ORDER DENYING APPLICATION FOR POST CONVICTION RELIEF AND AFFIRMING DEATH SENTENCE
Bobby Lynn Ross, Petitioner, has appealed from the denial of post-conviction relief by the District Court of Roger Mills County in Case No. CRF-83-27. We affirm the District Court’s dеnial of post-conviction relief, and affirm the sentence of deаth.
The procedural posture of this case is summarized as follows: Petitioner was sentenced to death for the offense of Murder in the First Degreе and to ninety-nine (99) years imprisonment for the offense of Robbery
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with Firearms. Petitioner filed a direct appeal to this Court and we affirmed the convictions and sentences. See
Ross v. State,
Petitioner is now asking this Court to review the validity of his conviction and sentenсe. He raises seventeen (17) propositions of error. Several оf these propositions contain separate allegations of error. We have reviewed each and every claim and find that those claims raised in propositions numbers V, VIII(B) & (C), IX, X, XI, XIII, XIV, XV were raised on direct appeal or petition for rehearing and are therefore barred by res judicata. See
Coleman v. State,
Propositions I and II, considered together, request this Court to hold in abeyance Appellant’s post-conviction application pending a ruling in
Mann v. Reynolds, et al.,
Having found that Appellant is procedurally barred from raising most of the claims brought in the current application, we find that we need to address Propositions VII and VIII(A), which imрacted the denial of his application by the trial court- The trial court, having found that the instruction on “especially heinous, atrocious аnd cruel” was unconstitutionally vague, invalidated that particular aggravator, and reweighed the remaining two aggravators and the mitigating factors. The trial court found that the sentence of death was still appropriate.
Appellant urges that his sentence should be modified to life imprisonment because (1) the “retroactive use of a judicially created reweighing policy would violate federal and state prohibitions against ex post facto application of judicial changes in policy which detrimentally affect a defendant’s substantial rights” and (2) he was denied his constitutional right to sentencing by a jury. In
Trice v. State,
Accordingly, finding no reason to deviate from the triаl court’s findings, we AFFIRM the decision denying the application. Additionally, we find that Appellant has exhausted all his State remedies.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
