Ronald Turney Williams appeals from the denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition. A jury convicted him on February 10, 1984, of first degree murder and armed burglary in the first degree for breaking into a home, burglarizing it, and shooting and killing someone who saw him, John Bunchek. Williams was sentenced to death on the murder conviction and to an aggravated term of fourteen years for the burglary conviction. The Arizona Supreme Court affirmed,
State v. Williams,
I
John Bunchek, an elderly Scottsdale resident, was shot and killed on March 12, 1981. A white male who had been seen wandering around the neighborhood just before the shooting knocked on the Bun-chek’s door and asked Sylvia Bunchek whether her next-door neighbors were home. Mrs. Bunchek told him that they were not. Mrs. Bunchek saw the stranger walk toward the neighbors’ (the Tancoses’) house. She expressed concern to her husband when he arrived a few minutes later. He went to investigate. When he failed to return, Mrs. Bunchek went to the Tañeos house where she found her husband lying face down in a pool of blood, having been *1036 shot in the chest. John Bunchek ultimately died from the wound.
In addition to Mrs. Bunchek, five other witnesses saw the stranger in the neighborhood that day. Brenda Wood and William Koranda had talked with him face-to-face; Alan and Elizabeth Tautkus saw him for about five seconds as they drove by in their car. Wood and the Tautkuses provided the police with a description from which a composite sketch was prepared. This sketch was televised and published in local newspapers on March 13. It was seen by one of Williams’s roommates, Lynn Walsh. Williams rented a house that was about three minutes from the Tuatkus home with Walsh, James McClas-key and Cheryl Le Due. Walsh told McClaskey and Le Due that the drawing looked like “Randy.” “Randolph Cooper” and “Randy Despain” were names that Williams testified he used while he was in Arizona. The roommates looked at the drawing and made the composite face look thinner and more bearded. McClaskey then called Silent Witness and reported their suspicions that Williams was the suspect.
Meanwhile, without telling anyone, Williams “threw his stuff in the trunk of the car” and took off from Scottsdale the day of the murder. He was arrested after a shoot-out with FBI agents in New York City on June 8,1981.
An Arizona grand jury indicted Williams and, following an extradition hearing, Williams was arraigned on April 3, 1983. Counsel was appointed for him, but Williams elected to represent himself at the guilt phase with the assistance of advisory counsel.
The evidence at trial showed that none of the items taken from the Tañeos residence during the burglary was found in Williams’s possession. However, the Mauser .380 semiautomatic pistol that Williams used in the New York shoot-out was the same gun that fired the bullet which killed Bunchek. Williams had bought this gun in Mechanicsville, Virginia, in 1980. Also, a footprint on the door of the Tañeos house matched the tread marks of a type of athletic shoe that Williams had owned when he was in Scottsdale. In addition, Mrs. Tautkus identified Williams as the person she saw on March 12, although Wood and Koranda both testified that Williams was not the man they had seen in the neighborhood.
After Williams was shot and apprehended in New York, a nurse asked the FBI agent accompanying Williams to the hospital what Williams had done. The agent indicated that “he killed a bunch of people down south.” When Williams mumbled “no, no, no,” and the agent said “What about the old man in Scottsdale,” Williams replied either “If[I] hadn’t been framed in the first place, it never would have happened,” or “None of this would have happened if I hadn’t been framed in the first place.” Williams’s reference to being framed was to a prior murder conviction in West Virginia. 1
Williams subsequently also admitted to burglarizing the home of Marjorie Larson in Virginia in December 1980. Like the door to the Tañeos residence, the Larson front door was opened by bodily force. Both were daytime burglaries during which small items were stolen. As Williams was leaving the Larson house, he saw Larson standing in a neighbor’s driveway and shot at (but did not hit) her. The gun used to fire at Larson was the same *1037 gun that was used in the Bunchek murder and that Williams used in the shoot-out with the FBI. Williams left Virginia after the Larson burglary although he was engaged to be married at the time.
Williams testified on his own behalf. His defense was that McClaskey and McClaskey’s friend, “Bobby,” had borrowed his gun and committed the crime. However, LeDuc and Walsh testified that McClaskey looked and dressed differently from the man seen in the neighborhood that day. Neither knew of any friend of McClaskey whose name was “Bobby.” Williams also testified that he left Scottsdale to avoid being investigated for escaping from jail in 1979, committing the burglary in Virginia, and having no identification. Williams admitted that he lied under oath (at the extradition hearing) about aliases he had used, people he knew, and his presence in Arizona at the time Bunchek was killed.
The jury returned a guilty verdict on the first degree murder and burglary counts on February 10, 1984. The trial court denied Williams’s motion for a new trial. In keeping with practice at the time, the sentencing phase was tried to the court pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-703 (Supp. 1986). At Williams’s request, the court ordered two independent psychological evaluations. Both mental health experts concluded that he had no psychotic condition. Also at Williams’s request, his advisory counsel was appointed as counsel for purposes of the sentencing phase on April 11, 1984. Williams presented numerous witnesses and letters in mitigation to show that he was subjected to a difficult childhood, that he is a religious person, that he had been a good parolee, that he had been helpful to other inmates while incarcerated, and that the circumstances surrounding his prior convictions warrant mitigation, including the fact that a key witness in the first murder recanted and that his second conviction was based only on his participation in a prison escape rather than in the actual killing. The trial court considered evidence, bearing on nineteen allegedly mitigating factors during the six-day proceeding, and concluded that they were insufficient to mitigate Williams’s life of crime. On April 23, 1984 the court found no mitigating circumstances and found aggravating that Williams had two prior convictions for which life imprisonment could be imposed, and that Williams murdered Bunchek for pecuniary gain. Id. § 13 — 703(F)(1), (5). It therefore sentenced Williams to death. Id. § 13-703(E). The Arizona Supreme Court agreed with the trial court’s finding that the allegedly mitigating circumstances were insufficient to warrant leniency.
Extensive post-sentencing proceedings occurred. The state supreme court affirmed the conviction and sentence on direct appeal, and denied several motions for reconsideration. In January 1992, Williams filed a preliminary state petition for post-conviction relief, subsequently supplemented with additional claims. The trial court dismissed the petition on January 26, 1994, and the Arizona Supreme Court denied review on April 25, 1995. The supreme court issued a death warrant scheduling the execution for September 1995. Williams filed a federal petition for writ of habeas corpus on August 15, 1995, later amended to raise thirty-five claims for relief. The district court determined that several of the claims were procedurally barred, and denied the remaining claims on the merits in an exhaustive memorandum of decision and order filed January 5, 2001.
' Williams sought, and received, a Certificate of Appealability on twenty claims. 2
*1038 II
Williams first argues that Elizabeth Tautkus’s testimony identifying Williams as the person she saw the day of the crime was the result of an unconstitutionally suggestive pretrial identification procedure. He submits that the error of admitting it cannot be harmless, as the district court held, where eyewitness testimony such as Mrs. Tautkus’s is the only evidence placing a defendant at the scene of the crime.
Williams contacted the Tautkuses (who had been unable to identify him in a photographic array) to obtain a statement from them, as he had from Wood and Koranda, that Williams was not the person they saw. The Tautkuses were not cooperative, so Williams subpoenaed them for a deposition on August 28, 1983. Although Williams’s advisory counsel, Richard Mesh, was present, Williams took the deposition himself. The court denied his request to be relieved of manacles and prison attire. Mrs. Taut-kus found his appearance “a little disturbing,” but testified at trial that it did not influence her identification. The Tautkus-es and Mesh got into something of a shouting match before the deposition began, causing the prosecutor to intervene. He told the witnesses that they were there to help determine the accuracy of the information in the police report and to see if they could identify Williams as being the fellow they had seen on the day that Bun-chek had been shot; he added that he did not know personally whether Williams had done the shooting and that he wanted the Tautkuses to testify truthfully to what they knew. Once the deposition began, Williams pressed Mrs. Tautkus to state whether he was the person she saw walking on Maleomb Drive on March 12. She responded affirmatively when Williams took his glasses off.
The Arizona Supreme Court recognized that Mrs. Tautkus’s identification of Williams was under “extremely suggestive circumstances,” but concluded that it did not offend due process because it was Williams who procured the identification under suggestive circumstances.
In any event, as the district court found, even if the trial court did violate Williams’s due process rights by admitting the pretrial identification, the error was harmless. Mrs. Tautkus’s testimony did not have substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the verdict under
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Williams’s alternative request for an evi-dentiary hearing is unsupported and fails as well.
Ill
Williams faults admission of the statement he made in response to the FBI agent’s question about the old man in Scottsdale. Williams was read his
Miranda
rights just after he was shot.
Mi-randa v. Arizona,
The district court agreed with the trial court’s findings that Williams interjected himself into the conversation between the nurse and FBI agent, that this interjection led to the agent’s question, and that Williams voluntarily answered it. So do we.
See United States v. Andaverde,
IV
Williams complains that the “other acts” evidence admitted by the trial court was impermissible character evidence that was prejudicial. It consisted of testimony concerning the Larson burglary that Williams committed in Virginia on December 2, 1980; the shoot-out between Williams and the FBI in New York; Williams’s use of an alias, James Byrd, to buy the Mauser .380 caliber automatic on October 16, 1980, to obtain a Virginia driver’s license in that name, and to procure insurance policies; and Williams’s opulent lifestyle, without apparent means of support, when he was engaged to Diane Bowery. “A habeas petitioner bears a heavy burden in showing a due process violation based on an eviden-tiary decision,”
Boyde v. Brown,
The opulent lifestyle testimony presents no due process problem because the trial court sustained Williams’s objection and admonished the jury to disregard it.
See United States v. McCormac,
Evidence of the Larson burglary bears on the identity of Bunchek’s killer. That the same gun belonging to Williams was used to shoot at Larson and to kill Bunchek is a signature element that links Williams to both burglaries.
See, e.g., United States v. Higgs,
Finally, evidence about the shoot-out was probative of Williams’s identity as Bunchek’s killer because he still had (and used) the Mauser .380 after the Bunchek murder. The events surrounding Williams’s arrest also provided relevant context for the statement that he made in route to, or at, the hospital. Williams argues that he should have been allowed to stipulate to possession of the gun, but due process does not require as much.
Old
*1041
Chief v. United States,
Williams’s alternative request for an evi-dentiary hearing is unsupported and no basis appears for granting it.
V
Williams asserts that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by submitting false evidence to the grand jury; tainting the Tautkus identification testimony by telling her that she was only there to identify Williams as the person she saw in her neighborhood; and concealing the location of McClaskey, who was a critical defense witness. Williams refers to other incidents as well, including abusive language and tampering with evidence, that the district court properly found had not been fairly presented to the Arizona Supreme Court.
See Bose v. Lundy,
Williams’s suborning perjury argument turns on an exchange between the prosecutor and Detective Bingham.
4
In Williams’s view, Bingham falsely testified that Williams’s fingerprints had been found at the crime scene and that the footprint on the door of the Tañeos residence matched his shoes. The district court found that Bingham did not testify falsely, and we agree. While the prosecutor’s query about “that residence” could
*1042
have been clearer, in context it is clear enough that the line of questioning had to do with Randy Cooper’s residence. The point was that Williams was “Randy Cooper,” and thus that the NCC Tiger shoe box was Williams’s, not “Cooper’s,” because Williams’s fingerprints showed that it was he, not someone named Cooper, who lived at the residence. Nor was Bingham’s testimony about the shoe print false, as it simply conveys the detective’s conclusion that the type of shoe that made the imprint on the Tañeos door was an NCC Tiger running shoe, and that this was the type of shoe that McClaskey bought for “Randy Cooper.” Bingham did not testify, as Williams suggests, that Williams made the footprint. Regardless, any constitutional error in the grand jury proceedings is harmless because Williams was ultimately convicted of the offenses charged.
United States v. Mechanik,
During the “shouting match” that occurred after Mrs. Tautkus arrived for her deposition, the prosecutor tried to calm things down and in the process, remarked that “all we were trying to do ... was to determine the accuracy of the information that was in the police report and whether or not they could identify [Williams] as being the fellow who they had seen in the neighborhood on the day that Mr. Bunchek had been shot.” He added that he did not personally know whether Williams was the person who did the shooting and that Mrs. Tautkus should not prejudge the question. In the circumstances, we cannot see how this amounted to coaching that “so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.”
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
The Atizona Supreme Court found that the prosecutor tracked McClaskey down in Sonora, Texas, had a telephone number for one of his neighbors, and turned this information over to defense investigators before April 1983. Defense investigators were able to contact the neighbor but apparently not McClaskey. McClaskey told state investigators in this time frame that he was going to California for surgery, and evidently left Texas in May. The state did not immediately disclose this to Williams, but did so at some point. The supreme court found that Williams knew as much about McClaskey’s whereabouts as the state, which “did not fail to disclose relevant information to the defense.”
Williams’s offers no reason why he should have an evidentiary hearing on this issue, and we decline his request for remand.
VI
Williams also claims .judicial misconduct on account of the trial judge’s display of bias and hostility. Williams cites the judge’s requiring him to stay near counsel table during the trial and threatening that he would be shot if he strayed; requiring Williams to obtain permission from the guards before getting a drink of water; and advising the guards to be wary. The district court held that only the allegation of bias because of the order to stay near counsel table was exhausted. As to that claim, the court found that the trial judge went out of his way to treat both *1043 parties evenhandedly, and that his determination that Williams should stay near the counsel table was based on legitimate security concerns. We agree.
The trial judge ordered
both
Williams
and
the prosecutor to remain at counsel table during trial so that it would not appear that either side was being treated differently. Requiring Williams to stay put was an entirely sensible precaution given Williams’s history of escaping from custody and of violent encounters with law enforcement agents. He had been charged by the West Virginia State Penitentiary with one attempted escape from that facility, and later Williams in fact escaped with fourteen other prisoners during the course of which a police officer was killed. Williams was convicted of first-degree felony murder for that episode. He also escaped from the Peterson Place Hospital in West Virginia. And Williams had engaged in several outbursts, including physical confrontations with deputies, during pretrial hearings. In these circumstances, reasonable security measures, as well as warnings about non-compliance, were at once prudent and not indicative of bias.
See Liteky v. United States,
Williams concedes that he did not raise additional facts showing bias or hostility in state court, but contends that additional instances should not be procedurally defaulted because they supplement, rather than change, the basic claim that judicial bias permeated the proceedings. However, he fails to point to any conduct that arguably reveals an opinion derived from an extrajudicial source, or “such a high degree of favoritism or antagonism as to make fair judgment impossible.”
Liteky,
VII
Williams maintains that the voir dire procedures used to select jurors were unconstitutionally restrictive in scope and substance for a number of reasons. The trial court conducted voir dire, and we are not persuaded that it did so in a manner that deprived Williams of an impartial jury.
See Mu’Min v. Virginia,
In sum: The court’s failure to ask more than one follow-up question of a prospective juror who had heard about the case and remembered what she heard cannot have prejudiced Williams because the only facts that the juror remembered were that Mrs. Bunchek was home and Mr. *1044 Bunchek went next door. Nor does Williams suggest how he could be prejudiced by the court’s asking only one member of the venire, rather than all of them, whether he or she would only consider the defendant’s guilt or innocence and not his possible punishment; if anything, the question, cuts against, rather than in favor of, the defense. Williams claims that the court should have excused one juror for cause who stated that she may have been biased toward Williams because she was once burglarized, but Williams did not make a cause challenge, and the juror ultimately was not seated. The same applies to another prospective juror whose father had been shot by his brother; the judge asked whether this would carry over into the trial and the juror responded negatively. Williams did not request followup before passing the panel for cause, and he used a peremptory challenge to remove this venireman. Likewise, Williams did not challenge a prospective juror who had a good friend who was an FBI or customs agent but said that she would not treat FBI agents’ testimony differently as a result of this relationship. The trial judge also inquired whether prospective jurors could set aside sympathy for the victim’s wife if she testified, despite the fact that she was deceased, but Williams does not explain how this was harmful given that people may, or may not, testify for any number of reasons. Finally, Williams did not try to show the trial court (or us) how refusing to provide the venire with his questionnaire made any difference. As his advisory counsel acknowledged, most of its 150-200 form questions were duplicative of the court’s voir dire, and Williams did not request specific, further questions of particular jurors before accepting the panel.
VIII
Prior to trial, Williams asked the trial court for funds to secure the attendance of various out-of-state witnesses. After a hearing, the court determined that a number of them were not material. Williams correctly notes that he had a right to submit relevant testimony,
Chambers v. Mississippi,
Passarella was Williams’s former attorney whom he proffered to testify that FBI agents questioned him before contacting counsel. Testimony to this effect would not have been relevant, however, as the trial court found that Williams did not request a lawyer prior to making the statement. As we have explained, that finding is presumptively correct.
Dr. DeRossi was the Chief Surgeon in charge of the trauma team that treated Williams following his arrest by the FBI, but Williams’s investigator testified that DeRossi did not himself treat Williams or know anything about his condition or operation except for information reflected in hospital records. Others who did observe *1045 Williams at the time of his statement and were knowledgeable about his treatment did testify, so Williams could not have been prejudiced by DeRossi’s absence.
Joy was an Assistant Public Defender who represented Williams during his arraignment at the hospital. According to Williams, Joy would have testified that FBI agents were bothering Williams, that Williams told the FBI “to quit,” and that he had tubes down his throat, TVs in his arm, stitches four or five places, and was in shock. However, the trial court found that Joy did not see Williams until 5:00 p.m. As he was not percipient to Williams’s condition when the inculpatory statement was made around 2:30 p.m, Joy’s only knowledge would have come from Williams and was hearsay. There also was no evidence that Joy would have testified to Williams’s condition. Assuming that he would have, however, anything Joy observed about the shape that Williams was in after surgery has little bearing on his condition when he made the statement.
Cook was a West Virginia police officer to whom Likens admitted that he lied when he testified at Williams’s 1975 homicide trial that Williams had admitted killing the victim. Williams proffered both witnesses to show that his statement— “None of this would have happened if I hadn’t been framed in the first place”— was not a confession but related instead to the 1975 West Virginia murder conviction for which Williams claims he was framed. At most, these witnesses could have explained how Williams was framed; they could not have explained what Williams meant by what he said. What his statement meant was the only consequential issue. Whether Williams was framed sheds no light on whether Williams meant by “none of this would have happened” that he would not have been incarcerated, wouldn’t have escaped, wouldn’t have been in Scottsdale, and wouldn’t have been living with McClasky such that McClasky could take Williams’s gun and use it with Bobby to commit the burglary and kill Bunchek — -as he posits — or whether he meant that he wouldn’t have been arrested in New York City after precipitately leaving Scottsdale after burgling the Tañeos residence and shooting Bunchek. Nor would the testimony of Cook or Likens have related to the circumstances surrounding what Williams told the FBI. Therefore, their proffered testimony was neither relevant nor material.
Lastly, Mason was a Texas prosecutor who would have testified that there was an outstanding arrest warrant for McClaskey for stealing a trailer. However, the fact that McClaskey may have stolen a trailer does not make it more likely that he, instead of Williams, killed Bunchek.
No basis appears for remanding for an evidentiary hearing, as Williams alternatively requests.
IX
Williams contends that he was denied competent assistance of counsel when his appointed counsel failed to challenge false grand jury testimony and to provide the time, money, and assistance needed to represent him. As a result, Williams asserts that he was forced to undertake his own representation. We have already explained that there was no false grand jury testimony, so by definition counsel was not deficient and Williams was not prejudiced by any failure to object to Detective Bingham’s testimony. In any event, this could not have influenced Williams’s decision to proceed
pro se
because it wasn’t known at the time. Apart from this, a thorough review of the record leaves no doubt that Williams’s decision to invoke his
Faretta
rights and to represent himself was knowing, intelligent, unequivocal and voluntary.
*1046
Faretta v. California,
Williams was arraigned on April 3, 1983. Deputy Public Defender Dennis Freeman was appointed to represent him. On April 4, Freeman filed a motion for Williams requesting that Williams be allowed to proceed pro se. At the hearing, Williams had no particular reason for wanting to have Freeman taken off the case, but explained that prison conditions prevented him from being able to interact meaningfully with Freeman or any other attorney. The trial court determined that the conditions of Williams’s confinement did not unreasonably interfere with his ability to consult with counsel. Williams renewed his motion on April 18, 1983. He told the court that he and Freeman had reached an impasse in their relationship, that Freeman had never tried a capital case, and that Freeman had said he was overloaded and that the public defender’s office was short attorneys, investigators and secretaries. In these circumstances Williams was of the opinion that the Maricopa County Public Defender’s Office could not give him adequate representation. Before the court could rule, Richard Mesh, an experienced public defender, stepped in to replace Freeman. In turn, Mesh was relieved a week later, on April 25, 1983, when Williams asked the court to reconsider his request to proceed pro se. At the hearing, Williams stated that he had given the matter a good deal of consideration. Factors he mentioned were the budget problems of the Public Defender’s Office, the charges and the sentences, 'the physical conditions at the jail, and “a number of other things.” Williams expressed no displeasure with Mesh and offered to work with him in the capacity of advisory counsel. He indicated to the court that he had represented himself in two previous cases, one of which went to trial. The trial court engaged in an extensive colloquy during which Williams demonstrated that he had “picked up quite a bit in [his] courtroom experiences,” indicated that he understood the nature of the charges and the sentences that he faced as well as the pitfalls of representing himself and the ground rules by which trial would be conducted, and averred that he wanted “to handle this case personally, manage and conduct this defense on [his] own.” After receiving Williams’s written waiver of counsel, and finding that Williams knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily gave up his right to counsel* the court acceded to Williams’s request to represent himself but appointed Mesh as advisory counsel. 5 Williams represented himself throughout the guilt phase with Mesh as advisory counsel until Mesh was hospitalized; when it became obvious that Mesh could not continue, he was replaced as advisory counsel by another public defender, Robert S. Briney, who was familiar with the case.
All arguments that Williams now makes about counsel’s ineffective performance have to do with Mesh’s assistance after Williams invoked his Faretta rights and Mesh became advisory counsel. For example, Williams maintains that Mesh was not able to devote more than eight hours a week to his case, was too overburdened to make phone calls, told him that the work was more than he had ever encountered, did not promptly process the motions that Williams wanted him to type, refused to type a list of voir dire questions, and failed to prepare some diagrams. These alleged deficiencies were brought to the trial court’s attention in connection with Williams’s request for the appointment of *1047 additional advisory counsel. Even so, Williams acknowledged, “There’s no problem with Mr. Mesh. He’s done — as far as I’m concerned, he’s doing a terrific job with the amount of time that he has available.” The trial court observed that Mesh was one of Arizona’s most able lawyers, and the district court found no indication that Mesh was not conducting Williams’s defense in a capable manner or that there was irreconcilable conflict.
It is well settled that we “indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.”
Strickland v. Washington,
X
Williams maintains that he was denied expert mental health assistance that was needed to prepare a defense. Prior to trial, he filed two motions seeking the appointment of a psychiatrist. See Rule 11, Ariz.R.Crim.P., 17 A.R.S. In his Motion for Psychiatric Examination of Incarcerated Defendant filed on July 15, 1983, Williams requested a psychiatric examination to determine whether he was “mentally liable and responsible on March 12, 1981.” The motion was unsupported and the trial court denied it because Williams had failed to produce any evidence of a mental problem. The court also noted that Williams was not advancing an insanity defense at that time.
On October 20, 1983 Williams filed a motion to Have Defendant’s Mental Condition Examined that sought appointment of two mental health experts to determine whether he suffered from a mental disease or defect on March 12, 1981, or currently. This motion was supported by reports of court-ordered psychiatric examinations in 1964 and 1970. There were three 1964 reports. The first diagnosed him as having “sociopathic personality disturbance, anti-social reaction.” The second offered a tentative diagnosis of “psychoneurotic disorder, depressive reaction” and “schizophrenic reaction, catatonic type.” The third 1964 report found that testing bore out a diagnosis of “chronic undifferentiated schizophrenia” that was “incipient, but progressing.” The 1970 report diagnosed Williams as having “antisocial personality.” Hallucinations were denied. The reports indicated that Williams was bright intellectually with a high IQ, and Williams advised the court that he had no treatment since these examinations. At the hearing, advisory counsel indicated that Williams does “wave in, wave out”; that when things were going well for Williams he was a joy to have as a client but when things were *1048 not going well, he was as difficult a client as any; and that Williams wanted to bring to the court’s attention “that, for all he knows, he may have been under some kind of psychiatric disorder at the time of his alleged involvement with Mr. Bunchek that might be of a defensive nature to him that he’s not the proper person to evaluate it.” The trial court denied the motion as it found nothing in the reports to show that Williams was incompetent or insane.
The Arizona Supreme Court agreed with the trial court’s findings.
7
It concluded that neither Arizona Rule 11, nor the due process clause, nor
Ake v. Oklahoma,
The district court found that Williams failed to establish that his sanity was likely to be a significant factor in his defense. It also emphasized that the defense Williams advanced at trial was that McClaskey and Bobby had committed the burglary and murder.
Ake,
which was decided after Williams was convicted but before the Arizona Supreme Court resolved his direct appeal, held that “when a defendant has made a preliminary showing that his sanity at the time of the offense is likely to be a significant factor at trial, the Constitution requires that a State provide access to a psychiatrist’s assistance on this issue if the defendant cannot otherwise afford one.”
Williams asks for a remand for an evi-dentiary hearing, but suggests no basis upon which an evidentiary hearing should be granted.
XI
Finally with respect to the guilt phase, Williams contends that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction. The district court found otherwise based on evidence showing that: Williams possessed the gun that was used to kill Bunchek before and after the murder; the shoe print found on the door to the Tañeos residence was .consistent with a pair of shoes worn by Williams; his roommates identified the suspect in a composite sketch as Williams; Williams left Scottsdale the day of the murder; Williams appeared to confess to Bunehek’s murder; the burglary Williams committed in Annandale, Virginia further indicated that Williams was the Tañeos burglar; and the jury could reasonably disbelieve Williams as he admitted that he lied under oath. Williams’s quarrel with the district court’s analysis is essentially with the weight of this evidence, but our review of the record also leaves us satisfied that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crimes beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
XII
We turn to the issues raised by Williams concerning his sentencing phase. The state trial court imposed the death penalty after it concluded that there were no mitigating circumstances and that there were two aggravating circumstances: that Williams had two prior convictions for which life in prison could be imposed and that the murder of Bunchek was for pecuniary gain.
Williams presents several challenges relating to the preparation of two psychological evaluations and the presentence report. As to the psychological evaluations, Williams argues that he was denied an independent psychological evaluation in violation of Ake, and that he was not given a Miranda warning before meeting with two court-appointed mental health experts. As to the presentence report, Williams argues that he was not given a Miranda warning prior to meeting with the probation officer. We address these contentions in turn.
Where the mental health of an accused person is genuinely in issue, due process requires the opportunity to have an independent mental health expert to assist the defense.
Ake v. Oklahoma,
We next address Williams’s contention that constitutional error occurred when he was not given Miranda warnings before being examined by two court appointed mental health experts. When Petitioner requested separate funds for a psychological evaluation, the trial court informed Williams of Rule 26.5, which provides:
At any time before sentence is pronounced, the court may order the defendant to undergo mental health examination or diagnostic evaluation. Reports under this section shall be due at the same time as the presentence report unless the court orders otherwise.
Rule 26.5, Ariz.Rule.Crim.P., 17 A.R.S. The trial court said that it would order a psychological evaluation under Rule 26.5, if that was what Williams was requesting. Williams initially replied that he was not requesting an examination under Rule 26.5 but, after conferring with advisory counsel, Williams accepted the trial court’s offer of an examination under that rule. The trial court then ordered two evaluations, one by an expert that Williams recommended and one by an expert the state chose. The trial court also ordered that the reports by the two doctors be submitted to Williams, to the state, and to the court.
Both experts interviewed Williams, and thereafter submitted their reports as instructed by the trial court. It is established that Williams was not given a
Miranda
warning before either interview, and Williams claims this was reversible error under
Estelle v. Smith,
[I]f a defendant requests such an evaluation or presents psychiatric evidence, then, at the very least, the prosecution may rebut this presentation with evidence from the reports of the examination that the defendant requested. The defendant would have no Fifth Amendment privilege against the introduction of this psychiatric testimony by the prosecution.
Id.
at 422-23,
Williams also argues that he should have been given a
Miranda
warning before being interviewed by the probation officer who prepared the presentence report. We have previously held in
Hoffman v. Arave,
Having concluded that the presentence interview violated Williams’s Fifth Amendment privilege against self incrimination, we next consider whether that was harmless error under
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
We conclude that the introduction of the presentence report was harmless error. In arguing to the contrary, Williams contends that the report relied on his statements in which he had downplayed a troubled family background. He also points to statements in the report that suggest that he was callous and indifferent to the harm caused to others by his past criminal activity. However, the presentence report also stated that Williams reasserted his innocence during the presentence interview, claimed that he had never harmed anybody during his prior criminal activities, and asserted that he had previously attempted to save the life of a drowning child. Reviewing his statements given in the presentence interview as a whole, and assessing their possible impact on the trial court, we cannot conclude that the introduction of the presen-tence report before the sentencing judge “had substantial and injurious effect or influence” on the sentencing proceedings. The admission of the PSR was also harmless because there was no testimony in the PSR that was not presented previously by other sources.
We also conclude that there is no proper basis for Williams’s request for an eviden-tiary hearing on these issues.
XIII
Williams maintains that the trial court misused Williams’s assertion of innocence against him when it denied his request to investigate potential mitigating evidence, and when it found that there was no possibility that Williams would be rehabilitated.
Williams first argues that the trial court held Williams’s assertion of innocence against him when it denied Williams the funds necessary to investigate and present mitigating evidence. Although Williams presents this argument in broad and extravagant terms, the only evidence in the record to which he cites in support of this claim, and the only specific claim addressed by the district court, concerns a request for genetic testing.
Williams requested that the trial court provide defense funds to test for an XYY chromosome abnormality, which might have shown that Williams was ge *1052 netically predisposed to violent behavior. Williams’s claim turns on an exchange with the trial court, in which the court sought to understand how evidence of a chromosome abnormality would be mitigating. 10 Although the trial court was skeptical how Williams could proclaim his innocence and simultaneously argue that whatever crimes he had committed were on account of a genetic abnormality, the trial court did not deny funds for the testing because Williams maintained he was innocent. Rather, Williams offered no evidence suggesting that testing was warranted, and admitted that he had “no idea” whether he had a chromosome abnormality. We conclude that the trial court did not use Williams’s assertion of innocence against him in this respect.
Williams also argues that the trial court held his assertion of innocence against him when the trial court found that there was no possibility of rehabilitation. Williams does not cite to the record to support this claim, and the state argues that the trial court found that Williams could not be rehabilitated based on his long and violent criminal history. But even if the trial court did consider Williams’s assertion of innocence when it found that Williams could not be rehabilitated, this was not error.
See Gollaher v. United
States,
XIV
When detailing potential aggravating circumstances at the presentence hearing, the prosecutor cited the Larson burglary in Virginia and Williams’s use of a gun when he was arrested in New York by the FBI. Williams argues that because he had not been convicted in connection with these incidents, the trial court should not have considered them to be aggravating circumstances.
See
A.R.S. § 13-703(E) (Supp.1986) (enumerating specific aggravating circumstances). Williams has cited no authority, and we have found none, stating that the trial court could not consider other potential aggravating circumstances. Further, considering prior unadjudicated criminal conduct is permissible under Arizona law under some circumstances.
See State v. Rossi,
We need not decide whether A.R.S. § 13-703(E) provides an exhaustive list of aggravating circumstances that a court may consider. The district court found, and we agree, that the trial court did not consider the unadjudicated offenses when determining the existence of aggravating circumstances. The record indicates that the prosecution sought to characterize the prior unadjudicated acts as aggravating circumstances, but not that the trial court considered them to be aggravating circumstances. Here, the trial court stated that it found only two aggravating factors: that Williams was convicted of two prior offenses for which life imprisonment could have been a penalty under Arizona law, and that the murder of John Bunchek was for pecuniary gain. “[I]n the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we must assume that the trial judge properly applied the law and considered only the evidence he knew to be admissible.”
Gretzler v. Stewart,
XV
Williams claims that he was unconstitutionally denied the appointment of a mitigation investigator. Williams had the assistance of James Vance, an investigator who assisted the defense during the trial phase and who conducted a mitigation investigation during the sentencing phase. Williams argues that he was denied the resources to allow Vance to conduct an adequate investigation, and that Williams should have been appointed an additional private investigator.
There is no doubt that in appropriate circumstances a court must provide investigative help to ensure that an accused has received the effective assistance of counsel. We have previously held that “the effective assistance of counsel guarantee of the Due Process Clause requires, when necessary, the allowance of investigative expenses or appointment of investigative assistance for indigent defendants in order to insure effective preparation of their defense by their attorneys.”
Mason v. Arizona,
The district court here found that Williams did not make the requisite showing of need for an additional mitigation investigator. On February 29, 1984, the trial court stated that it would grant Williams’s request for funds if Williams made “some good faith showing ... that there might be some benefit somewhere to the defense.” Williams requested an additional investigator in a motion submitted on March 6,1984, but gave no argument in support of that motion. And at no other time did Williams introduce evidence or argument in support of his request for an additional investigator. Because we conclude that Williams did not meet his burden of making a threshold showing that an additional investigator would be helpful, we hold that the trial court’s denial of Williams’s request for that other investigator was not constitutional error.
We similarly reject Williams’s claim that it was constitutional error for the state trial court to deny Williams’s request to fund a trip by Vance to West Virginia. The only information Williams submitted to the trial court regarding this request was a list of many people who lived in the area of West Virginia, where Williams was raised. Williams did not give any information other than possible witness names and that they would be helpful. Because Williams offered nothing more than “undeveloped assertions that the requested assistance would be beneficial,” we cannot say there was constitutional error in denying the request for travel. Under the Supreme Court’s standards for scope of potentially mitigating evidence, almost any statement by any person who knew Williams might have been admissible on the issue of mitigation, subject to normal evidentiary rules restricting cumulative testimony.
Lockett v. Ohio,
XVI
Williams argues that the trial court unconstitutionally denied his right to have certain witnesses appear at the presentence hearing, either by denying his request to fund their travel or by the trial court’s denial of a continuance. Williams provided a list of 150 potential mitigation witnesses to Vance, and said that more names would be forthcoming. However, in his Supplemental Motion for Reconsideration to the Arizona Supreme Court, Williams argued that the trial court’s denial of funds was unconstitutional regarding six witnesses: Robert Blakely, Beverly Dawson, Ronald Heath, Sadie _Williams, Susan Brozek, and Rosemary Price. The district court confined its analysis to these six witnesses, and that was correct because the federal courts have jurisdiction in this habeas context to consider only claims that *1055 were exhausted in the state court. The district court assumed that all six were material witnesses, but held that the failure to compel the witnesses to attend did not have a substantial and injurious effect on the sentence, and therefore that the eiror was harmless.
“[T]he Compulsory Process Clause guarantees a criminal defendant the right to present relevant and material witnesses in his defense.... ”
Alcala v. Woodford,
On this appeal, Williams discusses five witnesses: Robert Blakely, Beverly Dawson, Ronald Heath, Sadie Williams, and Rosemary Price. He does not discuss Susan Brozek in his opening or reply brief, and therefore has abandoned his claim concerning this witness. Accordingly, we discuss only the other five witnesses.
Robert Blakely was a former parole officer who supervised Williams from 1965 until 1968. Blakely would have testified that Williams “is intelligent, courteous, cooperative, kind, and liked by everyone in the area.” Further, he would have testified that Williams did so well in prison that Blakely helped Williams get early parole, that Williams was an “ideal parolee,” and that he was a helpful person. The trial court found Blakely to be a material witness, but denied Williams’s request for a continuance to allow Blakely, who was unavailable for the hearing, to appear. The trial court accepted that Blakely “would testify during the time he knew Mr. Williams that he was a positive force of [sic ] his fellow prisoners.”
Beverly Dawson was Petitioner’s ex-wife, and Williams proffered to the trial court that she would have testified that they cared very much for each other, and that Williams’s current problems may have been the result of problems they had during their marriage. Dawson was unavailable for the hearing, and the trial court denied Petitioner’s request for a continuance, but accepted that “she would say that their marriage was so bad that it may have affected him 20 years later.”
Ronald Heath was a guard at the Moundsville Prison where Williams was incarcerated. Williams proffered that Heath would testify that Williams had a “strong character” and was a positive influence in the prison.
Williams proffered the following from Vance regarding the information Sadie Williams would provide:
Sadie Williams is the defendant’s mother. I spoke with her on numerous occasions. Mrs. Williams advised me that Ronald has never caused problems in West Virginia, and that she believed that he grew up as an ordinary boy and that he had a lot of love in his heart and would have, on numerous occasions, pick up stray dogs and cats and provide homes until they could be placed. Ron *1056 was a regular church goer and was known to help the older ladies across the railroad tracks to the church and she further stated that Mr. Williams on numerous occasions' would give children money and that he also would buy clothes for children that could not afford them.
Rosemary Price was a juror at one of Williams’s earlier murder trials. Williams stated that Price was a friend of his, with whom he regularly corresponded and conversed with by phone. Williams proffered that Price would have testified that Williams counseled her during her divorce and helped her cope.
With the exception of Blakely, the trial court found that Williams failed to make a threshold showing that the testimony of the witnesses would aid the defense. The trial court’s finding is fairly supported by the record.
See Mayfield v. Woodford,
Our analysis differs regarding Blakely and Dawson. The trial court found Blakely to be a material witness, and approved Petitioner’s request to fund Blakely’s travel. The trial court did not find that Dawson was a material witness. However, both Blakely and Dawson were unavailable during the presentence hearing, and the trial court denied Williams’s request for a continuance. “Generally, a decision to grant or deny a continuance is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Studley,
Applying those factors, we determine that there was no abuse of discretion by the state trial court in its decision not to grant a continuance to facilitate the appearance of Blakely and Dawson at the sentencing hearing. Williams repeatedly sought to delay the hearing by requesting continuances, drawing out hearings, and delaying in tendering his list of potential mitigation witnesses. And the trial court granted Williams a continuance for a month to allow him time to find mitigation witnesses on a previous occasion. Further, Williams has not demonstrated that he suffered prejudice as a result of the failure to grant the continuance. The trial *1057 court accepted the proffered testimony concerning Blakely and Dawson, and there is no indication that their live testimony would have differed from the proffered testimony. Accordingly, we deny Williams’s request for relief on this ground.
XVII
Williams argues that the trial court refused to consider relevant mitigating evidence. Specifically, he argues that the trial court refused to consider his troubled family history, that it refused to consider his claim that he was innocent of the prior murders for which he was convicted, and that it ignored “a variety of reasons that [Williams] should not die.”
We have recognized a distinction between a failure to consider relevant evidence and a conclusion that such evidence was not mitigating. In a capital ease, a sentencing judge cannot refuse to consider any relevant mitigating evidence,
Edings v. Oklahoma,
Although a sentencing court may not refuse to consider any relevant mitigating evidence, “a sentencer is free to assess how much weight to assign to such evidence.”
Ortiz v. Stewart,
Williams claims that the trial court did not consider the relevant mitigating evidence. But the record indicates otherwise. Regarding Williams’s troubled family history, the trial court stated:
The Court has considered evidence of defendant’s family history, including the testimony that his father was an alcoholic who verbally abused and rejected the defendant, and that the defendant’s grandfather and uncle encouraged him at an early stage of his life to engage in criminal conduct. The Court finds that none of this is a mitigating factor or calls for leniency in the present case; and that defendant has, without additional influence of his family, continued a life of crime, fully aware of the unlawfulness of his conduct, and fully capable both mentally and physically of conforming his conduct to the requirements of the law at all times, including the times relevant to the offenses of which he has been convicted in this case.
To us, this passage indicates that the sentencing trial court considered all of the mitigation evidence that was presented concerning Williams’s abusive family back *1058 ground, and nonetheless found Williams’s mitigation case to be wanting.
Regarding Williams’s claim that he was innocent of the prior two convictions, the trial court accepted Williams’s proffer that the key witness against him in his first trial had recanted, and that he was convicted of felony murder for his second offense because he was not the trigger-man. Frank Passarella, Petitioner’s attorney during his first murder trial, testified at the presentence hearing about the lack of evidence linking Williams to that murder. Terry Britt, one of Petitioner’s attorneys during his felony murder trial, also testified at the sentencing hearing in this case, stating that there was no evidence that Williams was the triggerman during that crime. The state trial court stated generally that the court considered all aspects of the defendant’s character, propensities, and record, and the circumstances of the Bunchek murder, and that it considered all evidence offered by the defendant or state relevant to the sentencing determination. The trial court in sentencing was not required to discuss every piece of evidence. While admitting evidence of Williams’s conviction of the prior offenses for which he was subject to life imprisonment, the trial court in the sentencing hearing permitted Williams to present evidence that he was innocent of the prior offense of murder, and that he was not the triggerman in connection with his prior offense of felony murder. The trial court in sentencing concluded that the evidence was not mitigating in context balanced against Williams’s life of serious and deadly crimes.
Finally, Williams claims that the trial court ignored “a variety of reasons that [Williams] should not die.” If this is an . argument that the trial court did not make particularized findings as to each of Williams’s proffered mitigating circumstances, then that argument is foreclosed by
Jeffers. See
XVIII
In 2002 the U.S. Supreme Court held that “[b]ecause Arizona’s enumerated aggravating factors operate as ‘the functional equivalent of an element of a greater offense,’ the Sixth Amendment requires that they be found by a jury.”
Ring v. Arizona,
Williams attempts to avoid
Summerlin
by relying on
Adamson v. Ricketts,
XIX
Williams contends that the psychiatrist and psychologist who conducted mental health evaluations pursuant to Rule 26.5 were incompetent. He argues that each of them should have conducted an extensive social and medical history, that they should have conducted unspecified physical and neurological tests, and that the tests they did perform were incomplete and incompetently conducted. The district court held that Williams did not show that the two court-appointed experts were incompetent, that he failed to identify which tests should have been conducted, and that his blanket assertions that the tests were incomplete were insufficient to support the charge.
Petitioner points to no evidence generated at trial, sentencing, or during the more than twenty years since then, showing that the two experts were incompetent. Williams offers no affidavits from medical experts supporting that the two experts were incompetent, gives no list of the tests that in his view should have been conducted or what those tests may have shown, and offers no evidence showing that the tests that the experts conducted were incomplete. Because the record does not contain evidence from Petitioner indicating that the prior medical experts were incompetent, the district court correctly held that this claim does not require relief.
Petitioner’s request for an evidentiary hearing on this claim is unsupported, and is denied.
XX
Next, Williams argues that Arizona’s treatment of pecuniary gain as an aggravating circumstance is facially unconstitutional because it does not “genuinely narrow the class of persons eligible for the death penalty” and does not “reasonably justify the imposition of a more severe sentence on the defendant compared to others found guilty of murder.”
Zant v. Stephens,
It is not true that everyone convicted of robbery felony-murder is automatically death eligible. The State needs to prove at sentencing that the killing was done with the expectation of pecuniary gain. Even if it is true that under many circumstances a person who kills in the course of a robbery is motivated to do so for pecuniary reason, that is not necessarily so. A defendant is free to argue that the killing was motivated by reasons unrelated to pecuniary gain.
Id. at 334-335 (citation omitted). We concluded that the Arizona statute “sufficiently channels the sentencer’s discretion and does not result in unconstitutionally disproportionate imposition of the death penalty when applied to felony-murder defendants.” Id. at 335. Applying this prior precedent, we reject Williams’s argument that the pecuniary gain aggravating factor is facially unconstitutional.
In the alternative, Williams argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish that he killed Bunchek for pecuniary gain.
*1060
As we noted above with regard to the guilt phase, we examine “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
XXI
Williams argues that the Arizona death penalty statute is unconstitutional as applied to him because his sentence is arbitrary and capricious. He argues that the “trial and appellate courts agreed Petitioner proved his innocence of the prior two convictions,” and therefore that the trial court unconstitutionally considered the pri- or convictions aggravating factors.
We reject this argument, which mischar-acterizes the record. The state trial and appellate courts did not agree that Williams proved his innocence of the prior convictions. Rather, the state trial court accepted Williams’s proffer that the key witness in his first murder trial recanted, and that his second conviction was for felony murder, not premeditated murder. This testimony, even when credited, is not the equivalent of a finding that Williams was innocent of the prior offenses. Further, the trial court considered Williams’s claim of innocence of the prior offenses in the context of mitigation. After weighing the evidence the state trial court found that Williams did not establish mitigation. Petitioner’s claim that the trial court found him innocent of the prior offenses is not correct, and as a result his claim that the death penalty is unconstitutional as applied to him fails.
Williams also argues that the death penalty is unconstitutional here because “there is significant doubt whether Petitioner committed this crime.” Although the ease against Williams was based on circumstantial evidence, we held above that the evidence — including Williams’s gun, footprint and flight — was sufficient to support his conviction, and that his trial was not constitutionally defective. Williams has not offered any new evidence to cast doubt on his conviction for the murder of John Bunchek. Williams’s assertion that there is doubt about whether he committed this crime is foreclosed by the jury’s determination of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and our determination that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to so conclude.
Petitioner’s alternative request for an evidentiary hearing is unsupported, and once more we determine that there was no basis for requiring a hearing.
XXII
The district court found that Williams’s claim that execution by lethal injection violates the Eighth Amendment was procedurally defaulted. Williams concedes that this claim was not presented to the Arizona courts. However, Williams argues that he could not have raised the claim in his state proceedings because the facts supporting the claim had not yet been discovered.
Williams’s claim, is based on the 1995 affidavit of a pathologist, Dr. Karen Griest, who reviewed an autopsy report of James Clark, who was executed in 1993 by lethal injection. Dr. Griest states that in Arizona lethal injection is administered in a way that causes extreme suffering and torture. .Williams also relies upon a statement from Dr. Brunner. Dr. Brunner *1061 concluded that Clark and John Brewer, who was executed by lethal injection in 1993, likely experienced suffering and torture.
We may not reach the merits of procedurally defaulted claims, that is, claims “in which the petitioner failed to follow applicable state procedural rules in raising the claims.... ”
Sawyer v. Whitley,
Newly discovered material facts probably exist and such facts probably would have changed the verdict or sentence. Newly discovered material facts exist if:
(1) The newly discovered material facts were discovered after the trial.
(2) The defendant exercised due diligence in securing the newly discovered material facts.
(3) The newly discovered material facts are not merely cumulative or used solely for impeachment, unless the impeachment evidence substantially undermines testimony which was of critical significance at trial such that the evidence probably would have changed the verdict or sentence.
Rule 32.1(e), Ariz.R.Crim.P., 17 A.R.S.
The first factor of the Rule 32.1 test is not in dispute. The facts Williams relies upon were discovered by him in 1995, long after his trial and presentence hearing. However, the district court held that Williams did not satisfy the second factor of the Rule 32.1 test, concluding that Williams did not exercise due diligence in obtaining the evidence. Although Williams alleged that he did not discover the evidence, in the form of the statements of Drs. Griest and Brunner, until 1995, the district court found that Williams provided no reasons why he could not have discovered these facts before filing his supplemental petition for post-conviction relief to the Arizona courts, which he filed on January 26,1994.
We agree with the district court. Williams does not explain why he did not seek evidence between the time when Arizona introduced lethal injection as a mode of execution in late 1992 and when Williams filed in 1994 his supplemental petition for post-conviction relief in the Arizona courts. Williams requests an evi-dentiary hearing, but points to no evidence in the record that is contested, and so we deny this request.
XXIII
We reject Williams’s challenges to the district court’s denial of Williams’s Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Williams claims that an informant falsely testified that Williams confessed to a 1975 murder for which he was given a life sentence. Williams escaped from the prison where he was serving that sentence. A guard was killed during that escape, for which Williams was convicted of felony murder.
. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) does not apply to
*1038
the merits of Williams's appeal because his federal petition was filed before AEDPA's effective date,
Lindh v. Murphy,
We review
de novo
a district court’s denial of a habeas petition filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
Clark
v.
Murphy,
. The only certified issue is whether Williams waived his Miranda rights.
. The colloquy was:
Q Did your department make any investigation at the residence of Randy Cooper to recover any items or any types of evidence?
A Yes. We recovered, through a search warrant, several items from the room that he occupied. We also recovered, from Mr. McClaski, in the garbage can, a shoe box which contained some silverware, some other items. And the shoe box was an NCC Tiger shoe box.
Q Did you, during the course of your investigation, attempt to identify to some extent the type of shoe that made the imprint on the door?
A Yes, I did.
Q And what type of shoe made that imprint? A An NCC Tiger running shoe.
Q Did you determine whether or not the subject at that point wore or used'the NCC Tiger running shoe?
A Yes. Those — that particular pair of shoes were purchased by Mr. McClaski for a person that he called Randy Cooper.
Q Were there any fingerprints that came from that residence?
A Yes.
Q And had they been identified?
A Yes, they have.
Q By whom?
A By the F.B.I.
Q And what name have they been attached?
A Ronald Turney Williams.
Q And has Mr. Cooper been identified through fingerprints and other means as a Ronald Turney Williams?
A Yes, he has.
. The court asked Williams again on June 14, 1983, whether he still wanted to represent himself, and he said that he did.
. Williams makes no free-standing claim ineffectiveness assistance of counsel, nor could he. Having failed to show that his decision to represent himself was involuntary, Williams cannot claim that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel at trial.
See Faretta,
. As the court explained:
The nature of the crime, Williams’s conduct at trial, and prior psychiatric examinations all suggest that Williams was sane at the time of the offense and competent to stand trial. Although Bunchek's death was tragic and vicious, it did not occur under unusual circumstances or in an unusual way; nothing about the killing suggests that the murderer was insane. It is similarly impossible to draw any inference of mental instability from Williams’s conduct at trial. Williams insisted on his right to represent himself and in doing so he demonstrated remarkable ability. Finally, Williams's prior psychiatric examinations suggest only that he is prone to engage in antisocial conduct. His subsequent record indicates that this diagnosis was optimistic.
. Under Rules 11.2 and 11.3, Williams had to show that "reasonable grounds for an examination exist.” Under Arizona law, evidence sufficed for an examination if it created a doubt in the court's mind about competency or sanity.
Williams,
. The state argues that
Hoffman
is a new rule which, under
Teague v. Lane,
. The colloquy was:
Q I’m concerned, Mr. Williams, because you are telling me that you want this examination to show propensity for violence because of a chromosome defect, and it’s you talking. You are representing yourself, and I cannot view what you do as anything but yourself. The only relevance to this would be if you are admitting that you did these things and you are now telling me that you have a chromosome abnormality. It is your position under oath that you did not do this in which case this couldn’t be mitigating because if you have a violent personality it would be absolutely irrelevant since it’s your claim that you did not do this at all.
A I'm not admitting anything. The jury came in with a verdict saying I am guilty. By virtue of their verdict I am allowed to bring before this court any and all mitigating circumstances. That's the jury's verdict that you are accepting. If I say I am not guilty, can I go home?
Q Tell me which side of your face you are talking out of. Are you saying you did this and have a violent, aggressive behavior and can prove it, and you want the -state to provide funds for a doctor to prove that? Or are you saying Ronald Turney Williams, you, did not do it?
A Whether or not I am guilty, I am asking that this court consider that fact of the chromosome deficiency as a mitigating circumstance and appoint the expert in that field to make a determination as to whether or not that is true.
Q All right. If you say Doctor Hecht is going to testify that you have this XYY chromosome abnormality, and you are, therefore, predisposed to violent behavior, that that is a mitigating circumstance. Is that your argument?
A I would like to be tested on it. If I am found to have it, then I may very well use it.
Q Have you ever raised this issue in any other case? I know you've submitted psychological reports dating back to when you were 18, I believe. None of these give any indication of a genetic difficulty at all, or any mental inadequacies.
A I have no idea whether or not I have any chromosome defects or abnormalities either, but I would like to have this particular doctor do a check and see if I do. If I do, then, of course, I would like to use it.
Q Well, in the absence of any clue that this is not purely fishing, I will deny this motion.
If you will recall in the Rule 11 matter I followed the same pattern. There had to be some evidence justifying your claim that you were not competent to stand trial.
. The state trial court explained that "[t]he Court has considered all aspects of the defendant's character, propensities, record ... and all evidence offered by the defendant or the State which is relevant in determining whether to impose a sentence less than death.”
