Shields v. Dretke , 122 F. App'x 133 ( 2005 )


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  •                                                             United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    February 17, 2005
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT              Charles R. Fulbruge III
    _____________________                      Clerk
    No. 04-70008
    _____________________
    ROBERT ALAN SHIELDS,
    Petitioner - Appellant
    v.
    DOUG DRETKE, DIRECTOR, TEXAS
    DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
    CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS DIVISION,
    Respondent - Appellee
    ---------------------
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Texas, Galveston
    (3:99-CV-753)
    ---------------------
    Before JOLLY, WIENER, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Petitioner-Appellant Robert Alan Shields seeks a certificate
    of appealability (“COA”) on multiple issues that the district
    court deemed unworthy of collateral review.      Shields also appeals
    the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of
    respondent-appellee Doug Dretke (“the State”). Shields further
    appeals the district court’s order denying an evidentiary hearing
    under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2).
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined
    that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent
    except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
    Because Shields has failed to make a substantial showing of
    the denial of a constitutional right, we deny his application for
    a COA on all of his claims after a threshold inquiry on the
    merits.    We further find that the district court did not abuse
    its discretion when it denied Shields an evidentiary hearing.
    I. PROCEEDINGS
    In 1994, a Texas grand jury indicted Shields for the murder
    of Paula Stiner while in the course of committing and attempting
    to commit burglary and robbery.            In 1995, a jury found Shields
    guilty of capital murder.            After the penalty phase, the jury
    recommended the death penalty, and, in October 1995, the trial
    court sentenced Shields to death.
    Shields directly appealed his conviction and sentence to the
    Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (“TCCA”).               In 1998, the TCCA
    affirmed Shields’s conviction and sentence.1              Shields filed a
    motion for rehearing, which that court denied.
    Shields timely filed an application for a writ of habeas
    corpus    in   the   state   trial   court.     The   trial   court   entered
    findings of fact and conclusions of law, recommending that relief
    be denied.2     The TCCA adopted the trial court’s findings of fact
    1
    See Shields v. State, No. 72,278 (Tex. Crim App. Feb. 25,
    1998) (unpublished).
    2
    See Ex parte Shields, No. 94CR1685-83 (112nd Judicial
    District Court of Galveston County, Texas, Oct. 14, 1998).
    2
    and conclusions of law and denied relief after its own review of
    the record.3
    In 1999, Shields timely filed a petition for a writ of
    habeas    corpus      in    the    United    States    District          Court      for   the
    Southern District of Texas.                 Shields’s federal habeas petition
    contained numerous unexhausted claims.                 After the state filed its
    opposition to Shields’s petition, in which it argued that the
    majority    of     Shields’s       claims    were    unexhausted          and    therefore
    procedurally       barred,        Shields    moved    to     stay       the   proceedings
    pending his return to state court to exhaust the unexhausted
    claims.      The      district      court   granted        the       motion   and    allowed
    Shields to return to state court to exhaust his claims.                                   The
    order further permitted Shields to refile his federal petition
    within 90 days if the TCCA denied relief.                               Pursuant to the
    district    court’s         order,    Shields       filed        a    successive      habeas
    application with the TCCA.
    In 2002, the TCCA denied Shields’s successive state habeas
    application      as    an    abuse    of    the     writ    under        state      statute.4
    Shields then refiled his federal petition in the district court.
    In 2003, the district court denied Shields’s petition, denied his
    3
    See Ex parte Shields, No. 72,278-01 (Tex. Crim. App. Dec.
    9, 1998).
    4
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.071 § 5 (Vernon’s 1999).
    3
    request for an evidentiary hearing, and rendered summary judgment
    in favor of the State.          Shields filed a motion in the district
    court to alter or to amend its judgment under Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure 59(e), and the district court denied the motion.
    In February 2003, Shields sought a COA in the district court
    on   28    issues.      Based   on   the       TCCA’s   dismissal   of   Shields’s
    successive     habeas    petition,    the       district   court    rejected   the
    majority of Shields’s claims as procedurally barred.                      After a
    threshold inquiry on the merits, the district court rejected
    those claims on which Shields had not procedurally defaulted.
    Shields now seeks a COA on these issues from this court.
    II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    A.     Guilt-Innocence Phase
    The evidence adduced at trial showed that Tracy Stiner, the
    victim’s husband, arrived home from work shortly before 6:00 p.m.
    on September 21, 1994.           He discovered his wife’s body in the
    laundry room.        Mrs. Stiner’s body lay on its right side on the
    floor of the laundry room with her back to the washer and dryer.
    The room and the victim were covered in blood.                      The breakfast
    area of the house was in disarray, and the contents of Mrs.
    Stiner’s purse were strewn about.               There was also a hammer on the
    floor of the breakfast area.           As Mr. Stiner searched the house,
    he noticed that several items —— including several pair of socks,
    4
    shirts, a book bag, and a kitchen knife —— were missing.                             Mr.
    Stiner testified that he later learned that, at 11:37 a.m. —— a
    time when his wife would have been at work —— a telephone call
    had been made from his home to the home of one of Shields’s
    friends in Spring, Texas.
    Dr.    William     Korndoffer,    Galveston          County’s    Chief       Medical
    Examiner, testified that Mrs. Stiner had suffered a blunt trauma
    to the head and had been repeatedly stabbed in the throat, chest,
    and torso.        Mrs. Stiner also suffered a number of defensive
    wounds, which indicated that she had struggled with her assailant
    before she died.
    Detective Michael Wayne Tollett of the Friendswood Police
    Department testified that he was notified of Mrs. Stiner’s murder
    around   6:16    p.m.   on   September       21   and     arrived    at     the   Stiner
    residence     shortly    thereafter.         Tollett      testified        that   police
    lifted Shields’s fingerprints from the laundry room and that
    bloody shoe prints at the scene were consistent with Shields’s
    shoes.     Tollett found blood on the purse, the carpet, and a large
    amount   of     blood   in   the   laundry        room.      He     also    found    one
    screwdriver on the carpet below a broken window and a wooden-
    handled screwdriver outside.          A cigarette butt found at the scene
    had saliva on it consistent with Shields’s saliva.                    Mrs. Stiner’s
    car was also missing.
    5
    The     Shields    family      lived    next    door     to    the   Stiners.
    Christine      Shields,    Shields’s     mother,      testified      that   a   police
    officer informed her of Mrs. Stiner’s murder when she returned
    home on September 21.            The next day, Mrs. Shields noticed that
    some items were out of place in her garage —— cushions had been
    arranged to form a makeshift bed, and some drinks were nearby.
    Mrs. Shields also found Shields’s pager and one of his shirts
    near    the    cushions,   although      Shields      had    not   lived    with   his
    parents for several months and was not welcome in their home
    without at least one parent present.                  When Mrs. Shields learned
    from neighbors that a wooden-handled screwdriver like one that
    she and her husband owned had been used to break into the Stiner
    home, she began to suspect that her son was involved in the
    crime.       She contacted the police and gave them Shields’s friends’
    phone numbers where he might be reached.
    Shields was arrested on September 24, 1994.                    At the police
    station, police noticed cuts on his hands.                   There was also a cut
    on his right chin and what appeared to be blood on his shoes,
    which    the    police    took   to    the    lab   for     analysis.       Shields’s
    underwear was also saturated with blood.
    Shields’s     fingerprints        were       found     on     Mrs.    Stiner’s
    checkbook, on the door leading from the laundry room to the
    garage, and in Mrs. Stiner’s car.               Mr. Stiner identified several
    6
    of the items in Mrs. Stiner’s car as having been in his home
    before his wife’s murder.            The bloody shoe impression at the
    crime scene matched the shoes that Shields wore at the time of
    his arrest.       The blood obtained from Shields’s underwear and from
    a paper towel at the Stiner home were consistent with Shields’s
    blood.
    Further, evidence showed that Shields had used Mrs. Stiner’s
    credit card after the murder to purchase a suit.             Mark Lang was
    manager of Dejaiz’s Men’s Clothing in Willowbrook Mall and was
    working on September 21.       He testified that Shields came into the
    store around 6:15 p.m. and purchased a suit with a credit card in
    the name of Paula Stiner.       Shields signed the credit card slip in
    the   name   of    Tracy   Stiner,   Mrs.   Stiner’s   husband.    When   Lang
    noticed a horizontal cut on Shields’s finger, Lang was told by
    Shields that he had cut his finger while splicing wires at work.
    Shields also had a bandage around his middle finger on his left
    hand.
    Several      of   Shields’s    friends   also    testified    for   the
    prosecution.      Troy Sterner testified that he knew Shields in 1994
    and, at that time, Shields was staying in vacant houses in the
    Woodlands area.         Shortly after the murder, Sterner saw Shields
    with cuts on his hand.       Shields told Sterner that he had cut them
    while working at a store.
    7
    Gina Cykala, a friend of Shields, testified that on the day
    of the murder she saw Shields at McDonald’s at around 8:45 p.m.
    Shields was driving a big white car that she had never seen
    before.   Shields told Cykala that he had borrowed the car from a
    friend.
    Colin Checketts also testified that on September 21, Shields
    was driving a white car.        Shields told Checketts that he had
    obtained the car from a friend, Ray Holt, and wanted to sell it
    for $500.        He told Checketts that he had cut his hands while
    working at a store.      He then gave Checketts the suit that he had
    purchased at Dejaiz’s Men’s Clothing Store.      David Chastain and
    Jarrod Moore, two of Shields’s friends, testified the same.
    The defense put no witnesses on the stand during the guilt-
    innocence phase.       After hearing all of this evidence, the jury
    returned a verdict of guilty.
    A.     Penalty Phase
    1.     Evidence by the State
    At the penalty phase, the State introduced evidence that
    Shields had been assessed deferred adjudication probation for
    theft/burglary of a motor vehicle in 1992, after which Shields
    completely disregarded the terms of his probation.
    Authorities also arrested Shields in Florida in 1994 for
    grand theft auto.        In January 1994, Shields and two friends,
    8
    Chastain and Checketts, broke into a car in Friendswood, stole a
    checkbook and a credit card and charged $150 in cigarettes before
    the card was reported stolen.             Around the same time, the three
    friends broke into a house next door to Shields’s and stole cash,
    car keys, and, later, the car itself.               They then drove to Florida
    in the car, shoplifting along the way.                  They were arrested in
    Florida for grand theft auto.             They had also attempted to break
    into a home in Florida, but they fled when a neighbor spotted
    them.     The jury also heard testimony that in July 1994, Shields
    had been involved in stealing credit cards and a cell phone from
    another car.
    Based     on   the    testimony   of     Shields   and    his    mother,    the
    Florida court liaison officer recommended, and the court ordered,
    that the conditions of probation be amended to allow Shields to
    enter St. Joseph’s Psychiatric Hospital for at least one month to
    receive      psychiatric     evaluation       and   possible   drug    treatment.
    After twelve days, the court allowed Shields to report on an
    outpatient basis.         Shields later missed two appointments in July
    1994.       On August 10, Mrs. Shields urged the court officer to
    issue   a    warrant   for   Shields   so      that   she   could    retrieve    her
    missing car, which Shields had stolen.
    John Matzelle, a friend of Shields, testified that in June
    1994, Shields loaded a pistol and pointed it at him.                            When
    9
    Matzelle    objected,    Shields      stood       up       and   shoved    the      gun    in
    Matzelle’s face, stating that he “could point the fucking gun in
    [his] face if he felt like it.”                       Shields later went in the
    backyard and fired the gun twice over the fence, returning to
    tell his friends that he “had just shot at his mail carrier.”
    Detective    Tollet    testified      that       no    mail      carrier       recalled     a
    shooting incident on his route that day.
    To refute the defense psychiatric testimony, the State also
    called Dr. Edward Gripon as a rebuttal witness.                        Responding to a
    hypothetical question that paralleled the facts of Paula Stiner’s
    murder, Dr. Gripon testified that such an offender lacks concern
    and   remorse    for   his   own    action.           He    further    testified      that
    Shields’s psychiatric records demonstrate poor impulse control
    and    aggressiveness.        Dr.     Gripon           diagnosed        Shields       with
    “personality disorder with features of aggressivity, features of
    antisocial      personality,       which    is    the        absence      of    a   social
    conscience, not caring what one does, that sort of thing.”                                Dr.
    Gripon testified that in his opinion, Shields is a future danger.
    Dr. Gripon never personally interviewed Shields.
    2.    Evidence by the Defense
    Mrs. Shields testified that Shields had a close relationship
    with his family until two years after they moved to Colorado from
    Texas.     At that point, Shields became withdrawn and did not get
    10
    along with his father. When the family moved back to Texas,
    Shields’s grades were average, and he was a typical fifteen-year
    old.    Shields’s relationship with his family deteriorated after
    an arrest for theft.        He began to associate with “undesirable”
    people and at times would disappear from home for a day or two.
    To ensure his graduation, the Shields decided to drop him off and
    to pick him up every day from high school.             A month or two before
    graduation,    however,    Shields   moved     out    of   his   parents’   home
    without notice.       Shields returned only to inform his parents that
    he could not live by his father’s rules.                   When Shields left
    again, it was to Florida in a neighbor’s stolen car.
    Mrs. Shields arranged professional counseling for Shields in
    1993, but he quit after three or four visits.                     Shields then
    refused to see another professional.            By June 1994, Shields was
    no longer taking the anti-depressant medication that the St.
    Joseph’s doctor had prescribed, and his behavior deteriorated.
    Shields left his parents’ home for good in July 1994 to live in
    an abandoned house in the Woodlands.           Mrs. Shields testified that
    in   her   opinion,    Shields   could   not   have   murdered     Mrs.   Stiner
    unless Mrs. Stiner confronted him first.             She also testified that
    she did not believe that he had entered the home with the intent
    to hurt Mrs. Stiner.      On cross-examination, Mrs. Shields admitted
    that she and her husband had twice changed the locks on the house
    11
    to prevent Shields from breaking in and stealing.
    Clinical       social     worker       Fran    St.     Peter    performed      a
    biopsychosocial assessment on Shields.                      St. Peter performed a
    three-hour assessment on Shields the night before her testimony
    and interviewed Shields’s mother, father, sister, and brother-in-
    law.    St. Peter testified that one of Shields’s close friends had
    been       killed    when    Shields    was       eleven.      The    incident,     she
    testified, traumatized him.             The family’s move to Colorado then
    isolated him and caused him to withdraw.                      St. Peter testified
    that Shields’s first introduction to narcotics occurred when he
    was    a     thirteen-      to   fourteen-month       old    baby,    when     doctors
    prescribed medication to him to ease the pain after he burned
    himself.          Shields tried Valium when he was eleven.                   St. Peter
    also testified that Shields had consumed alcohol continuously
    since the age of fourteen.             By the age of seventeen, 70 to 75 per
    cent of Shields’s time related to procuring, using, or recovering
    from    drugs       and    alcohol.    St.    Peter    questioned      the    Shields’
    attentiveness to their son and stated that the family essentially
    led separate lives.
    Dr. Fred Fason testified as to Shields’s alleged future
    dangerousness.            He testified that a psychiatrist would need to
    perform       a     scientifically-based           medical    evaluation       on    an
    individual before making a diagnosis of future dangerousness.                        He
    12
    also stated that the American Psychiatric Society has recommended
    that its members not testify as to future dangerousness because
    no test has demonstrated that these opinions are scientifically
    valid.     Responding to a hypothetical question that traced the
    facts of    Paula   Stiner’s         murder,      Dr.   Fason   admitted   that   his
    diagnostic impression was that “he’s a sociopath or antisocial
    personality disorder.”
    Dr. James Marquart, a professor of criminal justice at Sam
    Houston    University     and    a    sociologist,       testified   as    to   study
    results that show that the majority of former death row inmates
    in the general prison population do not commit acts of violence
    in   the   prison   any   more       than   any    other   prison    inmate.      Dr.
    Marquart testified that it is difficult to predict accurately
    future dangerousness based solely on the offense committed.
    Perry Evans and Jose Lozano, employees of the Galveston
    County Sheriff’s Department, testified that Shields was involved
    in four instances of jail misbehavior in over a year.                      Although
    officials had classified Shields as a minimum security inmate,
    they based this classification on Shields’s representations that
    he had no prior criminal record, no chemical dependency problem,
    and lived at his family home.                    While in jail awaiting trial,
    Shields was involved in a fight, was in an unauthorized area, and
    destroyed, altered, or damaged county property or the property of
    13
    another.
    After hearing both the State’s and the defense’s evidence,
    the   jury        answered        the    special        issue   question     of    future
    dangerousness in the affirmative and recommended death.
    III. LAW
    Section       2253     of    the       Antiterrorism      and    Effective       Death
    Penalty     Act    (“AEDPA”)        forecloses        appeal    from   a   state   habeas
    proceeding unless a circuit justice or judge issues a COA.5                              We
    may issue a COA “only if the applicant has made a substantial
    showing of the denial of a constitutional right.”6                         To make this
    showing, Shields must demonstrate that “jurists of reason could
    disagree      with     the         district          court’s    resolution        of    his
    constitutional claims or that jurists could conclude the issues
    presented     are     adequate          to    deserve     encouragement     to     proceed
    further.”7     If the district court denies relief on procedural, as
    opposed to constitutional grounds, “a COA should issue when the
    prisoner shows, at least, that jurists of reason would find it
    debatable whether the petition states a valid claim of the denial
    of a constitutional right and that jurists of reason would find
    5
    28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1)(A).
    6
    
    Id. § 2253(c)(2).
          7
    Miller-El v. Cockrell, 
    537 U.S. 322
    , 327 (2003) (citing
    Slack v. McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
    , 483 (2000)).
    14
    it   debatable      whether    the   district     court    was    correct   in   its
    procedural ruling.”8
    To determine whether to grant a COA, we are limited “to a
    threshold        inquiry   into   the   underlying        merit    of   [Shields’s]
    claims.”9         This     threshold    inquiry    “does     not    require      full
    consideration of the factual and legal bases adduced in support
    of the claims.”10           Instead, we base our determination on “an
    overview of the claims in the habeas petition and a general
    assessment of their merits.”11           When the district or state court
    has imposed the death penalty, “any doubts as to whether a COA
    should issue must be resolved in [petitioner’s] favor.”12
    Shields seeks a COA from this court on multiple issues:
    (1)     The district court erred when it found that Shields
    procedurally   defaulted  on   the   majority of his
    ineffective assistance of counsel claims.
    (2)     Trial counsel was ineffective in that he failed to
    present a viable defense during the guilt-innocence
    phase.
    (a) The district court overlooked issues of disputed
    fact that entitled Shields to proceed on appeal as
    to all of his ineffective assistance of counsel
    8
    
    Slack, 529 U.S. at 484
    (emphasis added); Matchett v.
    Dretke, 
    380 F.3d 844
    , 847-48 (5th Cir. 2004).
    9
    
    Miller-El, 537 U.S. at 327
    .
    10
    
    Id. at 336.
          11
    
    Id. 12 Hernandez
    v. Johnson, 
    213 F.3d 243
    , 248 (5th Cir. 2000).
    15
    claims.
    (b)   Trial counsel failed to present evidence to
    contradict the state’s theory that Shields had
    been “lying in wait” for the victim.
    (c)   Trial counsel was ineffective in that he refused
    to permit Shields to testify to present an
    alternative version of events and because he
    switched defense theories midway through trial.
    (3)    Trial counsel was ineffective during the guilt-
    innocence phase of the trial in that he:
    (a) failed to object to the introduction of the hammer
    and knives found at the scene of the crime.
    (b) failed to object to the testimony of Shields’s
    mother, Christine Shields.
    (c) failed to object to the admission of Shields’s
    out-of-court    statements   to     the   Woodland
    subdivision witnesses.
    (d) failed to consult with forensic evidence experts
    to rebut the state’s case.
    (4)    Trial counsel’s performance during opening and closing
    arguments at the guilt-innocence phase constituted
    ineffective assistance of counsel.
    (a) Trial counsel failed to object to the state’s
    opening argument that allegedly consisted of
    victim impact information and characterized the
    evidence of guilt as conclusive.
    (b) Trial counsel failed to present an adequate
    closing argument.
    (5)    Trial counsel was ineffective during the guilt-
    innocence and punishment phases in that he failed to
    obtain a confidential defense psychiatric expert under
    Ake v. Oklahoma13 to examine Shields.
    (6)    Trial counsel’s performance during the state’s case-in-
    chief at the punishment phase constituted ineffective
    assistance of counsel because he:
    (a) failed to require       the   state  to prove the
    extraneous offenses admitted as evidence of future
    dangerousness.
    13
    
    470 U.S. 68
    (1985).
    16
    (b)   allowed incompetent witnesses to testify and
    failed to investigate the witnesses to impeach
    them effectively.
    (7)    Trial counsel’s performance during the defense’s case-
    in-chief   at   the    punishment   stage   constituted
    ineffective assistance of counsel because he:
    (a) failed to present the theory of self-defense and
    Shields’s alleged lack of intent to the jury as
    mitigating evidence.
    (b) failed to investigate and to prepare Shields’s
    background history and incompetently presented
    punishment phase evidence.
    (c) failed to prepare adequately the mitigation
    specialist witness, Fran St. Peter.
    (d) admitted damaging evidence through the mitigation
    specialist that would have otherwise been barred
    under Estelle v. Smith.14
    (e) failed to present effectively mitigating evidence.
    (f) failed to present a viable insanity defense or to
    present evidence on Shields’s alleged diminished
    capacity.
    (g) failed to use effectively defense experts Dr.
    Fason and Dr. Marquart.
    (h) elicited positive answers to the special issues ——
    that the jury was to consider to determine whether
    to impose a life sentence or death —— from two
    defense witnesses.
    (8)    Trial counsel was ineffective in that he failed to
    present a coherent defense to the state’s case on
    future dangerousness.
    (9)    Trial counsel’s performance at the punishment phase was
    ineffective in that he:
    (a) opened the door to the rebuttal testimony of Dr.
    Gripon by introducing psychiatric records produced
    by the state’s mental health expert.
    (b) introduced into evidence exhibits that suggested
    an affirmative answer to the special issues.
    (c) failed to object to the state’s hypothetical
    questions posed to Dr. Gripon.
    14
    
    451 U.S. 454
    (1981).
    17
    (d)   failed to request a hearing under Texas Rule of
    Evidence 705(b) and to object under Daubert v.
    Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.15 to determine
    the   scientific foundations  of   Dr.  Gripon’s
    opinion.
    (10) Trial counsel was ineffective at the punishment phase
    in that he failed to object to the state’s comment that
    Shields lacked remorse.
    (11) The cumulative effect of trial counsel’s errors
    prejudiced him and deprived him of effective assistance
    of counsel.
    (12) Trial counsel conducted a deficient voir dire, thereby
    depriving Shields of his Sixth Amendment right to an
    impartial jury.
    IV. COA: Procedural Default
    Whether the trial court erroneously concluded that
    Shields procedurally defaulted on the majority of his
    ineffective assistance of counsel claims.
    We have always required that a habeas petitioner exhaust his
    claims in state court before proceeding to federal court on those
    claims: “[A] state prisoner seeking to raise claims in a federal
    petition for habeas corpus ordinarily must first present those
    claims to the state court and must exhaust state remedies.”16
    “Under the procedural default doctrine, a federal court may not
    consider a state prisoner’s federal habeas claim when the state
    based its rejection of that claim on an adequate and independent
    15
    
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993).
    16
    Martinez v. Johnson, 
    255 F.3d 229
    , 238 (5th Cir. 2001)
    (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)).
    18
    state ground.”17        If the petitioner fails to present his claims
    to   the    appropriate   state      court,   his   claims   are   procedurally
    defaulted.       Defaulted claims “will not be regarded as a basis for
    granting federal habeas relief.”18              Nevertheless, a petitioner
    may overcome any procedural default “if he can demonstrate cause
    for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged
    violation of federal law.”19            “‘Cause . . . requires a showing of
    some external impediment preventing counsel from constructing or
    raising the       claim.’”20    To   demonstrate    prejudice,     a    petitioner
    must show “‘not merely that the errors at . . . trial created a
    possibility of prejudice, but that they worked to his actual and
    substantial disadvantage, infecting his entire trial with error
    of constitutional dimensions.’”21
    A    petitioner     may    also    overcome    procedural        default   by
    
    17 Mart. v
    . Maxley, 
    98 F.3d 844
    , 846 (5th Cir. 1996).
    Shields also argues that Texas’s abuse-of-the-writ doctrine is
    not an adequate and independent state ground. For the reasons
    stated infra, see n. 70, we reject this argument.
    18
    Ogan v. Cockrell, 
    297 F.3d 349
    , 356 (5th Cir. 2002)
    (citing 
    Martinez, 255 F.3d at 239
    ).
    19
    
    Id. 20 McCleskey
    v. Zant, 
    499 U.S. 467
    , 497 (1991) (quoting
    Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 492 (1986)) (emphasis in
    original).
    21
    
    Murray, 477 U.S. at 494
    (quoting United States v. Frady,
    
    456 U.S. 152
    , 170 (1982)) (emphasis in original).
    19
    demonstrating that “failure to consider the claims will result in
    a   fundamental         miscarriage       of    justice.”22            To    demonstrate      a
    “fundamental          miscarriage       of      justice,”       the        petitioner      must
    “establish that under the probative evidence he has a colorable
    claim      of   factual    innocence”          ——   or,     “actual     innocence.”23        A
    petitioner may demonstrate actual innocence during the guilt-
    innocence       phase     by    showing      that,     in    view     of    the    identified
    constitutional          error,    “it     is    more      likely    than     not    that   ‘no
    reasonable       juror’        would    have    convicted          him.”24          When    the
    petitioner challenges a sentence of death, he must establish
    actual innocence by showing that “but for a constitutional error,
    no reasonable juror would have found the petitioner eligible for
    the death penalty under the applicable state law.”25
    Shields contends that the district court erred when it held
    that he procedurally defaulted on the majority of his ineffective
    assistance       of    counsel     claims.          The     district       court   held    that
    Shields had procedurally defaulted on all of his claims except ——
    as numbered in this opinion —— 3(a), (9)(c), and (9)(d).                              Shields
    22
    Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    , 750 (1991).
    23
    Sawyer v. Whitley, 
    503 U.S. 333
    , 339 (1992) (quoting
    Kuhlmann v. Wilson, 
    477 U.S. 436
    , 454 (1986)).
    24
    Schlup v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 329 (1995).
    25
    
    Sawyer, 503 U.S. at 336
    .
    20
    argues that during his state habeas proceeding, he filed in the
    TCCA an Emergency Motion to Abate Habeas Appeal and for Dismissal
    with Prejudice in which he (1) informed the court that habeas
    counsel was ineffective in failing to present numerous claims to
    the court; (2) asked the court to dismiss his habeas counsel; and
    (3) asserted his right to self-representation.             Without providing
    reasons, the TCCA denied this motion outright.
    Shields     maintains    that   the   state   court’s   denial   of   his
    emergency motion —— which, he urges, was a denial of his Sixth
    Amendment right to self-representation —— constitutes cause and
    prejudice to excuse the procedural default.             The State, on the
    other hand, contends that Shields merely asserts a claim for
    ineffective assistance of habeas counsel and that our precedent
    controls here.26
    In Ogan v. Cockrell, the petitioner argued for the first
    time on appeal that the state court had denied him meaningful
    access to the courts, equal protection, and due process when it
    refused     to   “remedy     its   earlier   error    of     appointing    him
    ineffective [habeas] counsel.”27           While the application to the
    Texas Court of Criminal Appeals was pending, Ogan wrote a letter
    to the court, in which he asked the court to dismiss his habeas
    26
    Ogan v. Cockrell, 
    297 F.3d 349
    (5th Cir. 2002)
    27
    
    Id. at 356.
    21
    counsel and appoint another attorney.28             The letter also included
    a pro se motion that requested the removal of Ogan’s appellate
    counsel      and       provided     examples      of     counsel’s          alleged
    incompetence.29
    The district court rejected Ogan’s argument and dismissed
    several of Ogan’s claims as procedurally barred because Ogan’s
    appointed habeas counsel had failed to raise them before the
    state courts.30        We affirmed the district court and in so doing,
    reaffirmed       our    long-standing     holding      that    an     ineffective
    assistance of state habeas counsel claim does not constitute
    sufficient cause to overcome the procedural bar because there is
    no constitutional right to competent habeas counsel.31
    On its face, Ogan clearly forecloses Shields’s arguments.
    Shields argues, however, that this matter is distinct from Ogan
    because     he     asserted   his   Sixth      Amendment      right    to    self-
    representation to the TCCA, which denied him that right.                    Noting
    that “cause” requires a force external to the petitioner that
    prevents him from developing the record and from asserting his
    claims to the state courts, Shields argues that the “Texas Court
    28
    See 
    id. at 365
    n. 3.
    29
    See 
    id. 30 See
    id. at 356.
    
         31
    See 
    id. at 357.
    22
    of   Criminal         Appeals’        denial        of     Shields       right     to     self-
    representation was the ‘external force’ and interference that
    made compliance not only impractical but impossible.”
    Shields’s argument, although novel, is meritless.                                   First,
    neither     we      nor   the   Supreme    Court          has    established       a    federal
    constitutional right to self-representation on collateral review.
    Further,       in    Martinez    v.    Court        of    Appeal,      the    Supreme     Court
    explicitly held that there is no federal constitutional right to
    self-representation             on     direct            appeal        from    a       criminal
    conviction.32         It is implausible, therefore, that there would
    exist such a right on collateral review.                         Accordingly, the TCCA’s
    denial of Shields’s right to self-representation on collateral
    review does not demonstrate a substantial showing of the denial
    of a constitutional right sufficient to support the granting of a
    COA or to excuse his procedural default. Accordingly, we are
    barred from considering those claims that Shields failed to raise
    before the Texas courts and which the TCCA later dismissed as an
    abuse     of   the    writ.      Notwithstanding                this   bar,    however,     our
    independent review of the record demonstrates that the district
    court held that Shields had procedurally defaulted on one claim
    that we find he raised in his state petition.
    32
    
    528 U.S. 152
    , 163 (2000).
    23
    In his reply brief, Shields specifically argues that he did
    not procedurally default on claims (6) through (11).33                    Claim
    (11) charges that the cumulative effect of trial counsel’s errors
    prejudiced   him   and   deprived     him   of   effective    assistance    of
    counsel.     Shields specifically raised this issue in his state
    habeas application and thus has not waived it.
    Less clear is whether Shields raised claims (6) through (10)
    in his state habeas petition.          Shields argues that these five
    claims specifically challenge trial counsel’s performance at the
    punishment phase and are not procedurally barred because his
    state habeas application specifically challenged trial counsel’s
    performance during the punishment phase.              In effect, Shields
    argues that because his state habeas application challenged trial
    counsel’s    performance   at   his    punishment    phase,    he   did    not
    33
    Shields also asserts that he preserved the other claims
    in his federal habeas petition before the district court that
    challenge errors at the guilt/innocence phase of the trial.
    Shields’s state habeas petition belies this assertion. The only
    aspects of the trial challenged in Shields’s state habeas
    application were the failure of trial counsel to object to (1)
    the testimony of Lang as to the credit card purchase of the suit
    two hours after the murder, and (2) the admission of the hammer
    and the knives. Whether on purpose on through inadvertence of
    counsel, Shields does not seek a COA on the failure to object to
    Lang’s testimony at the guilt/innocence phase (although, as we
    discuss below, he does challenge the inclusion of this extraneous
    offense in the hypotheticals posed to Dr. Gripon at the
    punishment phase). As noted below, Shields has properly
    preserved his challenge to the hammer and the knives.
    24
    procedurally default on any claims that he raises in his federal
    petition that concern his punishment phase.                          We do not read
    Shields’s state habeas petition so broadly.
    Claim (6) alleges that trial counsel was ineffective during
    the punishment phase of the trial because he failed to require
    the     state    to    prove   the     extraneous        offenses,      and    allowed
    incompetent witnesses to testify.                    The substance of claim (6)
    challenges       the    testimony    of       John    Hernandez,      the     probation
    officer, who testified that: (1) Shields committed car theft (for
    which he was never charged or prosecuted); (2) Shields had been
    institutionalized        and   had     not    continued       his    counseling     when
    released;       and    (3)   Shields’s       own     family   did    not    like    him.
    Further, Claim (6) challenges the testimony of Chastain, Holt,
    and Matzelle.
    Shields      mentioned    none     of    these    witnesses      in   his    state
    habeas application.          Neither did Shields mention the extraneous
    offenses.        Although Shields, in his state habeas application,
    mentions trial counsel’s ineffectiveness in allowing testimony on
    the extraneous offenses at the guilt-innocence phase, the only
    witness     (and       extraneous      offense)        that    the     state       habeas
    application challenged was Lang, who testified as to the purchase
    that Shields made after the murder using Mrs. Stiner’s credit
    card.     Lang did not testify during the punishment phase of the
    25
    trial.     Accordingly, to the extent that Shields now challenges
    any   “extraneous      offense”     evidence       at    his   punishment     phase,
    Shields did not fairly present this claim to the state court and
    has procedurally defaulted on it.
    Shields also asserts that he did not procedurally default on
    claim (7), which contains eight sub-claims.                    With the exception
    of sub-claim (7)(f), we find no mention of the other claims in
    Shields’s state habeas petition.               Shields specifically argued in
    his state habeas application that his trial counsel failed to
    present evidence on Shields’s alleged brain defects during the
    punishment    phase     of    his   trial.34       In    his   federal     petition,
    however, Shields alleges in sub-claim (7)(f) that trial counsel
    was ineffective in failing to present a viable insanity defense
    and evidence on Shields’s alleged diminished capacity during the
    guilt/innocence       phase   of    the   trial.        We   find    no   mention   in
    Shields’s     state     habeas      petition       that      trial    counsel       was
    ineffective    for     failing      to    produce       evidence     of   diminished
    capacity or insanity at the guilt/innocence phase, which, Shields
    argues, would have provided him with an affirmative defense to
    murder.     Accordingly, Shields did not fairly present this claim
    34
    In his state habeas petition, Shields raised this claim
    of error with respect to the testimony of Fran St. Peter, who
    testified only during the punishment phase of the trial.
    26
    to the state court and is procedurally barred from bringing it
    now.
    Claim (8) of Shields’s federal petition alleges that trial
    counsel was ineffective at the punishment phase because he failed
    to present a coherent defense to the state’s case on future
    dangerousness.        Specifically, Shields contends that trial counsel
    failed      to   familiarize       themselves       “with    the    methods     of   risk
    assessment of future dangerousness” and failed to cross-examine
    Dr. Gripon “on the erroneous correlations in his analysis.”                            In
    his    state     habeas     application,     Shields        challenged    the    State’s
    hypothetical questions posed to Dr. Gripon and trial counsel’s
    failure to object to Dr. Gripon as an expert.                       Neither of these
    claims —— properly preserved in federal sub-claims (9)(c)-(d) ——
    challenged        trial     counsel’s      failure     to     present    a     “coherent
    defense.”         Accordingly, Shields has procedurally defaulted on
    this claim.35
    Federal sub-claims (9)(a)-(b) contend that trial counsel was
    ineffective       because     he   (a)     opened    the     door   to   the    rebuttal
    testimony        of   Dr.   Gripon    by    introducing        psychiatric       records
    produced by the State’s mental health expert, and (b) introduced
    into evidence exhibits that suggested an affirmative answer to
    35
    In any event, the arguments in this claim are somewhat
    preserved in federal sub-claims (9)(c)-(d).
    27
    the special issues.           Shields has procedurally defaulted on these
    two sub-claims.            Nowhere in his state habeas petition did he
    challenge the introduction of exhibits at the punishment phase.
    Accordingly, Shields procedurally defaulted on these claims.
    Federal     claim          (10)   alleges     that       trial   counsel       was
    ineffective at the punishment phase in that he failed to object
    to   the    state’s       comment   during     closing     argument    that    Shields
    lacked remorse.            Specifically, Shields alleges that the State
    violated Griffin v. California36 because the comment that Shields
    lacked     remorse    indirectly        commented    on    Shields’s    refusal      to
    testify, which is protected by the self-incrimination clause of
    the Fifth Amendment.              After careful review of Shields’s state
    habeas petition, we find no mention —— direct or indirect —— of
    this claim.          It    is,    therefore,    procedurally      barred      from   our
    review.
    Accordingly, we conclude that jurists of reason would not
    disagree with the district court’s conclusion that Shields is
    procedurally      barred         from    asserting       the    majority       of    his
    ineffective assistance of counsel claims.                       We agree with the
    district court that Shields properly preserved claims (3)(a),
    (9)(c), and (9)(d).              We disagree with the district court that
    36
    
    380 U.S. 609
    (1965).
    28
    Shields    procedurally    defaulted    on    claim   (11),   his    cumulative
    error claim.      We hold that jurists of reason could disagree
    whether the district court was correct in its procedural ruling
    on this claim.37          Because Shields must also demonstrate the
    denial of a constitutional right on this claim,38 however, we
    resolve below whether Shields is entitled to a COA on the four
    claims that he has properly preserved.
    V.     COA: Preserved Claims (3)(a), (9)(c), (9)(d), and (11)
    A.     Legal Standard
    To    be   entitled    to   relief      under    the   AEDPA,   a   habeas
    petitioner must show that the state court resolution of his case
    was either “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application
    of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme
    Court of the United States,” or “resulted in a decision that was
    based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of
    the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.”39                    Our
    review on a request for a COA is similarly circumscribed by the
    AEDPA, and “our duty is to determine not whether [Shields] is
    entitled to relief, but whether the district court’s conclusion
    37
    See 
    Slack, 529 U.S. at 484
    .
    38
    See 
    id. at 485
    (“Section 2253 mandates that both showings
    be made before the court of appeals may entertain the appeal.”).
    39
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
    29
    (that the state court adjudication was not contrary to or an
    unreasonable       application    of     federal    law)    is   one      about    which
    jurists of reason could disagree.”40
    As     all     of   Shields’s      preserved     claims        relate    to     the
    ineffective assistance of his trial counsel, he must show both
    (1) that      counsel’s representation was deficient, and (2) that
    trial     counsel’s      deficient     performance       prejudiced       him.41      If
    Shields fails to carry his burden on either element, we may
    reject his claim.42
    To     establish      that   counsel’s      performance        was    deficient,
    Shields must show that “counsel’s representation ‘fell below an
    objective standard of reasonableness.’”43                  Although no specific
    guidelines    exist      to   evaluate    attorney    conduct,       “[t]he       proper
    measure of        attorney    performance      remains     simply    reasonableness
    under prevailing professional norms.”44
    To show that a deficient performance by trial counsel was
    40
    Thacker v. Dretke, —— F.3d ——, 
    2005 WL 18542
    , at *2 (5th
    Cir. Jan. 5, 2005); see Williams v. Puckett, 
    283 F.3d 272
    , 277
    (5th Cir. 2002).
    41
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984).
    42
    See 
    id. at 697.
         43
    Soffar v. Dretke, 
    368 F.3d 441
    , 472 (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
    ).
    44
    
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
    .
    30
    prejudicial, Shields must demonstrate “a reasonable probability
    that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different.”45                “An error by counsel,
    even if professionally unreasonable, does not warrant setting
    aside the judgment of a criminal proceeding if the error had no
    effect on the judgment.”46              Rather, we must determine whether
    “there is a reasonable probability that counsel’s errors affected
    the outcome of the trial.”47            “A reasonable probability need not
    be proof by a preponderance that the result would have been
    different,    but    it     must   be   a   showing   sufficient   to   undermine
    confidence in the outcome.”48
    B.     Claim (3)(a)
    Shield’s       first    properly-preserved       claim   alleges   that   his
    trial counsel was ineffective during the guilt-innocence phase of
    the trial because he failed to object to the admission into
    evidence of the hammer and knives found at the scene of the
    crime.     With regard to both weapons, Shields specifically argues
    that he merits a COA on this claim because no evidence connected
    45
    
    Id. at 694.
         46
    
    Id. at 691.
         47
    
    Soffar, 368 F.3d at 478
    .
    
    48 Will. v
    . Cain, 
    125 F.3d 269
    , 279 (5th Cir. 1997)
    (citing 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    ).
    31
    the weapons to the crime, or, stated differently, no witness
    testified and no testing revealed that the weapons introduced by
    the prosecution were the weapons used during the crime.
    Citing     Texas    Rule    of    Evidence        403,   the     district    court
    rejected this claim on the grounds that the probative value of
    the hammer and the knives outweighed their prejudicial effect,
    and trial counsel need not raise a meritless objection.                        Agreeing
    with the state court, the district court found that if trial
    counsel had objected to the admission of this evidence, the state
    trial court would not have been wrong to overrule the objection.
    We agree.      Under both the Federal Rules of Evidence and the
    Texas Rules of Evidence, relevant evidence may be excluded if its
    probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of
    unfair prejudice.49       The advisory committee’s notes to Rule 403
    define    “unfair   prejudice”        as   “an    undue       tendency   to    suggest
    decision on an improper basis, commonly though not necessarily,
    an emotional one,” and we have adopted this definition.50                        When a
    defendant    challenges    evidence        on    the    basis    of    Rule    403,   we
    require courts      to   “look    at   the      ‘incremental        probity’     of   the
    evidence in question in analyzing the offering party’s need to
    49
    FED. R. EVID. 403; TEX. R. EVID. 403.
    50
    FED. R. EVID. 403 advisory committee’s note; see also
    Jackson v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 
    750 F.2d 1314
    , 1334 (5th
    Cir. 1985).
    32
    make    this    form   of   proof   and   the   tendency    of   the   questioned
    evidence to invite an irrational decision.”51
    Viewing the hammer and the knives within this rubric, we
    find that their admission neither suggested a decision on an
    improper basis nor invited an irrational decision.                     The hammer
    and the knives were highly probative of the state’s case.                   Tracy
    Stiner discovered the hammer on the floor of his home when he
    discovered his wife’s body.           He testified that this hammer           was
    his and that it was in the garage when he left for work that
    morning.       Detectives called to the scene found the hammer in the
    breakfast room together with an overturned chair, a purse, a
    checkbook, and an X-Ray folder from the doctor’s office.52                     In
    addition, the medical examiner, Dr. Korndorffer, testified that
    Paula Stiner suffered a laceration on the top of her head and a
    contusion on her forehead consistent with blunt force trauma.
    Dr.    Korndorffer      testified     further     that     these   wounds    were
    consistent with the hammer found at the scene.               He also testified
    that Paula Stiner suffered blunt force trauma to her hands, which
    bent and damaged her rings and knocked the stone out of one of
    51
    
    Jackson, 750 F.2d at 1334
    (citing United States v.
    Beechum, 
    582 F.2d 898
    (5th Cir. 1978) (en banc)).
    52
    Evidence presented at trial showed that Paula Stiner left
    work early on the 21st to visit the doctor’s office and, when she
    left, she was carrying a folder of X-Rays.
    33
    them.
    Dr. Korndorffer testified additionally that the knife wounds
    to Paula Stiner’s body were caused by a knife with a blade that
    was five inches long and three-fourths of an inch wide.     Tracy
    Stiner testified that a knife with a blade of five inches length
    and a width of three-fourths of an inch was missing from the
    knife set on the counter, and the prosecution introduced the set
    of knives from the Stiner home to show that the missing one fit
    the descriptions of Dr. Korndorffer and Tracy Stiner.
    We conclude that the probative value of the hammer and the
    knives is not outweighed by unfair prejudice.   The record clearly
    demonstrates that the hammer was the one found at the scene.
    Record evidence regarding the knives belies Shields’s assertion
    that they were irrelevant, given Mr. Stiner’s testimony that the
    one knife missing from the set fit the description of the weapon
    that caused the stab wounds to Paula Stiner’s body.
    More importantly, because Shields specifically argues that
    no testimony or evidence proved that these were the weapons used
    to perpetrate the crime, we view Shields’s claims of error to the
    admissibility of the weapons as a challenge to their “chain of
    custody.”   As we have explained, “[i]n cases where the defendant
    questions whether the evidence offered is the same as the items
    actually seized, the role of the district court is to determine
    34
    whether      the     government      has    made   a    prima      facie   showing       of
    authenticity.”53        A “break in the chain of custody simply goes to
    the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility.”54                        The above-
    noted record evidence establishes that the State made out a prima
    facie case of authenticity.                Consequently, any possible break in
    the    chain    of    custody    would      only   go   to   the    weight    the      jury
    accorded the hammer and the knives.
    We cannot say that trial counsel was ineffective for failing
    to object to the admission of the hammer and the knives.                          Shields
    has failed to make a substantial showing of the denial of a
    constitutional right with regard to his evidentiary challenge.
    Thus, we decline to issue a COA on this claims.
    C.      Claim (9)(c)
    Shields advances that trial counsel was ineffective because
    he    failed    to    object    to   the    hypothetical     questions       on    future
    dangerousness         that     the   State    posed     to   Dr.     Gripon       at    the
    punishment phase of the trial.                The prosecutor posed three such
    questions to elicit Dr. Gripon’s opinion on Shields’s future
    dangerousness:
    I would like to go over a hypothetical question
    53
    United States v. Sparks, 
    2 F.3d 574
    , 582 (5th Cir. 1993).
    54
    
    Id. (citing United
    States v. Shaw, 
    920 F.2d 1225
    , 1229-30
    (5th Cir. 1991)); see also United States v. Dixon, 
    132 F.3d 192
    ,
    197 (5th Cir. 1997) (quoting Sparks).
    35
    with you, Doctor: Assume with me that the murder was
    committed, the murder of Paula Stiner was committed by
    a 19-year-old male who burglarized her home and who
    laid in wait for his victim, Paula Stiner, for 5 ½
    hours.   And during that time he used the phone, he
    gathered up items that he wanted to steal, he fixed
    himself some food in a skillet, he selected his weapons
    which were a hammer and a knife.
    Assume further with me the victim entered the
    house who was immediately assaulted with the hammer,
    then the knife, struck some 27 or more times; and
    during her horrific struggle to survive, was overcome
    and died 10 to 15 minutes after the initial assault
    began.
    Assume with me further that immediately after the
    assault on the victim that the Defendant went over to
    the victim’s purse which was only a very short distance
    away from her body, rummaged through the purse, taking
    what he wanted, including credit cards, [and] the keys
    to her car, which was parked in the garage.
    Assume that the person drove to a shopping mall in
    Paula Stiner’s car. Within about an hour and a half of
    having committed the murder, he was at the mall.     He
    purchased items of clothing. He was described as cool,
    polite, calm. He said that the card was his mother’s
    credit card.
    Tell us, Doctor, what does that behavior tell you
    as a psychiatrist?
    Assume further that the man, about two hours or so
    later, met with some friends of his at a fast food
    restaurant and again acted normal; was not intoxicated,
    according to them; claimed that the car he was driving
    was borrowed from a friend, that it was even for sale.
    Assume further that later that evening he went out
    with one of his friends to a nightclub in the
    Montgomery County area, acted normal, had some beers,
    just had a good time.
    What does that behavior tell you, Doctor, about
    that person?
    Assume that during the year prior to the murder
    that the man stole from his parents, he burglarized his
    36
    parents’ home.   What does that tell you?                    What does
    that behavior tell you, Doctor?
    In     response   to    these    hypothetical       examples,       Dr.   Gripon
    testified that the described behavior demonstrates premeditation,
    viciousness, and a lack of concern for the victim shown by “the
    going about [of] the normal activities of life as if nothing had
    actually happened.”           He stated that “[a] person who can do that
    has little concern for their fellow man, if any.”                          Dr. Gripon
    also        stated   that     such     behavior     demonstrates       a     lack     of
    responsibility and a “rather callous, very hard nature.”55
    Shields asserts that the hypothetical scenarios exaggerated
    and    mischaracterized        the   facts     of   the    crime.    Shields        also
    contends that the extraneous offenses —— such as the credit card
    purchase —— should not have been included in the hypothetical
    questions.
    Shields’s arguments are meritless.                 He does not explain how
    the hypothetical examples mischaracterize or exaggerate the facts
    that the State presented at trial.                  Based on our review of the
    record, the hypothetical presentations neither mischaracterized
    55
    Shields relies heavily on this argument because in the
    affidavit of an investigator who interviewed the jurors after the
    jury imposed the death penalty —— attached to his state habeas
    application —— one of the jurors stated that Dr. Gripon made a
    better presentation on future dangerousness than the defense
    witnesses and that “[s]he believe[d] that all of the other jurors
    felt the same way about Dr. Gripon.”
    37
    nor exaggerated the facts of Paula Stiner’s murder.                Rather, they
    paralleled the evidence that the state introduced at trial.                     If
    trial     counsel    had    objected,   his   objection        would   have   been
    meritless.      The failure to raise meritless, futile objections
    does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.56
    As for Shields’s “extraneous offenses” argument, he fails to
    point to an extraneous offense in the hypothetical examples.                  Our
    review of Shields’s state habeas petition does reveal, however,
    that he referred to Mark Lang’s testimony about the credit card
    purchase of the suit that occurred two hours after the murder.
    The record clearly reflects that Lang testified to the facts that
    the prosecutors included in the hypothetical questions.
    Further, we reject any possible argument that Shields makes
    with regard     to    the   admissibility     and   use   of    such   testimony.
    Tracy Stiner testified that when he arrived home on the day of
    the murder, he found his wife’s purse and its contents scattered
    around on the floor of their breakfast area.                He also testified
    that Mrs. Stiner carried several credit cards in her purse.                   Lang
    testified that on that same day, Shields used a credit card to
    purchase $271.71 in clothing from DeJaiz’s.               The name on the card
    56
    See Clark v. Collins, 
    19 F.3d 959
    , 966 (5th Cir. 1994);
    Koch v. Puckett, 
    907 F.2d 524
    , 527 (5th Cir. 1990) (citing Murray
    v. Maggio, 
    736 F.2d 279
    , 283 (5th Cir. 1984) (per curiam)).
    38
    was Paula Stiner.       Shields, identified by Lang, signed the charge
    using     the   name   Tracy    Stiner,      the    victim’s       husband.         Lang’s
    testimony tied Shields to the scene of the crime —— where he
    stole the credit card —— and to the attack itself.
    Such testimony is clearly admissible.                  Any objection to this
    testimony under Texas Rule of Evidence 404(b), as Shields appears
    to urge, would have been futile.                   Under Texas Rule of Evidence
    404(b), “[e]vidence        of   other       crimes,      wrongs,    or   acts   is     not
    admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show
    that he acted in conformity therewith.”57                    The prosecution did
    not use the testimony of Lang —— or any corroborating evidence ——
    to prove the character of Shields.                  This evidence had relevance
    apart from any possible tendency to prove Shields’s character.58
    Further, under our and Texas law, “[f]ruits of the same
    crime     are   admissible      and    do     not    constitute       an     extraneous
    offense.”59        Shields’s     use    of       Paula     Stiner’s        credit    card
    57
    TEX. R. EVID. 404(b).          This language tracks that of federal
    Rule of Evidence 404(b).
    58
    See United States v. Posada-Rios, 
    158 F.3d 832
    , 871 (5th
    Cir. 1998); Alba v. State, 
    905 S.W.2d 581
    , 585 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1995).
    59
    Skidmore v. State, 
    530 S.W.2d 316
    , 321 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1975); see also United States v. Price, 
    877 F.2d 334
    , 337 (5th
    Cir. 1989) (“Where evidence is inextricably intertwined with the
    charged offense, it is relevant and not extraneous. If the
    challenged extraneous evidence is inseparable from the evidence
    of the charged offense, it is unnecessary to consider its
    39
    constituted fruits of his crime.          We are satisfied that jurists
    of reason would not debate the district court’s ruling in this
    regard, and we deny a COA on this claim.
    D.   Claim 9(d)
    Shields insists that his trial counsel was ineffective for
    failure to (1) object to Dr. Gripon’s testimony based on the
    inadmissible reports on which Dr. Gripon based it,60 and (2)
    challenge Dr. Gripon under Texas Rule of Criminal Evidence 702.
    Specifically, Shields emphasizes that trial counsel failed to
    voir dire Dr. Gripon under Texas Rule of Criminal Evidence 705(b)
    to   determine   the   foundations   of   his   opinion.   Shields   also
    contends that trial counsel failed to challenge Dr. Gripon’s
    qualification as an expert under Texas Rule of Criminal Evidence
    702.    We reject Shields’s arguments and decline to issue a COA on
    this claim.
    Texas Rule of Criminal Evidence 705(b) “allows counsel to
    voir dire expert witnesses outside the presence of the jury to
    admissibility under Rule 404(b).”) (citations and quotations
    omitted).
    60
    Contrary to the state’s argument and the district court’s
    finding, Shields explicitly argued in his state habeas petition
    that Dr. Gripon testified on the basis of reports that were never
    admitted at trial.
    40
    learn what facts the expert is basing his or her opinion on.”61
    “[N]either the rule nor the case law creates a presumption of
    error if counsel fails to request voir dire.”62                   Texas courts
    have often held that the rule is not violated when nothing in the
    record indicates that counsel did not know on what facts the
    expert witness based his opinion.63           In other words, when defense
    counsel knows the basis of the expert’s opinion, there is no need
    to invoke this rule.64
    Here, the record confirms beyond cavil that defense counsel
    was   cognizant    of   the   reports    on   which   Dr.    Gripon     based   his
    opinion.      Although Shields points to no specific reports in his
    federal petition, in his state habeas petition, he challenged Dr.
    Gripon’s     reliance   on    the   reports   of   Drs.     Felthous,    Barrett,
    Hungerford, Franke, and Freedman.             If Shields knew of the basis
    of Dr. Gripon’s opinion, his counsel must have.                   Further, Dr.
    Gripon explicitly testified at trial that he based his opinion on
    these reports.       It is thus clear that because defense counsel
    knew of the basis of Dr. Gripon’s opinion, it would have been
    61
    Saenz v. State, 
    103 S.W.3d 541
    , 546 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003);
    see Brown v. State, 
    974 S.W.2d 289
    , 292 (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).
    62
    
    Saenz, 103 S.W.3d at 546
    ; 
    Brown, 974 S.W.2d at 292
    .
    63
    
    Saenz, 103 S.W.3d at 546
    ; 
    Brown, 974 S.W.2d at 292
    .
    64
    
    Saenz, 103 S.W.3d at 546
    ; 
    Brown, 974 S.W.2d at 292
    .
    41
    futile to invoke Rule 705(b).
    In addition, we note that Shields provides no explanation as
    to why any of the reports on which Dr. Gripon based his testimony
    would have been inadmissible.                  In any event, under Texas Rule of
    Criminal Evidence 703, an expert “can . . . base his opinion
    partially       on    facts       or   data    which    is     inadmissible,        if    such
    information          is   commonly         relied    upon     by    experts      within    his
    field.”65        We perceive no ineffective assistance in counsel’s
    failure to challenge Dr. Gripon’s reliance on, inter alia, the
    autopsy      report       of   Dr.     Hungerford      and    psychiatric        reports    on
    Shields      from     1993.          In    addition,    our        review   of    the    trial
    transcript convinces us that defense counsel cross-examined Dr.
    Gripon, including questioning him at the opening of his testimony
    with regard to the validity of his expert opinion.                               There is no
    merit to this claim.
    Shields       also      insists      that    trial    counsel    was      ineffective
    because he failed to object to Dr. Gripon on the basis of Daubert
    v.    Merrell    Dow      Pharmaceuticals,          Inc.66         Specifically,     Shields
    argues that “the methodology used by Dr. Gripon was inadequate
    and    unreliable         under      the    Daubert    test    because      he    based    his
    65
    Joiner v. State, 
    825 S.W.2d 701
    , 707-08 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1992) (citing Nethery v. State, 
    692 S.W.2d 686
    , 702 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1985)).
    66
    
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993).
    42
    assessment of future dangerousness entirely on his judgment, not
    on any empirical data concerning base rates of violence of life-
    sentenced prisoners convicted of capital murder, nor on any other
    data that the science of violence risk assessment recognizes.”
    As noted, though, Dr. Gripon based his psychiatric opinion
    on future dangerousness on the records that related to Shields
    and Paula Stiner’s murder.               Even though we are somewhat troubled
    by   the   absence       of    a   personal      interview    of    Shields     by   Dr.
    Gripon,67 we cannot say that counsel was ineffective in failing
    to make a Daubert objection to Dr. Gripon’s testimony.                               Our
    review of the record demonstrates that Dr. Gripon adequately
    established        his    expert        credentials,    which        included    prior
    testimony as to the future dangerousness of a perpetrator on
    between twelve to eighteen occasions.                   We have also noted our
    awareness     of    no        clearly    established    law        that   prevents    a
    psychiatrist from basing his opinion on the records of the case
    and the psychiatric records of the perpetrator.                           Shields has
    established no prejudice here.
    Although trial counsel did not object to the testimony of
    Dr. Gripon, the defense did put on its own expert witnesses
    during the punishment phase to rebut Dr. Gripon’s testimony.                         Dr.
    67
    See Flores v. Johnson, 
    210 F.3d 456
    , 458 (5th Cir. 2000)
    (Garza, J., specially concurring).
    43
    Fason      testified     as     to   the   possible     unreliability            of    future
    dangerousness testimony, and Dr. Marquart testified that studies
    reveal that capital inmates are no more likely to commit future
    violent acts than any other inmates.                      Trial counsel was not
    ineffective when he elected to rely on rebuttal witnesses to
    discredit Dr. Gripon’s testimony instead of futilely filing a
    Daubert objection.            We reject Shields’s arguments and deny a COA
    on this claim.
    E.      Claim (11)
    In    his    final      properly-preserved       claim      of   error,         Shields
    argues that he deserves a COA on his claim that the cumulative
    effect of trial counsel’s error denied him ineffective assistance
    of   counsel.       As     we   conclude    that      there   was      no    such     error,
    however, there can be no cumulative error.68
    F.      Conclusion
    For    the    foregoing        reasons,    we   deny    a   COA       on   Shields’s
    properly-preserved claims.             We hold that jurists of reason would
    not debate the district court’s rulings.                  The district court did
    not err when it denied Shields a COA on these claims and granted
    summary judgment in favor of the State.
    68
    See United States v. Moye, 
    951 F.2d 59
    , 63 n.7 (5th Cir.
    1992) (“Because we find no merit to any of Moye’s arguments of
    error, his claim of cumulative error must also fail.”).
    44
    VI.   Evidentiary Hearing
    Shields also urges that the district court erred when it
    failed to grant his request for an evidentiary hearing on his COA
    claims.   Shields reiterates many of the arguments that he raised
    in his challenge to the district court’s ruling on his procedural
    default claims.   Shields contends that 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2)
    does not bar an evidentiary hearing here because he did not fail
    to develop the factual bases of his claims in state court.69
    Shields asserts that because the Texas courts impeded the factual
    development of his claim —— thus involving no failure on his part
    —— Section 2254(e)(2) does not apply.    Shields maintains that he
    is entitled to an evidentiary hearing to resolve factual disputes
    that concern
    69
    Section 2254 provides
    (2) 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.
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) (emphasis added).
    45
    procedural default, and those relating to “cause” and
    “prejudice” include the competence of counsel, whether
    state action impeded Petitioner’s ability to present
    his claims on direct appeal and on state habeas,
    whether the basis of trial counsel’s decisions were
    tactical or negligent and prejudicial, and the many
    other factual issues detailed herein.
    Shields further contends that the district court erred when it
    did not grant him an evidentiary hearing because the state court
    never “adjudicated” his claims, but only issued a perfunctory
    one-page denial to the 600-plus-page petition.70
    Accordingly, pursuant to Section 2254(e)(2), because Shields
    does not contend that his claims of error rely on a new rule of
    constitutional law or a factual predicate that he could not have
    discovered   with    due   diligence,   he   is   not   entitled   to   an
    evidentiary hearing if he failed to develop a factual basis for
    his claim in the state court proceedings.71
    Shields was not diligent in pursuing the factual predicates
    of his claims.      He contends that he exercised due diligence by
    70
    Shields also contends that he is entitled to an
    evidentiary hearing on whether Texas’s abuse-of-the-writ doctrine
    is an adequate and independent state ground. This argument is
    foreclosed by our holding in Emery v. Johnson, 
    139 F.3d 191
    , 195-
    96 (5th Cir. 1997), that Texas’s abuse-of-the-writ doctrine
    constitutes an adequate state ground. In Barrientes v. Johnson,
    
    221 F.3d 741
    , 759-60 (5th Cir. 2000), we held that the doctrine
    has constituted an independent state ground since the TCCA’s
    decision in Ex parte Berber, 
    879 S.W.2d 889
    (Tex. Crim. App.
    1994).
    71
    See Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 420
    , 429-30 (2000);
    McDonald v. Johnson, 
    139 F.3d 1056
    , 1059 (5th Cir. 1998).
    46
    requesting an evidentiary hearing in state habeas proceedings,
    and that the state court impeded any factual discovery when it
    perfunctorily      denied   his    request.         In   sum,    he   asserts    that
    Section    2254(e)(2)     is    inapplicable        here.       Shields   concedes,
    however, that he devoted only one line of his 600-plus-page state
    habeas petition to his request for an evidentiary hearing, when
    he asked that he “be accorded an evidentiary hearing on the
    allegations in this petition.”               Although the Supreme Court has
    said that “failure to develop the factual basis of a claim”
    connotes fault on the part of the petitioner, we have held that
    “[m]ere requests for evidentiary hearings will not suffice; the
    petitioner must be diligent in pursuing the factual development
    of his own claim.”72        Shields points to no factual dispute that
    the state court, or, for that matter, the district court, could
    have resolved by granting his request for an evidentiary hearing.
    Neither does Shields proffer any specific evidence that would
    change the state or district courts’ resolution of his claims.
    Even if we were to determine that Shields did not fail to
    develop    the    factual       basis   of    his     claim     in    state   court,
    “overcoming      the   narrow    restriction     of      §   2254(e)(2)   does   not
    guarantee a petitioner an evidentiary hearing, it merely opens
    72
    Dowthitt v. Johnson, 
    270 F.3d 733
    , 758 (5th Cir. 2000).
    47
    the door for one.”73        The district court still retains discretion
    to grant or to deny an evidentiary hearing under Rule 8 of the
    Rules       Governing   Section   2254   cases.74     To    obtain    a   hearing,
    Shields would have “to show either a factual dispute which, if
    resolved in his favor, would entitle him to relief or a factual
    dispute that       would   require    development     in   order     to   assess a
    claim.”75
    Shields     procedurally      defaulted   on   the    majority      of   his
    claims.       As such, we are barred from considering those claims,
    evidentiary hearing or not.            The alleged ineffective assistance
    of Shields’s state habeas counsel does not constitute cause for
    the procedural default, and an evidentiary hearing would have
    shed no light on this issue.76
    As to those claims on which Shields did not procedurally
    default, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it
    denied his request for an evidentiary hearing.               We have held that
    73
    Murphy v. Johnson, 
    205 F.3d 809
    , 815 (5th Cir. 2000).
    74
    RULES GOVERNING § 2254 CASES 8(a); see 
    Murphy, 205 F.3d at 815
    .
    75
    
    Id. at 815;
    see Robison v. Johnson, 
    151 F.3d 256
    , 268
    (5th Cir. 1998).
    76
    
    Ogan, 297 F.3d at 357
    ; see also Holland v. Jackson, ——
    U.S. ——, 
    124 S. Ct. 2736
    , 2738 (2004) (per curiam) (“Attorney
    negligence, however, is chargeable to the client and precludes
    relied unless the conditions of § 2254(e)(2) are satisfied.”).
    48
    “where a district court has before it sufficient facts to make an
    informed decision regarding the merits of a claim, a district
    court does not abuse its discretion in refusing to grant an
    evidentiary       hearing     (even     where    no   factual   findings      are
    explicitly    made    by     any   state    court).”77    Our   review   of   the
    instant record demonstrates that the district court reviewed the
    pleadings, the record, and all of the evidence in support of
    Shields’s claims.          Indeed, even though the district court held
    that Shields had procedurally defaulted on the majority of his
    claims, it went on to address the merits of those claims, further
    supporting our conclusion that it thoroughly reviewed the record.
    Moreover, we have held that conclusional and unsupported
    allegations do not entitle a habeas petitioner to an evidentiary
    hearing.78    Our review of this record demonstrates that Shields
    offers us no specific evidence that the jury did not consider at
    trial.    Neither does he point to any specific evidence that would
    create a factual dispute as to the four claims on which he did
    not procedurally default.             The district court had before it the
    affidavit of Shields’s state habeas counsel and still determined,
    as   we    have      done,     that     state    habeas   counsel’s      alleged
    77
    
    Murphy, 205 F.3d at 816
    (citing McDonald v. Johnson, 
    139 F.3d 1056
    , 1060 (5th Cir. 1998)).
    78
    See 
    id. (citing Ward
    v. Whitley, 
    21 F.3d 1355
    , 1367 (5th
    Cir. 1994)).
    49
    ineffectiveness does not constitute a sufficient factual dispute
    to require an evidentiary hearing.      The Rules Governing Section
    2254 cases “‘do[] not authorize fishing expeditions.’”79
    VII. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court
    did not err when it denied a COA to Shields and denied Shields an
    evidentiary hearing.    We therefore deny Shields’s application for
    a COA.
    COA DENIED.
    79
    
    Id. at 816-17
    (quoting 
    Ward, 21 F.3d at 1367
    ).
    50