Muhammad v. Kelly, 575 F.3d 359 (4th Cir. 2009) (Fedral
Habeas).
Background: Following affirmance of capital murder conviction,
269 Va. 451, 619 S.E.2d 16, petition for writ of habeas corpus was
filed. The United States District Court for the Eastern District
of Virginia, Liam O'Grady, J., 2008 WL 4360996, denied the
petition. Petitioner appealed.
Holdings: The Court of Appeals, Gregory, Circuit Judge, held
that: (1) FBI report which indicated that sniper was likely acting
alone was not exculpatory; (2) government's failure to disclose
certain witness statements did not amount to Brady violation; (3)
counsel's failure to object to defendant's self-representation did
not prejudice defendant; and (4) claim challenging exclusion of
expert during penalty phase was procedurally defaulted. Affirmed.
GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
John Allen Muhammad petitions this Court for a writ of habeas
corpus. He alleges nondisclosure of exculpatory information by the
prosecution, ineffective assistance of his trial counsel, improper
exclusion of expert testimony during his sentencing phase, and
improper time and page restrictions on his habeas petition in the
district court below. We are unable to find reversible error in
the conclusions of the state and district courts, and we therefore
affirm the district court's decision to deny habeas relief.
I.
Paul J. LaRuffa was a restaurateur in Clinton, Maryland. At
the end of the day on September 5, 2002, LaRuffa closed his
restaurant and proceeded to take his laptop computer and $3500 in
cash and credit receipts to his car. After he sat behind the
steering wheel, he saw a figure to his left and a flash of light,
then heard gunshots. LaRuffa was shot six times, but survived. An
employee who left the restaurant with LaRuffa witnessed the
shooting and called 911. He testified that he saw a “kid” run up
to LaRuffa's car, fire into it, and take the briefcase and laptop.
Muhammad v. Virginia, 269 Va. 451, 619 S.E.2d 16, 25 (2005). The
briefcase and empty deposit bags were found six weeks later in a
wooded area approximately a mile from the shooting. The DNA from
clothing found nearby was consistent with that of Lee Boyd Malvo.
On September 15, 2002, there was a second shooting in Clinton,
Maryland: Muhammad Rashid was locking the front door of the Three
Roads Liquor Store from the outside when he heard gunshots behind
him. A young man then rushed him and shot him in the stomach.
Rashid testified that the young man was Malvo.
Almost a week later, on September 21, 2002, Claudine Parker and
Kelly Adams were shot after closing the Zelda Road ABC Liquor
Store in Montgomery, Alabama. Parker died as a result of her
gunshot wound through the back-the bullet transected her spinal
cord and passed through her lung. Adams was shot through the neck,
and the bullet exited through her chin, breaking her jaw in half,
shattering her face and teeth, paralyzing her left vocal cord, and
severing nerves in her left shoulder. Yet, she survived. Bullets
recovered from the shooting were eventually identified as coming
from a Bushmaster high-powered rifle. While the rifle was being
fired, Malvo was seen approaching Parker and Adams. A police car
passed by the scene immediately after the shooting, and the
officers observed Malvo going through the women's purses. The
officers gave chase, but Malvo escaped. In the process, however,
he dropped a gun catalog. Malvo's fingerprints were found on the
catalog, and a .22-caliber, stainless-steel revolver was found in
the stairwell of an apartment building that Malvo traversed. The
revolver was the same as the one used to shoot LaRuffa and Rashid.
Two days later, on September 23, 2002, the manager of a Baton
Rouge, Louisiana, Beauty Depot store, Hong Im Ballenger, was
walking to her car after closing the store for the evening when
she was shot once in the head. The bullet entered the back of her
head and exited through her jawbone. She died as a result of the
wound. The bullet was determined to have come from the Bushmaster
rifle found on Muhammad during his arrest. Witnesses saw Malvo
flee from the scene with Ballenger's purse.
The sixth and seventh shootings occurred in Silver Spring,
Maryland, on October 3, 2002. At approximately 8:15 a.m.,
Premkumar A. Walekar was shot while fueling his taxicab. The
bullet went through his left arm and entered his chest, where it
fatally damaged his heart. At approximately 8:30 a.m., Sarah Ramos
was killed while sitting on a bench in front of the Crisp & Juicy
Restaurant in the Leisure World Shopping Center. The bullet
entered through the front of her head and exited through her
spinal cord at the top of the neck. Both bullets were identified
as having come from a Bushmaster rifle, and an eyewitness
identified Muhammad's Chevrolet Caprice at the scene of the second
shooting.
On October 3, 2002, at approximately 10:00 a.m., Lori Lewis-Rivera
was shot in the back while vacuuming her car at a Shell gas
station in Kensington, Maryland. The bullet was identified as
coming from a Bushmaster rifle. An eyewitness said that he saw a
Chevrolet Caprice in the area approximately twenty minutes before
the shooting. At approximately 7:00 p.m., a police officer stopped
Muhammad for running two stop signs. The officer gave Muhammad a
verbal warning and released him. Later that night, at
approximately 9:15 p.m., Pascal Chariot was shot in the chest as
he crossed the inter section of Georgia Avenue and Kalmia Road in
the District of Columbia. Chariot's shooting happened about thirty
blocks from where Muhammad was stopped. The bullet fragments from
both the Lewis-Rivera and the Chariot shootings were identified as
coming from a Bushmaster rifle.
The next day, October 4, 2002, Caroline Seawell was putting
bags in her minivan outside of a Michael's craft store in
Fredericksburg, Virginia, when she was shot once in the back. The
bullet damaged her liver and exited through her right breast, but
she survived the attack. An eyewitness testified to seeing a
Caprice in the parking lot at the time of the shooting, and
ballistics tests determined the bullet fragments came from a
Bushmaster rifle.
On October 6, 2002, Tanya Brown was taking Iran Brown to Tasker
Middle School in Bowie, Maryland. As Iran was walking on the
sidewalk to the school, he was shot once in the chest. Tanya drove
Iran to a health care center where surgeons were able to save his
life despite lung damage, a large hole in his diaphragm, damage to
the left lobe of his liver, and lacerations to his stomach,
pancreas, and spleen. Two eyewitnesses testified that they saw a
Caprice in the vicinity of the school the day before and the
morning of the shooting. One eyewitness positively identified both
Muhammad and Malvo in the Caprice the morning of the shooting. The
police searched the surrounding area and found a ballpoint pen and
a shell casing in the woods near the school. The area had been
pressed down like a blind used to conceal hunters. The tissue
samples from the pen matched Muhammad's DNA, and the shell casing
and bullet fragments were determined to have come from a
Bushmaster rifle. The Brown shooting was also the first time that
police discovered communications from the shooters. The tarot card
for death was found, and on it was written, “Call me God.” On the
back, someone had written, “For you, Mr. Police. Code: Call me God.
Do not release to the Press.” Muhammad v. Virginia, 619 S.E.2d at
27.
Three days later, on October 9, 2002, Dean Meyers was fueling
his car at a Sunoco station in Manassas, Virginia, when he was
shot in the head by a single bullet. The bullet was later
determined to have come from a Bushmaster rifle. An eyewitness
testified that she saw Muhammad and Malvo in the area
approximately one hour prior. The police actually interviewed
Muhammad in a parking lot across the street immediately after the
shooting, and they later found a map with Muhammad's fingerprints
in the parking lot.
On October 11, 2002, Kenneth Bridges was fired upon at an Exxon
gas station in Massaponax, Virginia. He was shot once in the chest
by a bullet identified as having come from the Bushmaster rifle.
Two eyewitnesses testified that they saw a Caprice at or near the
Exxon that morning.
The fourteenth shooting occurred on October 14, 2002, in Falls
Church, Virginia. Linda Franklin and her husband were loading
their car outside of a Home Depot when she was shot in the head by
a single bullet and killed. Ballistics experts determined that the
bullet was from a Bushmaster rifle.
The next day, October 15, a Rockville, Maryland, dispatcher
received the following telephone call: “Don't say any thing, just
listen, we're the people who are causing the killings in your area.
Look on the tarot card, it says, ‘call me God, do not release to
press.’ We've called you three times before trying to set up
negotiations. We've gotten no response. People have died.” Id. at
28. The caller hung up before the dispatcher could transfer the
call to the Sniper Task Force.
Three days later, on October 18, Officer Derek Baliles of the
Montgomery County, Maryland, Police received a telephone call. The
caller told Baliles to “shut up” and said that he knew who was
doing the shootings, but wanted the police to verify some
information before he said anything further. Id. The caller asked
questions about the Parker and Adams shootings in Alabama and hung
up again. When the caller called again, Baliles verified the
shootings. The caller stated that he needed to find more coins and
a telephone without surveillance, then hung up. The same day,
William Sullivan, a priest in Ashland, Virginia, received a
telephone call from two people. The first male voice told him that
someone else wanted to speak to him. The second male voice said
that “the lady didn't have to die,” and “it was at the Home Depot.”
Id. The caller then told him about the shooting in Alabama and
said, “Mr. Policeman, I am God. Do not tell the press.” Id. The
caller concluded by telling Sullivan to relay the information to
the police.
The next day, October 19, 2002, Jeffery Hopper and his wife
were leaving a restaurant in Ashland, Virginia, when he was shot
in the abdomen. Hopper survived, but his injuries required five
surgeries to repair his pancreas, stomach, kidneys, liver,
diaphragm, and intestines. In the woods near the crime scene,
police discovered another blind similar to the one at the Brown
shooting. They also found a shell casing, a candy wrapper, and a
plastic sandwich bag that was attached with a thumbtack to a tree
at eye level and was decorated with Halloween characters and self-adhesive
stars. The shell casing and bullets were determined to have come
from a Bushmaster rifle. The candy wrapper contained Muhammad's
and Malvo's DNA.
The sandwich bag contained a handwritten message: For you Mr.
Police. “Call me God.” Do not release to the Press. We have tried
to contact you to start negotiation ... These people took our call
for a Hoax or Joke, so your failure to respond has cost you five
lives. If stopping the killing is more important than catching us
now, then you will accept our demand which are non-negotiable. (i)
You will place ten million dollar in Bank of america account ...
We will have unlimited withdrawl at any atm worldwide. You will
activate the bank account, credit card, and pin number. We will
contact you at Ponderosa Buffet, Ashland, Virginia, tel. # ...
6:00 am Sunday Morning. You have until 9:00 a.m. Monday morning to
complete transaction. “Try to catch us withdrawing at least you
will have less body bags.” (ii) If trying to catch us now more
important then prepare you body bags. If we give you our word that
is what takes place. “Word is Bond.” P.S. Your children are not
safe anywhere at anytime. Id. at 28-29 (alterations in original).
However, the note was not discovered until after the deadline had
passed. Surveillance videotapes from that day identified Muhammad
at a Big Lots store near the shooting.
The day after Hopper was shot, the FBI Sniper Tip Line received
a call from a male who stated, “Don't talk. Just listen. Call me
God. I left a message for you at the Ponderosa. I am trying to
reach you at the Ponderosa. Be there to take a call in ten
minutes.” Id. at 29. On October 21, 2002, the FBI negotiations
team received a call that had been re-routed from the Ponderosa
telephone number. A recorded voice said:
Don't say anything. Just listen. Dearest police, Call me God.
Do not release to the press. Five red stars. You have our terms.
They are non-negotiable. If you choose Option 1, you will hold a
press conference stating to the media that you believe you have
caught the sniper like a duck in a noose. Repeat every word
exactly as you heard it. If you choose Option 2, be sure to
remember we will not deviate. P.S.-Your children are not safe. Id.
The next day at around 6:00 a.m., Conrad Johnson, a bus driver
for the Montgomery County Transit Authority, was shot in the chest
as he was entering his bus in Aspen Hill, Maryland. Johnson was
conscious when the rescue workers arrived, but died at the
hospital. The bullet fragments were determined to have come from a
Bushmaster rifle. At another blind discovered nearby, a black
duffle bag and a brown left-handed glove were found. DNA from hair
found in the duffle bag matched that of Muhammad. Another plastic
bag that contained self-adhesive stars and a note was left behind.
On October 24, 2002, the FBI captured Muhammad and Malvo at a
rest area in Frederick County, Maryland. They were asleep in a
Caprice, where police found a loaded .223-caliber Bushmaster rifle
behind the rear seat. The DNA on the rifle matched that of both
Muhammad and Malvo, although the only fingerprints found on the
rifle were those of Malvo. The Caprice had been modified with
heavy window tint, a hinged rear seat that provided easy access to
the trunk from the passenger compartment, and a hole that had been
cut into the trunk lid just above the license plate. Covering the
hole was a right-handed brown glove that matched the left-handed
glove found near the Johnson shooting, and a rubber seal crossed
over the hole. Moreover, the trunk had been spray-painted blue.
Police also found the following items in the Caprice: a global
positioning system receiver; a magazine about rifles; an AT & T
telephone charge card; ear plugs; maps; plastic sandwich bags; a
rifle scope; .223-caliber ammunition; two-way radios; a digital
voice recorder; a receipt from a Baton Rouge, Louisiana, grocery
store, dated September 27, 2002; an electronic organizer; a
plastic bag from Big Lots; a slip of paper containing the Sniper
Task Force telephone number; and a list of schools in the
Baltimore area. Moreover, police found LaRuffa's laptop computer,
onto which Muhammad had loaded “Microsoft Streets and Trips 2002”
on September 2, 2002. In the software program, maps had been
marked with icons, including some with a skull and crossbones.
Icons indicated where Walekar, Lewis-Rivera, Seawell, Brown,
Meyers, and Franklin had been shot. There was also a document
entitled “Allah8.rtf” that contained portions of the text
communicated to police in the extortion demands.
In total, Muhammad was accused of shooting sixteen people and
killing ten of them. Muhammad was convicted by a jury in the
Circuit Court of Prince William County, Virginia, on November 17,
2003, for the 2002 capital murder of Dean Meyers as more than one
murder in three years, in violation of Va.Code Ann. § 18.2-31(8)
(2003); for the capital murder of Meyers in the commission of an
act of terrorism, in violation of Va.Code Ann. § 18.2-31(13)
(2003); for conspiracy to commit capital murder; and for the
illegal use of a firearm during the commission of murder. On
November 24, 2003, the jury sentenced Muhammad to death for the
capital murder and to twenty-three years in prison for the other
crimes. The trial court entered final judgment in accordance with
the verdict on March 29, 2004. The Supreme Court of Virginia
upheld Muhammad's convictions on April 22, 2005, Muhammad v.
Virginia, 269 Va. 451, 619 S.E.2d 16, and denied rehearing on
September 23, 2005. The Supreme Court of the United States denied
Muhammad's petition for a writ of certiorari on May 15, 2006.
Muhammad v. Virginia, 547 U.S. 1136, 126 S.Ct. 2035, 164 L.Ed.2d
794 (2006).
The Prince William County Circuit Court appointed counsel to
represent Muhammad on habeas corpus review. Muhammad filed his
petition on July 31, 2006, and the Supreme Court of Virginia
dismissed the petition on June 12, 2007, Muhammad v. Warden, 274
Va. 3, 646 S.E.2d 182 (2007). It denied rehearing on September 25,
2007. The Supreme Court of the United States denied Muhammad's
petition for a writ of certiorari on April 14, 2008. Muhammad v.
Kelly, --- U.S. ----, 128 S.Ct. 1889, 170 L.Ed.2d 760 (2008). On
October 4, 2007, the Prince William County Circuit Court set
Muhammad's execution date for November 5, 2007. On October 10,
2007, a group of attorneys requested that the U.S. District Court
for the Eastern District of Virginia appoint them to represent
Muhammad and stay his execution pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2251
(2006) so that they could file a petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254
(2006). The district court granted their request on October 26,
2007, and directed them to file, within sixty days, a petition of
not more than fifty pages. They subsequently filed a motion
requesting that the district court rescind its briefing order and
allow them to wait a year to file Muhammad's § 2254 petition. The
district court denied the motion, but allowed the attorneys an
additional thirty days to file an eighty-page petition. On January
22, 2008, the district court allowed Muhammad to file a
placeholder petition on the ninetieth day from the stay and gave
advance permission to file an amended petition three months
afterward. On January 24, 2008, Muhammad filed his placeholder
petition, and on April 23, 2008, he filed his amended petition.
On April 23, 2008, Muhammad also filed a motion requesting
funding for a neuropsychologist, a neuropsychiatrist, and brain
imaging in the amount of $29,000. Additionally, Muhammad filed a
motion for leave to file a third habeas petition, arguing that his
one-year time limit had not expired. On August 6, 2008, the
district court denied Muhammad's motion to file a third amended
petition. On September 24, 2008, the district court denied his
motion for funding and granted the Warden's motion to dismiss the
petition and to lift the stay of execution. Muhammad requested a
certificate of appealability (COA) on October 20, 2008, and filed
a notice of appeal. The district court denied a COA. On January
30, 2009, Muhammad filed a motion with this Court seeking a COA,
and we granted his motion on February 10, 2009.
II.
The district court's denial of a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus is reviewed de novo. Bell v. Ozmint, 332 F.3d 229, 233 (4th
Cir.2003). We may grant relief on a claim adjudicated on the
merits in a state court only if the state-court proceeding
“resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. §
2254(d)(1). With this in mind, we turn to the merits of Muhammad's
claims.
III.
A.
Muhammad's first argument is that the government withheld
exculpatory information during his trial. “[A] Brady [ v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963),] violation has
three essential elements: (1) the evidence must be favorable to
the accused; (2) it must have been suppressed by the government,
either willfully or inadvertently; and (3) the suppression must
have been material, i.e., it must have prejudiced the defense at
trial.” Monroe v. Angelone, 323 F.3d 286, 299-300 (4th Cir.2003) (citing
Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 281-82, 119 S.Ct. 1936, 144
L.Ed.2d 286 (1999)).
Muhammad notes that in June 2006, one month before the due date
for filing his state habeas petition, his Virginia attorneys
received from his Maryland attorneys a DVD with approximately
30,000 pages of discovery responses that were not produced during
his Virginia case over two years earlier even though they were
possessed by the same multijurisdictional joint investigation
team. Muhammad contends that several of these undisclosed
documents contained exculpatory information that would have
undermined portions of the prosecution's case in Virginia.
First, Muhammad takes issue with the government's failure to
disclose an FBI criminal analysis that indicated that the sniper
committing the shootings was likely acting alone. He believes that
this analysis would have undermined the testimony of sniper expert
Mark Spicer, who opined that a sniper team carried out the
shootings because one person could not have done so alone.
Moreover, in the murder of Pascal Charlot, the government had no
direct evidence of Muhammad's involvement, but used Spicer's
testimony to draw the connection. The district and state courts
concluded that the analysis was not exculpatory because the report
did not definitively conclude that the killings were the work of a
single shooter. Muhammad v. Warden, 646 S.E.2d at 186-87. For
example, the report opined that “[i]f there is a second offender,
he is not likely to be an equal partner in these crimes, and would
be subservient to the primary offender.” (J.A. 2019.) Furthermore,
the FBI profile explicitly notes, “This analysis is not a
substitute for a thorough, well-planned investigation, and should
not be considered all inclusive. The information provided is based
upon probabilities.” ( Id. at 2016.) Given the inconclusive
language in the report, it cannot be considered exculpatory, and
the state court's conclusion that there was no Brady violation was
not in error.
Second, Muhammad takes issue with the ballistics evidence used
to convict him. Among the undisclosed information, he points to
reports that the evidence recovered from the September 5 and
September 14 shootings were too damaged to provide a conclusive
ballistics match. (J.A. 2536.) He also highlights a report from
the Prince George's County Police Department that there was
insufficient evidence to determine whether the handgun recovered
at the Alabama shooting was that used to fire the bullets that
killed the victims. (J.A. 2537.) Finally, he points to a December
3, 2002, report that preliminary ballistics findings were
inconclusive. (J.A. 2539-40.) The district court dismissed the
claims after it determined that Muhammad failed to present them to
the state court. Muhammad concedes that he did not present the
claims to the state court initially (Pet'r's Br. 9-10), but he
responds that the Warden raised the issue by arguing that the
suppressed evidence was not material and that he disputed the
claim.
Upon review of the portions of the record that Muhammad cites
in support of his argument that these claims were properly
presented to the state court, we must rule against him. There is
no indication in the record that the government directly presented
the issue of the materiality of the undisclosed ballistics
evidence to the court. And although Muhammad claims to have
disputed the prosecution's ballistics testimony in his motion for
rehearing, the motion does not mention the ballistics reports
detailed above. Thus, it appears that Muhammad did not present
these claims to the state court and they are therefore
forfeited.FN1
FN1. We note that even if Muhammad had presented these claims,
there was other, conclusive ballistics evidence to support his
convictions. Therefore, the challenged ballistics evidence would
not have been exculpatory.
Third, Muhammad disputes evidence of his involvement in the
Parker shooting in Alabama, which was used as one of the predicate
killings for his capital charges. He claims that several witnesses
reported conflicting information, and relevant to the undisclosed
information, two witnesses who identified someone other than Malvo
at the scene were not disclosed to him, and witnesses who reported
seeing a handgun were also not disclosed. Muhammad interprets the
previously undisclosed interviews to indicate that Clyde Wilson-who,
along with James Gray, chased after Malvo-saw Malvo point and fire
a handgun. Yet, Wilson does not actually say that he saw a handgun;
in fact, he could not specifically identify the type of gun that
he saw, but demonstrated what he saw by extending his arms
straight out. (J.A. 2512.) Additionally, Muhammad argues that
Wilson's account could have been used to impeach other witnesses
because Wilson stated that the suspect was wearing a green or
turquoise shirt-different from other descriptions given-and he
could not identify Malvo in the lineup, casting doubt on Gray's
identification. The Supreme Court of Virginia determined that his
testimony could not have been used to impeach Gray because Wilson
saw Malvo from a different vantage point and chased Malvo down a
different route from Gray, and Gray saw Malvo face-to-face.
Moreover, because Wilson did not testify, the report would have
been of minimal use. We cannot say that the Supreme Court of
Virginia's conclusion was unreasonable.
Further, in an undisclosed report, forensics experts in Alabama
had previously determined that the bullets used in the killing
were .22 caliber and likely came from a handgun. Muhammad contends
that it was only after his apprehension that the experts
determined, without examining the weapon, that the bullets came
from his .223-caliber Bushmaster rifle and not the .22-caliber
handgun found nearby. But Muhammad's challenges to the ballistics
information were not made in state court. Moreover, ATF firearms
examiner Dandridge made an independent conclusive match of the
bullets found in Montgomery to the Bushmaster rifle. (J.A.
713-15.) Thus, these claims must fail.FN2
FN2. Muhammad makes an additional argument that the statement
of one Officer D.L. Johnson, given within days of the shooting,
was not disclosed to him, but this argument also was not made in
state court.
Fourth, Muhammad challenges additional evidence related to the
Chariot shooting in the District of Columbia, another predicate
killing for his capital murder conviction. He alleges that the
government suppressed evidence that one witness, Gail Howard, had
previously provided only a vague description of the car seen at
the scene; did not speak to the police until weeks after the
shooting, contrary to her testimony; and had letters written by
the D.C. police to the Immigration and Naturalization Service on
her behalf in order to assuage her fears about her immigration
status. Moreover, those witnesses who talked to the police within
hours after the shooting supposedly indicated that a handgun, not
a rifle, was used in the shooting.
Howard's police statement said that the car she saw was an
“American made, big police looking car, square shape. The same
type of car people buys [sic], after the police had them. I think
it was a four door and the windows were tinted. And the car was
dark colored.” (J.A. 2054B.) This description is not vague; it
accurately describes a 1990s-model Chevrolet Caprice, which is
what Muhammad drove. As for the immigration letters, as the
Supreme Court of Virginia noted, Muhammad makes no allegation that
Howard testified falsely, so it is unclear how this information
would prove exculpatory. Regarding the statements from the other
seven witnesses, only one of them, Ayman Gomma, states that a
handgun was fired, and this was not from personal observation, but
was instead a deduction he drew from his training in the Army and
the sound that he heard. Moreover, none of them testified at trial,
and Howard's testimony, which the witnesses would have supposedly
impeached, was corroborated by the ballistics evidence. Thus, the
Supreme Court of Virginia's conclusion that the information was
not exculpatory was not incorrect.
The fifth category of evidence that Muhammad raises as
exculpatory concerns the Ballenger killing in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, which was used as one of the predicate offenses for the
Virginia capital charges. Ingrid Shaw testified that she saw Malvo
running from the murder scene and identified Muhammad's Caprice as
the one that Malvo entered. However, when she was first
interviewed, and in two subsequent interviews, she did not mention
seeing a car parked nearby that later picked up Malvo. When she
did mention a car, she said it could be an “Olds Cutlass,” and the
Louisiana license plate number she gave was registered to a 1979
Ford LTD. (J.A. 2496.) Presumably, this information could have
been used to impeach her testimony, and the district court found
as much. However, the district court ultimately concluded that the
information was not prejudicial because of the ballistics evidence,
her positive identification of Malvo, and the fact that the
Ballenger murder was one of several predicate killings for the
capital murder charge. We can find no error in this conclusion.
Finally, Muhammad contends that the Commonwealth failed to
disclose a series of twelve letters written by Malvo to another
inmate named “Pac-Man.” These letters allegedly contradict the
Commonwealth's position that Muhammad directed or controlled
Malvo's acts, as required by Virginia law in order to subject
Muhammad to the death penalty. See Muhammad v. Virginia, 269 Va.
451, 611 S.E.2d 537, 553-56 (2005). While the letters do not
discuss Muhammad directly, (J.A. 1534-43) Muhammad argues that the
letters could be used to demonstrate that Malvo was not malleable
and could think independently of Muhammad. The district court and
the Supreme Court of Virginia determined that the letters were
largely cumulative because there was trial testimony that also
indicated that Malvo could think independently. Given this, the
conclusion of the state courts in this regard was not unreasonable.
Let it be clear that we by no means condone the actions of the
Commonwealth in this case. As a matter of practice, the
prosecution should err on the side of disclosure, especially when
a defendant is facing the specter of execution. When questioned at
oral argument regarding why this information was withheld or why
the Commonwealth did not take the step of instituting an open-file
policy, the Commonwealth had no explanation. Yet, at this stage of
the criminal process, we deal only with actions that were clear
violations of the Constitution. While not admirable, the
Commonwealth's actions did not violate the Constitution. Even if
the withheld evidence were exculpatory, Muhammad cannot show that
he was prejudiced by any nondisclosure. The jury determined that
he murdered several people, the evidence against him in most
instances was compelling, and any number of the killings could
serve as the one predicate killing necessary for his conviction.
See Griffin v. United States, 502 U.S. 46, 49, 112 S.Ct. 466, 116
L.Ed.2d 371 (1991) (“[A] general jury verdict [is] valid so long
as it was legally supportable on one of the submitted grounds-even
though that gave no assurance that a valid ground, rather than an
invalid one, was actually the basis for the jury's action.”). Thus,
we find no constitutional violation.
B.
Muhammad's next set of claims involves his belief that his
trial attorneys were ineffective because they did not object to
his representing himself despite evidence that indicated brain
abnormalities and difficulties processing and communicating
information. In order to establish a claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel, Muhammad must first “show that counsel's
performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made
errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the
‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.”
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80
L.Ed.2d 674 (1984). Second, Muhammad must demonstrate that “the
deficient performance prejudiced the defense. This requires
showing that counsel's errors were so serious as to deprive the
defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.” Id.
Muhammad alleges that his trial attorneys were informed of
three abnormalities in an MRI taken prior to his October 20, 2003,
request to represent himself: a) a shrunken cortex, b) a cavum
septum pellucidum, and c) an abnormal shortening of the corpus
callosum. The shrunken cortex shows “the loss of vital brain
tissue that control's [sic] an individual's ability to analyze
information, organize, control and direct his behavior and
emotions, solve problems and learn from his own experiences.” (Pet'r's
Br. 24.) Muhammad claims that this is the result of severe
beatings he received as a child. The cavum septum pellucidum is a
space in the brain that should close during childhood, but
Muhammad's did not. He notes a relationship between a cavum septum
pellucidum and psychoses and schizophrenia. There is a similar
relationship between schizophrenia and a shortened corpus callosum.
Additionally, Muhammad presents a topographic display that
shows the damage to his brain, as indicated by shades of color. (Pet'r's
Br. 27.) The display was created for his habeas petition, but
Muhammad alleges that his trial attorneys knew the information at
the time of his pro se request. Moreover, an IQ test, the WAIS-III,
indicated that his performance was below seventy-three percent of
other men his age. Dr. Dorothy Lewis, a psychiatrist, determined
that although Muhammad could display a “superficial brightness,” (J.A.
2549) FN3 he was not competent to represent himself ( Id.; see
also J.A. 2052-54).FN4 Finally, Muhammad alleges that his trial
attorneys knew that he had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and
bipolar disorder. Muhammad contends that all of this evidence
should have led his trial attorneys to object to his representing
himself and prevented them from calling him “very bright” when the
judge questioned them about Muhammad's ability to represent
himself. (J.A. 214-15.)
FN3. Although Dr. Lewis references the period from September
through October 2003-before Muhammad's first trial-in her
declaration, the declaration is dated December 2007 and was
prepared for Muhammad's federal habeas proceedings below.
FN4. Dr. Lewis's competency evaluation, dated March 27, 2006,
was prepared for Muhammad's Maryland trial, not the Virginia trial
at issue, although it was utilized during his state habeas
proceedings.
Even if we assume that his attorneys should have objected to
Muhammad's self-representation, the state and district courts
found that Muhammad did not show that he was prejudiced, since he
represented himself for only two days during the government's
presentation of its case, and his defense attorneys were heavily
involved as standby counsel, preserving objections to the
government's evidence and attempting to “play as full a role as
the court [would] allow.” (J.A. 215.) Muhammad points only to the
fact that eighteen witnesses were presented, including the
government's sniper expert, and that he made ramblings in front of
the jury that damaged its view of him. However, Muhammad does not
point to any evidence that was improperly received and considered
by the jury, or any potentially prejudicial piece of evidence.
Thus, the decision of the state courts on Muhammad's IAC claim was
not an unreasonable application of clearly established law.FN5
FN5. We note that Muhammad desires us to factor into our
consideration the standard for competence to stand trial set forth
in Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 172, 95 S.Ct. 896, 43 L.Ed.2d
103 (1975) (quoting Dusky v. United States, 362 U.S. 402, 80 S.Ct.
788, 4 L.Ed.2d 824 (1960) (per curiam)): “whether a criminal
defendant ‘has sufficient present ability to consult with his
lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding-and
whether he has a rational as well as factual understanding of the
proceedings against him.’ ” Specifically, Muhammad asks the Court
to consider whether there is a “reasonable probability ... that,
had his trial counsel raised the issue of his competency, he would
have been found incompetent.” (Pet'r's Br. 61.)
Muhammad's claim, however, is one of ineffective assistance of
counsel, not mental incompetence to stand trial. The two are
separate inquiries, and Muhammad does not pursue the latter.
Instead, he argues that if his attorneys had raised the competency
issue, then the judge would have possibly ordered a competency
hearing, and “if examined for competency, there is at least a
reasonable probability that Muhammad would not have been found
competent to represent himself.” (Pet'r's Br. 65-66.) But even if
all of the conditions in Muhammad's far-fetched hypothetical had
been met, the result simply would have been an inability to
represent himself. It is by no means certain that the judge would
have gone further to rule him incompetent to stand trial.
At oral argument, counsel for Muhammad contended that it was
structural error to allow the appellant to represent himself while
incompetent. But again, Muhammad's competence is not at issue, and
it is unclear how structural error should factor into our analysis
at all since it would require us to presume Muhammad to be
incompetent. Indeed, it is unclear whether a structural error even
exists in the form in which Muhammad wishes to use it. See Neder
v. United States, 527 U.S. 1, 8, 119 S.Ct. 1827, 144 L.Ed.2d 35
(1999) (noting that the Supreme Court has “found an error to be ‘structural,’
and thus subject to automatic reversal, only in a very limited
class of cases” and listing cases that do not encompass the
present situation (internal quotation omitted)). We would only be
speculating if we were to hold that, had his counsel objected,
Muhammad (possibly) would have been found incompetent and that,
moreover, he was indeed incompetent and therefore it was
structural error to allow him to represent himself during that
limited portion of his trial in which he did so. We reject this
argument and find that the Strickland standard alone, not in
conjunction with the Drope standard, applies to this case.
C.
According to Muhammad, the district court further erred when it
excluded all defense expert testimony during the penalty phase of
his trial as a sanction for failing to submit to an interview by
the Commonwealth's psychiatrist. Muhammad had planned to present
the opinion of Dr. Mark Cunningham, a psychologist who had
interviewed Muhammad's friends and family, in order to show how
his upbringing influenced his subsequent adult actions, including
the shootings at issue. Muhammad did not plan to use Dr.
Cunningham in order to present a psychiatric defense to his crimes.
Instead, he argues, Dr. Cunningham would have been used only in
mitigation so that he would receive life imprisonment instead of
death. The defense attorneys concluded that they could not
introduce the lay testimony without Dr. Cunningham because “only
Dr. Cunningham could provide the jury a conceptual basis for
assessing Muhammad's moral culpability and understanding the truly
mitigating character of this evidence.” (Pet'r's Br. 41.)
The lay testimony that the defense attorneys would have
presented included accounts from Muhammad's sister, Aurolyn
Williams, who would have testified that their mother died of
breast cancer while they were young. The children then moved into
their grandparents' three-bedroom house, where they lived with
twenty other people and were beaten, forced to eat black-eyed peas
separately from everyone else every night, prevented from entering
the house during the day, and never told their birthdays until
they were older. Another of Muhammad's sisters, Bessie Williams,
would have testified similarly. His brother, Edward Williams,
would have testified about how their uncle, Felton Holiday-a
reform school guard convicted of battery with a dangerous weapon
in 1962 for beating a minor to death-constantly attacked them.
Muhammad was allegedly forced to place his hand on a spark plug
while his grandfather, Guy Holiday, pulled the cord.
According to the Supreme Court of Virginia: Consideration of
Muhammad's arguments on these matters requires a clear
understanding of what the trial court ruled concerning these
issues. The trial court ruled that Muhammad could not present
expert testimony on mitigation factors at sentencing because of
his refusal to abide by the trial court's order to submit to an
evaluation by the Commonwealth. The trial court did not bar the
presentation of non-expert testimony on this issue. Thereafter,
Muhammad sought the ability to present limited expert testimony
purporting not to be based upon expert interviews. The
Commonwealth objected. The trial court overruled the
Commonwealth's objection and gave Muhammad the opportunity to
present evidence out of the presence of the jury that would allow
the trial court to rule on its admissibility. Muhammad did not
take advantage of this invitation. Only after all the evidence was
presented at the sentencing phase and both parties rested their
case did Muhammad offer an affidavit as a proffer of Dr.
Cunningham's testimony. He may not be heard to complain about the
exclusion of Dr. Cunningham's limited testimony when he did not
give the trial court the contemporaneous opportunity to evaluate
its admissibility. Muhammad v. Virginia, 619 S.E.2d at 47 (emphasis
added). Pursuant to its Rule 5:25,FN6 the Supreme Court of
Virginia found that Muhammad had waived his argument about the
trial court's failure to allow Dr. Cunningham to testify only as
to his risk for future dangerousness. Additionally, we emphasize
once more that the trial court did allow Muhammad to present the
testimony outside of the presence of the jury so that the court
could determine its admissibility, but Muhammad chose not to take
advantage of the opportunity. The district court found this claim
therefore to be procedurally defaulted, and our precedent supports
this decision. E.g., Weeks v. Angelone, 176 F.3d 249, 270 (4th
Cir.1999).
FN6. The Rule states: “Error will not be sustained to any
ruling of the trial court or the commission before which the case
was initially tried unless the objection was stated with
reasonable certainty at the time of the ruling, except for good
cause shown or to enable this Court to attain the ends of justice.”
The district and state courts also found that Muhammad
knowingly waived his right to present expert mitigation testimony:
“Muhammad is correct that limiting the evidence that a criminal
defendant may present in his defense implicates numerous
constitutional rights. What Muhammad fails to appreciate is that
he may, by his knowing and informed decisions, waive such rights.”
Muhammad v. Virginia, 619 S.E.2d at 48. The trial court informed
Muhammad, pursuant to Va.Code Ann. § 19.2-264.3:1 (2003), that if
he did not submit to a psychiatric evaluation by the government's
experts, he would not be able to present expert testimony of his
own. Muhammad indicated that he understood. (J.A. 79-80.) After
Muhammad refused to be examined by the government's psychiatrist,
the trial court once again questioned him about the consequences
of his doing so, and he once again indicated that he understood. (J.A.
170.) Thus, the state court's determination that Muhammad waived
the presentation of expert mitigation evidence was neither
inconsistent with the facts in the record nor contrary to clearly
established law.
Muhammad believes that the outcome of this claim is governed by
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.S. 104, 102 S.Ct. 869, 71 L.Ed.2d 1
(1982), Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d
973 (1978) (plurality), and Taylor v. Illinois, 484 U.S. 400, 108
S.Ct. 646, 98 L.Ed.2d 798 (1988), and not by Buchanan v. Kentucky,
483 U.S. 402, 107 S.Ct. 2906, 97 L.Ed.2d 336 (1987), which the
district and state court relied upon. In Buchanan, the Supreme
Court held that “if a defendant requests [a psychiatric]
evaluation or presents psychiatric evidence, then, at the very
least, the prosecution may rebut this presentation with evidence
from the reports of the examination that the defendant requested.”
Id. at 422-23, 107 S.Ct. 2906; see also Savino v. Murray, 82 F.3d
593, 604 (4th Cir.1996) (“When a defendant asserts a mental status
defense and introduces psychiatric testimony in support of that
defense, he may face rebuttal evidence from the prosecution taken
from his own examination or he may be required to submit to an
evaluation conducted by the prosecution's own expert.”) The
district and state courts read Buchanan to uphold Virginia's rule
requiring Muhammad to submit to reciprocal examination if he
wanted to present his own expert testimony. Muhammad argues, how
ever, that he did not purport to present psychiatric evidence,
just evidence of his “reduced moral culpability” due to his family
background. (Pet'r's Br. 84.) However, Dr. Cunningham would have
performed a psychiatric evaluation on Muhammad that could have
informed his view of Muhammad's background. Hence, the state also
was entitled to perform an evaluation, and the state courts' so
holding is reasonable in light of the Supreme Court's decision and
our precedent.
D.
Muhammad believes that the district court erred when it did not
allow him the full 365-day statutory filing period in order to
file his habeas petition and when it limited the petition to fifty
pages. Upon subsequent motions by Muhammad, the district court
extended its original sixty-day deadline by thirty days, raised
the page limit to eighty pages, and granted Muhammad leave to
amend the petition within ninety days from that deadline. Muhammad
did as the court instructed. Three months after the court's
deadline, but before the expiration of the statute of limitations,
Muhammad filed another motion to amend along with his second
amended petition, which Muhammad contends developed his Brady
claims more extensively. The district court denied leave to amend.
We review these claims for abuse of discretion. Hill v. Ozmint,
339 F.3d 187, 193 (4th Cir.2003).
According to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1) (2006): “A 1-year period of
limitation shall apply to an application for a writ of habeas
corpus by a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State
court.” Muhammad cites no case law that has found that a district
court must grant a petitioner an entire year in order to file his
habeas petition. Moreover, even if we assume that the district
court erred in denying Muhammad an entire year in which to file
his petition, “the trial court's error must have a ‘substantial
and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's
verdict.’ ” Tuggle v. Netherland, 79 F.3d 1386, 1393 (4th
Cir.1996) (quoting Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 637, 113
S.Ct. 1710, 123 L.Ed.2d 353 (1993)).
Muhammad claims that if he had been allowed the full
limitations period, he would have been able to produce more
inconsistent testimony, more exculpatory witness statements, more
evidence that Muhammad and Malvo were not at the Parker shooting,
evidence that a shooter in a white box truck was responsible for
the Ramos shooting (including evidence that one Danaus Ford drove
a white box truck that contained gunshot residue and owned a .223-caliber
firearm, claimed to be God, and had unsuccessfully attempted to
get into sniper school), and he would have developed the claims in
his first amended petition at greater length. However, Muhammad's
problem is that, given the abundance of evidence against him, none
of these things likely would have resulted in a different outcome,
and thus he can show no prejudice. Therefore, any error in denying
Muhammad the full statutory period in which to file his petition
was harmless.
E.
Finally, Muhammad argues that the district court erred in not
providing him with expert assistance or with an evidentiary
hearing to develop his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel
and incompetence. According to the district court, “the record,
viewed in light of the forecasted evidence, would not entitle the
petitioner to an evidentiary hearing on his claims, nor would the
petitioner be able to win on the merits regardless of the experts'
findings.” (J.A. 2987.) The district court is given discretionary
authority to provide for expert assistance by 18 U.S.C. § 3599(f)
(2006):
Upon a finding that investigative, expert, or other services
are reasonably necessary for the representation of the defendant,
whether in connection with issues relating to guilt or the
sentence, the court may authorize the defendant's attorneys to
obtain such services on behalf of the defendant and, if so
authorized, shall order the payment of fees and expenses therefor....
Moreover, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) provides: If the applicant has
failed to develop the factual basis of a claim in State court
proceedings, the court shall not hold an evidentiary hearing on
the claim unless the applicant shows that- (A) the claim relies on-
(i) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on
collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously
unavailable; or (ii) a factual predicate that could not have been
previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence; and(B)
the facts underlying the claim would be sufficient to establish by
clear and convincing evidence that but for constitutional error,
no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of
the underlying offense.
Given the foregoing discussion of Muhammad's IAC and
incompetence claims, and the deficiencies therein, the district
court's decisions to deny further expert assistance and to deny
Muhammad an evidentiary hearing were not abuses of discretion. See
Wright v. Angelone, 151 F.3d 151, 163 (4th Cir.1998).
IV.
After a full review of the record and Muhammad's claims, we
conclude that we must affirm the decision of the district court.
Muhammad's petition for a writ of habeas corpus is hereby denied.
AFFIRMED