Jimmy Fletcher Meders was convicted of the 1987 armed robbery and murder of a convenience store clerk and was sentenced to death. On direct appeal this Court addressed several alleged trial court errors but did not complete our review because Meders had obtained new counsel during the pendency of the appeal; thus, we remanded the case to the trial court for a hearing on his claim that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
Meders v. State,
Meders thereafter filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus asserting, inter alia, a claim that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance. The habeas court granted the petition on that ground and rejected the other grounds raised in the petition. In Case No. S06A0579, the Warden appeals the ruling that Meders received ineffective assistance of trial counsel; Meders (hereinafter “petitioner”) appeals the other grounds in Case No. S06X0581. For the reasons that follow we reverse the habeas court’s ruling in the Warden’s appeal and affirm the ruling denying petitioner relief on the remaining grounds. Accordingly, we reinstate petitioner’s convictions and sentences.
Case No. S06A0579.
1. We agree with the Warden that the habeas court improperly considered claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel that were procedurally barred because actually litigated and incorrectly found cause and prejudice to excuse petitioner’s procedural default in failing to raise permutations of those claims on direct appeal. The law is well-established that “any issue raised and ruled upon in the petitioner’s direct appeal may not be reasserted in habeas corpus proceedings ([cit.]),”
Gaither v. Gibby,
We recognize that the proper standard of review requires this Court to accept the habeas court’s factual findings and credibility determinations unless clearly erroneous, although we independently apply the legal principles to the facts.
Zant v. Means,
The first “cause” found by the habeas court to have impeded counsel’s efforts to raise the procedurally-defaulted claims was the fact “petitioner was unable to cross examine his trial counsel” at the remand hearing held on the ineffectiveness issue due to trial counsel’s illness and inability to attend court. This finding overlooks the legal remedy that was readily available to petitioner in this situation, namely, a court order to obtain counsel’s sworn testimony for use at the remand hearing. See OCGA § 24-10-130 (depositions to preserve testimony in criminal proceedings). See also
Dickens v. State,
The second “cause” found by the habeas court was that “the factual or legal basis for the claim was not reasonably available to counsel,” based on several specifically enumerated evidentiary items. As to the first of those items involving testimony from a certain detective about other shootings on the night of the murder and the feud that allegedly motivated the shooters, the habeas court’s finding is clearly erroneous. Our review of the record reveals that the detective actually testified in the remand hearing and that he and a number of other witnesses were questioned about the other shooting incidents. Thus, contrary to the habeas court’s finding, this testimony was not “unavailable to counsel during the pendency of the direct appeal.”
Next, the habeas court found that petitioner “was not legally permitted to access the criminal records” of the two men with him at the time of the murder and of the man to whom he confessed immediately after the murder “under the Georgia Open Records Act until after [petitioner] had completed his direct appeal.” This finding fails to assist petitioner in overcoming the procedural bars to raising any new claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, however, because it does not specify, and we cannot determine from the record, what “criminal records” have been newly discovered that show any prejudice of constitutional proportions. Furthermore, any materials legally unavailable to trial counsel before and during trial could not support an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim in any case because counsel obviously do not perform deficiently in failing to obtain what is not legally available to them. See
Strickland v.
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Washington,
Finally, the habeas court found that petitioner “did not have access” to testimony from the prosecutor until the habeas hearing. This finding is clearly erroneous in that it fails to recognize that the prosecutor was present during the remand hearing and thus available to be called as a witness within the trial court’s discretion. See generally
Timberlake v. State,
Therefore, because the ineffective assistance claims petitioner previously raised on direct appeal are procedurally barred as actually litigated and because he failed to demonstrate in his habeas proceedings that he was raising any truly new ineffective assistance claims concerning which he could satisfy the cause and prejudice test applicable to procedurally-defaulted claims, the habeas court erred by granting relief based on grounds of the alleged ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
Case No. S06X0581.
2. Petitioner argues that the habeas court erred by denying his claim regarding the State’s use of allegedly-false testimony by a detective and a portion of the prosecutor’s argument to the jury. The habeas court found that petitioner had failed to demonstrate that the testimony in question was actually false. Given the vagueness of the facts upon which the detective testified at trial and the varying interpretations one might place on his testimony, we do not find the habeas court’s finding of fact to be clearly erroneous. We further note that this claim should have been found procedurally defaulted because it was not raised during petitioner’s direct appeal proceedings. Upon finding the claim to be procedurally defaulted, the habeas court should then have inquired into whether petitioner had shown cause and prejudice to overcome that bar. See OCGA § 9-14-48 (d);
Turpin v. Todd,
supra,
3. In two related enumerations petitioner argues that the habeas court erred by failing to address his claim that the State engaged in misconduct by introducing into evidence at trial food stamps possibly taken during the armed robbery and a summons issued against petitioner for trafficking in cocaine. These claims are barred by procedural default because they were not preserved by objection at trial. See OCGA§ 9-14-48 (d). See also
Meders,
supra,
4. Petitioner argues that the habeas court erred by failing to grant relief based on his claim of evidence suppression. See
Brady v. Maryland,
To succeed in an evidence suppression claim, petitioner was required to show the following:
(1) the State possessed evidence favorable to the defendant;
(2) the defendant did not possess the favorable evidence and could not obtain it himself with any reasonable diligence; (3) the State suppressed the favorable evidence; and (4) had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, a reasonable probability exists that the outcome of the trial would have been different. [Cits.]
Schofield v. Palmer,
supra,
Most of the allegedly-suppressed evidence in issue consisted of items that the prosecutor, both on remand and at the habeas hearing, asserted had been contained in the district attorney’s file made
*870
available to trial counsel. See
Adams v. State,
Portions of petitioner’s evidence suppression claim concern matters not included in the prosecutor’s file, including the allegation that the prosecutor assisted one of the State’s witnesses in certain criminal matters both before and after petitioner’s crimes and additional information related to other shooting incidents. Our review supports the habeas court’s finding that petitioner failed to show prejudice as a result of the alleged suppression of these items sufficient to demonstrate a reasonable probability of a different outcome in either phase of petitioner’s trial.
Schofield v. Palmer,
supra,
Therefore, pretermitting the Warden’s waiver arguments, petitioner’s claim fails because his evidence suppression claim concerns only materials either not shown to have been suppressed or not sufficiently prejudicial to warrant relief.
5. Petitioner argues that the habeas court erred by refusing to order the prosecutor to disclose the written notes he had made while reviewing his file that he thereafter used to refresh his recollection during his habeas testimony. See OCGA § 24-9-69. This Court has held that materials used to refresh the recollection of a witness for the State
in criminal cases
must be disclosed by the witness upon request.
Baxter v. State,
6. Petitioner claims that the habeas court erred by refusing to order the in camera review of any bar complaints filed against the prosecutor. This Court will not reverse a habeas court’s ruling on discovery matters absent a clear abuse of discretion.
Turpin v.
*871
Bennett,
7. Petitioner argues that the habeas court erred when it ruled that various enumerated grounds were barred as actually litigated or procedurally defaulted. This argument has already been addressed above insofar as it concerns trial counsel’s alleged ineffectiveness. This Court held on appeal following the remand hearing that the trial court did not err by refusing to appoint a psychologist for purposes of the remand hearing,
see Meders,
supra,
8. This Court has already conducted a review of the proportionality of petitioner’s death sentence and we perceive no reason to re-examine the issue.
Meders,
supra,
Judgment reversed in Case No. S06A0579. Judgment affirmed in Case No. S06X0581.
Notes
Those claims included trial counsel’s failure to make use of certain evidence (police reports and witnesses’ prior inconsistent statements) and counsel’s failure to object to the admission of certain evidence (a summons for trafficking in cocaine and food stamps possibly taken during the armed robbery).
We remind bench and bar that
while it may represent a hardship to petitioner, the intervening death of a habeas petitioner’s trial attorney does not excuse a petitioner’s inability to produce “objective evidence” in support of his allegations. . . . While unfortunate, because the death of a petitioner’s trial counsel is just as, if not more, likely to prejudice the respondent, it does not relieve the petitioner of his “heavy burden” of proving ineffective assistance. [Cit.]
Slevin v. United States,
71 F Supp.2d 348, 358, fn. 9 (S.D. N.Y. 1999), aff'd,
