Petitioner Michael Selsor, an Oklahoma state prisoner convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition. Selsor asserts seven issues on appeal: (1) whether a state appellate ruling allowing the prosecution at his retrial proceedings to seek the death penalty against him violated his due process rights; (2) whether the imposition of the death penalty at his retrial proceedings violated his rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause; (3) whether the state trial court violated his constitutional rights at the retrial proceedings by instructing the jury as to the elements of a post-crime first degree murder statute, rather than the elements of the pre-crime first degree murder statute under which he was originally charged; (4) whether the imposition of the death penalty at his retrial proceedings violated his rights under the Equal Protection Clause; (5) whether the prosecution acted vindictively, in violation of his due process rights, by seeking the death penalty at his retrial proceedings; (6) whether the penalty phase of his retrial proceedings was rendered fundamentally unfair by prosecutorial misconduct; and (7) whether the admission, during the penalty phase of the retrial proceedings, of testimony from the victim’s family members regarding the appropriate sentence violated his rights under the Eighth *987 Amendment. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.
I
Factual background
The relevant underlying facts of this case were outlined in detail by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) in addressing Selsor’s most recent direct appeal:
At approximately 11:00 p.m. on September 15,1975, Selsor and Richard Eugene Dodson robbed the U-TOTE-M convenience store at 5950 33rd West Avenue in Tulsa. Selsor and Dodson entered the store, each armed with a .22 caliber handgun. Employee Clayton Chandler was working at the cash register. Selsor approached Chandler, pulled his gun, and demanded the contents of the register. Dodson located employee Ina Morris, who was restocking the walk-in cooler. Dodson pointed his gun at her and ordered her to get down. Morris replied, “You’ve got to be kidding me.” Dodson then fired a shot striking Morris in the shoulder.
Chandler loaded a sack with money and handed it to Selsor, who then shot Chandler several times in the chest killing him. Upon hearing the shots, Dodson emptied his weapon through the cooler door at Morris. Morris was shot in the head, neck and shoulder, but survived. Selsor and Dodson then fled.
On September 22, 1975, Selsor and Dodson were arrested in Santa Barbara, California. Selsor confessed this and other crimes to Detective John Evans of the Santa Barbara Police Department. In his confession, Selsor admitted that before entering the store, he and Dodson had agreed to leave no witnesses.
Selsor v. State (Selsor II),
Selsor’s original trial and direct appeal
Following his arrest, Selsor “was charged in the District Court, Tulsa County, with the offenses of Armed Robbery, CRF-75-2183; Shooting With Intent to Kill, CRF-75-2182; and, Murder in the First Degree, CRF-75-2181, After Former Conviction of a Felony.”
Selsor v. State (Selsor I),
Selsor filed a direct appeal challenging his convictions and sentences. On April 6, 1977, the OCCA issued a published decision affirming all of Selsor’s convictions, as well as the sentences imposed for the Shooting With Intent to Kill and Armed Robbery convictions. The OCCA, however, modified Selsor’s death sentence to life imprisonment. In doing so, the OCCA concluded, consistent with its then-recent decision in
Riggs v. Branch,
Selsor’s first application for state post-conviction relief
On November 8, 1978, Selsor filed a pro se application for post-conviction relief in state district court. The application asserted a single claim for relief from his convictions, i.e., that “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY REQUIRING [Dodson] AND [Selsor] TO, OVER [their] OBJECTION, BE TRIED JOINTLY WITH THE SAME COUNSEL FROM THE PUBLIC DEFENDERS OFFICE.” S. R., Vol. I at 160. On February 28, 1980, the state district court denied Selsor’s application, noting that Selsor’s claim had previously been rejected by the OCCA on direct appeal. The state district court’s denial of post-conviction relief was affirmed by the OCCA on June 12, 1980.
Selsor’s second application for state post-conviction relief
“On July 3, 1989, Selsor filed a second application for post-conviction relief in state court.”
3
Selsor v. Kaiser (Kaiser II),
Selsor’s first federal habeas proceedings
In October of 1991, Selsor filed a pro se petition for federal habeas relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma.
Selsor v. Kaiser (Kaiser I),
Selsor appealed the district court’s ruling to this court. This court appointed a federal public defender to represent Selsor. On May 2, 1994, this court issued a published opinion reversing the decision of the district court and remanding for further proceedings. More specifically, this court concluded “that the district court applied the incorrect legal standard” to Selsor’s Sixth Amendment claim,
id.
at 1033, and thus remanded the case to the district court to “determine whether: (1) [Selsor]’s objection at trial to the joint representation was timely, and, if so, (2) whether the trial, court took ‘adequate steps to ascertain whether the risk [of a conflict of interest] was too remote to warrant separate counsel,’ ”
id.
at 1033-34 (quoting
Holloway v. Arkansas,
“On remand the district [court] concluded that Selsor’s objection to the joint representation was timely.”
Kaiser II,
Selsor appealed again to this court. On April 8, 1996, this court issued a published opinion (Kaiser II) reversing the district court’s ruling. In doing so, this court held “there was an actual conflict of interest that adversely affected counsel’s performance on behalf of Selsor,” resulting in “violations of Selsor’s Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to effective assistance of counsel.” Id. at 1506. Accordingly, this court remanded the case to the district court “with directions to enter judgment invalidating Selsor’s convictions ..., but providing that such judgment [wa]s without prejudice to further proceedings by the state for retrial of [Selsor] within a reasonable time.” Id.
Selsor’s neio trial
The Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office initiated retrial proceedings in May of 1996. On August 6, 1996, the prosecution filed a Bill of Particulars alleging that Selsor “should be punished by Death” for “the offense of Murder in the First Degree, as charged in the [original] Information,” as a result of the following aggravating circumstances: (1) “[t]he Defendant knowingly created a great risk of death to more than one person”; (2) “[t]he murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel”; (3) “[t]he murder was committed for the purpose of avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest or prosecution”; and (4) “[t]he existence of a probability that the defendant would commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat to society.” S. R., Vol. I at 191.
Selsor moved to strike the Bill of Particulars, arguing that “[allowing the State to seek the death penalty against [him would] violate[] the prohibition against ex post facto laws and expose [him] to more severe punishment than was lawful at the time [he] committed the alleged crime” of Murder in the First Degree.
Id.,
Vol. II at 203. On July 20, 1997, on the eve of trial, the state trial court denied Selsor’s motion. Selsor immediately petitioned the OCCA for a writ of mandamus and obtained from that court a stay of the impending trial.
Id.
at 288. On October 14, 1997, the OCCA issued a published decision affirming the trial court’s decision.
Selsor v. Turnbull,
Following the OCCA’s decision, Selsor’s retrial began on February 2, 1998. At the outset, Selsor’s counsel moved to dismiss the charges against Selsor, arguing that the Information, which was filed in 1975 and which charged Selsor under the language of the 1973 first degree murder statute, alleged both “that ... Selsor with premeditated design effected] the death of Clayton Chandler and during the course of a robbery with firearms did kill Clayton Chandler.” Tr., Vol. IV at 738. The state trial court overruled Selsor’s motion. Id. at 739 (“I think that the Information, albeit old, properly informs Mr. Selsor of the charge that is against him.”). At the conclusion of the government’s first-stage evidence, the jury found Selsor guilty of the three charges against him, i.e., murder in the first degree, shooting with intent to kill, and robbery with firearms.
*990 The second-stage proceedings began following a short recess. To prove the four alleged aggravating circumstances, the prosecution presented evidence that Selsor and Dodson committed four similar armed robberies shortly prior to the robbery of the Tulsa U-TOTE-M convenience store, two of which involved the actual use of violence against store clerks (specifically the shooting of one clerk by Selsor and the stabbing of another clerk by Dodson). The prosecution also presented evidence establishing that Selsor attempted to escape from prison in December 1984. Lastly, the prosecution presented testimony from the widow and daughter of Clayton Chandler, the murder victim in the case, and from Ina Morris, the store clerk wounded by Dodson during the robbery. All three of these witnesses read into the record victim impact statements they had prepared prior to trial. As part of their testimony, each of these three witnesses testified that they agreed with the District Attorney’s recommended sentence of death.
Selsor in turn presented testimony from a data entry clerk employed by the Tulsa County Sheriffs Department, who testified that during the nineteen months Selsor was confined in the Tulsa County Jail awaiting retrial, Selsor had no write-ups of any kind. Selsor also presented testimony from four current or former Oklahoma Department of Corrections employees, all of whom knew Selsor because of their contact with him during his post-trial incarceration. All four of these witnesses testified, in pertinent part, that, despite their being generally in favor of the death penalty, they disagreed with the District Attorney’s recommended sentence of death for Selsor.
At the conclusion of the second-stage evidence, the jury found the existence of two of the four aggravating circumstances alleged by the prosecution: that Selsor knowingly created a great risk of death to more than one person, and that the murder was committed for the purpose of avoiding and preventing a lawful arrest. In turn, the jury fixed Selsor’s punishment at death for the first degree murder conviction. As for the other two counts of conviction, the jury recommended life imprisonment for the shooting with intent to kill conviction, and twenty years’ imprisonment for the robbery with firearms conviction.
The state trial court entered judgment consistent with the verdicts on May 6, 1998. The judgment stated, in pertinent part, that Selsor was found guilty of “MURDER, 1st DEGREE,” in violation of “21-701.7,” the 1976 murder statute enacted by the Oklahoma state legislature. S. R., Vol. III at 436.
Selsor’s direct appeal from the new trial
Selsor appealed his convictions and sentence to the OCCA. On May 10, 2000, the OCCA issued a published opinion affirming Selsor’s first degree murder conviction and death sentence, as well as Selsor’s shooting with intent to kill conviction and related sentence of life imprisonment, but reversing the conviction and sentence for robbery with firearms and remanding to the state trial court with instructions to dismiss that charge.
Selsor II,
*991 The instant federal habeas proceedings
Selsor initiated the instant federal habeas proceedings on October 3, 2001, by filing a motion for appointment of counsel. The district court granted Selsor’s motion and, on May 20, 2002, Selsor’s appointed counsel filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus on Selsor’s behalf asserting eighteen grounds for relief. Respondent filed a response to the petition, as well as a certified copy of the relevant state court records.
On September 29, 2009, the district court issued an opinion and order denying Selsor’s petition in its entirety. On that same date, the district court entered judgment in favor of respondent and against Selsor. Following the entry of an amended judgment on November 24, 2009, Selsor moved for a certificate of appealability with respect to nine issues. The district court granted Selsor’s motion. Of the nine issues on which a COA was granted, Selsor has since filed appellate pleadings addressing seven of those issues.
II
A. Standard of review
Because Selsor filed his federal habeas petition after April 24, 1996, the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), AEDPA’s provisions govern these proceedings.
Snow v. Sirmons,
If a claim was addressed on the merits by the state courts, we may not grant federal habeas relief on the basis of that claim unless the state court decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), or “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding,”
id.
§ 2254(d)(2). “When reviewing a state court’s application of federal law, we are precluded from issuing the writ simply because we conclude in our independent judgment that the state court applied the law erroneously or incorrectly.”
McLuckie v. Abbott,
If a claim was not resolved by the state courts on the merits and is not otherwise procedurally barred, our standard of review is more searching. That is, because § 2254(d)’s deferential standards of review do not apply in such circumstances, we review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings, if any, for clear error.
McLuckie,
B. Analysis
1. Due process violation — OCCA’s overruling of Riggs
Selsor contends, in Proposition One of his appellate brief, that the OCCA in Turnbull violated the Ex Post Facto Clause as applied to judicial decisions through the Due Process Clause by overruling its decision in Riggs and allowing the prosecution at the retrial proceedings to seek the death penalty against him.
a) Background information
On June 29, 1972, the United States Supreme Court held that a Georgia state statute that allowed for unbridled jury discretion in the imposition of death sentences violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Furman v. Georgia,
408
*992
U.S. 238, 240,
Oklahoma fell into the latter camp. In 1973, the Oklahoma Legislature adopted a statutory scheme that mandated imposition of the death penalty for anyone convicted of first degree murder, and defined first degree murder as follows:
Homicide, when perpetrated without authority of law and with a premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed, or of any other human being, is murder in the first degree in the following cases:
1. When perpetrated against any peace officer, prosecuting attorney, corrections employee or fireman engaged in the performance of his official duties;
2. When perpetrated by one committing or attempting to commit rape, kidnapping for the purpose of extortion, arson in the first degree, armed robbery or when death occurs following the sexual molestation of a child under the age of sixteen (16) years;
3. When perpetrated against any witness subpoenaed to testify at any preliminary hearing, trial or grand jury proceeding against the defendant who kills or procures the killing of the witness, or when perpetrated against any human being while intending to kill such witness;
4. When perpetrated against the President or Vice President of the United States of America, any official in the line of succession to the Presidency of the United States of America, the Governor or Lieutenant Governor of this state, a judge of any appellate court or court of record of this state, or any person actively engaged in a campaign for the office of the Presidency or Vice Presidency of the United States of America;
5. When perpetrated by any person engaged in the pirating of an aircraft, train, bus or other commercial vehicle for hire which regularly transports passengers;
6. When perpetrated by a person who effects the death of a human being in exchange for money or any other thing of value, or by the person procuring the killing;
7. Murder by a person under a sentence of life imprisonment in the penitentiary;
8. When perpetrated against two or more persons arising out of the same transaction or occurrence or series of events closely related in time and location;
9. When perpetrated against a child while in violation of Section 843, Title 21 of the Oklahoma Statutes; and
10. Intentional murder by the unlawful and malicious use of a bomb or of any similar explosive.
Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.1 (1973).
These state legislative responses to
Furman
in turn led to new court challenges. On July 2, 1976, the United States Supreme Court issued a trio of decisions addressing the two general types of revised death penalty schemes. In
Wood-
*993
son,
Four days later, on July 6, 1976, the Supreme Court applied its decisions in
Woodson
and
Roberts
and reversed six Oklahoma capital cases that were pending before it.
Williams v. Oklahoma,
The Oklahoma legislature responded to these Supreme Court decisions by calling a special session, repealing the 1973 statute, and enacting, effective July 24, 1976, new first and second degree murder statutes. Importantly, for purposes of the instant appeal, the new statutes effectively expanded the definition of first degree murder by defining it in the following manner:
A. A person commits murder in the first degree when he unlawfully and with malice aforethought causes the death of another human being. Malice is that deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a human being, which is manifested by external circumstances capable of proof.
B. A person also commits the crime of murder in the first degree when he takes the life of a human being, regardless of malice, in the commission of forcible rape, robbery with a dangerous weapon, kidnapping, escape from lawful custody, first degree burglary or first degree arson.
Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.7 (1976). In other words, in contrast to the 1973 murder statute, which defined first degree murder to require both malice aforethought and commission of the murder in one of several *994 specified circumstances, the 1976 statute defined first degree murder to require only malice aforethought or commission of the murder during one of several enumerated felonies.
The OCCA first addressed these judicial and legislative events in its
Riggs
decision issued on September 2, 1976. The petitioner in
Riggs
had been charged with first degree murder under Oklahoma’s 1973 death penalty statute. However, that charge was filed on July 9, 1976, three days after the Supreme Court held Oklahoma’s 1973 death penalty statute to be unconstitutional. Immediately after the charge was filed, Riggs responded by filing a petition for writ of habeas corpus with the state trial court “alleging that the Supreme Court ... had declared Oklahoma’s First Degree Murder Statute unconstitutional and thus he was being illegally restrained.”
Riggs,
to determine the status of those defendants either charged or having committed the crime of Murder in the First Degree or Murder in the Second Degree, and those defendants convicted of said offenses prior to the effective date of our new [1976] murder statutes. We find it appropriate to move with the necessary speed to clarify and attempt to fill what has been termed “the apparent void” in our Murder law prior to the effective date of our new homicide murder statute.
Id. at 825. Continuing, the OCCA noted that
[t]his determination [wa]s mandatory as to that class of defendants charged with or committing homicide murder prior to the effective date of our new statute; they cannot be tried under the new statute, as the evidentiary burden of proof under it hafdj been changed to their detriment. * * * To [hold] otherwise in th[is] situation! ] would be to violate the ex post facto provision of the Constitution of the United States, Article 1, Section 10. * * * For this reason the new homicide murder statute cannot be applied retroactively by judicial construction.
Id. (emphasis added).
The OCCA then addressed “the status of those defendants ... convicted of First Degree Murder and sentenced to death prior to the enactment of the new [1976] statute.” Id. “A threshold inquiry in resolving the status of th[is] class!] of defendants,” id., the OCCA held, was “to examine the effect of the Supreme Court decisions upon the Oklahoma homicide murder statutes,” id. at 825-26. Citing the Supreme Court’s post-Woodson, and Roberts reversal of the six pending Oklahoma capital cases, the OCCA “conclude[d] the death penalty as provided in 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3 [(the 1973 death penalty statute) ], ha[d] been effectively stricken from [the] statute, which [itself had been] repealed.” Id. at 827. However, the OCCA in turn concluded that “the remaining provisions of [Oklahoma’s 1973] homicide murder statute remain[ed] in effect after the striking of the death penalty provision.” Id. The OCCA then addressed “what constitute^] the appropriate constitutionally permissible punishment which should befall [defendants] ... convicted of murder in the first degree, or ... committing the offense of murder in the first degree prior to 12:01 a.m. of July 24, 1976[, the date the 1976 murder statute became effective].” Id. at 828. Noting that a section of the 1973 murder statute authorized the OCCA to exercise its discretion and modify a sentence of death, the OCCA concluded “that the alternative sentence [that could] be imposed against those individuals convicted of murder in the first degree prior to *995 the effective date of [the] new murder homicide statute [wa]s life imprisonment.” Id. at 829. As for “individuals] committing, but not convicted of, the crime of murder in the first degree prior to 12:01 a.m., July 24, 1976,” the OCCA held, “the appropriate penalty for murder in the first degree [wa]s ‘life in the penitentiary at hard labor,’ under the 1973 statute.” Id.
On June 17, 1977, approximately nine months after the issuance of
Riggs,
the Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Dobbert v. Florida,
*996 The final relevant piece of procedural history occurred in 1997. At that time, Selsor was being retried in state court pursuant to this court’s decision in Kaiser II. Selsor moved to strike the Bill of Particulars filed by the prosecution, arguing that “[allowing the State to seek the death penalty against [him would] violate[] the prohibition against ex post facto laws and expose [him] to more severe punishment than was lawful at the time [he] committed the alleged crime” of Murder in the First Degree. S. R., Vol. II at 203. The state trial court denied Selsor’s motion, and Selsor immediately petitioned the OCCA for a writ of mandamus. On October 14, 1997, the OCCA issued its decision in Turnbull and, at the urging of the prosecution, expressly overturned its decision in Riggs. In doing so, the OCCA stated:
Riggs was decided during the chaos caused when the United States Supreme Court overturned the death penalty statutes of several states, and during the scramble by those states to ensure there were constitutional penalty provisions in place for the offense of Murder in the First Degree. Riggs,554 P.2d at 824-25 nn. 1-3. This Court attempted to analyze United States Supreme Court precedent in effect at the time, and determined that Riggs, and other defendants who had committed homicide murder while the statutes with unconstitutional death penalty provisions were in effect, could not be tried under newly enacted statutes. Riggs,554 P.2d at 825 . This Court found the evidentiary burden of proof under the newly enacted statutes had been changed to the detriment of Riggs and the other defendants, and to apply the newly enacted statutes to them would be to violate the ex post facto provisions of the Constitution of the United States. Id.
After this Court attempted to construe federal ex post facto law in Riggs, the United States Supreme Court directly addressed the issue of whether the ex post facto clause prohibited the application, of newly enacted statutes for imposing the death penalty, to defendants whose crimes were committed pri- or to the enactment of the new statutes. Dobbert v. Florida,432 U.S. 282 ,97 S.Ct. 2290 ,53 L.Ed.2d 344 (1977). In its ex post facto analysis, the Supreme Court compared the newly enacted statutes to the statutes in effect on the date the crime was committed, even though the old statutes, like Section 701.3, had been declared unconstitutional. The United States Supreme Court held the changes in death penalty statutes were procedural and on the whole ameliorative, and could be applied retroactively without an ex post facto violation. Id.
In different contexts, this Court has adopted and applied the reasoning and analysis of Dobbert. Cartwright v. State,778 P.2d 479 (Okl.Cr.1989). This Court has acknowledged an ex post facto argument is not won by proving disadvantage alone. Cartwright,778 P.2d at 482 . In addition, the true focus of ex post facto analysis is on (1) the elements of the offense, (2) the conditions and quantum of punishment, and (3) the quantity and degree of proof necessary to establish guilt. Id.
Contrary to Petitioner’s arguments, there was a death penalty statute in effect in 1975, and on the date his crime was committed, in the form of 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3. Contrary to this Court’s analysis in Riggs, the newly enacted death penalty statutes did not change the burden of proof to the detriment of Riggs and other defendants, as compared to the burden of proof under Section 701.3. Under Section 701.3, the only available sentence was death. Under newly enacted death penalty statutes, the sentencing options increased in favor of a defendant to include not only *997 death but also the possibility of life imprisonment, and now life without parole. 21 O.S.Supp.1976, §§ 701.9 and 701.10; 21 O.S.1991, § 701.9, and Supp.1996, § 701.10. Under Section 701.3, the State was only required to prove the elements of the crime of First Degree Murder. Once those elements were proven, the State had no further burden of proof because the death penalty was required. Under newly enacted death penalty statutes, the State not only must prove the same elements of the crime of First Degree Murder, but also must prove aggravating circumstances before the death penalty can be imposed. Id. Therefore, newly enacted death penalty statutes (1) did not increase the elements of the offense of First Degree Murder, (2) did not increase but in fact decreased the conditions and quantum of punishment, and (3) did not decrease but in fact increased the quantity and degree of proof necessary to establish guilt, and are not ex post facto. Dobbert, supra; Cartwright, supra. The ex post facto analysis and the holdings thereunder in Riggs v. Branch,554 P.2d 823 (Okl.Cr.1976) are hereby overturned.
Ex post facto analysis only applies to legislative enactments, however, changes in the law by judicial construction, such as overturning Riggs, implicates the Due Process Clause and requires consideration of ex post facto principles. Cartwright,778 P.2d at 482 . This Court has previously addressed the retroactive application of a judicial interpretation of a statute, which changed the law thus allowing independent reweighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances and denying defendants automatic modification of a death sentence to life imprisonment, and found the Due Process Clause was not violated under an ex post facto analysis. Castro v. State,749 P.2d 1146 (Okl.Cr.1987), cert. denied485 U.S. 971 ,108 S.Ct. 1248 ,99 L.Ed.2d 446 (1988). Similarly, the change in law by judicial decision that Riggs should be overturned does not violate the Due Process Clause or ex post facto principles, because it does not change the crime for which Petitioner is charged, increase the punishment prescribed therefor, or increase the quantity or degree of proof necessary to establish his guilt. Castro,749 P.2d at 1151 .
Petitioner’s equal protection claim can be easily and summarily disposed of. Petitioner is simply no longer similarly situated to those defendants subject to Oklahoma’s unconstitutional death penalty statute, 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3, or to those defendants whose sentences were modified in accordance with Riggs. Petitioner’s Judgment and Sentence has been vacated and he stands before this Court, similarly situated to defendants awaiting trial under current murder and death penalty statutes. Dobbert,432 U.S. at 301 ,97 S.Ct. at 2302 ,53 L.Ed.2d at 361 ; see also Cheatham v. State,900 P.2d 414 , 428-30 (Okl.Cr.1995).
Finally, we reject Petitioner’s claim that to subject him to the death penalty, because his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated, flies in the face of due process. Petitioner has not supported this claim with citation to any authority. Rule 3.5(C)(4), Rules [of the Court of Criminal Appeals], Moreover, if a defendant has not been acquitted of the death penalty and his conviction and sentence are reversed on appeal or collateral proceedings, the slate is wiped clean and a defendant may be subjected to any punishment authorized by law, including death. Salazar v. State,919 P.2d 1120 , 1127 (Okl.Cr.1996). Finally, subjecting Petitioner to the death penalty does not appear to be punishment for Petitioner’s successful attack on his Judgment and Sentence, but merely an application of *998 the correct law, and/or a correction of the applicable law. See Stafford v. State,800 P.2d 738 , 740 (Okl.Cr.1990).
b) Selsor’s arguments
Selsor contends that “the OCCA both unreasonably applied clearly established federal law and deprived [him] of due process” when, in Turnbull, it “constru[ed] its 1976 decision in Riggs[] to mean something no reasonable person would have understood that case to mean, overruling this purported holding, and applying the overruling retroactively to [him], thereby permitting the State to obtain a ’ death sentence against him.” Aplt. Br. at 21-22. In support, Selsor contends that “Riggs held that even if someone in [his] position were retried for murder, he faced a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.” Id. at 22. According to Selsor, he “reasonably relied on [Riggs ] when he pursued post-conviction relief,” believing he could not again be subjected to a sentence of death. Id. Selsor argues that the OCCA’s “Turn-bull decision, overruling Riggs, was both unforeseeable and indefensible” because “Riggs had stood unchallenged for two decades, had produced the very result the State requested in that case, had provided the basis for [his] life sentence, and had been cited only with approval by the OCCA.” Id. In turn, Selsor contends that “[t]he due process question ... is whether [he] had fair warning when he collaterally attacked his unconstitutional conviction that he could be resentenced to death if he secured a new trial.” Id. at 33.
c) Clearly established federal law applicable to the issue
Selsor contends, citing
Bouie v. City of Columbia,
Before the Supreme Court, petitioners argued, in pertinent part, “that they were denied due process of law ... because the [trespass] statute failed to afford fair warning that the conduct for which they [were] convicted had been made a crime.”
Id.
at 349,
In addressing petitioners’ argument, the Supreme Court began by acknowledging “[t]he basic principle that a criminal statute must give fair warning of the conduct that it makes a crime....”
Id.
In turn, the Court held “[t]here can be no doubt that a deprivation of the right of fair warning can result not only from vague statutory language but also from an unforeseeable and retroactive judicial expansion of narrow and precise statutory language.”
Id.
at 352,
Selsor also suggests that
Lankford v. Idaho,
The Supreme Court granted certiorari “to decide whether the sentencing process followed in th[e] ... case satisfied the requirements of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Id.
at 111,
d) The OCCA’s ruling on the issue
In Turnbull, in which Selsor sought mandamus relief on the eve of his retrial, the OCCA sua sponte addressed and rejected the question of whether its overruling of Riggs violated Selsor’s due process rights. On direct appeal following his 1998 retrial, Selsor asked the OCCA to revisit *1001 the issue. The OCCA again concluded that no due process violation occurred, stating as follows:
In Selsor v. Turnbull, this Court ... anticipated and resolved [an] issue[ ] Selsor failed specifically to raise then but which he raises now in Proposition! ] ... Ill ...: whether the retroactive application of this Court’s decision overruling Riggs v. Branch violated due process. * * * This Court ... found that the retroactive application of this Court’s decision overruling Riggs v. Branch to this case did not violate due process. We specifically stated: “the change in law by judicial decision that Riggs should be overturned does not violate due process ... because it does not change the crime for which [Selsor] is charged, increase the punishment prescribed therefore, or increase the quantity, or degree of proof necessary to establish . his guilt.” In sum, Selsor’s argument! ] in Proposition ] ... Ill w[as] adequately resolved in Selsor v. Turnbull; nothing in his brief is convincing or persuasive enough to change those results.
Selsor II, 2 P.3d at 349-50.
e) § 2251 analysis
The OCCA’s resolution of Selsor’s due process issue was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of,
Bouie.
7
To begin with, Selsor’s case differs from
Bouie
in terms of the substance of the judicial decision at issue: whereas the South Carolina Supreme Court in
Bouie
was interpreting the scope of a criminal statute, the OCCA in
Turnbull
was revisiting one of its own decisions involving an issue of constitutional law (i.e., whether application of the punishment scheme set forth in Oklahoma’s 1976 murder statute to defendants charged with violating the prior 1973 murder statute violated the prohibition against
ex post facto
laws). Moreover, even ignoring this distinction, the OCCA’s reversal of
Riggs
in
Turnbull
did not have an ex post facto effect. Specifically, by concluding, contrary to its decision in
Riggs,
that defendants charged with violating Oklahoma’s 1973 murder statute could be sentenced to death, the OCCA in
Turnbull
did not authorize a greater punishment “than the law annexed to the crime ... when committed.”
Calder v. Bull,
Likewise, the OCCA’s resolution of Selsor’s due process issue was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of,
Lankford.
Unlike the petitioner in
Lankford,
who was effectively deprived of notice that the trial judge was considering imposition of the death penalty, Selsor was afforded adequate notice of the prosecution’s intent to seek the death penalty at the 1998 retrial proceedings. In turn, Selsor was able to utilize the adversary process to challenge (albeit unsuccessfully) the constitutionality of the prosecution’s action. Thus, unlike the situation in
Lankford,
there was no “risk [in Selsor’s case] that the adversary process may have malfunctioned. ...”
2. Double jeopardy violation
In Proposition Two of his appellate brief, Selsor contends that the OCCA effectively acquitted him of the death penalty in Selsor I when it modified his sentence to life imprisonment, and that, consequently, his resentencing to death following his second trial violated his rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause.
a) Clearly established federal law
Between 1919 and 1980, the Supreme Court repeatedly held “that the Double Jeopardy Clause imposes no absolute prohibition against the imposition of a harsher sentence at retrial after a defendant has succeeded in having his original conviction set aside.”
Bullington v. Missouri,
In
Bullington,
the Court granted certiorari to consider “whether the reasoning of [these cases] ... applied] under a system,” specifically Missouri’s 1978 capital murder scheme, “where a jury’s sentencing decision is made at a bifurcated proceeding’s second stage at which the prosecution has the burden of proving certain elements beyond a reasonable doubt before the death penalty may be imposed.”
Id.
at 432,
On retrial, the prosecution served notice “that it intended again to seek the death penalty” on the basis of the “same aggravating circumstances” it attempted to prove at the first trial.
Id.
The petitioner “moved to strike the notice, arguing that the Double Jeopardy Clause ... barred the imposition of the penalty of death when the first jury had declined to impose the death sentence.”
Id.
After the trial court informally announced its intention to grant petitioner’s motion to strike, the prosecution sought a writ of prohibition first from an intermediate state appellate court, and then from the Supreme Court of Missouri. The Supreme Court of Missouri “issued a preliminary writ of prohibition” and, “[ajfter argument, ... sustained the [prosecutionj’s position and made the writ absolute.”
Id.
at 437,
The United States Supreme Court, in granting certiorari and addressing the issues raised by petitioner, noted at the outset that “[t]he procedure that resulted in the imposition of the sentence of life imprisonment upon [the] petitioner ... at his first trial ... differed] significantly from those employed in any of the Court’s cases where the Double Jeopardy Clause ha[d] been held inapplicable to sentencing.”
Id.
at 438,
Three years later, in
Arizona v. Rumsey,
The United States Supreme Court subsequently granted the state of Arizona’s petition for writ of certiorari and affirmed the decision of the Arizona Supreme Court.
Id.
at 209,
In 1986, the Court granted certiorari in another Arizona death penalty case to decide “whether the Double Jeopardy Clause bars a further capital sentencing proceeding when, on appeal from a sentence of death, the reviewing court finds the evidence insufficient to support the only aggravating factor on which the sentencing judge relied, but does not find the evidence insufficient to support the death penalty.”
Poland v. Arizona,
On direct appeal, the Arizona Supreme Court concluded that the petitioners’ convictions were “tainted by a jury-room discussion of evidence not admitted at trial,” and accordingly reversed the convictions and ordered a retrial.
Id.
at 150,
On remand, the “petitioners were again convicted of first-degree murder.” Id. At the sentencing hearing, the prosecution alleged the same two aggravators (the “especially heinous, cruel, or depraved” aggravator and the “pecuniary gain” aggravator) it had asserted at the original trial, as well as a third aggravator against one of the petitioners (that this petitioner was previously convicted of a felony involving the use or threat of violence on another person). Id. “The trial judge found all of the aggravating circumstances alleged by the prosecution, and again sentenced both petitioners to death.” Id.
“Petitioners argued on [direct] appeal ... that the Double Jeopardy Clause barred reimposition of the death penalty” because, in then1 view, “the Arizona Supreme Court’s decision on their first appeal that the evidence failed to support the ‘especially heinous, cruel, or depraved’ aggravating circumstance amounted to an ‘acquittal’ of the death penalty.”
Id.
at 151,
The United States Supreme Court subsequently “granted certiorari to consider whether reimposing the death penalties on petitioners violated the Double Jeopardy Clause.”
Id.
Applying the principles outlined in
Bullington
and
Rumsey,
the Court stated that “the relevant inquiry in the cases before [it] [wa]s whether the sentencing judge or the reviewing court ha[d] ‘decid[ed] that the prosecution ha[d] not proved its case’ for the death penalty and hence ha[d] ‘acquitted’ petitioners.”
Id.
at
*1006
154,
The most recent Supreme Court decision relevant to Selsor’s double jeopardy claim is
Sattazahn v. Pennsylvania,
The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari to “consider once again the applicability of the Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Clause in the context of capital-sentencing proceedings.”
Id.
at 103,
b) OCCA’s resolution of the issue
In
Turnbull,
the OCCA sua sponte “anticipated and resolved” the double jeopardy argument that Selsor now asserts.
Selsor II,
[I]f a defendant has not been acquitted of the death penalty and his conviction and sentence are reversed on appeal or collateral proceedings, the slate is wiped clean and a defendant may be subjected to any punishment authorized by law, including death.
Turnbull,
Selsor asked the OCCA to revisit the issue on direct appeal following his retrial. Selsor argued that his “case presented] the unique question of whether an appellate court’s modification of a death sentence on appeal to life imprisonment on the grounds that the statute under which the defendant was sentenced was subsequently declared unconstitutional constitutes an implied acquittal of the death penalty.” State Aplt. Br. at 38. Selsor in turn argued “that under the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence,” specifically Bullington, Rumsey, and Poland, the OCCA’s decision in Selsor I “to modify [his] death sentence to life imprisonment constituted an ‘implied acquittal’ on the merits of the central issue in the proceeding: whether *1008 death was the appropriate punishment for the offense.” Id.
The OCCA summarily rejected the claim, concluding that the argument was “adequately resolved in ...
Turnbull,”
and that “nothing in [Selsor’s new appellate] brief [wa]s convincing or persuasive enough to change th[at] resultf ].”
Selsor II,
c) § 2251(d) analysis
Underlying the OCCA’s rejection of Selsor’s double jeopardy claim was the implicit conclusion that the OCCA had not, in modifying Selsor’s death sentence to life imprisonment in Selsor I, “acquitted” Selsor of the death penalty. As discussed in greater detail below, this conclusion was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law.
On direct appeal from his first trial, Selsor argued that he was sentenced under an unconstitutional death penalty statute (i.e., Oklahoma’s 1973 death penalty statute). The OCCA agreed with Selsor, summarily stating:
In his first assignment of error, defendant asserts the unconstitutionality of Oklahoma’s death penalty statute, 21 O.S. Supp.1973, § 701.3. With this we agree. See Riggs v. Branch (State), Okl. Cr.,554 P.2d 823 (1976).
Selsor I,
For the foregoing reasons, the sentence in Case No. CRF-75-2181, Murder in the First Degree, is hereby MODIFIED to Life imprisonment, and otherwise AFFIRMED....
Id. at 931.
The conclusory nature of the OCCA’s reasoning in
Selsor I,
combined with its citation to
Riggs,
makes it necessary to examine
Riggs
in some detail. As previously noted,
Riggs
was decided in the immediate wake of the Supreme Court’s rejection of post-FVmcm, mandatory death penalty schemes adopted by a number of states, including Oklahoma. The OCCA acknowledged these Supreme Court decisions at the outset of
Riggs
and in turn concluded that its task was “to determine the status of ... those defendants!, like Selsor,] convicted of [First Degree Murder] prior to the effective date of [Oklahoma’s] new [1976] murder statute[].”
Riggs,
Returning to
Selsor I,
it is apparent that the OCCA, by applying its decision in
Riggs
to modify Selsor’s death sentence to a term of life imprisonment, did not, as Selsor now suggests, “acquit” him of the death sentence..
See
Aplt. Br. at 50 (sug
*1009
gesting that
Selsor I
amounted to a determination “ ‘that the prosecution ha[d] not proven its case that the death penalty [wa]s appropriate.’ ” (quoting
Poland,
We thus conclude that Selsor is not entitled to federal habeas relief on the basis of his double jeopardy claim.
S. Ex post facto/due process violation
In Proposition Three of his appellate brief, Selsor contends that at his 1998 retrial he was effectively prosecuted and convicted under Oklahoma’s 1976 murder statute, rather than the 1973 murder statute he was charged with violating, and that, as a result, his first degree murder conviction violates the Ex Post Facto Clause. In support, Selsor notes that in
Turnbull
the OCCA “proclaimed that [he] was now ‘similarly situated to defendants awaiting trial under current murder and death penalty statutes.’ ” Aplt. Br. at 55 (quoting
Turn-bull,
a) Clearly established federal law
Although Selsor frames the alleged error as an ex post facto violation, we believe the alleged error is more appropriately treated as a due process violation. “The Ex Post Facto Clause, by its own terms, does not apply to courts.”
Rogers,
The Supreme Court has “observed ... that limitations on ex post facto judicial decisionmaking are inherent in the notion of due process.”
Rogers,
b) Facts relevant to claim
Selsor was originally charged by information with first degree murder in violation of Oklahoma’s 1973 murder statute. See Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.1 (1973). That statute defined the crime of first degree murder to require proof of “a premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed, or of any other human being,” and commission of the murder during the course of one of several enumerated felony offenses, including armed robbery. Id. Consistent with that statutory definition, the information filed against Selsor alleged that he, “with a premeditated design to effect the death of one CLAYTON CHANDLER,” and “while being then and there engaged in committing the crime of Robbery With Firearms did kill the said CLAYTON CHANDLER by means of a firearm loaded with powder.... ” S. R., Vol. I at 10.
At Selsor’s retrial proceedings, the prosecution relied on the original information. However, the prosecution also filed a Bill of Particulars (something it was not required to do under the 1973 murder statute) alleging the existence of two aggravating circumstances enumerated in Oklahoma’s 1976 murder statute. See Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.12 (1976). Selsor moved to strike the Bill of Particulars. After the state trial court denied Selsor’s motion, Selsor petitioned the OCCA for a writ of mandamus and asserted a number of constitutional objections to the Bill of Particulars.
The OCCA, in its
Turnbull
decision, rejected Selsor’s petition. In rejecting Selsor’s claim that the prosecution’s pursuit of the death penalty against him violated his rights under the Equal Protection Clause, the OCCA stated that Selsor “[wa]s no longer similarly situated to those defendants subject to Oklahoma’s unconstitutional death penalty statute, 21 O.S.Supp. 1973, § 701.3, or to those defendants whose sentences were modified in accordance with
Riggs.” Turnbull,
Following the issuance of Turnbull, Selsor’s case returned to the state trial court, where his retrial proceedings began. At the close of the first-stage evidence, the state trial court read to the jury the language of the information that was filed against Selsor in 1975. S. R., Vol. III at 351-54. That language stated, in pertinent part:
The Defendant in this case, MICHAEL B. SELSOR, stands charged by an Information filed by the State of Oklahoma with the crime of MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE.
The Information alleges that RICHARD EUGENE DODSON and MI *1011 CHAEL B. SELSOR, on or about the 15th day of September, 1975, in Tulsa County, State of Oklahoma, and within the jurisdiction of this Court, did unlawfully, feloniously, and willfully, while acting in concert each with the other, without authority of law, and with a premeditated design to effect the death of one CLAYTON CHANDLER, the said RICHARD EUGENE DODSON and the said MICHAEL B. SELSOR did, while being then and there engaged in committing the crime of Robbery with firearms, did kill the said CLAYTON CHANDLER by means of a firearm loaded with powder and shot, held in the hands of the said defendants and with which they pointed at, fired, and shot the said CLAYTON CHANDLER, said shot causing mortal wounds in the body of the said CLAYTON CHANDLER, from which mortal wounds the said CLAYTON CHANDLER did languish and die;
The Defendant in this case, MICHAEL B. SELSOR, stands charged by an Information filed by the State of Oklahoma with the crime of ROBBERY WITH FIREARMS.
The Information alleges that RICHARD EUGENE DODSON and MICHAEL B. SELSOR, on or about the 15th day of September, 1975, in Tulsa County, State of Oklahoma and within the jurisdiction of this Court, did unlawfully, feloniously and wrongfully, while acting in concert each with the other, rob one CLAYTON CHANDLER, by wrongfully taking and carrying away certain money belonging to U-TOTE-M STORE # 918, and in the possession of said CLAYTON CHANDLER, and in his immediate presence, without his consent and against his will, said robbery being accomplished by said defendants with the use of a certain firearm, to-wit: a .22 caliber pistol, and which they used to menace and threaten the said CLAYTON CHANDLER with harm if he resisted, and by said assault, threats and menace did then and there put the said CLAYTON CHANDLER in fear of immediate and unlawful injury to his person and overcame all his resistance, and while so intimidating him did then and there wrongfully take and obtain from him the money aforesaid, contrary to the form of the Statutes in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State.
Id. at 351-54.
The state trial court then proceeded to provide the jury with specific instructions regarding the crime of first degree murder. In doing so, the state trial court outlined for the jury the essential elements of first degree murder under Oklahoma’s 1976 murder statute, rather than the 1973 murder statute under which Selsor was charged:
The defendant is charged with:
MURDER IN THE FIRST DEGREE of CLAYTON CHANDLER on September 15, 1975, in Tulsa County, Oklahoma.
Id. at 361.
No person may be convicted of murder in the first degree unless the State has proved beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the crime. These elements are:
First, the death of a human;
Second, the death was unlawful;
Third, the death was caused by the defendant;
Fourth, the death was caused with malice aforethought.
Id. at 363.
The state trial court also separately instructed the jury on the elements of the crime of Robbery With Firearms:
The defendant is charged with:
*1012 ROBBERY WITH FIREARMS of CLAYTON CHANDLER on September 15th, 1975, in Tulsa County, Oklahoma.
Id. at 371.
No person may be convicted of ROBBERY WITH FIREARMS unless the State has proved beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the crime. These elements are:
First, wrongful;
Second, taking;
Third, carrying away;
Fourth, personal property;
Fifth, of another;
Sixth, from the person of another;
Seventh, by foree/fear;
Eighth, through use of a loaded firearm.
Id. at 372. After deliberating, the jury found Selsor guilty of both of these crimes, as well as the crime of Shooting With Intent to Kill.
c) OCCA’s rejection of the claim
On direct appeal to the OCCA from his retrial, Selsor argued, in pertinent part, that the state trial court’s retroactive application of the 1976 first degree murder statute and its corresponding penalty provisions violated the prohibition against ex post facto laws. The OCCA rejected that argument, stating as follows:
In Proposition I, Selsor argues that the ex post facto provisions of the federal and state constitutions were violated because he was tried in 1998 pursuant to the First Degree Murder statute (21 O.S.1991, § 701.7(A)) in effect then rather than the statute in effect when he allegedly committed the crime (21 O.S. Supp.1973, § 701). In Proposition V, he asserts that his jury was mis-instructed on the applicable elements of First Degree Murder and that the Information did not adequately notify him of the charges against which he had to defend. We address these propositions together and conclude that they both lack merit.
This Court focuses on the following factors when determining whether there has been an ex post facto violation: i, the elements of the offense; ii, the conditions and quantum of punishment; and iii, the quantity and degree of proof necessary to establish guilt. Although the elements of First Degree Murder and the burden of proof contained in the 1973 statute (under which Selsor was charged) differ from those contained in the current statute, Selsor’s jury was instructed on all the elements of First Degree Murder under the 1973 statute.
While all elements of First Degree Murder under the 1973 statute were not contained within Instruction 9, they were included within the instructions as a whole. Instruction 18 correctly informs the jury on the elements of Robbery with Firearms. The essential elements of that offense are the same under the statute applicable at the time of Selsor’s crime (21 O.S.1971, § 801) and the current statute (21 O.S. 1991 , § 801). Thus, considering Instructions 9 and 18 together indicates that Selsor’s jury was instructed upon and found him guilty of all the elements of First Degree Murder under the applicable 1973 statute. As such, the defendant was not convicted under a lesser burden of proof, and under these circumstances, we do not find a violation of the ex post facto provisions of the State and Federal constitutions.
Selsor II,
d) § 225j.(d) analysis
The OCCA correctly noted that the state trial court’s first degree murder instruction (Instruction 9) failed to include all of the essential elements under the 1973 murder statute. But rather than considering whether this resulted in constitutional error, the OCCA instead looked *1013 to the remainder of the state trial court’s jury instructions and concluded that, because Instruction 18 correctly informed the jury of the elements of Robbery with Firearms, the instructions as a whole encompassed all of the essential elements of the 1973 murder statute. In turn, the OCCA concluded that no constitutional error occurred.
This reasoning is backwards. While the presence of Instruction 18 may be relevant to the question of harmlessness, it does nothing to alter the fact that Selsor was convicted of first degree murder under the elements of the 1976 murder statute. As we have noted, Oklahoma’s 1976 murder statute, in contrast to Oklahoma’s 1973 murder statute, allowed the State to convict a defendant of first degree murder on the basis of malice aforethought alone, without proving that the killing occurred during the commission of one of several statutorily designated felony offenses. And because the 1976 murder statute required fewer elements of proof than the 1973 murder statute, the state trial court’s instructional error clearly had an ex post facto effect on Selsor. Specifically, Selsor was effectively subjected to a law “that
aggravate^]
a
crime,
or ma[d]e[ ] it
greater
than it was, when committed.”
Calder,
Having concluded that the state trial court’s instructions effectively violated Selsor’s due process rights, and that the OCCA’s resolution of this issue was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, two related questions remain: whether the error is subject to harmless error review and, if so, “whether the error was harmless.”
Patton v. Mullin,
In
Marcus,
a criminal defendant was indicted on charges that he engaged in unlawful conduct between January 1999 and October 2001. At trial, the government presented evidence of the defendant’s conduct during that entire period, and the jury convicted him. On appeal, the defendant argued that because the statutes he was convicted of violating did not become law until October 28, 2000, there was an Ex Post Facto Clause violation, and that the violation was a structural error that warranted reversal without a showing of prejudice. The Supreme Court, however, rejected those arguments. The Court first held, citing its decision in
Marks,
that it was “incorrect to classify the error at issue as an Ex Post Facto Clause violation.... ”
Marcus,
In light of
Marcus,
we conclude that the due process violation that resulted
*1014
from the state trial court’s instructional error is amenable to harmless error review. And “[b]ecause the OCCA did not reach th[e] issue, it is reviewed by this court under the harmless error standard announced in
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
We have little trouble concluding that the state trial court’s instructional error did not have a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s guilt phase verdict. To be sure, the instructional error, as we have already discussed, allowed the jury to convict Selsor of first degree murder on the basis of fewer essential elements than were required for conviction under the applicable 1973 murder statute. But the presence of Instruction 18, which correctly outlined for the jury the elements of Robbery with Firearms, combined with the jury’s findings of guilt on the First Degree Murder and Robbery with Firearms charges, meant that the jury found the existence of all but one of the essential elements of the 1973 murder statute. And the only essential element that was not covered by the state trial court’s instructions, i.e., that the murder occurred “while in the commission” of the robbery, was essentially undisputed. In other words, the prosecution’s evidence clearly established, without dispute from Selsor, that Selsor murdered Chandler during the course of the convenience store robbery. In short, then, the instructional error resulted in no “actual prejudice” at the guilt phase of Selsor’s trial. 10
We must still address, however, whether the state trial court’s instructional error had a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s penalty phase verdict. Selsor argues that the error had precisely such an effect because it “led to the jury’s consideration and finding of an invalid aggravating factor....” Aplt. Br. at 69. In support, Selsor notes that the jury at the penalty phase “was instructed that it could find the ‘avoid arrest or prosecution’ aggravated only if it determined that Selsor killed Chandler to avoid arrest for ‘another crime
separate and distinct
from the murder.’ ”
Id.
(quoting S. R., Vol. III at 403; emphasis in original). This instruction, Selsor argues, “was consistent with the OCCA’s decisions holding that the ‘avoid arrest or prosecution’ aggravator required proof of ‘a predicate offense, separate from the murder, for which the defendant seeks to avoid arrest or prosecution,’ ”
id.
at 69-70 (quoting
Scott v. State,
We disagree. To be sure, the OCCA’s decisions provide that establishment of the “avoid arrest or prosecution” aggravator requires proof that “the defendant committed some ‘predicate crime,’ separate from the murder.”
Mitchell v. State,
Ip. Equal protection — imposition of death penalty for pre-1976 murder
In Proposition Four of his appellate brief, Selsor contends that “[b]y resentencing [him] to death, both the State and the OCCA have deprived him of equal protection of the laws, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Aplt. Br. at 72. More specifically, Selsor contends that “[t]he State treated [him] differently from all other defendants convicted of murders occurring between May 17, 1973 and July 24, 1976, by obtaining a death sentence against him alone.” Id.
a) Clearly established federal law applicable to the claim
Selsor points to a number of Supreme Court decisions in support of his equal protection claim. To begin with, Selsor cites to
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
b) The OCCA’s resolution of the claim
Selsor presented his equal protection claim to the OCCA in the context of the mandamus action he filed in 1997 seeking to challenge the state trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss the prosecution’s Bill of Particulars. The OCCA rejected the claim, concluding as follows:
Petitioner’s equal protection claim can be easily and summarily disposed of. Petitioner is simply no longer similarly situated to those defendants subject to Oklahoma’s unconstitutional death penalty statute, 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3, or to those defendants whose sentences were modified in accordance with Riggs. Petitioner’s Judgment and Sentence has been vacated and he stands before this Court, similarly situated to defendants awaiting trial under current murder and death penalty statutes. Dobbert,432 U.S. at 301 ,97 S.Ct. at 2302 ,53 L.Ed.2d at 361 ; see also Cheatham v. State,900 P.2d 414 , 428-30 (Okl.Cr.1995).
Turnbull,
c) § 2254(d) analysis
According to Selsor, the relevant comparison group for purposes of his equal protection claim includes all Oklahoma state defendants convicted of murders occurring between May 17, 1973 and July 24, 1976. In so defining this comparison group, Selsor obviously “regards ... as immaterial to the similarly-situated analysis,”
United States v. Moore,
In our view, however, the OCCA’s more narrow construction of the “similarly situated” test, and its related conclusion that Selsor was not similarly situated to the identified group because of his successful federal habeas action and subsequent retrial, was an entirely reasonable construction of clearly established federal law. Although the Supreme Court, as far as we can determine, has never precisely defined the meaning of “similarly situated,” it has emphasized that the comparative group identified by the plaintiff/petitioner must be “similarly situated in relevant respects.”
Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of Ala. v. Garrett,
*1017 5. Vindictive prosecution — due process violation
In Proposition Five of his appellate brief, Selsor contends that the State violated his due process rights when, following his successful federal habeas action, it actively sought the death penalty against him. Selsor contends that the State’s action in this regard raises an “unrebuttable presumption” of vindictive prosecution. Aplt. Br. at 77.
a) Clearly established federal law applicable to the claim
In support, Selsor points to
Blackledge v. Perry,
The general principle relied on by Selsor appears to have first originated in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
In
Blackledge,
the Court addressed the related question of whether the Constitution places limitations on the ability of a prosecutor, following a defendant’s successful appeal or habeas action, to file more serious charges against the defendant, i.e., charges that carry a more severe sentence than was originally imposed on the defendant after the first trial. In addressing this question, the Court examined
*1018
Pearce
and two of its own post-Pearce decisions and concluded that “[t]he lesson that emerge[d] from [them] [wa]s that the Due Process Clause is not offended by all possibilities of increased punishment upon retrial after appeal, but only by those that pose a realistic likelihood of ‘vindictiveness.”’
Blackledge,
In 1984, the Court, prompted by a “conflict among the Circuits,” revisited “the meaning of [its] holding in
Pearce.” Wasman v. United States,
To prevent actual vindictiveness from entering into a decision and allay any fear on the part of a defendant that an increased sentence is in fact the product of vindictiveness, the Court fashioned what in essence is a “prophylactic rule,” see Colten v. Kentucky,407 U.S. 104 , 116,92 S.Ct. 1953 , 1960,32 L.Ed.2d 584 (1972), that “whenever a judge imposes a more severe sentence upon a defendant after a new trial, the reasons for his doing so must affirmatively appear.”395 U.S., at 726 ,89 S.Ct., at 2081 . This rule has been read to “[apply] a presumption of vindictiveness, which may be overcome only by objective information in the record justifying the increased sentence.” United States v. Goodwin,457 U.S. 368 , 374,102 S.Ct. 2485 , 2489,73 L.Ed.2d 74 (1982). The rationale for requiring that “the factual data upon which the increased sentence is based” be made part of the record, of course, is that the “constitutional legitimacy,” of the enhanced sentence may thereby be readily assessed on appeal. Ibid.
Id.
at 564-65,
Although there was no affirmative evidence tendered that the prosecutor brought the [greater] felony charge in bad faith, we agreed that, because the record was devoid of any explanation for the new indictment, relief should be granted. Consistent with Pearce, however, we explicitly observed that a different disposition would have been called for had the State advanced a legitimate nonvindictive justification for the greater charge. This acknowledgment, of course, was no more than a reaffirmation that Pearce established a rebuttable presumption of vindictiveness, not an absolute prohibition on enhancement of sentence.
Id.
at 566,
In sum, where the presumption applies, the sentencing authority or the prosecutor must rebut the presumption that an increased sentence or charge resulted from vindictiveness; where the presumption does not apply, the defendant must affirmatively prove actual vindictiveness.
*1019
Id.
at 569,
b) The OCCA’s resolution of the claim
Selsor presented this claim to the OCCA in 1997 when, following the state trial court’s denial of his motion to strike the Bill of Particulars filed by the prosecution, he petitioned the OCCA for a writ of mandamus. In his filing with the OCCA, Selsor argued, in pertinent part, that in light of Riggs, “there was no death penalty statute in effect in Oklahoma in 1975, when [he] [wa]s alleged to have committed the crime of murder in the first degree,” but that he was nevertheless “facing the death penalty, a greater punishment than that in place at the time of the alleged commission of the crime, because his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated” and ultimately vindicated in a federal habeas proceeding. App. to Assume Original Jurisdiction and Pet. for Writ of Prohibition and/or Mandamus at 6, 8-9. Exposing him to such possible punishment, Selsor argued, “fl[ew] in the face of due process.” Id. at 9. Notably, Selsor did not cite to Pearce or Blackledge, nor did he argue that the prosecution acted vindictively in filing the Bill of Particulars against him. 12
In addressing Selsor’s arguments, the OCCA first held that, “[c]ontrary to [Selsor]’s arguments, there was a death penalty statute in effect in 1975, and on the date his crime was committed, in the form of 21 O.S. Supp.1973, § 701.3.”
Turnbull,
Contrary to this Court’s analysis in Riggs, the newly enacted death penalty statutes did not change the burden of proof to the detriment of Riggs and other defendants, as compared to the burden of proof under Section 701.3. Under Section 701.3, the only available sentence was death. Under newly enacted death penalty statutes, the sentencing options increased in favor of a defendant to include not only death but also the possibility of life imprisonment, and now life without parole. 21 O.S. Supp.1976, §§ 701.9 and 701.10;21 O.S. 1991 , § 701.9, and Supp.1996, § 701.10. Under Section 701.3, the State was only required to prove the elements of the crime of First Degree Murder. Once those elements were proven, the State had no further burden of proof because the death penalty was required. Under newly enacted death penalty statutes, the State not only must prove the same elements of the crime of First Degree Murder, but also must prove aggravating circumstances before the death penalty can be imposed. Id. Therefore, newly enacted death penalty statutes (1) did not increase the elements of the offense of First Degree Murder, (2) did not increase but in fact decreased the conditions and quantum of punishment, and (3) did not decrease but in fact increased the quantity and degree of proof necessary to establish guilt, and are not ex post facto, [citations omitted] The ex post facto analysis and the holdings thereunder in Riggs v. Branch,554 P.2d 823 (Okl.Cr.1976) are hereby overturned.
Id. at 582-83. Later in its opinion, the OCCA rejected Selsor’s due process argument:
*1020 Finally, we reject Petitioner’s claim that to subject him to the death penalty, because his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated, flies in the face of due process. Petitioner has not supported this claim with citation to any authority. Rule 3.5(C)(4), Rules[ of the Court of Criminal Appeals]. Moreover, if a defendant has not been acquitted of the death penalty and his conviction and sentence are reversed on appeal or collateral proceedings, the slate is wiped clean and a defendant may be subjected to any punishment authorized by law, including death. Salazar v. State,919 P.2d 1120 , 1127 (Okl.Cr.1996). Finally, subjecting Petitioner to the death penalty does not appear to be punishment for Petitioner’s successful attack on his Judgment and Sentence, but merely an application of the correct law, and/or a correction of the applicable law. See Stafford v. State,800 P.2d 738 , 740 (Okl.Cr.1990).
Id.
at 583. Both the
Salazar
and
Stafford
decisions cited by the OCCA expressly cited to
Pearce
and its progeny.
Salazar,
c) § 2251(d) analysis
Selsor contends the OCCA’s decision “directly conflicts with” Blackledge and the Supreme Court’s “later decisions construing that case.” Aplt. Br. at 80. According to Selsor, “[t]he OCCA ruled contrary to this clearly established law, because in resting its decision on the perceived absence of evidence of retaliation, it failed to recognize that vindictiveness must be presumed, and that the State bore the burden of rebutting that presumption.” Id.
It is apparent from its decision that the OCCA did not expressly address the question of whether Selsor was, under
Pearce
and its progeny, entitled to a presumption of vindictiveness, or whether Selsor was instead required to prove actual vindictiveness on the part of the prosecution. As the Supreme Court recently emphasized, however, it is unnecessary that a state court “explain[] [its] reasoning.”
Harrington v. Richter,
— U.S.-,
Neither of these implicit conclusions reached by the OCCA are contrary to, or an unreasonable application of,
Pearce
or its progeny. Turning first to the question of whether Selsor was entitled to a presumption of vindictiveness, the relevant comparison, according to the Supreme Court, is between the “original sentence” and the “new” or newly-sought sentence.
Pearce,
That leaves only the OCCA’s implicit conclusion that Selsor failed to prove actual vindictiveness on the part of the prosecution in filing the Bill of Particulars and seeking the death penalty on retrial. In this federal habeas action, Selsor asserts a host of arguments in an attempt to prove actual vindictiveness: the fact that in his first direct appeal “the State asked the OCCA to modify [his] sentence to life,” Aplt. Br. at 82; “[t]he extraordinary lengths to which the State went in seeking the death penalty following [his] habeas victory,” including “its aggressive and surprising campaign to overrule Riggs,” id. at 83; “[t]he State’s pursuit of an excessive sentence on the shooting with intent to kill conviction,” i.e., “ask[ing] the jury for a sentence 250 times greater than it had requested at the first trial,” id. at 84; and the lack “of any explanation by the State for its decision to seek the death penalty,” id. at 86. The problem, however, is that Selsor made no mention of any of these factors (or of Pearce or its progeny) when he presented his due process claim to the OCCA. Thus, the OCCA’s implicit conclusion that Selsor failed to carry his burden of presenting sufficient evidence to justify a remand to the state trial court for determination of the actual vindictiveness issue, or, alternatively, its implicit finding of no actual vindictiveness, was entirely reasonable. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) and (2).
6. Prosecutorial misconduct
In Proposition Six of his appellate brief, Selsor contends that the penalty-phase of his trial was rendered “fundamentally unfair” by prosecutorial misconduct. Aplt. Br. at 87. Specifically, Selsor contends that the prosecution, “[b]oth by suggesting, absent a shred of evidentiary support, that [his] mitigation witnesses were testifying untruthfully out of fear of reprisals, and by comparing the value of [his] life in prison to the victim’s death, ... created a grave risk that the jury’s death verdict was based on passion and prejudice, rather than a reasoned review of the evidence.” Id.
a) Relevant background facts
Selsor’s penalty-phase mitigation evidence was comprised of testimony from five non-familial witnesses. The first of those, LaDonna Penny, a data entry clerk for the Tulsa County Sheriffs Department, testified that Selsor received no write-ups during the nineteen months he was confined in the Tulsa County Jail. The remaining four witnesses, Kenneth Williamson, Bervin Knott, Fred Cook, and Linda Morgan, were either employed by, or retired from employment with, the Oklahoma Department of Corrections (ODC) and had interacted with Selsor during his imprisonment following his original conviction. All four of these witnesses testified that, despite supporting the death penalty generally, they disagreed with the prosecution’s recommended sentence of death for Selsor.
In cross-examining these latter four witnesses, the prosecution focused on certain episodes of misconduct committed by Selsor during his period of confinement, in particular his attempted escape in the early 1980’s. The prosecution also elicited a concession from one of the witnesses, Knott, that he would likely again be assigned to supervise Selsor if Selsor was sentenced to life in prison. Knott, however, expressly disagreed with the prosecution’s suggestion on cross-examination that it could potentially place him in danger to say negative things about Selsor; indeed, Knott testified that he was not concerned *1022 about the ramifications of his testimony. Nevertheless, during its final second-stage closing argument, the prosecution argued that Knott and the other ODC witnesses were scared to say anything negative about Selsor:
And let’s talk about the State employees, the [ODC] personnel. Y would ask each and every one of you to think about their testimony in context of the evidence in this case. I would submit to you, liken it to your neighbors that you live next door to. Think about if you were asked to come in here and sit in judgment of your neighbors, and all you knew about your neighbors and whether they should receive the death penalty or not is whether they mow their yard, took out their trash, dressed okay, painted their house, and said good morning appropriately. Would you be biased? Would you know all the facts? Would you know why someone wants your neighbor killed? And think about this, ladies and gentlemen, if they’re your neighbors, where are they gonna go if they don’t receive a sentence of death? They’re gonna come right back and they’re gonna live right next door to you. Do you think those people don’t know that they’re rubbing elbows with this Defendant every day?
Do they know anything about Anne Chandler [ (the victim’s wife) ] and what she’s been through for the last 23 years? Do they know anything about his daughter Debbie? Do they know anything about Ina Morris? No. You’ve heard their testimony. They really don’t know. One of them read it in the paper.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a jury system where you all get to come in here and hear both sides. Remember, one of their witnesses was very candid. No, it’s not fair to the victims to sit and make a decision if I don’t know both sides. Total agreement with that. You’ve got to know both sides.
But you’ve got individuals who only knew this Defendant in a controlled prison environment for a couple of years. Some of those witnesses, are they biased? Do they have to survive in that system? You bet they do. Their word is their bond. They’ve worked in the same system. They’ve worked next to long-term offenders. How is it gonna go when they get back to the walls and all those long-term offenders hear that someone like [Selsor’s] last witness, Ms. Morgan, came in here and starts saying, well, this Defendant deserves to die? How do you think that’s gonna sit well with the other long-term offenders, the other killers that she works with? Do you think that could put her in jeopardy? Is it fair to those people in that position, knowing what they knew about this case? Was that fair?
Tr., Vol. V at 1200-02.
The prosecution also, during its final second-stage closing argument, asked the jury to consider what Selsor’s life would be like if sentenced to life imprisonment, and, in doing so, contrasted that with the plight of Selsor’s victims:
Ladies and gentlemen, I submit to you, based on the evidence you’ve heard in this case, you’ve got to decide the punishment in this case. Let’s think about the punishment. If you vote for a verdict other than death, what is going to be Mike Selsor’s punishment? What is he going to have? He’s going to have freedom, freedom to do what he wants.
What have you heard about over the last 23 years? This will be your punishment. He [ (Selsor) ] can do what he wants. He can smoke dope, he can hang out with his friends, he can read books, watch TV, write letters, participate in rodeos, workout, play ball, work in the garden. He doesn’t have to have a job. You’ve heard he doesn’t even hold a job.
*1023 He sits around and does what he wants. And all of his needs are met: clothing, food, and shelter. Is that too good for what he’s done? Is that the appropriate punishment in this case? Because you do have to live with yourselves and you do have to know what you vote for is what’s right.
If you believe, hey, Mike [Selsor], here you go. There you go, that’s what you get for what you’ve done, and you go back there and you vote for life without parole. If you feel that is the appropriate punishment that Mike Selsor deserves, then I submit to you, you go back there with conscience, you vote for it.
But what has he done? What has been his reign of terror? Clayton Chandler lost his life, brutally, savagely, without mercy, without pity, without hesitation, without any concern for human life. He took Clayton Chandler from his family. His little girl did not get to see daddy come home that night. When she went into the door to put her arms around dad, there was no dad. He took a husband. Her dreams were in that man. Her dreams. He took the father, the pillar of this society. This was a good man. He didn’t do anything to deserve to die like a dog in that store. The nightmare, he created a nightmare. You bet he did. They [ (the government’s second-stage witnesses) ] told you about it, and they lived it every single day while he’s doing this.
Physical suffering. Clayton suffered. He suffered. You bet he did. The surviving family, her 29-year mate, the person she loved, her best friend, her provider, her security, her hero, he’s gone. He lays right over there.
Ina Morris. It was a tragedy. That night was a tragedy. She was on her knees, asking God to forgive her for her sins. She was shot repeatedly because he [ (Selsor) ] made a blood pact with his partner in crime to leave no witnesses. She has suffered, she has suffered. She lost everything. She lost her innocence, she lost her trust. She couldn’t even function, ladies and gentlemen. It took years and years of counseling for, what did it be [sic]? Go outside. And he deserves this.
Id. at 1202-04.
b) Clearly established federal law applicable to the claim
Selsor points to a trio of Supreme Court cases in support of his claim:
Viereck v. United States,
c) The OCCA’s resolution of the claim,
Selsor first presented his claim to the OCCA on direct appeal from his 1998 retrial, arguing, in pertinent part, that the prosecutor’s second-stage arguments deprived him of his right to a fair sentencing hearing. In doing so, however, Selsor failed to cite to .any of the three Supreme Court cases he now relies on.
In addressing Selsor’s arguments, the OCCA noted at the outset that Selsor’s counsel failed to object to the purported misconduct at trial, thereby “waiving all but plain error.”
Selsor II,
Selsor ... contends that the prosecutor demeaned his mitigation evidence by arguing facts outside the record. The prosecutor’s arguments were fair challenges to Selsor’s mitigating evidence. Moreover, the comments were not based upon facts outside the record but were reasonable inferences and arguments from the facts adduced at trial. There was no error.
Selsor argues that the prosecutor improperly compared the advantages of Selsor’s life in prison to the plight of the dead victim. These comments by the prosecutor are not error. Instead, they fairly commented on Selsor’s mitigation evidence and merely asked the jury to consider what Selsor’s life was like and would be like in prison based upon the evidence at trial in determining the appropriate punishment. This is proper argument.
Id. (internal paragraph numbers omitted).
d) § 2251(d) analysis
“[W]hen a state court applies plain error review in disposing of a federal claim, the decision is on the merits to the extent that the state court finds the claim lacks merit under federal law.”
Douglas v. Workman,
We conclude, contrary to Selsor’s arguments on appeal, that the OCCA’s decision was consistent with
Viereck, Gardner,
and
Darden.
To begin with, the challenged remarks by the prosecutor concerning the testimony of the ODC employees were not “wholly irrelevant to any facts or issues in the case,”
Viereck,
As for the prosecutor’s comparison of the plight of the victims and their families with the life Selsor would lead if sentenced to a term of imprisonment, the OCCA reasonably concluded that was a valid comment on the evidence presented during the second-stage proceedings. In cross-examining each of Selsor’s ODC witnesses, the prosecutor elicited testimony indicating that Selsor, like other inmates serving terms of imprisonment, could choose whether or not to work, and could participate (and had participated) in various activities, including prison rodeos and gardening. The prosecutor in turn emphasized this testimony during closing arguments to highlight for the jury the consequences of a decision to sentence Selsor to life imprisonment rather than death. To be sure, the prosecutor’s related discussion of the plight of the victims and their families may have “arouse[d] [the jury’s] passion,”
Viereck,
In sum, Selsor is not entitled to federal habeas relief on the basis of his prosecutorial misconduct claim.
7. Impermissible testimony by victim’s family
In his seventh, and final, proposition of error, Selsor contends that the trial court’s admission, during the penalty-phase, of testimony from Clayton Chandler’s widow and daughter “that they agreed with the prosecution’s recommendation of death for Selsor,” Aplt. Br. at 103-04, “served only to inflame the jury’s passion and prejudice, and therefore violated the Eighth Amendment,” id. at 104.
a) Relevant background facts
The prosecution, as part of its second-stage evidence, presented testimony from Debbie Huggins, Chandler’s daughter, and Anne Chandler, Chandler’s widow. Both of these witnesses were allowed to read into the record written victim impact statements they had prepared prior to trial. As part of her victim impact statement, Huggins stated, “I am in agreement with the District Attorney’s Office regarding the recommendation of this case.” Tr., Vol. V at 1042. Similarly, Anne Chandler stated, in reading her victim impact statement, “I agree with the District Attorney’s recommendations on this case.” Id. at 1045. Selsor’s counsel timely objected to both statements, but was overruled by the state trial court.
b) Clearly established federal law applicable to the claim
Selsor, citing
Payne v. Tennessee,
“This circuit and several other circuits have [since] expressly recognized that the portion of
Booth
prohibiting family members of a victim from stating ‘characterizations and opinions about the crime, the defendant, and the appropriate sentence’ during the penalty phase of a capital trial survived the holding in
Payne
and remains valid.”
Welch v. Sirmons,
c) Selsor’s failure to present claim to the OCCA
It is uncontroverted that Selsor never presented this claim to the OCCA. Selsor argues, however, that exhaustion of the claim was futile because the OCCA has consistently upheld admission of similar evidence. Indeed, Selsor asserts, “[t]he OCCA upheld admission of a victim’s death recommendation the same day it decided [his] appeal.” Aplt. Br. at 104 (citing
Welch v. State,
A state prisoner generally may not raise a claim for federal habeas corpus relief unless he “has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A). To exhaust a claim, a state prisoner must pursue it through “one complete round of the State’s established appellate review process,” giving the state courts a “full and fair opportunity” to correct alleged constitutional errors.
O’Sullivan v. Boerckel,
In the instant case, we conclude, out of an abundance of caution, that Selsor has sufficiently established that exhaustion of his claim with the OCCA would have been futile. In particular, Selsor correctly notes that the OCCA, both at the time it decided his direct appeal and for several years thereafter, consistently approved of the admission during second-stage capital proceedings of a “victim’s opinion of [the] recommended sentence.”
Welch,
d) The merits of the claim
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Payne
and our own
post-Payne
cases clearly establish that it is a violation of the Eighth
*1027
Amendment to allow a victim or a victim’s family member to comment, during second-stage proceedings, on the appropriate sentence for a capital defendant.
See Welch v. Workman,
The question then becomes whether “the prejudicial impact of [this] constitutional error” rises to the “substantial and injurious effect standard set forth in”
Brecht. Fry v. Pliler,
We conclude, after “[assessing the improper parts of the victim impact evidence in the context of other evidence presented,” that the improper evidence “did not have an actual impact on [Selsor’s] sentence.” Welch,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Both defendants were represented, over their respective objections, by the same two lawyers from the Tulsa County public defender’s office. As discussed below, that joint representation was ultimately the basis for this court's 1996 decision to grant a writ of habeas corpus in Selsor’s favor.
. Dodson was acquitted of first degree murder, but convicted of the other two charges.
. The records from this proceeding were not included in the record before us, and Selsor’s own brief, when referring to these proceedings, contains no citations to the record. Thus, it is unclear precisely what claim or claims Selsor asserted in his second application for state post-conviction relief.
. It is significant to note that although the Florida legislature in late 1972 altered the state's procedural scheme for imposition of the death penalty, it did not substantially alter the pre-existing definition of murder in the first degree. See Fla. Stat. § 782.04 (2010), Amendment Notes (explaining historical changes to statute).
. Selsor also quotes and cites the Supreme Court’s decision in
Rogers v. Tennessee,
. On March 1, 2011, Selsor filed a notice of supplemental authority pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 28(j) identifying three additional authorities in support of his due process claim:
NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson,
. The OCCA's decision in
Turnbull
was erroneous in one key respect: the OCCA was mistaken in concluding that “the newly enacted death penalty statutes did not change the burden of proof to the detriment of Riggs and other defendants, as compared to the burden of proof under Section 701.3.”
. There is no indication that the Oklahoma legislature intended for the 1976 murder statute to be applied retroactively to criminal defendants, such as Selsor, who committed their crimes prior to its enactment, and respondents do not argue otherwise.
. Although Selsor now suggests that these statements amounted to a factual determination by the OCCA that he was being tried under Oklahoma’s 1976 murder statute, we disagree. In our view, the OCCA was simply explaining that Selsor was "similarly situated” to defendants being tried under the 1976 murder statute in that he was awaiting retrial, with no existing conviction or sentence in place.
. Selsor does not argue that the state trial court’s instructional error resulted in actual prejudice at the guilt phase of his trial. Instead, he argues that “the ex post facto violation rendered] [his] conviction legally void....’’ Aplt. Br. at 68. As we have explained, however, the state trial court's error did not result in an ex post facto violation, but rather a due process violation that is amenable to harmless error review.
. In 1989, the Court refined
Pearce
slightly, ''hold[ing] that no presumption of vindictiveness arises when the first sentence was based upon a guilty plea, and the second sentence follows a trial.”
Alabama v. Smith,
. Despite Selsor's failings, we conclude that the claim he asserted before the OCCA was “the substantial equivalent” of the claim he now asserts in this federal habeas proceeding,
Picard
v.
Connor,
. These included statements such as, "He [ (the defendant) ] shouldn’t be out of his cell
*1024
unless he has a leash on him and a prison guard at the other end of that leash,” and “I wish that I could see him [ (the defendant) ] sitting here with no face, blown away by a shotgun.”
. Selsor also cites to
Woodson v. North Carolina,
