Court Opinion

ID: 3030883
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-13 22:45:02.728734+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:40:40.854701
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                            FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
                                    ___________

                                    No. 00-4079
                                    ___________

Carey D. Moore,                          *
                                         *
             Appellant,                  *
                                         *
      v.                                 * Appeal from the United States
                                         * District Court for the District
Michael L. Kinney, Warden                * of Nebraska.
of the Nebraska Penal and                *
Correctional Complex,                    *
                                         *
             Appellee.                   *
                                    ___________

                              Submitted: September 11, 2002

                                   Filed: February 10, 2003
                                    ___________

Before HANSEN, Chief Judge, HEANEY, McMILLIAN, BOWMAN, WOLLMAN,
      BEAM, LOKEN, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, MURPHY, BYE, RILEY,
      MELLOY, SMITH, Circuit Judges.
                              ___________

BEAM, Circuit Judge, with whom HANSEN, Chief Judge, BOWMAN, WOLLMAN,
LOKEN, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, and RILEY, Circuit Judges, join.

       In this death penalty matter, Carey D. Moore appeals the district court's1 denial
of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for habeas corpus. We affirm.

      1
       The Honorable Richard G. Kopf, Chief Judge, United States District Court for
the District of Nebraska.
I.    BACKGROUND

       The facts underlying Moore's initial conviction and sentencing in Nebraska
state court in 1980 are undisputed and have been repeated, in some form, in no less
than eight federal or state appellate court decisions. Briefly, in August 1979, Moore
purchased a handgun and set out to rob and kill Omaha cab drivers. Moore carefully
planned to select older targets because he thought it would be easier for him to shoot
an older man rather than a man nearer his own age. In carrying out this scheme,
Moore called several cabs over a period of time and hid while watching them arrive,
and depart, if the driver was young. Moore confessed to the police that he felt an
older victim would be an easier mark. Using this approach, Moore selectively
abducted and murdered cab driver Reuel Eugene Van Ness, Jr. on August 22, 1979,
and Maynard Helgeland on August 27, 1979.

       Moore was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder and was sentenced
to death by a three-judge panel in 1980. The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed the
convictions and sentences in State v. Moore, 316 N.W.2d 33 (Neb.), cert. denied, 456
U.S. 984 (1982). Moore filed a motion for postconviction relief in 1982, which was
denied by the state district court in 1983, and this denial was affirmed by the
Nebraska Supreme Court in State v. Moore, 350 N.W.2d 14 (Neb. 1984).

       Moore then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States
District Court for the District of Nebraska, which granted the writ in Moore v. Clarke,
No. CV84-L-754 (D. Neb. Sept. 20, 1988). This court affirmed, holding that the
"exceptional depravity" component of the aggravating circumstance set forth in Neb.
Rev. Stat. § 29-2523(1)(d)2 was unconstitutionally vague, both on its face and as

      2
       Section 29-2523(1)(d) provides: "The murder was especially heinous,
atrocious, cruel, or manifested exceptional depravity by ordinary standards of
morality and intelligence."

                                         -2-
interpreted by the Nebraska Supreme Court. Moore v. Clarke, 904 F.2d 1226, 1233
(8th Cir. 1990) (Moore I). The same panel published an opinion denying rehearing.
951 F.2d 895 (8th Cir. 1991).

       On remand, the Nebraska Supreme Court declined to resentence Moore, and,
instead, sent the matter to the state district court for resentencing. State v. Moore,
502 N.W.2d 227, 230 (Neb. 1993). A new three-judge sentencing panel of the state
district court convened in 1994 and in April of 1995 again sentenced Moore to death.
This decision was affirmed by the Nebraska Supreme Court in State v. Moore, 553
N.W.2d 120 (Neb. 1996) (per curiam), cert. denied, 520 U.S. 1176 (1997).

       In early March 1997, the Nebraska Supreme Court established May 9, 1997,
as Moore's execution date, and on April 30, 1997, Moore filed another state action
for postconviction relief. On May 5, 1997, the Nebraska Supreme Court stayed
Moore's execution and the state district court subsequently denied Moore's motion for
relief without an evidentiary hearing. The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed the
denial of postconviction relief in State v. Moore, 591 N.W.2d 86 (Neb.), cert. denied
sub nom., 528 U.S. 990 (1999). On October 5, 1999, Moore filed the current petition
for writ of habeas corpus. See Moore v. Kinney, 119 F. Supp. 2d 1022 (D. Neb.
2000).

II.   DISCUSSION

       In 1990, as indicated, this court invalidated Moore's 1980 sentences stating that
the "exceptional depravity" aggravator was unconstitutionally vague as written and
construed. Moore I, 904 F.2d at 1233. In so holding, the court simply failed to
correctly predict the direction the United States Supreme Court's death penalty
jurisprudence would take. Indeed, the impression given by the Moore I court was that
any narrowing construction of the "exceptional depravity" factor would fail to pass
constitutional muster. Id. at 1235 (Floyd Gibson, J., dissenting) ("It seems to me that

                                          -3-
the majority's approach in this case could defeat virtually any aggravating
circumstance statute, and by the use of semantics make a dead letter of any death
statute."). However, one month after Moore I was issued, the United States Supreme
Court upheld the validity and constitutionality of the State of Arizona's narrowing
scheme in Walton v. Arizona, 497 U.S. 639 (1990)3, and in Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S.
764, 777-78 (1990) (stating that Arizona Supreme Court construed the "especially
heinous, cruel or depraved" aggravating circumstance in a constitutionally
permissible manner) (emphasis added). The specific Arizona aggravating factor
considered in these two cases was almost identical to Nebraska's "exceptional
depravity" formulation. As a result of our 1990 misstep in Moore I, taken over the
vigorous objection of Judge Floyd Gibson, Moore's case has been adrift in the state
and federal courts for the past twelve-plus years. The court, sitting en banc, is
obviously not bound by the 1990 Moore I decision. Therefore we begin with a clean
slate as we examine Moore's 1995 resentencing. As we do so, we note that Moore's
current habeas corpus petition, filed in 1999, is governed by the standards set forth
in 28 U.S.C. § 2254, as amended by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
Act of 1996.

      3
       Walton was partially overruled on other grounds by Ring v. Arizona, 122 S.
Ct. 2428 (2002). Decided in June 2002, Ring, and its holding that a jury, not a judge,
must make any factual findings which increase a sentence from imprisonment to
death, is not implicated in this case. The Supreme Court did not, and has not,
expressly made the ruling in Ring retroactive. See, e.g., Ring, 122 S. Ct. at 2449-50
(O'Connor, J., dissenting) (noting that current state death row inmates will not be able
to invoke the principles of Ring and citing Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288 (1989)).
Absent an express pronouncement on retroactivity from the Supreme Court, the rule
from Ring is not retroactive. See Tyler v. Cain, 533 U.S. 656, 663 (2001) (holding
that "a new rule is not 'made retroactive to cases on collateral review' unless the
Supreme Court holds it to be retroactive") (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(A)).

                                          -4-
       The two issues certified for appeal in this case center around whether Neb. Rev.
Stat. § 29-2523(1)(d) is unconstitutional: (1) on its face because it remains open-
ended and vague, and it fails to channel application of the death penalty; and (2) as
applied by the Nebraska courts because the resentencing panel's construction of the
statute denied Moore due process. We cannot grant Moore habeas corpus relief on
any claim that was "adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the
adjudication of the claim . . . resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved
an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
Supreme Court of the United States." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). The first step in this
analysis is to compare the state court decision with applicable Supreme Court
precedent on the subject in question. The state court decision is only "contrary to"
established Supreme Court precedent if the state court applied a rule that directly
contradicts Supreme Court precedent containing "materially indistinguishable" facts.
Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 405 (2000) (O'Connor, J., for the Court). And, a
state court's application of the law is not "unreasonable" if it is merely incorrect or
erroneous in this court's independent judgment; rather, it must be objectively
unreasonable. Id. at 410 (O'Connor, J., for the Court). Nor is citation to any
particular Supreme Court case necessary, "so long as neither the reasoning nor the
result of the state-court decision contradicts" Supreme Court precedent. Early v.
Packer, 123 S. Ct. 362, 365 (2002) (per curiam). Factual findings by the state court
"shall be presumed to be correct," and this presumption will be rebutted only "by
clear and convincing evidence." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). The district court's legal
conclusions are reviewed de novo, McDowell v. Leapley, 984 F.2d 232, 233 (8th Cir.
1993), and its factual findings are reviewed for clear error, Couch v. Trickey, 892
F.2d 1338, 1341 (8th Cir. 1989).

       With these standards in mind, we turn to Moore's 1995 resentencing, and the
subsequent Nebraska Supreme Court adjudication of his current claims. Upon
remand to the Nebraska Supreme Court for resentencing following our 1990 decision,
the state asked the court to define "exceptional depravity" in a way that would satisfy

                                          -5-
the federal court's objections to the statute's constitutionality, to apply the newly
constructed definition to the facts of the case, to reweigh the aggravating and
mitigating factors, and to resentence Moore. State v. Moore, 502 N.W.2d at 228. As
earlier indicated, the supreme court declined these requests and remanded the case to
the state district court for resentencing. Id.

                                          A.

      At resentencing, the state district court applied its own narrowed construction
of "exceptional depravity" to the facts of Moore's case. State v. Moore, 553 N.W.2d
at 132. The resentencing panel determined that the definition of "exceptional
depravity" should include the following:

      (1) the killer's infliction of prolonged or significant physical violence,
      such as sexual abuse, on the victim after the victim's death or loss of
      consciousness; (2) the killer's mutilation or dismemberment of the
      victim's body after death; . . . (3) the apparent relishing of the murder by
      the killer . . . . [and (4)] the killer's cold, calculated planning of the
      victim's death, as exemplified by experimentation with the method of
      causing the victim's death or by the purposeful selection of a particular
      victim on the basis of specific characteristics such as race, gender, creed,
      sexual orientation, disability, or age.

Id. (emphasis omitted). The resentencing panel concluded that the fourth factor was
present due to Moore's selection of his victims on the basis of age. Id. Based on the
presence of this and other aggravating factors which outweighed the mitigating
factors, the panel resentenced Moore to death.

       The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed the death sentence on direct appeal, id.,
and it later affirmed the denial of postconviction relief, 591 N.W.2d 86. On direct
appeal, the court considered and rejected Moore's claim that, at the time of
resentencing, there was no constitutionally viable definition of "exceptional

                                          -6-
depravity" available to the resentencing panel. The court first cited a litany of its own
cases that have approved the "cold, calculated" formulation. 553 N.W.2d at 130. The
court then pointed out that "exceptional depravity" was further narrowed with the
advent of the five-factor test first enunciated in State v. Palmer, 399 N.W.2d 706,
731-32 (Neb. 1986), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 872 (1987). Citing Walton v. Arizona,
Lewis v. Jeffers, and this court's decision in Joubert v. Hopkins, 75 F.3d 1232 (8th
Cir. 1996), cert. denied, 518 U.S. 1029 (1996), the court concluded that the Palmer
factors had been constitutionally validated and the resentencing panel could have
applied either the "cold, calculated" test or the Palmer factors to define "exceptional
depravity." 553 N.W.2d at 131.

       The court noted that, despite the existence of a constitutionally viable
definition of "exceptional depravity," the resentencing panel, apparently out of an
abundance of caution due to the confusing state of the law arising from our 1990
opinion, undertook to further narrow this aggravating factor as outlined above. Id.
at 131-32. The resentencing panel was within its authority to do so, the court noted,
because under Nebraska law, in the absence of clear precedent, a trial court must
construe a statute according to its own understanding of it. Id. at 132.

       The court next turned to the merits of Moore's claim that the formulation
actually applied by the resentencing panel was unconstitutionally vague and
overbroad. The court found that the "cold, calculated" formulation, restricted to a
situation where the defendant chose his victims on the basis of age, was sufficiently
narrow to avoid a vagueness challenge. This formulation "provide[d] sufficient
guidance to the sentencing authority 'so as to minimize the risk of wholly arbitrary
and capricious action.'" Id. (quoting Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 189 (1976)).
Citing Gregg and Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238 (1972) (per curiam), the Nebraska
Supreme Court found that the resentencing panel's definition provided a meaningful
distinction between the cases which impose the death penalty and those that do not.

                                          -7-
553 N.W.2d at 132-33. Nor was the formulation overbroad, as it applied only to a
subclass of defendants convicted of first-degree murder. Id. at 133.

       The Nebraska Supreme Court's consideration of the merits of Moore's claim is,
at the very least, a reasonable application of Supreme Court precedent. The court
identified the relevant Supreme Court precedent–Gregg and Furman–and reasonably
applied it to Moore's case. We agree with the Nebraska Supreme Court's reasoning.
The principal objective of a vagueness challenge is to ensure that the state provides
a process that is "neutral and principled so as to guard against bias or caprice in the
sentencing decision." Tuilaepa v. California, 512 U.S. 967, 973 (1994). So long as
the sentencer is capable of understanding the core meaning of the challenged factors,
the vagueness challenge will fail. Id.

        Thus, the key inquiry concerning whether the "cold, calculated" formulation
is constitutional is not the specific substance of that narrowed definition, but simply
whether the sentencing process is infected with bias or caprice. This is the
"controlling objective when we examine eligibility and selection factors for
vagueness." Id. The vagueness review is deferential, however, and "[a]s long as an
aggravating factor has a core meaning . . . capable of understanding, it will pass
constitutional muster." Jones v. United States, 527 U.S. 373, 400 (1999) (Thomas,
J., plurality). Furthermore, an aggravating factor must be sufficiently narrow so that
it does not apply to everyone convicted of first-degree murder. Tuilaepa, 512 U.S.
at 972. Under this deferential standard, the resentencing panel adequately and
constitutionally narrowed the "exceptional depravity" aggravator.

       The resentencing panel defined "exceptional depravity" to include "the killer's
cold, calculated planning of the victim's death, as exemplified by experimentation
with the method of causing the victim's death or by the purposeful selection of a
particular victim on the basis of specific characteristics such as race, gender, creed,
sexual orientation, disability, or age." State v. Moore, 553 N.W.2d at 132 (emphasis

                                         -8-
omitted). This is a definition which has a core meaning that is capable of being
understood and that will not lead to bias or caprice. Furthermore, the definition is not
overbroad. Moore's decision to choose his victims on the basis of a specific
characteristic–their advanced ages–separates his case from murderers who made no
such decision. Thus, the Nebraska Supreme Court's resolution of this issue was
clearly not an unreasonable application of United States Supreme Court precedent
and will not be disturbed on habeas review by this court.

       Moore, to the contrary, argues that the resentencing panel's definition of
"exceptional depravity" was unconstitutionally vague, and he argues that his claim
is governed by Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238. In Furman, the Supreme Court, in
a one paragraph per curiam opinion (followed by nine separate concurring and
dissenting opinions), held that the application of the death penalty by the states of
Texas and Georgia was unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment in violation
of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. Id. at 239-40. Supreme Court opinions
following Furman have clarified that a capital sentencing scheme must not be
"arbitrary and capricious," Gregg, 428 U.S. at 189 (Stewart, J., concurring), nor leave
the sentencer with "standardless and unchanneled" discretion, Godfrey v. Georgia,
446 U.S. 420, 429 (1980) (Stewart, J., plurality). See Maynard v. Cartwright, 486
U.S. 356, 362 (1988). At the time of Furman, in 1972, the Georgia and Texas
sentencing schemes had no statutory aggravators whatsoever. The statutes merely
provided a capital jury the choice among death, life imprisonment, or five to twenty
years of imprisonment. 408 U.S. at 308 nn.8-9 (Stewart, J., concurring). The various
concurring opinions in Furman came to the general conclusion that imposition of the
death penalty in these (and similarly situated) jurisdictions was random, and akin to
"being struck by lightning," with race being the only discernible factor playing a role
in the selection for the death penalty. Id. at 309-10 (Stewart, J., concurring).

      In response to Furman, the legislatures in death penalty states which had
previously allowed absolute discretion to the sentencer were "compelled . . . to

                                          -9-
specify particular 'aggravating factors' that must be found before the death penalty can
be imposed." Ring, 122 S. Ct. at 2444 (Scalia, J., concurring). Whether "erroneously
coerced" to do so or not, id. at 2445 (Scalia, J., concurring), the fact remains that
death penalty states, including Nebraska,4 did specify these aggravating factors.
Thus, Moore's claim may be a "Furman" claim in the loose sense that he is asserting
that Nebraska's application of its death penalty to him is arbitrary, but the specifics
of his constitutional argument are not controlled by Furman.

       Moore also vigorously argues that Maynard v. Cartwright, 486 U.S. 356,
controls the outcome here. The contention being, apparently, that the "exceptional
depravity" component of section 29-2523(1)(d) is not reasonably susceptible of a
constitutionally sufficient narrowing under any circumstance. This argument
seriously misreads Cartwright. In Cartwright, the Supreme Court found the
"especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel" portion of a statutory aggravator to be
impermissibly vague. 486 U.S. at 362-64. However, the Court also held that this
same aggravating factor could be constitutionally narrowed by requiring a finding of
torture or serious physical abuse, for example, or some other formulation. Id. at 364-
65. The Cartwright aggravator, "especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel," if anything,
paints with a broader brush than Nebraska's "exceptional depravity" component. So,
the validity of the resentencing panel's narrowing construction, achieved through the
requirement of a selection of the victims on the basis of age, is actually supported by
Cartwright. The Cartwright decision contemplated such a narrowing. Id. Thus,
Cartwright, given its best gloss for Moore, does no more for his claim than Tuilaepa,
or even Godfrey and Gregg. Each of these Supreme Court decisions reiterate that the
sentencer cannot have unfettered discretion, but instead must be guided by an
aggravator with a core meaning presented through a definition capable of

      4
       The aggravating factors can be determined at either the guilt phase as part of
the definition of the crime, or at the penalty phase as a separate sentencing factor, or
both. Tuilaepa, 512 U.S. at 972. Nebraska's aggravating factors are determined at
sentencing. See Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 28-303, 29-2523.

                                         -10-
comprehension, and considered via a process not infected with bias or caprice. All
of these conditions were met in the 1995 resentencing. Thus, Moore's first ground
for habeas corpus relief is without merit.

                                         B.

      Moore's second contention is that his due process rights were violated because
he lacked adequate notice of the resentencing panel's "exceptional depravity"
formulation. The Nebraska Supreme Court noted that in the context of notice to a
criminal defendant at or prior to sentencing, the Fourteenth Amendment requires

      (1) that the language of the statute and previous constructions of it in
      existence at the time of the crime provided reasonable notice to a person
      of ordinary intelligence of the scope of criminal behavior reached by the
      statute and (2) that any new construction of the statute which occurs
      after the crime does not increase the scope of behavior considered under
      the particular aggravating circumstance.

553 N.W.2d at 134 (citing Cartwright, 486 U.S. 356; Grayned v. City of Rockford,
408 U.S. 104 (1972); Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U.S. 347 (1964)).

        The Nebraska court found that both prongs of the notice requirement were met,
and it described Moore's knowledge regarding the "exceptional depravity" aggravator
at the time of the 1995 resentencing as follows:

      Prior to Moore's hearing, a person of ordinary intelligence in Moore's
      situation would have been aware of the following information regarding
      the exceptional depravity prong of aggravating circumstance §
      29-2523(1)(d): (1) the language of the statute; (2) our pre-Palmer
      constructions of exceptional depravity; (3) the factors stated in Palmer;
      (4) our statement in State v. Joubert, 224 Neb. 411, 432, 399 N.W.2d
      237, 251 (1986), that exceptional depravity was also demonstrated by

                                        -11-
      the fact that the murders in that case were "coldly planned as part of a
      repetitive program of self-gratification, involving immature victims
      selected on the basis of their availability at a time when the likelihood
      of detection was slight"; (5) the previous holding in State v. Moore, 210
      Neb. 457, 316 N.W.2d 33 (1982), cert. denied 456 U.S. 984, 102 S. Ct.
      2260, 72 L. Ed. 2d 864 (the victims were selected on the basis of certain
      characteristics, including age); and (6) U.S. Supreme Court holdings
      affirming the factors annunciated in State v. Gretzler, 135 Ariz. 42, 659
      P.2d 1 (1983), cert. denied 461 U.S. 971, 103 S. Ct. 2444, 77 L. Ed. 2d
      1327, and followed in Palmer, which were held to be constitutional;
      Walton v. Arizona, 497 U.S. 639, 110 S. Ct. 3047, 111 L. Ed. 2d 511
      (1990); Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S. 764, 110 S. Ct. 3092, 111 L. Ed. 2d
      606 (1990); Arave v. Creech, 507 U.S. 463, 113 S. Ct. 1534, 123 L. Ed.
      2d 188 (1993).

553 N.W.2d at 134-35.

      The Nebraska Supreme Court found that, as a consequence of the above-
described knowledge, Moore was not deprived of notice in violation of the Due
Process Clause. Id. at 135. The Nebraska Supreme Court's adjudication of this issue
was clearly not an unreasonable application of federal law as established by the
Supreme Court. The court correctly identified the Supreme Court's rule regarding
notice of a statute's subsequent construction as it may affect sentencing and it
reasonably applied this precedent to the factual history in Moore's case.

      As the Nebraska Supreme Court implicitly observed, Moore's due process
notice claim could potentially involve two different time frames. First, Moore must
have had adequate notice that his criminal conduct in 1979 would subject him to the
death penalty. The second inquiry involves the notice Moore had regarding the
resentencing panel's narrowing formulation of the "exceptional depravity" factor. In
both instances, Moore had fair warning that his conduct would result in the death
sentence that he received.

                                        -12-
       While the 1979 time frame is not an issue in this appeal, when Moore
committed these murders, the "cold, calculated" formulation of "exceptional
depravity" had been in use for two years. Nebraska first used the "cold, calculated"
formulation in two cases issued on the same day in 1977, State v. Rust, 250 N.W.2d
867 (Neb. 1977), and State v. Holtan, 250 N.W.2d 876 (Neb. 1977). In Holtan, the
court stated that because the defendant killed and attempted to kill unresisting victims
of robbery, the "act was totally and senselessly bereft of any regard for human life."
250 N.W.2d at 880. Although the court did not use the terms "cold" and "calculated"
in Holtan, in Rust the court stated, "[t]oday in Holtan, we have also said that
[exceptional depravity] exists where the murder is so coldly calculated as to indicate
a state of mind totally and senselessly bereft of regard for human life." 250 N.W.2d
at 874 (affirming death sentence where defendant shot several times and killed
civilian bystander who had come to aid of wounded police officers during "shoot
out").

       The 1993-1995 resentencing time frame is at issue. Moore briefly contended
at the resentencing hearing in October of 1994 and now contends in briefing in this
appeal that Bouie, 378 U.S. 347; Douglas v. Buder, 412 U.S. 430 (1973), and,
apparently, the Nebraska Supreme Court's recognition "that any new construction of
the statute which occurs after the crime [must] not increase the scope of behavior
considered under a particular aggravating circumstance," State v. Moore, 553 N.W.2d
at 134, entitled him to know beforehand the precise definition of "exceptional
depravity" that would ultimately be applied to him by the resentencing panel. Moore
describes this claim as a due process right analogous to the protections advanced by
the Ex Post Facto Clause of the Constitution. We disagree with this characterization
for reasons more completely discussed later, but, we find that he did, in any event,
have more than adequate notice.

      We digress briefly, however, to note that the holdings in Bouie and Douglas
and the contents of the referenced Nebraska Supreme Court ruling are factually

                                         -13-
inapposite in the circumstances of this case. The resentencing panel's "new
construction" of the statute was designed to and actually did narrow and diminish,
rather than "increase" the scope of actionable behavior considered by the sentencers.
Moore offers no Supreme Court precedent involving either due process or ex post
facto jurisprudence that supports his contention under the facts of this case.

       As a peripheral matter, Moore also claims that any panel formulation could
never serve as adequate notice without it having been previously approved by the
Nebraska Supreme Court. He, of course, offers no supporting precedent or policy
justification for this notion, and we believe there is none. At the very least, the
Nebraska Supreme Court's ruling to the contrary is not an unreasonable application
of established Supreme Court law. Further, we earlier disposed of this contention
when we validated the Nebraska Supreme Court's ruling that "[t]he resentencing
panel was within its authority" to narrow and apply the aggravating factor as it did.
Ante at 7-8.

       We now return more directly to Moore's notice argument. The district court
carefully outlined the prior notice Moore received concerning the narrowed
aggravator. The district court noted and discussed the Nebraska Supreme Court's
holding in Joubert, 399 N.W.2d 237, wherein the court found that the murders
manifested "exceptional depravity," in part because the murders "were coldly planned
as part of a repetitive program of self-gratification, involving immature victims
selected on the basis of their availability." Id. at 251-52 (emphasis added). And, on
habeas review, this court held that the narrowed definition of "exceptional depravity"
applied by the Nebraska courts in Joubert was "clearly constitutional." Joubert v.
Hopkins, 75 F.3d at 1244. Cf. Tuilaepa, 512 U.S. at 977 ("there is no suggestion that
the term 'age' is vague").

      Also as noted by the district court, after evidence was presented to the
rehearing panel, a member judge asked: "What about the testimony that [Moore]

                                        -14-
selected older men because he didn't want to kill younger ones?" This inquiry
occurred several months before sentence was actually imposed and the record is
devoid of any request by Moore to offer further evidence5 or to make additional
argument to rebut the thrust of this question. Moore did argue at that time that the
panel could not "on [its] own come up with a definition [of exceptional depravity]."
Moore v. Kinney, No. 4:99CV 3263, Sentencing Transcript at 275 (Neb. D. Ct. Oct.
14, 1994). However, as earlier noted, the panel had the authority to do so and did do
so, with full affirmance by the Nebraska Supreme Court and, now, this court.
Accordingly, Moore had ample notice in 1994 and 1995 that the state planned to
pursue a narrowed definition of "exceptional depravity" which would include the
notion that Moore selected his victims on the basis of their ages. Indeed, this is the
formulation that the state had advanced in the prior fifteen years of litigation, and it
was unreasonable for Moore not to assume that the state would persist with this
theory of the case. The district court's citations to the examples in the record showing
the defense's knowledge in this regard bear this out. 119 F. Supp. 2d at 1033-36. In
sum, the Nebraska Supreme Court's adjudication of Moore's due process claim was
not an unreasonable application of federal law as established by the Supreme Court,
and we cannot grant habeas corpus relief on Moore's notice claim.

      We also reject Moore's due process claim for two additional reasons. First,
even if Moore was totally without notice of the resentencing panel's legal
conclusions, Northern Nat. Gas Co. v. O'Malley, 277 F.2d 128, 137 (8th Cir. 1960)
(holding that a determination of the meaning of words in a statute or regulation
presents a legal question), arising from the panel's narrowing construction of the
"exceptional depravity" component of section 29-2523(1)(d), he was accorded more

      5
       During or since the evidentiary hearing and argument before the resentencing
panel in October of 1994, including during briefing and argument to the district court
and this court, Moore has never posited, advanced or suggested the nature or
particulars of any evidence that he could or would adduce that might bear on the
question of law surrounding the narrowing of the aggravator by the panel.

                                         -15-
than adequate due process. He could have asked the resentencing panel for the
opportunity to further argue this question of law, but he apparently did not. He
received, as required by Nebraska law, an automatic direct appeal to the Nebraska
Supreme Court, 553 N.W.2d 120, and the Supreme Court long ago held that
"proceedings in [an] appellate tribunal are to be regarded as a part of the process of
law . . . to be considered in determining any question of alleged deprivation of [a
defendant's] life or liberty contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment." Frank v.
Mangum, 237 U.S. 309, 327 (1915). Beyond this, Moore has been able to assert his
legal challenge at a state trial level postconviction proceeding which was fully
reviewed by the Nebraska Supreme Court, 591 N.W.2d 86, and, of course, by way of
habeas review in the district court and in this court. At each proceeding he has been
able to attack the validity of the resentencing panel's formulation.

      Finally, and perhaps most importantly, even if Moore suffered a constitutional
due process violation, which he clearly did not, we see no reasonable basis for
affording him habeas corpus relief. As outlined in Part II.A. above, we today
determine that the resentencing panel's legal conclusions were well within the
contours established by Supreme Court precedent. It is difficult to discern harm to
Moore, other than the prejudice that may follow from any correct application of the
law. Prior notice of a lawful interpretation of the law is not required by the
Constitution, even in a death penalty case. Lastly, we repeat that even an incorrect
or erroneous application of the law by the Nebraska courts in defining the
"exceptional depravity" aggravator provides Moore no relief. Williams v. Taylor, 529
U.S. at 410 (O'Connor, J., for the Court).

III.   CONCLUSION

       Moore's 1995 resentencing passes constitutional muster. We therefore affirm.

                                        -16-
HEANEY, Circuit Judge, with whom McMILLIAN, MURPHY, and BYE, Circuit
Judges, join, dissenting and with whom MELLOY and SMITH, Circuit Judges, join
in Section II.B.2.

       Today the majority takes an unprecedented step: it permits trial courts to decide
for themselves what criteria would support a death sentence after hearing all the
evidence on the matter, and then conclude if the evidence presented fits within their
newly-established criteria. I am bewildered that a majority of this court could hold
that such a procedure passes constitutional muster. To me, it is a clear due process
violation, for it deprives defendants of meaningful notice of what facts of their case
might result in their execution. Remaining true to both panel decisions in this case,
as well as to relevant Supreme Court precedent on the matter, I continue to believe
that Nebraska has not narrowed its “exceptional depravity” aggravator in a
constitutionally acceptable manner. The aggravator remains just as open-ended as it
was at Moore’s original sentencing. I would reverse the district court, and remand
the matter for resentencing without reliance on the “exceptional depravity”
aggravator. Because the majority’s cursory factual recitation understates the history
of this case and Nebraska’s unsuccessful struggle to bring its death penalty
aggravator into compliance with the Constitution, I begin with a more thorough
examination of the case.

I.    BACKGROUND

      For well over twenty years, the state of Nebraska has been trying to execute
Carey Dean Moore. He was first sentenced to death by a three-judge panel in 1980
after the panel determined that the two murders he committed manifested
“exceptional depravity,” an aggravating factor that, if found, supports imposition of
the death penalty under Nebraska’s statutory scheme. The panel recognized that the
“exceptional depravity” aggravator had been interpreted by the Nebraska Supreme
Court to include murder that “is so coldly calculated as to indicate a state of mind

                                         -17-
totally and senselessly bereft of regard for human life.” State v. Moore, Order of
Sentence at 8 (Dist. Ct. Douglas County June 20, 1980) (citing State v. Holtan, 250
N.W.2d 876, 880 (Neb. 1977)); see also State v. Rust, 250 N.W.2d 867, 874 (Neb.
1977). Based on the evidence that Moore had planned his crimes for a day or two and
sought victims that were older than he, the sentencing panel determined that Moore’s
murders were “so coldly calculated as to indicate a state of mind totally and
senselessly bereft of all regard for human life, thus manifesting exceptional
depravity.” State v. Moore, Order of Sentence at 10 (Dist. Ct. Douglas County June
20, 1980) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Nebraska Supreme Court, in a
divided opinion, affirmed the convictions and sentences. See State v. Moore, 316
N.W.2d 33 (Neb. 1982).

       In 1988, Moore sought federal habeas relief in district court. The district court6
assigned the matter to Magistrate David L. Piester for a Report and Recommendation.
He recommended that the writ be granted on the basis that Nebraska’s “exceptional
depravity” aggravator was unconstitutionally vague both facially and as narrowed by
the Nebraska Supreme Court. Judge Urbom, a highly respected district court judge
who has served since 1970, accepted the magistrate’s analysis and conclusions,
recognizing that while the Nebraska Supreme Court purported to constitutionally
narrow the “exceptional depravity” aggravator in Holton and Rust, the new
interpretation “offer[ed] little if anything, objective in nature” to guide the sentencer.
Moore v. Clark, No. CV84-L-754, slip op. at 4 (D. Neb. Sept. 20, 1988). The district
court then examined the Nebraska Supreme Court’s 1986 decision in State v. Palmer,
399 N.W.2d 706 (1986), which suggested a new, five-prong interpretation of the
“exceptional depravity” aggravator.7 Notably missing from this new interpretation

      6
      The Honorable Warren K. Urbom, United States District Court for the District
of Nebraska.
      7
      In Palmer, the Nebraska Supreme Court held “that ‘exceptional depravity’ in
a murder exists when it is shown, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the following

                                          -18-
was any mention of the “coldly calculated” language from the Rust decision, which
was relied upon by the sentencing panel in its imposition of the death penalty.
Observant that Palmer was a divergence from pre-1986 interpretations, the court
summarized the confused history of the Nebraska Supreme Court’s interpretation of
the aggravator in the following manner:

      If the 1986 [Palmer] definition intended to abandon its pre-1986 efforts
      at guidance, it did not say so distinctly. If it did not so intend, a
      sentencer now has a series of suggestions, some objective and some not,
      from which to choose, without assurance that the series is complete.

Moore v. Clark, No CV84-L-754, slip op. at 4 (D. Neb. Sept 20, 1988). The court
concluded that “as earnest as the Supreme Court of Nebraska has been in its difficult
task to bring Nebraska’s statutory language of this aggravating factor into
constitutional objectivity, a sentencer is left with only scattered and uncertain
fragments for a definition.” Id. at 5. Recognizing that a death penalty sentencing
system that fails to adequately channel the sentencer’s discretion is constitutionally
infirm, the court was left with no alternative but to grant the writ.

       The state timely appealed. In a 1990 decision, this court affirmed, concluding
that the Nebraska Supreme Court had failed to provide sufficient guidance to the
sentencing panel “to cure the constitutional deficiencies of this vaguely worded
statute.” Moore v. Clark, 904 F.2d 1226, 1230 (8th Cir. 1990) (Moore I). Judge John
R. Gibson undertook a careful examination of the words and phrases at issue, and
agreed with the district court that the phrase “so coldly calculated as to indicate a
state of mind totally and senselessly bereft of regard for human life” had nominal

circumstances, either separately or collectively, exist in reference to a first degree
murder: (1) apparent relishing of the murder by the killer; (2) infliction of gratuitous
violence on the victim; (3) needless mutilation of the victim; (4) senselessness of the
crime; or (5) helplessness of the victim.” 399 N.W.2d at 731-32.

                                         -19-
value in channeling the sentencer’s discretion. Id. As such, the “exceptional
depravity” aggravator remained unconstitutionally vague, despite the Nebraska
Supreme Court’s attempt to narrow it through the “coldly calculated” language. Id.
Additionally, the panel determined that Palmer could not be accurately characterized
as clarifying existing state law. Id. at 1231. Rather, “[t]o us, the greater significance
of Palmer is that it demonstrates the Nebraska Supreme Court’s exhaustive efforts to
redefine ‘exceptional depravity’; this simply underscores our conclusion that the
phrase is unconstitutionally vague.” Id. at 1232. The court continued:

      [o]ur examination of the state court precedent available to guide
      sentencing bodies in Nebraska which are required to determine whether
      the murder “manifested exceptional depravity” leads us to conclude, as
      did the district court, that, as earnestly as the Nebraska Supreme Court
      has attempted to provide objective criteria, the unconstitutional
      vagueness of the critical language in this statute remains. A sentencing
      body may glean only subjective and unilluminating fragments from
      existing case law.

Id. (footnotes omitted). The panel further recognized, consistent with Maynard v.
Cartwright, 486 US. 356 (1988), that the Nebraska Supreme Court’s affirmance of
Moore’s death sentence was improper, for it merely looked at all of the facts and
circumstances of Moore’s case and decided what sentence should follow. Moore I,
904 F.2d at 1233. Harkening back to the Tenth Circuit’s en banc decision in
Cartwright, the panel agreed that “[t]he discretion of a sentencer who can rely upon
all of the circumstances of a murder is as complete and as unbridled as the discretion
afforded to the jury in Furman.” Id. (quoting Maynard v. Cartwright, 822 F.2d 1477,
1491 (10th Cir. 1987) (en banc), aff’d, 486 U.S. 356 (1988)).

      As the majority correctly notes, following the 1990 panel decision of this court,
the Supreme Court handed down two cases that dealt with the narrowing of an
unconstitutionally vague death penalty aggravating factor. See Walton v. Arizona,
497 U.S. 639 (1990) (upholding Arizona’s narrowed construction of its facially vague

                                          -20-
death penalty aggravating factor); Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S. 764 (1990) (same).8 The
state promptly petitioned for rehearing with suggestions for rehearing en banc,
arguing that, as the majority now posits, the 1990 panel “simply failed to predict the
direction the United States Supreme Court’s death penalty jurisprudence would take”
in these two cases. Ante, at 3. In light of Walton and Jeffers, the panel accepted
additional briefing on the effect, if any, that these two decisions would have on
Moore’s case. Giving full credence to the recent decisions of the Supreme Court, the
panel found its decision to be fully consistent with both Walton and Jeffers, and
denied the petition for rehearing. See Moore v. Clarke, 951 F.2d 895 (8th Cir. 1991).
The United States Supreme Court denied the state’s petition for certiorari. Clark v.
Moore, 504 U.S. 930 (1992). Accordingly, our 1990 opinion stood, and the matter
was remanded to the Nebraska courts.

       Upon remand to the Nebraska Supreme Court for resentencing, the state
requested that the court redefine the “exceptional depravity” aggravator in a way that
would satisfy the federal court’s objections to its constitutionality, apply the newly
constructed definition to the facts of Moore’s case, reweigh the statutory aggravating
and mitigating factors, and resentence Moore. See State v. Moore, 502 N.W.2d 227,
228 (Neb. 1993). Despite our suggestion that the Nebraska Supreme Court could
salvage the “exceptional depravity” aggravator “by construing it to provide the
sentencing body with objective criteria for applying the statute,” Moore I, 904 F.2d
at 1229 (citing Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U.S. 420, 423 (1980)), the Nebraska Supreme
Court expressly refused to redefine the aggravator, and instead remanded the case to
the district court for resentencing “in the interest of judicial economy,” Moore, 502

      8
        Walton was overruled recently by the Supreme Court in Ring v. Arizona, 122
S. Ct. 2428 (2002). Ring effectively outlaws Nebraska’s capital sentencing system
by requiring that death penalty determinations be made by a jury, rather than a judge
or panel of judges. Id. at 2443. Because no Ring issue was certified for appellate
review, the question of whether or not it has applicability to Moore’s case or similar
cases remains open.

                                        -21-
N.W.2d at 228, 230. In so doing, the state supreme court gave no advance guidance
to the resentencing panel as to what interpretation of the constitutionally defunct
aggravator might salvage it.

        The resentencing panel, “left with an ineffective and constitutionally infirm
interpretation of ‘exceptional depravity’ as it proceed[ed] to determine the sentences
to be imposed on Carey Dean Moore,” fashioned its own construction of the
aggravator. State v. Moore, Order of Sentence at 12 (Dist. Ct. Douglas Co. Apr. 21,
1995). With no “effective appellate definition” of the aggravator, the resentencing
panel made up a new one that considered the presence of four factors: (1) the killer’s
infliction of violence on the victim after the victim had died or lost consciousness;
(2) the killer’s mutilation or dismemberment of the victim’s body after death; (3) the
apparent relishing of the murder by the killer; and (4) “the killer’s cold, calculated
planning of the victim’s death as exemplified . . . by the purposeful selection of a
particular victim on the basis of specific characteristics such as race, gender, creed,
sexual orientation, disability, or age.” Id. at 12-14. The panel then determined that
this newly constructed aggravator applied to Moore because he picked older victims,
and resentenced Moore to death.

       Moore appealed and the Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed. The court
suggested that the resentencing panel’s new construction was unnecessary, stating for
the first time its belief that the panel “could have applied the Palmer factors.” State
v. Moore, 553 N.W.2d 120, 131 (Neb. 1996). In the same opinion, the court
recognized the particular newly-constructed aggravator found present in Moore’s case
“was not based on Palmer, but on the ‘coldly calculated’ language that the Eighth
Circuit had disapproved.” Id. at 132 (emphasis added). Nonetheless, the court
affirmed the death sentence because the panel had, in its view, further narrowed this
construction by limiting it to situations where the defendant picked the victim based
on some specific characteristic, such as age. Id.

                                         -22-
       Once again, Moore sought habeas relief in federal district court.9 Again, the
matter was assigned to Magistrate Piester for a Report and Recommendation. He
recommended that the petition for writ of habeas corpus be granted for two reasons:
1) defining exceptional depravity to include the purposeful selection of the victim on
the basis of some open-ended list of specific characteristics failed to properly channel
the sentencer’s discretion, contrary to Supreme Court precedent; and 2) the panel’s
post hoc application of its newly-constructed aggravator violated Moore’s due
process rights by depriving him of notice and an opportunity to respond. See Moore
v. Kinney, No. 4:99CV3263, slip op. at 21-25 (D. Neb. Sept. 18, 2000) (Order, Report
and Recommendation). “Nothing has changed in the present litigation,” Magistrate
Piester explained:

      The Nebraska Supreme Court has neither abandoned nor expressed a
      desire to abandon pre-Palmer constructions that have been held to be
      unconstitutionally invalid. . . . This reluctance of the state’s supreme
      court to abandon prior constructions has left the sentencer . . . with a
      series of suggestions, some objective and some not, from which to
      choose, without assurance that the series is complete. . . . Therefore, I
      conclude the resentencing panel committed constitutional error in
      considering this aggravator to resentence the petitioner.

Id. at 17-18 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). With regard to the
specific aggravator applied to Moore, the magistrate found it failed to channel the
sentencer’s discretion:

      Another troubling aspect of the resentencing panel’s sub-prong is that
      it is, itself, open ended. The sub-prong is worded as “purposeful
      selection of the victim on the basis of specific characteristics such as
      race, gender, creed, sexual orientation, disability, or age.” The use of
      “characteristics” implies something about the victim which makes that

      9
      The Honorable Richard G. Kopf, United States District Court for the District
of Nebraska.

                                         -23-
       person one of a class of persons, seemingly identifiable by an
       unalterable condition, but that is not altogether clear. What other
       “characteristics” might be included? A killer may have a “purpose” of
       ridding the world of a class of persons he or she finds unworthy of life,
       but who do not fit these classifications. The use of the “such as”
       language opens this factor to a myriad of seemingly limitless
       applications.

Id. at 21.

       The magistrate also determined that the resentencing panel fashioned its new
construction to fit the facts of Moore’s case: “The panel reviewed the facts of
petitioner’s case . . . and then, for all practical purposes, concluded that those facts
made out the ‘exceptional depravity’ aggravator by creating the ‘selection of the
victim’ aggravator.” Id. at 22. Recognizing that this type of death sentencing by fiat
was specifically outlawed by the Supreme Court in Maynard v. Cartwright, 486 U.S.
356 (1988), the magistrate recommended that the writ be granted.

      The district court rejected the magistrate’s recommendations. Moore v.
Kinney, 119 F. Supp. 2d 1022, 1024 (D. Neb. 2000). The court first noted that
Moore’s resentencing panel did not use the Palmer construction of “exceptional
depravity,” but rather made up its own definition. Id. at 1029-30. Next, the court
approved of this newly constructed definition, opining that the new definition’s
requirement that a victim be picked based on a specific characteristic would “exclude
most defendants convicted of capital murder.” Id. at 1031. The court gave no
credence to the magistrate’s point that any precision in the new definition’s specific
characteristic language was obviated by the inclusion of the phrase “such as,” which
modifies the definition to include any characteristic of the victim, resulting in no
more narrow a definition than one we have previously found unconstitutionally
vague. Id. at 1032-33.

                                         -24-
        The district court went on to hold that the resentencing panel had derived its
definition from prior cases in which exceptional depravity existed as evidenced by the
killer’s cold, calculating planning of the victim’s death, including selecting the victim
on the basis some specific characteristic, foreclosing Moore’s due process argument.
Id. at 1033.

       Moore again appealed to this court. In a divided panel opinion, our court
decided that Nebraska had done nothing to narrow the aggravator that we had
previously found unconstitutional. Thus, consistent with our 1990 and 1991 panel
opinions, we again found Nebraska’s “exceptional depravity” aggravator to be
unconstitutional on its face and as interpreted by the Nebraska Supreme Court.
Moore v. Kinney, 278 F.3d 774, 782 (8th Cir. 2002). We further determined that
Nebraska had acted in contravention of the Constitution by forcing the resentencing
panel to construct a new statute and apply it to Moore in the first instance. Id. Our
authority for this principle derived from Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153 (1976)
(overturned on other grounds), and Moore I, which itself rested on Godfrey v.
Georgia, 446 U.S. 420 (1980), for the same proposition. Because Moore’s 1995
death sentence rested on an unconstitutional statute – just as his 1980 death sentence
did – we remanded the matter for resentencing, with directions that Moore could not
be sentenced to death on the basis of the “exceptional depravity” aggravator.

II.   DISCUSSION

A.    THE “EXCEPTIONAL DEPRAVITY” DEATH PENALTY
      AGGRAVATOR THAT WAS APPLIED TO MOORE AT HIS 1995
      SENTENCING WAS UNCONSTITUTIONALLY VAGUE.

      Although the majority calls into question the propriety of the 1990 panel
decision, it acknowledges that our vagueness analysis concerns Moore’s 1995
resentencing proceeding. I agree, and will focus my discussion accordingly.
Throughout the entirety of this case, one thing has remained static: neither the

                                          -25-
Nebraska Legislature nor the Nebraska Supreme Court has fashioned a death penalty
sentencing scheme that provides the sentencing body with a cogent, “meaningful
basis for distinguishing the few cases in which [the death penalty] is imposed from
the many cases in which it is not.” Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 188 (1976)
(opinion of Stewart, Powell, and Stevens, JJ.) (quoting Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S.
238, 313 (1972) (White, J., concurring)). As it stands, Nebraska’s checkerboard
approach to narrowing an unconstitutional aggravator “fails adequately to inform [the
sentencing body] what they must find to impose the death penalty and as a result
leaves them and appellate courts with the kind of open-ended discretion which was
held invalid in Furman.” Maynard v. Cartwright, 486 U.S. 356, 361-62 (1988) (full
citation omitted).

         Initially, we consider whether Nebraska’s “exceptional depravity” aggravator
is constitutional on its face. It provides for imposition of the death penalty where,
inter alia, “[t]he murder . . . manifested exceptional depravity by ordinary standards
of morality and intelligence.” Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-2523(1)(d). In Walton v. Arizona,
497 U.S. 639 (1990), the Supreme Court recognized that a similar aggravator was
clearly unconstitutional on its face. Walton, 497 U.S. at 654 (“In this case there is no
serious argument that Arizona’s ‘especially heinous, cruel or depraved’ aggravating
factor is not facially vague.” (emphasis added)). Finding no significant difference
between the unconstitutionally vague Arizona statute and the one applied to Moore,
it is clear that Nebraska’s “exceptional depravity” aggravator is also unconstitutional
on its face.

      Nonetheless, a state supreme court may salvage a facially vague statute through
a narrowed interpretation. See Walton, 497 U.S. at 654 (upholding facially
unconstitutional statute where Arizona Supreme Court had narrowed its
construction).    Moore’s first sentencing panel attempted to narrow the
unconstitutional aggravator by construing “exceptional depravity” to mean a murder
“so coldly calculated as to indicate a state of mind totally and senselessly bereft of

                                         -26-
regard for human life.” State v. Moore, Order of Sentence at 9 (Dist. Ct. Douglas
County June 20, 1980), aff’d, State v. Moore, 316 N.W.2d 33 (1982). This
construction failed in part because every premeditated murder, by its very nature, is
“calculated,” otherwise the verdict would not stand. The word “cold,” as used in this
phrase, is equally unilluminating. Our first panel correctly recognized that the
sentencing court’s construction of the aggravator “offers little, if any, objective
guidance,” Moore I, 904 F.2d at 1230, and is consequently not in accord with the
Supreme Court’s requirement that the aggravator “channel the sentencer’s discretion
by clear and objective standards that provide specific and detailed guidance,”
Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U.S. 420, 428 (1980) (opinion of Stewart, Blackmun,
Powell, and Stevens, JJ.) (footnotes and internal quotation marks omitted).10

       The state attempted to bring its vague aggravator into constitutional
compliance again following Moore’s 1995 resentencing hearing. The resentencing
panel crafted its own construction of the “exceptional depravity” aggravator, and
found that Moore deserved the death penalty because the murders exhibited “the
killer’s cold, calculated planning.” State v. Moore, Order of Sentence at 14 (Dist. Ct.
Douglas Co. Apr. 21, 1995). Apparently cognizant that this construction was nearly
identical to the one held unconstitutional by our court in 1990, the resentencing panel
attempted to modify the aggravator by suggesting that “the purposeful selection of a
particular victim on the basis of specific characteristics such as race, gender, creed,
sexual orientation, disability, or age” was proof of “cold, calculating planning.” Id.
(emphasis added).

      10
         In Arave v. Creech, 507 U.S. 463, 471-76 (1993), the Supreme Court upheld
an aggravator that had been interpreted to mean the murderer was a “cold-blooded,
pitiless slayer.” As the Supreme Court noted, “the phrase ‘cold-blooded, pitiless
slayer refers to a killer without feeling or sympathy.” Id. at 472. On the other hand,
the construction in Moore’s case is concerned with the type of planning undertaken
by the killer. As such, I find the aggravator approved in Creech to be inapposite to
the one at issue in Moore’s case.

                                         -27-
       Rather than clarifying the aggravator, the panel complicated matters by
inserting an open-ended list of qualifiers, including the basis on which Moore
selected his victims. However, the phrase “such as” renders the list of traits following
it at most advisory, and most likely useless. The effect is that the list of specific
characteristics remains open-ended, leaving it to the sentencing body to determine
what traits may be included in the list. This does not comport with the Supreme
Court’s mandate that the aggravator must provide clear, objective, and detailed
standards that guide the sentencing body’s discretion. Godfrey, 446 U.S. at 428; see
also Cartwright, 486 U.S. at 362 (“Since Furman, our cases have insisted that the
channeling and limiting of the sentencer’s discretion in imposing the death penalty
is a fundamental constitutional requirement for sufficiently minimizing the risk of
wholly arbitrary and capricious action.”).

       Put another way, “[i]f the sentencer fairly could conclude that an aggravating
circumstance applies to every defendant eligible for the death penalty, the
circumstance is constitutionally infirm.” Arave v. Creech, 507 U.S. 463, 474 (1993).
Here, it is hard to imagine a murder that would not be committed on the basis of some
specific characteristic of the victim. While race, gender, creed, sexual orientation,
disability, and age are some characteristics, a victim may also be chosen because of
where he or she worked, or because of his or her tone of voice, or because of
appearance, or because of socioeconomic status. In short, the list is endless; the
sentencer’s discretion has not been narrowed by the new construction.

      Moreover, to the extent that Nebraska intends to use this construction of
“exceptional depravity” in conjunction with the Palmer construction, the aggravator’s
shortcomings become more pronounced. Palmer held that “exceptional depravity”
was present where the killer relished in the murder, inflicted gratuitous violence, or
mutilated the victim; where the killing was senseless; or where the victim was
helpless. State v. Palmer, 399 N.W.2d 706, 731-32 (Neb. 1986). Adding the “cold,
calculated planning” construction, it is hard to imagine any defendant, once convicted

                                         -28-
of first-degree murder, who would not fit one of these many circumstances. If
permitted to stand, Nebraska has, through its broadened constructions, created a
catch-all death penalty aggravator. Our court found the “exceptional depravity”
aggravator unconstitutional in 1990, and it remains so today.

B.    THE DEATH PENALTY SENTENCING PROCEDURES USED BY
      NEBRASKA VIOLATED MOORE’S CONSTITUTIONAL DUE
      PROCESS RIGHTS.

       While I remain convinced that the Nebraska “exceptional depravity” aggravator
is unconstitutionally vague, Moore’s sentence must be set aside for an additional
reason: Nebraska’s procedures for sentencing Moore to death violated his due process
rights. I agree with the majority that Moore’s due process challenge to Nebraska’s
reconstruction of the “exceptional depravity” aggravator presents two distinct issues:
1) whether Moore could have known in 1979 that selecting victims based in part on
their age would be accorded so much weight at his sentencing; and 2) whether the
resentencing panel’s post hoc construction of the aggravator left him without
adequate notice of what criteria the panel would rely upon in its sentencing
determination. I find Moore’s argument compelling on both of these matters, and
would hold that the procedure Nebraska used in Moore’s case denied him of the
process due under the United States Constitution.

                                          1.

       Throughout the original proceedings, at no time – not when Moore committed
the crimes, confessed, waived his right to a jury trial, was convicted, or was sentenced
– did he have reason to know that indicating that he picked the victims because they
were older than he would become an integral part of the “exceptional depravity”
calculus. At the time of these proceedings, “exceptional depravity” had been defined
to mean that either: 1) the victims were helpless or unresisting, State v. Holtan, 250

                                         -29-
N.W.2d 876 (Neb. 1977); 2) the act itself was “so coldly calculated as to indicate a
state of mind totally and senselessly bereft of regard for human life,” State v. Rust,
250 N.W.2d 867, 874 (Neb. 1977); or 3) the depravity is so apparent “as to obviously
offend all standards of morality and intelligence,” State v. Simants, 250 N.W.2d 881,
891 (Neb. 1977). While picking a victim based on age is certainly a more narrow
construction than any of these definitions, the available constructions of “exceptional
depravity” could not have alerted Moore that doing so automatically implicated a
death sentence.

       Moore’s case is analogous to the circumstance presented to the Ninth Circuit
in Coleman v. McCormick, 874 F.2d 1280 (9th Cir. 1989) (en banc), cert. denied, 493
U.S. 944 (1989). In Coleman, the mandatory death penalty statute in effect when the
defendant was tried and convicted was held to be unconstitutional, and was replaced
by a more narrow statute that weighed aggravating and mitigating circumstances. 874
F.2d at 1285. The Ninth Circuit, sitting en banc, recognized that “the due process
clause protects individuals’ rights to fundamentally fair procedures before they are
deprived of their liberty rights.” Id. at 1286. Acknowledging its obligation to closely
scrutinize the procedures used in capital sentencing cases, the court concluded that
retroactive application of the narrowed death penalty statute deprived the defendant
of due process because he “had no reason to suspect that his decisions at trial would
come back to haunt him at a sentencing hearing.” Id. at 1288. Similarly, the
resentencing panel’s new construction in Moore’s case was not a reasonably
foreseeable evolution of the “exceptional depravity” aggravator.11

      11
         In its 1980 sentencing order, the panel noted that Moore selected his victims
in part due to their age. This fact was reiterated by the Nebraska Supreme Court in
its 1982 decision. However, as noted above, these cases were held unconstitutional
by the federal district court in 1988 and our court in 1990, leaving unanswered the
question of whether age would be considered by the sentencing court.

                                         -30-
                                          2.

       Moore’s due process rights were further violated by the resentencing panel’s
post hoc application of its newly-defined “exceptional depravity” aggravator. In its
1990 panel opinion, our court indicated that the Nebraska Supreme Court could
“salvage a facially-vague statute by construing it to provide the sentencing body with
objective criteria for applying the statute.” Moore I, 904 F.2d at 1229. This, of
course, would provide the sentencing body with the “specific and detailed guidance”
necessary to pass constitutional muster. Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U.S. 420, 428
(1980); accord Walton v. Arizona, 497 U.S. 639, 653-54 (1990) (approving
application of a vague aggravator when it had first been narrowed by state supreme
court). In no cases cited by the majority or uncovered in my research, however, has
the Supreme Court approved of a state supreme court delegating the task of narrowing
a death penalty aggravator to a district court.

       On remand following this court’s 1990 and 1991 decisions, the Nebraska
Supreme Court could have narrowed the aggravator, or provided some direction to
the resentencing panel to guide its decision. This is particularly true in light of
Nebraska’s adherence to the construction it put forth in State v. Palmer, 399 N.W.2d
706, 731-32 (Neb. 1986), nearly ten years before Moore’s resentencing hearing.
Instead, the Nebraska Supreme Court remanded to the resentencing panel, leaving the
panel with what it believed was “an ineffective and constitutionally infirm
interpretation of ‘exceptional depravity,’” and “no effective appellate definition” to
guide the panel’s analysis. State v. Moore, Order of Sentence at 12 (Dist. Ct. Douglas
Co. Apr. 21, 1995). Accordingly, the panel was forced to reconstruct the
“exceptional depravity” aggravator and then apply it to Moore in the first instance.

       Logic and fairness would dictate that the resentencing panel should have
crafted its new construction of the aggravator, informed the parties as to what the
construction was, held an evidentiary hearing, and then heard argument from the

                                        -31-
parties as to whether Moore’s circumstance fit within the panel’s construction of the
aggravator. Undertaking the process in this way would have given both Moore and
the state advance notice of the criteria it was using, such that the parties could provide
informed argument on whether the facts of Moore’s case should result in a sentence
of death.12

       Instead, the resentencing panel took precisely the opposite approach: rather
than alerting Moore as to what criteria would guide its decision at the outset of the
proceedings, the panel first held an evidentiary hearing and then heard oral argument
from both parties. The first time the panel indicated to Moore that it was going to
narrow the “exceptional depravity” aggravator to include selection of victims based
on age, was in its final pronouncement of Moore’s sentence. Put another way, it was
not until the adversarial process was complete that the panel decided what criteria it
would rely upon for determining the sentence. This left Moore in the unenviable
position of trying to argue for his life without any idea of what would guide the
panel’s decision. A post hoc sentencing scheme such as this denies defendants due
process in the most basic sense, for they have no prior notice of the law to be used
against them. Accord Osborne v. Ohio, 495 U.S. 103, 115 (1990) (holding new
construction of statute may be applied to conduct occurring prior to construction only
where defendant has fair warning of new application); Marks v. U.S., 430 U.S. 188,
191 (1977) (same).

      The majority suggests that Moore must have known that the panel would define
the “exceptional depravity” aggravator to include selection of the victims based on

      12
        There is no argument that the process I have outlined would be less efficient
than the process actually employed; Moore’s resentencing began on April 25, 1994,
and was not concluded until April 21, 1995–almost a full year later. In the interim,
the resentencing panel held a preliminary hearing on April 25, 1994, took evidence
on June 29-30, 1994, heard oral argument on October 14, 1994, and concluded by
reading its decision in open court on April 21, 1995.

                                          -32-
age, citing State v. Joubert, 399 N.W.2d 237 (Neb. 1986). I disagree. First, I note
that at the time of Moore’s resentencing hearing, the Nebraska Supreme Court’s
Joubert decision had been overturned by the federal district court’s grant of habeas
corpus relief. See Joubert v. Hopkins, 8:CV91-00350, slip op. (D. Neb. Oct. 11,
1994). It cannot be said that Moore should have anticipated that Joubert would, over
a year later, ultimately be reversed by our court. At the time he was sentenced, the
Nebraska Supreme Court’s Joubert decision was bad law, and Moore had no reason
to believe otherwise.

       Nonetheless, even if Joubert is considered, it does not stand for the broad
proposition that exceptional depravity is manifested by selecting victims due to their
age. The defendant in Joubert kidnaped and killed two young boys within a four-
month period. He was sentenced to death in part because the panel found the murders
to exhibit exceptional depravity. In affirming the sentence, the Nebraska Supreme
Court noted that Joubert “planned these abductions and murders far in advance,” that
“the murders were to be repetitive,” and “the victims selected by the defendant would,
by his fantasized standards, be somewhat defenseless and consist of prepubescent
boys or women fitting the pictorial description gleaned from detective magazine
covers.” State v. Joubert, 399 N.W.2d 237, 250 (Neb. 1986). The court concluded
that “the murders were coldly planned as part of a repetitive program of self-
gratification, involving immature victims selected on the basis of their availability
at a time when the likelihood of detection was slight.” Id. at 251 (emphasis added).
Given these statements, the majority misreads Joubert in concluding that age was
used as an aggravator. It is clear that the court in Joubert was concerned with the
victims’ age and immaturity only as it concerned other factors the court considered
relevant, such as the their availability, helplessness as victims, and relation to the
gratification Joubert took in the killings. That the victims were young was a fact of
the Joubert case, but that does not transform age into an aggravating factor absent a
more specific pronouncement to that effect.

                                        -33-
       The majority also claims that Moore had sufficient notice that the “exceptional
depravity” aggravator would be constructed to include selecting victims on the basis
of age because of a single question from a member of the resentencing panel during
oral argument. At the October 14, 1994 resentencing hearing, Judge Rist asked
Moore’s counsel, “What about the testimony that he selected older men because he
didn’t want to kill younger ones?” State v. Moore, Sent. Tr. at 263 (Dist. Ct. Douglas
County Oct. 14, 1994), available at Moore v. Kinney, No. 4:99CV3263 (D. Neb.
2000). Notably missing from the majority’s opinion, however, is the context for this
statement: Moore’s attorney began his argument by taking each aggravator proposed
by the prosecutor in turn; at the time of this question, counsel was in the midst of
analyzing the applicability of aggravator (1)(b), which deals with murders committed
in an effort to conceal commission of the crime or the identity of the perpetrator. See
Neb. Rev. Stat. 29-2523(1)(b). Judge Rist’s question was in response to argument on
this point, and was not raised again in any form during discussion on the “exceptional
depravity” aggravator. Thus, any assertion that the age question related to the
“exceptional depravity” aggravator is simply not supported by the record. The
majority’s insinuation that a single question about age during argument on an
unrelated aggravator should have alerted Moore that the panel would interpret
“exceptional depravity” to mean selecting victims based on their age is simply
untenable.13

      13
        A close read of the sentencing transcript in this matter reveals that Moore was
truly without prior notice that age would become part of the “exceptional depravity”
calculus, even by the prosecutor’s requested interpretation. At the preliminary
hearing, Moore’s counsel asked the court to order the prosecutor to state what
aggravators he was relying upon. The prosecutor responded that he was relying on
the aggravators in the statute. Moore v. Kinney, 4:99CV3263, Sent. Tr. at 40-41
(Dist. Ct. Douglas County Oct. 14, 1994). During the evidentiary hearing, the
prosecutor told the court he was relying on the “exceptional depravity” aggravator as
defined in Palmer and Joubert, id. at 78-79, but the prosecutor failed to provide a
written brief on the matter, id. at 220, and then admitted that he believed the “coldly
calculated” construction of the aggravator had been abandoned, and he was thus

                                         -34-
                                           C.

       In Moore II, we recognized that the well-established concept of stare decisis
prohibited us from reconsidering matters decided by the panel in Moore I. Today,
this court, sitting en banc, gives little credence to the importance of uniformity in the
law and reexamines a decision that has stood for over a decade. While I question
whether this approach exhibits sound jurisprudence, I will take this opportunity to
address a matter not fully explored in Moore II: whether the 1990 panel should have
clarified that the resentencing court could no longer rely on the “exceptional
depravity” aggravator.

       In a state such as Nebraska that makes a death penalty determination by
weighing aggravating and mitigating factors, “[u]se of a vague or imprecise
aggravating factor in the weighing process invalidates the sentence and at the very
least requires . . . reweighing in the state judicial system.” Stringer v. Black, 503 U.S.
222, 237 (1992). A question remains as to whether a sentencing court on remand can
resentence a defendant to death on the basis of an aggravator already found to be
unconstitutional. The answer is clearly no, because of the due process concerns
outlined in Moore II and reiterated above. Moore’s resentencing panel recognized
that it had the option of deciding Moore’s sentence without reference to the
“exceptional depravity” aggravator, for other aggravators were also found to be
present. Accordingly, the panel could have weighed these other aggravators against
the mitigating evidence to determine if a death sentence was appropriate. The panel
was also mindful, however, that the original sentencing panel based its death sentence
on the “exceptional depravity” aggravator “to a significant degree.” State v. Moore,
Order of Sentence at 12 (Dist. Ct. Douglas Co. Apr. 21, 1995). This statement leads
me to believe that the panel recognized that without the “exceptional depravity”

relying only on the Palmer construction, id. at 234-35.

                                          -35-
aggravator, the remaining aggravating circumstances did not support a sentence of
death.

III.   CONCLUSION

       Nebraska has not narrowed its “exceptional depravity” aggravator in a
constitutionally acceptable manner; the aggravator remains just as open-ended as it
was at Moore’s original sentencing. Moreover, the procedures used by the Nebraska
courts violated Moore’s due process rights, leaving him without notice of what
criteria might be used to decide his fate. I would reverse the district court, and
remand the matter for resentencing without reliance on the “exceptional depravity”
aggravator.

MELLOY, Circuit Judge, with whom SMITH, Circuit Judge, joins, dissenting.

      I join in Section II.B.2. of Judge Heaney's dissent. I agree with that portion of
the dissent which finds that Moore's due process rights were violated by the
resentencing panel’s post hoc application of its newly defined aggravator.

       As outlined in footnote 8 of Judge Heaney's dissent, the parties were relying
upon the Nebraska Supreme Court's construction of the "exceptional depravity"
aggravator as set out in State v. Palmer, 399 N.W.2d 706 (Neb. 1986). Evidence was
presented and legal arguments made based upon each side’s analysis of the Palmer
decision. I do not believe that Palmer can be read to give fair notice to either party
that the age of the victim would be considered a factor in determining exceptional
depravity. Likewise, for the reasons outlined in Judge Heaney's dissent, I do not
believe that the Nebraska Supreme Court's decision in State v. Joubert, 399 N.W.2d
237 (Neb. 1986), provided the necessary due process notice.

                                         -36-
       In both Walton v. Arizona, 497 U.S. 639 (1990), and Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S.
764 (1990), the Supreme Court held that the overbroad exceptional depravity
aggravator can only be salvaged if "a State has adopted a constitutionally narrow
construction of a facially vague aggravating circumstance, and if the State has applied
that construction to the facts of the particular case . . . ." Lewis, 497 U.S. at 779.
Thus, Walton and Lewis clearly set forth a two-step process. First, the overly broad
aggravator has to be construed in a constitutional fashion, and only then can that
construction be applied to the facts of the particular case. In this case, the aggravator
was construed and narrowed after a full presentation of the evidence and without
notice to the defendant as to the standards to be applied in making the decision on
imposition of the death penalty.

        As the majority indicates, the Nebraska Supreme Court addressed the due
process issue raised in this portion of Judge Heaney's dissent. See State v. Moore,
553 N.W.2d 120, 133-35 (Neb. 1996). Habeas relief can only be granted if the state's
adjudication of the claim "resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law as determined by the
Supreme Court of the United States." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1); Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. 362, 402-13 (2000) (interpreting § 2254(d)(1)). I believe that the failure to
first clearly set out the construction of the aggravator and advise the parties of that
construction is contrary to clearly established Supreme Court precedent, specifically,
Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U.S. 347 (1964). Bouie makes clear that the
Fourteenth Amendment is violated when a person is required to speculate as to the
application of a statute. Id. at 350-54. I find unpersuasive the Nebraska Supreme
Court’s conclusion that Bouie is inapposite because it dealt with a statute which had
been broadened in its application while the exceptional depravity aggravator in this
case has been arguably narrowed. The core principle of Bouie, as supported by the
Supreme Court decisions cited in that case, is that due process requires that the
resentencing panel should have given notice to Moore as to the criteria which would
guide its decision.

                                          -37-
       I do not agree with that portion of Judge Heaney's dissent which would require
the Nebraska Supreme Court to narrow the aggravator before remand to the trial
court. I believe the resentencing panel had the authority to narrow the aggravator and
could have constitutionally done so prior to the hearing. I do join that portion of
Section II.B.2. of Judge Heaney's dissent which finds that Moore's due process rights
were violated by the "post hoc application of its newly defined