Rоosevelt Pollard was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1983 murder of Blytheville, Arkansas businessman Richard E. Alford. He appealed directly to the Missouri Supreme Court, which affirmed his conviction. The Supreme Court of the United States denied certiorari. Mr. Pollard then filed a motion for state post-conviction relief, for which the motion court appointed counsel. After being denied state post-conviction relief, Mr. Pollard again appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court, which affirmed the motion court’s denial of relief. Again, the Supreme -Court of the United States denied certiorari.
Mr. Pollard next filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Missouri Supreme Court. When the Missouri Supreme Court denied relief, he filed the present petition for federal habeas corpus relief. The United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri denied his petition for habe-as corpus, and this appeal followed.
I.
In his amendеd petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Mr. Pollard articulated over sixty claims. The first issue he raises on appeal is whether the district court erred in dismissing the first ten and the thirteenth of these claims as having been procedurally defaulted. Mr. Pollard does not dispute that he failed to assert nine of the ten claims in his state post-conviction relief proceeding. He asserts, however, that this failure was due to the ineffective assistance rendered by his post-conviсtion counsel, and that this ineffectiveness amounts to cause excusing the procedural default of these claims.
Federal courts will consider on habe-as review procedurally defaulted claims only on a showing of cause for the procedural default and “actual prejudice resulting from the alleged constitutional violation,”
Wainwright v. Sykes,
There is, however, no right to counsel in either state or federal post-conviction relief proceedings.
Coleman v. Thompson,
II.
There is one claim among the first ten that Mr. Pollard advanced in his amended petition for habeas corpus that he does not concede was procedurally defaulted. That claim is that his trial counsel provided him ineffective assistance by failing to request an instruction at thе penalty phase of his trial concerning the fact that he was 19 years of age when he committed the underlying offense. The district court concluded that this claim was defaulted because the Missouri Supreme Court found that this issue, among others, was procedurally barred under state law because it was not raised in the appeal on the merits.
See Pollard v. State,
We believe that the district court correctly concluded that it was not at liberty to consider this claim. A federal court mаy address a habeas petition only where “the decision of the last state court to which the petitioner presented his federal claims fairly appeared to rest primarily on resolution of those claims, or to be interwоven with those claims, and did not clearly and expressly rely on an independent and adequate state ground.”
Coleman,
III.
One claim that we may consider is Mr. Pollard’s twelfth claim, namely, that his appellate counsel was constitutionally ineffective for omitting from his brief on direct appeal objections concerning the prosecutor’s closing argument at trial. Mr. Pollard cites threе statements made by the prosecutor that were not objected to contemporaneously by his trial counsel and not addressed by his appellate counsel. On this claim, Mr. Pollard filed a motion to recall the mandate. The Supreme Court of Missouri denied this motion, but did not provide reasons for its decision. Since we can discern no independent and adequate state law basis for the denial, we are not barred from considering the merits of this claim.
The effectiveness of Mr. Pollard’s appeals counsel must be evaluated in light of the circumstances in which he was called on to perform. These include the fact that Mr. Pollard’s trial counsel failed to object contemporaneоusly to the statements now complained of. On appeal, therefore, Mr. Pollard’s appeals counsel could have sought review of these issues only under a plain error standard. Mo.S.Ct.R. 29.12(b) & 30.20. Furthermore, we must “indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.”
Strickland v. Washington,
A.
In the first of these statements, the prosecutor argued that “deep down inside, *890 even this defendant couldn’t say that your decision [to impose the death penalty] was unfair.” Mr. Pollard claims that this statement was an impermissible reference to the fact that he did not testify during the penalty phase of his trial.
Direct comments by a prosecutor on a defendant’s failure to testify violates the Fifth Amendment’s privilege against self-incrimination.
Griffin v. California,
We find it difficult to believe, however, that the statement in question could be characterized as a commentary on the defendant’s failure to testify. First, the statement was clearly not a direct reference to Mr. Pollаrd’s failure to testify. We also are not persuaded that it manifests any intention on the part of the prosecutor to call attention to the fact that Mr. Pollard did not testify. Finally, we frankly cannot see how anyone could naturally take this statement to be a comment on Mr. Pollards failure to testify. Rather than an impermissible reference to Mr. Pollard’s failure to testify, we are quite persuaded that the prosecutor was attempting to argue that even by the defendant’s lights the death penalty was an appropriate penalty for the crime. Accordingly, we are unpersuaded that his appellate counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to raise an objection to this statеment for the first time on appeal.
B.
Mr. Pollard also claims that his appellate counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to cite the prosecutor’s use of the term “predator” in reference to him during oral argument. During closing argument, the prosecutor argued that “the defendant, being a predator, ... saw something he wanted, [and] took it.” The prosecutor made a second reference to “people out there, predators, like this defendant, ..., who are ready to prey on the weak_” Mr. Pollard asserts that the “predator” epithet was intended to engender fear in the jurors that he posed a threat to themselves, their property, and their children, and was so improper as to deny him a fair trial as guaranteed him under the Due Process Clause.
It appears that Mr. Pollard’s objection to the term predator rests in an unspoken inference that predators are animals. While we cannot sаy for certain that he believes this inference was made, we can say for certain that a reference to a defendant in a capital murder ease as an “animal ... [that] shouldn’t be out of his cell unless he has a leash on him” has been determined not so prejudicial as to deny a defendant a fair trial within the requirements of the Due Process Clause.
Darden v. Wainwright,
When considered under “the nаrrow [standard] of due process, and not the broad exercise of supervisory power,” Id., we are not persuaded that it was plain error for the trial court to allow the word “predator” to be used in reference to him. Nor do we think such a reference rendered the results of his trial unreliable. We are therefore unpersuaded that Mr. Pollard’s appellate counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to advance this claim on appеal.
C.
Finally, Mr. Pollard maintains that his direct appeal counsel was ineffective for failing to raise the objection that the prosecutor impermissibly personalized his argument to the jury, thus violating petitioner’s due process rights. During his argument, thе prosecutor said:
*891 I remember when I was a child that in the summertime we’d leave the front door open, ... people used to leave their keys in their ear. We don’t have that anymore. We’ve got to keep our doors lockеd, got to keep our cars locked, ... [c]an’t let your kids walk home from the show at night anymore without worrying about them. Why is that? The reason is because of people like this man here....
We are not persuaded that these comments “so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.”
Darden
at 181,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the district court and dismiss the petition.
