Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-azd-2_98-cv-00072/USCOURTS-azd-2_98-cv-00072-7/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 535
Nature of Suit: Habeas Corpus - Death Penalty
Cause of Action: 28:2254 Ptn for Writ of H/C - Stay of Execution

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WO

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

Samuel Villegas Lopez, 

Petitioner, 

v.

Charles L. Ryan, et al.,

Respondents. 

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No. CV-98-72-PHX-SMM

DEATH PENALTY CASE

ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR

RELIEF FROM JUDGMENT

 

Before the Court is Petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Rule

60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or in the alternative petition for writ of habeas

corpus. (Doc. 237.) The motion asserts that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Martinez

v. Ryan, 132 S. Ct. 1309 (2012), provides a proper ground for this Court to reopen

Petitioner’s federal habeas proceeding. Respondents oppose the motion. (Doc. 246.) For

the reasons that follow, the motion is denied.

BACKGROUND

This case derives from the 1986 murder of 59-year-old Estafana Holmes in her

Phoenix apartment. Police found the victim’s partially nude body after conducting a “check

welfare” call. She had been blindfolded with her pajama pants, and her mouth was stuffed

with a scarf. The apartment was blood-spattered and in disarray with broken and displaced

furnishings. The victim’s throat had been sliced, and she had been stabbed more than twenty

times in her left breast, upper chest, and lower abdomen. Seminal fluid was found in both

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her vagina and anus.

Petitioner was seen in the neighborhood the night before the crime as well as in the

early morning after the murder, looking wet as if he had just bathed. While under

questioning several days later about an unrelated matter, Petitioner asked about a woman

who had been stabbed and had her throat slashed. Information that the victim’s throat had

been cut had never been publically released. Petitioner’s fingerprints matched prints found

in the victim’s apartment, and his bodily fluids were consistent with those obtained from her

body.

In 1987, a jury convicted Petitioner of first degree murder, sexual assault, kidnapping,

and burglary. The trial court sentenced him to death for the murder after finding the

existence of two aggravating factors: a prior felony conviction “involving the use or threat

of violence on another person,” Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-703(F)(2) (1992) (transferred and

renumbered to § 13-751), and commission of the offense in an especially heinous, cruel, or

depraved manner, id. § 13-703(F)(6) (1992). On direct appeal, the Arizona Supreme Court

affirmed the convictions but vacated the “prior felony conviction” aggravating factor and

remanded for resentencing on the murder count. State v. Lopez, 163 Ariz. 108, 116, 786 P.2d

959, 967 (1990). 

Resentencing took place in 1990. The trial court again sentenced Petitioner to death,

finding that the murder was committed in an especially cruel, heinous, or depraved manner

and that no mitigating circumstances were sufficient to warrant leniency. On appeal, the

Arizona Supreme Court affirmed. State v. Lopez, 175 Ariz. 407, 857 P.2d 1261 (1993).

With regard to mitigation, the court found inter alia that Petitioner had failed to prove that

his capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the

requirements of law was significantly impaired at the time of the offense as a result of

intoxication, see Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-703(G)(1) (1992) (transferred and renumbered to § 13-

751), or that he suffered from a condition known as “pathological intoxication.” 

Petitioner then sought state postconviction relief (“PCR”) under Rule 32 of the

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Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure. Among other claims in his PCR petition, Petitioner

asserted that trial counsel had been ineffective in failing to provide his “pathological

intoxication” expert with pretrial statements and testimony of two witnesses who had

observed Petitioner’s actions and behavior a few hours before the murder. The trial court

dismissed the petition without a hearing. With regard to the counsel ineffectiveness claims,

the court found that Petitioner had failed to show “counsel’s performance fell below

prevailing professional norms” or a “reasonable probability that the result of the trial or

sentencing procedures would have been different.” The Arizona Supreme Court summarily

denied a discretionary petition for review.

Petitioner filed a petition seeking federal habeas relief in 1998. After initial briefing

limited to procedural default issues, the Court dismissed a number of Petitioner’s claims as

procedurally barred, premature, or plainly meritless. (Docs. 92, 160). In their answer

regarding the procedural status of Petitioner’s claims, Respondents conceded that Petitioner

had properly exhausted his ineffectiveness claims (Doc. 37 at 12), and therefore the Court

ordered merits briefing on these claims (Doc. 160 at 7, 22). However, after Petitioner filed

his merits brief, Respondents asserted for the first time that Petitioner had fundamentally

altered one of the exhausted sentencing ineffectiveness claims and that this expanded habeas

claim was procedurally barred from federal review. (Doc. 196 at 12-14.) In reply, Petitioner

argued that “the claim is the same as that pleaded in state court: trial counsel rendered

ineffective assistance when he failed to provide his expert the relevant information he needed

to render a reliable opinion when he testified.” (Doc. 199 at 21.) Petitioner did not, as an

alternative argument, raise any grounds of cause and prejudice or miscarriage of justice to

overcome the alleged default.

In a subsequent ruling, the Court determined that it had authority to address the newlyraised procedural default allegation and found that the expanded ineffectiveness claim had

not been properly exhausted in state court and was procedurally defaulted. (Doc. 200 at 9-10

& n.7, 13-15.) Although Petitioner had not asserted cause and prejudice or miscarriage-ofCase 2:98-cv-00072-SMM Document 249 Filed 04/30/12 Page 3 of 19
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justice grounds to excuse the alleged default, the Court sua sponte considered hypothetical

arguments, including ineffectiveness by postconviction counsel in failing to fairly present the

broadened claim in the state PCR petition. (Id. at 15 n.8.) Pursuant to then existing law, the

Court determined that any failure by PCR counsel to raise the claim could not constitute

cause. (Id.) Recognizing that the issue was adequate to proceed on appeal, the Court issued

a certificate of appealability on the question of whether Petitioner’s expanded sentencing

ineffectiveness claim was procedurally barred.

On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit declined to reach the procedural

default issue and affirmed on an alternate ground. The court found that Petitioner was

“independently barred from seeking relief through his expanded allegations of ineffective

assistance of counsel because he did not develop the factual basis for this claim in state court.

See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2).” Lopez v. Ryan, 630 F.3d 1198, 1201 (9th Cir.), cert. denied,

132 S. Ct. 577 (2011).

On March 20, 2012, the Supreme Court decided in Martinez v. Ryan that in order to

“protect prisoners with a potentially legitimate claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel,

it is necessary to modify the unqualified statement in Coleman [v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722

(1991),] that an attorney’s ignorance or inadvertence in a postconviction proceeding does not

qualify as cause to excuse a procedural default.” 132 S. Ct. at 1315. Consequently, the

Court held that in states like Arizona, which require ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel

claims to be raised in an initial-review collateral proceeding, failure of counsel in an initialreview collateral proceeding to raise a substantial trial ineffectiveness claim may provide

cause to excuse the procedural default of such a claim. Id. 

On April 9, 2012, Petitioner filed the instant motion, arguing that Martinez represents

a “watershed change in procedural law” that when applied to this case demonstrates that he

has cause to overcome the finding of procedural default regarding his expanded sentencing

ineffectiveness claim. (Doc. 237 at 4.) He seeks relief under Rule 60(b)(6) to reopen these

proceedings so he can demonstrate that postconviction counsel’s ineffectiveness constitutes

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cause and to establish entitlement to federal habeas relief based on sentencing counsel’s

alleged ineffectiveness. In a footnote in his reply brief, Petitioner asserts for the first time

that relief also should be granted under Rule 60(b)(5). (Doc. 248 at 12 n.7.)

DISCUSSION

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) entitles the moving party to relief from

judgment on several grounds, including the catch-all category “any other reason justifying

relief from the operation of the judgment.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6). A motion under

subsection (b)(6) must be brought “within a reasonable time,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(c)(1), and

requires a showing of “extraordinary circumstances.” Gonzalez v. Crosby, 545 U.S. 524, 535

(2005).

I. Second or Successive Petition

For habeas petitioners, Rule 60(b) may not be used to avoid the prohibition set forth

in 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b) against second or successive petitions. In Gonzalez, the Court

explained that a Rule 60(b) motion constitutes a second or successive habeas petition when

it advances a new ground for relief or “attacks the federal court’s previous resolution of a

claim on the merits.” Id. at 532. “On the merits” refers “to a determination that there exist

or do not exist grounds entitling a petitioner to habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. §§

2254(a) and (d).” Id. at n.4. The Court further explained that a Rule 60(b) motion does not

constitute a second or successive petition when the petitioner “merely asserts that a previous

ruling which precluded a merits determination was in error—for example, a denial for such

reasons as failure to exhaust, procedural default, or statute-of-limitations bar.” Id. 

Petitioner asserts that the latter situation applies here because the Court found his

expanded ineffectiveness claim to be procedurally defaulted and did not address the claim

“on the merits.” (Doc. 237 at 9.) Petitioner is correct that under Gonzalez a district court has

jurisdiction to consider a Rule 60(b) motion challenging a procedural default ruling.

However, in this case, the Court is bound by the decision of the Ninth Circuit, which did not

reach the procedural default issue and instead found that Petitioner was not entitled to habeas

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 The Court also summarily denies Petitioner’s request for relief under Rule 60(b)(5).

That provision permits relief if prospective application of a judgment or order “is no longer

equitable.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(5). The judgment in this case is not prospective. See

Harvest v. Castro, 531 F.3d 737, 748 (9th Cir. 2008) (“The standard used in determining

whether a judgment has prospective application is whether it is executory or involves the

supervision of changing conduct or conditions.”). 

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relief because § 2254(e)(2) precluded consideration of new evidence not presented in state

court. 

Whether the appellate court’s § 2254(e)(2) analysis is akin to a merits ruling appears

to be an open question. Assuming the court impliedly found the claim to be meritless based

on a lack of supporting evidence, such ruling is now law of the case. See Pepper v. United

States, 131 S. Ct. 1229, 1250 (2011) (“[W]hen a court decides upon a rule of law, that

decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case.”)

(quoting Arizona v. California, 460 U.S. 605, 618 (1983)). If so, this Court must dismiss the

instant motion because it constitutes a successive habeas petition seeking to re-raise a claim

presented in a prior petition and denied on the merits. See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(1) (“A claim

presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application under section 2254 that was

presented in a prior application shall be dismissed.”); Gonzalez, 545 U.S. at 530.

Alternatively, even if the Court construes the Ninth Circuit’s ruling as procedural and not on

the merits, Petitioner’s motion fails because, as discussed in Section II below, Martinez does

not constitute extraordinary circumstances sufficient to reopen judgment in this case.1

 

As a separate matter, before undertaking its alternative analysis of Petitioner’s motion,

the Court must address the scope of Petitioner’s sentencing ineffectiveness claim. In a

footnote within the instant motion, Petitioner asserts that he seeks “review of Claim 1C as

presented in the previous proceedings in this Court.” (Doc. 237 at 7 n.1.) However, the body

of the motion suggests that he is trying to pursue a different claim than that presented in

either state court or his habeas petition. Specifically, Petitioner asserts that counsel was

ineffective for failing to conduct a meaningful investigation into Petitioner’s social history

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2

 In support Petitioner provides a 47-page affidavit obtained in February 2012 from

the National Mitigation Coordinator for the Defender Services Division of the United States

Courts detailing the “prevailing professional norms regarding the investigation and

preparation of mitigation evidence in capital cases.” (Doc. 239-5 at 1.) 

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and to present evidence of Petitioner’s “tragic life” as mitigation to the sentencing judge.2

(Doc. 237 at 20-24.) 

In his habeas petition, Petitioner framed Claim 1C as follows:

Mr. Lopez’s attorneys failed to investigate or prepare his case for trial

and sentencing, including their failure to properly prepare the psychiatric

expert, Dr. Otto Bendheim.

Petitioner came from a poor, dysfunctional family who suffered severe

problems and financial hardships which were exacerbated by his father’s

abandonment of Petitioner, his seven brothers and his mother when Petitioner

was a young boy. R.T. 7/13/90 (p.m.), Ex. 8. Petitioner completed only the

tenth grade, and has only a sixth grade reading level. ROA 99. Several of

Petitioner’s brothers have substance abuse problems, and have been

imprisoned, including one brother for a serious assault and two brothers for a

homicide.

The unrefuted testimony at trial established that petitioner was

intoxicated the night [of] the homicide. One witness, Yodilia Sabori, saw

petitioner just forty-five minutes prior to the homicide. She described Mr.

Lopez as:

He was different, he was shaking, like shaking, and he was—he

acted like he was mad, like everything bothered him. He just

couldn’t stand still. He was just—he had to hold himself on the

wall, stand on the wall, just stand on the pole.

R.T. 4/21/87 at 73-74. Ms. Sabori’s friend Pauline Rodriguez said that Mr.

Lopez was “on something” the night of the homicide. R.T. 7/13/90 (p.m.), Ex.

11. Ms. Rodriguez’s boyfriend, Raymond “Ralph” Hernandez also believed

that Mr. Lopez was intoxicated that night. R.T. 7/13/90 (a.m.), Ex. 3.

Both Ms. Rodriguez and Mr. Hernandez described Mr. Lopez as a

different person when he is under the influence of intoxicants. R.T. 7/13/90

(p.m.), Ex. 11; R.T. 7/13/90 (a.m.), Ex. 3. Ms. Sabori described Mr. Lopez as

undergoing a sudden and dramatic change in behavior after asking her if she

wanted to get “high” and then going around the corner for approximately five

minutes. R.T. 4/21/87 at 72-76; R.T. 7/13/90 (p.m.), Ex. 10. Despite the fact

that Dr. Bendheim had reached a conclusion that Mr. Lopez likely suffers from

pathological intoxication, the trial attorneys, both at trial and resentencing,

failed to provide the testimony or taped interviews of Pauline Rodriguez and

Yodilia Sabori to Dr. Bendheim. ROA 116, Ex. 3. This omission on the part

of the attorneys severely undermined the testimony and opinions offered by

Dr. Bendheim at sentencing. Once provided with this information, Dr.

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Bendheim was even more sure of his diagnosis. ROA 116, Ex. 3. The failure

to provide this and other important background information to Dr. Bendheim

was ineffective assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington, supra.

Despite information that petitioner had a long term history of substance

abuse and exposure to toxic substances, came from a dysfunctional family

plagued by violence and neglect, was abandoned by his father at a young age,

lived in extreme poverty, had little guidance because his mother was forced to

work to support her eight children, had only a tenth grade education and sixth

grade reading level, Mr. Lopez’s attorney failed to properly prepare his case

for trial and sentencing.

Such investigation was necessary for the expert to review in order to

establish a base line for Mr. Lopez’s cognitive functioning, to compare his

cognitive and behavioral functioning when intoxicated to his base line

functioning, to determine if intoxication exacerbated any underlying

physiological conditions with psychiatric consequences or psychiatric

disorders, to determine the presence and course of his addictive disease, to

determine the likelihood of the presence, severity and effect of neurologic

deficits and the effects of intoxication on those deficits, and to determine any

other factors that would have influenced or controlled his thought processes

and behavior during the offense. The medical expert also required this

information to weigh and assess lay witness reports of Mr. Lopez’s behavior

surrounding the offense, during interrogation by law enforcement, and during

clinical interviews with Mr. Lopez. Counsel was ineffective. Strickland v.

Washington, supra.

(Doc. 27 at 11-13.)

In its order finding procedural default, the Court determined that Claim 1C was

substantially broader than the claim presented in state court:

 In his PCR petition, Petitioner alleged ineffective assistance of counsel

(IAC) because counsel failed to properly prepare his expert, Dr. Otto

Bendheim. (ROA 116 at 9.) Specifically, Petitioner alleged that counsel failed

to provide Dr. Bendheim with four documents—the pretrial statements and

trial testimony of Pauline Rodriguez and Yodilia Sabori. (Id.) Petitioner

alleged this was deficient because the statements were available to counsel and

they were particularly relevant to the doctor’s assessment of pathological

intoxication at the time of the crime as these witnesses saw Petitioner’s actions

and behaviors just a few hours before the murder. (Id. at 10.) Petitioner

alleged he was prejudiced by counsel’s failure because this information was

the best evidence in support of pathological intoxication and, if it had been

provided to Dr. Bendheim initially, he could have provided a more complete

and stronger diagnosis at the time of sentencing. (Id. at 10-11.) The

allegations in the Petition for Review are essentially identical and focus solely

on counsel’s failure to provide Dr. Bendheim the statements by Rodriguez and

Sabori that were identified in the PCR petition. (PR Dkt. 1 at 11-13.)

By continuing to characterize the claim as he did in state court—that

counsel failed to prepare his expert witness—Petitioner attempts to shoehorn

in the much broader claim that counsel failed to conduct an exhaustive social

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history investigation (which he should have used to prepare his expert).

However, the claim asserted in state court was a very narrow one, focused

solely on counsel’s failure to provide the expert with four specific documents

from percipient witnesses to support his tentative diagnosis of pathological

intoxication. In contrast, the claim as alleged in this Court is counsel’s failure

to conduct a comprehensive investigation of Petitioner’s background so that

the expert could provide a complete and thorough assessment of Petitioner’s

cognitive functioning, as well as any psychological conditions, addictive

diseases, or neurological deficits, and any other possible influences on

Petitioner’s behavior and thought processes at the time of the crime. (Doc. 28

at 9-10, 11-13.) In support of his exhaustion argument, Petitioner contends

that his allegations in state court went beyond counsel’s failure to provide Dr.

Bendheim the four documents specifically identified and included counsel’s

failure to provide “all relevant information”; in support of this proposition,

Petitioner quotes from his PCR reply brief and his Petition for Review. (Doc.

199 at 22.) This argument is not supported by the record. The quotes on

which Petitioner relies regarding “all the relevant evidence” that counsel

should have given Dr. Bendheim, when viewed in the context of the entire

argument in those documents and his whole PCR proceeding, clearly refer to

the statements by Rodriguez and Sabori that were relevant to his assertion of

pathological intoxication not to potentially mitigating background information;

they do not reference additional evidence never investigated. (ROA 116 at 9-

11; ROA 138 at 3; PR Dkt. 1 at 11-13.)

(Doc. 200 at 13-14.)

The Ninth Circuit similarly found that Claim 1C was broader than the claim raised in

state court. “Coupled with his claim regarding the two witnesses, Lopez newly alleged that

counsel failed to furnish Dr. Bendheim with a broad range of biographical data and family

and social history that were necessary for a proper diagnosis.” Lopez, 630 F.3d at 1204. In

finding that Petitioner was barred from relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2), the Court noted

that Petitioner had not been diligent in developing his claim that counsel was ineffective in

“failing to investigate Lopez’s personal history and to furnish Dr. Bendheim with those

facts.” Id. at 1206.

Neither this Court nor the Ninth Circuit construed Petitioner’s expanded habeas claim

as asserting ineffectiveness based on a general failure to investigate Petitioner’s background

and to present such evidence as stand-alone mitigation to the sentencer. Rather, both courts

found that Petitioner’s claim, although broader than the claim presented in state court, was

limited to a failure to investigate and provide background information to Petitioner’s

psychiatric expert.

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To recap, this Court found procedurally barred Petitioner’s claim of ineffectiveness

based on counsel’s failure to investigate and provide to Dr. Bendheim information

concerning Petitioner’s personal history. The Court did not rule “on the merits” of this claim

and instead limited its merits analysis to counsel’s failure to provide Dr. Bendheim with the

statements and testimony of Rodriguez and Sabori. Assuming the Ninth Circuit also did not

resolve Petitioner’s expanded claim “on the merits,” this Court has jurisdiction to consider

Petitioner’s Rule 60(b) motion, free of the constraints imposed by 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b) upon

successive petitions, only to the extent Petitioner seeks to reopen judgment to revisit the

procedurally barred aspect of Claim 1C. See Ruiz v. Quarterman, 504 F.3d 523, 526 (5th

Cir. 2007) (finding § 2244(b) inapplicable where Rule 60(b) motion sought to reopen

judgment on procedurally barred claim).

To the extent Petitioner seeks relief under Rule 60(b) to assert generally that counsel’s

representation at resentencing was ineffective because he failed to investigate and present

to the sentencing judge evidence of Petitioner’s background and upbringing (separate from

presenting such evidence to Dr. Bendheim to aid diagnosis of Petitioner), the Court finds that

the motion advances a new ground for relief. As such, this aspect of Petitioner’s motion is

the equivalent of a second or successive petition, and the Court may not consider Petitioner’s

general claim of ineffectiveness based on counsel’s “failure to present mitigating evidence

supporting a sentence less than death” absent authorization from the Ninth Circuit. See 28

U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A). 

II. Extraordinary Circumstances

The Court turns now to the issue of whether in this case Martinez constitutes an

extraordinary circumstance justifying relief under Rule 60(b)(6) to reconsider the Court’s

procedural bar ruling as to the expanded aspect of Claim 1C. When a petitioner seeks postjudgment relief based on an intervening change in the law, the Ninth Circuit has directed

district courts to balance numerous factors on a case-by-case basis. Phelps v. Alameida, 569

F.3d 1120, 1133 (9th Cir. 2009). These include but are not limited to: (1) whether “the

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intervening change in the law . . . overruled an otherwise settled legal precedent;” (2)

whether the petitioner was diligent in pursuing the issue; (3) whether “the final judgment

being challenged has caused one or more of the parties to change his position in reliance on

that judgment;” (4) whether there is “delay between the finality of the judgment and the

motion for Rule 60(b)(6) relief;” (5) whether there is a “close connection” between the

original and intervening decisions at issue in the Rule 60(b) motion; and (6) whether relief

from judgment would upset the “delicate principles of comity governing the interaction

between coordinate sovereign judicial systems.” Id. at 1135-40. After consideration of these

varied factors, the Court determines that the balance weighs against granting post-judgment

relief. 

 Change in the Law

The first factor is whether the intervening change in the law overruled otherwise

settled legal precedent. The decisions in Gonzalez v. Crosby and Phelps v. Alameida lend

guidance for applying this factor. 

In Gonzalez, the prisoner’s habeas petition was dismissed as time barred when the

district court concluded that an untimely successive motion for state postconviction relief

was not a “properly filed” application sufficient to toll the limitations period under 28 U.S.C.

§ 2244(d)(2). 545 U.S. at 527. Seven months after the appellate court denied a certificate

of appealability on the issue, the Supreme Court held in Artuz v. Bennett, 531 U.S. 4 (2000),

that an application for state postconviction relief can be “properly filed” even if the state

court dismissed it as procedurally barred. Gonzalez sought to reopen judgment, and the

Supreme Court ultimately determined that Artuz did not constitute an extraordinary

circumstance justifying relief under Rule 60(b)(6). In doing so, it noted that the district

court’s analysis of the limitations period “was by all appearances correct under the Eleventh

Circuit’s then-prevailing interpretation of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2).” 545 U.S. at 536. The

Court further observed that “[i]t is hardly extraordinary that subsequently, after petitioner’s

case was no longer pending, this Court arrived at a different interpretation.” Id.

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In Phelps, the Ninth Circuit determined that a habeas petitioner was entitled to relief

from judgment based on an intervening change in circuit law relevant to determining finality

of a California postconviction petition for the purpose of tolling the limitations period under

§ 2244(d)(2). In doing so, the court observed that “the change in the law worked in this case

. . . did not upset or overturn a settled legal principle” as did the change in the law at issue

in Gonzalez. 569 F.3d at 1136. Rather, the core disputed issue in Phelps’s case did not

become settled until fifteen months after his appeal became final and was “decidedly

unsettled” when the petition was before the district court. Id. This, the court reasoned,

distinguished Gonzalez and cut in favor of granting relief. 

Comparing these two cases to the situation here, the Court readily concludes that

Petitioner’s case is more akin to Gonzalez than Phelps. As in Gonzalez, the procedural bar

ruling now being challenged was correct under then-prevailing law. As Petitioner

acknowledges, Martinez represents a significant shift in habeas procedural law. Prior to

Martinez, both Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit caselaw held that an attorney’s ignorance

or inadvertence in a state postconviction proceeding did not qualify as cause to excuse a

procedural default. See Coleman, 501 U.S. at 736; Bonin v. Calderon, 77 F.3d 1155, 1159

(9th Cir. 1996). In Martinez, the Court carved out a narrow exception to the rule in Coleman,

recognizing for the first time that inadequate postconviction counsel may serve as cause to

excuse a defaulted trial ineffectiveness claim when such claims may be raised only in a

postconviction proceeding. 132 S. Ct. at 1315. Thus, the law was well settled that

ineffective assistance of postconviction counsel could not serve as cause when this Court sua

sponte considered and rejected hypothetical cause arguments for the default of expanded

Claim 1C, including ineffectiveness by postconviction counsel. This factor weighs against

reconsideration. See Adams v. Thaler, No. 12-70010, 2012 WL 1415088 (5th Cir. Apr. 25,

2012) (finding that Martinez is “simply a change in decisional law” and does not constitute

an extraordinary circumstance justifying postconviction relief).

Diligence

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The second factor, whether Petitioner was diligent in pursuing the issue, also weighs

against reconsideration. This is not a case, such as Phelps, where the petitioner “pressed all

possible avenues of relief” on the identical legal position ultimately adopted in a subsequent

case as legally correct. 569 F.3d at 1137. Indeed, at no time prior to the instant motion did

Petitioner urge ineffective assistance of postconviction counsel as cause to excuse the default

of his expanded sentencing ineffectiveness claim. 

In his initial response to Respondents’ belated assertion of default, Petitioner argued

only that the claim had been fully exhausted and was not substantially altered compared to

that presented in state court. (Doc. 199 at 13-23.) In a motion for reconsideration from the

Court’s order finding the expanded aspect of Claim 1C defaulted, Petitioner argued that the

Court had erred in not finding that Respondents’ admission of exhaustion in their initial

answer constituted an express waiver of any exhaustion defense. (Doc. 202 at 2-11.) On

appeal, Petitioner again argued that the claim had been fully exhausted and that this Court

erred in sua sponte revisiting the exhaustion issue following Respondents’ initial concession.

Lopez, 630 F.3d at 1205 & n.6. Petitioner did not assert to either this Court or the Ninth

Circuit any alternative arguments based on cause and prejudice or fundamental miscarriage

of justice to excuse the default. 

In Gonzalez, the Supreme Court cited the petitioner’s lack of diligence as a second

factor militating against Rule 60(b)(6) relief. The Court observed that the petitioner had

neither raised the issue addressed in Artuz in his application for a certificate of appealability

before the circuit court, nor sought rehearing or certiorari from the appellate court’s COA

denial, despite the fact Artuz had been decided eight days after that denial. 545 U.S. at 537.

“This lack of diligence confirms that Artuz is not an extraordinary circumstance justifying

relief from the judgment in petitioner’s case.” Id.

Here, not only did Petitioner fail to advance the legal principle at issue in Martinez,

he never challenged this Court’s finding that ineffectiveness of postconviction counsel could

not constitute cause for the default of the expanded sentencing ineffectiveness claim. This

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lack of diligence cuts against Petitioner.

Reliance

The third factor is whether granting relief under Rule 60(b) would “‘undo the past,

executed effects of the judgment,’ thereby disturbing the parties’ reliance interest in the

finality of the case.” Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1137 (quoting Ritter v. Smith, 811 F.2d 1398, 1402

(11th Cir. 1987)). Post-judgment relief “is less warranted when the final judgment being

challenged has caused one or more of the parties to change his legal position in reliance on

that judgment.” Id. at 1138.

In Phelps, the court found that neither party had relied on the finality of the district

court’s dismissal of the petition as time-barred such that their legal position had changed due

to the court’s judgment. “To the contrary, when Phelps’ petition was dismissed, his federal

case simply ended: Phelps remained in prison, and the State stopped defending his

imprisonment.” Id. The court reasoned that there were no “past effects” of the judgment that

would be disturbed if the case were reopened for consideration on the merits of the habeas

petition because “the parties would simply pick up where they left off.” Id. Therefore, the

lack of reliance weighed in the petitioner’s favor.

The same cannot be said here. When Petitioner’s case became final, the State of

Arizona sought and obtained a warrant of execution from the Arizona Supreme Court to

carry out Petitioner’s sentence; the execution is set for May 16. “Both the State and victims

of crime have an important interest in the timely enforcement of a sentence.” Hill v.

McDonough, 547 U.S. 573, 584 (2006). As explained by the Supreme Court in Calderon v.

Thompson, a capital case in which the appellate court had sought to recall its mandate for the

purpose of revisiting the merits of the prisoner’s habeas petition:

A State’s interests in finality are compelling when a federal court of

appeals issues a mandate denying federal habeas relief. At that point, having

in all likelihood borne for years “the significant costs of federal habeas

review,” the State is entitled to the assurance of finality. When lengthy federal

proceedings have run their course and a mandate denying relief has issued,

finality acquires an added moral dimension. Only with an assurance of real

finality can the State execute its moral judgment in a case. Only with real

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finality can the victims of crime move forward knowing the moral judgment

will be carried out. To unsettle these expectations is to inflict a profound

injury to the “powerful and legitimate interest in punishing the guilty,” an

interest shared by the State and the victims of crime alike.

523 U.S. 538, 556 (1998) (citations omitted). When the State’s and victims’ interests in

finality are viewed in light of Petitioner’s lack of diligence on the Martinez issue, the Court

is compelled to conclude that the State’s reliance on the Court’s judgment weighs against

granting post-judgment relief to assess whether, under Martinez, Petitioner could establish

cause and prejudice to overcome the default of his expanded sentencing ineffectiveness claim.

Delay

The fourth factor looks at whether a petitioner seeking to have a new legal rule

applied to an otherwise final case has petitioned the court for reconsideration “with a degree

of promptness that respects the strong public interest in timeliness and finality.” Phelps, 569

F.3d at 1138 (internal quotation omitted). Here, the motion was filed just three weeks after

Martinez was decided. Petitioner did not delay seeking relief based on Martinez, and this

factor weighs in his favor.

Close Connection

The fifth factor “is designed to recognize that the law is regularly evolving.” Id. at

1139. The mere fact that tradition, legal rules, and principles inevitably shift and evolve over

time “cannot upset all final judgments that have predated any specific change in the law.”

Id. Accordingly, the nature of the change is important and courts should examine whether

there is a “close connection” between the original and intervening decision at issue in a Rule

60(b)(6) motion. Id. 

In Phelps, the intervening change in the law directly overruled the decision for which

reconsideration was sought. Additionally, the intervening precedent “resolved a conflict

between competing and co-equal legal authorities.” Id. (internal quotation omitted). As

already addressed regarding the first factor, the change in the law at issue here overruled long

settled precedent. More critically, there is no close connection between this Court’s cause

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3

 Even were the Court inclined to consider whether the rationale of Martinez extends

to the diligence requirement of § 2254(e)(2), this Court is bound by the Supreme Court’s

directive in Williams v. Taylor, that “a failure to develop the factual basis of a claim is not

established unless there is a lack of diligence, or some greater fault, attributable to the

prisoner or the prisoner’s counsel.” 529 U.S. 420, 432 (2000) (emphasis added). In

Williams itself, the Supreme Court found that state postconviction counsel’s failure to

investigate an available psychiatric report constituted a lack of diligence. Id. at 438-40.

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determination and the decision in Martinez because the appeals court affirmed this Court’s

judgment on different grounds.

In Lopez, the Ninth Circuit expressly declined to address the propriety of this Court’s

procedural default ruling, finding instead that Petitioner was separately barred from relief by

28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2). 630 F.3d at 1202, 1205-06. The court’s ruling did not rest on

procedural default grounds and did not reach the question of cause. Thus, there is no “close

connection” between the final judgment in this case and the Martinez decision, which

provides a new cause argument for procedurally defaulted counsel ineffectiveness claims.

Indeed, addressing cause would be an exercise in futility. This Court is bound by the Ninth

Circuit’s determination that Petitioner was not diligent in developing the expanded

ineffectiveness claim in state court, and Martinez does not address postconviction counsel

ineffectiveness in the context of § 2254(e)(2)’s diligence requirement.3

 The lack of

connection between Petitioner’s case and Martinez weighs heavily against reconsideration.

 Comity

The last factor concerns the need for comity between independently sovereign state

and federal judiciaries. Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1139. The Ninth Circuit has determined that

principles of comity are not upset when an erroneous legal judgment, if left uncorrected,

“would prevent the true merits of a petitioner’s constitutional claims from ever being heard.”

Id. at 1140. For example, in Phelps, the district court dismissed the petition as untimely, thus

precluding any federal habeas review of the petitioner’s claims. The court found that this

favored the grant of post-judgment relief in Phelps’s case because dismissal of a first habeas

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4

 In affirming the denial of relief on this claim, the Ninth Circuit was “not convinced”

that a more definitive diagnosis from Dr. Bendheim “would have changed the outcome of the

sentencing proceeding.” Lopez, 630 F.3d at 1209. The court noted:

The new evidence would have done little to refute Dr. Dean’s contrary

assessment that Lopez did not suffer from pathological intoxication. As Dr.

Dean pointed out, pathological intoxication is an extremely rare condition,

Lopez did not exhibit any of the predisposing factors, and the evidence from

his criminal file indicated that he did not react pathologically to alcohol or

show reactions within the typical timeframe after drinking.

Id. 

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petition “denies the petitioner the protections of the Great Writ entirely.” Id. 

Here, the Court’s judgment did not preclude review of all of Petitioner’s federal

constitutional claims. A number of the claims, including counsel ineffectiveness for failing

to provide Dr. Bendheim with the statements and testimony of two relevant witnesses, were

addressed on the merits in both the district and appellate courts.4

 While the Court declined

to reach the merits of the expanded sentencing ineffectiveness claim based on Petitioner’s

failure to properly exhaust the claim in state court, the Ninth Circuit held that Petitioner was

separately barred from relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) because he had not been diligent

in developing the claim. Given these circumstances, the comity factor does not favor

Petitioner.

Conclusion

Having evaluated each of the factors set forth in Gonzalez and Phelps in light of the

particular facts of this case, the Court concludes that Petitioner’s motion to reopen judgment

fails to demonstrate the extraordinary circumstances necessary to grant relief under Rule

60(b)(6). The Court’s determination that ineffectiveness of postconviction counsel could not

constitute cause was at that time legally correct under longstanding caselaw, and the State

of Arizona has a strong interest in carrying out Petitioner’s sentence. In addition, Petitioner

never previously raised this issue, and the court of appeals affirmed on an entirely different

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ground. Thus, reopening the case to revisit this Court’s cause findings would be futile. 

III. Second-in-Time Habeas Petition

As an alternative, Petitioner asks the Court to treat his Rule 60(b) motion as a proper

second-in-time habeas application. Petitioner correctly notes that the Supreme Court “has

declined to interpret ‘second or successive’ as referring to all § 2254 applications filed

second or successively in time, even when the later filings address a state-court judgment

already challenged in a prior § 2254 application.” Panetti v. Quarterman, 551 U.S. 930, 944

(2007); see, e.g., Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 485-86 (2000) (concluding that a petition

filed after district court dismissed an initial petition for failure to exhaust state remedies is

not “second or successive” petition); Stewart v. Martinez-Villareal, 523 U.S. 637, 643-45

(1998) (holding that a second-in-time petition is not “second or successive” when it raises

a claim previously dismissed as premature).

Petitioner argues that his second-in-time petition is not successive because his

sentencing ineffectiveness claim “has only now become ripe because only now may he

establish cause [based on Martinez] to overcome the procedural bar.” (Doc. 237 at 42.) The

Court declines to accept Petitioner’s novel proposition that a previously ripe claim raised and

dismissed with prejudice in an initial petition may be re-raised in a new petition based on a

change in the law. Accordingly, Petitioner’s alternative request is denied. See 28 U.S.C. §

2244(b)(1) (“A claim presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application under

section 2254 that was presented in a prior application shall be dismissed.”).

CERTIFICATE OF APPEALABILITY

To the extent a certificate of appealability is needed for an appeal from this Order, see

United States v. Washington, 653 F.3d 1057, 1065 n.8 (9th Cir.) (2011) (noting open question

whether COA required to appeal denial of legitimate Rule 60(b) motion), cert. denied, 132

S. Ct. 1609 (2012), the Court finds that reasonable jurists could debate its resolution of

Petitioner’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion. See 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c); Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S.

473, 484 (2000). Accordingly, the Court grants a certificate of appealability on this issue.

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Based on the foregoing,

IT IS ORDERED that Petitioner’s Motion for Relief from Judgment Pursuant to Fed.

R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6) or in the Alternative Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus (Doc. 237) is

DENIED. 

DATED this 30th day of April, 2012.

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