Virgil Delano Presnell, Jr., is a Georgia prison inmate. Presnell stands convicted of murder, statutory rape, kidnapping with bodily injury, and kidnapping. He faces a death sentence on the murder conviction, and prison sentences on the remaining convictions.
The United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia granted Pres-nell’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1988) with respect to the death sentence, but denied relief with respect to Presnell’s convictions and remaining sentences. Respondent Zant appeals from those portions of the district court’s order granting habeas relief, and Presnell cross-appeals from the portions of the same order denying relief. We affirm the district court’s judgment.
I.
On July 1, 1976, petitioner was indicted in Cobb County, Georgia, for the capital offenses of murder, rape, 1 and kidnapping with bodily injury, 2 and for the offenses of kidnapping and aggravated sodomy. One week before trial, aggravated sodomy was dropped from the indictment. A jury subsequently found petitioner guilty on all four remaining counts. At the penalty phase of petitioner’s trial, the judge instructed the jury on the statutory aggravating circumstance that could warrant the imposition of death sentences for murder, rape, and kidnapping with bodily injury: “[t]he [capital] offense ... was committed while the offender was engaged in the commission of another capital felony.” Ga. Code, § 27-2534.1(b)(2) (1975). Specifically, the judge instructed the jury that it could impose the death penalty (1) for the murder, if it was committed while petitioner was engaged in the commission of the “kidnapping with bodily harm, aggravated sodomy”; (2) for the rape, if it was committed while petitioner was engaged in the commission of the murder; and (3) for the kidnapping with bodily injury, if it was committed while petitioner was engaged in the commission of the rape. The jury found that all three offenses had been committed while petitioner had been engaged in the commission of the offenses specified in the instruction, and imposed death sentences for murder, rape, and kidnapping with bodily injury. The judge also imposed a twenty-year concurrent sentence for kidnapping.
On direct appeal, the Georgia Supreme Court held that the judge had not requested that the jury specify whether it found
*1527
petitioner guilty of statutory or forcible rape.
Presnell v. State,
After the Georgia Supreme Court had denied his motion for rehearing, the United States Supreme Court granted Presnell’s petition for a writ of certiorari. The Supreme Court reversed the affirmance of petitioner’s conviction of kidnapping with bodily injury and of petitioner’s death penalty for murder, and remanded the case “for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.”
Presnell v. Georgia,
On remand, the Georgia Supreme Court vacated that portion of its earlier opinion “[in] which [it] seemingly [had] held that aggravated sodomy was not bodily injury within the meaning of the crime of kidnapping with bodily injury.”
Presnell v. State,
After the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari from the Georgia Supreme Court’s decision on remand, petitioner unsuccessfully pursued state post-conviction remedies, and, on June 15, 1981, filed his first federal habeas petition. This petition was dismissed without prejudice for failure to exhaust state court remedies. Petitioner then returned to state court, but saw his state habeas action dismissed yet again.
Petitioner filed the present federal habe-as petition on May 15, 1985 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. In this petition, Presnell mounted numerous challenges against his convictions and sentences. Denying petitioner relief on all other grounds, the district court held that the prosecutor’s error of quoting certain language from
Eberhart v. Georgia,
Respondent Zant appeals the district court’s decision to grant relief as to petitioner’s death sentence. On cross-appeal, petitioner presents six claims: (1) the Georgia Supreme Court ignored the mandate of the United States Supreme Court by reinstating both petitioner’s conviction for kidnapping with bodily injury and his death sentence for murder; (2) petitioner received ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt phase of his trial in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments; (3) the trial court’s order to compel a psychiatric examination of petitioner violated petitioner’s privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments; (4) the trial court’s denial of petitioner’s *1528 motion for change of venue violated petitioner’s rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments; (5) the district court improperly disposed of certain claims without an evidentiary hearing; and (6) the composition of petitioner’s grand and traverse juries violated petitioner’s rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Petitioner also mounts two additional attacks against his death penalty: (1) the reinstatement of petitioner’s death penalty constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments; and (2) the reinstatement of petitioner’s death penalty constituted double jeopardy in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. As the writ issues with respect to petitioner’s death sentence on other grounds, we need not, and do not, address these claims.
We first address the Eberhart issue. We then turn to petitioner’s attacks on his conviction.
II.
Petitioner argues that the following summation in the prosecutor’s closing argument at the sentencing phase of petitioner’s trial constituted reversible error:
[M]y feelings, ladies and gentlemen, probably are best summed up in the words of a Supreme Court Justice many years ago, in 1873, he wrote an opinion in the case of Eberhart V. The State of Georgia, and while this is more than one hundred years ago, it, in my opinion, fits this situation that we have here today, and it says, reading at page [610] and Volume 47 of the Georgia Reports: “We have, however, no sympathy with that sickly sentimentality that springs into action whenever a criminal is at length about to suffer for crime. It may be a sign of a tender heart, but it is also a sign of one not under proper regulation. Society demands that crime shall be punished and criminals warned, and the false humanity that starts and shudders when the axe of justice is ready to strike, is a dangerous element for the peace of society. We have had too much of this mercy. It is not true mercy. It only looks to the criminal, but we must insist upon mercy to society, upon mercy [sic] to the poor woman whose blood cries out against her murderers. That criminals go unpunished is a disgrace to our civilization, and we have reaped the fruits of it in the frequency in which bloody deed [sic] occur. A stem, unbending, unflinching administration of the penal laws, without regard to position or sex, as it is the highest mark of our [sic] civilization, it [sic] is also the surest mode to prevent the commission of offenses.” 3
The factors governing our review of federal habeas claims attacking a prosecutor’s closing argument have been clearly enunciated in
Wilson v. Kemp,
A prosecutor’s argument violates the Constitution if it renders the defendant’s trial “so fundamentally unfair as to deny him due process.” [Brooks v. Kemp,762 F.2d 1383 , 1400 (11th Cir.1985) (en banc) ] (quoting Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,416 U.S. 637 , 645,94 S.Ct. 1868 , 1872,40 L.Ed.2d 431 (1974)) [, vacated on other grounds,478 U.S. 1016 ,106 S.Ct. 3325 ,92 L.Ed.2d 732 (1986) ]. Improper argument by a prosecutor reaches this threshold of fundamental unfairness if it is “so egregious as to create a reasonable probability that the outcome was changed.” Id. at 1403. A “reasonable probability” is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome. Strickland v. Washington,466 U.S. 668 , 694,104 S.Ct. 2052 , 2068,80 L.Ed.2d 674 , 698 (1984).
The methodology we have adopted for applying these constitutional standards is to determine first whether particular arguments by a prosecutor were improper and if so, to determine what the probable effect of the improper argument was on *1529 the jury. See Brooks v. Kemp,762 F.2d at 1403 .
We have considered similar attacks on a prosecutor’s use of substantially identical language from
Eberhart v. State
on numerous prior occasions.
See Wilson, 777
F.2d at 621;
Bowen v. Kemp,
The prosecutor’s use of the
Eberhart
quote in his closing argument to the jury clearly was highly improper.
Wilson, 777
F.2d at 624;
Drake,
In three out of our four dealings with
Eberhart
to date, we found sufficient prejudice to warrant issuance of the writ with respect to the sentence imposed. Immediately preceding his closing argument to the jury, the prosecutor in
Potts
read to the court not only the
Eberhart
quote, but also excerpts from
Gregg v. Georgia,
In
Drake,
the prosecutor’s closing argument to the jury included the
Eberhart
passage and a passage from another nineteenth century opinion by the Georgia Supreme Court,
Hawkins v. State,
Most recently, in Wilson, the prosecutor, as his colleague had done in Potts, quoted excerpts from Gregg in addition to the infamous Eberhart language. The prosecutor also identified the author of the Eberhart passage as “a noted legal scholar in the 1800’s.” Wilson, 777 F.2d at 623. Reserving judgment on the prejudicial effect of each quotation in isolation, we found that the Eberhart and Gregg quotations in conjunction constituted reversible error. Id. at 627.
Only in
Bowen
did we not find undue prejudice in a prosecutor’s use of
Eber-hart. Bowen,
however, is clearly distinguishable from the present case. In
Bowen,
the prosecutor’s closing argument included a short passage containing paraphrased excerpts from
Eberhart.
The prosecutor did not claim to read these excerpts from an opinion by the Georgia Supreme Court, but merely attributed the excerpts to “one of our noted justices” and “a justice.”
Bowen,
The present case more closely resembles Drake, which, according to Bowen itself, “is easily distinguished from [Bowen]." Id. at 683 n. 5. As Bowen points out, “[t]he prosecutor in Drake [and in the present case] specifically invoked the office of the Supreme Court of Georgia in support of his argument [, whereas] the prose *1530 cutor [in Bowen ] referred only to a ‘noted justice.’ ” Id. Moreover, as Bowen remarks, “[t]he prosecutor in Drake [and in the present case] specifically stated that the Supreme Court of Georgia regarded the kind of mercy adverted to as not true mercy.” Id. In Bowen, however, “no mention was made of mercy, except that society occasionally should be the object of mercy, as well as a criminal defendant.” Id. 4
All similarities between the present case and Drake aside, a consideration of the prosecutor’s use of the Eberhart quote in the context of the entire sentencing phase brings home the quote’s prejudicial impact. The sentencing hearing clearly focused on the issue of mercy. Eberhart’s improper suggestion that the jury must exclude any consideration of mercy from its sentencing decision therefore in effect deprived petitioner of his only remaining ple.a for life. At the hearing, petitioner produced three witnesses, none of whom challenged any of the aggravating circumstances alleged by the State, and all of whom were designed to appeal to the jury’s mercy. Dr. Harry Porter, a psychiatrist, testified that he had diagnosed petitioner as suffering from pedophilia, a medical condition he considered curable. Dr. Porter also testified that he did not believe petitioner had intended to harm his victims, and characterized petitioner as a very compliant individual who could function satisfactorily in a controlled environment. Dr. Miguel A. Bosh, another psychiatrist, also testified to the treatability of pedophilia. Rev. John T. Welch, a Baptist minister who had supervised petitioner for twelve months at a mission for juvenile delinquents, testified that he had baptized petitioner and described petitioner as “easily swayed.” Finally, petitioner’s mother, Lois Cole, spoke of her son’s troubled childhood in a broken home without the benefit of fatherly guidance for most of his youth, and his academic problems leading to the failure of “two or three different grades.”
Both closing arguments similarly revolved around the mercy issue. The prosecutor argued against the relevance of a troubled childhood for sentencing purposes. Perhaps most significantly, the Eberhart quote’s denunciation of mercy not only concluded the prosecutor’s argument, but also accounted for almost two of the argument’s ten pages of trial transcript.
In response, the closing argument for the defense amounted to little more than a plea for mercy. The defense attorney’s brief recapitulation of the mitigating testimony by the two psychiatrists, the minister, and petitioner’s mother appeared sandwiched between explicit pleas for mercy: first, “All I can do is stay here in these few moments that are allotted me to plead for his life, as his mother would like to do, as his grandmother would like to do,” and, again, “I ask you for mercy for this boy. I don’t say he is entitled to mercy, mercy is something that is freely given from someone somewhere.” The defense attorney summed up his closing argument with this appeal to the jury’s capacity for mercy:
Mercy is a sweet thing for a person who receives it. There have been many times that I have been the beneficiary of mercy. People have had mercy on me at various times. Not because I necessarily deserved it. But, again, remember, it is better to give it — you won’t have to go home at night knowing that you killed somebody that might be subject to being rehabilitated, someone to be trusted, someone to be cured. As the physicians have told you, and you may not like psychiatrists, psychiatrists have done marvelous things for many people, the boy can function well in a controlled environment. For that reason we ask you not to impose the death penalty, that you extend him the silken glove of mercy and not the naked nailed hands. (Emphasis added.)
*1531
Considering the central role of the mercy issue in the sentencing phase of petitioner’s trial, the prosecutor’s heavy, and clearly improper, reliance on the
Eberhart
quote’s anachronistic denunciation of mercy as a relevant sentencing consideration “undermine[s] confidence in the outcome” of the sentencing proceeding.
See Drake,
III.
A.
Petitioner argues that the Georgia Supreme Court ignored the United States Supreme Court’s mandate in
Presnell v. Georgia,
The reinstatement of petitioner’s conviction of kidnapping with bodily injury and of his death penalty for murder is not necessarily inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Presnell v. Georgia
and therefore cannot be said to disregard the Supreme Court’s instruction in that case to conduct proceedings “not inconsistent with this opinion.”
In the second scenario, the court did not change its interpretation of state law at all, as it all along had considered aggravated sodomy a possible basis for the bodily injury component of the crime of kidnapping with bodily injury.
See id.
Although neither the Georgia Supreme Court’s original opinion, nor its opinion on remand are models of analytic clarity, we need not settle definitively on one of the two outlined scenarios, as both would have rendered the proceedings in the state court “not inconsistent” with the Supreme Court’s opinion in Presnell v. Georgia and, therefore, would have honored the Supreme Court’s mandate.
*1532
We further point out that the United States Supreme Court has declined the invitation to bring the Georgia Supreme Court into line with its mandate in
Presnell v. Georgia.
In his certiorari petition from the Georgia Supreme Court’s decision on remand, petitioner complained of the Georgia Supreme Court’s alleged refusal to enforce the high court’s mandate. The United States Supreme Court denied certiorari. While a denial of certiorari has no precedential value, and therefore may not be interpreted as endorsing the result in a case or the analysis employed to reach that result, it does reflect the Supreme Court’s assessment of a state court's efforts to comply with the Supreme Court’s instructions. In the past, the Supreme Court has not hesitated to grant certiorari in cases where it detected a lack of compliance with its order.
See, e.g., Yates v. Aiken,
B.
On appeal, 5 petitioner argues that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance at the guilt phase 6 by failing to raise the insanity defense. 7
In
Strickland v. Washington,
A convicted defendant’s claim that counsel’s assistance was so defective as to require reversal of a conviction or death sentence has two components. First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment. *1533 Second, the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable. Unless a defendant makes both showings, it cannot be said that the conviction or death sentence resulted from a breakdown in the adversary process that renders the result unreliable.
Id.
at 687,
The district court found that petitioner had “failed to produce any evidence whatsoever to support any claim of insanity.” The court further found that petitioner “has not come forward with any evidence that would tend to show that trial counsel’s decision not to raise an insanity defense was not the result of reasonable professional judgment.” We adopt the district court’s findings of fact on this issue as not clearly erroneous and therefore reject petitioner’s ineffective assistance claim.
C.
Petitioner enlists
Estelle v. Smith,
In Smith, the Supreme Court held that the testimony of a court appointed psychiatrist at the penalty phase of a bifurcated capital trial violated the defendant’s privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and right to counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. 8 Unlike in Smith, the record in the present case establishes that petitioner s counsel both received ample notice of the State’s intention to seek a psychiatric examination and had ample opportunity to confer with petitioner to inform him of his right against self-incrimination. According to the district court’s findings, prior to trial “[t]here had been indications” that petitioner might present a defense of insanity or diminished capacity. Following these indications, the State on May 10, 1976, more than one month before the examination and almost three months prior to trial, moved the trial court for an order directing a psychiatric examination of petitioner to determine his sanity. On May 18, 1976, the court held a first hearing on the State’s motion. On June 8, 1976, still more than two weeks before the examination, during a second hearing on the motion, petitioner’s counsel indicated in a colloquy with the court about counsel’s ability to advise his client on his right to remain silent during the examination that he had “conferred sufficiently” with petitioner. Moreover, in response to a question by petitioner’s counsel, the court explicitly affirmed the propriety of advising petitioner of his right to remain silent, remarking that this right “would supersede any right that the State would have.” On June 17, 1976, the court granted the State’s motion. Another six days later, on June 23, 1976, petitioner was transferred for eight days to Central State Hospital, Milledgeville.
Again in contrast to Smith, the trial court in the present case undertook several efforts to protect petitioner’s right against self-incrimination. First, he explicitly approved of defense counsel’s efforts to educate petitioner on his right to remain silent during the psychiatric examination. He further specified in his order directing petitioner to be examined by Milledgeville psychiatrists, that “[t]o provide for the securing of the rights of Defendant against self-incrimination, the said medical examiner shall not disclose, without prior order of this Court, the content of statements or conversations with said accused.”
*1534
As yet another point of distinction between
Smith
and the present case, the psychiatrist in
Smith
extensively testified about remarks made to him by the defendant, including a detailed account of the crime, and identified defendant’s account as “the most important thing that ... caused [him] to think that [defendant] is a severe sociopath_”
Smith,
Finally, the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Smith
rested in part on the fact that the prosecution had presented the psychiatrist’s testimony even though the defendant had “introduced no psychiatric evidence, nor had he indicated that he might do so.”
Id.
at 466,
Considering that the Supreme Court carefully limited its holding to the “distinct circumstances” in
Smith, id.
at 466,
D.
Next, petitioner argues that the trial court's denial of his motion for change of venue violated his rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Georgia Supreme Court, on direct appeal, found that “the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the jury selection process revealed no degree of actual prejudice.”
Presnell v. State,
E.
Petitioner further complains of the district court’s failure to conduct an evidentiary hearing. In particular, petitioner contends that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing on his claims that his counsel had rendered ineffective assistance and that he *1535 was improperly denied a change of venue. 9 We find no fault with the district court’s decision to dispose of these issues on the basis of the record of the state proceedings, the federal habeas petition, and the response.
F.
Finally, petitioner contends that his grand jury and traverse juries were unconstitutionally composed because women and blacks were systematically excluded from the grand and traverse jury pools. Petitioner did not raise this claim until his state habeas proceedings. There, the state habeas court held that petitioner had procedurally defaulted the claim. The court also held that petitioner had failed to establish cause for his trial counsel’s failure to object to, and prejudice resulting from, the composition of his grand and traverse juries. The district court considered the claim procedurally barred, and also found lack of both cause and prejudice.
See Wainwright v. Sykes,
IV.
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Between petitioner’s sentencing and the Georgia Supreme Court’s decision on direct appeal, the United States Supreme Court held that forcible rape could not constitute a capital felony.
Coker v. Georgia,
. As acknowledged by the Georgia Supreme Court in
Collins v. State,
. As indicated, the prosecutor’s attempted quotation from
Eberhart
contains several errors. For the original passage, see
Eberhart,
. The State’s attempt to distinguish the present case from Wilson, Drake, and Potts on the ground that the jury in the present case was charged on the appropriateness of considering mercy fails. Neither Wilson, or Drake, or Potts turned on the presence or absence of a mercy instruction. Moreover, record excerpts submitted by petitioner establish that mercy instructions in fact were given in each of these three cases.
. Petitioner did not raise on appeal four instances of ineffective assistance considered by the district court: his trial counsel’s failure to challenge the composition of (1) the grand and (2) traverse juries, and his counsel’s failure (3) properly to investigate the facts and circumstances surrounding the offenses charged, and (4) thoroughly to investigate possible defenses.
. Petitioner also complains of ineffective assistance at the sentencing stage. We need not address this claim since the writ issues on other grounds. On appeal, he further alleges ineffective assistance of counsel in his first state habe-as proceeding. The Supreme Court repeatedly has held that ”[t]here is no constitutional right to an attorney in state postconviction proceedings."
Coleman
v.
Thompson,
— U.S. -,
.Petitioner complains of three additional instances of ineffective assistance at the guilt phase: (1) his counsel’s failure to preserve a burden of proof claim under
In re Winship,
Petitioner also finds fault with his counsel’s failure to present all mitigating evidence to the jury. As the writ issues with respect to petitioner’s death sentence on other grounds, we need not, and do not, address this claim.
. Petitioner does not allege a violation of his right to counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments.
. Petitioner also claims that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing on his claims that the death penalty in Georgia is arbitrarily administered, and that the death penalty in Georgia is discriminatorily administered. As mentioned above, we need not, and do not, address these challenges to petitioner’s death sentence because the writ issues with respect to petitioner's death sentence on other grounds.
