Roy Ramsey, a Missouri death row inmate, appeals 'the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We affirm.
On November 21, 1988, Ramsey and his brother, Billy, went to the home of an elderly couple, Garnett and Betty Ledford, to rob them. Billy’s girlfriend drove the brothers there in her car. Ramsey had a gun, but Billy did not. Garnett answered the door, and Ramsey used the gun to force his way inside. The brothers took the Ledfords upstairs to a bedroom. After Betty opened the Ledfords’ safe, the brothers tied her in a chair. Billy went downstairs with some of the loot, including money, guns, a videocassette recorder, and foreign coins, and Ramsey killed the Ledfords by shooting each of them at close range in the head. Several days later, the brothers were caught. Billy entered a plea agreement and testified against Ramsey in exchange for a twenty-five-year sentence. A Missouri jury convicted Ramsey of first-degree murder and sentenced him to death. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed Ramsey’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal.
See State v. Ramsey,
Ramsey filed this federal habeas petition in December 1995. A year later, the district court denied Ramsey’s petition. Seeking permission to appeal twenty-five issues, Ramsey asked us “for a certificate of appeal-ability pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c) and Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 22(b).” We remanded Ramsey’s request to the district court for compliance with the statute and rule cited by Ramsey. The district court granted a certificate of appealability on eleven issues and denied a certificate on fourteen others. Ramsey then sought an expanded certificate of appealability or certificate of probable cause from us. We denied Ramsey’s request and thus limited the issues to only those that satisfied the standard for *754 granting either certifícate — the same eleven identified by the district court. We turn initially to the eleven issues certified for appeal.
Ramsey first asserts he was denied effective assistance of counsel and due process because his trial attorney had a conflict of interest. During the hearing on Ramsey’s motion for a new trial, the prosecutor brought the court’s attention to a newspaper article that spoke of letters written to Ramsey from Billy, whose judgment in accordance with his plea agreement could still be set aside. In the letters, Billy apologized for giving false testimony at Ramsey’s trial. The trial court asked Ramsey’s attorney to produce the letters, and the attorney refused, citing a conflict of interest. Ramsey asserts a conflict existed at the posttrial hearing with respect to the letters’ production because his attorney was at risk of being found to have provided ineffective assistance during the trial in failing to use the letters. Ramsey’s counsel, a Missouri public defender from the district 48 office (Trial Trans, at 1852) sought to withdraw, but the court denied the motion. Although the court doubted a conflict existed, the court obtained a different Missouri public defender from the district 16 office (Trial Trans, at 1852) to advise Ramsey on the limited issue of whether to produce the letters at the hearing on the motion for a new trial. Ramsey decided not to produce the letters. Ramsey contends his trial attorney’s posttrial conflict carries over to all the Missouri public defender’s offices, and thus the court should have appointed an attorney in private practice to advise him.
To prevail on his claim, Ramsey must show both an actual conflict of interest and an adverse effect on his attorney’s performance.
See Nave v. Delo,
Second, Ramsey attacks the Missouri Supreme Court’s proportionality review of his death sentence on direct appeal under Mo.Rev.Stat. § 565.035. Contrary to Ramsey’s assertions, Missouri’s proportionality review does not violate the Eighth Amendment, due process, or equal protection of the laws.
See Sweet v. Delo,
Third, Ramsey contends his death sentence is based on an invalid aggravating circumstance: that the homicide was “outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman in that it involved torture or depravity of mind.” According to Ramsey, this aggravating circumstance is vague or overbroad because it does not define “torture or depravity of mind.” “A finding of torture is sufficient to properly narrow the class of persons eligible for the death penalty.”
LaRette v. Delo,
Fourth, Ramsey contends his right to confront and eross:examine witnesses against him was violated when the trial court admitted parts of a videotaped statement by Billy about Ramsey’s role in the murders. Police made the tape when they brought Billy, a suspect in the murders, into the police station for questioning early in the investigation, before Billy made a plea bargain. Billy initially denied any knowledge of the robbery, then said someone other than Ramsey was his accomplice. After police confronted Billy with the statements of his mother, aunt, and girlfriend saying Ramsey and Billy committed the robbery and Ramsey had a gun, Billy gave the videotaped statement implicating his brother. At the prosecutor’s behest, the trial court admitted parts of the tape in rebuttal after defense counsel suggested on cross-examination that Billy fabricated his trial testimony to save his own neck. Defense counsel had brought out that Billy’s testimony was the product of a plea bargain and there were inconsistencies between Billy’s trial testimony and éarlier statements made in his deposition and at the time of his arrest. Although the court admitted parts of the tape, the court instructed the jury it should not consider the tape as substantive evidence.
We see no violation of Ramsey’s right to confront witnesses against him. “[T]he Confrontation Clause is not violated by admitting a declarant’s out-of-court statements, as long as the declarant is testifying as a witness and subject to full and effective cross-examination.”
California v. Green,
. Fifth, Ramsey asserts the prosecutor made improper arguments during the trial’s guilt phase. Ramsey can receive no federal habeas relief based on a prosecutor’s improper statements unless the prosecutor’s misconduct infected the entire proceeding and rendered it fundamentally unfair in violation of due process.
See Newlon v. Armontrout,
Contrary to Ramsey’s view, the prosecutor did not indirectly comment on Ramsey’s failure to testify. The challenged comments do not show the prosecutor intended to call • attention to Ramsey’s failure to testify, and we do not think the jury would naturally and necessarily understand the comments as highlighting Ramsey’s failure to take the stand.
See United States v. Moore,
We also reject Ramsey’s assertion that the prosecutor’s reference to Ramsey as “Rambo” was improper. The reference was permissible argument because it was based on trial testimony.
See Pickens v. Lockhart,
Sixth, Ramsey asserts parts of the prosecutor’s penalty-phase closing argument were improper. Based on evidence that criminals become less dangerous as they age, Ramsey argued lack of future dangerousness as a mitigating factor in sentencing. In response, the prosecutor argued, “Roy Ramsey, Rambo, is not burning out____ We have no reason to believe anything else. Roy Ramsey, while in the most secure prison in the state, sodomized a member of our society. And that’s something I am having trouble with. We can’t protect people in our society from Roy Ramsey.” (Trial Trans, at 1755-56.) Ramsey contends this argument improperly contorted a mitigating factor into an aggravating factor, injected evidence outside the record, and stated the prosecutor’s personal opinion. We see no constitutional error. The state had presented evidence that Ramsey committed sodomy in October 1976 “while awaiting trial” for robbing a man in August.
See Ramsey,
Seventh, Ramsey contends his rights to due process and a fair and impartial jury were violated when the trial court refused his proposed voir dire questions directed at the prospective jurors’ ability to be impartial in sentencing Ramsey. “Voir dire plays a critical role in assuring criminal defendants that their Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury will be honored. Without an adequate voir dire the trial judge cannot fulfill [the] responsibility to remove prospective jurors who may be biased and defense counsel cannot intelligently exercise peremptory challenges.”
United States v. Spaar,
Ramsey proposed the following voir dire questions:
Could each of you consider the death penalty in this case with the understanding that under Missouri law you are never *757 required to impose it? If Roy Ramsey is convicted of first-degree murder, are there any of you who feel he should get the death penalty regardless of any mitigation circumstances? If you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, that Roy Ramsey is guilty of first-degree murder, would the defense have to convince you that he should not get the death penalty? Would your views on the death penalty prevent or substantially impair your ability to follow the following instruction: You are not compelled to fix death as the punishment, even if you do not find the existence of one or more mitigating circumstances, sufficient to outweigh the aggravating circumstances or circumstances which you find to exist. You must consider all of the circumstances in deciding whether to assess and declare the punishment at death. Whether that is to be your final decision rests with you. If you find one or all of the aggravating circumstances exist beyond a reasonable doubt, could you still consider life without parole as a possible punishment? If you found aggravating circumstances exist beyond a reasonable doubt and that they warrant the death penalty, could you still consider life without parole as a possible punishment? If you find aggravating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt and find that the mitigating circumstances do not outweigh the aggravating circumstances, would you still consider life without probation or parole as a possible punishment?
Rather than posing these questions, the trial court told the jurors, “I’m going to ask you some questions [about] imposition of the death penalty. These questions are asked of you in the abstract, understanding that no evidence has been presented____ If you were selected as a juror in this ease, you must be able to vote for both of the punishments authorized by law. My question is would you be capable of voting for a sentence of death? Would you be capable of voting for a sentence of life without parole?” (Trial Trans, at 578-80.) To help the attorneys exercise their peremptory challenges, the court also asked, “If you were chosen as a juror, would you have a tendency to favor either the death penalty, the life imprisonment penalty, or neither?”. (Trial Trans, at 580.)
The trial court’s queries were more direct and succinct than Ramsey’s proposed questions, and addressed the crucial disqualification issue of whether the prospective jurors would automatically vote for or against the death penalty in every case,
see Morgan v. Illinois,
Eighth, Ramsey asserts the jury instructions improperly limited the jury’s consideration of mitigating circumstances. Ramsey complains that the instructions required the jury to decide whether the aggravating circumstances warranted imposition of death before the jury could consider any mitigating circumstances. As Ramsey sees it, the instructions improperly placed the burden on him to prove the mitigators outweighed the aggravators before he could receive the benefit of the mitigating circumstances. In
Bolder v. Armontrout,
Ninth, Ramsey asserts Missouri’s reasonable doubt instructions allowed the jury to convict him based on a lower burden of proof than the Constitution requires. Ramsey complains that the instructions defined proof “beyond a reasonable doubt” as that leaving the jury “firmly convinced” of Ramsey’s guilt. We have already decided we
*758
would have to go beyond existing Supreme Court precedent to find constitutional infirmity in Missouri’s instruction charging the jury to be “firmly convinced” before convicting a defendant.
See Murray v. Delo,
Tenth, Ramsey contends the trial court’s denial of his challenges for cause to venirepersons who leaned toward the death penalty violated his rights to an impartial jury, due process, and equal protection in violation of the Sixth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments. When the court denied Ramsey’s motion challenging prospective jurors Atwood and Dillon for cause, Ramsey used peremptory challenges to dismiss them. Because Ramsey has not shown the seated jury was partial, his Sixth Amendment claim fails.
See Cox v. Norris,
As for his due process claim, Ramsey must show he did not receive some right to peremptory challenges provided for by Missouri law.
See Sloan,
With respect to equal protection, Ramsey claims the court used two separate standards for juror qualification, one to re *759 tain jurors who favored the death penalty, and another to exclude jurors who questioned the death penalty’s propriety. Contrary to Ramsey’s claim, the record of voir dire shows the court was evenhanded. The court asked more questions when a potential juror stated an inability to impose either life imprisonment or death, but not when a-potential juror expressed a tendency to lean toward either sentence. The information about a prospective juror’s tendency helped both the prosecution and the defense decide how to exercise peremptory challenges, and Ramsey used some of his to remove Atwood and Dillon.
In his eleventh claim, Ramsey asserts jury instructions five and seven violate due process because the instructions confuse the elements of first-degree- murder and improperly shift the burden of proving deliberation to Ramsey. The instructions stated that if the jury found Ramsey or his brother had killed the Ledfords by shooting, the shooter knew his conduct was practically certain to cause death, and the shooter had deliberated for any length of time, first-degree murder had occurred, and if the jury found that “with the purpose of promoting or furthering the death of [the Ledfords], [Roy Ramsey] acted alone or together with or aided or encouraged Billy Ramsey in causing the death of [the Ledfords] and [Roy Ramsey] did so after deliberation, ... then [the jury would] find [Roy Ramsey] guilty ... of murder in the first degree.” Contrary to Ramsey’s assertion, the instruction plainly required the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Ramsey himself had deliberated, as Missouri law requires, see
State v. Ferguson,
Last, Ramsey contends the district court should have given him permission to raise fourteen more issues on appeal. In Ramsey’s view, the district court committed error' in granting him a certificate of appealability limited to eleven issues under 28 U.S.C. § 2253 as amended by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act. Although he initially requested a certificate of appealability and we remanded the question of the certificate’s issuance to the district court, Ramsey now asserts the district court should have given him an unlimited certificate of probable cause under the pre-Aet version of § 2253. Ramsey filed his habeas petition in December 1995 before the Act’s April 1996 effective date, and he asserts the Act does not govern habeas petitions filed before then.
See Lindh v. Murphy,
Section 2253 requires a state prisoner to obtain authorization from a district or circuit judge before appealing from the denial of a federal habeas petition. Before the Act, § 2253 required a state prisoner to obtain a certificate of probable cause.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2253 (1994). The Act amended § 2253 to require a state prisoner to obtain a certificate of appealability.
See
28 U.S.C.A. § 2253(c) (West Supp.1998). The same substantive standard governs issuance of the pre-Aet certificate of probable cause and the post-Act certificate of appealability.
See Roberts v. Bowersox,
As Ramsey acknowledges, we have already held the Act’s amended version of § 2253 applies to habeas petitioners like him, who filed their habeas petitions before the Act’s effective date but had not yet appealed the denial of their habeas petition.
See Tiedeman,
Even if the new certificate of appeal-ability requirement does not apply to Ramsey’s pre-Act habeas petition, Ramsey would be no better off. The district court would have granted Ramsey a certificate of probable cause, and although Ramsey would have been free to choose which claims to assert on appeal, we would have narrowed the issues for full briefing on the merits to the same eleven selected by the district court. In our December 22, 1997 order denying Ramsey’s application to us for an expanded certificate of appealability or certificate of probable cause, we decided Ramsey had not made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right with respect to the fourteen rejected issues. Ramsey does not challenge our decision to limit the issues in his appellate brief, explain why the fourteen rejected issues meet the substantial showing standard, or point out how the district court or this court made a mistake in concluding the fourteen issues do not warrant full briefing and oral argument on appeal.
See Kerr v. Federal Emergency Management Agency,
Having considered all of Ramsey’s arguments, we affirm the district court’s denial of Ramsey’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result and concurs in the judgment.
