OPINION
Sylvester Lewis Adams appeals the denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. We affirm the district court’s judgment.
I
Adams was arrested and charged with the kidnapping and murder of Bryan Chambers, housebreaking, and armed robbery. The armed robbery count was dismissed. A jury convicted Adams of the other crimes and sentenced him to death. The South Carolina Supreme Court reversed and remanded for a new trial because of evidentiary and procedural errors.
State v. Adams,
On remand, a second jury convicted Adams and sentenced him to death. The South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed this conviction in
State v. Adams,
Adams filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in June, 1986, alleging numerous errors in his trial. After an evidentiary hearing on the issue of Adams’s mental competency, the United States magistrate recommended denial of the petition. The district court adopted the magistrate’s report and recommendation, and this appeal followed.
The Supreme Court of South Carolina summarized the evidence as follows:
On October 17, 1979, at approximately 3:00 p.m., Bryan Chambers, a sixteen year old with a slight learning disability, was taken from his home and strangled to death in a wooded area directly behind the house. Shortly thereafter, Bryan’s mother received a phone call. The only words she could make out were “boy ... place ... money_”
Bryan’s mother hung up on the caller not knowing at that time that her son was missing.
The evidence introduced at the trial relating to the abduction is as follows:
1) Forced entry into the house through the rear door with the use of a tire tool (or jack handle).
2) A piece of tablecloth was torn from the dining room table and used to hold a sock in the victim’s mouth.
*1310 3) Venetian blind cord, removed from the house, was used to bind his feet once he had been forced into the wooded area behind the house.
4) The strangulation was caused by placing a stick in the tablecloth (pulled down around his neck) and tightening it in the fashion of a tourniquet.
5) A butcher knife was missing from the victim’s home and there was a deep cut above one of his ears consistent with a blow from such a knife.
James Jeter was a key state’s witness. His testimony may be abbreviated as follows: The defendant (Adams) rode a bicycle into Jeter’s backyard where he was raking leaves. Adams had a tire tool, a gun and a pair of gloves in his possession. Adams told Jeter he was going to break into the house next door to steal money.
After entering the house, Adams attempted to solicit Jeter’s aid in removing a safe he had allegedly found there. Jet-er refused. Adams then stated he would await Bryan’s return home from school to get the combination.
Jeter spoke with Bryan in Bryan’s front yard when he returned home a few minutes later. He did not warn Bryan that Adams was inside because he was afraid.
A short time later, Jeter saw Adams lead Bryan into the woods with something white tied around Bryan’s neck. He appeared to be resisting Adams.
A search for Bryan was conducted by Jeter’s father and Bryan’s father (A.C. Mitchell) in the early evening. Jeter became concerned about his friend and asked Adams where he was. Adams told him Bryan was tied up in an abandoned house and he would be released when Bryan’s parents gave him (Adams) some money. He also told Jeter he had attempted a ransom call but Bryan’s mother had hung up on him before he could tell her where to deliver the money.
Bryan’s body was found covered with brush by rescue workers the following day. The next day (two days after the killing), Jeter told the police for the first time that he knew about the incident.
A.C. Mitchell testified that on the evening of his son’s death, when he and a neighbor were searching for Bryan with the aid of Bryan’s small dog (which had been found trapped inside the washing machine of the boy’s home), Adams had frightened them away from the area where Bryan’s body was later found by appearing with his pit bulldog allegedly to aid in the search.
State v. Adams,
II
Adams first asserts that the jury instruction defining reasonable doubt violated his right to due process by unconstitutionally lowering the state’s burden of proof.
The trial judge defined reasonable doubt as follows:
Now I do not mean, ladies and gentlemen, by the term reasonable doubt that it is some whimsical or imaginary doubt. It is not a weak doubt, it is not a slight doubt. It is a substantial doubt, a doubt for which you can give a reason. It is a substantial doubt arising out of the testimony or lack of testimony in the case for which a person honestly seeking to find the truth can give a reason. If you have such a doubt in your mind as to whether or not the State has proven this defendant guilty, you should resolve that doubt in his favor and write a verdict of not guilty and acquit him.
sjc * * * # *
As I think I’ve indicated to you reasonable — what reasonable doubt means: I would tell you that the two phrases reasonable doubt and proof to a moral certainty are synonymous and the legal equivalent of each other. These phrases connote, however, a degree of proof distinguished from an absolute certainty. The reasonable doubt that the law gives the accused is not a weak or a slight doubt, but a serious or strong and well- *1311 founded doubt as to the truth of the charge.
JA 779-80, 790-91.
In
Cage v. Louisiana,
— U.S. -,
must be such doubt as would give rise to a grave uncertainty, raised in your mind by reasons of the unsatisfactory character of the evidence or lack thereof. A reasonable doubt is not a mere possible doubt. It is an actual substantial doubt. It is a doubt that a reasonable man can seriously entertain. What is required is not an absolute or mathematical certainty, but a moral certainty.
Ill S.Ct. at 329 (citing
State v. Cage,
the words “substantial” and “grave,” as they are commonly understood, suggest a higher degree of doubt than is required for acquittal under the reasonable doubt standard.
When those statements are then considered with the reference to “moral certainty,” rather than evidentiary certainty, it becomes clear that a reasonable juror could have interpreted the instruction to allow a finding of guilt based on a degree of proof below that required by the Due Process Clause.
As in Cage, the South Carolina trial court’s instructions equated “reasonable doubt” with “moral certainty” and “substantial doubt.” Although not using the words “grave uncertainty,” the trial court’s instruction that the doubt be “serious or strong and well-founded” conveyed the same meaning. Tested by Cage, the trial court’s instruction diluted the reasonable doubt standard and allowed the jury to find Adams guilty by a measure of proof that failed to meet the requirements of the Due Process Clause.
Our conclusion that the jury instructions violated Adams’s due process rights, however, does not require a new trial. Rather, we must decide whether we can retroactively apply the rule in Cage to Adams.
Teague v. Lane,
Teague
stated that generally “a case announces a new rule when it breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government” or “if the result was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Adams argues that
Cage
did not articulate a new rule but simply applied the principle announced in
In re Winship,
Nevertheless the conclusion that instructions such as those in
Cage
violate due process was subject to debate. Eight years after
Winship,
in
Taylor v. Kentucky,
A new rule nevertheless should apply in habeas corpus proceedings if it meets one of two exceptions. The first exception pertains to new rules that “place an entire category of primary conduct beyond the reach of the criminal law or new rules that prohibit imposition of a certain type of punishment for a class of defendants because of their status or offense.”
Sawyer v. Smith,
The second exception applies to a new rule that “requires the observance of those procedures that ... are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.”
Teague,
It is quite evident that
Cage’s
rule eliminates confusion and improves the accuracy of a trial. But it does not “alter our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding.”
Sawyer,
Ill
Adams next argues that he was mentally incompetent during a portion of his trial and therefore his conviction violates due process. In a related claim he asserts that counsel was ineffective in failing to request a redetermination of his competency when his behavior indicated that he had deteriorated mentally. Adams argues that this failure deprived him of the opportunity to present mitigating evidence at the sentencing phase.
In December, 1979, and January, 1980, shortly after Adams was indicted, Dr. Herbert D. Smith conducted a psychiatric evaluation of Adams at the State Hospital. He concluded that although Adams suffered from mild mental retardation and some paranoid trends, he was not mentally ill and was competent to stand trial. Dr. Harold C. Morgan, who evaluated Adams at the request of defense counsel, later testified *1313 that his findings were quite consistent with the State Hospital’s findings shortly after indictment.
Before the second trial, Adams’s counsel began to doubt his competence and asked Dr. Morgan to re-evaluate him. Dr. Morgan visited Adams and requested Dr. Diane Follingstad, a psychologist, to test him. Adams, however, would not cooperate. At the direction of the trial court, Dr. Smith conducted a 20-minute psychiatric interview immediately before jury selection and found Adams competent. Dr. Smith did not know about Adams’s uncooperative behavior prior to the re-evaluation. Adams does not contend that he was incompetent before the second trial started, but he asserts that his subsequent bizarre behavior showed that he lost competency during the trial.
A defendant must be competent throughout the trial, not just at its commencement.
See Drope v. Missouri,
The magistrate conducted an evi-dentiary hearing on the issue of Adams’s competency throughout the second trial. Both Adams and the state presented expert witnesses. Adams’s trial counsel and the prosecutor also testified. Adams’s contention, supported by his experts, is that he became incompetent during the trial, especially when he addressed the jury in a bizarre and partly irrelevant closing argument. The state’s expert witness, Dr. Smith, expressed the opinion that Adams was competent and that he was no different during his argument to the jury than he was before trial. Conceding doubts about the accuracy of his diagnosis of paranoid personality, Dr. Smith said he believed Adams had mixed personalities. Nevertheless, he expressed the opinion that Adams remained competent throughout the trial.
In a lengthy opinion that devoted 21 pages to a review of the trial record and the conflicting evidence at the habeas corpus evidentiary hearing, the magistrate found that Adams was competent throughout his trial. Upon review of the magistrate’s report and recommendation, the district court concluded that Dr. Smith’s testimony provided a persuasive and wholly adequate basis for finding that Adams was competent throughout his trial.
The magistrate and the district court applied correct legal principles to the question of competency. Though the testimony was conflicting, ample evidence supports their findings and conclusions. Their resolution of this issue accords with that of the state habeas judge who also found that Adams was competent throughout his trial. The South Carolina Supreme Court, after an examination of the trial record, held that Adams’s claim of incompetency lacked merit.
State v. Adams,
Adams’s claim that his counsel were ineffective because they did not request a re-evaluation of his competency during the course of the trial must also fail. Inasmuch as Adams was competent, no prejudice resulted in either the guilt or the punishment phase of the trial because his counsel did not move for another competency examination. Lack of prejudice defeats Adams’s claim of ineffective counsel.
See Strickland v. Washington,
Adams also complains that his counsel were ineffective because they did not introduce at the sentencing phase mitigating evidence of his mild mental retardation and paranoid personality disorder. Adams did not raise this issue in the state proceedings or in his federal petition for a writ of habeas corpus. To correct this hiatus, Adams’s present counsel links it to the allegation of ineffectiveness of trial coun *1314 sel because they did not seek re-evaluation of his competency during the trial. However, this linkage was not alleged in the state proceedings or in the federal petition. Neither the magistrate nor the district court addressed this linkage. Instead, their attention was devoted to the allegation that defense counsel were ineffective because they should have sought re-evaluation of Adams's competency during the trial, a claim that we have discussed and found to be without merit.
The claim that counsel were ineffective at sentencing is procedurally barred because Adams failed to raise it in the state proceedings. S.C.Code § 17-27-90;
Land v. State,
Alternatively, we conclude that Adams’s claim of ineffective counsel at sentencing lacks merit. Adams’s appellate counsel argues that Adams’s trial counsel’s deficiency at sentencing arose out of their failure to request a mental evaluation during the second trial. But such an evaluation would have been inconclusive evidence of Adams’s mental condition some three years before when he committed the crime. As a matter of fact, Dr. Smith had expressed the opinion shortly after the crime that Adams was mildly mentally retarded and exhibited paranoid personality trends. Dr. Morgan, Adams’s expert, agreed with the findings Dr. Smith made at his initial examination shortly after the crime. Adams’s counsel argued to the jury that his mental condition was a mitigating circumstance, and the judge instructed the jurors that they could consider his mental condition as a mitigating circumstance.
IV
Adams contends that the prosecutor withheld exculpatory information in violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
Adams claims he is entitled to a new trial because, despite his request for disclosure, the prosecutor did not inform him of Mark Culp's written statement.
Chambers, the victim, arrived at his home at 2:35 in the afternoon, and was killed sometime before 3:05. Mark Culp gave a written statement to the prosecution that he saw Adams outside Chambers’s house and heading to his own home about five minutes after Chambers’s arrival. Adams maintains this testimony could have been used to show that he could not have killed Chambers, because he could not have committed the murder and disposed of the body in five minutes.
The prosecutor interviewed Culp after Culp had given the written statement. Culp then said five minutes could mean a minimum of fifteen minutes. Culp later made a sworn statement that during the first trial he told one of defense counsel all he knew about Adams on the day Chambers disappeared. In the statement he said that he repeated this information in a conversation with defense counsel at the second trial. Later he claimed he never talked with defense counsel. In any event, nei *1315 ther the prosecutor nor defense counsel called Culp to testify at either the first or second trial. Adams’s testimony at his trial was not consistent with Culp’s statement. Adams claimed that he remained in his house after approximately 2:15, and he did not mention seeing Culp or the other person to whom Culp said Adams spoke. This inconsistency indicates that Culp’s statement was neither exculpatory nor material.
Based on the weight of evidence against Adams, both the magistrate and the district court concluded that Culp’s statement was not reasonably likely to have affected the outcome of the trial. The statement that Adams appeared five minutes after Chambers arrived home is of little significance compared to Adams’s confession, his inconsistent alibi testimony, and Jeter’s testimony.
Adams also complains that the prosecutor unlawfully withheld a police report about the questioning that resulted in Adams’s confession. He argues that this report would have disclosed that the police elicited “his confession through a process of piecemeal questioning about each ‘missing’ detail.” Specifically the report noted that Adams first claimed that Jeter killed Chambers, but when he was asked about a nylon cord, he denied tying Chambers with any cord. The police then asked about other details, and Adams finally admitted the crime.
Adams asserts that another pólice report would have shown that his alibi, first asserted when he was arrested, was not a recent fabrication. He contends that the prosecutor implied it was a recent fabrication by stating in final argument: “Now he raises some alibi.” JA 727. The prosecutor never expressly charged that the alibi was a recent fabrication. This single cryptic remark was made in the course of a long summation.
Brady, Agurs, and Bagley dealt with the prosecutor’s suppression of evidence that was known to the prosecutor but not to the defendant. Unlike the situation in those cases, the information in the police reports was known to Adams. Hence, strictly speaking, the prosecutor suppressed nothing.
The district court held that singly and cumulatively the items which the prosecutor did not disclose were not material in light of the evidence proving Adams’s guilt. We concur in the district court’s assessment of materiality.
V
Adams next claims that his confession should have been excluded because the police obtained it by violating his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights, as enunciated in
Miranda v. Arizona,
Miranda,
Adams was arrested on Friday, October 19, and stayed in jail through the weekend. According to Adams he asserted his right to remain silent, but police continued to interrogate him in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The prosecution concedes that the police asked Adams daily whether he wanted to make a statement, but that *1316 each day he refused. The court appointed an attorney to represent Adams on Monday, October 22. On Tuesday, October 23, police drove Adams from the jail in Rock Hill to Columbia for a polygraph test. Adams claims this was done without informing counsel, in violation of the Sixth Amendment.
While returning to the jail from Columbia, Adams said he wanted to make a statement. The police refused to accept it at that time and told Adams that they would have to contact his attorney. Nevertheless, Adams made spontaneous implicating admissions.
Adams spoke with his attorney that night, who unsuccessfully tried to convince Adams not to confess. His attorney per-, suaded the police to agree that any oral statement Adams made would not be used against him unless he signed the statement after it had been reduced to writing. Adams then gave an oral confession. After it was reduced to writing, Adams and his attorney conferred, reviewing the draft line by line. Adams, disregarding his attorney’s advice, signed the statement. He now contends that this statement resulted from his earlier Fifth and Sixth Amendment violations and therefore should not have been admitted into evidence at his trial.
The district court found that the signed confession was admissible, even if Adams could establish Fifth and Sixth Amendment violations by the taking of the polygraph test and any incriminating statements made in transit from Columbia. The court noted that no evidence existed that the signed confession resulted from the polygraph test, and it found Adams had made a “knowing, intelligent and counseled waiver of his Fifth Amendment rights.” JA 1729. The district court also determined that the confession was voluntary. JA 1731.
The fact that earlier incriminating statements may have been improperly obtained does not require suppression of a later, validly obtained confession.
Oregon v. Elstad,
Adams effectively waived his rights as long as he did so “voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently.”
Miranda,
We conclude that Adams’s waiver of his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination after conferring with his counsel was made voluntarily and “with a full awareness of both the nature of the right being abandoned and the consequences of the decision to abandon it.”
Moran v. Burbine,
VI
Adams next asserts that he was deprived of his right to an impartial jury.
One of the prospective jurors stated on voir dire examination that he would believe a police officer’s testimony before that of a private citizen. The trial judge then asked the juror if he could make a determination based on the evidence presented in court and the court’s instructions on the law and if he could evaluate the testimony of the witnesses from what he saw in court. When the prospective juror responded that he could, the judge qualified him over Adams’s objection. Neither Adams nor the prosecution struck the juror in question. Adams had two peremptory strikes remaining when the juror was seated, and ultimately he used only nine of his ten peremptory strikes. Adams now contends that seating the juror deprived him of his right to an impartial jury.
In federal habeas corpus cases, factual findings by the state court are presumed to be correct. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). This presumption applies to a trial court’s determination that an individual juror is impartial.
Patton v. Yount,
The record supports the trial court’s conclusion that the juror would be impartial. He responded to the judge that he could determine Adams’s guilt or innocence based on the evidence and instructions. We find no evidence in the record to overcome the presumption of correctness afforded state trial courts under § 2254(d).
See Wainwright v. Witt,
Adams’s reliance on
United States v. Evans,
In Adams’s trial, the judge, after the juror’s admission, questioned him further about bias and made a credibility determination based on the answer to his supplemental inquiry. Also, unlike Evans, police testimony in Adams did not form a predominant part of the government’s case.
Moreover, Adams can demonstrate no prejudice since he did not avail himself of all peremptory strikes. Failure to exhaust peremptory strikes bars objection to the trial judge’s refusal to excuse a juror for cause.
State v. Britt,
Adams protests, however, that if he had used his last strike to eliminate the objectionable juror, he would have had no opportunity to strike his replacement. This argument is foreclosed by
Ross v. Oklahoma,
Because peremptory challenges are a creature of statute and are not required by the Constitution, it is for the State to determine the number of peremptory challenges allowed and to define their purpose and the manner of their exercise. As such, the ‘right’ to peremptory challenges is ‘denied or impaired' only if the defendant does not receive that which state law provides.
It is a long settled principle of Oklahoma law that a defendant who disagrees with the trial court’s ruling on a for-cause challenge must, in order to preserve the claim that the ruling deprived him of a fair trial, exercise a peremptory challenge to remove the juror. Even then, the error is grounds for reversal only if the defendant exhausts all peremptory challenges and an incompetent juror is forced upon him.
He * * * * *
Thus, although Oklahoma provides a capital defendant with nine peremptory challenges, this grant is qualified by the requirement that the defendant must use those challenges to cure erroneous refusals by the trial court to excuse jurors for cause. We think there is nothing arbitrary or irrational about such a requirement. ...
487
U.S.
at 89-90,
Boss establishes that South Carolina’s practice is valid. If Adams had struck the objectionable juror with his last challenge, and the replacement had been a qualified juror, Adams would have no legally cognizable complaint. If the replacement had been unqualified, presumably the trial judge would have excluded him for cause. If, however, the judge had erred and allowed the unqualified replacement to sit despite Adams’s objection, Adams could assign the error as a basis for a new trial.
We conclude that Adams has not proved that the trial judge erroneously qualified the juror. Also, because Adams did not use all of his peremptory strikes, the state did not deprive him of any constitutionally protected right.
VII
During closing argument, the prosecutor stated that Adams’s lawyers were appointed and that they would not tell the jury the police officers beat Adams. Counsel for Adams did not object to the statement. Adams now argues that this statement denied him due process because it implied that defense counsel did not believe his testimony that the police beat him to force a confession.
Improper remarks during closing argument do not always mandate retrial. “The relevant question is whether the prosecutors’ comments so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.”
Darden v. Wainwright,
Parenthetically, we note that in this appeal Adams has not assigned error to the admission of his confession on the ground that the police beat him.
VIII
Adams next argues that the trial judge failed to communicate to the jurors that they could give mitigating weight to any aspect of the case that they thought deserved it.
The trial judge charged the jurors that they could recommend a life sentence for any reason at all, whether or not they found a statutory mitigating circumstance. *1319 During jury deliberations, the jury asked the trial judge whether Adams’s confession was a mitigating circumstance. The trial judge stated that it was “not a statutory mitigating circumstance, but as I have also instructed you, you may consider the case in its entirety_” JA 890. The judge was referring to a portion of the sentencing instructions in which he had said:
[Y]ou may recommend a life sentence without finding the existence of an alleged statutory mitigating circumstance and you, as I have told you before, may recommend the imposition of the life sentence even should you find beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of an alleged statutory aggravating circumstance. In other words, you may in your good judgment, recommend a life sentence for any reason at all that you see fit to consider.
JA 878.
Lockett v. Ohio,
[T]he Eighth and the Fourteenth Amendments require that the sentencer, in all but the rarest kind of capital case, not be precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or record and any of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death.
IX
The jury could not impose the death penalty under South Carolina law unless it found that Adams killed Chambers while in the commission of kidnapping or housebreaking. S.C.Code § 16-3-20. Adams argues that since the jury did not find that the kidnapping and housebreaking occurred in the commission of murder, his death’ sentence violates the Eighth Amendment.
The trial judge charged the jury at the sentencing phase of the trial that it could consider as an aggravating circumstance that the murder was committed while in the commission of housebreaking and kidnapping. The judge also instructed the jury that if it “unanimously [found] beyond a reasonable doubt that one or more of those alleged statutory aggravating circumstances existed at the time the victim in this case was murdered,” it would be authorized to recommend the death sentence. JA 876. The verdict at the sentencing phase of the trial was as follows:
We, the jury in the above entitled case, having found beyond a reasonable doubt that the following statutory aggravating circumstances existed, house — kidnapping and housebreaking, now recommend to the Court that the Defendant, Sylvester Lewis Adams, be sentenced to death.
JA 893.
“A verdict is sufficient if the jury’s intention can be ascertained with reasonable certainty from the language used in the verdict.”
Carver v. Martin,
X
Quoting S.C.Code § 16-3-910, the trial judge instructed the jury during the guilt phase of the trial as follows: “Whoever shall unlawfully seize, confine, inveigle, decoy, kidnap, abduct or carry away any other person by any means whatsoever without authority of law ... shall be guilty *1320 of the statutory offense of kidnapping.” JA 784. In the sentencing instructions the judge did not narrow the definition of kidnapping, but simply stated that it was an aggravating circumstance. Adams argues that this definition is so broad that it could serve as an aggravating circumstance in virtually all murders, thereby violating the Eighth Amendment.
Maynard v. Cartwright,
Also, South Carolina law authorizes the jury to impose the death penalty if one aggravating factor exists. S.C.Code § 16-3-20(C). The jury need not weigh the aggravating circumstances against the mitigating circumstances. The jury found two aggravating factors—kidnapping and housebreaking—the latter of which Adams does not challenge. Where one valid aggravating factor supports a death sentence and the jury need not weigh it against mitigating factors, the sentence need not be set aside simply because the jury also found an invalid aggravating factor.
Zant v. Stephens,
XI
At the sentencing phase of Adams’s trial the prosecutor made the following argument to the jury:
There are four words that I consider important in somebody’s life, rapport's one of them. You have to be able to communicate with people ... Coping is another one. You have to be able to cope to function in this world. If you can’t cope, you can’t function. Love’s another one ... And the fourth one, repentance ... Now, again, I’ll tell you, you recall the testimony and you recall if any of those four characteristics are held by that man right there. You do that. When you go back to that jury room and you deliberate, you try and decide whether he can handle any of those or whether he owns any of them, or whether he’ll ever own any of them.
JA 857-58.
Adams now maintains that this language violated the Eighth Amendment because it suggested to the jury that his mental disabilities were aggravating, rather than mitigating,' factors. He did not object to the remarks at trial or move for a mistrial.
Adams has not shown that the prosecutor’s remarks were plain error. The district court noted that Adams’s claim is based entirely on inferences he seeks to draw from the prosecutor’s comments. The court concluded that the inferences drawn by Adams were unjustified because the prosecutor pressed on the jury no specific conclusion concerning Adams’s mental state, nor did he explicitly urge the jury to treat Adams’s mentality as an aggravating circumstance.
In
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
*1321 The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
