by a failure to
*780
present certain testimony until the substance of that testimony is known.”
Cardwell,
. Orbe filed a § 848(q) motion for funds for a psychiatrist before filing his habeas petition, which was denied for failure to show good cause that the services of a psychiatrist were reasonably necessary at that point in time, without prejudice to Orbe renewing the motion after his habeas petition was filed. See Orbe v. True, Civil Action No. 01-1845-A (E.D. Va. April 17, 2002) (Order).
. Orbe claims that this diagnosis was inaccurate, and that Orbe should have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, although Orbe also concedes that the symptoms and nature of Orbe's illness were properly captured by Dr. Pasquale's testimony. See infra discussion of claim VI(B)(2) at pp. 782-84.
. On some of the occasions, the question was phrased "just on the facts or that mercy should have nothing to do with it?” (emphasis added).
. Orbe contends, unpersuasively, that this instruction was not adequate. He maintains that the phrase "consider any evidence presented” reinforces the notion that the jury’s decision should be made “just on the facts.” Yet, the instruction, fairly read, clearly allows the jurors to consider mercy as an independent factor in weighing the verdict.
. See supra at pp. 777-79.
. For example, Dr. Pasquale's report summarizes Orbe's symptoms as "chronic major depressive signs ... with the addition of ... severe agitation, although aggressively, violently and impulsively acting out.”
. The prosecution attempted to undermine the suicide theory by pointing out that the suicidal intent was self-reported and that many of Orbe’s actions reflected the contrary, namely a strong interest in self-preservation.
. Dr. Pasquale testified concerning “the ambivalence that Mr. Orbe continued to experience, back and forth about whether or not he should take his life.... right up to January, 1998.” This ambivalence is reflected in the trial record. Orbe told Dr. Pasquale that, two months prior to his crime spree, Orbe put his stepfather's gun to his head but could not pull the trigger. Orbe told his victims during the crime spree thdt he had "nothing to lose,” and told Dr. Pasquale that his intent at the time was to die; yet, he packed two suitcases of clothes for a trip and avoided drawing his gun during his final attempt to evade the police.
. Orbe also argues that, even had Saffle foreclosed an Eighth Amendment claim, counsel could have argued that state law afforded greater protection than the Fourteenth Amendment. This argument is speculative at best, as Orbe is able to cite no apposite or persuasive state authority.
. In
Brown,
the jury was instructed not to be “swayed by 'mere sentiment, conjecture, sympathy, passion, prejudice, public opinion or public feeling.' ”
See Brown,
. See Orbe v. True, Civil Action No. 01-1845-A (E.D.Va. December 14, 2001) (Order).
. This limitations period begins to run from the date of final judgment on direct review, but is tolled by state post-conviction proceedings. See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A) & (d)(2).
.See Orbe v. True, Civil Action No. 01-1845-A (E.D.Va. September 10, 2002) (Order).
.
Finley
stresses that "[w]e have never held that prisoners have a constitutional right to counsel when mounting collateral attacks upon their convictions.”
Finley,
. As
Ross
makes clear, ”[t]he duty of the State under our cases is not to duplicate the legal arsenal that may be privately retained by a criminal defendant in a continuing effort to reverse his conviction, but only to assure the indigent defendant an adequate opportunity to present his claims fairly in the context of the State's appellate process.”
Ross,
.This is a higher threshold for the petitioner to meet in the quest for a writ of habeas than the harmless error threshold used on direct appeal, namely whether the error "was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” See id. at 1392.
. The Fourth Circuit reached the same conclusion in a very similar case.
See Swann v. Taylor,
