IT IS ORDERED thаt petitioner-appellant is GRANTED leave to proceed in for-ma pauperis.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that petitioner-appellant’s application for certificate of probable cause is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that petitioner-appellant’s application for stay of execution pending appeal is DENIED.
We recite the prior history of this case, which is the third federal habeas petition of petitioner-appellant Sterling R. Rault, Sr. (Rault). Rault was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death in Louisiana courts in October 1982. On direct appeal, the Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed his conviction and sentence.
State v. Rault,
*302 On July 20, 1987, Rault’s execution date was fixed for July 24, 1987. On July 22, 1987, in response to writs sought by Rault, the Louisiana Supreme Court ordered that Rаult’s execution date be refixed for a date between thirty and forty-five days following the order so fixing the date of execution. See LSA-R.S. 15:567. Pursuant to this order, the Louisiana trial court, on July 23, 1987, fixed Rault’s execution date for August 24, 1987 (i.e., any time between 11:59 p.m. August 23, 1987 and 3:00 a.m. August 24, 1987). Thereafter, Rault again unsuccessfully sought post-conviction relief in the Louisiana trial court and habeas corpus in the Louisiana Supreme Court. Rault then, on August 12, 1987, brought this, his third petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. That court, by orders entered August 13, 1987, denied relief, denied stay of execution, and denied certificate for probable cause. 28 U.S.C. § 2253. Rault seeks to appeal to this Court, and requests us to issue a stay of execution and a certificate of probable cause. We decline this relief.
In passing on Rault’s application for certificate of probable cause, we are guided by the standard “that a certificate of probable cause requires petitioner to make a ‘substantial showing of the denial of [a] federal right.’ ”
Barefoot v. Estelle,
In his trial and on his direct appeal, Rault, of course, wаs represented by counsel, and he has also been represented by counsel in all of his subsequent state and federal habeas corpus and post-conviction relief applications, and is so represented in the present proceedings before this Court, as he was in the court below. Rault’s present counsel has represented him in all his federal habeas proceedings and in all his Louisiana post-conviction and habeas proceedings. This same counsel also represented him on direct appeal, though he was represented by different counsel at and before trial.
In this his third federal habeas applicаtion, Rault alleges three grounds for relief, described in his supporting memorandum of law filed in the district court below and in his application to this Court for certificate of probable cause, as follows:
“I. ... [T]he denial of petitioner’s right to testify under both hypnosis and in a conscious state, and the denial of the right to present tapes of the hypnotic sessions deprived the petitioner of his Sixth Amendment right to testify, his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense, and his Louisiana Constitutional rights to the same.
“II. ... [T]he denial of petitioner’s right to testify under both hypnosis and in a conscious state, and the denial of the right to present tapes of the hypnotic sessions deprived thе petitioner of his Eighth Amendment right to have the jury consider all relevant mitigating circumstances.
“HI. ... [T]he use of an element of the crime (La.R.S. 14:30(1)) as the only aggravating circumstance truly supported by the evidence renders the death penalty in this case an arbitrary and capricious act violative of Eighth Amendment guarantees.”
Claims I and II
We consider the first two claims together as they relate to the same subject matter. 1
*303
As detailed in the opinion of the Louisiana Supreme Court on Rault’s direct appeal and in our prior opinion on Rault’s first federal habeas application, at his trial Rault’s counsel “filed a motion to allow Rault to give testimony undеr hypnosis by Dr. Steck as
demonstrative evidence
of his mental condition and as a predicate for evaluating the basis of Dr. Steck’s testimony” that Rault was, in effect, insane, at the time of the offense.
Rault relies on the recent decision of the Supreme Court in
Rock v. Arkansas,
— U.S. -,
Moreover, in
Rock,
the defendant was unable to recall the events at issue, without the aid of hypnosis. Here, by contrast, Rault has consistently claimed that he was able to recall the events at issue, and that he had described them in detail to his counsel before trial.
Rault,
The exclusion of the tapes and the refusal to allow, as demonstrative evidence, Rault’s testimony
while
hypnotized did not deprive Rault of any right under the United States Constitution, as to either the guilt or innocence phase of the trial or the sentencing phase, and, further, such rulings were not, as the district court below expressly found, prejudicial to Rault at either phase.
Cf. Glass v. Butler,
We also observe that Rault’s claim in this regard is inconsistent with his sworn testimony at the March 1985 state habeas proceeding, which likеwise formed the basis for his initial federal habeas claims. At that March 1985 hearing, Rault, far from claiming he could not remember what happened on the evening in question, testified in great detail as to those events, most of his testimony in this respect occupying pages 173 to 213 of the transcript of that hearing. In this testimony, Rault essentially repeated (albeit with a few relatively minor variations) the “Good Samaritan” story, the second, unhypnotized story which he had told his lawyers prior to his trial. He testified at the March 1985 state habeas hearing that the detailed description of the events he gave on that occasion was the truth and was what he had told his lawyers prior to trial, and was what had come to be called the “Good Samaritan” story. Rault has consistently maintained under oath, and sought post-conviction relief from the Louisiana, courts and the federal courts, on the basis that he did (before trial, at trial, and subsequent to trial) remember what happened throughout the day and evening of the offense and his subsequent apprehension and was able to relate it, all without any hypnosis. He should not now, at the last moment and after two unsuccessful federal habeas petitions, be able to repudiate these solemn representations. We further point out in this connection that Rault’s initial federal habeas was not denied on the theory that Rault could not remember what happened on the evening in question. Indeed, it has never been determined that Rault could not remembеr the events at issue. Rather, Rault’s first federal habeas was denied because, whether or not he could recall what happened during the offense, the state post-conviction court’s implied fact-findings, that Rault consented to his counsel’s strategy of using what Rault had said to Dr. Steck and Bachemin while hypnotized as evidence of his insanity when the offense was committed, and that he was informed of his right to testify and of counsel’s willingness to put him on the stand if he wished but that he did not desire to testify, were supported by more than adequate evidence, and because his counsel’s choice of strategy in those circumstances was well within the range of reasonable professional judgment and in any event did not prejudice Rault.
Moreover, we believe that the presentation of these claims in this, Rault’s third federal habeas, when they were not presented in either of the two earlier federal habeas petitions, constitutes an abuse of the writ under Rule 9(b) following 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Certainly these claims were known earlier, as they were presented to the Louisiana Supreme Court both on writs at the beginning of trial and on direct appeal. Rault in essence offers two excuses for not presenting the claims earlier. The first is that the
Rock
decision came down subsequent to his last federal habeas. While this is true, it is meaningless because
Rock
does not support the claims. Rault’s second excuse is that the claims could not be presented until the courts had rejected his initial post-conviction claims that he was wrongfully denied the right to choose his own defense and testify and present the “Good Samaritan” story. There are at least two answers to this. First, we do not consider that Rule 9(b) authorizes the delib
*305
erate withholding of claims, even if they are to some extent inconsistent. In the second place, Rault’s excuse in this respect affords no reason for omitting the present claims from Rault’s second federal habeas, which was filed some three months after the United States Supreme Court deniеd
certiorari
respecting Rault’s first federal habeas application. Accordingly, when Rault filed his second federal habeas, the claims which he asserts were inconsistent with those now advanced had already all been finally rejected, and no constraints in that regard prevented him from raising his present first two claims in his second federal habeas. We recognize that the court below did not expressly address Rule 9(b), nor did the State of Louisiana do so prior to the decision below, since the petition below was dismissed before the state had the opportunity to answer. However, in an answer filed by the state the day after the decision below, the statе raised,
inter alia,
the defense of abuse of the writ.
2
Further, Rault below and before this Court had an opportunity to, and did, advance his asserted justifications for not previously raising these claims. We conclude that as a matter of law there is no conceivable justification for the total omission of these claims from Rault’s prior federal habeas petitions, particularly his second, and that as a matter of law he has abused the writ. We further find as a matter of law that the interests of justice do not require alleviation of the bar of Rule 9(b).
See Berry v. Phelps,
In sum, considered on their merits, Rault’s first two claims are wholly invalid, and present on their merits no basis whatever on which to issue a certificate of probablе cause or a stay of execution. Further, the two claims are clearly barred as an abuse of the writ under Rule 9(b), and the interests of justice do not dictate an alleviation of that bar, and for this separate reason also no certificate of probable cause or stay of execution are appropriate respecting either of these claims.
Claim III
In his third claim, Rault complains of the use as a statutory aggravating circumstance for sentencing purposes of an element of the crime of which he was convicted at the guilt or innocence stage. In this regard, he seeks to raise one of the issues on which the United States Supreme Court recently granted
certiorari
in
Lowenfield v. Phelps,
Rault was convicted of first degree murder. At the time of the offense, LSA-R.S. 14:30 provided as follows:
“First degree murder is the killing of a human being:
“(1) When the offender has specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm and is engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated escape, aggravated arson, aggravated rape, aggravated burglary, armed robbery, or simple robbery; ....”
The indictment alleged that Rault “committed first degree murder of one Jane Ellen Francioni, while in the perpetration of an aggravated rape and aggravated kidnapping.” At the guilt or innocencе stage, the jury found Rault guilty as charged. Article 905.4, LSA-C.Cr.P., provided at the time in question with respect to statutory aggravating circumstances for sentencing purposes, in pertinent part, as follows:
“The following shall be considered aggravating circumstances:
“(a) the offender was engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated burglary, aggravated arson, aggravated escape, armed robbery, or simple robbery;
*306 “(g) the offense was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel manner; or
“(h) the victim was a witness in a prosecution agаinst the defendant, gave material assistance to the state in any investigation or prosecution of the defendant, or was an eye witness to a crime alleged to have been committed by the defendant or possessed other material evidence against the defendant.”
At the sentencing stage, the jury recommended the death sentence and found the following aggravating circumstances:
1. “The offender was engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of' aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping.”
2. “The offense was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel manner.”
3. “The viсtim was an eye witness to a crime alleged to have been committed by the defendant or possessed other material evidence against the defendant.”
On direct appeal, the Louisiana Supreme Court held that there was sufficient evidence that Rault was engaged both in aggravated rape and in aggravated kidnapping when he murdered Jane Francioni.
State v. Rault,
“The evidence supports the jury’s finding that the crime was committed in an especially cruel, atrocious and heinous manner. Two gunshot wounds were inflicted, one of which would have caused a slow, painful death in a matter of hours, while the other would have caused death within five to ten minutes. It is apparent that Ms. Francioni had beеn shot by the bullet which would have caused a slow painful death at the time she was observed by the U.N.O. students. During a lengthy time interval, she was taken to a remote area, raped, and shot again. She was dragged around by a belt placed about her neck. Obviously, she suffered intense mental and physical pain during the ordeal. Although her throat was cut and her body set afire after she died, she had already undergone severe trauma. The factual circumstances indicate torture and the pitiless infliction of unnecessary pain.” Id.
The Louisiana Supreme Court did not pass on the validity of the third aggravating circumstance found, relating to the victim’s being an eye witness оf a crime committed by the defendant. Id.
Rault contends that the first aggravating circumstance found, that he was engaged in the perpetration of aggravated rape and aggravated kidnapping, duplicates the element of first degree murder, that the murder was committed in the course of perpetrating aggravated rape and aggravated kidnapping. He contends that this constitutes impermissible double counting for purposes of authorizing capital punishment. Rault relies in this regard on
Collins v. Lockhart,
We reject this contention and find it to be without merit and not to warrant issuance of a certificate оf probable cause or stay of execution, for the following reasons.
In the first place, we have consistently rejected the
Collins
theory, and have continued to do so after the grant of
certiorari
in
Lowenfield. See Wingo v. Blackburn,
In the second place, we observe that there is not an exact duplication between the elements of first degree murder relevant to this case and the first statutory aggravating circumstance found by the jury. The reason for this is that in order to convict for first degree murder, it was not necessary to show that Rault was engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of both aggravated rape and aggravated kidnapping; rather, it sufficed to show that he was engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of either of those two offenses. While this was alsо true with respect to the statutorily defined first aggravating circumstance, nevertheless, the jury in regard to it found that he was engaged in the perpetration of both aggravated rape and aggravated kidnapping, and the Louisiana Supreme Court found that the evidence sustained this finding as to both those offenses. Consequently, the jury’s finding respecting the first statutory aggravating circumstance embraced statutory findings beyond those necessary for Rault’s conviction of first degree murder. Otherwise stated, to convict Rault of first degree murder it was necessary to find that he was then engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of only one other named serious felony; the jury found, as an aggravating circumstance, that he was then engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of two other named serious felonies. 3
*308
In the third place, even if the first aggravating circumstance found by the jury merely duplicated the elements of the offense, and even if it was hence itself invalid as a statutory aggravating circumstance, nevertheless, the jury also found two other statutory aggravating circumstances, one of which two was sustained by the Louisiana Supreme Court. In this setting, the invalidity of the first aggravating circumstance does not constitutionally impair the death sentence or render it improper under Louisiana law.
Zant v. Stephens,
Finally, Rault’s claims in respect to the invalidity of the first aggravating circumstance found, by reason of alleged double counting, and in respect to the invalidity of the second aggravating circumstance found, by reason of claimed insufficiency of the evidence, are both barred as being an abuse of the writ, contrary to Rule 9(b), because neither claim was submitted in either of Rault’s prior two federal habeas petitions. Rault seeks to excuse his failure to raise the double counting claim earlier on the ground that he did not realize it was tenable until on June 22, 1987 the United States Supreme Court granted
certiorari
in
Lowenfield,
in part upon that issue.
*309
Rault also states that his claim that the evidence was insufficient as to the second aggravating circumstance found, the especially heinous and cruel manner in which the murder was committed, did not become relevant for federal habeas purposes until the double counting claim, with respect to the first aggravating circumstance found, became viable. While we are inclined to agree with the lаtter condition, we reject the former. We hold that Rault, represented by competent counsel throughout, had no valid reason to withhold his double counting claim respecting the first aggravating circumstance from either his first or his second federal habeas petition. We note that the
Collins
case, relied on by Rault in respect to his double counting claim, was decided by the Eighth Circuit on January 31, 1985, which was three and a half months before Rault’s initial federal habeas was filed on May 14,1985 and some nineteen months before his second federal habeas was filed on September 12, 1986. We found abuse of the writ on this same basis in
Berry,
In sum, we hold that Rault’s third- claim is invalid on its merits, and presents on its merits no ground for issuing a certificate of probable cause or stay of execution. We further hold that the omission of this claim from Rault’s prior two federal habeas petitions constitutes an unexcused abuse of the writ under Rule 9(b) and that enforcement of the bar of Rule 9(b) would not result in a miscarriage of justice, and for this independent reason also the third claim presents no grounds for a certificate of probable cause or stay of execution.
Conclusion
We reject eaсh of Rault’s claims on their merits, and hold that none of them present on their merits grounds for issuance of a certificate of probable cause or stay of execution. Alternatively, we hold that each of his claims constitutes an unexcused abuse of the writ, and that application of the bar of Rule 9(b) would not constitute a miscarriage of justice, and that also for this independent reason none of the claims warrants issuance of a certificate of probable cause or stay of execution. Accordingly, we deny a certificate of probable cause and we dismiss the appeal. We likewise deny the appliсation for stay of execution.
Certificate of Probable Cause DENIED; Appeal DISMISSED; Application for Stay of Execution DENIED.
Notes
. We note preliminarily that Rault’s first claim contains a reference to Rault's
“Louisiana
Constitutional rights” (emphasis added). However, that has not been briefed, here or below. Moreover, the Louisiana Supreme Court, the ultimate arbiter of such claims, has rejected it. Finally, such a claim does not state a ground for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We also observe that Rault’s first and second claims arguably refer to the denial of the right to testify “in a conscious state.” However, they have not been briefed on that basis, here or below. Moreover, we have
*303
already held that there was no such denial.
Rault,
. Also, in response to Rault’s application to this Court for certificate of probable cause, the state urges, inter alia, that each of Rault's three claims is barred as an abuse of the writ under Rule 9(b).
. We recognize that the foregoing may be inconsistent with the following from the opinion of Justice Brennan, in which Justices Marshall and Blackmun joined, dissenting from the denial of stay of execution in
Watson v. Butler,
— U.S. -,
“If the commission of armed robbery and aggravated rape constitutes only a single aggravating circumstance, then Watson presents exactly the same claim as Lowenfield. In the majority of cases that have required a tally of aggravating circumstances, the Louisiana Supreme Court has considered the presence of more than one felony under Article 905.4(a) to count as only a single aggravating factor. See, e.g., State v. Carmouche, slip op. (La. May 18, 1987); State v. Bates,495 So.2d 1262 (La. 1986); State v. Andrews,452 So.2d 687 (La. 1984); State v. Jordan,420 So.2d 420 (La. 1982); State v. Myles,389 So.2d 12 (La.1979). In some other cases, including this one, State v. Watson,449 So.2d 1321 (La.1984), the Louisiana Supreme Court appears to have viewed each felony as a separate aggravating factor. That court, however, has not had the opportunity to address this issue explicitly.” (Footnote omitted.)
With respect, we view the matter somewhat differently. Our reading of the cited decisions of the Louisiana Supreme Court does not indicate to us that that court was expressly addressing the question, one way or another, and it appears to us that the passing references to aggravating circumstances as being one or two were not intended to have significance.
Andrews
did not involve a capital sentence. In
Bates,
it appears that but a single "other” felony (armed robbery) was involved under article 905.4(a).
In
State v. Carmouche,
“The jury’s finding that defendant committed this murder while engaged in the perpetration of aggravated rape is clearly supported by the evidence. Accordingly, it is unnecessary for us to consider the sufficiency of the evidence for the findings that dеfendant committed this murder while engaged in the perpetration of aggravated burglary and armed robbery.
"Since the jury found one statutory aggravating circumstance (La.Code Crim.P. art. 905.4(a)) and that circumstance is clearly supported by the record, we find it unnecessary *308 to decide whether the jury erred in finding that the offense was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel manner (the second aggravating circumstance).” Id. at 801.
In
Watson,
findings that the offense was committed in the perpetration of aggravated rape and in the perpetration of armed robbery (article 905.4(a)) and that the offender had a significant prior history of criminal activity (article 905.4(c)) are referred to as findings of "three aggravating circumstances” and the last mentioned as "[t]he third aggravating circumstance."
We believe it clear under Louisiana law that the number of statutory aggravating circumstances found has no legal or categorical significance, so long only as one statutory aggravating circumstance is found (and it is legally valid and supported by the evidence). Further, under the clear wording of article 905.4(a) and the holdings of cases such as Carmouche, only one of the offenses listed alternatively in article 905.4(a) need be found in order to constitute a valid statutory aggravating circumstance. Moreover, the Lowenfield issue does not raise a question of Louisiana law — under Louisiana law the “double counting” is clearly proper. The Lowenfield question, as we apprehend it, is whether the Eighth Amendment allows capital punishment where nothing declared by statute to constitute one of the aggravating circumstances necessary to a death sentence is proved which was not also necessary to prove in order to convict of the capital crime charged in that particular case. That situation does not exist where two other concurrent felonies — the commission of either of which during an intentional murder is statutorily defined as an aggravating circumstance — are found at sentencing but proof of only one was necessary for conviction of the underlying offense.
