Miсhael Jenner was found guilty by a South Dakota state court jury of premeditated murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and accessory to murder. His convictions were affirmed on all direct appeals. He filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, which the district court 1 denied. On appeal, Jenner contends that he was provided ineffective assistance of counsel and his trial was fundamentally unfair because of the trial court’s refusal to sever his trial from that of his co-defendant. He also argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him and he was denied due process because of excessive and prejudicial trial security. We affirm.
The facts of this case are set forth in the South Dаkota Supreme Court opinion,
State v. Jenner,
Jenner’s convictions arose from the execution-style murder of Jackie Sjong, a prospective witness in a California murder prosecution. Ricky Fenstermaker, a member of the Vagos motorcycle club, stabbed a hitchhiker to death on a California highway. Sjong, Fenstermaker’s cousin, witnessed the stabbing. Jenner, the president of the Los An-geles chapter of the Vagos, along with co-defendant Richard Elliott, shot Sjong near the KOA campground in Sturgis, South Dakota, while the group was attending the annual Black Hills motorcycle rally. Jenner was convicted of first degree murder, conspiracy to сommit murder, and accessory after the fact to murder. After Jenner exhausted his state appeals, he petitioned for habeas corpus relief. The district court denied the writ, and Jenner appeals.
I.
Jenner raises several claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. He claims his trial counsel was ineffective on several grounds, including сounsel’s: (1) failure to object to alleged vouching for prosecution witness Fenstermaker; (2) failure to explain the presence of a Fenstermaker family photograph in Jenner’s wallet; (3) failure to fully impeach Fenstermaker; (4) failure to object to testimony that Jenner had been previously incarcerated; (5) failure to propose an ac *739 complice instruction; (6) failure to object to an attack on defense counsel; (7) failure to introduce evidence that Jenner does not smoke; (8) failure to object to the prosecution’s questioning of Jenner about not calling alibi witnesses; and (9) failure to object to the prosecution’s questioning Jenner whether certain witnesses were lying.
Our review of counsel’s representation is “highly deferential.”
Strickland v. Washington,
Jenner first claims that his counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the prosecution’s alleged vouching for Fenstermaker. 2 During Fenstermaker’s direct examination, the prosecutоr asked Fenstermaker if he was required to testify truthfully as a condition of his grant of immunity, and “that the only way that [he] could get in trouble testifying here in this case ... would be if [he] would come in and not tell the truth.” In closing argument, the prosecutor also stated that Fenstermaker had no motive to lie, because if he did lie, his immunity would be cancelled. Jenner contends these two instancеs amounted to improper vouching.
The South Dakota Supreme Court rejected this argument in Jenner’s state habeas appeal, concluding there was no improper vouching.
Jenner v. Leapley,
Jenner next contends that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to present certain evidence. During the state’s rebuttal argument, the prosecutor raised the question of how Jenner obtained a photograph of Fenstermaker’s child and former girl-friend, implying that Jenner got the phоtograph from Sjong after he killed him. Jenner contends his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to explain that he actually got the photograph from Fenstermaker’s former girlfriend. Jenner also complains about counsel’s failure to establish that he did not smoke. Two cigarette butts were found at the murder scene. There was testimony at trial that someonе with the same blood type as Sjong smoked one of the cigarettes, and that Elliott did not smoke.
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The South Dakota Supreme Court rejected these arguments. The court ruled that the prosecution improperly argued in rebuttal that Jenner may have obtained the family photograph from Sjong’s body after killing him because these comments went beyond the scope of issues raised by Jenner’s closing argument.
Jenner did not receive' ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to present evidence. First, a prosecutor’s presеntation of new argument during rebuttal is an error of state law, and does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation.
See Whitmore v. Lockhart,
Similarly, Jenner was not prejudiced by trial counsel’s failure to establish that he did not smoke. There was no evidence linking the cigarette to Jenner, only evidence that one of the cigarettes could have been Sjong’s. Evidence that Jenner did not smoke would not have changed the outcome at trial.
Jenner next argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach Fenstermaker with Fenstermaker’s four pri- or felony convictions for burglary and receiving stolen goods.
Jenner’s trial counsel explained that he did not use these convictions to impeach Fen-stermaker because the jury was informed of the details of Fenstermаker’s manslaughter conviction. Trial counsel reasoned that the burglary and stolen goods convictions were less serious than the evidence that Fenster-maker stabbed someone to death for making an obscene gesture at him. This reasoning is objectively reasonable and counsel was not deficient.
See English v. United States,
Jenner further argues that his counsel was ineffective for not objecting to testimony that Jenner had been in prison. Jenner’s counsel did not object to co-defendant Elliott’s testimony that he only talked to Jenner “a couple times because [Jenner] was in the joint most of the time.” Triаl counsel explained that he did not object because he did not want to further emphasize Jenner’s incarceration. Counsel’s failure to object amounts to a reasonable trial strategy.
See Whitmore,
Jenner also cites counsel’s failure to рropose an accomplice instruction as an example of ineffective assistance of counsel. He says his trial counsel should have proposed an instruction informing the jury that Fenstermaker was an accomplice to the Sjong murder and the jury should view Fenstermaker’s testimony cautiously.
The South Dakota Supreme Court held that Jenner was nоt entitled to an accomplice instruction because Fenstermaker was not an accomplice under state law. Given the South Dakota Supreme Court’s ruling, there is no basis for ruling that counsel was deficient for not proposing the instruction.
See Berrisford,
Jenner next contends that his trial counsel’s failure to withdraw his notice of alibi amounted to ineffective assistanсe of counsel.
Before trial, Jenner’s counsel filed a notice of alibi defense, listing six witnesses, as required by S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 23A-9-1 (1988). Jenner’s attorney subpoenaed and called only one of these witnesses because he was unable to locate the other witnesses. During the prosecutor’s cross-examination of Jenner, the prosecutor brought out Jenner’s *741 failure to call the alibi witnesses. Jenner now argues his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to this questioning and for failing to withdraw the notice.
The South Dakota Supreme Court found no error in trial counsel’s failure to object because counsel never withdrew the notice, and, therefore, the prosecution’s inquiry was proper under section 23A-9-6. Thе court further reasoned that even if counsel erred in failing to withdraw the notice, there was no prejudice, as the prosecution could still refer to the lack of alibi witnesses under South Dakota case law. We are satisfied that the prosecutor directed his comments at Jenner’s failure to call alibi witnesses, which is not a basis for an ineffective assistance claim.
See Epps v. Iowa,
Jenner also claims his counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the prosecution’s questioning of Jenner and closing argument. During Jenner’s cross-examination, the prosecutor asked Jenner whether other witnesses were lying. The South Dakota Supreme Court ruled that it was “probably improper” to ask whether other witnesses were lying, but it was not prejudicial.
Jenner also argues ineffective assistance based on his attorney’s failure to object to an attack on counsel’s integrity. The prosecutor stated in his closing argument:
You see, they had this kind of a meeting. They had this idea. ‘Hey, we can both get out of this deal together if we stick together. We can both get out.’ But you know what? You’ve heard it said before, there is no honor among thieves. There certainly isn’t honor among murderers. When it came down to it, it was each man for himself. They pointed the finger at each other and the very least, ladies and gentlemen, you can’t walk out of that jury room without at least finding one of them guilty, because the evidence is there.
Jenner’s trial counsel had met with Elliott before Elliott testified at trial. At trial, Elliott changed his story, and Jenner’s counsel impeached him. 3 Jenner contends that the prosecutor’s statement directly attacked the truthfulness of his attоrney, accusing him of concocting a story.
A fair interpretation of the prosecutor’s argument, however, is that the prosecutor accused Jenner, not his attorney, of fabricating a defense. Thus, trial counsel’s failure to object was neither deficient nor prejudicial.
See United States v. Fuller,
II.
Jenner next claims his trial was fundamentally unfair because the trial court refused tо sever his trial from that of co-defendant Elliott. Jenner claims his trial was fundamentally unfair because the jury could not compartmentalize the evidence as it related to the separate defendants and the separate counts. Jenner also claims that his defense was antagonistic and mutually exclusive to Elliott’s, and Elliott’s unexpected change of story at trial made it impossible for him to receive a fair trial.
“In challenging the trial court’s failure to sever his trial from that of his eodefendant, [Jenner] bears a heavy burden.”
Hollins v. Department of Corrections,
In affirming Jenner’s convictions, the South Dakota Supreme Court rejected Jenner’s severance argument, finding that Jenner “failed to make the requisite showing
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that his defense and that of Elliott were so irreconcilable that severance was required.”
Following the South Dakota court decision, the Supreme Court explained that the joint trial of defendants with mutually antagonistic or irreconcilable defenses is not prejudicial per se, so as to require the trial court to sever the trial of eodefendants.
Zafiro v. United States,
We are similarly unpersuaded that the number of charges
and
number of defendants mandated severing the triаls. Jenner does not explain why the jury could not compartmentalize the evidence of the three charges against the two defendants.
See United States v. Lucht,
III.
Jenner next argues that there is insufficient evidence to support his convictions. We will grant rehef for insufficient evidence only when the evidence at trial is such that no rational trier of fact could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Jenner argues that the photograph was the only physical evidence linking him to the Sjong murder, and absent his counsel’s mistakes, the prosecution could not have used this evidence to gain a conviction. Besides Elliott’s testimony identifying Jenner as the murderer, a significant amount of additional evidence pointed towards Jenner’s guilt. There was evidence that Jenner was a member of the Yagos, and that the Vagos had a policy of killing “snitches.” Indeed, Fenstermaker testified that he thought Sjong was killed because he was a snitch. Fenstermaker testified that following his arrest in California he telephoned Jenner, and Jenner told him not to “worry about it,” he would “take care of it.” Jenner told Fenstermaker not to call him or any other Vago until he heard from somebody. After Sjong’s death, another witness testified that he overheard Jenner say that “the witness has been taken care of.... ” Finally, there was evidence linking Jenner to the murder scene and one of the murder weapons. Ample evidence existed for a rational trier of fact to have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
IV.
Finally, Jenner contends that his due process rights were violated because of security measures taken at trial.
There is no record evidence, however, to tell us what security measures Jenner endured at his trial. Jenner states that there were armed federal marshals in the courtroom and throughout the courthouse. 4 He states that all spectators had to pass through a metal detector and spectators were not allowed to stay when the defendants entered or left the courthouse. He states that certain floors of the courthouse were closed, and restrictions were placed on who hе could speak with in the courthouse.
*743 Jenner says that the security measures, especially when coupled with the other trial errors, gave the jury the impression that Jenner was extremely dangerous and guilty, and this violates his due process rights.
Even assuming we have an adequate record to review Jenner’s claim, we cannot conclude the security measures idеntified by Jenner were so prejudicial that Jenner was denied a fair trial.
Holbrook v. Flynn,
We аffirm the district court’s denial of the writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. The Honorable Richard H. Battey, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.
. Jenner also argues he was denied due process because of the prosecution's vouching for Fen-stermaker. Because we conclude no improper vouching took place, we reject Jenner’s due process argument.
. Jenner also argues that the trial court erred in admitting testimony of a witness that Elliott asked the witness to retrieve Elliott's gun from the trash and to get a shovel to bury the body. Jenner does not develop this argument in detail and fails to specify any constitutional violation or even trial error.
See Jenner,
. Jenner directs us to newspaper article written during his trial which described the courthouse as "a modern-day Alamo before the attack.”
