Wright v. Haley , 169 F.3d 695 ( 1999 )


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    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT                    FILED
    U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    03/10/99
    No. 97-6646                 THOMAS K. KAHN
    CLERK
    D. C. Docket No. 94-0696-AH-M
    FREDDIE LEE WRIGHT,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    versus
    JOE HOPPER,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Alabama
    (March 10, 1999)
    Before BIRCH, DUBINA and BARKETT, Circuit Judges.
    DUBINA, Circuit Judge:
    Petitioner, Freddie Lee Wright (“Wright”), appeals the district court’s order
    denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Wright was convicted and sentenced to
    death for the December 1, 1977, robbery and murders of Warren and Lois Green (“the
    Greens” or “the victims”), at the Western Auto Store in Mt. Vernon, Alabama. After
    reviewing the entire record in this case, and having the benefit of oral argument and the
    parties’ briefs, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. Facts
    The facts are recited verbatim from the opinion of the Alabama Court of Criminal
    Appeals on direct review of Wright’s conviction and sentence.
    The State presented evidence that around 10:30 on the morning of
    December 1, 1977, Mr. Green had cashed checks in the amount of $900 at a
    local bank and placed the money in a red bank bag. Shortly before noon, it
    was discovered that Mr. and Mrs. Green had been tied together and shot in
    their Western Auto Store in Mount Vernon. The money was missing from
    the cash register, and a television, a stereo component system, and several
    watches were also missing from the store. Mr. Green was not wearing the
    Seiko watch he had been wearing earlier that morning. His family had
    given him this watch as a birthday present on November 30, 1977.
    Doris Lacey Lambert testified that, on the 2nd day of December of
    1977, the defendant told her that “he had went out with some of his
    friends,” “Craig, Roger, and ‘Gill Man,’” to Mount Vernon and that “he
    killed two people” with a gun in a Western Auto Store.
    On cross examination, Ms. Lambert admitted that she had one child
    by the defendant but denied making the statement that “before she would
    see another woman have him she would see him dead” after she learned that
    the defendant was engaged to another woman. She admitted that she had
    been convicted of shoplifting.
    2
    Roger McQueen testified that he had been convicted of armed
    robbery and was going to plead guilty to first degree murder for the Mount
    Vernon killings. He “considered himself a guilty participant in this
    murder.” McQueen stated that he and Craig lived in the same apartment
    complex in Mobile. On December 1, 1977, they took Craig’s car and
    picked up the defendant and Tinsley. About one week before, at his
    suggestion, a decision had been made between him and Craig “to rob some
    store in Jackson.” The defendant and Tinsley learned of the plan and
    agreed to go. On the way to Jackson, they stopped in Mount Vernon to get
    some tape to repair a torn seat in Craig’s car.
    McQueen went in the Western Auto Store to purchase the tape.
    Wright came in later armed with a gun and told Mr. and Mrs. Green to
    come out from behind the desk into a “little room.” The defendant told
    McQueen “to go to the register” and Tinsley entered the store. McQueen
    removed the money from the register and Tinsley, at the defendant’s
    direction, got some extension cord to tie up Mr. and Mrs. Green. The
    defendant and Tinsley then tied up the Greens. The defendant made several
    trips from the store to Craig’s car and took a T.V. set and a stereo system.
    Tinsley took the watches. The defendant also had Mr. Green’s watch.
    McQueen also testified that Craig told him to “make sure the people were
    taken care of” because “the people would have identified the car.” The
    defendant was the last one to leave the store. When he returned to Craig’s
    car, the others “asked him what took place and he said that he had took care
    of both peoples.” * * * “He said he had shot both peoples and also Reginald
    Tinsley agreed with him because he went back into the store the last time.”
    McQueen asked the defendant to show him the empty cartridges if the
    defendant shot both people and the defendant handed McQueen “two empty
    cartridge[s] from the gun.” The gun was a “nickel plate .38 with some kind
    of carving handle, a wooden handle.” McQueen testified that they left
    Mount Vernon and went to Craig’s sister’s house where they divided the
    money he had taken from the store. The defendant gave the T.V. to Craig
    and the stereo was taken to where the defendant “stayed at.” McQueen left
    the “bank carrier” that he had taken at Craig’s sister’s house.
    Percy Craig testified that he had been convicted for “possession”,
    forgery, and burglary. He admitted his participation in this offense under
    review as “the driver” and testified that he intended to plead guilty to a
    charge of murder. Craig substantially corroborated McQueen’s testimony.
    3
    Craig testified that, when McQueen returned to the car after having
    been in the store, either Tinsley or the defendant asked him “how did it look
    inside.” He admitted that he asked his three companions “if everything had
    been taken care of” because “they were in and out of the store so fast I
    wanted to be sure that the people were tied up to give me enough time to get
    away.” After they left the store, the defendant gave McQueen “a couple of
    empty cartridges . . . to throw out of the window.” Craig then asked if he
    shot the people and the defendant said yes. Craig testified that a couple of
    days after the robbery he saw the defendant with a Seiko watch that was
    subsequently identified as having been Mr. Green’s. Craig said that the
    defendant gave the watch to Joe Nathan Beckham who pawned the watch.
    Other witnesses for the State identified the Seiko watch. It was
    established that this watch was pawned by Joe N. Beckham at Buster’s
    Eagle Pawn Shop in Mobile on January 16, 1978.
    Expert testimony presented by the State established that Mr. and
    Mrs. Green were both shot once in the head with a .38 caliber bullet and
    that the bullet recovered from Mr. Green’s head could have been fired from
    a pistol recovered directly behind the defendant’s apartment. The bullet
    that had killed Mrs. Green was too mutilated to compare.
    The defendant was arrested at the Stone Oaks Apartment on July 28,
    1978. He was living with Hazel Craig, who, when the deputies asked,
    denied that the defendant was home. The officers searched the apartment
    and found the defendant in a bedroom. Later, a .38 caliber revolver was
    recovered on the ground next to an air conditioning unit at the rear of the
    apartment. Although the ground was damp, apparently from the early
    morning mist or dew, the gun was “perfectly dry” and “had what appeared
    to be a fine coating of lint material on the gun itself.”
    Wright v. State, 
    494 So.2d 726
    , 733-35 (Ala. Crim. App. 1985).
    B. Procedural History
    Wright’s first trial ended in a mistrial, but a Mobile County Grand Jury re-indicted
    him for the capital offenses of “[r]obbery or attempts thereof, when the victim is
    intentionally killed by the defendant” and “[m]urder in the first degree wherein two or
    4
    more human beings are intentionally killed by the defendant by one or a series of acts.”
    See 
    Ala. Code § 13-11-2
    (a)(2) (1975) (repealed and replaced, § 13A-5-40(a)(2)) and 
    Ala. Code § 13-11-2
    (a)(10) (1975) (repealed and replaced, § 13A-5-40(a)(10)). After a two-
    day trial, the jury found Wright guilty of both counts and set his punishment at death.
    After a separate sentencing hearing, the trial court imposed the death sentence.
    On direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reversed and remanded
    the case on the authority of Beck v. Alabama, 
    447 U.S. 625
     (1980), and Ritter v. State,
    
    403 So.2d 154
     (Ala. 1981). The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals denied the State’s
    application for rehearing and the Alabama Supreme Court then denied the State’s petition
    for writ of certiorari. See Wright v. State, 
    407 So.2d 565
     (Ala. 1981). The United States
    Supreme Court granted the State’s petition for writ of certiorari, vacated the judgment of
    the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, and remanded the case to the Alabama Court of
    Criminal Appeals for reconsideration in light of Hopper v. Evans, 
    456 U.S. 605
     (1982).
    See Alabama v. Wright, 
    457 U.S. 1114
     (1982).
    After remand by the United States Supreme Court, the Alabama Court of Criminal
    Appeals affirmed Wright’s conviction and sentence of death. See Wright v. State, 
    494 So.2d 726
    . The Alabama Supreme Court affirmed. See Wright v. State, 
    494 So.2d 745
    (Ala. 1986). The Alabama Supreme Court denied Wright’s application for rehearing and
    the United States Supreme Court denied Wright’s petition for writ of certiorari. Wright v.
    Alabama, 
    479 U.S. 1101
     (1987).
    5
    Wright filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis in the Mobile County Circuit
    Court on June 22, 1987. After conducting an evidentiary hearing on the petition, the trial
    court denied Wright coram nobis relief. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
    affirmed the trial court’s decision. See Wright v. State, 
    593 So.2d 111
     (Ala. Crim. App.
    1991). On January 31, 1992, the Alabama Supreme Court denied Wright’s application
    for writ of certiorari and the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari review. See
    Wright v. Alabama, 
    506 U.S. 844
     (1992).
    Wright then filed his federal habeas corpus petition. After conducting an
    evidentiary hearing on Wright’s allegations, the district court denied Wright habeas relief.
    II. ISSUES
    1. Whether the State’s failure to produce certain items of evidence violated Brady
    v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
     (1963).
    2. Whether Wright received ineffective assistance of counsel because counsel
    failed to investigate another person’s arrest and indictment for the same crime; failed to
    challenge the State’s alleged use of peremptory challenges to strike all black members
    from the venire and failed to raise this issue on direct appeal; and failed to object to the
    admission of misleading information in Wright’s pre-sentence investigation report.
    3. Whether Wright established a prima facie violation of Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
     (1986), and whether Wright’s Batson claims are procedurally barred because
    counsel did not raise an objection at trial under Swain v. Alabama, 
    380 U.S. 202
     (1965).
    6
    4. Whether the preclusion clause in Alabama’s former Death Penalty Act
    unconstitutionally prevented the instruction of a lesser included offense in this case.
    5. Whether Wright is entitled to relief on the remaining claims presented to the
    district court.
    III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    We review the district court’s grant or denial of habeas corpus relief de novo. See
    Byrd v. Hasty, 
    142 F.3d 1395
    , 1396 (11th Cir. 1998). “A district court’s factual findings
    in a habeas corpus proceeding are reviewed for clear error.” 
    Id. at 1396
    . An alleged
    Brady violation presents a mixed question of law and fact, which this court reviews de
    novo. See Duest v. Singletary, 
    967 F.2d 472
    , 478 (11th Cir. 1992). We also review de
    novo the district court’s determination that Wright is procedurally barred from raising
    some of his claims in federal court and its application of the cause and prejudice rules to
    the procedural bar issues. See Lusk v. Singletary, 
    112 F.3d 1103
    , 1105 (11th Cir. 1997),
    cert. denied, 
    118 S.Ct. 894
     (1998). An ineffective assistance of counsel claim is a mixed
    question of law and fact which we review de novo. See Dobbs v. Turpin, 
    142 F.3d 1383
    ,
    1386 (11th Cir. 1998).
    7
    IV. DISCUSSION
    A. Brady claim
    Wright contends that the State violated Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , when it
    withheld several crucial items of evidence. These items include the testimony of Mary
    Johnson (“Johnson”) which placed Theodore Otis Roberts (“Roberts”) at the Western
    Auto Store shortly before the murders (“the Johnson testimony”); an affidavit of
    Detective Stroh that declared that Roberts’s girlfriend had stated that a handgun
    belonging to Roberts was the weapon that was used to kill the Greens (“the Stroh
    affidavit”); evidence that Doris Lambert, Wright’s former girlfriend and witness for the
    State at trial, had a history of poor mental health and drug use (“Lambert evidence”); and
    evidence that the State and Roger McQueen, a member of the robbery team and witness
    for the State, entered a secret agreement that provided lenient treatment for McQueen if
    he testified against Wright at trial (“McQueen agreement”). The district court found all
    but the Johnson testimony to be procedurally barred from federal court review.
    In order to establish a violation of Brady, Wright must demonstrate:
    (1) that the Government possessed evidence favorable to the defendant
    (including impeachment evidence) . . . ; (2) that the defendant does not
    possess the evidence nor could he obtain it himself with any reasonable
    diligence . . . ; (3) that the prosecution suppressed the favorable evidence . .
    . ; and (4) that had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, a reasonable
    probability exists that the outcome of the proceedings would have been
    different. . . .
    United States v. Meros, 
    866 F.2d 1304
    , 1308 (11th Cir. 1989) (citations omitted). For
    Brady purposes, evidence is material “only if there is a reasonable probability that, had
    8
    the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different.” United States v. Stewart, 
    820 F.2d 370
    , 374 (11th Cir. 1987)(citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). “A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient
    to undermine confidence in the outcome.” United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682
    (1985).
    1. The Johnson testimony
    Mary Johnson reported to the police that she entered the Western Auto Store
    shortly before the robbery-murders. As she entered, she observed a blue automobile with
    several people in it. When she left the store, she met a person entering, and she observed
    the same blue automobile parked nearby with three people in the back seat and one
    person in the front seat. When she learned of the murders, she gave the police a
    description of the person she had seen entering the store. She subsequently identified a
    photograph of the person she saw and later identified the same person in a police line-up.
    The person she identified in both instances was Roberts, who bears a striking resemblance
    to Roger McQueen. The automobile Percy Craig drove on the day of the robbery-murders
    was blue. In light of this information, the State filed charges against Roberts and Mary
    Johnson testified at the preliminary hearing. Roberts was indicted, but the State dropped
    the charges after the prosecutors concluded that Johnson had misidentified him. See
    Wright v. State, 593 So.2d at 115.
    Wright argued in his error coram nobis petition that the State suppressed the
    preliminary hearing testimony of Mary Johnson in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373
    
    9 U.S. 83
    . After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the trial court concluded that the State
    did not suppress evidence pertaining to Mary Johnson’s identification of Roberts. On
    appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, holding that the record
    adequately supported the trial court’s findings. The court noted that Wright’s trial
    counsel was aware that the State had charged Roberts with the crimes prior to Wright’s
    trial; that the preliminary hearing in Roberts’s case was a matter of public record; and that
    the local newspapers extensively reported the substance of Johnson’s testimony prior to
    Wright’s trial. The court also found that the evidence was not material. See Wright v.
    State, 593 So.2d at 115-16.
    The district court determined that the testimony of Al Pennington (“Pennington”),
    Wright’s trial counsel, at the federal evidentiary hearing and the state court’s factual
    findings supported the conclusion that the Johnson testimony did not violate Brady. We
    agree. The State did not suppress the evidence. Pennington testified that he knew that
    Roberts had been indicted for the crime, and he knew of Mary Johnson’s existence
    because he placed her on the defense’s witness list. ROA, Vol. 8, p. 83. Although the
    Johnson testimony was not part of Roberts’s official court record, nothing prevented
    Pennington from discovering the transcript or interviewing Mary Johnson to discern the
    crux of her testimony. In light of this and the fact that the State is not required to furnish
    a defendant with exculpatory evidence that is fully available through the exercise of due
    diligence, we conclude there was no Brady violation. See United States v. McMahon,
    
    715 F.2d 498
    , 501 (11th Cir. 1983).
    10
    Assuming arguendo that the Johnson testimony was suppressed by the State,
    Wright argues that this evidence was material because it showed that another individual
    may have committed the crime and this evidence would have raised serious questions
    about the credibility of Craig and McQueen’s testimony. Thus, the evidence could have
    changed the outcome of the trial. There is one fatal flaw with Wright’s argument. The
    Johnson testimony would not have changed the outcome of the trial because it did nothing
    to indicate that Wright was not present at the crime scene, and it did nothing to contradict
    Craig and McQueen’s testimony that Wright was the triggerman. Additionally, in
    contrast to Wright’s argument, the Johnson testimony would not have impeached Craig
    and McQueen because they were each impeached on several grounds and neither one ever
    mentioned that Roberts was a participant in the crime. Moreover, Wright never
    mentioned Roberts to his ex-girlfriend Doris Lambert when he implicated McQueen,
    Craig, Tinsley, and himself in the murders. The defense would have had a remote chance
    of convincing the jury that Roberts was involved in the murders. Accordingly, the
    Johnson testimony had no bearing on the essential facts that resulted in Wright’s
    conviction, and therefore, the testimony could not have changed the outcome of the trial.
    In sum, we conclude that the Johnson testimony was neither suppressed nor material, and
    therefore, there was no Brady violation.
    2. The remaining items of evidence
    The district court concluded that the remaining items of allegedly exculpatory
    evidence – the Stroh affidavit, the Lambert evidence, and the McQueen agreement –
    11
    were all procedurally defaulted because the petitioner failed to raise these claims in the
    state court. The failure to raise these claims to the state courts is a procedural default that
    bars federal habeas review of the claims. See Wainwright v. Sykes, 
    433 U.S. 72
     (1977).
    A federal court will consider the claims, however, if the petitioner can show “cause and
    prejudice” for his procedural default or that failure to consider his claims will result in a
    fundamental miscarriage of justice. See Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    , 750 (1991).
    The district court evaluated both exceptions to the doctrine of procedural default and
    found that cause existed, but that Wright had not proved prejudice to overcome the
    procedural default. The district court also determined that the fundamental miscarriage of
    justice exception was not applicable.
    To establish “cause” for a procedural default, a petitioner must demonstrate that
    some objective factor external to the defense impeded the effort to raise the claim
    properly in state court. See Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 488 (1986). The district
    court found cause to exist because the record demonstrates that the State was in
    possession of the Stroh affidavit, the Lambert evidence, and the McQueen agreement, and
    did not disclose these materials to the defense. Thus, the district court concluded that the
    State prevented Wright from raising these claims in the state courts. The record does not
    support this finding. Wright presented no evidence indicating that the State’s post-
    conviction counsel did anything to suppress the above-referenced items or did anything to
    impede Wright from learning about these items of evidence. However, the district court’s
    12
    correct finding that there was no prejudice pretermits a more lengthy discussion on why
    cause was not proven by Wright.
    In order to establish prejudice, Wright must show that the items of evidence were
    material; that is, that “had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different.” United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682
    (1985) (Blackmun, J.). Wright fails to make this showing.
    a. The Stroh affidavit.
    This affidavit declares that Roberts’s girlfriend stated to Detective Stroh that a
    handgun belonging to Roberts was the weapon that was used to kill the Greens during the
    robbery. Even if the State had disclosed the affidavit to the defense, it would not have
    been admissible at trial because it is hearsay. The defense easily could have called
    Roberts’s girlfriend to testify at trial regarding her alleged statement to Detective Stroh.
    Inadmissible evidence may be material if the evidence would have led to
    admissible evidence. See Spaziano v. Singletary, 
    36 F.3d 1028
    , 1044 (11th Cir. 1994).1
    1
    In Wood v. Bartholomew, 
    516 U.S. 1
    , ___, 
    116 S.Ct. 7
    , 10 (1995), the Supreme
    Court considered the question whether inadmissible evidence may be material under
    Brady. In that case, the Supreme Court reviewed a holding of the Ninth Circuit Court of
    Appeals that an inadmissible polygraph test was material under Brady because the
    polygraph results may have led defense counsel to additional information which may
    have been used at trial. In reversing, the Court did not declare that admissibility was a
    precondition to materiality. The Court proceeded to sift through the record and, after
    examining the possible effects that the undisclosed polygraph results would have had on
    the outcome of the trial, concluded that the information was not material. 
    116 S.Ct. at
    10-
    11. The Court reiterated the traditional Brady standard that evidence is material “only
    where there exists a reasonable probability that had the evidence been disclosed the result
    at trial would have been different.” 
    Id. at 10
    . Thus, the Court did not hold that
    13
    Wright has failed to show that the affidavit would have led to admissible evidence
    because he did not call Roberts’s girlfriend as a witness at the federal evidentiary hearing.
    Therefore, it is unknown exactly what she would say, and accordingly, Wright has failed
    to prove that what she would say is material. A court cannot speculate as to what
    evidence the defense might have found if the information had been disclosed. Wood, 
    116 S.Ct. at 11
    . The crucial inquiry is whether there is evidence in the record that establishes
    a “reasonable probability” that the production of the inadmissible evidence would have
    resulted in a different outcome at trial. 
    Id. at 10
    . There is no such evidence in this record.
    Since the evidence is not likely to have changed the outcome of his trial, Wright has not
    shown prejudice to overcome his procedural default.
    b. The Lambert evidence.
    The District Attorney’s office had Doris Lambert’s mental health records but did
    not give them to Wright’s lawyers. The district court found that this evidence was not
    admissible under Alabama law, and accordingly, was not material. Wright argues that the
    evidence was material because the case against him centered upon Doris Lambert’s
    credibility and the evidence of her mental health and drug use could have been used at
    trial to impeach her credibility.
    Under Alabama law, Lambert’s mental health records and reported drug use would
    not have been admissible at Wright’s trial. In Alabama, a prosecutor or defense attorney
    admissibility of undisclosed evidence is a prerequisite to materiality. Accordingly, Wood
    does not conflict with our decision in Spaziano.
    14
    cannot use evidence of drug use to impeach a witness unless it is shown that the drugs
    affect the reliability of the witness’s testimony. See Leonard v. State, 
    551 So.2d 1143
    ,
    1147 (Ala. Crim. App. 1989). Moreover, “[t]he credibility of a witness may be
    impeached by proving mental derangement or insanity but only if such mental incapacity
    exists at the time the witness takes the stand to testify or at the time he observed the facts
    to which he has testified on direct.” Charles Gamble, McElroy’s Alabama Evidence §
    141.01(1) (3d ed. 1977).
    There is no evidence that Lambert was using drugs when she testified at Wright’s
    trial or when Wright told her that he killed the Greens. Nor is there any evidence that
    Lambert was suffering any mental incapacity when she testified or when Wright
    confessed to her. The district court found evidence that Lambert suffered from
    depression several years before the Greens’s murders, but it found no evidence that
    Lambert suffered from depression during trial or when Wright confessed to her.
    Notwithstanding the fact that Lambert admitted to using drugs occasionally between
    Wright’s confession and trial, the district court found no evidence that her occasional
    drug use impaired her faculties. These findings are not clearly erroneous.
    Moreover, even if the Lambert evidence had been admitted at trial, the evidence
    would have had little impact on the jury’s perception of her credibility. Mr. Pennington
    cross-examined Lambert and elicited from her that she had been convicted of shoplifting
    and that she was Wright’s former girlfriend and had a son Wright fathered. See Trial
    Transcript, Doc. 12, Vol. 1, p. 174-75. Mr. Pennington also questioned Lambert’s mother
    15
    who stated that she told her daughter not to come to trial and tell a “bunch of lies.” Id.,
    Vol. 2, p. 291. Thus, Mr. Pennington was able to call Lambert’s credibility into question
    during his examination. Moreover, this evidence does not rise to the level of “mental
    derangement or insanity,” nor does it establish the type of drug problem that produces an
    impaired mind. See McElroy’s Alabama Evidence; Leonard, 551 So.2d at 1147. In short,
    the Lambert evidence would not have been admissible at Wright’s trial, and even if it had
    been admitted, it would have had little bearing on the credibility of her testimony.
    Accordingly, we conclude that this evidence is not material.
    c. The McQueen agreement.
    Wright alleges that the State and Roger McQueen secretly agreed that McQueen
    would plead to a lesser charge and testify against Wright at trial. Wright also alleges that
    McQueen perjured himself at trial by testifying that he planned to plead guilty to first
    degree murder instead of second degree murder. Wright relies on McQueen’s testimony
    at the federal evidentiary hearing to support these contentions.
    The district court found that the McQueen agreement could have been used to
    impeach McQueen at trial; but that the potential impact of any possible impeachment
    would have been de minimis. This is true in light of Mr. Pennington’s cross-examination
    of McQueen at trial. Pennington attempted to impeach the credibility of McQueen by
    eliciting from him his previous convictions for grand larceny and arson and his admission
    to the use of drugs on the day of the robbery. McQueen even openly admitted to being
    high the morning of the robbery-murders. See Trial Transcript, Doc. 12, Vol. 1, p. 198-
    16
    201. Additionally, even if the McQueen agreement would have totally discredited
    McQueen, the State still had the testimony of Craig and Lambert, in combination with the
    physical evidence, to support Wright’s conviction. Moreover, when McQueen testified at
    the federal evidentiary hearing on Wright’s behalf, the district court found that
    McQueen’s testimony was not credible. See ROA, Vol. 8, p. 172.
    McQueen testified at trial that he planned to plead guilty to first degree murder and
    armed robbery; however, at the federal evidentiary hearing, the State presented testimony
    that proved that McQueen, in exchange for truthful testimony, would be prosecuted for
    less than capital murder. Id. at p. 99, 185, 209. Thus, the outcome of Wright’s trial
    would not have been different if McQueen had told the jury that he planned to plead
    guilty to second degree murder rather than first degree murder. Both charges are less than
    capital murder charges and do not have the same attendant sentence.
    Wright further argues that the documents he introduced into evidence at the federal
    evidentiary hearing establish that the State had a secret deal with McQueen. A review of
    the hearing transcript, however, reveals that the State’s witnesses disproved the existence
    of such a deal. An entry contained in McQueen’s court file shows he was convicted of
    second degree murder and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, to run consecutive with a
    sentence he was serving in Mississippi. ROA, Vol. 8, Folder 6, Petitioner’s Exh.’s 15 &
    16. This document is consistent with the testimony of the State’s witnesses who stated
    that McQueen’s sentence was to run consecutively with the Mississippi sentence. ROA,
    Vol. 8, p. 100, 209. Wright still argues that prosecutors promised McQueen that he
    17
    would not have to serve his sentence in Alabama and that he did not serve that sentence.
    Id. at p. 175. However, McQueen mentioned in his testimony that the district attorney
    later had a detainer issued so that he could begin serving his sentence for his participation
    in the robbery-murders. Id. This testimony and the documentary evidence negate any
    claim Wright has that the State and McQueen had a secret deal. Accordingly, Wright
    cannot demonstrate prejudice to overcome his procedural default.
    Cumulatively, the Stroh affidavit, Lambert evidence, and McQueen agreement do
    not undermine confidence in the verdict. See Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
     (1995).
    Most of the items would have been inadmissible at trial, and the others would not have
    changed the outcome of the trial. Accordingly, Wright has not demonstrated prejudice
    from his failure to raise these claims in state court. This court could consider Wright’s
    claims however, if they fall within the “narrow class of cases . . . implicating a
    fundamental miscarriage of justice.” Schlup v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 315 (1995) (quoting
    McCleskey v. Zant, 
    499 U.S. 467
    , 494 (1991) (internal quotation marks omitted). A
    fundamental miscarriage of justice occurs “where a constitutional violation has probably
    resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent.” Id. at 321 (quoting Murray v.
    Carrier, 
    477 U.S. at 496
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Wright cannot establish by a fair probability that no reasonable juror would have
    found him guilty in light of all the evidence which he alleges was wrongfully suppressed.
    See Schlup, 
    513 U.S. at 329
    . At trial, the State called several witnesses who testified
    extensively to Wright’s participation in the robbery-murders. Lambert testified that
    18
    Wright confessed to killing two people with a gun at a Western Auto Store. McQueen
    admitted to his participation in the crimes and testified that at the time of the crimes,
    Wright possessed a .38 caliber handgun. McQueen further stated that upon entering the
    getaway vehicle, Wright told the other members of the robbery team that he shot the
    Greens. McQueen testified that after Wright made this statement, Wright handed
    McQueen two expended bullet cartridges to prove that he had killed the Greens. Craig’s
    testimony substantially corroborated McQueen’s. Craig further testified that after the
    commission of the crimes, he saw Wright with a gold Seiko watch that was later
    identified as Mr. Green’s. The State also produced physical evidence that linked Wright
    to the robbery-murders.
    Wright maintains that he is innocent but does not mention his alibi defense that he
    proffered at trial. He attempts to establish his innocence by shifting the focus to Roberts.
    Wright alleges that Roberts murdered the Greens and that McQueen and Craig are
    covering for Roberts by implicating Wright; however, Wright offers no evidence to
    support this contention. The allegedly suppressed items of evidence do tend to raise some
    question as to whether Roberts may have been involved in the robbery-murders. Indeed,
    this evidence originally prompted the State to indict Roberts. Wright must go further,
    however, and show that in light of this new evidence, “no juror, acting reasonably, would
    have voted to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     The allegedly suppressed
    material does not satisfy this standard. At the federal evidentiary hearing, McQueen
    testified that everything he previously told the police was true except for the fact that
    19
    Wright did not murder the Greens. McQueen makes no reference to Roberts being
    present at the robbery-murders and did not say who actually shot the Greens.
    Accordingly, a reasonable jury could find Wright guilty of killing the Greens. Wright
    cannot overcome his procedural default on the remaining Brady claims.
    B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel claims
    Wright asserts numerous instances of ineffective assistance of counsel but he only
    raised four of them in the state courts. The claims that Wright did not raise in the state
    courts are procedurally defaulted, see Footman v. Singletary, 
    978 F.2d 1207
    , 1211 (11th
    Cir. 1992), so we will only review them if Wright can show cause and prejudice or a
    fundamental miscarriage of justice. See Agan v. Vaughn, 
    119 F.3d 1538
    , 1548-49 (11th
    Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 
    118 S.Ct. 1305
     (1998). For Wright to show cause, the procedural
    default “must result from some objective factor external to the defense that prevented
    [him] from raising the claim and which cannot be fairly attributable to his own conduct.”
    McCoy v. Newsome, 
    953 F.2d 1252
    , 1258 (11th Cir. 1992) (quoting Carrier, 
    477 U.S. at 488
    ). Under the prejudice prong, Wright must show that “the errors at trial actually and
    substantially disadvantaged his defense so that he was denied fundamental fairness.” Id.
    at 1261 (quoting Carrier, 
    477 U.S. at 494
    ). The district court found that Wright had not
    demonstrated cause and prejudice to excuse his procedural defaults. On appeal, Wright
    provides the court with no explanation or evidence to establish cause and prejudice.
    20
    Accordingly, these remaining claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are barred from
    federal habeas review.2
    The district court correctly determined that only four instances of ineffective
    assistance of counsel were properly before the court for review: (1) whether counsel was
    ineffective in allegedly failing to investigate Roberts’s involvement in the robbery-
    murders; (2) whether counsel was ineffective in failing to raise a Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
     (1986), objection at trial; (3) whether counsel was ineffective for failing to obtain
    a transcript of Wright’s first trial which ended in a mistrial; and (4) whether counsel was
    ineffective for failing to challenge on direct appeal the trial court’s grant of the State’s
    motion in limine regarding the arrest and indictment of Roberts. In order to prevail on his
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Wright must show that counsel’s performance
    2
    These claims were presented in Wright’s federal habeas petition and delineated
    as ineffective assistance for (1) failing to adequately investigate and prepare for trial; (2)
    failing to compel disclosure of all evidence relating to the handgun the ballistics expert
    had previously identified; (3) failing to adequately challenge and otherwise establish the
    systematic under-representation of blacks, women and other cognizable groups in the jury
    pool; (4) failing to object to improper voir dire questioning; (5) failing to cross-examine
    Craig, McQueen or Detective Tillman as to any deals between Craig or McQueen and the
    State; (6) failing to cross-examine Lambert regarding any deals she received from the
    State; (7) failing to seek a continuance or mistrial so he could testify regarding his prior
    conversation with Lambert and to obtain testimony from Tinsley; (8) failing to call other
    alibi witnesses at trial; (9) failing to object to numerous improper jury instructions; (10)
    failing to bring to the court’s attention the fact that Craig’s former girlfriend stated that
    Craig told her that he and McQueen committed the murders; (11) failing to object to
    repeated improper and leading questioning by the prosecutor, irrelevant and prejudicial
    testimony, improperly stipulating to the expert qualifications of witnesses, and failing to
    object to improper comments by the trial judge; (12) ineffective assistance at sentencing;
    and (13) ineffective assistance on appeal.
    21
    fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, and that the deficient performance
    prejudiced his defense. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 686 (1984). “When
    applying Strickland, we are free to dispose of ineffectiveness claims on either of its two
    grounds.” Oats v. Singletary, 
    141 F.3d 1018
    , 1023 (11th Cir. 1998).
    1. Wright alleges that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate
    Roberts’s alleged involvement in the robbery-murders. On collateral review, the state trial
    court found that counsel’s failure to investigate Roberts’s alleged involvement in the
    robbery-murders was the result of a strategic decision based on Pennington’s skill and
    reputation, and his prior knowledge that Roberts was the focus of the police investigation
    of the Greens’s murders. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals found that the record
    supported the trial court’s findings and denied Wright any relief on this claim. See
    Wright v. State, 593 So.2d at 116-17. The district court relied on the state court’s findings
    on this claim to deny Wright any relief. Wright argues that the state courts and the district
    court erred in finding that Pennington’s failure to investigate Roberts’s alleged
    involvement in the robbery-murders was the result of a strategic choice because in both
    the state coram nobis hearing and the federal evidentiary hearing, Pennington
    categorically denied that he made a strategic decision not to investigate. ROA, Vol. 3,
    Folder 3, p. 32-45; Vol. 8, p. 51.
    Although Pennington denied making a strategic decision not to investigate
    Roberts’s alleged involvement in the robbery-murders, the record contradicts this
    assertion. Pennington admitted knowing that Roberts had been indicted for the same
    22
    offense as Wright and knowing who had represented Roberts. ROA, Vol. 8, p. 55, 57.
    When asked why he did not pursue inquiry into the State’s case against Roberts,
    Pennington answered, “I had other avenues to pursue concerning the remainder of my
    defense for Freddie Wright.” Id. at 57. Pennington knew that Mary Johnson was on his
    witness list because he requested that she be. Id. at 82. He reluctantly admitted that he
    knew that Mary Johnson had some tie to Wright’s case. Id. at 83. Pennington admitted
    that he had to make choices in defending a client based on factors such as time,
    information, and what his client told him. Id. Thus, Pennington admitted to the process
    of making strategic decisions. “[B]ecause ineffectiveness is a question which we must
    decide, admissions of deficient performance by attorneys are not decisive.” Harris v.
    Dugger, 
    874 F.2d 756
    , 761 n. 4 (11th Cir. 1989). The record persuades us that Wright’s
    trial counsel was not ineffective for failing to investigate Roberts’s alleged involvement
    in the robbery-murders.
    2. Wright argues that his counsel was ineffective for failing to raise a Batson
    objection at trial and in failing to supplement the record on appeal with a Batson
    challenge. Pennington testified at the federal evidentiary hearing that no blacks sat on
    Wright’s jury and that he knew that the State used several of its peremptory strikes to
    remove black persons from the jury. ROA, Vol. 8, p. 68. At the state coram nobis
    hearing, Pennington stated that he did not object to the State’s use of its peremptory
    strikes because the law was very developed and the Alabama Supreme Court had ruled
    that peremptory strikes could be used for any reason. ROA, Vol. 3, Folder 3, p. 38-39.
    23
    In Poole v. United States, 
    832 F.2d 561
    , 565 (11th Cir. 1987), we held that counsel
    was not ineffective for failing to raise a Batson objection prior to the issuance of that
    case. In so holding, we stated that “[t]he Supreme Court has held that ‘Batson v.
    Kentucky is an explicit and substantial break with prior precedent,’ Allen v. Hardy, [
    478 U.S. 255
     (1986)], so that ‘the rule in Batson should not be available to petitioner on
    federal habeas corpus review of his convictions.’” 
    832 F.2d at 565
    . Since Wright’s trial
    occurred before Batson, Wright is not entitled to relief on this claim.
    Wright’s other Batson-related claim – that counsel was ineffective for failing to
    supplement the record on appeal with a Batson challenge – is not properly before our
    court for review. Wright did not argue this to the district court. We will not consider
    claims not properly presented to the district court and which are raised for the first time
    on appeal. See Cotton v. U.S. Pipe & Foundry Co., 
    856 F.2d 158
    , 162 (11th Cir. 1988).
    3. The only other issue of ineffective assistance that Wright asserts on appeal is
    his claim that counsel was ineffective during the penalty phase of his trial. This claim is
    procedurally defaulted. See Footman, 
    978 F.2d at 1211
    . With regard to the other claims
    of ineffective assistance which Wright presented in the state courts and are not
    procedurally barred, Wright does not separately address these claims in his brief on
    appeal. Wright contends at the conclusion of his brief that he is entitled to relief on all
    claims raised in his federal habeas petition. Therefore, we must consider the other two
    claims of ineffective assistance of counsel which are not procedurally barred from our
    review.
    24
    These claims are whether counsel was ineffective for failing to obtain a transcript
    of Wright’s first trial and whether counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge on
    appeal the trial court’s grant of the State’s motion in limine regarding the arrest and
    indictment of Roberts. Since Wright cannot demonstrate why his counsel’s failure to
    obtain a transcript of his first trial affected the outcome of his second trial, he is not
    entitled to relief on this claim. As to his claim that counsel should have objected on
    appeal to the trial court’s grant of the State’s motion in limine, Wright fails to
    demonstrate how the result of his appeal would have been different had counsel objected.
    Accordingly, Wright is not entitled to relief on these claims of ineffective assistance of
    counsel.
    C. Batson claim
    Wright contends that the State used its peremptory strikes in a racially
    discriminatory manner in violation of Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
     (1986). The
    district court correctly determined that Wright procedurally defaulted this claim because
    he did not raise a substantive Batson claim at trial, or on direct appeal, or in his state
    coram nobis proceeding. To excuse his procedural default, Wright must show cause and
    prejudice. See Weeks v. Jones, 
    26 F.3d 1030
    , 1043 (11th Cir. 1994).
    Wright urges this court to overlook his procedural default because the Alabama
    courts have not regularly and consistently applied a procedural bar to cases where a
    Batson claim was not raised on direct appeal. Wright relies on this court’s decision in
    Cochran v. Herring, 
    43 F.3d 1404
     (11th Cir.), modified on reh’g, 
    61 F.3d 20
     (1995), to
    25
    support his contention. In Cochran, this court found that “where the trial took place pre-
    Batson, a properly made Swain claim made in a pre-trial motion is treated as a timely
    made Batson objection for the purpose of preserving the Batson issue for appeal.” 
    43 F.3d at
    1409 n.7. This court noted that the Alabama Supreme Court in Ex parte Floyd,
    
    571 So.2d 1234
     (Ala. 1990), allowed a defendant to raise a Batson claim in a post-
    conviction motion because he had raised a Swain objection at trial. Cochran was
    identically situated to Floyd, and we concluded that the Alabama state courts had applied
    its procedural rules inconsistently when it allowed Floyd to proceed with his Batson claim
    but denied Cochran that right.
    Although Wright’s case does share some similarities with Cochran’s – both cases
    were tried pre-Batson and Batson was decided while their direct appeals were pending --
    there is one fatal flaw in Wright’s reliance on Cochran: Wright never made a Swain
    objection. His counsel even conceded at the federal evidentiary hearing that there was no
    Swain claim presented to the district court. ROA, Vol. 8, p. 75-76. Wright’s case is more
    similar to State v. Tarver, 
    629 So.2d 14
    , 18-19 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993), in which the
    Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals held that Tarver was procedurally barred from
    raising a Batson claim in a post-conviction hearing because Tarver did not preserve the
    claim for appellate review by making a Swain objection at trial (Batson was decided
    while the case was on direct appeal). As such, Wright procedurally defaulted his
    substantive Batson claim.
    26
    Wright also encourages this court to overlook his procedural default of his Batson
    claim by arguing that the state courts addressed the merits of the Batson claim. Although
    Wright concedes that he did not expressly raise in state court an independent Batson
    claim, he contends that the state court heard testimony on this claim and ruled on the
    underlying merits of the claim. Wright relies on a portion of the trial court’s order
    denying his coram nobis petition. Wright overlooks the preceding paragraph of the order
    in which the trial court stated that “[t]he petitioner recognizes that he cannot raise a claim
    under Batson . . . for the first time in this proceeding. . . .” ROA, Tab 43 at 33. The trial
    court then discussed the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to raise a
    Batson claim. Additionally, there is no mention of a substantive Batson claim in his brief
    on appeal from the denial of his error coram nobis petition, and the Alabama Court of
    Criminal Appeals does not mention a substantive Batson claim in its opinion. See Wright
    v. State, 
    593 So.2d 111
    . As the record demonstrates, the state courts never addressed a
    substantive Batson claim. Accordingly, Wright cannot demonstrate cause and prejudice
    to excuse his procedural default for failing to raise a substantive Batson claim to the state
    courts, and therefore, we will not consider the merits of the claim.
    D. The Preclusion Clause claim
    When Wright was tried and convicted, the Alabama Death Penalty Act contained a
    preclusion clause which prohibited the jury in capital cases from convicting the defendant
    of a lesser included offense. In Beck v. Alabama, 
    447 U.S. 625
     (1980), the Supreme
    Court struck down this clause as unconstitutional. Then in Hopper v. Evans, 
    456 U.S. 27
    605 (1982), the Supreme Court held that a defendant convicted under Alabama’s 1975
    Death Penalty Act was entitled to a new trial if evidence presented at trial suggests that
    the trial court could have charged a lesser included offense or if the defendant suggests a
    plausible alternative theory that was not contradicted by his own testimony at trial. The
    state courts held that Wright’s own testimony contradicted this claim that the court should
    have charged a lesser included offense because he called an alibi witness. The state
    courts concluded that there was no evidence presented at trial upon which a conviction of
    a lesser included offense could have been based. The district court agreed and so do we.
    Wright contends that the state courts and the federal district court erred in finding
    that there was no evidence to support a charge of a lesser included offense. The two
    items upon which Wright relies for this assertion are Lambert’s testimony that “they” had
    killed the Greens, not “he,” and testimony of the State’s ballistics expert who conceded
    that he had previously identified another handgun as the murder weapon. Wright claims
    that this evidence would have permitted the jury to convict him of a lesser included
    offense under the theory that he was present at the crime but he was not the triggerman.
    First, Wright’s reliance on Lambert’s use of the pronoun “they” does not support
    his argument that the jury should have been instructed on lesser offenses. This reliance
    ignores the bulk of Lambert’s testimony in which she stated that Wright told her that he
    killed two people in a Western Auto Store. Her testimony was clarified by questioning
    from the State. See Trial Transcript, p. 166. Thus, Lambert’s one-time incorrect usage of
    the pronoun “they” does not support a lesser offense charge. Second, Wright does not
    28
    provide the court with any reason why the testimony from the State’s ballistics expert
    should support a lesser charge instruction. It appears, at most, to support Wright’s alibi
    defense.
    Next, Wright contends that if not for the preclusion clause, he could have
    presented an alternative plausible claim that he was a member of the robbery team but not
    the triggerman. Although Wright did not testify, he presented a witness, Carl Harrington,
    who stated that he was with Wright the morning of the robbery-murders. This alibi
    defense negates any “plausible claim” that the defendant could have still been a member
    of the robbery team, but not the triggerman, so Wright was not entitled to a lesser
    included offense instruction. See Alldredge v. State, 
    431 So.2d 1358
    , 1361 (Ala. Crim.
    App. 1983) (alibi defense inconsistent with lesser included offense instruction).
    Moreover, Wright cannot show that the preclusion clause prevented him from asserting a
    lesser included offense defense. See Hopper, 
    456 U.S. at 613-14
    ; see also Ritter v.
    Smith, 
    726 F.2d 1505
     (11th Cir. 1984). Thus, Wright cannot show that he was prejudiced
    by the existence of the preclusion clause.
    E. Remaining claims
    Wright asserts on appeal that he is entitled to relief on the remaining issues raised
    in his federal habeas petition. Most of his claims are procedurally defaulted because they
    were not presented in the state courts.3 Several other issues were considered by the
    3
    Wright did challenge the trial court’s refusal to give certain requested jury
    instructions in his federal habeas petition and on direct appeal. The Alabama Court of
    29
    Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals and found to be procedurally barred under state
    procedural rules. See Wright v. State, 593 So.2d at 118-19. These claims are barred from
    federal review unless Wright provides the court with evidence demonstrating cause and
    prejudice to overcome these procedural defaults. Johnson v. Singletary, 
    938 F.2d 1166
    ,
    1174-75 (11th Cir. 1991). Wright has failed to do so; therefore, we will not consider these
    claims on the merits.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court denying
    habeas relief to Wright.
    AFFIRMED.
    Criminal Appeals addressed this issue and found it to be without merit. See Wright v.
    State, 494 So.2d at 732. Our review of the record leads us to the same conclusion.
    30
    31