William Morva v. David Zook , 821 F.3d 517 ( 2016 )


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  •                              PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 15-1
    WILLIAM CHARLES MORVA,
    Petitioner - Appellant,
    v.
    DAVID ZOOK, Warden, Sussex I State Prison,
    Respondent - Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Virginia, at Roanoke. Michael F. Urbanski, District
    Judge. (7:13−cv−00283−MFU−RSB)
    Argued:   March 22, 2016                     Decided:   May 5, 2016
    Before WYNN and DIAZ, Circuit Judges, and DAVIS, Senior Circuit
    Judge.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge Wynn and Senior Judge Davis joined.
    ARGUED: Jonathan P. Sheldon, SHELDON, FLOOD & HAYWOOD, PLC,
    Fairfax, Virginia, for Appellant.      Alice Theresa Armstrong,
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia,
    for Appellee.    ON BRIEF: Teresa L. Norris, BLUME NORRIS &
    FRANKLIN-BEST, LLC, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellant.
    Mark R. Herring, Attorney General of Virginia, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.
    DIAZ, Circuit Judge:
    William        Charles       Morva     appeals         the     district       court’s
    dismissal    of       his   petition    for       a   writ     of   habeas    corpus,    and
    challenges several aspects of his capital convictions and death
    sentence.        First, Morva argues that the Virginia circuit court’s
    refusal     to     appoint      a    prison-risk-assessment                expert    compels
    relief under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
    of 1996 (AEDPA), 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d).                          But because Morva has
    identified       no    clearly      established        federal       law    requiring   the
    appointment of a nonpsychiatric expert, we reject this claim.
    Next, Morva asserts three related ineffective-assistance-
    of-counsel       claims       regarding     his       counsel’s       investigation     and
    presentation of mitigating evidence in his capital sentencing
    hearing.     Reviewing these claims through the deferential lens of
    § 2254(d), we find neither deficient performance nor resulting
    prejudice under Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984).
    Last, we determine whether Morva has shown cause to excuse his
    procedurally defaulted claim that counsel was ineffective for
    stipulating       at    the     guilt   phase         of    trial    that    Morva    was   a
    prisoner in lawful custody at the time of the alleged capital
    murder.          Finding      the    underlying            claim    insubstantial      under
    Martinez v. Ryan, 
    132 S. Ct. 1309
     (2012), we hold that he has
    not.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s judgment.
    2
    I.
    A.
    In the summer of 2006, Morva was in jail awaiting trial in
    Montgomery     County,   Virginia,       on   burglary-,   robbery-,   and
    firearm-related charges.     He had been in jail for approximately
    one year when he escaped and committed the crimes we address in
    this appeal.     We set out the relevant facts of Morva’s crimes,
    as recited by the Supreme Court of Virginia:
    Morva was scheduled to go to trial on August 23,
    2006. In the evening on August 19, 2006, he informed
    the jail personnel that he required medical attention
    due to an injury to his leg and forearm.   During the
    early morning hours of August 20, 2006, Sheriff’s
    Deputy Russell Quesenberry, who was in uniform and
    armed with a Glock .40 caliber semi-automatic pistol,
    transported Morva to the Montgomery Regional Hospital
    located in Montgomery County. Morva was wearing waist
    chains, but Deputy Quesenberry did not secure Morva’s
    allegedly injured arm.
    Upon arrival at the hospital, Morva “kept trying” to
    walk on Deputy Quesenberry’s right side even though he
    was ordered to walk on Deputy Quesenberry’s left side.
    Quesenberry was required to have Morva walk on his
    left because Quesenberry wore his gun on his right
    side.   Quesenberry observed that Morva’s limping was
    sporadic and “sort of went away.” Also, Nurse Melissa
    Epperly observed Morva walking as if he were not
    injured.
    After the hospital treated Morva, Morva requested to
    use the bathroom.     Deputy Quesenberry inspected the
    bathroom and allowed Morva access.        While in the
    bathroom, Morva removed a metal toilet paper holder
    that was screwed to the wall.     As Deputy Quesenberry
    entered the bathroom, Morva attacked him with the
    metal toilet paper holder, breaking Quesenberry’s
    nose,   fracturing    his   face,   and  knocking   him
    unconscious.     Morva then took Quesenberry’s gun.
    3
    Prior to leaving the bathroom, Morva confirmed that
    Quesenberry’s gun was ready to fire, ejecting a live
    round from the chamber.
    After escaping from the bathroom, Morva encountered
    Derrick McFarland, an unarmed hospital security guard.
    Morva pointed Quesenberry’s gun at McFarland’s face.
    McFarland stood with his hands out by his side and
    palms facing Morva.      Despite McFarland’s apparent
    surrender, Morva shot McFarland in the face from a
    distance of two feet and ran out of the hospital,
    firing five gunshots into the electronic emergency
    room doors when they would not open.    McFarland died
    from the gunshot to his face.
    In the morning of August 21, 2006, Morva was seen in
    Montgomery County near “Huckleberry Trail,” a paved
    path for walking and bicycling.          Corporal Eric
    Sutphin, who was in uniform and armed, responded to
    that information by proceeding to “Huckleberry Trail.”
    Andrew J. Duncan observed Morva and then later
    observed Corporal Sutphin on “Huckleberry Trail.”
    Four minutes later, Duncan heard two gunshots, less
    than a second apart. David Carter, who lived nearby,
    heard shouting, followed by two gunshots, and saw
    Corporal Sutphin fall to the ground.
    Shortly thereafter, Officer Brian Roe discovered
    Corporal Sutphin, who was dead from a gunshot to the
    back of his head. Corporal Sutphin’s gun was still in
    its holster with the safety strap engaged.    Officer
    Roe confiscated Corporal Sutphin’s gun to secure it
    and continued to search for Morva.
    Later that day, Officer Ryan Hite found Morva lying
    in a ditch in thick grass. Even though Morva claimed
    to be unarmed, officers discovered Quesenberry’s gun
    on the ground where Morva had been lying. Morva’s DNA
    was found on the trigger and handle of Quesenberry’s
    gun.
    Morva v. Commonwealth (Morva I), 
    683 S.E.2d 553
    , 557 (Va. 2009).
    After a six-day trial, the jury found Morva guilty of assault
    and battery of a law-enforcement officer, escape of a prisoner
    4
    by force or violence, three counts of capital murder, 1 and two
    counts of using a firearm in the commission of a murder.
    B.
    1.
    We   begin        with    a    brief      discussion        of    Virginia’s    capital
    sentencing scheme.
    Under Virginia law, a capital sentencing hearing proceeds
    in two stages.           See Tuggle v. Netherland, 
    516 U.S. 10
    , 12 n.1
    (1995)     (per    curiam).           First,         the   jury    decides       whether     the
    Commonwealth           has     proved      at     least      one        of    two   statutory
    aggravating factors beyond a reasonable doubt: the defendant’s
    future dangerousness and the vileness of his capital offense
    conduct.          
    Va. Code Ann. §§ 19.2-264.2
    ,            19.2-264.4(C).         In
    evaluating the aggravating factor of future dangerousness, the
    jury is limited to considering the defendant’s criminal record,
    his   prior       history,          and    the       circumstances           surrounding    the
    commission        of     the    capital         offense.           §§ 19.2-264.2,          19.2-
    264.4(C).     If the jury fails to find an aggravating factor, it
    must impose a sentence of life imprisonment; if, however, the
    jury finds one or both of the statutory aggravating factors, it
    has full discretion to impose either the death sentence or life
    1Morva was charged with the capital murder of Derrick
    McFarland, the capital murder of Eric Sutphin, and the capital
    offense of premeditated murder of more than one person within a
    three-year period.
    5
    imprisonment.      See §§ 19.2-264.2, 19.2-264.4(C)–(D); Tuggle, 
    516 U.S. at
    12 n.1.
    Although Virginia juries are not instructed to give special
    weight   to    aggravating       factors    or    to   balance       aggravating    and
    mitigating evidence, Swann v. Commonwealth, 
    441 S.E.2d 195
    , 205
    (Va.   1994),    juries    are    constitutionally        required       to   consider
    relevant      mitigating   evidence        in    determining     a    sentence     in   a
    capital case, Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 113–14 (1982).
    2.
    Prior to trial, Morva moved for the appointment of Dr. Mark
    D. Cunningham, a prison-risk-assessment expert, to “rebut the
    Commonwealth’s claim that Morva was a future danger to society
    and to provide the jury with an assessment of the likelihood
    that Morva would commit violence if he were sentenced to life in
    prison.”      Morva I, 683 S.E.2d at 557.              The circuit court denied
    the motion, stating that Virginia law barred as irrelevant Dr.
    Cunningham’s testimony regarding the environment and structure
    of a maximum-security facility as well as testimony regarding
    rates of violence among individuals similarly situated to the
    defendant.      Morva later moved for reconsideration, supported by
    a letter from Dr. Cunningham, but the motion was denied.
    Morva also sought the appointment of a mental-health expert
    and a mitigation specialist, which the circuit court granted.
    The court appointed Dr. Bruce Cohen, a forensic psychiatrist;
    6
    Dr. Scott Bender, a neuropsychologist; and Dr. Leigh Hagan, a
    psychologist.        All     three    experts       prepared    capital-sentencing
    evaluations.        Dr.    Cohen     and    Dr.    Bender    diagnosed        Morva   with
    schizotypal personality disorder. 2                  Dr.     Cohen and Dr. Hagan,
    however, noted that there was no evidence indicating that Morva
    was experiencing “an extreme mental or emotional disturbance” at
    the time of the capital offenses, or that he was “unable to
    appreciate    the    criminality       of    his    conduct    or   to    conform      his
    conduct to the requirements of the law.”                      J.A. 2013; see also
    J.A. 2025–26 (showing in Dr. Bender’s evaluation that he did not
    find to the contrary; rather, he did not consider the issue).
    At the sentencing phase, the Commonwealth tendered evidence
    of both statutory aggravating factors.                       Morva called thirteen
    witnesses, including Dr. Bender and Dr. Cohen.                      While Dr. Cohen
    testified    to    Morva’s    absence       of     extreme    mental     or    emotional
    disturbance and his ability to appreciate the criminality of his
    conduct,    the     doctor    also    testified       that     Morva’s    schizotypal
    personality       disorder     mitigated          against     imposing        the     death
    sentence.      The jury ultimately found both aggravating factors
    beyond a reasonable doubt and imposed the death sentence on each
    of the three capital murder convictions.
    2 The disorder “shares some of the biologic, emotional, and
    cognitive features of schizophrenia, but the symptoms are of
    lesser severity.” J.A. 2015.
    7
    On direct appeal (and as relevant here), Morva challenged
    the   circuit      court’s        denial      of    his   motion    to    appoint     Dr.
    Cunningham    as      a    prison-risk-assessment          expert.        The    Supreme
    Court of Virginia found no abuse of discretion, affirmed Morva’s
    convictions     and       sentences,    and        subsequently    denied   rehearing.
    Two   justices     dissented        from      the    majority’s     decision     on   the
    prison-risk-assessment issue, finding that the circuit court’s
    denial of Morva’s motion “result[ed] in a fundamentally unfair
    trial in the sentencing phase” because absent Dr. Cunningham’s
    testimony and assessment, Morva “was not permitted the means to
    effectively respond to the Commonwealth’s assertions” of future
    dangerousness.            Morva    I,   683    S.E.2d     at   568–69     (Koontz,    J.,
    dissenting).
    The U.S. Supreme Court denied further review.
    C.
    Morva   then        sought   post-conviction         relief    in    the   Supreme
    Court of Virginia.           His petition raised, in relevant part, three
    of the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims before us now.
    The Warden filed a motion to dismiss, supported with exhibits
    and affidavits, including Dr. Bender’s, Dr. Cohen’s, and Dr.
    Hagan’s capital-sentencing evaluations.                    Morva moved repeatedly
    to supplement the record and for discovery, the appointment of
    mental-health experts, and an evidentiary hearing.                           The court
    8
    denied     Morva’s       motions    and    dismissed       the   habeas         petition,
    finding no ineffective assistance.
    Morva subsequently filed a federal habeas petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    , raising the claims on appeal here.                         The district
    court held two hearings, permitted supplemental briefing, and
    later issued a memorandum opinion dismissing the petition.                             The
    court found that Morva was not entitled to relief under AEDPA’s
    deferential standard.            It also held that Morva failed to show
    cause for his defaulted ineffective-assistance claim.
    This appeal followed.
    II.
    Morva presents five claims.               First, he contends that the
    Virginia       circuit    court’s    denial     of   his    motion     to       appoint   a
    prison-risk-assessment expert violated his Eighth and Fourteenth
    Amendment rights.          Next, Morva raises three related ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel         claims      regarding       counsel’s    investigation
    into     his    childhood,       family    background,        and     mental-illness
    history;       counsel’s    presentation        of   mitigating       evidence;         and
    counsel’s assistance to the state-funded mental-health experts.
    Finally,       Morva   appeals      the   denial     of    relief    on     a    separate
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel               claim,     raised     for       the   first
    time in the district court, regarding his counsel’s decision
    during the guilt phase of trial to stipulate to Morva’s status
    9
    as a “prisoner in a state or local correctional facility,” who
    was “imprisoned, but not yet had gone to trial,” and who was “in
    lawful custody” at the time of the charged offenses.                        J.A. 282–
    83.
    We consider each argument in turn, “reviewing de novo the
    district    court’s      denial    of   [Morva’s]    petition    for    a    writ    of
    habeas corpus.”          Gray v. Zook, 
    806 F.3d 783
    , 790 (4th Cir.
    2015).
    A.
    We    turn     first    to   Morva’s    prison-risk-assessment           claim.
    Because the Supreme Court of Virginia adjudicated this claim on
    the merits, we may not grant Morva habeas relief unless the
    court’s decision was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable
    application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined
    by the Supreme Court of the United States” or “was based on an
    unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence
    presented in the State court proceeding.”                  Gordon v. Braxton,
    
    780 F.3d 196
    , 202 (4th Cir. 2015) (quoting § 2254(d)).
    Our    evaluation       of    a    state’s     application       of     clearly
    established        federal    Supreme    Court     precedent    depends       on    the
    specificity        of   the   clearly    established     law.      “[W]here         the
    ‘precise contours’ of [a] right remain ‘unclear,’ state courts
    enjoy ‘broad discretion’ in their adjudication of a prisoner’s
    claims.”     Woods v. Donald, 
    135 S. Ct. 1372
    , 1377 (2015) (per
    10
    curiam)     (second    alteration       in     original)       (quoting        White     v.
    Woodall, 
    134 S. Ct. 1697
    , 1705 (2014)).                        Similarly, when the
    Supreme Court has not yet “confront[ed] ‘the specific question
    presented by [a particular] case,’ the state court’s decision
    [cannot] be ‘contrary to’ any holding” of the Supreme Court.
    
    Id.
       (quoting      Lopez   v.   Smith,      
    135 S. Ct. 1
    ,   4     (2014)      (per
    curiam)).
    “A state court’s determination that a claim lacks merit
    precludes federal habeas relief so long as ‘fairminded jurists
    could     disagree’    on    the      correctness       of     the     state      court’s
    decision.”         Harrington    v.    Richter,    
    562 U.S. 86
    ,    101    (2011)
    (quoting    Yarborough      v.   Alvarado,      
    541 U.S. 652
    ,     664    (2004)).
    Thus, “[t]he question under AEDPA is not whether a federal court
    believes     the    state   court’s      determination         was     incorrect        but
    whether     that    determination       was     unreasonable—a           substantially
    higher    threshold.”       Schriro     v.     Landrigan,      
    550 U.S. 465
    ,     473
    (2007).
    The Supreme Court of Virginia did not unreasonably reject
    Morva’s claim that he was constitutionally entitled to a state-
    funded prison-risk-assessment expert.                   Morva improperly frames
    the court’s alleged error as an unconstitutional prohibition on
    his right to present mitigating evidence.                    But this presents the
    issue “at too high a level of generality.”                    Woods, 
    135 S. Ct. at 1377
    .     Rather, Morva challenges the Supreme Court of Virginia’s
    11
    decision that due process did not require the appointment of a
    state-funded         nonpsychiatric           expert—particularly               where    other
    state-funded experts had been provided—because he did not make
    the required showing under Virginia law.
    We conclude that the Supreme Court of Virginia reasonably
    applied    clearly     established         federal         law    in    rejecting       Morva’s
    challenge.       Notably, the U.S. Supreme Court has never addressed
    a    capital    defendant’s        right      to     a   state-funded       nonpsychiatric
    expert.    The Court has only ruled on an indigent defendant’s due
    process right to a state-funded psychiatrist when he makes “a
    preliminary showing that his sanity at the time of the offense
    is    likely    to    be     a    significant        factor       at    trial.”         Ake   v.
    Oklahoma, 
    470 U.S. 68
    , 74, 79 (1985).                           Since Ake, “the Supreme
    Court ha[s] flatly declined to resolve the question of what, if
    any,    showing      would       entitle   an      indigent       defendant       to    [state-
    funded]    non-psychiatric             assistance          as    a     matter    of     federal
    constitutional law.”               Weeks v. Angelone, 
    176 F.3d 249
    , 265–66
    (4th Cir. 1999).
    Absent federal precedent on the issue, the Supreme Court of
    Virginia       has   crafted       a   rule     to       determine      when     due    process
    requires a state-funded nonpsychiatric expert.                                  In Husske v.
    Commonwealth,        the     court     announced          the    “particularized         need”
    standard: “an indigent defendant who seeks the appointment of an
    expert witness, at the Commonwealth’s expense, must demonstrate
    12
    that the subject which necessitates the assistance of the expert
    is ‘likely to be a significant factor in his defense,’ and that
    he will be prejudiced by the lack of expert assistance.”                                  
    476 S.E.2d 920
    , 925 (Va. 1996) (citation omitted) (quoting Ake, 
    470 U.S. at
    82–83).           To satisfy this burden, the defendant must
    demonstrate that the “expert would materially assist him in the
    preparation of his defense” and that the expert’s absence “would
    result in a fundamentally unfair trial.”                    
    Id.
    We have said that the Husske standard is “congruent with
    the requirements of the federal Constitution.”                              Bramblett v.
    True, 59 F. App’x 1, 9 (4th Cir. 2003); see also Page v. Lee,
    
    337 F.3d 411
    ,     415–16     (4th       Cir.    2003)    (finding       that    North
    Carolina’s particularized-need test, which mirrors Virginia’s,
    “is   surely    a     reasonable       interpretation         of   Ake”).        Thus,    the
    Supreme Court of Virginia did not unreasonably apply clearly
    established         federal      law     in        requiring       Morva    to     show     a
    particularized need for his requested expert.
    Turning to the Supreme Court of Virginia’s application of
    the   Husske    test     to    Morva’s        case,    we   find     no    constitutional
    violation warranting habeas relief under § 2254(d).                              The court
    first addressed the three cases on which Morva relied in support
    of his claim—Gardner v. Florida, 
    430 U.S. 349
     (1977), Skipper v.
    South   Carolina,        
    476 U.S. 1
        (1986),      and     Simmons      v.   South
    Carolina, 
    512 U.S. 154
     (1994)—and found they did not dictate the
    13
    result he urged.         Morva I, 683 S.E.2d at 564–66.                The court then
    discussed      Virginia        precedent      on   the     relevance         of    prison-
    environment evidence to a future-dangerousness assessment and,
    finding      irrelevant       and    therefore     inadmissible        an    “essential”
    part    of     Dr.     Cunningham’s         proffered      testimony         (i.e.,       his
    testimony regarding prison life, prison security, and statistics
    on    similarly      situated       defendants’     instances       of      violence      in
    prison), concluded that “the circuit court did not err or abuse
    its discretion in denying [Morva’s] motion” because Morva did
    not satisfy the particularized-need test.                   Id. at 565–66.
    The Supreme Court of Virginia’s conclusion that Gardner,
    Skipper,     and     Simmons    do    not    support     the    constitutional          rule
    Morva     asserts      is      neither      contrary      to,    nor        involves      an
    unreasonable        application      of,    clearly      established        federal     law.
    Gardner concerned a court’s imposition of the death penalty on
    the basis of a confidential presentence report that was never
    disclosed to the defense.              
    430 U.S. at 353
     (plurality opinion).
    Vacating      and    remanding       the    case   for    resentencing,           the   U.S.
    Supreme Court announced that the imposition of a death sentence
    “on    the   basis     of     information     which      [the   defendant]          had   no
    opportunity to deny or explain” is unconstitutional.                          
    Id. at 362
    (plurality      opinion)       (emphasis      added)     (finding      a    due    process
    violation); 
    id. at 364
     (White, J., concurring in the judgment)
    (finding      an     Eighth    Amendment      violation);       
    id.
          (Brennan,        J.,
    14
    concurring     in     part       and    dissenting          in     part)     (joining       the
    plurality’s due process reasoning).
    The Court relied on this general principle years later in
    Skipper,     when    it     considered         a    capital       defendant’s       right    to
    present mitigating evidence regarding future dangerousness when
    the   prosecution          asserts      that        aggravating      factor,       lest     the
    defendant     be    sentenced      to    death       on    information      he     was    never
    allowed to challenge.             
    476 U.S. at
    5 n.1.               The Court’s holding,
    however, was narrow:
    [T]he only question before us is whether the exclusion
    from   the  sentencing   hearing   of  the   testimony
    petitioner proffered regarding his good behavior
    during the over seven months he spent in jail awaiting
    trial deprived [him] of his right to place before the
    sentencer   relevant   evidence   in   mitigation   of
    punishment. It can hardly be disputed that it did.
    
    Id. at 4
     (emphasis added).
    Finally, Simmons announced yet another narrow expansion of
    a capital defendant’s right to introduce mitigating evidence.
    The   Court        there    held       that        when    “the     defendant’s          future
    dangerousness        is     at     issue,          and    state    law     prohibits        the
    defendant’s release on parole, due process requires that the
    sentencing     jury        be    informed          that   the     defendant        is    parole
    ineligible.”        Simmons, 
    512 U.S. at 156
     (plurality opinion); 
    id.
    at 177–78 (O’Connor, J., concurring in the judgment) (“Where the
    State puts the defendant’s future dangerousness in issue, and
    the   only    available          alternative         sentence       to     death    is     life
    15
    imprisonment without possibility of parole, due process entitles
    the defendant to inform the capital sentencing jury—by either
    argument or instruction—that he is parole ineligible.”). 3
    These cases do not clearly establish a capital defendant’s
    right to a state-funded nonpsychiatric expert.                        See White, 
    134 S. Ct. at 1702
         (“‘[C]learly           established    Federal     law’   for
    purposes of § 2254(d)(1) includes only ‘the holdings, as opposed
    to   the   dicta,     of    this    Court’s         decisions.’”     (alteration     in
    original)    (quoting       Howes       v.   Fields,    
    132 S. Ct. 1181
    ,    1187
    (2012))).        Confined as we are under AEDPA, we conclude that the
    Supreme Court of Virginia’s decision regarding a right whose
    “‘precise contours’ . . . remain ‘unclear,’” is neither contrary
    to nor an unreasonable application of federal law.                          Woods, 
    135 S. Ct. at 1377
     (quoting White, 
    134 S. Ct. at 1705
    ).
    The Supreme Court of Virginia’s separate determination that
    Morva failed to show a particularized need for the expert also
    does not run afoul of clearly established law.                             The court’s
    classification of prison-environment evidence as irrelevant and
    therefore inadmissible is not unreasonable under U.S. Supreme
    Court    precedent.         Nor    is    the      court’s   similar    determination
    3  Together,  the   three-justice  plurality   and  Justice
    O’Connor, joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Kennedy,
    “provid[ed] the dispositive votes necessary to sustain [the
    judgment].” O’Dell v. Netherland, 
    521 U.S. 151
    , 158 (1997).
    16
    regarding statistical evidence of similarly situated inmates and
    instances of prison violence.
    A   defendant’s         constitutional           right      to   present       mitigating
    evidence related to his character, criminal history, and the
    circumstances         of     his   offense       does    not     upset     a    state      court’s
    broad      discretion        in    determining         the   admissibility            of    other,
    nonindividualized evidence.                 See Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
    ,
    604 & n.12 (1978) (plurality opinion) (“Nothing in this opinion
    limits     the      traditional         authority       of   a     court    to       exclude,     as
    irrelevant, evidence not bearing on the defendant’s character,
    prior record, or the circumstances of his offense.”); see also
    Johnson v. Texas, 
    509 U.S. 350
    , 362 (1993) (“[Lockett and its
    progeny]       do     not    bar    a     State       from   guiding       the       sentencer’s
    consideration of mitigating evidence.                        Indeed, we have held that
    ‘there      is      no . . .       constitutional         requirement           of    unfettered
    sentencing        discretion        in    the     jury,      and    States       are    free      to
    structure            and          shape         consideration              of         mitigating
    evidence . . . .’” (second alteration in original)).                                   Thus, the
    Supreme      Court      of     Virginia         did    not   unreasonably            apply    U.S.
    Supreme Court precedent by deeming irrelevant evidence that did
    not     relate       specifically          to     Morva’s        character,          background,
    criminal         record,     or    the     circumstances           of   his      offense—i.e.,
    evidence regarding general prison life and security offered to
    show    that      Morva’s      “opportunities           to   commit      criminal          acts   of
    17
    violence in the future would be severely limited in a maximum
    security prison.”          Burns v. Commonwealth, 
    541 S.E.2d 872
    , 893
    (Va. 2001).
    Finally, the Supreme Court of Virginia did not unreasonably
    decide the facts.           Morva contends otherwise, but he does not
    identify the alleged factual error.                    We assume he takes issue
    with   the     court’s     finding     that     the    inadmissible         evidence      of
    general       prison    life     and   security        was   “essential”         to       Dr.
    Cunningham’s proffered testimony.                 Morva I, 683 S.E.2d at 566.
    But Dr. Cunningham’s own statements to the circuit court compel
    this finding.          In his letter, he wrote that an individualized
    prison-risk      assessment      “is    only    meaningful      if     it    takes    into
    account the person’s future setting, if known, and the frequency
    of serious violence by people with similar characteristics in
    similar settings.”          J.A. 176.         His declaration also noted that
    the    proffered       group-statistical         data    and    prison-environment
    evidence       are     “necessary”     and      “critically         important”       to    a
    “reliable violence risk assessment.”                  J.A. 145–46.          Accordingly,
    we    hold    that     Morva’s    prison-risk-assessment             claim     does       not
    warrant federal habeas relief.
    B.
    Next     we      consider       Morva’s        nondefaulted          ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel            claims.          First        we     determine           the
    appropriate standard of review.               Then we turn to the merits.
    18
    1.
    The    district         court         applied        § 2254(d)        to        Morva’s
    nondefaulted      claims,       and    we     review        that    decision      de    novo.
    Gordon, 780 F.3d at 202.                   For AEDPA’s deferential standard to
    apply to the state post-conviction-relief court’s dismissal of
    these     claims,      the     court’s        decision        must     qualify         as    an
    “adjudicat[ion] on the merits” under § 2254(d); otherwise, de
    novo review is proper.                Id. (alteration in original) (quoting
    § 2254(d)).       “Whether a claim has been adjudicated on the merits
    is a case-specific inquiry,” Winston v. Pearson (Winston II),
    
    683 F.3d 489
    ,     496    (4th     Cir.    2012),       but     “[a]    claim      is   not
    ‘adjudicated      on    the    merits’        when    the    state     court      makes      its
    decision ‘on a materially incomplete record,’” Gordon, 780 F.3d
    at 202 (quoting Winston v. Kelly (Winston I), 
    592 F.3d 535
    , 555
    (4th Cir. 2010)).            “A record may be materially incomplete ‘when
    a     state   court        unreasonably            refuses     to      permit       “further
    development of the facts” of a claim.’”                            
    Id.
     (quoting Winston
    II, 683 F.3d at 496).                 Morva argues that the state court’s
    denial of the appointment of experts and an evidentiary hearing
    resulted in a decision on a materially incomplete record.                                    We
    disagree.
    Although      the     Supreme       Court     of     Virginia       precluded        some
    factual       development             as       to         counsel’s         investigative
    decisionmaking, the court did not act unreasonably.                             The record
    19
    was substantial and contained sufficient evidence to answer the
    Strickland inquiry.            Moreover, the record provided reasons for
    counsel’s decisions not to interview or call certain witnesses
    at   the    sentencing    phase,       and    included      cumulative        information
    about Morva’s background that counsel received through witness
    interviews.         And trial transcripts show the extent of mitigating
    evidence presented to the jury.
    Moreover,       there    is     no   doubt     that     the    Supreme    Court   of
    Virginia considered this substantial record in ruling on Morva’s
    ineffective-assistance claims.                See Morva v. Warden of Sussex I
    State      Prison    (Morva    II),    
    741 S.E.2d 781
    ,       789–90    (Va.   2013)
    (discussing     the     “double-edged”        nature     of    submitted       affidavits
    regarding Morva’s background and character, and evaluating the
    quality and implications of Morva’s mental-health evidence).
    We therefore review Morva’s remaining nondefaulted claims
    under      AEDPA’s    highly    deferential         standard.         Under    AEDPA,   we
    defer      to   the    state     court’s          judgment,     and     under    clearly
    established Supreme Court precedent, the state court defers to
    counsel’s presumptive “sound trial strategy.”                          Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 689
     (“Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance must be
    highly deferential.”).              It was Morva’s burden before the state
    court to show both that counsel’s performance was deficient—that
    “counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness”—and that he suffered prejudice as a result—by
    20
    showing      “a    reasonable    probability       that,     but    for    counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
    been    different.”       
    Id. at 688, 694
    .     “The    likelihood      of   a
    different      result   must    be    substantial,    not    just    conceivable.”
    Richter, 
    562 U.S. at 112
    .
    “Surmounting Strickland’s high bar is never an easy task,”
    
    id. at 105
       (quoting    Padilla   v.     Kentucky,    
    559 U.S. 356
    ,   371
    (2010)), and “[e]stablishing that a state court’s application of
    Strickland was unreasonable [or contrary to clearly established
    federal law] under § 2254(d) is all the more difficult,” id.
    This double-deference standard effectively cabins our review to
    a determination of “whether there is any reasonable argument
    that counsel satisfied Strickland’s deferential standard.”                    Id.
    2.
    Morva asserts that counsel was ineffective in failing to
    (1) adequately investigate his background, history, character,
    and mental illness; (2) provide all available information to the
    mental-health        experts    to     ensure     accurate    evaluations;        and
    (3) adequately present the available mitigating evidence to the
    jury.       Although Morva identifies these as three distinct claims,
    his briefs address them together, and we will resolve them as
    such.       The post-conviction-relief court found that Morva failed
    to satisfy both Strickland prongs.                We first review the court’s
    21
    decision     on    deficient      performance,            before    considering       whether
    Morva met his burden as to prejudice.
    a.
    Regarding      deficient        performance,           the     Supreme       Court    of
    Virginia held that counsel’s investigation and presentation of
    mitigating evidence did not fall below an objective standard of
    reasonableness.           See    Morva       II,     741     S.E.2d    at     789    (calling
    counsel’s investigation “exhaustive,” finding that counsel spoke
    with     the       affiants      on        whom     Morva’s         claim     relies,       and
    characterizing        the     affiants’           would-be    testimony       as     “double-
    edged”    (quoting       Lewis   v.    Warden        of    Fluvanna     Corr.       Ctr.,   
    645 S.E.2d 492
    , 505 (Va. 2007))).                     Similarly, the court found that
    counsel adequately assisted the mental-health experts.                                 
    Id. at 790
     (finding that Morva failed to show an indication of “true
    mental illness” to alert counsel).
    The     Supreme    Court       of    Virginia’s        decision        on    deficient
    performance does not warrant federal habeas relief.                                 As to the
    investigation, Morva challenges trial counsel’s alleged failure
    to     investigate       Morva’s      multigenerational              family     history     by
    conducting “little or no investigation of [Morva’s] immediate
    family”      and   only     “cursory       interviews        with    [Morva’s       mothers’]
    family members.”          Appellant’s Br. at 50, 57.                   The record shows,
    however, that counsel hired a mitigation expert and interviewed
    many of the family-member affiants who did not testify at trial
    22
    and    on    whom    Morva        relies   to    show    ineffective         assistance,
    including Morva’s mother, sister, paternal half-sister, one of
    his brothers, and two of his aunts.                     Notably, Morva’s mother’s
    affidavit      provides       a    thorough     account       of     Morva’s     father’s
    Hungarian background and American immigration and of her own
    family      history,    J.A.      1071–1082,     and    it    also    states    that   she
    “shared a good deal of information contained in th[e] affidavit
    with     [Morva’s       capital        defense         team]”       through      “several
    conversations with [them] over a period of more than a year,”
    
    id. at 1115
    .
    While Morva complains that counsel could have interviewed
    other family members and spent more time gathering information
    from those family members that were interviewed, he points to no
    U.S.     Supreme    Court      case    establishing          that    counsel’s     effort
    constitutes deficient performance or that counsel’s decision not
    to pursue this line of mitigating evidence was constitutionally
    unreasonable.        See Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 689
     (“[A] court must
    indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within
    the wide range of reasonable professional assistance; that is,
    the    defendant       must    overcome     the    presumption            that . . .   the
    challenged action ‘might be considered sound trial strategy.’”
    (quoting Michel v. Louisiana, 
    350 U.S. 91
    , 101 (1955))).
    Indeed,      clearly        established     federal          law    supports    the
    Supreme Court of Virginia’s deference to counsel’s performance
    23
    in this instance.               See Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 533
    (2003)      (“Strickland        does        not   require         counsel       to    investigate
    every    conceivable         line     of     mitigating           evidence      no    matter    how
    unlikely      the      effort     would       be       to    assist       the    defendant       at
    sentencing.”); Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 691
     (finding that when
    counsel      has       “reason         to     believe            that     pursuing           certain
    investigations         would     be    fruitless            or   even    harmful,       counsel’s
    failure      to     pursue      those        investigations             may     not     later    be
    challenged        as   unreasonable”).                 Given      the    doubly       deferential
    standard of AEDPA, we cannot conclude that the Supreme Court of
    Virginia      unreasonably          applied        Strickland           when    it     held     that
    counsel’s     investigation            into       Morva’s        family       history    was     not
    “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.”
    
    466 U.S. at 690
    .
    Regarding        the     presentation            of   mitigating         evidence,      Morva
    has   not    shown     that     counsel       performed           deficiently.          The     jury
    heard     from      thirteen      witnesses,            including         the    mental-health
    experts who evaluated Morva.                       Witnesses testified to Morva’s
    absent      parents      and     his        tumultuous           relationship         with     them,
    including that his mother was at times homeless and unable to
    care for him; Morva’s own nomadic lifestyle and homelessness as
    a young adult; his ongoing health problems; his nonviolent and
    compassionate nature; and his odd, somewhat fantastical beliefs
    and behavior.
    24
    These sympathetic and humanizing facts compose the bulk of
    the affidavits Morva presented to the Supreme Court of Virginia
    to show inadequate investigation and presentation of mitigating
    evidence.          That the mitigating evidence Morva insists should
    have    been       presented     at    trial       is    merely   cumulative     to     the
    evidence actually heard by the jury further undercuts Morva’s
    claim for deficient performance.                        See Wong v. Belmontes, 
    558 U.S. 15
    ,     22–23   (2009)    (per       curiam)      (rejecting     the   view    that
    counsel should have presented additional “humanizing evidence”
    about     the      defendant’s        “difficult         childhood”      and   “positive
    attributes,” and stating that “[a]dditional evidence on these
    points would have offered an insignificant benefit, if any at
    all”).
    The same can be said about the additional evidence that
    Morva says counsel should have provided to the mental-health
    experts.        Dr. Bender and Dr. Cohen found that Morva suffered
    from     schizotypal      personality          disorder.          In     reaching      this
    diagnosis, they conducted interviews with Morva, his mother, and
    his sister; performed diagnostic tests and evaluations of Morva;
    and considered a plethora of documents from counsel, including
    reports       of    interviews        with     Morva’s      acquaintances.            Morva
    presents no evidence that counsel should have believed these
    sources were insufficient for the experts to conduct a reliable
    and    accurate      mental-health       evaluation,        or    that   providing      the
    25
    cumulative evidence that Morva identifies would have materially
    altered their assessments of his mental condition.
    Morva    contends         that    it   was    objectively   unreasonable      for
    counsel to fail to provide the experts certain family medical
    records and the names of three acquaintances who he claims had
    “invaluable insight into [his] mental state.”                        Appellant’s Br.
    at 66.       But Dr. Bender and Dr. Cohen learned, through their
    evaluations and interviews, of Morva’s maternal family history
    of schizophrenia.              And Morva did not show the Supreme Court of
    Virginia     how    his    three       acquaintances’     relationships      with   him
    gave them “invaluable insight” into his mental health at the
    time of the capital offenses, or that counsel should have known
    of   their    value       to    the     defense.      Thus,    the   court   did    not
    unreasonably apply Strickland or its progeny when it held that
    Morva failed to substantiate his claim that counsel performed
    deficiently.
    b.
    As to prejudice, the Supreme Court of Virginia found that
    “Morva   has       not    demonstrated       what    impact,    if   any,”   the    new
    family-background evidence “had on his actions,” and concluded
    that the information “does not mitigate Morva’s actions.”                       Morva
    II, 741 S.E.2d at 789.                 The court also found that Morva failed
    to show that “the mental health experts who examined Morva in
    preparation for trial and sentencing would have changed the[ir]
    26
    expert[]     conclusions”      if    they       had    received      the       additional
    information from counsel.           Id. at 790.         These decisions are not
    unreasonable.
    On appeal, Morva presents a cumulative prejudice argument.
    He contends that the “inadequate investigation of [his] multi-
    generational      history      deprived        [the]    jurors       of    a     complex,
    multifaceted      description        of        [him]    as     a     human           being.”
    Appellant’s Br. at 69.         Additionally, he claims that had counsel
    given the mental-health experts all known Morva-family history
    and   the    contact    information       of    Morva’s      close    acquaintances,
    “there is a reasonable probability [that] the court-appointed
    mental health experts would have diagnosed Morva with” a more
    serious mental illness.             Id. at 76.         In turn, counsel “could
    have had an explanation for the jury that Morva’s mental illness
    was   a     but-for    cause   of    the       violence,     reducing          his     moral
    culpability and providing a strong argument for life in prison
    rather than a death sentence.”             Id. at 79.
    This claim fails.         First, Morva’s arguments relate to the
    jury’s finding that his conduct was vile, but it does nothing to
    combat the future dangerousness aggravating factor.                              And the
    jury imposed the death penalty not only on the basis of what
    Morva had done, but also on the probability that he might commit
    violent crimes in the future.
    27
    Second, Morva fails to show a reasonable likelihood that
    the evidence of his family history and the anecdotal evidence of
    his mental state—had it been presented—would have resulted in a
    life   sentence.        His   argument      regarding     the    probability       of   a
    different diagnosis is too speculative given the record and the
    lack of any support from the mental-health experts.                       See Pooler
    v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    702 F.3d 1252
    , 1268, 1279 (11th
    Cir. 2012)       (finding     no    § 2254(d)     error   with    the    state   post-
    conviction-relief court’s determination that the defendant did
    not show prejudice because he “failed to demonstrate that [the
    mental-health      experts]        would   have   changed   their       opinions      had
    they conducted more in-depth psychological evaluations or been
    provided with his records” (quoting Pooler v. State, 
    980 So. 2d 460
    , 469 (Fla. 2008) (per curiam))); Roberts v. Dretke, 
    381 F.3d 491
    , 500 (5th Cir. 2004) (finding that the prisoner failed to
    establish    Strickland       prejudice      in   part    because   “there       is     no
    evidence    in    the    record       suggesting     that    [the       mental-health
    expert] would change the psychiatric diagnosis in his report
    based on a review of Roberts’s [undisclosed] medical records”). 4
    4
    Morva unsuccessfully sought to supplement the record with
    an affidavit and unsworn preliminary report from two clinical
    psychologists who, years after the capital offenses and Morva’s
    schizotypal-personality-disorder    diagnosis,   reviewed    the
    documents produced throughout the litigation. The affidavit and
    report, which the Supreme Court of Virginia declined to
    consider, push for additional mental-health evaluations to
    (Continued)
    28
    Further,     the     record    lacks       the    alleged     “red    flags”    that
    would have “‘point[ed]’ [the experts] to a more serious mental
    illness.”     Appellant’s Br. at 58 (quoting Rompilla v. Beard, 
    545 U.S. 374
    , 392 (2005)).           Dr. Cohen thoroughly explained the eight
    (out   of   nine)    symptoms        indicative         of   schizotypal      personality
    disorder that Morva displayed.                Dr. Cohen discussed each symptom
    individually       and    also   distinguished           the    personality        disorder
    from   an   acute     disease        state    with      examples     of     how    symptoms
    manifest     in    both     conditions.            Morva’s      three     acquaintances’
    accounts of his mental state are consistent with Dr. Cohen’s
    account of the schizotypal symptoms Morva manifested after the
    capital offenses.           It is therefore unlikely the experts would
    have   changed      their    minds     on    the   basis       of   the   acquaintances’
    anecdotes.        And there is no reasonable probability that at least
    one juror would have changed his sentencing vote on the basis of
    additional    lay-witness        testimony         regarding        Morva’s       “complex,
    multifaceted” humanity.
    determine whether Morva had a more serious mental illness at the
    time of the capital offenses.      Morva also attached to his
    federal habeas petition a declaration from a psychiatrist, who
    did not evaluate him directly but reviewed some litigation
    documents and the trial mental-health experts’ evaluations, and
    opined that Morva suffers from schizophrenic symptoms. However,
    these submissions do nothing to show that Dr. Cohen, Dr. Bender,
    and Dr. Hagan would have come to a different medical conclusion
    at the time of Morva’s sentencing—the prejudice question before
    us now.
    29
    Last, when we “reweigh the evidence in aggravation against
    the totality of available mitigating evidence,” it is clear that
    Morva fails to show prejudice.              Wiggins, 
    539 U.S. at 534
    .                   Even
    the   most       sympathetic     evidence       in    the     record       about   Morva’s
    troubled     childhood     and    mental    health 5        does     not     outweigh     the
    aggravating       evidence     presented    at       trial.         “While    we   have   no
    doubt     that    the   conditions    in    the      home     and    the     treatment     of
    [Morva     and     his]    siblings    made          for    an      unpleasant      living
    environment, they do not tip the aggravation-mitigation scale in
    favor of mitigation.”            Phillips v. Bradshaw, 
    607 F.3d 199
    , 219
    (6th Cir. 2010).          Because the Supreme Court of Virginia’s no-
    prejudice determination was neither contrary to nor involved an
    unreasonable application of clearly established law, we reject
    Morva’s ineffective-assistance claims.
    C.
    Finally, we turn to Morva’s claim of ineffective assistance
    arising from counsel’s stipulation at the guilt phase of trial.
    To convict Morva of prisoner escape, the jury was required to
    5The affidavit of Constance “Connie” Beth Dye, one of
    Morva’s aunts, relates the most revealing and troubling
    information about Morva’s childhood.      Ms. Dye characterizes
    Morva’s father as a moody and controlling “monster” and his
    mother as absent and mentally troubled. See J.A. 1030–43. She
    also details the squalor of Morva’s early childhood: the house,
    including the children’s room, smelled bad and was littered with
    trash and food remnants, and the children were malnourished and
    dirty. See J.A. at 1032–38.
    30
    find that Morva was, prior to escaping, lawfully imprisoned and
    not yet tried or sentenced, or lawfully in the custody of law
    enforcement.       See 
    Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-478
    .                 Recall that, when
    he escaped and committed the capital offenses, Morva was in jail
    awaiting     trial     on    pending     charges     for,    inter      alia,    armed
    robbery.      After the trial court ruled, in Morva’s favor, to
    prohibit     the   introduction        into    evidence     of   the   substance    of
    Morva’s pending charges, defense counsel and the Commonwealth
    stipulated to the following:
    [O]n the dates in question for the crimes charged,
    that is August 20th and August 21st of 2006, . . . the
    Defendant was a prisoner in a state or local
    correctional facility. . . .     [T]he Defendant was
    imprisoned, but not yet had gone to trial on the
    criminal offenses, and . . . the Defendant was in
    lawful   custody.    That   is  the   extent  of   the
    stipulation.
    J.A. 282–83.
    Morva contends that this stipulation improperly admitted an
    essential    element        of   the   capital-murder     charge       involving   the
    shooting of Derrick McFarland, the hospital security guard.                         To
    satisfy its burden as to capital murder, the Commonwealth was
    required to prove that Morva shot and killed McFarland when he
    was “confined in” jail or otherwise “in the custody of” a jail
    employee.      See 
    Va. Code Ann. § 18.2-31
    (3).                   Morva argues that
    when    he    killed        McFarland,        he   had    escaped       from    Deputy
    Quesenberry’s custody and was not physically confined in jail,
    31
    so    the   stipulation          precluded     either       a    successful      motion    to
    strike or an acquittal on that charge.
    Morva concedes that the claim, raised for the first time to
    the    district         court,    is    procedurally        defaulted.           He    argues,
    however,     that       his    state     post-conviction         counsel’s       failure    to
    raise the claim in the Supreme Court of Virginia, serves as
    cause to excuse his procedural default.                     We do not agree.
    A    habeas      petitioner       is   generally         barred    from    obtaining
    federal habeas review of a claim if he failed to exhaust the
    claim in state court.                  See Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    ,
    750 (1991).        In Martinez, the Supreme Court carved out a “narrow
    exception”         to    the     Coleman      rule.         132     S.    Ct.     at     1315.
    Specifically, Martinez held:
    [W]hen a State requires a prisoner to raise an
    ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel   claim  in   a
    collateral proceeding, a prisoner may establish cause
    for    a   default    of   an    ineffective-assistance
    claim . . . . where appointed counsel in the initial-
    review collateral proceeding, where the claim should
    have been raised, was ineffective under the standards
    of Strickland v. Washington. To overcome the default,
    a prisoner must also demonstrate that the underlying
    ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel   claim  is   a
    substantial one, which is to say that the prisoner
    must demonstrate that the claim has some merit.
    Id. at      1318     (citation         omitted).      Because       state     prisoners     in
    Virginia     cannot       raise    ineffective-assistance               claims    on    direct
    appeal,      and    because       state    post-conviction          counsel       failed    to
    challenge      counsel’s         stipulation,         the       claim    is   squarely      in
    32
    Martinez territory.              See Fowler v. Joyner, 
    753 F.3d 446
    , 462
    (4th Cir. 2014), cert. denied, 
    135 S. Ct. 1530
     (2015).
    The district court, however, properly found that this was
    “no[t]       [a]       substantial        claim        of    ineffective         assistance       of
    counsel”         and    dismissed    it     for    procedural            default.        Morva    v.
    Davis (Morva III), No. 7:13-cv-00283, 
    2015 WL 1710603
    , at *28
    (W.D. Va. Apr. 15, 2015).
    Even if the stipulation, which mirrors the elements of the
    prisoner escape offense, conceded an element of the capital-
    murder charge under section 18.2-31(3), it does not constitute
    ineffective assistance.               It is not objectively unreasonable for
    counsel to stipulate to a fact that the government can prove.
    See United States v. Toms, 
    396 F.3d 427
    , 433–34 (D.C. Cir. 2005)
    (finding no deficient performance when counsel stipulated to a
    fact       the     government       was     prepared         to    show        through    witness
    testimony).
    The Commonwealth could easily have shown that Morva was a
    “prisoner         confined”     despite      the        fact      that    he    was   physically
    outside of the jail and had escaped law enforcement’s custody.
    In     Mu’Min      v.     Commonwealth,           the       defendant      was     charged       and
    convicted of capital murder under section 18.2-31(3) 6 for killing
    someone after escaping from an off-site prison work detail.                                      See
    6    At the time, section 18.2-31(3) was codified as 18.2-
    31(c).       See Mu’Min, 389 S.E.2d at 889.
    33
    
    389 S.E.2d 886
    ,       889–90       (Va.       1990)    (describing           the        facts
    underlying      the     conviction),        aff’d      on     other       grounds       sub     nom.
    Mu’Min v. Virginia, 
    500 U.S. 415
     (1991).                                  On appeal to the
    Supreme Court of Virginia, the defendant challenged as overly
    prejudicial       the    admission         into      evidence        of    a     copy     of    his
    previous conviction, which was offered to prove the “prisoner
    confined in a state or local correctional facility” element of
    the capital murder charge.                  Id. at 894.              The court found no
    reversible error and noted that a jury instruction, which was
    expressly charged to define the “prisoner confined” element on
    the basis of the defendant’s legal status as an inmate and not
    on his physical location or whether he escaped, was “a correct
    statement of the law.”            Id. at 894 & n.7.
    Mu’Min makes clear that the Commonwealth could have shown,
    through   evidence          of   Morva’s     pending         charges,       that    he     was     a
    “prisoner confined” when he killed McFarland.                                  Cf. Simmons v.
    Commonwealth,         
    431 S.E.2d 335
    ,       335–36        (Va.    Ct.     App.       1993)
    (explaining that, in the context of escape under Virginia law,
    the    defendant        remained      a    “prisoner          in     a    state,     local        or
    community correctional facility” even while released on furlough
    because the term refers to the prisoner’s legal status, which
    “is not dependent upon actual physical presence in such facility
    or    otherwise    restricted         by    a     prisoner’s         location”).               Thus,
    counsel’s strategic choice was not deficient performance.
    34
    Moreover,     the    stipulation      did    not    prejudice       Morva    for
    substantially the same reason.               Jury Instruction No. 9, which
    was charged without objection, provides that “[a] prisoner of a
    state or local correctional facility remains a prisoner at all
    times until he is released from that status by the proper state
    authority.       A   prisoner    who   escapes      from    custody    retains      the
    status     of    prisoner     during   the     entire       course    of    such        an
    unauthorized absence.”           J.A. 492.         This instruction is almost
    identical to the one charged in Mu’Min.                    See 389 S.E.2d at 894
    n.7.     So even without the stipulation, the Commonwealth could
    have   proven     that     Morva’s   killing   of    McFarland       satisfied      the
    elements    of    capital     murder   under   section       18.2-31(3).           As    a
    result, Morva’s claim that his counsel was ineffective is not
    substantial and was properly dismissed for procedural default.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s
    judgment.
    AFFIRMED
    35