Kelvin Malone v. Daniel Vasquez ( 1998 )


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  •                        United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 96-1613
    ___________
    Kelvin Malone,                          *
    *
    Plaintiff-Appellant,         *
    *   Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 *   District Court for the
    *   Eastern District of Missouri.
    Daniel Vasquez, Warden, San             *
    Quentin State Prison; Jeremiah W.       *
    (Jay) Nixon, Missouri Attorney          *
    General,                                *
    *
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ___________
    Submitted: May 19, 1997
    Filed: February 26, 1998
    ___________
    Before MURPHY and HEANEY, Circuit Judges and ROSENBAUM,1 District Judge.
    ___________
    MURPHY, Circuit Judge.
    Kelvin Malone, who was convicted of murder in Missouri and sentenced
    to death, appeals from the denial by the district court2 of his petition
    for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. §2254. We affirm.
    1
    The Honorable James M. Rosenbaum, United States District Judge for the
    District of Minnesota, sitting by designation.
    2
    The Honorable Jean C. Hamilton, Chief United States District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Missouri.
    I.
    Kelvin Malone was convicted of the 1981 murder of William Parr, a 62
    year old taxi driver in Berkeley, Missouri, a St. Louis suburb. Richard
    Elder, a fellow Yellow Cab driver, testified at Malone’s trial that around
    11:45 p.m. on March 17, 1981, he was waiting in the cab line at the
    Greyhound Bus Terminal in St. Louis. Parr was first in line, and Elder
    heard the dispatcher tell Parr to pick up a package at First National Bank
    for delivery. The bank was less than three blocks from the bus terminal,
    and such deliveries were top priority. Parr left for the bank immediately.
    Elder passed the bank about four minutes after Parr left on the delivery run
    and saw Parr's cab parked in front of the bank with the dome light on.
    About a block from the bank at the corner of Sixth and Locust, Elder
    saw a black man with a suitcase trying to hail a cab.           Elder later
    identified this man as Kelvin Malone. On his way home that night, Elder
    heard the dispatcher repeatedly calling Parr with no answer. Daniel Ward,
    a First National Bank employee, testified that he left the bank at 1:00 a.m.
    and saw a cab parked out front with a black man sitting in the back seat.
    Police later found an abandoned cab at 6105 Avila in Berkeley. A
    local resident reported seeing a Yellow Cab turn onto Avila at around 1:20
    a.m. on March 18. Later that morning police found Parr's body in Entrance
    Park in Berkeley. Parr had been shot and was lying face down with blood
    coming from his nose and right ear. He was taken to Christian Northeast
    Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.
    There was evidence that Kelvin Malone had arrived in St. Louis from
    California on the evening of March 17 with a suitcase and two .25 caliber
    pistols.   Around 1:30 a.m. on March 18, Emmanuel Bego, who lived with
    Michael Crenshaw in Berkeley, heard a knock at the door.         Bego heard
    Crenshaw say "Kelvin" when he went to the door, but Bego did not see who was
    there. Later that day Crenshaw left for California
    -2-
    with Malone in Crenshaw’s car. After they departed, Bego found a Greyhound
    bus ticket in the basement for a trip leaving Los Angeles on March 15, with
    scheduled arrival in St. Louis at 12:40 a.m on March 18.
    California police found Malone and Crenshaw asleep in Crenshaw's car
    in San Jose on March 24 and asked for identification. The men drove off
    instead and were apprehended after a high speed chase. The officers found
    a small suitcase and two loaded .25 caliber pistols in the car. Three
    bullets test fired from one of these guns were later compared to a .25
    caliber slug taken from Parr's brain. Initial comparisons with the naked
    eye by St. Louis police were inconclusive, but an FBI ballistics examiner
    using a comparison microscope determined that all four bullets came from one
    of the guns which Malone had carried when he arrived in St. Louis and which
    were found in the car at his arrest.
    Missouri charged Malone with the murder of William Parr. By the time
    of the trial on this charge in 1984, Malone had been convicted and sentenced
    to death in California for two murders that took place in that state just
    a few days after Parr was killed in Missouri.3 Counsel was appointed in the
    Parr case on November 28, 1983, and Malone directed him to move to trial as
    quickly as possible; counsel began to meet with Malone about a month before
    trial commenced on March 26, 1984, and began detailed trial preparation two
    weeks before trial. In preparation for trial, counsel reviewed with Malone
    police reports, his earlier psychological examination, and other types of
    information. Malone presented no evidence during the guilt phase of his
    trial, and the only evidence he presented during the penalty phase was
    expert testimony by
    3
    Malone was convicted of the murders of Myrtle Benham and Minnie White. In
    the guilt phase of the Benham trial there was also evidence that Malone had kidnaped
    Leroy Combs at gunpoint in Santa Maria, California on March 11, 1981 and that he and
    Crenshaw murdered Jim Rankin (who disappeared from a Kansas City parking lot on
    March 18, 1981).
    -3-
    Professor James Gilsinan that the death penalty is not an effective
    deterrent. He also offered the testimony of Father Francis Cleary related
    to historical justifications for the death penalty, but it was not received.
    Malone directed his attorney not to contact members of his family about
    mitigating evidence because he wanted to avoid causing them additional pain.
    Malone was convicted on March 30, and on the next day the jury returned a
    verdict of death. He chose not to appear at sentencing on April 26, 1984,
    when he was sentenced to death. He was then returned to California where
    he remains incarcerated.4
    Malone’s direct appeal of his Missouri conviction was unsuccessful.
    State v. Malone, 
    694 S.W.2d 723
    (Mo. 1985) (en banc). He then sought state
    postconviction relief under Missouri Criminal Procedure Rule 27.26. Malone
    v. State, 
    747 S.W.2d 695
    (Mo.Ct. App. 1988). His original petition was
    dismissed without prejudice because he was not in Missouri custody at the
    time it was filed and Rule 27.26 had a custody requirement.        He later
    refiled his petition under Rule 29.15 after it replaced the earlier rule.
    The new rule did not require Missouri custody, and the trial court rejected
    the petition on the merits. Malone appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court
    which remanded for factual findings on whether Malone had complied with the
    Rule 29.15 requirement that a petitioner verify that the filing contained
    all his claims and that he understood they were otherwise waived. The trial
    court was instructed to make findings on whether this verification
    requirement had been met and on whether the prosecution had exercised
    racially motivated peremptory challenges. The court found that Malone had
    not verified his petition and therefore dismissed it for lack of
    jurisdiction. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed, Malone v. State, 
    798 S.W.2d 149
    (Mo. 1990) (en banc), and later dismissed as moot Malone’s
    petition to recall the mandate and reinstate his appeal.
    4
    Counsel stated at oral argument that he understood federal habeas proceedings
    were pending on Malone’s California convictions.
    -4-
    Malone then filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus. He cited
    over sixty grounds for relief, some of which had been raised in state court
    and many of which had not. The district court denied his petition after
    determining that most of the claims were procedurally barred because Malone
    had failed to verify his petition as required by Rule 29.15 and had also
    failed to present many of the claims in state court. After a thorough
    review of the record, the court also concluded that his claims failed on the
    merits and later denied Malone’s motion to alter or amend the judgment.
    II.
    The state argues that not all of Malone’s claims are properly before
    the court because of the content of his notice of appeal. The district
    court order denying his petition and considering all his claims was issued
    on December 4, 1995, but the notice of appeal focuses on a January 17, 1996
    order denying his motion to alter or amend the judgment. The notice stated
    that he was appealing, “...from the final order and judgment issued by the
    Honorable Judge Jean C. Hamilton on January 17, 1996. This judgment and
    order denied Mr. Malone’s habeas corpus claims of constitutional error....”
    Malone’s notice of appeal indicates he intended to appeal both the denial
    of his post-judgment motion and the district court’s rulings on his
    constitutional claims. It is appropriate in these circumstances to construe
    his notice of appeal as encompassing both orders. See Sweet v. Delo, 
    125 F.3d 1144
    , 1148 (8th Cir. 1997). Because of Malone’s apparent intent to
    appeal both from the judgment denying his petition as well as the subsequent
    order, we waive the strict requirements of Rule 3(c). See Fed. R. App. P.
    2.
    Malone wishes to raise many issues on appeal, including various claims
    of ineffective assistance of counsel.        He alleges trial counsel was
    ineffective in the guilt phase of his trial for failure to call two
    witnesses who would have testified that they could not identify the black
    man they had seen in Parr’s cab, to call United States District Judge George
    F. Gunn to testify that he was not harmed during an armed
    -5-
    robbery by Malone, to introduce evidence of a polygraph suggesting that
    Malone did not commit one of the California murders, to prepare adequately
    for trial, to obtain a stipulation or testimony that two police officers
    found initial ballistics comparisons inconclusive, and to object to evidence
    of a towel used to wipe prints from Parr’s cab and to evidence that he gave
    a false name when arrested, to an improper closing argument, to the
    exclusion for cause of a potential juror based on his refusal to consider
    the death penalty, and to several jury instructions. He argues that his
    trial counsel was ineffective in the penalty phase for not presenting
    mitigating evidence from his family and not obtaining a new psychiatric
    examination or using the results of his California exam. Malone argues that
    appellate counsel was ineffective by not raising on direct appeal every
    issue raised in his postconviction litigation.
    Malone also raises claims of prosecutorial misconduct. He claims the
    prosecution should not have introduced evidence of his prior convictions or
    misleading testimony by California prosecutor Gary Admire that Malone had
    admitted in his California trial that he had been in the vicinity where Parr
    was killed.     He also says the prosecution improperly bolstered the
    credibility of prosecution witnesses, argued facts not in evidence, and
    mentioned that he had admitted being near the crime scene, that the jury
    could act on the basis of personal feelings or the general need to prevent
    crime, and that he bore the burden of proof.
    Malone also presents claims that his right to due process was violated
    by excuse of a venire member for cause based on his refusal to consider
    application of the death penalty, by informing the jury of his prior
    convictions, and by improper instructions on mitigating and aggravating
    factors.    In addition, Malone argues that the prosecutor exercised
    peremptory challenges based on race in violation of his right to equal
    protection.
    A.
    -6-
    Malone has abandoned several of the claims made to the district court
    by not presenting them in his appellate brief.        Jasperson v. Purolater
    Courier Corp., 
    765 F.2d 736
    , 740-41 (8th Cir. 1985). The abandoned claims
    include claims that he was denied due process and equal protection by
    Missouri’s delay in bringing him to trial, that he was improperly forced to
    choose between a speedy trial and sufficient time for his appointed counsel
    to prepare for trial, that the Rule 29.15 requirement that pro se petitioners
    verify their postconviction relief petitions violated his rights under the
    fifth, sixth, and fourteenth amendments, and a claim that the prosecution
    withheld potentially exculpatory information.     Malone has also abandoned
    several claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel,5 claims regarding
    jury selection,6 two claims of prosecutorial misconduct based on delay of
    trial and introducing hypnotically refreshed testimony, and a claim that
    permitting Gary Admire to repeat Malone’s testimony from his California
    trials violated his right against self incrimination. Other abandoned claims
    include ineffective assistance by state postconviction counsel, a violation
    of his right to confront and cross-examine witnesses through the lack of
    preparation by trial counsel, failure to instruct the jurors on their ability
    to consider in mitigation all factors of Malone’s character, and improper
    instructions about the burden of proof and the weighing of aggravating
    factors. The law favors an adversarial presentation of issues in order to
    conserve judicial resources and to ensure that cases are resolved in the
    context of an actual dispute.     Flast v. Cohen, 
    392 U.S. 83
    , 96-97 (1968).
    The issues
    5
    These ineffective assistance claims include failure to object to introduction of
    a Greyhound bus schedule and to an improperly empaneled jury, failure to preserve
    issues for appeal, and moving to strike venire member Berits for cause. (The latter
    claim is puzzling since the record shows that defense counsel objected to Berits being
    removed for cause because of her claim that her employer would not release her from
    work.)
    6
    The abandoned claims regarding jury selection are allegations that the venire
    panel was not a fair cross section of the community, jurors were improperly excused
    without cause, a separate jury was not selected for the penalty phase of trial, and the
    venire panel was not sworn before voir dire.
    -7-
    not presented in Malone’s brief should therefore be treated as abandoned and
    they need not be discussed.7 
    Jasperson, 765 F.2d at 740-41
    .
    B.
    Missouri argues that Malone’s constitutional claims may not be reached
    on the merits because they were not properly presented for review in state
    court. Several of Malone’s claims were never brought in the Missouri courts
    at all, while others were contained in petitions that did not comply with
    Missouri Criminal Procedure Rule 29.15 requiring verification.        Malone
    responds that his claims were properly presented, or alternatively, that any
    deficiencies in presentation may be excused.
    Claims that have not been presented for state court review are
    defaulted. 
    Sweet, 125 F.3d at 1149
    ; Nave v. Delo, 
    62 F.3d 1024
    , 1030 (8th
    Cir. 1995). Malone never sought state court review of thirteen claims of
    ineffective assistance of trial counsel,8 seven claims of prosecutorial
    misconduct,9 a claim that the trial court was inconsistent
    7
    We have reviewed these claims nonetheless, and they would fail in any event
    because of other procedural bars or on the merits.
    8
    These claims are that counsel was ineffective by failing to prepare adequately
    for trial; to investigate state witnesses; to prepare for the cross examination of Gary
    Admire, to present the results of Malone’s polygraph test; to call Judge Gunn; to object
    to evidence of the false name he gave at arrest, a towel used to wipe prints from Parr’s
    cab, and his prior crimes; to object to the composition of the jury panel or the exclusion
    of a potential juror based on his opposition to the death penalty or improper closing
    argument; to use the California psychological report; and to assess independently his
    mental health.
    9
    These claims are that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by introducing
    misleading evidence and evidence of Malone’s prior crimes and by an improper closing
    argument (arguing that Malone had the burden of proof, that the jury could act on
    personal feeling or general desire to enforce the law, arguing facts not in evidence, and
    bolstering the credibility of state witnesses).
    -8-
    in overseeing the striking of jurors for opposition to the death penalty, a
    claim that his right to confront and cross-examine witnesses was violated by
    trial counsel’s lack of preparation, four claims of improper jury
    instruction,10 and a claim that his death sentence resulted from the use of
    unconstitutional aggravating circumstances.
    The state also contends Malone failed to comply with Missouri Supreme
    Court Rule 29.15, which requires a petitioner to verify that the petition
    contains all of his claims and to acknowledge that any not included are
    waived.    The purpose of the rule is to ensure that all claims can be
    considered in one proceeding so verification is not just a meaningless procedural device. Kilgore v.
    State, 
    791 S.W.2d 393
    , 395 (Mo. 1990) (en banc). The state trial court made a factual
    finding that Malone had not verified his petition, and the Missouri Supreme
    Court relied on that finding when it dismissed the petition for lack of
    jurisdiction. 
    Malone, 798 S.W.2d at 151
    .
    Malone's counsel conceded at oral argument that under "the letter of the law" the claims raised in his state
    postconviction petition were procedurally barred, but he argues that they should be considered nonetheless. These
    claims include ineffective assistance of trial counsel,11 a claim that the prosecution violated his right to equal
    protection by exercising peremptory jury strikes on the basis of race, that the court
    10
    Malone claims that the jury was improperly instructed that it must unanimously
    find particular mitigating factors and not instructed on the limits Missouri imposes on
    weighing aggravating and mitigating factors and that all elements of the crime and any
    aggravating factors must be found beyond a reasonable doubt. Malone also alleges his
    trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to these errors at trial.
    11
    Malone claims counsel erred in his failure to subpoena witnesses who saw a
    black man in Parr’s cab, depose Richard Elder, obtain expert testimony on hypnotically
    refreshed testimony, contact Crenshaw to testify, obtain stipulations or testimony that
    initial ballistics tests were inconclusive, call his family to testify in mitigation, and use
    his existing psychological report or obtain a new one.
    -9-
    made erroneous evidentiary rulings,12 that Missouri improperly delayed his trial, and that the venire panel was not
    sworn prior to voir dire.
    In order for a state procedural rule to prevent federal review of
    Malone’s constitutional claims it must have been firmly established,
    regularly followed, and readily ascertainable when it was applied to him.
    Ford v. Georgia, 
    498 U.S. 411
    , 423 (1991). This court has previously held
    that the verification requirement of Rule 29.15 is an independent and
    adequate state procedural bar. See Oxford v. Delo, 
    59 F.3d 741
    , 745 (8th
    Cir. 1995). It is an independent state basis for decision because it is
    neither intertwined with, nor dependent upon, federal law, Ake v. Oklahoma,
    
    470 U.S. 68
    , 75 (1985), and an adequate basis because it meets the Ford test.
    At the time Malone’s petition was dismissed for failure to comply with Rule
    29.15, the Missouri verification rule was firmly established and consistently
    enforced under the rule and its predecessor. 
    Malone, 798 S.W.2d at 151
    ; see
    also Mills v. State, 
    769 S.W.2d 469
    , 470 (Mo.Ct. App. 1989); Riley v. State,
    
    588 S.W.2d 738
    , 741 (Mo.Ct. App. 1979); State v. Rector, 
    547 S.W.2d 525
    , 526
    (Mo.Ct. App. 1977).    The rule was readily ascertainable as well.       Rule
    29.15(d) clearly stated that a "movant shall declare" that all his claims are
    included and that those not included are waived. Mo. R. Crim. P. 29.15(d).
    It also referred petitioners to Criminal Procedural Form No. 40, a sample
    form for a Rule 29.15 petition which included a verification statement with
    a blank for the petitioner’s signature.
    The claims included in Malone’s unverified state petition may not now be considered on the merits because
    the bar in Rule 29.15 is an independent, adequate
    12
    Malone claims that Elder’s identification and hypnotically refreshed testimony
    of another witness should not have been admitted and that he was prevented from
    soliciting the testimony of Emmanuel Bego about Crenshaw’s whereabouts to show
    that the latter was not available to testify. He claims that evidence of his California
    death sentence should not have been admitted during the penalty phase and that the
    testimony of Father Cleary was improperly excluded.
    -10-
    state ground for decision. 
    Oxford, 59 F.3d at 745
    . This panel is bound by that holding unless the court en banc
    were to reconsider the issue. Campbell v. Purkett, 
    957 F.2d 535
    , 536 (8th Cir. 1992). The dissent argues that the
    rule was not clearly established and regularly followed at the time it was applied to Malone, but that argument is not
    persuasive. Both at the time Malone’s unverified petition was filed and at the
    time it was considered by the state courts Missouri had consistently treated
    the failure to verify as a jurisdictional defect that prevented consideration
    of a petition. See State v. Vinson, 
    800 S.W.2d 444
    , 447 (Mo. 1990) (en
    banc); Malone v. 
    State, 798 S.W.2d at 151
    ; Reynolds v. State, 
    783 S.W.2d 500
    (Mo.Ct. App. 1990); Sheperd v. State, 
    637 S.W.2d 801
    , 803 (Mo.Ct. App. 1982);
    State v. Rector, 
    547 S.W.2d 525
    , 526 (Mo.Ct. App. 1977). All but one of the
    cases the dissent cites in support of its argument that the rule was
    unsettled were decided after Malone failed to comply with the verification
    requirement and after the rule had been applied to him.
    The lone case the dissent relies upon that had been decided at the time
    Malone’s petition was considered by the state courts does not help him. See
    Rodden v. State, 
    795 S.W.2d 393
    (Mo. 1990) (en banc). The merits of an
    unverified petition were considered in Rodden, but in that case involving
    Rule 27.26 the state had not objected to the lack of verification until an
    appeal was filed. Since Rule 27.26 placed no time limit on amendments, an
    unverified petition could be amended to include verification in the absence
    of an objection. Id at 395. The Rodden court held that such an objection
    had to be made before the petition reached an appellate court. Because of
    the state’s failure to make a timely objection in Rodden, the merits had to
    be reached. The court expressly distinguished the new Rule 29.15, which
    placed a time limit on amendments strict limitation on the time to amend a
    petition in order to comply with the verification requirement and made
    verification a jurisdictional prerequisite that could be raised at any time.
    
    Id. Failure to
    verify within the time allowed under Rule 29.15 is treated
    as a jurisdictional defect barring consideration of the petition no matter
    when the objection is made. Id, citing Kilgore, 
    791 S.W.2d 393
    and Reynolds,
    
    783 S.W.2d 916
    .       Malone failed to comply with this jurisdictional
    prerequisite by not filing
    -11-
    a verified Rule 29.15 motion even though verification was a well settled and
    consistently applied rule at the time. There is therefore no inconsistency
    between his case and Rodden because they were decided under different rules
    with different limitations on verification.
    The dissent argues that Malone’s failure to verify his petition does
    not amount to procedural default because the fault was that of his
    postconviction counsel and subsequent Missouri cases required a remand in
    such circumstances to explore fault, but these cases were not decided until
    after Malone’s petition was rejected.         There is no entitlement to
    postconviction counsel, Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    , 755 (1991), and
    any failure of Malone’s counsel to satisfy the requirements of Rule 29.15 is
    not a basis to excuse the procedural bar. Id.; 
    Nave; 62 F.3d at 1034
    . In
    any event, Malone was not prejudiced by the failure to comply with the
    verification requirement because the state court did consider and reject on
    the merits all the claims he raised.
    Almost all of the claims Malone attempts to assert in his habeas
    petition have been procedurally defaulted. This includes both those never
    presented to the state courts, 
    Sweet, 125 F.3d at 1149
    ; 
    Nave, 62 F.3d at 1030
    ; and those which were raised in his unverified postconviction petition.
    We are bound by the state court’s factual finding that Malone failed to
    comply with the verification requirement of Rule 29.15, 28 U.S.C. §
    2254(e)(1), and by our precedent in Oxford that the Missouri verification
    requirement is a firmly established rule of state procedure that bars
    consideration of a petition for habeas corpus unless there has been
    
    compliance. 59 F.3d at 745
    .
    C.
    Unless Malone can demonstrate cause and prejudice to excuse his
    default, Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 488 (1986), or a fundamental
    miscarriage of justice, Schlup v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 316 (1995), federal
    habeas review is unavailable because the final state court to review his
    claims clearly and expressly relied on an independent, adequate procedural
    rule to dismiss them. Harris v. Reed, 
    489 U.S. 255
    ,
    -12-
    261 (1989); Wainwright v. Sykes, 
    433 U.S. 72
    , 87 (1977). Malone asserts he
    can show cause to overcome the default in three ways. He claims he was
    unable to comply with Missouri procedure because he was mentally ill,
    incarcerated in California, and received ineffective assistance from his
    trial and postconviction counsel.
    Establishing cause requires a showing of some external impediment that
    frustrates a petitioner’s ability to comply with the state procedural rule.
    
    Murray, 477 U.S. at 488
    . The record in this case includes no evidence that
    mental illness hindered Malone’s ability to consult with counsel, file
    pleadings, or otherwise comply with Missouri requirements for postconviction
    relief so mental illness is not cause to excuse his procedural default.
    Garrett v. Groose, 
    99 F.3d 283
    , 285 (8th Cir. 1995) (conclusive showing of
    incompetence is necessary). While being incarcerated in California may have
    made filing his petition in Missouri slightly more cumbersome, Malone has not
    shown it interfered with his ability to file. His California incarceration
    did not amount to state interference with his access to the courts and is
    therefore not cause. See e.g., Lamp v. State of Iowa, 
    122 F.3d 1100
    , 1105
    (8th Cir. 1997) (no cause where petitioner’s access to court is not blocked);
    Cf. Amadeo v. Zant, 
    486 U.S. 214
    , 220-221 (1988) (deliberately withholding
    evidence of a plan to exclude black jurors constitutes cause). Any error by
    Malone's postconviction counsel could not be cause because there is no
    constitutional entitlement to post-conviction counsel.      
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 755
    . Since the alleged errors by his trial counsel did not impede his
    ability to comply with the verification requirement of Rule 29.15, they also
    are not cause. 
    Murray, 477 U.S. at 488
    ; 
    Lamp, 122 F.3d at 1105
    .
    Even if Malone were to show cause to excuse his procedural default, he
    has not shown actual prejudice. Any error by Malone's postconviction counsel
    is irrelevant since there is no entitlement to counsel at that stage.
    
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 755
    . Malone asserts that the ineffectiveness of his
    trial counsel prejudiced him by the failure to present mitigating evidence
    or to raise all the issues included in his federal habeas petition. No duty
    exists to raise every nonfrivolous issue that is available, however,
    -13-
    Lamp, 
    122 F.3d 1106
    , and Malone was not prejudiced by counsel’s decision not
    to raise every conceivable claim.      Malone’s asserted mental illness and
    California incarceration did not prejudice him because he has not shown that
    they interfered with his ability to comply with Rule 29.15 or otherwise seek
    postconviction relief. 
    Lamp, 122 F.3d at 1105
    .
    Malone also argues that his procedural default should be excused under
    the fundamental miscarriage of justice exception. To invoke this exception,
    Malone must demonstrate that new evidence unavailable at the time of trial
    makes his actual innocence of the crime sufficiently likely to warrant
    consideration of his procedurally barred claims. 
    Schlup, 513 U.S. at 315
    .
    Malone has not presented any such evidence. He merely asserts in his brief
    that “[c]onstitutional errors, primarily attorney failure to investigate,
    probably caused his death sentence.” This is insufficient to make out a
    gateway claim of actual innocence under Schlup, let alone the more exacting
    standard for a substantive claim of actual innocence. Id at 317.
    Because Malone has not made a showing of cause and prejudice or actual
    innocence, the claims presented in his unverified state post-conviction
    motion are procedurally barred from further review.
    III.
    A.
    Of the over sixty claims Malone presented in his initial habeas
    petition and the almost thirty he has pursued on appeal, only his claim of
    ineffective assistance by    appellate counsel is not procedurally barred.
    Missouri has waived the procedural bar that would otherwise apply to this
    claim. Malone states that the failure of his appellate counsel to raise on
    direct appeal all those issues included in his postconviction submissions was
    below the objective standard of competence for counsel. The district
    -14-
    court dismissed this claim because it was not presented with sufficient
    argument or facts to support it.
    We affirm the district court’s disposition of this claim.       Claims
    argued with no specificity are waived. 
    Sweet, 125 F.3d at 1159
    . A claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel requires a showing that deficient
    performance by counsel prejudiced the defendant by depriving him of a fair
    trial with a reliable result. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 686
    (1984). Malone has cited no specific error by his appellate counsel, nor has
    he demonstrated that the failure to raise every conceivable claim prejudiced
    him.   Even were we to credit Malone’s generalized claim, the failure of
    appellate counsel to raise all conceivable arguments is not in itself error
    and the claim would fail on the merits. See 
    Lamp, 122 F.3d at 1106
    .
    B.
    The dissent concludes at least two of Malone’s claims are not
    procedurally barred and should succeed on the merits. These are claims that
    the prosecution violated Malone’s right to equal protection through racially
    based peremptory challenges and that he received ineffective assistance of
    counsel at the sentencing phase by failure to contact his family to testify
    or to introduce an existing psychological report or obtain a new one. Even
    if these claims could be considered on the merits, they would fail.
    Although Malone made a prima facie Batson claim by establishing that
    he is black and that the prosecutor engaged in a pattern of striking blacks
    from the jury, Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 96 (1986), he failed to rebut
    the prosecutor's proffered racially neutral reasons for those strikes.
    Purkett v. Elem, 
    115 S. Ct. 1769
    , 1771 (1995).         The state trial court
    considered and rejected this claim three times: on Malone's motion to quash
    the jury at the conclusion of voir dire, on his motion for a new trial, and
    on remand from the Missouri Supreme Court. On remand the court specifically
    found that the prosecutor had race-neutral reasons for his peremptory
    -15-
    strikes and that Malone had not shown those reasons to be pretextual. Review
    of this claim is controlled by these factual findings which we must presume
    to be correct. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1); 
    Purkett, 115 S. Ct. at 1771-72
    . We
    have also carefully considered the record of the proceeding and agree with
    the state court’s conclusions.13
    Malone also claims his counsel was ineffective in the sentencing phase
    of his trial by failing to contact his family about testifying and by failing
    to obtain a new psychological examination or to introduce an existing
    psychological report. Malone specifically told his attorney not to contact
    family members to avoid causing them more pain. Malone of course would have
    been in the best position to know how his family reacted to his troubles with
    the law, and Missouri rules of professional responsibility provide that
    attorneys should, "defer to the client regarding such questions as...concern
    for third parties...." Mo.R.P.C. 1.1. A professional guideline is a relevant
    measure to evaluate counsel’s performance.      
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
    .
    Additionally, during Malone's Missouri postconviction proceeding his trial
    counsel testified that he had talked with Malone's father and sister prior
    to the Parr trial and that he thought he had spoken with the mother as well.
    He also had before him the record of the penalty phase of the California
    trial which contained family testimony about Malone's upbringing and
    background, including his violations of the law from an early age.        The
    decision not to call family members to testify in mitigation has been
    recognized as a "strategic decision" that is "normally left to counsel's
    judgment." Fretwell v. Norris, 
    1998 WL 13
            The prosecutor said venire member Henderson was stricken because she had
    been the victim of an armed robbery, and none of the white jurors noted by the dissent
    had personally been the victim of a violent crime. Venire member Goode was stricken
    because he seemed familiar to the prosecutor and was the son of a minister. Although
    a white venire member who had spent seven years in the seminary was not stricken, he
    did not have the additional characteristic of being familiar to the prosecutor. The
    prosecutor said he struck venire member Simmons because he resided in Berkeley and
    the prosecutor believed from his experience it was not a good idea to have jurors who
    were familiar with the area of a crime.
    -16-
    3583, *6 (8th Cir. 1998) (internal citations omitted).          As to the
    psychological evidence, the record does not indicate that Malone behaved in
    a manner suggesting the need for a new examination, and his existing report
    contained potentially damaging evidence relating to his misconduct in San
    Quentin and his extensive criminal history.
    Counsel's decisions thus appear to fall within the range of reasonable
    representation, 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 686
    ; see also Hayes v. Lockhart, 
    852 F.2d 339
    , 348 (8th Cir. 1988), but even if we presume his attorney's
    performance was deficient, Malone has not shown prejudice. Counsel conceded
    at oral argument that at least one of the four aggravating factors found by
    the jury was valid, and this is sufficient to support a death sentence under
    Missouri law. State v. Kenley, 
    693 S.W.2d 79
    , 82 (Mo. 1985) (en banc). The
    facts of the Parr murder suggested a callous indifference to the life of
    another, and the jury heard evidence that at age twenty Malone had been
    involved in multiple murders over the course of several days. When testimony
    by Malone's family was considered in a hearing on his Rule 29.15 motion, it
    demonstrated that Malone was involved in criminal activity at a young age and
    that he had consistently demonstrated anti-social behavior. His existing
    psychological report showed that he had pressured other inmates to get their
    food and had physically threatened guards in jail.       Such evidence of a
    troubled background and violent behavior is "by no means uniformly helpful."
    Burger v. Kemp, 
    483 U.S. 776
    , 793 (1987). In light of the whole record any
    mitigating evidence from family members about his upbringing and
    psychological difficulties would not have made a different sentence
    sufficiently likely to support an ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
    Id at 694.
    IV.
    Kelvin Malone has brought many claims in this habeas petition, but
    almost all of them were never properly presented to the state courts, and
    Malone has not shown he can meet any exception to excuse the procedural bars
    to consideration of these claims. His single unbarred claim has not been
    stated with sufficient specificity to be
    -17-
    considered.   After thorough consideration of the record, we affirm the
    judgment of the district court.
    HEANEY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent. The all-white jury that convicted Kelvin Malone, a 20-year-old black male with a tenth
    grade education, was empaneled in violation of Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 89 (1986) (holding that equal
    protection clause forbids prosecutor to challenge potential jurors solely on account of race). Moreover, Malone was
    denied the effective assistance of counsel at the penalty phase of his trial. Each of these constitutional errors
    constitutes an independent basis for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus, and both issues were properly preserved
    for review by this court. For these two reasons, I would remand this case to the district court with directions to issue
    a writ of habeas corpus ordering the state court to vacate Malone’s sentence and conviction. My understanding of
    the history of this dispute, as well as the controlling law, is somewhat different than that of the majority and is set
    forth below.
    I.
    On March 31, 1984, an all-white jury in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri found Kelvin
    Malone guilty of the March 17, 1981 murder of William Parr, a white St. Louis cab driver. Malone, a black male,
    was twenty years old on the date of the offense. He had a tenth-grade education. On April 1, 1984, the jury
    recommended a sentence of death for the offense. After the Missouri court imposed sentence on April 26, 1984,
    Malone was returned to California, where he remains on death row for a murder he committed in that state.
    The trial court appointed William Aylward, St. Louis County Assistant Public Defender, to represent Malone
    on November 28, 1983. He did not begin work on Malone’s case, however, until about two weeks before the trial
    was scheduled to start.
    -18-
    Before trial, Aylward talked with Malone on several occasions and reviewed the police records, but he failed to
    interview any of the witnesses identified in the police reports or by Malone. He did not offer any evidence at trial.
    The state was represented at the two-day trial by two prosecutors.
    At the penalty phase of the trial, the public defender presented no witnesses to humanize Malone or to
    explain the circumstances of his life leading to his crimes. He called only one witness, an academic who testified that
    there was no evidence to support the view that the death penalty is an effective deterrent. Malone unsuccessfully
    appealed his conviction and sentence to the Missouri Supreme Court. State v. Malone, 
    694 S.W.2d 723
    (Mo. 1985)
    (en banc).
    On July 3, 1986, Malone’s counsel filed an initial motion for post-conviction relief under Missouri Supreme
    Court Rule 27.26 (repealed 1988). Following consultation with new appointed counsel, Malone filed an amended
    Rule 27.26 motion on March 13, 1987. Twenty-two claims were raised in this motion, including claims that the
    state used its peremptory challenges to strike all blacks from the jury and that Malone’s counsel was ineffective at
    the penalty phase of the trial for failing to investigate or present mitigating evidence. On June 30, 1987, the state
    filed a motion to dismiss Malone’s Rule 27.26 motion; because Malone was in custody in California rather than
    Missouri, a Rule 27.26 motion did not lie. The district court dismissed the motion with the simple words “so
    ordered.” The Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed, stating that dismissal did not prejudice Malone’s right to file
    a motion under the newly adopted Rule 29.15 so long as he filed on or before June 30, 1988. Malone v. State, 
    747 S.W.2d 695
    , 701 (Mo. App. 1988).
    On May 24, 1988, Malone’s counsel filed a Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief asserting
    essentially the same claims set forth in his amended Rule 27.26 motion. On July 21, 1988, Malone’s counsel filed
    an amended Rule 29.15 motion incorporating by reference all claims raised in the May 24th motion and stating
    -19-
    additional facts in support of some of the claims. Following a January 12, 1989 evidentiary hearing, the motion
    court denied each of Malone’s claims on the merits.
    With respect to Malone’s claim under Batson, the motion court stated that Malone was not a member of a
    racially-cognizable group as required by Batson because his mother was white and his father was black. The court
    stated that neither Batson nor its progeny had recognized a person of mixed racial heritage as being a member of a
    racially-cognizable group. As an additional basis of decision, the motion court held that blacks were not intentionally
    excluded from the jury. In so doing, the court relied on the trial judge’s report to the Supreme Court of Missouri that
    reached the same conclusion. According to the motion court, the findings by the judge who witnessed the entire jury-
    selection procedure resolved the issue as to whether blacks were excluded from the jury panel in favor of the state
    and these findings precluded further review of this issue through res judicata.14
    Malone appealed to the Missouri Supreme Court. During the appeal, the state challenged for the first time
    Malone’s original and amended Rule 29.15 motions as insufficient under Rule 29.15(d) because they were unverified.
    See Malone v. State, 
    798 S.W.2d 149
    , 150 (Mo. 1990) (en banc). The Missouri Supreme Court, stating that it was
    faced with an incomplete record with respect to the Batson claim and the verification issue with regard to ineffective
    assistance of counsel, remanded the matter to “the trial court to conduct an evidentiary hearing and determine whether
    [Malone] complied with the verification provisions of Rule 29.15 and whether [Malone’s] trial jury was impaneled
    contrary to the teachings of Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    (1986) and State v. Antwine, 
    743 S.W.2d 51
    (Mo.
    banc 1987).” 
    Id. 14 The
    motion court relied on the report of the trial judge to the Missouri Supreme
    Court, item E5, to support this finding. For whatever reason, item E5 was not made a
    part of the record submitted to our court, but we have subsequently obtained a copy of
    that report and it is properly considered as a part of the record.
    -20-
    On January 19, 1990, the trial court conducted the evidentiary hearing. Prior to the court’s ruling,
    defendant’s counsel filed a motion for leave to supply verification for the original and amended motions. The court
    denied the request. On March 26, 1990, the trial court dismissed Malone’s Rule 29.15 motion, ruling on the merits
    of his Batson challenge, and held that the failure to file a properly-verified motion on or before June 30, 1988 with
    respect to the remaining issues deprived the court of jurisdiction to hear the matter. The trial court dismissed
    Malone’s motion and the Missouri Supreme Court affirmed. 
    Malone, 798 S.W.2d at 151
    .
    Malone next filed a petition for habeas corpus with the federal district court. In his petition, Malone raised
    some twenty-three claims including that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance at the penalty phase of his
    trial and that, under Batson, the prosecution improperly struck black jury panel members in violation of his equal
    protection rights. The district court considered and denied each claim in the motion both on the merits and because
    Malone did not comply with the state verification requirements.
    II.
    In Ford v. Georgia, 
    498 U.S. 411
    (1991), the Supreme Court held “that only a ‘firmly established and
    regularly followed state practice’ may be interposed by a state to prevent subsequent review by this Court of a federal
    constitutional claim.” 
    Id. at 423-24
    (quoting James v. Kentucky, 
    466 U.S. 341
    , 348 (1984)) (citation omitted).
    Here, the verification rule was not firmly established or regularly followed at the time Malone filed his initial Rule
    27.26 motion on July 3, 1986, when he filed his amended Rule 27.26 motion on March 18, 1987, when he filed his
    initial Rule 29.15 motion on May 24, 1988, or when he filed his amended Rule 29.15 motion on July 21, 1988. A
    brief history of the verification requirement in the Missouri state courts illustrates this fact.
    -21-
    On September 11, 1990, the Missouri Supreme Court considered the post-conviction motion of James
    Rodden for relief from a murder conviction. Rodden v. State, 
    795 S.W.2d 393
    (Mo. 1990) (en banc). In that case,
    Rodden filed a pro se Rule 27.26 motion attacking his murder conviction. His motion was neither signed nor
    verified. Rather, counsel signed it “James Rodden by Lee Nation.” The filing, according to Rodden’s testimony,
    was accomplished without his knowledge or consent. On July 21, 1988, Rodden filed a first amended Rule 27.26
    motion, which was again signed only by Rodden’s counsel. On August 31, 1989, a second amended Rule 27.26
    motion was filed. It, too, was neither signed nor verified by Rodden. On the same day, the trial court ruled against
    Rodden on the merits. The state argued that the Missouri Supreme Court lacked authority to review the decision
    because of the absence of verification of the post-conviction motion. The Missouri Supreme Court agreed to hear
    the case on the merits stating:
    Even an essential element of a pleading, like verification, may be added by amendment. Drury
    Displays, Inc. v. Board of Adjustment, 
    760 S.W.2d 112
    , 114-15 (Mo. banc 1988). In this case, the
    state went to trial on the merits without any objection to deficiencies in the pleadings. The first
    objection to the pleadings was before this Court on appeal. Any deficiencies in the pleadings were
    waived, the pleadings are treated as amended to conform with the evidence, and the state may not
    raise lack of verification of the Rule 27.26 pleading for the first time on appeal.
    
    Id. at 395
    (citations omitted). Here, as in Rodden, the lack of verification was raised for the first time on appeal, yet
    the state court dealt inconsistently with the two cases.
    Two months later in State v. Vinson, 
    800 S.W.2d 444
    (Mo. 1990) (en banc), the Missouri Supreme Court
    again considered jurisdiction over an unverified, amended, Rule 29.15 motion. The court, citing the instant case,
    
    Malone, 798 S.W.2d at 150
    , dismissed the motion for want of jurisdiction. Chief Justice Blackmar dissented,
    stating:
    -22-
    I cannot agree that the Court lacked jurisdiction to consider the amended 29.15 motion. I would
    hold, rather, that when the state provides counsel for a postconviction movant, and that counsel fails
    to procure the movant’s verification on an amended motion which is otherwise timely, the Court
    may allow the verification to be supplied at a later time.
    Proceedings under Rule 29.15 are civil. It is uncommon in civil proceedings to hold that
    the filing of defective papers deprives the Court of jurisdiction. The usual remedy is to permit
    defects to be corrected by amendment. The law has been particularly intolerant of those who make
    no mention of a pleading defect until the trial court has ruled and then seek to disadvantage their
    opponents by claims of procedural defect. Rule 55.33(b). Nothing in the text of Rule 29.15
    indicates that proceedings under that rule are to be treated in a way different from what is usual in
    civil actions. Such phrases as “a nullity,” or “failed to invoke the circuit court’s jurisdiction” are
    simply bootstrapping. The Court could perfectly well allow the verification to be supplied when
    the defect is pointed out. This would allow the state to enjoy all of the real or imagined benefits of
    verification.
    ....
    Some of the opinions on this subject suggest that the verification requirement serves an
    expediting purpose. I cannot see that it expedites the proceedings in any way. There rather will be
    procedural hassles and a ping-pong match between state and federal courts, if this movant is
    obliged to pursue other postconviction remedies.
    
    Id. at 450-51
    (Blackmar, C.J., dissenting).
    Six months later, the Missouri Supreme Court decided Sanders v. State, 
    807 S.W.2d 493
    (Mo. 1991) (en
    banc), and Luleff v. State, 
    807 S.W.2d 495
    (Mo. 1991) (en banc). In Sanders, the movant was convicted of murder
    in the first degree and sentenced to death. His Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief was denied without an
    evidentiary hearing. Sanders filed a pro se motion for post-conviction relief
    -23-
    on April 25, 1988. The following day the court appointed the office of the public defender to represent him, and the
    court granted the public defender’s motion for additional time within which to file an amended motion. On
    November 29, 1988, counsel filed an addendum to the pro se motion that was neither signed nor verified by Sanders.
    On January 19, 1989, counsel filed a completed pro se Rule 29.15 form that had been signed and verified by Sanders
    back on May 5, 1988, soon after he filed the pro se motion. The trial court dismissed the amendment as not timely
    filed. In reversing the district court, the Missouri Supreme Court stated:
    Until today [April 9, 1991] this Court has not deviated from its firm position that failure
    to timely file a motion constitutes a complete bar to consideration of a movant’s claims, even when
    the claims are attributable entirely to inaction of counsel. . . .
    In Luleff v. State, 
    807 S.W.2d 495
    (Mo. banc 1991), decided today, this Court altered
    course. There the record reflected that movant’s appointed counsel took no action whatsoever on
    movant’s behalf, thereby apparently failing to comply with the provisions of Rule 29.15(e). On the
    face of the record it appeared that movant was deprived of meaningful review of his claims. The
    question then became one of the appropriate forum in which to address the claims of abandonment
    of counsel. This Court held the appropriate forum to be the motion court.
    The considerations underlying this Court’s holding in Luleff are equally compelling in this
    case where the record reflects that counsel has determined that there is a sound basis for amending
    the pro se motion but fails timely to file the amended motion as required by Rule 29.15(f). The
    failure is, in effect, another form of “abandonment” by postconviction counsel.
    
    Id. at 494-95
    (original emphasis and citations omitted). The court then laid down explicit guidelines for counsel
    to follow in future cases.
    -24-
    At such time as counsel may seek leave to file pleadings out of time, the motion shall set forth facts,
    not conclusions, showing justification for untimeliness. Where insufficiently informed, the court
    is directed to make independent inquiry as to the cause of the untimely filing. The burden shall be
    on the movant to demonstrate that the untimeliness is not the result of negligence or intentional
    conduct of the movant, but is due to counsel’s failure to comply with Rule 29.15(f). If the court
    determines that the untimeliness resulted from negligence or intentional conduct of movant, the
    court shall not permit the filing. Should the failure to file a timely amended motion result from
    inattention of counsel, the court shall permit the filing.
    
    Id. at 495
    (original emphasis omitted).
    The same year, the Missouri Supreme Court considered the first-degree murder conviction of Leamon White.
    State v. White, 
    813 S.W.2d 862
    (Mo. 1991) (en banc). White filed a timely but unverified post-conviction motion
    on August 17, 1989. The motion court appointed counsel on September 25, 1989. The first counsel withdrew and
    a new post-conviction counsel was appointed. New counsel failed to file a timely verified motion. White argued that
    his second counsel effectively abandoned him by failing to file a timely verified motion. The supreme court stated:
    “Counsel’s withdrawal, failure to file a timely amended motion, and failure to verify and allege sufficient facts raise
    serious questions as to whether the movant received postconviction representation in the sense of Rule 29.15.” 
    Id. at 864
    (original emphasis omitted). The court remanded to the motion court for further proceedings consistent with
    Sanders.
    In State v. Clay, 
    817 S.W.2d 565
    (Mo. Ct. App. 1991). David Lee Clay’s counsel first raised certain issues
    in an amended Rule 29.15 motion that was not timely filed nor verified. The court stated:
    -25-
    If movant can establish that the failure to verify and timely file is caused by the inattention of
    counsel, the amended motion can be filed and ruled on.
    ....
    If the failure to verify was Clay’s fault, the amended motion is a nullity and the motion court has
    no jurisdiction. If, however, the untimeliness was counsel’s fault, the motion court must treat the
    29.15 motion as timely filed. And, if the failure to verify is counsel’s fault, the trial court must take
    appropriate steps to have the amended motion verified so that it properly invokes the jurisdiction
    of the motion court.
    
    Id. at 569
    (citations omitted).
    In Hutchinson v. State, 
    821 S.W.2d 916
    (Mo. Ct. App. 1992), the movant filed a pro se Rule 29.15 motion
    on June 28, 1988, contending that his trial counsel was ineffective. On August 25, 1988, the court appointed
    counsel, who filed an unverified Rule 29.15 motion on October 28, 1988. In that case:
    An evidentiary hearing was held on January 26, 1990. The motion court stated at the
    hearing that its review was limited to the claims alleged in the pro se motion. Limited testimony
    was heard concerning the allegations in the amended motion. The court denied the pro se motion
    and concluded that because the amended motion was unverified, the claims alleged in the amended
    motion were “time barred and procedurally waived.” . . . .
    For his sole point on appeal, movant contends that the trial court erred in not considering
    the grounds raised in the unverified amended motion and in not inquiring into the cause of the
    failure of the amended motion to be verified. The general rule is that an unverified motion is a
    nullity which fails to invoke the jurisdiction of the trial court. However, the Missouri Supreme
    Court modified the strict application of this rule in State v. White, 
    813 S.W.2d 862
    (Mo. banc
    1991). If a movant can
    -26-
    establish that the failure to verify is caused by the inattention of counsel, the amended motion can be filed and ruled
    on.
    . . . [W]e must remand to the motion court for a determination of the cause of the lack of
    verification. The motion court must make a factual inquiry into the cause of the violations by
    holding an evidentiary hearing or, if the facts are undisputed, by examining the record. The court
    must make findings of fact on the question of whether the failure to verify results from the
    negligence or intentional conduct of movant or from the inattention of counsel. If the failure to
    verify was movant’s fault, the amended motion is a nullity and the motion court has no jurisdiction.
    If, however, the untimeliness was counsel’s fault, the motion court must take appropriate steps to
    have the amended motion verified so that it properly invokes the jurisdiction of the motion court.
    If, as a result of the motion court’s findings, the amended motion is filed and verified, the motion
    court should then proceed to review the allegations of the motion.
    
    Id. at 917-18
    (citations omitted).
    A careful review of the above-cited cases leads to the conclusion that the state’s verification rule was neither
    firmly established nor regularly followed when the Supreme Court of Missouri affirmed the trial court’s dismissal
    of Malone’s Rule 29.15 motion for lack of verification. Although the Missouri Supreme Court regularly used the
    language of jurisdiction, its decisions belie that posture. Moreover, as noted in Chief Justice Blackmar’s dissent in
    Malone, the majority of the state court ignored Rodden, which had been decided less than one month before. The
    verification rule was not firmly established when Malone filed his Rule 27.26 motions nor when he filed his initial
    or amended Rule 29.15 motions on July 3, 1986 and July 21, 1988, respectively.
    In any event, failure to file a timely-verified motion was the fault of his appointed counsel, not Malone,
    which brings Malone within the purview of Vinson, Sanders, Luleff, White, Clay, Hutchinson. Malone was a
    prisoner in California when counsel was appointed to represent him in the post-conviction proceeding. Counsel
    should
    -27-
    have been aware of the verification requirements under the rules, yet failed to take timely action to have that
    requirement fulfilled. With respect to the Rule 29.15 motion, Malone’s counsel explained the procedural reasons
    why Malone had to file a new motion, but did not remember whether she informed him that the new form had to be
    verified. Malone expected that his counsel would file a proper Rule 29.15 motion on his behalf. Between the time
    of the filing of the original Rule 29.15 motion and prior to the filing of Malone’s amended motion, an attorney
    reviewed the file and noticed that the initial Rule 29.15 motion had not been verified. He immediately sent a new
    form to Malone in California. During the week of September 12, 1988, Malone’s lawyer found a verified, signed
    copy of the Rule 29.15 motion, notarized on the 12th day of July, 1988 and postmarked July 25, 1988.
    Counsel’s failures to verify are not to be treated under the rubric of ineffective assistance of post-conviction
    counsel, but rather as an abandonment of counsel. The fact that the Missouri Supreme Court in 1991 set forth
    guidelines for counsel to follow in future cases does not support the state’s view that the verification rule was firmly
    established and regularly followed at the time that Malone’s motions were filed. In the cited cases the Missouri
    Supreme Court remanded to the motion court to determine whether the fault for lack of verification lay with the
    movant or with the movant’s counsel. Here, the record is clear that the fault lay with counsel, not Malone. Thus,
    in my view, lack of verification does not constitute procedural default under state law in this case.
    III.
    Defense counsel moved to quash the jury panel at the conclusion of voir dire and for a mistrial post-verdict
    because the defendant’s equal protection rights were violated by the prosecuting attorney’s intentional exclusion of
    all four black members of the jury
    -28-
    panel. Although the prosecutor offered no race-neutral explanation for the strikes at the time of trial,15 the court
    nonetheless denied the motions.16
    Malone raised the Batson issue at trial, in his first amended motion to vacate his sentence under Supreme
    Court Rule 27.26 dated March 13, 1987, in his Rule 29.15 motion dated May 24, 1988, and in his first amended
    Rule 29.15 motion filed on July 20, 1988. The Missouri Supreme Court, on appeal of the trial court’s denial of
    15
    In response to Malone’s post-verdict motion to quash the jury and for a new
    trial, the state responded that Mr. Malone was not black. The state expressed the view
    that Malone could not challenge the exclusion of black jurors because he was of mixed
    race, being the child of a white mother and a black father.
    16
    A direct appeal in the instant case was still pending, however, at the time
    Batson was decided. Thus, the Batson test is the appropriate one to apply in this case.
    At the time of trial, however, the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges was
    covered by Swain v. Alabama, 
    380 U.S. 202
    (1965). In Garrett v. Morris, 
    815 F.2d 509
    (8th Cir. 1987), we held that the decision in Swain does not completely insulate
    a prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges in a given case where the prosecutor
    volunteers the reasons for his actions and makes them part of the record.
    The record is then no longer limited solely to proof that the prosecutor has
    used his peremptory challenges to strike all black jurors from the
    defendant’s jury panel, and the presumption that the prosecutor has acted
    properly falls away. At that point, the court has a duty to satisfy itself that
    the prosecutor’s challenges were based on constitutionally permissible
    trial-related considerations, and that the proffered reasons are genuine
    ones, and not merely a pretext for discrimination.
    
    Id. at 511.
    Here, the state’s response that Malone was not black is not only disputed at
    every phase of the record, but this statement, as noted in Garrett, required the court to
    satisfy itself that the challenges were based on constitutionally-permissible, trial-related
    considerations.
    -29-
    Malone’s Rule 29.15 motion, explicitly remanded the case to the trial court to conduct an evidentiary hearing and
    determine whether Malone’s trial jury was impaneled contrary to the teaching of Batson and Antwine. 
    Malone, 798 S.W.2d at 150
    .
    On remand, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing and determined that Malone established a prima
    facie case under Batson. The trial court found that Malone was black and therefore a member of a cognizable racial
    group. The court also found that the state utilized three of its nine peremptory strikes to remove blacks from the
    jury panel and one of its two strikes in the alternate pool to strike a potential black alternate, leaving Malone to be
    tried by an all-white jury. The court directed the prosecutor to explain his reasons for striking the four black
    members of the venire: Henderson, Grooms, Simmons, and Goode. For the first time the prosecutor outlined his
    reasons for making the disputed strikes. He stated he struck Henderson because she was the victim of an armed
    robbery a few years before in which no person was ever charged with the offense. He stated that he struck Grooms
    because he stated his objection to the death penalty and because he indicated he would attempt to convince others
    of his view. The prosecutor defended his strike of Simmons because Simmons resided in Berkeley. Finally, he stated
    that he struck Goode because he looked familiar and because he was the son of a minister or pastor of a church. The
    court found that the prosecutor provided credible, rational, neutral explanations for each of the questioned
    peremptory strikes and that the state’s actions were properly based on verbal and nonverbal communications from
    jurors and on the prosecutor’s previous experiences. Finally, the court found that Malone had failed to show that
    the stated explanations were pretextual. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed over Chief Justice Blackmar’s
    dissent.
    After the Missouri Supreme Court denied relief, Malone raised his Batson claim as part of his petition for
    habeas relief in federal district court. The court denied relief, holding that Malone had defaulted the claim in light
    of the state court’s dismissal of his Rule 29.15 motion. In the alternative, the district court denied Malone’s Batson
    claims
    -30-
    on the merits. It concluded that the prosecutor’s reasons for striking each of the black prospective jurors were
    racially neutral on their face. The court rejected Malone’s argument that the state’s proffered reasons for striking
    Henderson and Goode from the venire panel were pretextual. With respect to venirepersons Grooms and Simmons,
    the court also concluded that, because Malone made no attempt to persuade the court that the prosecutor’s reasons
    for striking them were pretextual, he was not entitled to habeas relief.
    As an initial matter, because the Missouri trial court, the state post-conviction court, and the Missouri
    Supreme Court have all considered the Batson issue on the merits, the federal habeas court should do the same. In
    the alternative, assuming the Batson claim was not denied on the merits but because Malone’s Rule 29.15 motion
    was unverified, the claim nonetheless should have been considered by the federal habeas court on the merits because,
    as discussed previously, the verification requirements were not firmly established or regularly followed when the
    Missouri Supreme Court decided Malone.
    Malone established a prima facie case under Batson. As the state now concedes, Malone is black.17
    Moreover, the prosecutor struck all four blacks who remained on the thirty-four-person jury panel after all other
    panel members had been either successfully challenged for cause or excused for other reasons.
    I next consider whether the government offered race-neutral reasons for peremptorily challenging all four
    blacks on the thirty-four-person venire from which the jury was selected. “[U]nder Batson, the striking of a single
    black juror for racial
    17
    The record overwhelmingly supports this fact of Malone’s race. At every point
    in the trial, he was referred to as a black man. It is difficult to understand the confusion
    of this question at various points in Malone’s state proceedings, such as when the trial
    court reported that Malone was “an Asiatic-Moorish-American.”
    -31-
    reasons violates the equal protection clause, even though other black jurors are seated, and even when there are valid
    reasons for the striking of some black jurors.” United States v. Battle, 
    836 F.2d 1084
    , 1086 (8th Cir. 1987) (citing
    United States v. Gordon, 
    817 F.2d 1538
    , 1541 (11th Cir. 1987); and United States v. David, 
    803 F.2d 1567
    , 1571
    (11th Cir. 1986)). Thus, a single, improperly-stricken juror constitutes a basis for granting a new trial.
    I agree with the district court that the prosecutor stated a race-neutral reason for challenging Kenneth
    Grooms. Grooms stated during voir dire that he opposed the death penalty. Moreover, I find no evidence in the
    record that the prosecutor’s reason for striking Grooms was pretextual. I note, however, that there is no support in
    the record for the prosecutor’s statement that Grooms indicated he would attempt to convince other jurors of his
    view.
    In contrast, the district court’s decision to sustain the state’s peremptory challenges to Henderson and
    Simmons is not fairly supported by the record. The prosecutor testified at Malone’s post-conviction hearing that
    he struck Kim Henderson because she had been the victim of an armed robbery in 1980 and no one had been charged
    in the offense. In this circuit it is well established that a litigant may not justify the peremptory challenges to a
    venireman of one race unless veniremen of another race with comparable or similar characteristics are also
    challenged. Davidson v. Harris, 
    30 F.3d 963
    , 965 (8th Cir. 1994); Walton v. Caspari, 
    916 F.2d 1352
    , 1361-62 (8th
    Cir. 1990); Garrett v. Morris 
    815 F.2d 509
    , 513-14 (8th Cir. 1987). In other words, Malone can establish that an
    otherwise neutral explanation is pretextual by showing that the characteristics of a stricken black panel member are
    shared by white panel members who are not stricken. According to the voir dire transcript, the prosecutor failed to
    strike several white panel members who also had been victims of robberies or burglaries in which no one had been
    charged for the offense. These included Gerald J. Bush (house broken into in 1977; no one charged), Kenneth G.
    Hrebec (father’s grocery store robbed two or three times over ten years before trial), Janet I. Pettigrew
    -32-
    (home broken into three or four years before trial), and Minnie B. Hopkins (home broken into twice ten years before
    trial). The prosecutor did not specifically ask Henderson whether the fact that no one had been charged in her case
    would affect her view of Malone’s case. To the contrary, when asked, along with other members of the panel,
    whether the fact that she or her friends or relatives had been crime victims would prevent her from being a fair and
    impartial juror in this case, Henderson did not indicate that she would have any problems. Therefore, despite the
    state’s proffer of a race-neutral reason for excluding Henderson from the jury, the record demonstrates that the reason
    is pretextual. I thus believe it clear that the prosecutor violated Batson and Malone’s constitutional rights when he
    excluded Henderson from the jury.
    The prosecutor claimed that he struck Simmons based on his address in Berkeley, that the murder occurred
    in Berkeley, that Malone had ties to persons in Berkeley, and that some of the trial witnesses were friends of Malone.
    The district court accepted these reasons as race neutral. The court also stated that Malone failed to argue that the
    prosecutor’s reason was pretextual. I disagree with both conclusions. At voir dire, the prosecutor did not ask
    Simmons a single question, let alone questions about where he lived, the extent of his ties to the Berkeley area, or
    whether he was acquainted with any of the potential witnesses. It was not until the post-conviction hearing that the
    prosecutor advanced the claim that he struck Simmons for the reasons stated above. Yet, he failed at the post-
    conviction hearing to develop any testimony that could reasonably support his belief that Simmons might be
    influenced in any way by the fact that he lived in the area where the murder occurred. Moreover, I cannot accept the
    district court’s assertion that Malone is without recourse because he failed to argue that the reason advanced by the
    prosecutor at the post-conviction hearing was pretextual. That the prosecutor’s rationale was entirely ad hoc and
    unsupported by any statement at voir dire is sufficient to raise the issue of pretextuality. On its face, I do not believe
    that the prosecutor’s reason was race neutral given the concentration of persons of color living in Berkeley.
    Moreover, even if the proffered reason were considered race neutral, Malone has established that it was pretextual
    in light of the fact
    -33-
    that Simmons was asked no relevant questions and volunteered no relevant information to support the prosecution’s
    position.
    Finally, I am convinced that the district court erred in sustaining the state’s peremptory challenge to alternate
    Goode. The prosecutor stated that he struck Goode because he looked familiar to him and because he was the son
    of a minister or pastor of a church. Neither reason withstands scrutiny. The colloquy between the prosecutor and
    Goode was as follows:
    MR. McCULLOCH: . . . . Mr. Goode -- I don’t know -- while I’ve been sitting here, you
    look very familiar to me. Do I look familiar to you? Do you think you know me at all?
    VENIREMAN GOODE: Not off hand.
    MR. McCULLOCH: You work for the Postal Service?
    VENIREMAN GOODE: Right.
    MR. McCULLOCH: Are you a letter carrier?
    VENIREMAN GOODE: No. A truck driver.
    MR. McCULLOCH: Okay. Well, that wouldn’t be it. You live in the Ferguson area?
    VENIREMAN GOODE: No. Florissant.
    MR. McCULLOCH: Florissant?
    VENIREMAN GOODE: Um-hum.
    MR. McCULLOCH: That could be it, from the Florissant area. In any event, I don’t look
    too familiar to you, do I? You don’t think you know me?
    -34-
    VENIREMAN GOODE: No, I don’t.
    
    Id. at 223-24.
    Later, Malone’s counsel questioned Goode as follows:
    MR. AYLWARD: Okay. Mr. Goode, do you attend any church or --
    MR. GOODE: Yes, I do.
    MR. AYLWARD: Do you attend regularly?
    MR. GOODE: Yeah. My dad, he’s a pastor.
    
    Id. at 238.
    It is apparent from the colloquy that the prosecutor had little or no basis for his claim of familiarity; and,
    in any case, the state did not develop the record to suggest how any familiarity might adversely affect Goode’s ability
    to sit on the jury. As to the second reason, Malone has established that it was pretextual because Gerald J. Bush,
    the jury foreman, had spent seven years in the ministry and he was not challenged by the prosecutor.18
    18
    In addition, Bush stated that his home had been broken into in 1971 and no one
    was prosecuted. Bush revealed the following at voir dire:
    MR. AYLWARD: Are you affiliated with any religious group?
    VENIREMAN BUSH: To a certain degree, yes.                                          I spent
    approximately seven years in the ministry.
    MR. AYLWARD: Do you attend church at this time?
    VENIREMAN BUSH: Yes.
    MR. AYLWARD: And your family as well?
    VENIREMAN BUSH: Yes.
    
    Id. at 137-38.
    According to the prosecutor’s testimony, a similar incident justified the
    exclusion of Henderson from the jury. Thus, the jury foreperson, a white male,
    possessed two of the traits allegedly deemed unacceptable by the prosecution.
    -35-
    IV.
    In both his state and federal habeas corpus petitions Malone claimed that his trial counsel provided
    ineffective assistance at the penalty phase of his trial by failing to investigate and present mitigating evidence.
    Specifically, Malone claims that his trial counsel failed to interview or call his family members failed to have Malone
    psychologically evaluated or present available evidence of Malone’s psychological history. Although the district court
    concluded that Malone’s counsel rendered effective assistance, I disagree.
    To succeed on his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Malone must show (1) that his counsel’s
    performance was professionally unreasonable under all the circumstances, and (2) that there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional error, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 694 (1984). “When a defendant challenges a death sentence[,] . . . the
    question is whether there is a reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the sentencer--including an appellate
    court, to the extent it independently reweighs the evidence--would have concluded that the balance of aggravating
    and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.” 
    Id. at 695.
    Always, the ultimate focus of inquiry must be on
    the fundamental fairness of the proceeding whose result the defendant challenges. 
    Id. at 696.
    In a death penalty case, counsel is obligated to collect as much information as possible about the defendant
    for use at the penalty phase. Hill v. Lockhart, 
    28 F.3d 832
    , 845 (8th Cir. 1994). This is so because the sentencing
    battle must be one between the particularized nature of the crime and the particularized characteristics of the
    -36-
    individual defendant. Woodson v. North Carolina, 
    428 U.S. 280
    , 303 (1976) (holding unconstitutional a state first-
    degree-murder statute that carried automatic death sentence); see also Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 112
    (1982); Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
    , 605 (1978). As the Supreme Court has stated:
    [I]n capital cases the fundamental respect for humanity underlying the Eighth Amendment requires
    consideration of the character and record of the individual offender and the circumstances of a
    particular offense as a constitutionally indispensable part of the process of inflicting the penalty of
    death.
    
    Woodson, 428 U.S. at 304
    (internal citation omitted).
    Under all the circumstances, the jury at Malone’s trial was given no sense of the person he was. At the guilt
    phase of Malone’s trial, the jury returned its verdict at 11:00 p.m. on Friday, March 30, 1984. Despite the late hour
    and the fact that the next day was Saturday, the penalty phase of the trial began at 9:30 on the morning of March 31.
    The entire proceeding--including the jury’s deliberation on the appropriate punishment--lasted only four hours.
    Malone was not even present during the penalty phase of the trial, having refused to attend. The only additional
    evidence submitted by the state were Malone’s prior convictions and sentences from California which the prosecutor
    read to the jury from certified court records.
    For its part, the defense presented just one witness: a professor from St. Louis University who offered his
    general, expert opinion that the death penalty was not an effective deterrent to crime. Malone’s trial counsel offered
    no evidence to personalize, or even humanize, Malone in the eyes of the jury. He did not investigate or present
    evidence about Malone’s family, his upbringing, or his social, educational, psychological, or physical history. In fact,
    although trial counsel asked the jury to find
    -37-
    that Malone’s age at the time of the offense was a mitigating factor, he never even told the jury how old Malone
    was.19
    Testimony developed during the state post-conviction proceedings reveals that Malone’s lawyer did nothing
    to investigate or develop mitigating evidence in preparation for trial. His conversations with Malone were so limited
    that trial counsel did not even know that Malone had two children. Malone’s lawyer failed to speak to either of his
    parents, both of whom later stated for the record that they would have readily testified on their son’s behalf as they
    did during his two California trials.20 He did not request a psychological evaluation of his client nor did he review
    the extensive psychological profiles developed on his client for the California proceedings. According to the record,
    Aylward made no specific preparations for the penalty phase other than to contact one academic and one religious
    expert on capital punishment.
    The district court accepted the government’s argument that counsel’s decision not to call family members
    was a strategic one prompted primarily by Malone’s expressed preference not to put his family through the painful
    process again. Under the first prong of Strickland, a particular decision not to investigate is assessed for
    reasonableness under the circumstances and a heavy measure of deference applies to counsel’s 
    judgments. 466 U.S. at 691
    . Under the circumstances, however, it was unreasonable for counsel to completely abdicate his duty to
    investigate and to
    19
    Malone had just turned twenty years old at the time of the offense. By the time
    of this Missouri trial, Malone was twenty-three years old and had spent the better part
    of the preceding three years doing “hard time” at San Quentin Prison. The record also
    indicates that Malone had a beard at the time of trial. Thus, it would have been
    unreasonable to expect the jury to intuit that Malone was a young man at the time of
    the offense based solely on his physical appearance at trial.
    20
    Malone’s mother testified that, while she knew her son had been moved
    temporarily from California to Missouri, she was unaware that he was standing trial in
    Missouri for capital murder until well after his conviction and sentence.
    -38-
    understand the very life he was asking the jury to spare. His performance is readily distinguishable from the
    examples cited in Strickland as circumstances in which limited or nonexistent investigation might be reasonable:
    [W]hen the facts that support a certain potential line of defense are generally known to counsel
    because of what defendant has said, the need for further investigation may be considerably
    diminished or eliminated altogether. And when a defendant has given counsel 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.
    
    Id. Malone and
    his lawyer barely communicated until two weeks prior to trial, at which point counsel focused
    primarily on preparing for the guilt phase of the trial by reviewing investigative reports prepared by the state. Thus,
    Malone’s lawyer knew very little about what he might find if he investigated Malone’s personal history. It follows
    that, without knowing what information Malone’s family could provide the defense, it was unreasonable for counsel
    to use Malone’s reluctance to cause his family pain as a justification for not doing the work involved in developing
    a picture of Malone’s character and history. Without the necessary background information, Malone’s counsel was
    in no position to advise Malone on the importance of the mitigating evidence and on the likelihood that his family’s
    testimony might save his life. It seems clear that counsel’s performance during the penalty phase of Malone’s trial
    was unreasonably deficient.
    With respect to the second prong of Strickland, Malone suffered prejudice as a result of his counsel’s
    deficient performance. Because Malone had twice stood trial for capital murder in California, his Missouri trial
    counsel had a wealth of information from which he could have drawn a picture of Malone for the jury. But for
    counsel’s failures, the jury would have learned the following information from his family, friends, educators, and
    diagnosing psychologists: Malone is a mixed-race son of a white
    -39-
    mother and a black father. He is the third child and oldest boy in a family of seven children. Malone is also the
    father of two children who were ages one and four at the time of his trial. His father’s career in the military until
    1971 kept him from the family for long periods during most of Malone’s childhood and the family moved often.
    These frequent relocations interrupted his education and exacerbated his academic and disciplinary problems.
    Although Malone lived variously in West Point, New York; Fort Court, Texas; Wursbury, Germany; St. Louis,
    Missouri; and Honolulu, Hawaii, his most consistent childhood home was the city of Seaside, California which
    suffered intense racial tension during Malone’s youth. He was teased constantly for his mixed-race background and
    had difficulty finding acceptance with either the white community or with the burgeoning black power movement.
    Malone’s small size and frail physical condition also made him a target for constant ridicule. Malone dropped out
    of school in the tenth grade. His siblings and schoolmates universally described him as unpopular, hyperactive, a
    loner, and a child who was easily manipulated and bossed around.
    Kelvin had several falls and resulting head injuries as a child. Two of them required overnight stays in the
    hospital, the first when he was approximately eighteen months old and the second when he was about ten years old.
    Malone’s parents attributed many of Malone’s academic and social problems to these head injuries. Dr. Craig Rath,
    a clinical psychologist who testified during the penalty phase of Malone’s trial in San Bernardino, California,
    disagreed. Dr. Rath spent at least nine hours with Malone over several visits while he was detained in California,
    administered psychological tests, and reviewed approximately sixty-four defense reports based on interviews with
    persons in Malone’s past. Based on that information, Dr. Rath positively diagnosed Malone as having suffered from
    untreated attention deficit disorder (ADD) as a child and with residual ADD and antisocial personality disorder since
    adulthood. Dr. Rath explained that in residual type ADD, the hyperactivity that characterizes childhood behavior
    often goes away but problems with impulsivity, attention span and organizational skills remain. Dr. Rath also
    determined that, because
    -40-
    Malone’s ADD was the result of a small amount of organic brain damage, the roots of his problems are partially
    nonvolitional. Dr. Rath’s diagnosis is corroborated by the less-detailed 1982 report of Dr. William Jones, another
    licensed clinical psychologist in California. Dr. Williams examined Malone and found that he had a history of head
    trauma and “weak indications of underlying neurological dysfunction.”
    While I acknowledge that none of this information about Malone’s personal history would have required
    the jury to find any statutory mitigating circumstance beyond a reasonable doubt, the fundamental fairness of the
    penalty-phase proceedings must be questioned. See 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696
    . I am convinced of the reasonable
    probability that, had the jury been apprised of Malone’s history, it would have concluded that the balance of
    aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death. 
    Id. at 695.
    V.
    Therefore, I would reverse the district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief for two reasons, both of which,
    for the reasons I have discussed, were properly preserved for our review. First, the jury was impaneled in violation
    of Batson and the prosecution’s intentional, racially-motivated exclusion of all black members of the venire panel
    violated Malone’s equal protection rights. Second, Malone was denied the effective assistance of counsel at the
    penalty phase of his trial. Each of these constitutional errors constitutes an independent basis for the issuance of a
    writ of habeas corpus. I have examined each of the other claims of error in Malone’s petition and agree with the
    district court and the majority that none of them justify relief. I would remand the case to the district court with
    orders to issue a writ of habeas corpus directing the state court to vacate Malone’s sentence and conviction.
    -41-
    A true copy.
    Attest.
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
    -42-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 96-1613

Filed Date: 2/26/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (44)

United States v. Spiver Whitney Gordon , 817 F.2d 1538 ( 1987 )

United States v. Lowden David , 803 F.2d 1567 ( 1986 )

Darrel Wayne Hill, Appellee/cross-Appellant v. A.L. ... , 28 F.3d 832 ( 1994 )

Richard Dennis Oxford v. Paul Delo , 59 F.3d 741 ( 1995 )

frederick-davidson-v-charles-harris-coi-scott-jarvis-coi-raymond , 30 F.3d 963 ( 1994 )

David E. Walton v. Paul Caspari, and William L. Webster , 916 F.2d 1352 ( 1990 )

State v. Kenley , 693 S.W.2d 79 ( 1985 )

Glennon Paul Sweet v. Paul Delo, Superintendent, Potosi ... , 125 F.3d 1144 ( 1997 )

Linda Jasperson, Appellant/cross-Appellee v. Purolator ... , 765 F.2d 736 ( 1985 )

Steve Campbell v. James Purkett George Lombardi , 957 F.2d 535 ( 1992 )

Gerald Duane Garrett v. Terry Morris and Attorney General ... , 815 F.2d 509 ( 1987 )

T.J. Hayes v. A.L. Lockhart, Director, Arkansas Department ... , 852 F.2d 339 ( 1988 )

Emmett C. Nave v. Paul K. Delo, Emmett C. Nave v. Paul K. ... , 62 F.3d 1024 ( 1995 )

Fred Louis Lamp v. State of Iowa Director, Division of ... , 122 F.3d 1100 ( 1997 )

Luleff v. State , 807 S.W.2d 495 ( 1991 )

State v. Malone , 694 S.W.2d 723 ( 1985 )

Sanders v. State , 807 S.W.2d 493 ( 1991 )

State v. White , 813 S.W.2d 862 ( 1991 )

Drury Displays, Inc. v. Board of Adjustment of City of St. ... , 760 S.W.2d 112 ( 1988 )

State v. Antwine , 743 S.W.2d 51 ( 1987 )

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