Jason McGehee v. Larry Norris ( 2009 )


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  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 08-1182
    ___________
    Jason Farrell McGehee,                 *
    *
    Appellee,                  *
    *
    v.                               *
    *
    Larry Norris, Director, Arkansas       *
    Department of Correction,              *
    *
    Appellant.                 *
    ___________
    Appeals from the United States
    No. 08-1513                  District Court for the
    ___________                  Eastern District of Arkansas.
    Jason Farrell McGehee,                 *
    *
    Appellant,                 *
    *
    v.                               *
    *
    Larry Norris, Director, Arkansas       *
    Department of Correction,              *
    *
    Appellee.                  *
    ___________
    Submitted: May 14, 2009
    Filed: December 16, 2009
    ___________
    Before WOLLMAN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
    In 1998, an Arkansas jury found Jason Farrell McGehee guilty of the capital
    murder of John Melbourne and sentenced him to death. The Supreme Court of
    Arkansas affirmed the conviction and sentence. After exhausting his avenues for state
    relief, McGehee filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, challenging his sentence on five
    separate grounds. The district court granted the writ on the ground that the state trial
    court improperly excluded relevant mitigating evidence during the sentencing phase
    of McGehee’s trial. The State of Arkansas appeals the grant of the writ, and McGehee
    cross-appeals the dismissal of his other claims. We reverse the grant of habeas relief
    and affirm the district court’s dismissal of the remaining claims.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    A. The Crime
    During the summer of 1996, McGehee, then twenty years old, was the leader
    of a group of teens and young adults who resided in an abandoned house at 1123
    North Spring Street in Harrison, Arkansas. The group, which included McGehee,
    Melbourne, Benjamin McFarland, Christopher Epps, Candace Campbell, and Robert
    Diemert, used stolen and forged checks to finance the purchase of food, alcohol, and
    illegal drugs. Melbourne, fifteen, was the youngest of these individuals.
    On August 19, 1996, McGehee sent Melbourne to obtain cash with a stolen
    check. Melbourne’s efforts to pass the bad check aroused the suspicion of a local
    storekeeper, who contacted the police. When the police questioned Melbourne about
    his activities, he disclosed that there was stolen property at the house on Spring Street.
    -2-
    The police went to the residence to investigate but eventually left when no one
    answered the door. McGehee, McFarland, Campbell, and Epps had been hiding inside
    and concluded that Melbourne had “snitched” to the police. They determined that
    they would beat up Melbourne to teach him a lesson, and McFarland and Epps left to
    find him and bring him back to the house.
    When Melbourne arrived, McGehee confronted him, demanding to know why
    he had talked to the police. Shortly thereafter, the group initiated a torturous beating.
    Melbourne was stripped naked, punched, kicked, and burned with a candle. There
    was also evidence that Lysol was sprayed in his face. The beating continued for more
    than an hour, with McGehee delivering most of the blows. Although Melbourne
    initially attempted to escape the onslaught, he eventually became so weak that he
    ceased to resist. In Campbell’s words, “[H]e looked like he was really tired and
    exhausted. He was real weak at that point. . . . He had give up [sic] fighting.”
    At some point, McGehee decided that the group needed to leave the house
    because he feared the police would return to arrest him. McGehee decided to travel
    to his uncle’s vacant farmhouse in Omaha, Arkansas, and then head to the state of
    Utah, where he had family. McGehee allowed Melbourne to put his clothes on,
    following which he was bound and placed in a car. During the trip to Omaha, there
    was testimony that McGehee asked Melbourne, “how does it feel to know you are
    going to die?” When they arrived, Melbourne was again stripped and beaten.
    McGehee punched and kicked Melbourne; threw a box fan at him; struck him
    repeatedly with a wooden axe handle; and threatened him with a knife to his throat.
    The other members of the group all participated in the beating to varying degrees.
    Campbell kicked Melbourne in the groin and burned his genitals with a candle. When
    Melbourne tried to get away, McGehee and McFarland dragged him back.
    After about an hour, the group took a break from the assault, at which time
    McGehee suggested that they needed to get rid of Melbourne. McGehee, McFarland,
    -3-
    and Epps then took Melbourne, bound and naked, into the woods, where Melbourne
    made a final plea for his life. The three took turns strangling him to death, with
    McGehee putting his foot on Melbourne’s throat as he gasped for air. McGehee,
    McFarland, and Epps appeared to be laughing as they emerged from the woods.
    B. McGehee’s Trial
    Prior to his trial, McGehee underwent a forensic evaluation at the Arkansas
    State Hospital. The evaluation indicated that McGehee was of average intelligence,
    not mentally ill at the time of the offense, and competent to stand trial. McGehee
    subsequently filed a motion for funds to obtain psychiatric assistance, arguing that he
    needed expert assistance for both the guilt and penalty phases of his trial.
    Specifically, his counsel contended that McGehee might have potentially suffered
    adverse effects from his father’s exposure to the chemical Agent Orange in Vietnam.
    The state stipulated that McGehee’s father had been exposed to the chemical, but
    opposed the motion on the ground that there was an insufficient scientific basis to
    show that any inheritable defects would be relevant to mitigation. The court denied
    McGehee’s motion, stating that “[i]f you can present anything to [the] Court as to
    whom can do this and if they can do it promptly and information and material on why
    this is going to [be] mitigating, but I just cannot regard this as very substantial.”
    The jury found McGehee guilty of capital murder and kidnapping. At the
    sentencing phase of the trial, John Melbourne, Sr., testified about the impact of his
    son’s death, stating that since the murder he had been battling depression and unable
    to work or sleep. He testified that the trauma had caused him and his wife to divorce
    and that his remaining children struggled with the loss of their brother.
    By way of mitigation, McGehee introduced, among other things, evidence of
    his difficult life, dysfunctional family, and parental abandonment. The court ruled that
    -4-
    McGehee could not introduce evidence that two of his co-defendants were convicted
    of capital murder and kidnapping and did not receive the death penalty.
    Five witnesses testified on McGehee’s behalf. LaRee Peacock, McGehee’s
    maternal grandmother, testified that McGehee did not have a good relationship with
    his father because his parents had divorced when McGehee was young. Peacock
    testified that McGehee got along well with his mother until a period when she became
    religious and immediately expected him to do the same. Peacock testified that
    McGehee was not physically abused as a child, but she stated that he suffered mental
    abuse because his mother would, for example, get angry and refuse to feed McGehee
    and his sister dinner if they did not go to church. Peacock testified that McGehee’s
    mother took him to a counselor who recommended that she discipline McGehee by
    withholding something of which he was very fond. Accordingly, his mother took
    away his dog and withheld other items when she became angry. Eventually, the
    narrative focus of Peacock’s testimony drew an objection from the state:
    McGehee’s Counsel: Did [McGehee’s Mother] Robin neglect those
    children?
    Peacock: Well, they were clothed. And like I say, if they didn’t go to
    church, she would be upset. And one time we had gone out there for
    lunch and I can’t remember what [McGehee’s sister] Kimber had done,
    but she made her eat on the basement steps and she sat down there crying
    and it actually spoiled my lunch because I didn’t feel like eating. I just,
    I just lost my appetite. Another time—
    Prosecutor: Your Honor, I’m going—I apologize for interrupting but
    I’m going to object at this time. I don’t think the purpose is just to relay
    [sic] incident after incident. The questions are directed and are going to
    one of the mitigating factors and I think that’s appropriate but this [is
    inappropriate].
    -5-
    Linda Christensen, McGehee’s aunt, was the final defense witness. She
    testified that the relationship between McGehee’s parents was dysfunctional and that
    there was a good deal of mental cruelty in their household. Christensen testified that
    McGehee did not have a relationship with his father’s family and he did not meet his
    paternal grandparents until he was ten years old. She stated that McGehee and his
    mother “idolized each other” but that things changed when McGehee started getting
    into trouble. She also testified that at some point McGehee’s mother became
    fanatically religious and unusually strict, stating that “[s]ometimes for punishment,
    she would make them read the scriptures, sometimes [for] an hour, which only made
    the kids rebel.” Like Peacock, Christensen’s testimony relied heavily on anecdotes
    and eventually drew an objection:
    McGehee’s Counsel: To make it more relevant, the prosecutor has been
    lenient here, can you tell me a little bit about any punishments outside
    that Jason would suffer?
    Christensen: That Jason would suffer, yes. Jason wasn’t keeping a
    curfew. He was staying out later than his mother wanted and they never
    believed in locking the house before but when Jason came home, the
    house was locked. The house was locked and there were wooden dowels
    placed inside the windows and chunks of wood and books and just about
    anything she could find to put into the windows so he couldn’t slide the
    windows open.
    McGehee’s Counsel: He couldn’t get back in the house?
    Christensen: He couldn’t get back in the house and she said Jason knows
    how to knock. He should have come home when I told him to and if he
    wants in the house, he can knock. And so Jason slept in the dog run, in
    a small square dog run with his dog, Speckles. It didn’t have a roof and
    it was pretty cold because where we come from, it can freeze up until
    June, and this was the first part of April.
    McGehee’s Counsel: How long did this go on?
    -6-
    Christensen: Probably about seven to ten days.
    McGehee’s Counsel: He just didn’t get to come in?
    Christensen: No. He didn’t get to come in. She said if he wants to come
    in, he can knock. So I took him up food, took him up sandwiches. And
    he was living on [C-rations]. He found some [C-rations] and stuff. And
    I gave him some tissue papers and he was going to the bathroom outside
    and he got into the cellar and he got some bottled tomatoes. He dug
    holes in the dirt. He’s [sic] stand his bottles of tomatoes up. When we
    went up there, he had eaten—he was eating bottled tomatoes and we
    were afraid he would get poisoned, get botulism. And he was living out
    there with his dog. There was no cover on this dog run.
    McGehee’s Counsel: I’m not going to ask a lot about dogs but apparently
    some of your family is weird about how they handle their animals?
    Christensen: Yes.
    McGehee’s Counsel: Can you just elaborate on that? What happened to
    his dogs even when he was a small child?
    Christensen: When he was a baby, he had a Doberman Pincher—
    At that point, the prosecutor objected on the ground that the testimony was
    “very, very far afield from anything that’s relevant to the mitigating circumstances
    that I know about.” McGehee’s counsel did not explain how the incident was relevant
    to McGehee’s sentence, simply stating that “[t]he jury needs to know the background
    of why this man did what he did.” The trial judge sustained the objection on the
    ground that he could not see the relevance of “[s]omething years and years ago
    involving a dog.”
    Later, the court sustained a similar objection to Christensen’s testimony about
    abuse that McGehee’s sister suffered at the hands of their stepfather:
    -7-
    Christensen: [McGehee] was supposed to discipline his sister, Kimber.
    My sister let Jason do that a lot. [McGehee’s stepfather] Wayne wasn’t
    allowed to discipline her. She’d say, no, don’t discipline my kids, but
    when they got out of hand, she would tell Wayne, when they got older,
    she would say aren’t you going to do something with these kids. And so,
    you know, Jason had problems fighting on and off growing up, but
    Wayne beat Kimber up and Family Services were called in. She had big
    bruises on the back of her legs that they took pictures of.
    Prosecutor: Your Honor, at this point we’re talking about somebody who
    isn’t even the defendant, and I really think we’re way far afield from
    directional testimony. I would ask that we focus on what we’re here to
    do.
    McGehee’s Counsel: My position is I’m here to try to save his life and
    if it helps this jury with the background, that’s why I’m asking.
    The Court: Well, I’m going to sustain the State’s objection.
    After the jury had retired to deliberate on the sentence, McGehee’s counsel
    sought to make a record about what Christensen would have testified to in the absence
    of the state’s objection:
    McGehee’s Counsel: I was just trying to show a pattern as to how violent
    a family they were because the dogs’ throats are slit and they were
    blaming Jason for being the, not the one that did it but that because he
    wanted a new puppy, God had these animals killed and I just was trying
    to show once again the pattern of violence in the family that helped got
    [sic] him where he was. And that’s what I wanted to bring up. That’s all
    I have, Judge.
    ...
    The Court: Well, they haven’t really charted, ever since we bifurcated
    proceedings not only in capital cases but in other cases, it’s still
    uncharted. To what extent, the Court just allows an endless sequence of
    [anecdotes] to be presented by the defense. There has to be some limits
    placed on it. . . . I don’t know, maybe to some extent it’s just wide open
    -8-
    and it’s just how much time we’re going to take and how many different
    [anecdotes] we get to listen to about an individual’s history. But some
    presumably isolated act of cruelty to animals that happened years and
    years ago, I’m still not convinced has any particular relevance . . . .
    The jury unanimously found that the state had proved two aggravating
    circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) that the murder was committed for the
    purpose of avoiding or preventing arrest and (2) that the murder was committed in an
    especially cruel or depraved manner. The verdict forms also indicated a non-
    unanimous finding that McGehee probably came from a dysfunctional family. The
    jury found that the aggravating circumstances outweighed beyond a reasonable doubt
    any mitigating circumstances and justified a sentence of death.
    C. Direct Appeal and State Post-Conviction Proceedings
    On appeal to the Arkansas Supreme Court, McGehee argued that the trial court
    erred in excluding evidence that McFarland and Epps had received life sentences and
    in sustaining the state’s various objections to mitigation testimony. The Arkansas
    Supreme Court rejected McGehee’s contention that his co-defendants’ sentences were
    relevant, stating that “[McGehee] cites no authority or convincing argument in support
    of his theory, and we are not aware of any.” McGehee v. State, 
    992 S.W.2d 110
    , 123
    (Ark. 1999) (McGehee I).
    The court similarly rejected McGehee’s contention that the trial court had erred
    in sustaining the state’s objections to parts of Christensen’s testimony. With respect
    to Christensen’s statement about what had happened to McGehee’s dogs when he was
    a child, the court held that the trial judge had not erred because “it was not clear where
    defense counsel was going with the testimony.” 
    Id. at 124.
    The court further stated
    that the anecdote was irrelevant to McGehee’s punishment, “in light of the fact that
    the testimony merely described the family’s attitude about the death of their dogs, an
    event that occurred when [McGehee] was just a baby.” 
    Id. Moreover, the
    court
    -9-
    concluded that the trial judge had not erred in sustaining the state’s objection to
    Christensen’s testimony about the abuse McGehee’s sister suffered because it was
    “not clear from [McGehee’s] brief how this evidence would [have been] relevant to
    the issue of his punishment.” 
    Id. Alternatively, the
    court held that the argument was
    moot, because “[a]lthough the State objected to the testimony and the trial court
    sustained the objection, the jury was never admonished not to consider the evidence.”
    
    Id. at 125.
    Finally, pursuant to Rule 4-3(h) of the Arkansas Supreme Court Rules, the
    court reviewed the record for adverse rulings to which McGehee had objected at trial
    but not raised on appeal. Finding no reversible error, the court affirmed McGehee’s
    conviction and sentence. 
    Id. McGehee filed
    a petition for state post-conviction relief, arguing that his trial
    counsel was ineffective for, among other things, failing to challenge the
    constitutionality of his sentence on the ground that his co-defendants received lesser
    sentences and for abandoning any challenge to the victim impact testimony. The trial
    court denied the petition, and the Arkansas Supreme Court subsequently affirmed,
    holding that proportionality review of death sentences was not required and that the
    admission of victim impact testimony was not unconstitutional. McGehee v. State,
    
    72 S.W.3d 867
    , 878-79 (Ark. 2002) (McGehee II).
    D. Federal Habeas Proceedings
    McGehee filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, challenging only his sentence of
    death. McGehee argued that his constitutional rights were violated by (1) the trial
    court’s refusal to grant a continuance or provide funds for additional psychiatric
    evaluation; (2) the trial court’s exclusion of relevant mitigating evidence; (3) the
    disproportionate penalty that he received compared to his co-defendants; and (4) the
    use of victim impact testimony during his sentencing. McGehee also asserted that his
    -10-
    sentence should be vacated because three of the state’s witnesses had recanted their
    testimony in ways that mitigated McGehee’s role in the offense.
    In conjunction with his claim that he was improperly denied psychiatric
    assistance, McGehee’s petition relied upon new evidence, never presented in state
    court, about the psychological trauma that he allegedly endured during childhood.
    The evidence included declarations from some of McGehee’s mitigation witnesses.
    Linda Christensen’s declaration stated that when McGehee was a toddler his father cut
    the throats of the two family dogs. The declaration also described the following
    incident:
    [McGehee’s stepfather] Wayne had gotten mad. He was mad at Jason
    and Kimber and I don’t know if he took it out on [Jason’s dog] Dusty.
    Dusty and their other dog, King, were fighting over food that night when
    they got home. They were all down in the basement. Wayne got mad.
    He got up and kicked Dusty in the side with his cowboy boots as hard as
    he could. Dusty started bleeding out his rectum. He lay and suffered
    and the kids had to watch him die slowly. He was bleeding internally.
    By about 5:00 a.m. the next morning, Dusty was dead. I really believe
    part of Jason died with him. That was the turning point. Jason was
    never the same after that.
    McGehee did not refer to this account in his argument concerning the trial court’s
    exclusion of mitigating evidence, contending instead that the Arkansas Supreme Court
    had acted unreasonably in affirming the trial court on the record that was before it at
    the time.
    In its response to the petition, the state argued that McGehee’s psychiatric
    assistance and witness recantation claims were defaulted and that the Arkansas
    Supreme Court’s affirmance of the trial court’s rulings on mitigation evidence “was
    not an unreasonable application of the law to the facts of this case.” J.A. 256. The
    state argued that an evidentiary hearing was unnecessary, stating that “[t]he AEDPA
    -11-
    also significantly restricts the instances in which a federal habeas petitioner may
    obtain an evidentiary hearing and precludes such a petitioner from presenting any
    evidence, testimonial, or otherwise, until he has made the showing required by 28
    U.S.C. § 2254.” 
    Id. at 262.
    The district court granted the writ on the basis of the trial court’s exclusion of
    mitigating evidence and rejected the remainder of McGehee’s claims. In analyzing
    the mitigation claim, the court relied heavily on the new evidence, stating that
    “McGehee’s petition provides a declaration from Linda Christensen and the testimony
    she would have provided regarding the family’s treatment of animals if she were
    permitted to continue with her testimony at the sentencing.” The court stated that it
    was “particularly concerned by two different stories related to the treatment of animals
    by McGehee’s family while in the presence of McGehee as a baby and as an
    adolescent.” The court, however, did not consider whether McGehee had overcome
    § 2254’s restrictions on the consideration of evidence not presented in state court.
    The court set aside McGehee’s death sentence and ordered the state to grant a
    new penalty-phase trial or to change McGehee’s sentence to life in prison without
    parole. As recounted above, the state appeals the court’s ruling on the mitigation
    claim, and McGehee cross-appeals the denial of his other claims.
    II. Analysis
    We review the district court’s conclusions of law de novo and its factual
    findings for clear error. Hunt v. Houston, 
    563 F.3d 695
    , 702 (8th Cir. 2009). Under
    the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), if the issues raised in
    a petition for habeas corpus were adjudicated on the merits in state court, the petition
    must be denied unless the relevant state court decision was either “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), or
    -12-
    “based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented
    in the State court proceeding.” 
    Id. § 2254(d)(2).
    “An incorrect decision is not
    necessarily unreasonable, and we may not grant a writ of habeas corpus unless the
    state court decision is both wrong and unreasonable.” Palmer v. Clarke, 
    408 F.3d 423
    ,
    429 (8th Cir. 2005).
    A. Exclusion of Mitigating Evidence
    We begin by addressing the state’s argument that the district court erred in
    granting habeas relief based on the exclusion of mitigation testimony. McGehee
    argues that the Arkansas Supreme Court wrongfully affirmed the trial judge’s decision
    to sustain objections to Christensen’s testimony about the mistreatment of family dogs
    and the abuse of McGehee’s sister.1
    1. The District Court’s Consideration of New Evidence
    As a threshold issue, the parties disagree about the evidence that we may
    consider in evaluating this claim. The state contends that the district court erred in
    considering Christensen’s declaration about what her testimony would have been if
    the trial judge had not sustained the state’s objection. McGehee responds that the state
    waived any objection to the new evidence because it did not specifically raise the
    issue until it filed its reply brief in the present appeal. He asserts that the state “never
    once contended below that the district court was required to disregard the exhibits
    attached to [his] Petition.”
    1
    McGehee also argues that he should have been permitted to present the
    sentencing jury with evidence of the life sentences of his co-defendants. As he
    concedes, however, we rejected an identical argument in Simpson v. Norris, 
    490 F.3d 1029
    , 1033 (8th Cir. 2007).
    -13-
    We disagree with McGehee’s characterization of the state’s arguments and
    conclude that the district court erred in considering evidence never presented in state
    court. The new evidence in McGehee’s district court petition was not presented in
    conjunction with his argument that mitigation testimony was improperly excluded;
    instead, he relied on the new evidence to support his claim that he was improperly
    denied psychiatric assistance. He first incorporated the new evidence as a part of his
    mitigation claim in his brief filed in opposition to the state’s appeal from the grant of
    habeas relief. The state’s response to McGehee’s petition did not address the merits
    of the psychiatric assistance claim because it was the state’s position that the claim
    was procedurally defaulted. But the state did assert that the AEDPA precludes a
    petitioner “from presenting any evidence, testimonial, or otherwise, until he has made
    the showing required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254.” J.A. 262.
    Moreover, nothing in the state’s filings in the district court or before us could
    be construed as a concession to the consideration of new evidence. The state did not
    cite to the additional evidence, treating it as irrelevant. In the facts section of its
    opening brief, the state discussed only the evidence that was before the Arkansas
    Supreme Court, and most of its argument was devoted to establishing that “the
    Arkansas Supreme Court’s affirmance of the trial court’s rulings was not an
    unreasonable application of the law to the facts of this case.” The state also made
    numerous references to § 2254(d), which requires federal courts to assess state court
    decisions “in light of the record the [state] court had before it.” Holland v. Jackson,
    
    542 U.S. 649
    , 652 (2004).
    McGehee’s contention that the state waived its objection to the new evidence
    is therefore untenable. See Williams v. Norris, 
    576 F.3d 850
    , 860 (8th Cir. 2009)
    (holding that the state did not waive its objection to an evidentiary hearing where its
    motion included a general statement that “incorporated the fundamental purpose
    behind the restrictions on evidentiary hearings in § 2254(e)(2)”); cf. Miller-El v.
    Dretke, 
    545 U.S. 231
    , 257 n.15 (2005) (discussing, without deciding, whether the state
    -14-
    may have waived its objection to consideration of new evidence where it (1) proposed
    that the court consider the material, (2) failed to reference the AEDPA provision
    limiting consideration of new evidence, and (3) relied on the evidence to support its
    argument); Richey v. Bradshaw, 
    498 F.3d 344
    , 351-52 (6th Cir. 2007) (holding that
    the state waived its objection to the court’s reliance on new evidence where (1) the
    state urged the district court to consider the evidence, (2) the district court found the
    petitioner had been diligent in attempting to develop the evidence in state court, and
    (3) the state did not challenge the district court’s ruling on appeal).
    Under § 2254(e)(2), a habeas petitioner is generally barred from receiving an
    evidentiary hearing unless he has been diligent in attempting to develop the factual
    basis of his claim in state court. Michael Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 420
    , 440
    (2000). “Those same restrictions apply a fortiori when a prisoner seeks relief based
    on new evidence without an evidentiary hearing.” 
    Holland, 542 U.S. at 653
    .
    McGehee did not argue in the district court, and he does not argue here, that the new
    evidence in Christensen’s declaration satisfies the diligence requirements or any
    exception to § 2254(e)(2). Our review of the record satisfies us that there was “no
    state court ruling or other state-created impediment” that prevented McGehee from
    developing the facts surrounding Christensen’s testimony. 
    Williams, 576 F.3d at 862
    .
    McGehee’s counsel had the opportunity to make a proffer of evidence in the trial
    court, and the trial judge even suggested that the witness could make the proffer
    herself. McGehee has long been aware of the significance of Christensen’s testimony
    because it formed the basis of one of his arguments on direct appeal. Nevertheless,
    McGehee did not develop the additional facts that he sought to introduce in the district
    court. The state court record makes it clear that McGehee failed as a matter of law to
    meet the mandatory restrictions on the admission of new evidence in a habeas
    proceeding. Accordingly, we focus our analysis on the evidence that was available
    to the Arkansas Supreme Court. See 
    id. at 862-63.
    -15-
    2. The Arkansas Supreme Court’s Decision
    In Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
    (1978), the Supreme Court held that the
    Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments require that the sentencer in a capital case “not
    be precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s
    character or record and any of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant
    proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death.” 
    Id. at 604.
    The Court later
    explained “the corollary rule that the sentencer may not refuse to consider or be
    precluded from considering ‘any relevant mitigating evidence.’” Skipper v. South
    Carolina, 
    476 U.S. 1
    , 4 (1986) (quoting Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 114
    (1982)). The Court has used broad language to describe the relevance standard,
    observing that the meaning of relevance in the mitigation context is not unlike the
    meaning of relevance in other contexts; it is “evidence which tends logically to prove
    or disprove some fact or circumstance which a fact-finder could reasonably deem to
    have mitigating value.” Tennard v. Dretke, 
    542 U.S. 274
    , 284 (2004) (quoting
    McKoy v. North Carolina, 
    494 U.S. 433
    , 440 (1990)). The precise application of that
    broad language, however, is not always clear, and we have acknowledged that there
    is “little guidance on what constitutes relevance for Lockett purposes.” Sweet v. Delo,
    
    125 F.3d 1144
    , 1158 (8th Cir. 1997).
    The Lockett line of cases has focused on the categorical exclusion of certain
    types of mitigating evidence. See 
    Sweet, 125 F.3d at 1158
    (collecting cases). This
    case, however, involves a somewhat different issue: namely, the extent to which a trial
    judge may, when there are no categorical limitations on mitigation evidence, exclude
    testimony because of its apparent lack of probative value. The Supreme Court has
    addressed this issue only indirectly. In Skipper, the Court held that evidence of a
    defendant’s positive adjustment to pre-trial incarceration could not be categorically
    excluded from the sentencing decision, but it also stated that not “all facets of the
    defendant’s ability to adjust to prison life must be treated as relevant and potentially
    
    mitigating.” 476 U.S. at 7
    n.2. As one example, the Court suggested that the
    -16-
    frequency of the defendant’s showers would be irrelevant. 
    Id. Similarly, in
    Tennard
    the Court stated that it had “never denied that gravity has a place in the relevance
    analysis, insofar as evidence of a trivial feature of the defendant’s character or the
    circumstances of the crime is unlikely to have any tendency to mitigate the
    defendant’s 
    culpability.” 542 U.S. at 286
    .
    Evaluated against this precedent, the Arkansas Supreme Court’s rejection of
    McGehee’s mitigation arguments was not unreasonable or contrary to clearly
    established law. McGehee introduced five mitigation witnesses to establish that he
    had a dysfunctional family, very poor relationships with his father and stepfather, and
    a mother who behaved erratically and struggled to manage her children. Much of the
    testimony was discursive, anecdotal, and open-ended. At the time the prosecutor
    made his first objection to Christensen’s testimony, Christensen had just recounted a
    lengthy anecdote of arguably no mitigating value. Christensen had testified that as an
    adolescent, McGehee refused to keep his mother’s curfew and that a battle of wills
    ensued. McGehee’s mother locked the doors after McGehee failed to come home one
    evening. Rather than asking his mother for permission to enter the house, McGehee
    apparently chose to sleep outside with his dog, subsisting on bottled tomatoes and
    sandwiches delivered by his aunt.
    McGehee’s counsel then asked Christensen to discuss what happened to
    McGehee’s dogs “when he was a small child,” and Christensen answered, “[w]hen he
    was a baby, he had a Doberman Pincher.” At that point, the prosecutor objected on
    the ground that the testimony was irrelevant. McGehee’s counsel did not explain the
    substance of the testimony or how the jury could find a story about McGehee’s dogs
    relevant to his sentence. In upholding the trial judge’s decision, the Arkansas
    Supreme Court accurately observed that “it was not clear where defense counsel was
    going with the testimony.” McGehee 
    I, 992 S.W.2d at 124
    .
    -17-
    Later, after the jury had retired to deliberate, McGehee’s counsel proffered
    additional information about Christensen’s testimony. He stated that he wanted to
    show that the family was violent because the dogs’ throats had been slit and
    McGehee’s parents had told him it was because he wanted a new puppy. McGehee’s
    counsel did not request that the jury be returned to the courtroom to hear that
    additional evidence, and McGehee has cited no authority that should have compelled
    the trial judge to take that step sua sponte.
    Moreover, even after the proffer, the relevance of that testimony—if understood
    as a question about the gravity of the evidence and its likelihood of influencing the
    sentencing decision—is debatable. The death of a pet can be a traumatic experience
    for a child, and the story of parental cruelty may have contributed to the picture of
    family dysfunction. But to the extent that the testimony was offered to show a pattern
    of physical violence, it was contradicted by other evidence. McGehee’s grandmother
    testified that McGehee was not physically abused or neglected as a child. Christensen
    never stated that McGehee suffered physical abuse, and McGehee’s counsel did not
    allege any such abuse as a mitigating circumstance. Accordingly, the trial judge’s
    statement that the incident was an “isolated act of cruelty to animals that happened
    years and years ago” appears to have been a fair characterization. We cannot say that
    the Arkansas Supreme Court’s decision affirming the trial judge’s ruling was
    unreasonable.
    Nor was it unreasonable for the Arkansas Supreme Court to conclude that
    McGehee was not prejudiced by the trial judge’s decision to sustain an objection to
    Christensen’s testimony about the abuse of McGehee’s sister, Kimber. Christensen
    testified that McGehee’s stepfather was not allowed to discipline Kimber and that he
    had once beat her to the point that she had bruises on the back of her legs, prompting
    a visit from Family Services. The prosecutor objected on the basis that the witness
    was “talking about somebody who isn’t even the defendant, [and straying] way far
    -18-
    afield from directional testimony.” The trial judge sustained the objection, but did not
    admonish the jury not to consider that evidence.
    McGehee argues that the jury was unable to consider the evidence because it
    could have interpreted the judge’s decision to sustain the objection as an admonition
    to disregard Christensen’s testimony. He contends that this is so because the jury was
    earlier instructed to follow all of the judge’s evidentiary rulings. The evidentiary
    instruction to which McGehee points, however, was given during the guilt phase of
    McGehee’s trial. The jury did not receive a similar instruction before its sentencing
    deliberation. To the contrary, the jury was instructed that it could consider anything,
    in its discretion, that it found to be a mitigating circumstance. During his closing
    argument in the penalty phase, McGehee’s counsel highlighted the fact that the jury
    could consider mitigating circumstances ignored by the lawyers or the court.
    McGehee’s reliance on Penry v. Lynaugh, 
    492 U.S. 302
    (1989), in which the Court
    granted habeas relief because of the absence of such juror discretion, is therefore
    misplaced.
    Even if there were any error in the exclusion of Christensen’s testimony, it was
    harmless.2 See 
    Sweet, 125 F.3d at 1158
    -59 (concluding that Lockett errors may be
    held harmless). Although McGehee’s childhood was apparently difficult, the
    excluded evidence does not begin to approach the significance of the evidence in other
    notable cases in which the absence of mitigation testimony has been held prejudicial.
    See, e.g., Rompilla v. Beard, 
    545 U.S. 374
    , 391-92 (2005) (petitioner’s parents were
    violent alcoholics, and he was beaten regularly, locked inside an excrement-filled dog
    pen, and not allowed to visit other children); Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 517
    2
    Although McGehee contends that the state waived its harmless error argument
    by failing to raise it in the district court, we have the discretion to overlook a waiver
    and will do so when, as here, the record is straightforward and the finding of
    harmlessness is beyond reasonable dispute. See Lufkins v. Leapley, 
    965 F.2d 1477
    ,
    1482 (8th Cir. 1992).
    -19-
    (2003) (petitioner was left home alone for days, forcing him to beg for food and eat
    paint chips and garbage, and he was physically and sexually abused by his mother and
    foster parents); Terry Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 395-96 (2000) (petitioner had
    a “nightmarish childhood,” during which he was forced to live in unimaginable
    squalor and severely and repeatedly beaten by his father).
    As noted above, McGehee had the opportunity to provide evidence of the
    dysfunctional family and poor parenting that influenced his life choices. The
    mitigation testimony was somewhat conflicting, however, in that it showed that
    McGehee was not physically abused and that he had at least some family members
    and friends who cared for him during his childhood and early teenage years.
    Additional testimony about the death of McGehee’s dogs would not have significantly
    altered the jury’s picture of McGehee’s upbringing, and it would not have been likely
    to influence the sentencing decision. More precisely, we conclude that the Supreme
    Court’s recent observation in a death penalty case is particularly apt here: “Additional
    evidence on [this point] would have offered an insignificant benefit, if any at all.”
    Wong v. Belmontes, 
    130 S. Ct. 383
    , 388 (2009) (per curiam); cf. Grayson v.
    Thompson, 
    257 F.3d 1194
    , 1227-28 (11th Cir. 2001) (holding that petitioner was not
    prejudiced by the absence of mitigation evidence, in part, because “[a]lthough the
    graphic picture of [petitioner’s] home life . . . was not presented at trial, the judge did
    not wholly disregard [petitioner’s] unfortunate background in sentencing him to
    death”).
    The absence of any prejudice is particularly apparent given the horrific nature
    of the crime. See 
    Sweet, 125 F.3d at 1158
    (considering the nature of the crime as one
    element in determining harmlessness). The evidence at trial showed that McGehee
    was the ringleader of a torture murder and that his weaker, younger victim was
    brutalized because he told the truth when confronted by the police. McGehee inflicted
    most of the blows during the several hours in which Melbourne was tortured, and he
    exhibited no hesitation or remorse, apparently laughing just after he had left
    -20-
    Melbourne’s naked body lying in the woods. In the context of ineffective assistance
    of counsel claims, at least one of our sister circuits has stated that in death penalty
    cases involving a carefully planned murder, torture, rape, or kidnapping, “the
    aggravating circumstances of the crime outweigh any prejudice caused when a lawyer
    fails to present mitigating evidence.” Payne v. Allen, 
    539 F.3d 1297
    , 1318 (11th Cir.
    2008) (quoting Dobbs v. Turpin, 
    142 F.3d 1383
    , 1390 (11th Cir. 1998)). McGehee’s
    crime involved both torture and kidnapping, compounded in its cruelty by McGehee’s
    mocking, taunting statement, “how does it feel to know you are going to die?” In light
    of the entire record, therefore, we cannot say that the excluded evidence had a
    substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s sentencing decision. See Fry v. Pliler,
    
    551 U.S. 112
    , 121-22 (2007) (standard for reviewing harmlessness in § 2254
    proceedings). Accordingly, the district court erred in granting McGehee’s habeas
    petition on this claim.
    B. Denial of a Continuance and Funds for Psychiatric Assistance
    We turn next to McGehee’s contention that the district court erred in denying
    him habeas relief on his psychiatric assistance claim.3 As recounted above, McGehee
    requested a continuance and psychiatric assistance to determine whether he suffered
    detrimental effects from his father’s exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam. The trial
    3
    The state originally maintained that this claim was procedurally defaulted
    because McGehee failed to raise it in state court. In Starr v. Lockhart, 
    23 F.3d 1280
    ,
    1287 (8th Cir. 1994), we held that the Arkansas Supreme Court’s automatic review
    under Rule 4-3(h) preserves a petitioner’s Ake claim, avoiding procedural default
    even when the argument was not raised in state proceedings. Our recent decision in
    Williams, however, cast doubt on Starr’s continued application post-AEDPA.
    
    Williams, 576 F.3d at 865
    . Because we conclude that McGehee’s Ake argument fails
    on the merits, we need not decide whether the Starr analysis applies in this case. See
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2).
    -21-
    judge denied the request, noting that McGehee had already been granted a psychiatric
    evaluation and that the significance of his father’s chemical exposure was doubtful.
    Under Ake v. Oklahoma, 
    470 U.S. 68
    (1985), a defendant’s threshold showing
    that his mental state at the time of the offense is likely to be a significant factor at trial
    requires the state to provide access to a psychiatrist’s assistance if the defendant
    cannot otherwise afford to pay for his own expert. 
    Id. at 74.
    The entitlement to an
    Ake expert may extend to the penalty phase of a trial, and to the extent that the district
    court’s opinion suggested otherwise, it was incorrect. See 
    id. at 83;
    Starr, 23 F.3d at
    1288 
    (“Ake also explains that, when appropriate, the right to expert assistance extends
    to the sentencing phase of capital proceedings.”).
    McGehee was not entitled to an Ake expert, however, because he did not satisfy
    the initial showing that his mental state was likely to be a significant factor at trial.
    Ake and the other cases on which McGehee relies all involved elements not present
    here—a readily observable mental impairment or the prosecution’s use of a
    psychiatric expert to establish guilt or aggravating factors at sentencing. See 
    Ake, 470 U.S. at 71-73
    ; see also Tuggle v. Netherland, 
    516 U.S. 10
    , 11 (1995) (per curiam)
    (government “presented unrebutted psychiatric testimony” concerning the defendant’s
    future dangerousness); Boliek v. Bowersox, 
    96 F.3d 1070
    , 1074 (8th Cir. 1996)
    (petitioner was “an indigent capital defendant with a long history of mental-health
    problems”); 
    Starr, 23 F.3d at 1288
    -89 (petitioner had been diagnosed as mildly to
    moderately retarded); cf. Branscomb v. Norris, 
    47 F.3d 258
    , 262 (8th Cir. 1995)
    (rejecting an Ake claim because the petitioner failed to produce evidence of mental
    incapacity).
    The language in McGehee’s motion for a continuance belies the contention that
    he satisfied Ake’s requisite showing. McGehee asserted that he needed expert
    assistance to explore “the potential inheritance” of chemical defects attributable to
    Agent Orange. Although the state was willing to stipulate that McGehee’s father had
    -22-
    been exposed to Agent Orange, McGehee offered no evidence that any such exposure
    had affected his own mental state, and his counsel could only speculate about what
    tests needed to be performed and what they might show. Morever, the state did not
    rely on any psychiatric experts in the guilt or penalty phases of McGehee’s trial. Ake
    requires more than the mere possibility that an expert might be of some assistance to
    a defendant’s case. Little v. Armontrout, 
    835 F.2d 1240
    , 1244 (8th Cir. 1987) (en
    banc). “Rather, the defendant must show a reasonable probability that an expert
    would aid in his defense, and that denial of expert assistance would result in an unfair
    trial.” 
    Id. McGehee did
    not make this showing, and the district court thus properly
    denied relief on this claim.
    C. Proportionality Review and Victim Impact Testimony
    McGehee’s next two claims, that his sentence was disproportionate to that of
    his co-defendants and that the state relied on unconstitutional victim impact testimony,
    are foreclosed by our precedent and the AEDPA. McGehee argues that his death
    sentence violated the Eighth Amendment because two of his co-defendants, who he
    contends were equally culpable, received life sentences. As McGehee concedes,
    however, in Pulley v. Harris, the Supreme Court held that the Constitution does not
    require courts to consider whether a punishment is “disproportionate to the
    punishment imposed on others convicted of the same crime.” 
    465 U.S. 37
    , 43 (1984);
    see also Kane v. Garcia Espitia, 
    546 U.S. 9
    , 10-11 (2005) (per curiam) (instructing
    that a right cannot be clearly established for purposes of the AEDPA when the right
    at issue has not been articulated by the Supreme Court); Middleton v. Roper, 
    498 F.3d 812
    , 821 (8th Cir. 2007). McGehee also contends that the victim impact testimony
    at his sentencing violated the constitutional prohibition on arbitrariness in death
    penalty proceedings because the jury was not provided a framework for evaluating the
    evidence in its sentencing decision. We rejected an identical challenge to the
    Arkansas capital sentencing scheme in Johnson v. Norris, 
    537 F.3d 840
    , 850-52 (8th
    -23-
    Cir. 2008), cert. denied, 
    129 S. Ct. 1334
    (2009), and absent en banc review, we are not
    at liberty to revisit that decision.
    D. Denial of an Evidentiary Hearing
    Finally, McGehee argues that the district court erred in denying his motion
    for an evidentiary hearing. He contends that he is entitled to a hearing because
    declarations from three co-defendants who testified at his trial—Campbell, Diemert,
    and Epps—establish that they committed perjury and that the state knowingly used
    fabricated testimony. McGehee further argues that the amended testimony would
    make him ineligible for the death penalty because he did not personally inflict the fatal
    wounds and did not act with reckless indifference to human life. See Tison v.
    Arizona, 
    481 U.S. 137
    , 158 (1987).
    Where § 2254(e)(2) does not otherwise bar an evidentiary hearing, “the decision
    to grant such a hearing rests in the discretion of the district court.” Schriro v.
    Landrigan, 
    550 U.S. 465
    , 468 (2007). In making its determination, the district court
    must consider whether a hearing “could enable an applicant to prove the petition’s
    factual allegations, which, if true, would entitle the applicant to federal habeas relief.”
    
    Id. at 474.
    The district court properly concluded that, even if accepted as true, the
    statements of McGehee’s co-defendants would not entitle him to habeas relief. As the
    district court recognized, the statements “do not do much more than recount the events
    that were testified to at the trial.” In their declarations, Campbell, Diemert, and Epps
    stated that when they testified, they were immature, afraid of punishment, and eager
    to curry favor with the prosecutor. They also claimed that they exaggerated
    McGehee’s role in the attack. Campbell, for example, explained that when she
    testified that McGehee delivered most of the blows, she was referring only to “the
    specific time we were discussing,” and “never meant to imply that Jason did most of
    -24-
    the hitting overall.” J.A. 206. Similarly, Epps stated that McGehee did not take part
    in strangling Melbourne and did not laugh as he walked out of the woods.
    Individually and collectively, the declarations indicate that McGehee was more of an
    equal participant in the murder, rather than the ringleader.
    The declarations, however, do not show that the state knowingly used perjured
    testimony, and they fail to establish that McGehee did not act with reckless
    indifference to human life. There is no dispute that McGehee was a significant
    participant in two merciless beatings and was one of the three individuals who took
    Melbourne into the woods to die. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in denying McGehee an evidentiary hearing on this claim. See 
    Tison, 481 U.S. at 158
    (holding that major participation in a felony, combined with reckless
    indifference to human life, establishes the requisite culpability for capital murder).
    III. Conclusion
    The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions to dismiss
    the petition.
    ______________________________
    -25-