Michael Bowersox appeals the district court’s grant of a writ of habeas corpus to Robert Walls. The district court found that trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective during the sentencing phase of Walls’s capital murder trial and vacated his death sentence. Walls cross-appeals the district court’s adverse holdings on a multitude of other issues. We hold that Walls’s counsel was not constitutionally deficient, find the cross-appeal to be without merit, and reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
Fred C. Harmon, an eighty-eight-year-old widower lived alone in Maplewood, Missouri. *831 On December 18, 1985, friends became concerned when they had not seen Harmon for several days, and summoned police to conduct a welfare check at Harmon’s home. When the police entered the . house, they discovered pools .of blood on the kitchen floor, the bedroom floor, and the bed, and blood splattered on the bedroom wall. Four stove burners were on, with the pilot lights extinguished. The police noticed that a deep freeze, which opened from the top, had an arm chair, television, and a large typewriter stacked on it and that food was piled behind it. They opened the freezer and found Harmon’s body.
An autopsy revealed that Harmon had been viciously beaten: he had sustained numerous blunt trauma injuries to his head and limbs, an injury which separated his scalp from the skull in the middle of his head, broken ribs on his left side, and a bruised spleen. Harmon had also suffered facial injuries consistent with being kicked. Death was attributed to a combination of blunt injuries, hypothermia, and suffocation. Medical evidence showed that Harmon could have remained alive-in the freezer for over an hour before succumbing to either suffocation or hypothermia.
Two days after Harmon’s body was discovered, police found Harmon’s car in Santa Monica, California. Walls, who was twenty years old at the time, was already in custody for burglary. Under questioning by the police, Walls confessed that he and two others had committed the murder.
On the Friday before the murder, Walls had been transferred from the Jefferson City, Missouri, penitentiary to a halfway house in St. Louis pending release on parole. Two days later, Walls and two other prisoners escaped from the facility and went out drinking. One of the fugitives stated that he knew an old man from whom he could get a car and some money with which the three could flee the St. Louis area.
The trio went to Harmon’s home where Walls kept a look-out while the other two broke into the house. When Walls later entered, blood was everywhere and Harmon was crying on the bedroom floor. The three tried to bind Harmon with neckties, but he resisted and was beaten again. Walls first stepped on Harmon’s face and then held his feet while the others tied him up. All three dragged Harmon, who was still conscious and fighting, into the kitchen. The trio decided to put Harmon in the freezer and then to blow up the house. Walls helped to clean out the freezer to make room for Harmon, then helped the others lift the still-struggling Harmon and stuff him inside the freezer, head first. When Walls later opened the freezer, Harmon begged, “I’m already dead, let me die, ... let me die.” After sharing sodá out of the refrigerator with his partners, Walls went back in the bedroom for the keys to the car. When he returned to the kitchen, the television and a typewriter had been placed on top of the freezer. Walls lifted the typewriter, and called out, “Are you in there?” When he heard Harmon moaning, Walls replaced the typewriter. A chair was added to the top of the freezer. The three then turned on the gas and left in Harmon’s ear.
Walls was charged with capital murder and counsel was appointed for him. Originally counsel planned on having another lawyer handle the penalty phase, if one occurred, but the penalty-phase lawyer ultimately withdrew from the ease. In preparation for the penalty phase of the trial, counsel retained a social worker to investigate Walls’s family background and another lawyer to serve as second chair at trial and assist with witness preparation.
At defense counsel’s request, a psychiatrist examined Walls prior to trial. The psychiatrist concluded that Walls did not suffer from any mental disease or defect sufficient to constitute a defense, and that no further testing was warranted. Defense counsel obtained a second exam that, likewise, revealed no' mental disease or defect and recommended no additional testing. Both reports noted that Walls was alcohol-dependant, but concluded that he was able to conform his actions to the requirements of the law.
The jury found Walls guilty of murder in the first degree, robbery in the first degree, and burglary in the first degree. They im
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posed the death penalty.
1
The verdict and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal.
See Missouri v. Walls,
Walls moved to vacate the judgment and sentence pursuant to Rule 29.15 of the Missouri Supreme Court.Rules of Criminal Procedure. Among other things, he alleged that trial counsel had been ineffective in failing to present the testimony of certain family members during the penalty phase, in neglecting to seek additional psychiatric testing, and in electing not to present the testimony of the doctor who had conducted the second evaluation. The state court conducted a two-day hearing at which Walls’s mother, father, sister, brother, and step-brother testified. They reported that when Walls was around seven years old, his parents divorced and each married one spouse of another married couple: in other words, they swapped partners. They testified that this unusual arrangement was upsetting and stressful for the children of both families. Walls’s siblings also described the physical and emotional abuse they endured as children. Both Walls’s mother and father testified that they had been contacted by the defense team but had refused either to attend trial or to testify on Walls’s behalf. A psychologist also testified at the Rule 29.15 hearing. He opined that Walls’s alcohol abuse and a previous attempt at suicide by hanging could have caused brain damage and that it was “conceivable” that neuropsychological testing would have revealed some organic brain dysfunction. The doctor who had conducted the second psychiatric exam of Walls also testified. He reported that he was aware of Walls’s alcohol abuse at the time of the exam, but had not recommended additional testing. Finally, the lawyers who had conducted Walls’s defense testified. Each reviewed and explained the developments of the investigation and trial strategy. The state court concluded that counsel was not ineffective and denied relief.
See Walls v. Missouri,
Walls next filed a petition for a state writ of habeas corpus pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule of Criminal Procedure 91, which the state circuit court immediately transferred to the Missouri Supreme Court. The state supreme court summarily denied the petition and Walls’s subsequent motions to recall the mandate and for a rehearing.
After five years of litigation in state court, Walls filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court, alleging eighty-eight grounds for relief. The district court denied Walls’s request for an evidentiary hearing, 2 but granted the writ on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel. The court found that trial counsel was constitutionally defective in failing to present the testimony of Walls’s family, in failing to request further psychiatric testing, and in failing to call the second psychiatrist as a mitigation witness. Counsel was additionally ineffective, the court held, in failing to request a continuance in order to conduct fur *833 ther investigation. The district court denied relief., on all other grounds. Bowersox appeals the district- court’s finding of ineffective assistance of counsel. Walls eross-ap-' peals on multiple other claims. ■
II. DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo.
See McDonald v. Bowersox,
A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are governed by the two-part test of
Strickland v. Washington,
The district court concluded that counsel’s failure to secure testimony from the Walls family was- the result of incompetence. Walls was prejudiced by that failure, according to the district court, because the jury did not learn of his difficult family life or hear a plea on his behalf. The district court discounted the Missouri state courts’ prior findings of effective representation by reasoning that they had not considered the inadequacy of counsel’s pre-trial investigation. . , .
The duty to investigate derives from an attorney’s basic function, which is “to make the adversarial testing process work in the particular ease.”
Strickland,
Here, the defense team made an extensive effort to investigate Walls’s family
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background and to secure the family’s testimony at trial. Walls identified sixteen potential witnesses for the penalty phase. The social worker who had been retained by defense counsel attempted to contact each witness.
4
At the 29.15 hearing, Walls’s mother testified that the social worker telephoned her repeatedly and engaged her in “lengthy” conversations. Additionally, the social worker had several discussions with Walls’s father, stepmother, and numerous other relatives. The second-chair attorney also talked to Walls’s mother, father, and stepmother several times. Finally, lead counsel himself spoke with Walls’s mother, father, stepmother, and sister prior to the penalty phase of the trial. This is not a case in which counsel failed to conduct a reasonable inquiry into potential mitigation witnesses.
See, e.g., Kenley,
In all of their contacts with the defense team, the family steadfastly refused even to attend the trial, much less to testify. Walls’s mother declined to come because she “didn’t want to get involved.” Walls’s sister testified that she was “scared ... because it was so highly publicized.” Walls’s father explained that “I didn’t want to get my name ... drug into this.” Walls argues that counsel was ineffective in failing to change his relatives’ minds. Although counsel was unable to procure the testimony of the family members, we cannot say it was from lack of effort.
Walls next asserts that counsel should have subpoenaed the family to testify if they would not attend voluntarily. The decision to call family members as witnesses is a “strategic decision.”
Malone v. Vasquez,
We find that counsel’s decision not to compel Walls’s family to testify was entirely reasonable. It makes little sense to force unwilling family to testify in mitigation. If counsel had done so, “cross-examination would not even have been necessary in order to hurt [Walls’s] case. The simplest questions asked on direct examination would have revealed the relatives’ total lack of support.”
Laws v. Armontrout,
Counsel’s decisions thus fall within the range of reasonable representation, and Walls has therefore not established the first prong of the
Strickland
standard. However, even if counsel’s performance had been deficient, Walls could not show prejudice. We find no “reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s [allegedly] unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Strickland,
The unoffered testimony alleging physical and emotional abuse is not of substantial value. At the 29.15 hearing, both Walls’s
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mother and father denied that Walls was abused. Walls’s brothers testified that they had never seen Walls either physically or emotionally abused. The siblings did report that they themselves were “backhanded,” “knocked around,” and “smackfed].” Walls’s sister described an incident when Walls was “beatfen]” for knocking over a plant. She also testified that Walls’s mother sometimes struck the children with a belt and told them she did not love them and wished that they had never been born. While this testimony paints an unpleasant picture of Walls’s childhood, it pales in comparison to evidence of abuse that has been held to be significantly mitigating.
See Parkus v. Deb,
Likewise, we find that the unoffered plea for mercy by Walls’s family is not of substantial value. “It is not enough merely to speculate that a tearful parent on the stand might have evoked pity.”
Stokes,
The already limited value of Walls’s family’s testimony is further reduced when one considers the negative information that would .also have been elicited from them.
See Whitmore v, Lockhart, 8
F.3d 614, 623 (8th Cir.1993);. .The family’s testimony at the 29.15 hearing included descriptions of Walls as a belligerent teenager with- a violent temper and revealed that Walls had stolen from and fought with: family members. “[I]t was surely not unreasonable for [counsel] to have concluded that cross-examination might well have revealed matters of historical fact that would have harmed his client’s chances for a life sentence.”
Burger, v. Kemp,
Counsel’s failure to request neuropsychological or other testing was similarly within the range of competent representation and did not render Walls’s trial unreliable or unfair. It was entirely reasonable for counsel to rely on the conclusion of two trained psychiatrists that no additional testing was warranted.
See Six v. Deb,
Our resolution of the performance test on this issue makes it unnecessary for us to reach Strickland’s prejudice inquiry. However, we note that Walls has not demonstrated any -prejudice stemming from the lack of additional testing. He has made no showing that these tests would have revealed exculpatory or mitigating information. The strongest statement Walls can muster in support of prejudice is the psychologist’s testimony that it is “conceivable” that Walls suffers from some organic brain dysfunction. This speculation does nothing to undermine our confidence in the outcome of Walls’s trial.
The district court next found that counsel was incompetent for failing to present the testimony of the psychiatrist who conducted the second evaluation of Walls. In particular, the district court held that counsel should have told the doctor about Walls’s unusual family background, his alcohol abuse, and his attempted suicide by hanging, because the doctor could have used this information to craft mitigating testimony on
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Walls’s behalf. However, the doctor knew of this information and specifically referred to it in his report. Thus, there is simply no merit to this claim. Moreover, at the 29.15 hearing, counsel testified that “when it became obvious that none of the family members were going to show up, I was reluctant just to put on a psychiatrist to say that [Walls] had an anti-social personality disorder or that he was just mean, without anything to show the background as to how he got to be that way.” This strikes us as precisely the sort of reasoned strategic decision of counsel that is “virtually unchallengeable.”
Strickland,
The district court also held that counsel was ineffective in failing to seek a continuance immediately prior to the commencement of the trial. It based this conclusion on its determination that counsel had failed to properly investigate potential mitigation evidence. Our holding that trial counsel’s investigation was constitutionally adequate disposes of this claim as well. Walls has not identified any additional information that counsel could have discovered had a continuance been granted, and we find no evidence that the outcome of the trial would have been different had counsel made such a request.
See Kilgore v. Bowersox,
The district court found “[t]he most telling” evidence of ineffectiveness to be counsel’s own affidavit which states that he believes he provided Walls with ineffective assistance of counsel. However, admissions of inadequate performance by trial lawyers are not decisive in ineffective assistance claims.
See Harris v. Dugger,
In sum, we find that defense counsel’s performance was “within the range of competence demanded of attorneys under like circumstances.”
Starr,
B. Prosecutor’s Remarks
In his cross-appeal, Walls asserts that certain comments made by the prosecutor at trial violated the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution. The appropriate standard of review for this claim is “the narrow one of due process, and not the broad exercise of supervisory power that [we] would possess in regard to [a federal] trial court.”
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
After careful review of the entire transcript, including the closing arguments of
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both phases of the trial, we are not convinced that the challenged statements were improper. The comments about which Walls complains, when read in context, do not carry the meaning he ascribes to them. Even if any of the challenged comments were improper, however, they did not fundamentally taint the proceedings. Inappropriate remarks do not warrant federal habeas relief unless they infect the trial with enough unfairness to render a defendant’s conviction a denial of due process.
See Darden v. Wainwright, 477
U.S. 168, 181,
C. Exclusion of Venirepersons
Walls also claims that the district court erred in failing to grant relief on his claims regarding three venirepersons who were excluded from the panel after voir dire. The state argues that these claims are defaulted and that we therefore cannot consider them. We need not address whether Walls is procedurally barred from pursuing these claims because we find them to plainly be without constitutional merit.
See Thompson v. Jones,
Venirepersons may be excluded from a jury based on their views about capital punishment when those views would prevent or substantially impair the performance of their duties as a juror.
Adams v. Texas,
A trial court may excuse potential jurors . for cause if it finds that their “views would prevent or substantially impair the performance of [their] duties as [jurors] in accordance with- [their] instructions and [their] oath.”
Wainwright v. Witt,
We have carefully considered each of Walls’s remaining arguments and find them to be without merit. The district court therefore did not err in denying relief on those claims.
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. The grant of the writ of habeas corpus is reversed and Walls’s death sentence is reinstated.
Notes
. As aggravating circumstances, the jury found that (1) the murder was committed for the purpose of receiving money or any other thing of monetary value from the victim, see Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.032.2(4); (2) the murder involved torture or depravity of mind, see Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.032.2(7); (3) Walls committed the murder after he escaped from the lawful custody of a place of lawful confinement, see Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.032.2(9); (4) the murder was committed while Walls was engaged in the perpetration of burglary in the first degree and/or robbery in the ■ first degree, see Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.032.2(11); and (5) Walls had three prior convictions for burglary in the second degree. See Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.032.1(3) (Supp.1984).
. Although the district court denied Walls's motion for an evidentiary hearing, it relied upon six affidavits submitted by Walls that were not presented at the 29.15 hearing. A habeas petitioner is entitled to expand the state court record only if he can show cause for his failure to develop the facts' in state court and prejudice from that failure.
See Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
. Certain provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996), amended the federal statutory law of habeas petitions. Since Walls’s petition for habeas relief was pending in the-district court prior to April 24, 1996, however, these new provisions do not apply to his claim.
See Lindh v. Murphy,
. Walls dismisses both the social worker’s and second-chair’s investigations by focusing exclusively on the personal efforts of lead counsel. However, it is neither unprofessional nor unreasonable for a lawyer to use surrogates to investigate and interview potential witnesses rather than doing so personally.
See Harris v. Dugger,
. We add that any type of "sandbagging” is "not only unethical, but usually bad strategy as well.”
United States v. Day,
