Percy E. Cooksey III is a Missouri prisoner serving a sentence of life plus sixty years after being convicted by a jury of the unlawful use of a weapon, kidnapping, forcible *1216 rape, first degree robbery, and three counts of armed criminal action. He applied to the District Court 1 for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 Ü.S.C. § 2254 (1994). The District Court, adopting the report and recommendation of a Magistrate Judge, 2 denied the application. Cooksey timely appeals, and we affirm.
On February 6, 1987, Cooksey attended a prayer service at the Greater Faith Baptist Church in St. Louis, Missouri. During a prayer circle, Cooksey took out an eighteen-inch knife and held it to the throat of the woman next to him. After terrorizing the captive audience, Cooksey withdrew to a vacant building where he raped the woman and stole her watch. Cooksey did not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence when he appealed his convictions in state court. Missouri
v. Cooksey,
In his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Cooksey advanced the following five claims for relief: (1) the state trial court violated the Due Process Clause when it denied Cook-sey’s motion for disclosure of grand jury demographic data, which Cooksey sought in order to challenge the method used to select grand jurors in St. Louis; (2) the state trial court’s local rule regarding probation recommendations violates the Due Process Clause and the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial; (3) the state trial court violated the Due Process Clause when it based a sentence enhancement on a prior void conviction; (4) the state prosecutor violated the Due Process Clause when the prosecutor prevented Cook-sey from deposing the principal female victim of his crimes; and (5) the cumulative effect of the foregoing constitutional violations resulted in a denial of both due process and effective assistance of counsel. On appeal, Cook-sey argues that the District Court erred when it rejected his first four claims and, a fortiori rejected his fifth claim as well. Only the first issue requires extensive analysis, and we now turn to that issue.
Prior to trial Cooksey filed a motion to dismiss the indictment, alleging that the grand jury had not been selected from a fair cross-section of the community because certain racial groups had been systematically excluded.
See O’Neal v. Delo,
Under Missouri law, “an information charging the same offense charged in [a defective] indictment may be substituted therefor at any time before the jury is sworn.” Mo. Rev. Stat § 545.300 (1994). The decision to substitute an information is within the discretion of the prosecutor, and the court has no power to control that discretion.
Missouri ex rel. Lodwick v. Cottey,
In 1884, the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision in
Hurtado v. California,
As noted above, Mssouri law does not provide for a preliminary hearing when an information is substituted for an indictment. Nothing in the record indicates (and the state does not claim) that Cooksey was afforded any type of pretrial screening other than the grand jury proceedings that he has challenged at every turn. Cooksey argues that the charges against him were not screened at all and that Mssouri law, as applied in his case, violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the indictment, which he alleges was invalid, is not “a sufficient and legal substitute for a preliminary examination,”
Green,
“A state prisoner seeking a writ of habeas corpus from a federal court must first fairly present his claims to the state courts in order to meet the exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b).”
Forest v. Delo,
The Missouri Court of Appeals held that Cooksey’s grand-jury-demographics claim was waived because he failed to lodge a proper objection against the substitute information. Under Missouri law, a defective indictment does not contaminate a subsequent information that is substituted for the indictment without objection from the defendant.
Missouri v. Johnson,
We agree with the conclusion reached by the Missouri Court of Appeals. Cooksey’s objection to the timeliness of the information is not legally significant to this case; in order to fairly present his claim to the state courts he should have objected to the filing of the information on the ground that he was not being afforded the pretrial screening required by the Due Process clause. In essence, Cooksey put the cart before the horse. It would be inappropriate for any court to decide whether the state court should have granted discovery on the demographics of the grand jury before that court decided the constitutionality of the Missouri statutes providing for informations to be substituted for indictments, Mo.Rev.Stat. § 545.300, and providing that, in such cases, the accused is not afforded a preliminary hearing, id. § 544.250. Cooksey can prevail on his grand-jury-demographics claim only if the substitution of an information in the circumstances of this case fails to satisfy the requirements of the Due Process Clause. Cooksey, however, never challenged the procedures provided by state law until he appeared in federal court. The only objection he raised to the information was that it was untimely. On appeal in the state courts, he argued only that the state trial court deprived him of his due process rights when it denied his request for discovery on the demographics of the grand jury that indicted him. Thus the claim that the state trial court denied Cooksey’s due process rights by refusing to allow discovery of grand jury demographic data is, as the Missouri Court of Appeals held, procedurally barred as a matter of state law because Cooksey failed to lodge a proper objection to the information that was substituted for the indictment. He thus has defaulted the claim for purposes of his federal habeas corpus petition.
Despite the procedural bar and default, Cooksey could obtain federal habeas review of his claim if he were able to show cause for his default and actual prejudice as a result. Simply put, there is no way that Cooksey could show cause for his failure to raise this issue in state court. He had the opportunity to oppose the state’s motion to substitute an information for the indictment. In fact, Cooksey took advantage of the opportunity but argued only that the information was untimely. Similarly, Cooksey cannot show prejudice because he has never argued that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions. Clearly the evidence is sufficient to provide probable cause to believe that Cooksey committed the crimes charged, which is all that a grand jury indictment or a preliminary hearing would have established in this case. While the District Court and the Magistrate Judge did not consider whether Cooksey’s claim was barred, this Court may affirm a judgment on any basis supported by the record.
See Phillips v. Marist Soc.,
We turn now to the other issues that Cook-sey has raised in this appeal: the local rule on probation recommendations, the use of a prior conviction to enhance his sentence, and *1219 the prosecutor’s alleged role in preventing Cooksey from deposing the woman he had raped. We have carefully reviewed the Magistrate Judge’s report and recommendation as well as the arguments of the parties, and we conclude that the District Court correctly rejected Cooksey’s claims. With respect to these issues, we agree with the reasoning of District Court as set forth in the report and recommendation that it adopted.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court denying Cooksey’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Carol E. Jackson, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. The Honorable David D. Noce, United States Magistrate Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
.The motion to strike the information alleges that the information is "contrary to the ... due process rights of Defendant” hut only to the extent that the information was untimely. Missouri v. Cooksey, No. 871-0427, Motion to Dismiss and Strike Information at 1 (Cir. Ct. St. Louis Aug. 1, 1988). No mention is made of any other due process rights.
