delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue before us is whether respondent Robyn Leroy Parks, whose conviction and death sentence became final in
*486
1983, is entitled to federal habeas relief. His claim is that an instruction in the penalty phase of his trial, telling the jury to avoid any influence of sympathy, violates the Eighth Amendment. In
Penry
v.
Lynaugh,
A passing motorist found Abdullah Ibrahim, a native of Bangladesh, dead inside the Oklahoma City gas station where Ibrahim worked. The victim died from a single chest wound inflicted by a .45-caliber pistol. Parks admitted the murder to a friend, and the police obtained tapes of that statement. Parks said that he shot Ibrahim because he was afraid Ibrahim would tell the police that Parks used a stolen credit card to purchase gasoline.
In 1978, a jury found Parks guilty of capital murder. During the sentencing phase of the trial, Parks offered as mitigating evidence the testimony of his father, who described Parks’ background and character. • Parks’ counsel relied upon this testimony in his closing argument, arguing that Parks’ youth, race, school experiences, and broken home were mitigating factors that the jury should consider in making its sentencing decision. He asked the jury to show “kindness” to Parks in consideration of his background.
After instructing the jury that it must consider all of the mitigating circumstances, statutory or nonstatutory, proffered by Parks, and that it could consider any mitigating cir *487 cumstances that it found from the evidence, the trial court delivered the following instruction:
“You are the judges of the facts. The importance and worth of the evidence is for you to determine. You must avoid any influence of sympathy, sentiment, passion, prejudice, or other arbitrary factor when imposing-sentence. You should discharge your duties as jurors impartially, conscientiously and faithfully under your oaths and return such verdict as the evidence warrants when measured by these Instructions.” App. 13.
After finding as an aggravating circumstance that the murder was “committed for the purpose of avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest or prosecution,” Okla. Stat., Tit. 21, §701.12 (1981), the jury sentenced Parks to death.
Parks’ conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals,
Parks
v.
State,
Parks petitions the federal courts for a writ of habeas corpus. As he is before us on collateral review, we must first determine whether the relief sought would create a new rule under our holdings in Teague v. Lane, supra, at 299-301, and Penry, supra, at 313. If so, we will neither announce nor apply the new rule sought by Parks unless it would fall *488 into one of two narrow exceptions. Teague, supra, at 307; Penry, supra, at 329.
In
Teague,
we defined a new rule as a rule that “breaks new ground,” “imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government,” or was not
“dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Teague, supra,
at 301 (plurality opinion) (emphasis in original). The explicit overruling of an earlier holding no doubt creates a new rule; it is more difficult, however, to determine whether we announce a new rule when a decision extends the reasoning of our prior cases. As we recognized in
Butler
v.
McKellar, ante,
at 412-414, the question must be answered by reference to the underlying purposes of the habeas writ. Foremost among these is ensuring that state courts conduct criminal proceedings in accordance with the Constitution as interpreted at the time of the proceedings. See
ante,
at 413. “ ‘[T]he threat of habeas serves as a necessary additional incentive for trial and appellate courts throughout the land to conduct their proceedings in a manner consistent with established constitutional standards. In order to perform this deterrence function, . . . the habeas court need only apply the constitutional standards that prevailed at the time the original proceedings took place.’”
Teague, supra,
at 306 (quoting
Desist
v.
United States,
Parks contends that the result he seeks does not involve the creation of a new rule. Relying upon our decisions in
*489
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
In
Lockett,
a plurality of the Court decided that an Ohio death penalty statute that limited the jury’s consideration to specified mitigating circumstances violated the constitutional requirement of individualized sentencing in capital cases. See
In Eddings, the view adopted by the Lockett plurality ripened into a holding of the Court. We ruled that a sentencing judge’s refusal, as a matter of law, to consider mitigating evidence presented by a capital defendant concerning his family history and upbringing was constitutional error. Relying on the plurality opinion in Lockett, the Court reasoned:
“Just as the State may not by statute preclude the sentencer from considering any mitigating factor, neither may the sentencer refuse to consider, as a matter of law, any relevant mitigating evidence. In this instance, it was as if the trial judge had instructed a jury to disregard the mitigating evidence Eddings proffered on his behalf. The sentencer . . . may determine the weight to be given relevant mitigating evidence. But they may not give it no weight by excluding such evidence from *490 their consideration.” Eddings, supra, at 113-115 (emphasis in original).
Review of our decisions in
Lockett
and
Eddings
convinces us that the two cases do not dictate the result urged by-Parks. There is no dispute as to the precise holding in each of the two cases: that the State cannot bar relevant mitigating evidence from being presented and considered during the penalty phase of a capital trial. These two cases place clear limits on the ability of the State to define the factual bases upon which the capital sentencing decision must be made. Indeed, that is how we have interpreted these decisions in later cases. See
Hitchcock
v.
Dugger,
Lockett
and
Eddings
do not speak directly, if at all, to the issue presented here: whether the State may instruct the sentencer to render its decision on the evidence without sympathy. Parks asks us to create a rule relating, not to
what
mitigating evidence the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision, but to
how
it must consider the mitigating evidence. There is a simple and logical difference between rules that govern what factors the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision and rules that govern how the State may guide the jury in considering and weighing those factors in reaching a decision. We thus cannot say that the large majority of federal and state courts that have rejected challenges to antisympathy instructions similar to that given at Parks’ trial have been unreasonable in concluding that the instructions do not violate the rule of
Lockett
and
Eddings.
See
Byrne
v.
Butler,
Parks contends that our decision in
Penry
that the relief sought there did not call for the creation of a new rule compels a similar result in this case. We disagree. In
Penry,
we held that resolution of a claim that the Texas death penalty scheme prevented the jury from considering and giving effect to certain types of mitigating evidence did not involve the creation of a new rule under
Teague.
See
Penry,
Penry’s claim, moreover, did not ask us to apply the reasoning of
Lockett
and
Eddings
so much as it required us to apply our decision in
Jurek
v.
Texas,
“In our view, the relief Penry seeks does not ‘imposte] a new obligation’ on the State of Texas. Rather, Penry simply asks the State to fulfill the assurance upon which Jurek was based: namely, that the special issues would be interpreted broadly enough to permit the sentencer to consider all of the relevant mitigating evidence a defendant might present in imposing sentence.” Id., at 315 (citations omitted).
The
Penry
Court’s conclusion that
Lockett
and
Eddings
dictated the rule sought by Penry, see
We also reject Parks’ contention that the antisympathy instruction runs afoul of
Lockett
and
Eddings
because jurors who react sympathetically to mitigating evidence may interpret the instruction as barring them from considering that evidence altogether. This argument misapprehends the distinction between allowing the jury to consider mitigating evidence and guiding their consideration. It is no doubt constitutionally permissible, if not constitutionally required, see
Gregg
v.
Georgia,
Given the above discussion, it is obvious that our decision in California v. Brown is of no assistance to Parks. In Brown, we held that an instruction telling the jury not to be “swayed by ‘mere sentiment, conjecture, sympathy, passion, prejudice, public opinion or public feeling’ ” during the sentencing phase did not violate the Eighth Amendment. See id., at 542. We reasoned that a reasonable juror would interpret the instruction to ignore mere sympathy “as an admonition to ignore emotional responses that are not rooted in the aggravating and mitigating evidence,” and that it was not unconstitutional for a State to “prohibi[t] juries from basing *494 their sentencing decisions on factors not presented at the trial.” Id., at 542-543. Although we approved of the use of the antisympathy instruction given in Brown, Parks attempts to transform our reasoning in that case into a rule that the instruction given in his case violates the Eighth Amendment.
Parks’ argument relies upon a negative inference: because we concluded in Brown that it was permissible under the Constitution to prevent the jury from considering emotions not based upon the evidence, it follows that the Constitution requires that the jury be allowed to consider and give effect to emotions that are based upon mitigating evidence. For the reasons discussed above, see supra, at 488-491, we doubt that this inference follows from Brown or is consistent with our precedents. The same doubts are shared by the clear majority of federal and state courts that have passed upon the constitutionality of antisympathy instructions after Brown. See supra, at 490-491. The fact remains, however, that even if we accept Parks’ arguments, Brown itself was decided nearly four years after Parks’ conviction became final. In order to gain the benefit, if any, of Brown, Parks must establish that the decision in Brown did not create a new rule. To do so, Parks must contend that Lockett and Eddings dictated our reasoning, albeit perhaps not the result, in Brown. Our discussion above makes it evident that they do not.
Having decided that the relief Parks seeks would necessitate the creation of a new rule, we must determine whether the rule would come within either of the two exceptions to the general principle that new rules will not be applied on collateral review. The first exception permits the retroactive application of a new rule if the rule places a class of private conduct beyond the power of the State to proscribe, see
Teague,
The second exception is for “watershed rules of criminal procedure” implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding. See
Teague, supra,
at 311 (plurality opinion);
Btttler, ante,
at 416. This exception is also inapplicable here. Although the precise contours of this exception may be difficult to discern, we have usually cited
Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore reversed.
It is so ordered.
Respondent Robyn Parks was sentenced to death for the murder of a gas station attendant. After his conviction be
*496
came final in 1983, respondent brought a petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U. S. C. §2254 (1982 ed.) challenging his conviction and death sentence. He alleged,
inter alia,
that an instruction given at the sentencing phase of his trial that told the jury to avoid “any influence of sympathy, sentiment, passion, prejudice or other arbitrary factor when imposing sentence,” App. 13, deprived him of an individualized sentencing determination because a reasonable juror could have understood the instruction to bar consideration of relevant mitigating evidence. The Tenth Circuit, sitting en banc, agreed and vacated respondent’s death sentence.
Parks
v.
Brown,
*497 I
In
Teague
v.
Lane,
The Court’s decisions in the instant case and in
Butler
leave no doubt that the Court has limited drastically the scope of habeas corpus relief through the application of a virtually all-encompassing definition of “new rule.” In this case, the Court concludes that respondent seeks a “new rule” because it determines that the few lower courts that have rejected similar challenges to an antisympathy instruction were not “unreasonable” for doing so.
Ante,
at 490 (“We thus cannot say that the large majority of federal and state courts that have rejected challenges to antisympathy instructions similar to that given at Park’s trial have been unreasonable”).
2
The majority’s conclusion, however, is based on a
*498
fundamental misreading of
Lockett
v.
Ohio,
A
Most of the majority opinion addresses the retroactivity of a claim not even raised by respondent. The majority mischaracterizes respondent’s claim as one demanding that “jurors be allowed to base the sentencing decision upon the sympathy they feel for the defendant after hearing his mitigating evidence,” ante, at 489, and holds that claim barred by Teague. See ante, at 488-494. But as counsel for respondent argued before this Court:
“Mr. Parks asserts no constitutional right to a sympathetic or emotional jury. What he does assert under Woodson, Lockett, Eddings and their progeny is the entirely familiar claim upheld consistently by this Court of a right to a sentencer who has not been precluded from considering as a mitigating factor any aspect of a defendant’s background, character or record in addition to the circumstances of his offense that he proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 19-20.
Respondent concedes the State’s contention that a decision to impose the death penalty must reflect a “reasoned moral response” to the defendant’s culpability. See, e. g., Brief for Respondent 9. What he argues is that his jury could have interpreted the antisympathy instruction as barring consid *499 eration of mitigating evidence. More specifically, he claims that because much of the mitigating evidence relevant to his culpability also evoked sympathy, a juror who reacted sympathetically to the evidence would have believed that he was not entitled to consider that evidence at all — not even for its “moral” weight. 3 See id., at 10 (“[A]n antisympathy charge by the court, exploited by the prosecutor’s remarks, erected a barrier to full consideration of mitigating proof about [respondent’s] background. Since these circumstances compromised respondent’s chance to obtain a reasoned moral response from the jurors who held his life in the balance, his sentence is too unreliable to stand”). Respondent’s actual claim, therefore, alleges nothing more than a violation of the rule recognized in Lockett, supra, and Eddings, supra, that a jury may not be prohibited from considering and giving effect *500 to all relevant mitigating evidence when deciding whether to impose the death penalty.
It was on this claim that the Tenth Circuit granted respondent habeas corpus relief.
“‘Mercy/ ‘humane’ treatment, ‘compassion,’ and consideration of the unique ‘humanity’ of the defendant, which have all been affirmed as relevant considerations in the penalty phase of a capital case, all inevitably involve sympathy or are sufficiently intertwined with sympathy that they cannot be parsed without significant risk of confusion in the mind of a reasonable juror. . . .
Without placing an undue technical emphasis on definitions, it seems to us that sympathy is likely to be perceived by a reasonable juror as an essential or important ingredient of, if not a synonym for, ‘mercy,’ ‘humane’ treatment, ‘compassion’ and a full ‘individualized’ consideration of the ‘humanity’ of the defendant and his ‘character.’” Ibid, (emphasis added).
In holding that the antisympathy instruction “undermined the jury’s ability to consider fully [respondent’s] mitigating evidence,” the Tenth Circuit was careful to distinguish the claim at issue from the distorted version of respondent’s claim that the Court revives today:
“That argument misconstrues the issue. The issue is not whether unbridled sympathy itself is a proper mitigating factor. Rather, the issue is whether an absolute anti-sympathy instruction presents an impermissible danger of interfering with the jury’s consideration of proper mitigating evidence. We hold that it does. The Supreme Court has made it clear that such a risk is ‘unacceptable and incompatible with the commands of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.’” Id., at 1557 (quoting Lockett, supra, at 605) (emphasis in original).
*501 B
Under
Teague,
respondent’s claim must be decided according to the “prevailing law” at the time his conviction became final in 1983 unless his claim falls within one of the two exceptions to the general nonretroactivity presumption. See
Teague,
Respondent does not, however, raise a claim challenging
how
the jury considered mitigating evidence. As explained
*502
above, he argues that his jury could have believed it could not consider his mitigating evidence’s bearing on moral culpability
at all.
Thus, his claim clearly falls within the the holdings of
Lockett
and
Eddings
even under the majority’s reading of those cases. The
real
question in this case is whether the rule of
Lockett
and
Eddings
was violated. Resolution of respondent’s claim involves only the otherwise familiar inquiry into the sufficiency of the jury instructions, not the recognition of a new principle of law. See,
e. g., Hitchcock
v.
Dugger,
Moreover, the majority’s limited reading of
Lockett
and
Eddings
was rejected last Term in
Penry
v.
Lynaugh,
“[I]t was clear from Lockett and Eddings, that a State could not, consistent with the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, prevent the sentencer from considering and giving effect to evidence relevant to the defendant’s background or character or the circumstances of the offense that mitigate against imposing the death penalty.” Ibid.
Penry argued that although a Texas jury was able to give
some
effect to the evidence of mental retardation, the evidence “ha[dj relevance to his moral culpability beyond the
*503
scope of the special issues, and . . . the jury was unable to express its ‘reasoned moral response’ to that evidence in determining whether death was the appropriate punishment.”
Penry, supra,
at 322.
4
In sustaining Penry’s challenge, we expressly rejected the argument that although the State may not bar “consideration” of all relevant mitigating evidence, it may channel the “effect” the sentencer gives the evidence. We stated that “‘the right to have the sentencer consider and weigh relevant mitigating evidence would be meaningless unless the sentencer was also permitted to give effect to its consideration’ in imposing sentence.”
The majority struggles mightily to distinguish rules that govern a jury’s ability to “consider,” “weigh,” and “give effect to” mitigating evidence from rules relating to the “manner in which [the] mitigating evidence can be considered.” Ante, at 491 (emphasis added). This distinction is meaningless for a rule that limits the manner in which the jury considers mitigating evidence is unconstitutional if it limits the jury’s ability to consider and give effect to that evidence. But under the majority’s approach, a law requiring the jury to discount the weight of all, or of certain, mitigating factors would be consistent with Lockett so long as the majority could describe the statute as relating to the “manner” in which the jury considers the evidence despite such a statute’s obvious preclusive effect. Cf. McKoy v. North Carolina, ante, at 465-466 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (requirement that jury unanimously agree that mitigating circumstance exists is not a restriction on the jury’s ability to give effect to mitigating evidence, but only on the “manner in which it was allowed to do so — viz., only unanimously”) (citing ante, at 490).
Indeed, the majority’s language is strangely reminiscent of the argument trumpeted by Justice Scalia in Penry. Justice Scalia, writing for four Members of the Court, argued that “it could not be clearer that Jurek adopted the constitutional rule that the instructions had to render all mitigating circumstances relevant to the jury’s verdict, but that the precise manner of their relevance — the precise effect of their consideration — could be channeled by law.” Penry, stipra, at 355 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part). The Court correctly rejected that position in Penry, and its failure to do so today creates considerable ambiguity *505 about which Lockett claims a federal court may hereafter consider on habeas corpus review.
C
Because the majority concludes that the claim respondent presses would constitute a “new rule,” it must proceed to consider whether the claim fits within the second exception to the
Teague
doctrine of nonretroactivity.
6
A plurality of the Court in
Teague
concluded that only those new rules that amount to “bedrock procedural” rules “without which the likelihood of an accurate conviction is seriously diminished” should be applied retroactively.
Teague,
The determination with which the Court refuses to apply this exception to a capital sentencing error is most disturbing and is remarkably insensitive to the fundamental premise upon which our Eighth Amendment jurisprudence is built. This Court has consistently “recognized that the qualitative difference of death from all other punishments requires a correspondingly greater degree of scrutiny of the capital sentencing determination.”
California
v.
Ramos,
*507
The foremost concern of the Eighth Amendment is that the death sentence not be imposed in an arbitrary and capricious manner. See,
e. g., Gregg
v.
Georgia,
*508 II
For the same reasons that
Lockett
and
Eddings
compel the conclusion that respondent does not seek a “new rule” under
Teague,
these cases also compel the conclusion that respondent was denied an individualized sentencing determination as required by the Eighth Amendment. As Justice O’Con-nor has recognized, “one difficulty with attempts to remove emotion from capital sentencing through [antisympathy] instructions ... is that juries may be misled into believing that mitigating evidence about a defendant’s background or character also must be ignored.”
California
v.
Brown,
When reviewing the validity of particular jury instructions, the Court has consistently held that “[t]he question ... is not what [this Court] declares the meaning of the charge to be, but rather what a reasonable juror could have understood the charge as meaning.”
Francis
v.
Franklin,
A
“To determine how a reasonable juror could interpret an instruction, we ‘must focus initially on the specific language challenged.’... If the specific instruction fails constitutional muster, we then review the instructions as a whole to see if the entire charge delivered a correct interpretation of the law.”
California
v.
Brown, supra,
at 541 (quoting
Francis, supra,
at 315-316).
10
In this case, the jury was instructed to “avoid
any
influence of sympathy, sentiment, passion, prejudice or other arbitrary factor when imposing sentence.” App. 13 (emphasis added). This instruction is distinguishable from the one upheld in
California
v.
Brown, supra.
In that case, the Court rejected the argument that a reasonable juror could have interpreted an instruction not to be “swayed by mere sentiment, conjecture, sympathy, passion, prejudice, public opinion or public feeling” as a command not to consider mitigating evidence. The Court held instead that a reasonable juror would have understood “the instruction not to rely on ‘mere sympathy’ as a directive to ignore only the sort of sympathy that would be totally divorced from the evidence adduced during the penalty phase.”
The context of the sentencing proceedings bolsters this conclusion. The only mitigating evidence proffered by respondent was testimony about his deprived background from his father. Although this evidence was relevant to the sentencing decision because it bore on respondent’s culpability, a juror’s initial reaction to this evidence might have been to feel sympathy for respondent because of his hardship. A juror who conscientiously followed the instruction to avoid any sympathy would have believed that he was required to ignore the father’s testimony altogether since only by excluding it completely from consideration could he eliminate all feelings of sympathy for respondent. Moreover, because the father’s testimony did not fit within the mitigating circumstances listed by the judge, it was all the more likely that a juror believed that the father’s testimony was irrelevant to the sentencing decision. 11 See California v. Brown, supra, *511 at 550 (Brennan, J., dissenting) (“It is . . . likely . . . that jurors instructed not to rely on sympathy would conclude that the defendant had simply gone too far in his presentation, and that, as in other trial contexts, the jury must look to the judge for guidance as to that portion of the evidence that appropriately could be considered”).
Indeed, the prosecutor’s closing argument maintained that respondent’s presentation at the sentencing phase constituted an illegitimate sympathy ploy and that the jury was required to ignore it. 12 After explaining that none of the minimum mitigating circumstances were supported by the evidence, the prosecutor argued:
“[Defense counsel’s] closing arguments are really a pitch to you for sympathy — sympathy, or sentiment or prejudice; and you told me in voir dire you wouldn’t do that.
“Well it’s just cold turkey. He either did it or he didn’t. He either deserves the death penalty or he doesn’t, you know. You leave the sympathy, and the sentiment and prejudice part out of it.” App. 75.
Given the sparse amount of evidence presented at the sentencing phase and the prosecutor’s theme that the jury’s de *512 liberations were to be purely mechanical, 13 there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury believed that the antisympathy instruction barred it from considering respondent’s deprived background as a valid reason not to impose the death penalty.
Nothing in the other instructions ensured that the anti-sympathy instruction would be correctly understood. The trial judge did instruct the jury that it was required to consider a list of minimum mitigating circumstances and that it was free to consider any other factor it deemed mitigating,
14
but these instructions did not cure the infirmity of the anti-
*513
sympathy instruction. Although the judge informed the jury in broad terms that it could consider all relevant mitigating evidence, he never defined the concept of mitigation for the jury. But the jury
ivas
told that it could not consider “sympathy” and nothing in the jury instructions explained that the command to avoid sympathy did not preclude the consideration of mitigating evidence. At best, then, the instructions sent contradictory messages. “Language that merely contradicts and does not explain a constitutionally infirm instruction will not suffice to absolve the infirmity. A reviewing court has no way of knowing which of the two irreconcilable instructions the jurors applied in reaching their verdict.”
Francis,
B
The majority suggests that
Lockett
and
Eddings
do not compel the invalidation of the antisympathy instruction because the instruction ensures that the decision to impose the death penalty is “a ‘reasoned
moral
response,’ rather than an emotional one.”
Ante,
at 493 (citation omitted; emphasis in original). Although some recent cases have stated that the decision to impose the death penalty must be a moral decision, see
Brown,
We can debate whether sympathy is an emotional reaction that has no place in a decision to impose the death penalty or whether sympathy, although an emotion, plays an important role in forming the jury’s moral response to the defendant’s actions. But this debate is an irrelevant academic exercise if in a particular case the jury is not informed of the distinction between the type of reaction to mitigating evidence that is an invalid emotional response and the type of reaction that is an acceptable “reasoned moral response.” This Court’s incantation of that talismanic phrase cannot hide the fact that the jury instructions in this case did not clearly inform the jurors that their decision whether to impose the death penalty — the most severe sanction available to society — should represent a moral judgment about the defendant’s culpability in light of all the available evidence. I would think the Court would at least ensure that its views about the propriety of the death penalty were the ones actually transmitted to the jury.
Ill
The instructions at the sentencing phase of respondent’s trial may well have misled the jury about its duty to consider the mitigating evidence respondent presented. Until today, the Court consistently has vacated a death sentence and remanded for resentencing when there was any ambiguity about whether the sentencer actually considered mitigating evidence. See
Eddings
v.
Oklahoma,
IV
Even if I did not believe that the antisympathy instruction interfered with the jury’s ability to consider and give effect to mitigating evidence, I would vacate respondent’s death sentence. I adhere to my view that the death penalty is in all circumstances cruel and unusual punishment.
Gregg
v.
Georgia,
Notes
The Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit granted respondent relief before we decided
Teague
v.
Lane,
As in
Butler,
the majority looks to decisions from other courts to discern the meaning of our precedents. See
Butler, ante,
at 412-415
(Arizona
v.
Roberson,
As Justice O’Connor has explained, “evidence about the defendant’s background and character is relevant because of the belief, long held by this society, that defendants who commit criminal acts that are attributable to a disadvantaged background, or to emotional and mental problems, may be less culpable than defendants who have no such excuse.”
California
v.
Brown,
The majority’s contention that Penry’s “claim was that the Texas system prevented the jury from giving
any
mitigating effect to the evidence of his mental retardation,”
ante,
at 491 (emphasis added), is simply incorrect.
Penry,
See also
Franklin
v.
Lynaugh,
The first exception permits the retroactive application of a “new rule” that places primary conduct beyond the power of the State to punish. Teague, supra, at 311. This exception is not relevant here.
But see Teague,
In
Penry,
the Court refined the scope of the first
Teague
exception in light of the unique nature of the death penalty. “Although
Teague
read [the first] exception as focusing solely on new rules according constitutional protection to an actor’s primary conduct, . . . [i]n our view, a new rule placing a certain class of individuals beyond the State’s power to punish by death is analogous to a new rule placing certain conduct beyond the State’s power to punish at all.”
Penry,
In addition, the plurality in
Teague
implied that the scope of the second exception was narrow because most fundamental rules of procedure have already been established. The Court today apparently rests its cursory treatment of this issue on that same assumption. Regardless of the validity of that premise with respect to rules pertaining to the guilt phase, that understanding is unsupportable when dealing with issues in the capital sentencing context. “In capital cases the finality of the sentence imposed warrants protections that may or may not be required in other cases.”
Ake
v.
Oklahoma,
As Justice Marshall ably demonstrates in his dissent in
Boyde,
the majority engages in a sleight of hand to justify the reformulation of the standard of review. See
Boyde, ante,
at 387 (Marshall, J., dissenting). But in the end, it is unclear how the majority’s “reasonable likelihood” standard differs from the prior inquiry into how a reasonable juror could have interpreted the instruction. See
Boyde, ante,
at 392 (Marshall, J., dissenting) (“It is difficult to conceive how a
reasonable
juror
could
interpret an instruction unconstitutionally where there is no ‘reasonable likelihood’ that a juror would do so”). To the extent that this new standard is stricter than the standard set forth in
Francis,
I believe it is “irreconcilable
*509
with bedrock due process principles.”
Francis,
This analysis ‘requires careful attention to the words actually spoken to the jury ... , for whether a defendant has been accorded his constitutional rights depends on the way in which a reasonable juror could have interpreted the instruction.’ ”
Francis, supra,
at 315 (quoting
Sandstrom
v.
Montana,
The trial judge instructed the jury as follows:
“The minimum mitigating circumstances are:
“1. The defendant has no significant history of prior criminal activity;
“2. The murder was committed while the defendant was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance;
“3. The victim was a participant in the defendant’s homicidal conduct or consented to the homicidal act;
“4. The murder was committed under circumstances which the defendant believed to provide a moral justification or extenuation for his conduct;
“5. The defendant was an accomplice in a murder committed by another person and his participation in the homicidal act was relatively minor;
“6. The defendant acted under duress or under the domination of another person;
“7. At the time of the murder the capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality (wrongfulness) of his conduct or to conform his conduct to *511 the requirement of the law was impaired as a result of mental disease or intoxication;
“8. The age of the defendant at the time of the crime.” App. 11-12.
Although the prosecutor’s comments do not have the force of law, they often are a useful aid in determining how a reasonable juror could have interpreted a particular instruction. See
Boyde, ante,
at 385 (“[A]rguments of counsel, like the instructions of the court, must be judged in the context in which they are made”); see also
Brown,
The prosecutor stressed this theme from the beginning of the trial. At voir dire, he told the jury: “Of course the Court will instruct you that you should not allow sympathy, sentiment or prejudice to enter into your deliberations. And frankly that’s just as cold-blooded as you can put it. . . . [Y]ou can be as sympathetic as you want to . . . be, but you can’t do it and sit on this jury.” App. 8-9. The rest of his closing argument was calculated to assure the jury that their conscience should not bother them because the criminal justice system required that the decision to put respondent to death be “cold-blooded.” He argued:
“[YJou’re not yourself putting Robyn Parks to death. You just have become a part of the criminal justice system that says when anyone does this, that he must suffer death. So all you are doing is you’re just following the law, and what the law says, and on your verdict — once your verdict comes back in, the law takes over. The law does all of these things, so it’s not on your conscience. You’re just part of the criminal justice system that says when this type of thing happens, that whoever does such a horrible, atrocious thing must suffer death.
“Now that’s man's law. But God’s law is the very same. God’s law says that the murderer shall suffer death. So don’t let it bother your conscience, you know.” Id., at 39-40 (emphasis added).
The jury was told:
“You must consider all the following minimum mitigating circumstances and determine whether any one or more of them apply to all of the evidence, facts and circumstances of this case. You are not limited in your consideration of the minimum mitigating circumstances set out herein, and you may consider any other or additional mitigating circumstances, if any, that you may find from the evidence to exist in this case. What facts or evidence that may constitute an additional mitigating circumstance is for the jury to determine.” Id., at 10-11.
