Court Opinion

ID: 17283
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-25 07:02:53+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:40:40.250939
License: Public Domain

Revised March 31, 1999

               IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

                       _____________________

                            No. 99-20014
                       _____________________

          GARY GRAHAM, now known as
          SHAKA SANKOFA,

                                          Petitioner-Appellant,

          v.

          GARY JOHNSON, DIRECTOR,
          TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
          INSTITUTIONAL DIVISION,

                                          Respondent-Appellee.

_________________________________________________________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Southern District of Texas
_________________________________________________________________
                         February 25, 1999
Before KING, Chief Judge, JOLLY and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.

KING, Chief Judge:

     Gary Graham, now known as Shaka Sankofa,1 a Texas death row

inmate, appeals the district court’s dismissal of his fourth

habeas corpus application under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.   Alternatively,

he moves for the recall of the mandate in one of his prior habeas

cases or for an order pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(C)

authorizing the district court to consider a successive habeas

     1
        For the sake of consistency, we refer to Graham by the
name under which he was convicted and sentenced.
corpus petition.    We previously denied this last motion in an

order entered February 8, 1999, in which we noted that we would

rule on the other two pleadings and issue a full opinion

explaining our decision in all three matters as soon as possible.

We now do so.

     Graham’s current application for a writ of habeas corpus is

successive to a previous petition he filed in 1988 that was fully

litigated on the merits and, in fact, was twice considered by the

Supreme Court.    In 1996, more than two years before Graham

brought this application, Congress passed a new law, the

Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA),

that was specifically designed to limit and, in some cases,

completely bar successive applications such as Graham’s.    Not

only did AEDPA itself impose stringent restrictions on successive

habeas applications, but the House Conference Report accompanying

it explicitly stated that it incorporated “reforms to curb the

abuse of the statutory writ of habeas corpus, and to address the

acute problems of unnecessary delay and abuse in capital cases.”

Graham concedes that all of the claims he makes today could have

been raised in 1988 and that if AEDPA governs his current

application, he is entitled to no relief whatsoever.    Thus, our

task is to determine whether AEDPA applies to him.    We conclude

that it does.    Accordingly, we must affirm the judgment of the

district court dismissing Graham’s fourth federal habeas

                                  2
application and deny his motion for recall of the mandate in his

previous habeas case.

                  I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       This appeal and the accompanying alternative motions are the

latest installments of a story that began nearly eighteen years

ago.    About 9:30 p.m. on May 13, 1981, in the parking lot of a

Safeway Food Store in Houston, Texas, Bobby Lambert, a customer

at the store, was shot and killed by a lone black male who

apparently was trying to rob him.     The perpetrator left the scene

without being apprehended.    After his arrest for another offense

about a week later, Gary Graham, then seventeen years old, was

charged with the capital murder of Lambert.

       At trial in the 182nd Judicial District of Harris County,

Texas, Bernadine Skillern was the only witness to identify Graham

as Lambert’s killer; two other eyewitnesses, Wilma Amos and

Daniel Grady, were unable to do so because they did not get a

good enough look at, or did not sufficiently recall, the

perpetrator’s face.    Immediately before Skillern testified that

Graham was the shooter, the trial judge conducted a hearing

outside the presence of the jury to determine whether her

identification was “tainted by [an] illegal lineup.”     Gilbert v.

California, 388 U.S. 263, 272 (1967) (citing United States v.

                                  3
Wade, 388 U.S. 218, 240 (1967)).       Skillern described in some

detail how she had picked Graham out of a May 26, 1981

photographic display and a May 27, 1981 police station lineup,

and defense counsel raised many of the same issues regarding

suggestive identification procedures that Graham’s current

counsel now brings before us.   The trial judge concluded that

Skillern’s identification was “based solely on [Skillern’s]

independent recollection of the facts as they occurred on May 13,

1981" and was “made independently of any conversation or

processes that were performed by members of the Houston Police

Department.”   The jury then returned, and Skillern testified in

open court that Graham was the person she had seen shoot Lambert.

Defense counsel presented no evidence at the guilt-innocence

stage.   The jury convicted Graham of capital murder and answered

the three death penalty special issues2 in the affirmative.3

     2
         The jury was asked the following questions:

           (1) Do you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable
           doubt that the conduct of the defendant that caused the
           death of the deceased was committed deliberately and
           with the reasonable expectation that the death of the
           deceased or another would result?

           (2) Do you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable
           doubt that there is a probability that the defendant
           would commit criminal acts of violence that would
           constitute a continuing threat to society?

           (3) Do you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable
           doubt whether [sic] the conduct of the defendant in
           killing the deceased was unreasonable in response to
           the provocation, if any, by the deceased?

                                   4
Accordingly, the court sentenced Graham to death.   On direct

appeal, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Graham’s

capital murder conviction and death sentence in an unpublished

opinion.   See Graham v. State, No. 68,916 (Tex. Crim. App. June

12, 1984).   Graham did not seek certiorari from the United States

Supreme Court.

     Instead, represented by new counsel, Graham filed a state

habeas petition in July 1987, contending, inter alia, that he was

incompetent and therefore could not constitutionally be executed,

that the Texas capital punishment scheme was constitutionally

defective for various reasons and did not allow the jury

adequately to consider mitigating evidence, including youth, and

that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.   Counsel was

alleged to be ineffective in numerous respects, including failing

The jury answered yes to all three questions. After the verdict
was read, the defense requested that the jury be polled, and each
juror acknowledged that the verdict accurately represented his or
her answers to the special issues.
     3
        During the punishment phase, the state demonstrated that
from May 14 to May 20, 1981, Graham robbed some thirteen
different victims in nine different locations, in each instance
leveling either a pistol or a sawed-off shotgun at the victim.
Two of the victims were pistol-whipped, one was also shot in the
neck, an elderly man was struck with the vehicle Graham had
stolen from him, and a fifty-seven-year-old woman was kidnapped
and raped. There was also testimony that Graham had a poor
reputation in the community for being a peaceful and law-abiding
citizen. The defense presented only the testimony of Graham’s
stepfather and grandmother as to his good and nonviolent
character. After the capital murder conviction, Graham pleaded
guilty to, and was sentenced to twenty-year concurrent prison
terms for, ten aggravated robberies committed on May 14, 15, 16,
18, 19, and 20, 1981.

                                 5
adequately to investigate, interview, and call alibi witnesses

and not allowing Graham to testify.    Graham’s petition was

supported by an affidavit signed by Dorothy Shields, William

Chambers, Mary Brown, and Loraine Johnson4 asserting that Graham

had been with them continuously during the night of the offense,

that Graham had told them that he had given their names to his

trial counsel, that counsel did not call them to testify, and

that Graham later informed them that counsel not only had refused

to call alibi witnesses but also had prevented him from

testifying on his own behalf.   State district judge Donald

Shipley, who had not presided at Graham’s trial, held competency

and evidentiary hearings.   At the latter, Graham, three alibi

witnesses (William Chambers, Mary Brown, and Dinah Miller), and

Graham’s trial counsel (Ronald Mock and Chester Thornton),

testified.   On February 9, 1988, Judge Shipley entered findings

of fact and conclusions of law adverse in all respects to Graham.

With respect to the ineffective assistance of counsel claim, he

found:

     4.   Prior to trial, counsel [who had been appointed to
          represent Graham on June 12, 1981] reviewed the
          information in the State’s file several times.

     5.   On numerous occasions prior to trial, counsel met with
          the applicant and attempted to discuss the facts of the
          case with him. The applicant stated only that he did

     4
        Brown is Graham’s wife. Chambers and Johnson are his
cousins. Shields is a friend who lived near Graham’s paternal
grandmother, with whom Graham sometimes resided, at the time of
the offense.

                                   6
            not commit the robbery-murder and that he had spent the
            evening with a girlfriend whose name, appearance, and
            address the applicant could not remember.

     6.     Although defense counsel made numerous inquiries of
            applicant, he did not give his defense counsel where he
            had been and what he had been doing on the night of the
            instant offense, May 13, 1981.

     7.     No person ever presented himself to defense counsel as
            an alibi witness, either before, during or after trial.

     8.     Specifically, the applicant did not furnish his counsel
            with the names or addresses of Dorothy Shield [sic],
            William Chambers, Mary Brown, or Lorain [sic] Johnson
            as potential alibi witnesses.

     9.     This court finds that the testimony of William
            Chambers, Mary Brown, and Dinah Miller concerning Gary
            Graham’s whereabouts on May 13, 1981 is not credible
            testimony.

     10.    Gary Graham was aware that an investigator was working
            with defense counsel in connection with the defense of
            his case.

     11.    Counsel for applicant hired an investigator, Merv West,
            who assisted them in investigating and interviewing
            possible defense witnesses.

Ex parte Graham, No. 335378-A (182d Dist. Ct., Harris County,

Tex. Feb. 9, 1988).   The state habeas trial court concluded that

Graham had received effective assistance of counsel and

recommended that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals deny habeas

relief.    The Court of Criminal Appeals did so in an unpublished

per curiam order with reasons issued February 19, 1988.

     Shortly thereafter, Graham, through new counsel, filed a

federal habeas application in the Southern District of Texas.    In

addition to challenging the racial and age composition of the

grand jury that indicted him, the constitutionality of the Texas

                                  7
death penalty statute as applied to him, and his own competency

to be executed, Graham asserted that he was denied the effective

assistance of trial counsel.    Specifically, he claimed that

counsel failed adequately to investigate his case and introduce

defense witnesses at trial.    Although he told them of at least

four alibi witnesses, Graham asserted, counsel neither

interviewed nor called these individuals to testify.    Graham also

complained that counsel refused to permit him to testify, failed

to obtain an independent psychiatric evaluation, did not object

to the exclusion of certain jurors, allowed him to be tried in

the same clothes he was wearing when arrested, concealed counsel

Ronald Mock’s personal acquaintance with chief prosecution

witness Skillern, neglected adequately to investigate the

extraneous offenses introduced against him at the punishment

phase of his trial, and called only two punishment phase

witnesses on his behalf.   Without holding an evidentiary hearing,

the district court denied relief, see Graham v. Lynaugh, No. 88-

563 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 24, 1988), and the Fifth Circuit declined to

issue a certificate of probable cause, see Graham v. Lynaugh, 854
F.2d 715, 723 (5th Cir. 1988).    The court of appeals panel

specifically reviewed the ineffective assistance of counsel

allegations and the state habeas court findings in respect

thereto, concluding that “Graham has failed to overcome the

presumption that the state court’s findings were correct.”      Id.

at 722.

                                  8
     In a per curiam order, the Supreme Court granted certiorari,

vacated the Fifth Circuit’s judgment, and remanded “for further

consideration in light of Penry v. Lynaugh[, 492 U.S. 302

(1989)].”     Graham v. Lynaugh, 492 U.S. 915 (1989).    On remand,

the same Fifth Circuit panel reinstated, in Part I of its new

opinion, all of its 1988 opinion except Section II.B, which dealt

with whether the Texas capital sentencing scheme allowed adequate

consideration of mitigating evidence, especially youth.       See

Graham v. Collins, 896 F.2d 893, 894 (5th Cir. 1990).       The panel

went on to hold that the Texas capital sentencing scheme,

contrary to Penry, did not allow adequate consideration of

Graham’s youth and accordingly vacated his death sentence.          See

id. at 898.    The Fifth Circuit then took the case en banc and

ultimately affirmed the denial of habeas relief.        See Graham v.

Collins, 950 F.2d 1009, 1034 (5th Cir. 1992).    The en banc court

explicitly approved Part I of the 1990 panel opinion, thus

reinstating all of the 1988 panel opinion except Section II.B

thereof, including the earlier panel findings that Graham’s

ineffective assistance of counsel claim lacked merit.       See id. at

1013 n.4.     It reversed the 1990 panel’s conclusion that the Texas

capital sentencing scheme did not allow adequate consideration of

Graham’s mitigating evidence, particularly his youth.       See id. at

1030-34.    The Supreme Court affirmed, addressing only the youth-

Penry issue and holding that any claim that the Texas capital

sentencing scheme did not allow adequate consideration of youth

                                   9
was barred under Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288 (1989).   See Graham

v. Collins, 506 U.S. 461, 477-78 (1993).

     On April 20, 1993, Graham, through counsel, filed his second

state habeas petition.   Again, he urged that trial counsel was

ineffective for failing to develop or present defense evidence or

meaningfully test the prosecution’s evidence, and that he thus

had been “condemned to die for a crime that he almost certainly

did not commit.”   Graham also asserted that the trial court’s

voir dire erroneously equated “deliberateness,” as used in the

first death penalty special issue, with “intent” as relevant to

guilt or innocence.   Finally, he contended that the special

issues did not allow adequate consideration of his youth.5     The

ineffective assistance claim was supported by new evidence

purporting to prove that a number of eyewitnesses whom Graham’s

counsel had not called during trial would have provided testimony

tending to exonerate Graham.   This new evidence consisted of the

following:

     1.   A March 31, 1993 affidavit of the investigator, Mervyn
          West, retained by Graham’s trial counsel, indicating
          that he and counsel had assumed Graham was guilty and
          therefore gave his case relatively little attention;

     5
        The apparent basis for making this argument, despite the
Supreme Court’s decision in Graham v. Collins, 506 U.S. 461
(1993), was the theory that Graham, by its reliance on Teague v.
Lane, 489 U.S. 288 (1989), did not apply except in federal habeas
actions. On February 19, 1993, the Supreme Court had granted
certiorari in the direct appeal case of Johnson v. Texas, 506
U.S. 1090 (1993), raising the youth-Penry issue.

                                   10
     2.   April 17, 1993 affidavits of Malcolm Stephens and his
          wife, Lorna Stephens, stating that they had come on the
          crime scene just after the shooting and had seen a
          young black man run away (not followed in the parking
          lot by anyone in a car, as Skillern had testified that
          she had done), and that the man was about 5'5" tall (a
          lineup chart showed Graham to be 5'9");

     3.   An April 15, 1993 affidavit of Wilma Amos, who had been
          present at the crime scene, stating that the shooter
          was no taller than 5'5", that no one followed him in a
          car, that defense counsel never contacted her, and that
          she had examined two photographs of Graham as he
          appeared in 1981 and was “certain that Gary Graham is
          not the man who shot Bobby Lambert”;

     4.   An April 15, 1993 affidavit of Ronald Hubbard, a
          Safeway employee who also had been present at the
          scene, describing the shooter as 5'6" and indicating
          that no one associated with Graham’s defense team ever
          contacted him;

     5.   An April 18, 1993 affidavit of Mary Brown indicating
          that she had been with Graham on the night of the
          offense;

     6.   An April 18, 1993 affidavit of William Chambers
          indicating that he had been with Graham on the night of
          the offense;

     7.   An April 18, 1993 affidavit of Dorothy Shields
          indicating that she had been with Graham for most of
          the night of the offense; and

     8.   An April 18, 1993 affidavit of Loraine Johnson
          indicating that she had been with Graham on the night
          of the offense and that she had spoken to trial counsel
          about testifying to an alibi defense but had been
          rebuffed.

Graham supplemented his petition on April 26, 1993, adding a

claim under Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390 (1993), that because

he was actually innocent his execution would be unconstitutional.

This supplement was supported by an April 26, 1993 affidavit of

Malcolm Stephens stating that, after seeing news coverage of

                               11
Graham’s case, he had realized that Graham was not the person who

had run in front of his car in the Safeway parking lot and

stating that he saw the true murderer several times in 1982,

1983, and 1985.   The state filed a reply, supported by an April

21, 1993 affidavit from trial counsel Ronald Mock, an April 22,

1993 affidavit from Mervyn West, and a March 26, 1993 affidavit

from Bernadine Skillern.   Later that same day, the state habeas

trial court, Judge Shipley, without holding an evidentiary

hearing, entered findings and conclusions, plus supplemental

findings, recommending that the Court of Criminal Appeals deny

relief.   The trial court adopted its February 9, 1988 findings

and conclusions regarding Graham’s first state habeas petition.

In addition, it found that the new 1993 affidavits from Chambers,

Brown, Shields, and Loraine Johnson were “not credible,” that in

light of his April 22, 1993 affidavit showing loss of memory,

West’s March 31, 1993 affidavit was “not reliable,” that Amos’s

1993 affidavit was “not credible,” that Hubbard and the

Stephenses did not see the actual shooting and that their

affidavits therefore did not undermine Skillern’s identification,

and that Skillern’s testimony was credible.   The court concluded

that Graham’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim had been

rejected in the previous state habeas proceeding and hence need

not be considered again.   Alternatively, it found that Graham had

shown neither defective performance nor any resultant prejudice.

Finally, the court concluded that a claim of actual innocence

                                12
independent of constitutional infirmity at trial was not

cognizable in habeas proceedings and that even if it were, Graham

fell far short of the showing necessary to trigger consideration

of such a claim.   On April 27, 1993, in a per curiam order, the

Court of Criminal Appeals denied habeas relief.    See Ex parte

Graham, 853 S.W.2d 564 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993).    Graham filed both

a petition for certiorari in the Supreme Court, which was denied,

see Graham v. Texas, 508 U.S. 945 (1993), and a motion for

reconsideration, which the Court of Criminal Appeals overruled,

see Ex parte Graham, 853 S.W.2d 565, 566 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993).

Nevertheless, the latter ordered Graham’s execution stayed for

thirty days pending the Supreme Court’s resolution of Johnson v.

Texas, 506 U.S. 1090 (1993) (granting certiorari).    See Graham,
853 S.W.2d at 566-67.

     On April 28, 1993, immediately after the Texas Court of

Criminal Appeals denied relief on his second state habeas

petition, Graham filed a second federal habeas application in the

Southern District of Texas asserting that he had received

ineffective assistance of counsel at trial.   He voluntarily

dismissed it that same day, after Governor Ann Richards granted a

thirty-day stay in connection with executive clemency

proceedings.

     On June 24, 1993, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in

Johnson v. Texas, 509 U.S. 350 (1993), holding that the Texas

capital sentencing scheme adequately allowed consideration of the

                                13
defendant’s youth as a mitigating factor.     See id. at 353.

Graham then filed in the Court of Criminal Appeals a motion to

continue the stay of execution and for remand to the state trial

court for an evidentiary hearing on his claims of ineffective

assistance of counsel, based on evidence discovered after the

second state habeas proceeding.    In a per curiam order issued

July 5, 1993, the Court of Criminal Appeals denied the motion to

continue the stay and the motion for remand without prejudice.

The state then set Graham’s execution for August 17, 1993.

     On July 21, 1993, Graham filed a civil suit against the

Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles (TBPP) seeking an evidentiary

hearing before that body on his innocence-based clemency request.

After a hearing, the Travis County state district court issued a

temporary injunction requiring the TBPP to hold a hearing on

Graham’s claim of innocence by August 10, 1993 or, in lieu

thereof, to reschedule his execution until after such a hearing.

The TBPP did not hold a hearing, but instead filed a notice of

appeal to the state court of appeals in Austin, which operated to

supersede the trial court’s order.     On August 13, 1993, the

Austin Court of Appeals, on Graham’s motion, enjoined his

execution pending resolution of the TBPP’s appeal.     Three days

later, the Court of Criminal Appeals, on Graham’s motion, stayed

his execution “pending further orders by the Court.”     On the same

day, the Court of Criminal Appeals also denied motions, filed by

the district attorney of Harris County and the TBPP, for leave to

                                  14
file with the Court of Criminal Appeals applications for mandamus

to require the Austin Court of Appeals to vacate its injunction

prohibiting Graham’s execution.    See State ex rel. Holmes v.

Third Court of Appeals, 860 S.W.2d 873, 873 (Tex. Crim. App.

1993).   On November 9, 1993, however, the court sua sponte

reconsidered its denial of leave to file the applications for

mandamus, granted leave, and stayed further proceedings in the

Austin Court of Appeals.   See State ex rel. Holmes v. Honorable

Court of Appeals, 885 S.W.2d 386, 386-87 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993).

Graham, through counsel, then appeared before the Court of

Criminal Appeals as the real party in interest.   On April 20,

1994, after Graham’s appeal of his third federal habeas

application had been briefed and argued, see infra, the court

conditionally granted the writs, holding that the Austin Court of

Appeals had no jurisdiction to enjoin Graham’s execution.     See

State ex rel. Holmes v. Honorable Court of Appeals, 885 S.W.2d
389, 390 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994).   It also addressed the scope of

Graham’s available state habeas remedies with respect to his

claim that evidence discovered since his conviction demonstrated

his actual innocence and decided that habeas corpus is an

appropriate vehicle for a prisoner to assert claims of actual

innocence:

     [W]e hold an applicant seeking habeas relief based on a
     claim of factual innocence must, as a threshold, demonstrate
     that the newly discovered evidence, if true, creates a doubt
     as to the efficacy of the verdict sufficient to undermine
     confidence in the verdict and that it is probable that the

                                    15
     verdict would be different. Once that threshold has been
     met the habeas court must afford the applicant a forum and
     opportunity to present his evidence.
          . . . .
          This threshold standard and burden of proof will
     satisfy the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
     and we adopt them in the habeas context. If the applicant
     meets the threshold standard announced above the habeas
     judge must hold a hearing to determine whether the newly
     discovered evidence, when considered in light of the entire
     record before the jury that convicted him, shows that no
     rational trier of fact could find proof of guilt beyond a
     reasonable doubt.
          Therefore, we . . . hold that, pursuant to Tex.Code
     Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 11.07, Graham may appropriately couch
     his claims of factual innocence in the context of a
     violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
     Amendment.

Id. at 398-99.   Notwithstanding this conclusion, the court

declined to use the case then before it to resolve Graham’s claim

because “there is no [habeas] application presently pending

before this Court, nor has the trial judge been given the

opportunity to prepare findings of fact consistent with art.

11.07 § 3.”   Id. at 399.   It observed, however, that “Graham is

free to pursue his claims through the filing of an application

under Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 11.07.”    Id.

     On June 22, 1994, the Austin Court of Appeals set aside the

Travis County district court’s temporary injunction against the

TBPP, but did not rule on the merits of the controversy.    In

October, the Travis County district court rendered judgment that

Graham was not entitled to a clemency hearing before the TBPP on

his actual innocence claim.   The Austin Court of Appeals

affirmed:

                                 16
     [W]e determine that Graham’s right to a due course of law
     hearing on his claim of actual innocence has been satisfied
     by the habeas corpus procedure fashioned for him by the
     Court of Criminal Appeals in Holmes. Upon a showing of new
     evidence that undermines confidence in the jury verdict,
     Graham will be entitled to an evidentiary hearing in
     accordance with statutory post-conviction habeas corpus
     procedures. . . .
          . . . Now that the Court of Criminal Appeals in Holmes
     has created a judicial vehicle for testing such a claim of
     actual innocence, we hold that the Texas Constitution does
     not afford Graham an additional, duplicative hearing within
     the executive-clemency process.

Graham v. Texas Bd. of Pardons & Paroles, 913 S.W.2d 745, 751

(Tex. App.--Austin 1996, writ dism’d w.o.j.).   Graham was thus

left with recourse only to the courts.

     The day after filing the civil suit against the TBPP,

Graham, through counsel, filed a third federal habeas application

in the Southern District of Texas.   The application asserted only

two grounds for relief:   first, that Graham was actually innocent

of the offense and thus was entitled to relief under the opinions

of five justices in Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390 (1993),

agreeing that “the execution of an innocent person would violate

the Constitution,” and second, that he was denied effective

assistance of counsel in that his attorneys failed to interview

crime scene witnesses named in the police report, investigate and

present an alibi defense, properly question witness Amos, and

call Hubbard to the stand.   Graham also moved for an evidentiary

hearing and for leave to undertake discovery.

     Graham’s application was supported by numerous affidavits

and exhibits, many of which he had obtained after the conclusion

                                17
of his second state habeas proceeding on April 26, 1993 and never

had submitted to the state courts.    This new material included

the following:

     1.   A July 10, 1993 affidavit of Sherian Etuk, who had been
          working at the Safeway on the evening of May 13, 1981
          and had seen the shooting or its immediate aftermath,
          describing the perpetrator as a young black man not
          taller than 5'6", with a light build and very narrow
          face, declaring that Etuk had been shown photographs by
          the police and that no one had contacted her on behalf
          of Graham, and stating that none of four pictures of
          Graham “depict the guy who shot the man out in the
          parking lot that night”;

     2.   A May 25, 1993 affidavit of crime scene witness Leodis
          Wilkerson, aged twelve in May 1981, declaring that he
          was never contacted by anyone on Graham’s behalf,
          describing the shooter as a short, young, clean-shaven
          black man, and stating that none of three attached
          photographs of Graham “to the best of my memory looks
          anything like the man who did the shooting at the
          Safeway”;

     3.   A June 1, 1993 affidavit of Loraine Johnson providing
          essentially the same information as her April 18, 1993
          affidavit but describing in more detail her attempt to
          inform Graham’s trial counsel of his alibi;

     4.   A May 1993 affidavit of Vanessa Ford tending to
          corroborate the alibi portions of Loraine Johnson’s
          June 1, 1993 affidavit;

     5.   A June 28, 1993 affidavit of Jo Carolyn Johnson
          corroborating Loraine Johnson’s affidavits as to
          Loraine’s informing Graham’s trial counsel of Graham’s
          alibi;

     6.   A Houston Police Department offense report indicating
          that Lambert was facing federal drug charges in
          Oklahoma, was carrying three shotguns and a number of
          false identification cards in his van, and had
          “fashioned himself as a con man,” describing three
          other suspects in the Lambert murder, who were not
          investigated further after Graham’s arrest, and
          indicating that there was no evidence except Skillern’s

                                     18
          identification connecting Graham to the crime, the
          Safeway, or its neighborhood;

     7.   A July 1993 report by psychologist Elizabeth Loftus
          concluding that Skillern’s identification was likely
          unreliable;

     8.   An April 20, 1993 report by another psychologist,
          Curtis Wills, asserting that “Bernadine Skillern’s
          identification is totally unreliable”;

     9.   A Houston Police Department firearms report dated May
          26, 1981, indicating that the .22 caliber pistol Graham
          had with him when arrested was not the .22 caliber
          pistol with which Lambert was killed.

On August 6, 1993, the state filed its answer and motion for

summary judgment, which waived exhaustion and did not raise the

issue of successive or abusive applications.   On August 13, 1993,

the district court, without any evidentiary hearing, denied

Graham’s application.   See Graham v. Collins, 829 F. Supp. 204,

209-10 (S.D. Tex. 1993).

     On appeal, the Fifth Circuit declined to accept the state’s

waiver of exhaustion and remanded the case to the district court.

See Graham v. Johnson, 94 F.3d 958, 970-71 (5th Cir. 1996).    In

so doing, it concluded that exhaustion would not be futile,

although Texas recently had passed a statute erecting significant

barriers to death row inmates’ successive habeas applications:6

     6
        Before the passage of the 1995 act, the Texas abuse-of-
the-writ doctrine allowed the courts, after finding that a habeas
petitioner had failed without cause to address the same issue on
direct appeal or in a previous petition, to refuse to accept the
habeas petition. See Ex parte Dora, 548 S.W.2d 392, 393-94 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1977). The rule was not regularly applied, however,
see Lowe v. Scott, 48 F.3d 873, 876 (5th Cir. 1995), until 1994,
see Ex parte Barber, 879 S.W.2d 889, 891 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App.

                                19
     (a) If an initial application for a writ of habeas corpus is
     untimely or if a subsequent application is filed after
     filing an initial application, a court may not consider the
     merits of or grant relief based on the subsequent or
     untimely initial application unless the application contains
     sufficient specific facts establishing that:

          (1) the current claims and issues have not been and
          could not have been presented previously in a timely
          initial application or in a previously considered
          application filed under this article or Article 11.07
          because the factual or legal basis for the claim was
          unavailable:

                (A) on the date the applicant filed the previous
                application; or

                (B) if the applicant did not file an initial
                application, on or before the last date for the
                timely filing of an initial application;

          (2) by a preponderance of the evidence, but for a
          violation of the United States Constitution no rational
          juror could have found the applicant guilty beyond a
          reasonable doubt; or

          (3) by clear and convincing evidence, but for a
          violation of the United States Constitution no rational
          juror would have answered in the state’s favor one or
          more of the special issues that were submitted to the
          jury in the applicant’s trial under Article 37.071 or
          37.0711.

Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 11.071 § 5(a).   Section 5(e)

defines an unavailable factual claim as one “not ascertainable

through the exercise of reasonable diligence on or before that

date.”   The Fifth Circuit found that these new provisions

“appear[ed]” to afford Graham the right to have his claims heard,

and noted that, in any case, it was unclear whether article

1994) (announcing strict application of abuse-of-the-writ
doctrine).

                                20
11.071, enacted while Graham’s federal habeas appeal was pending,

would apply to him.   See Graham, 94 F.3d at 969 n.20.   The court

also emphasized that exhaustion was necessary to flesh out the

record:

     The issues in this case are almost exclusively factual, and
     the relevant factual scenario is complex, highly
     controverted, and in many respects unresolved. The district
     court denied the petition without an evidentiary hearing.
     There is a large body of relevant evidence that has not been
     presented to the state court. It is doubtful that the
     record before us allows review of the underlying issues on a
     fully informed basis.

Id. at 970-71.

     On remand, on October 11, 1996, the district court dismissed

Graham’s third federal habeas application for failure to exhaust

state remedies.   Eighteen months later, on April 27, 1998, Graham

filed a third state habeas application, supported by the evidence

he previously had presented to the courts and three entirely new

affidavits, raising the same two issues as the third federal

habeas application.   He also added a claim that Texas violated

his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by (1) sentencing him

to death for a crime he allegedly committed at the age of

seventeen without a pretrial determination that he was

sufficiently mature and morally responsible to be tried as an

adult and (2) failing to require the full consideration of youth

as a mitigating circumstance.   On November 18, 1998, the Court of

Criminal Appeals dismissed his application as an abuse of the

                                21
writ under the new state habeas law.    See Ex parte Graham, No.

17,568-05 (Tex. Crim. App. Nov. 18, 1998).

     On December 18, 1998, Graham filed his fourth federal habeas

application in the Southern District of Texas, raising the same

three issues as he had in his third state habeas application.

The district court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, holding

that the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996,

Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996), required Graham to

obtain permission from the appropriate court of appeals before

filing a “second” or “successive” habeas application.     See Graham

v. Johnson, No. H-98-4241 (S.D. Tex. Jan. 7, 1999).   Graham filed

motions in the district court for a stay of execution and for a

certificate of probable cause or a certificate of appealability.

The court granted a certificate of appealability but denied the

stay.    See Graham v. Johnson, No. H-98-4241 (S.D. Tex. Jan. 8,

1999).    Graham then filed in the Fifth Circuit a motion for stay

of execution, a notice of appeal from the district court’s

dismissal of his application, and alternative motions to recall

the mandate in the 1996 habeas case or for an order authorizing

the district court to consider a successive habeas corpus

application.   On January 10, 1999, we granted a stay to allow

more time to consider the issues presented by the three

pleadings, and on February 8, 1999, in keeping with Congress’s

directive that we rule on such a request within thirty days, see

                                 22
28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(D), we denied Graham’s Motion for Order

Authorizing District Court to Consider Successive Habeas

Petition.   We now rule on Graham’s appeal and Motion to Recall

Mandate in Previous Habeas Case and provide a full opinion

explaining our decision in all three matters.

                      II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW

     The only issue raised by Graham’s appeal, whether AEDPA

applies to his current habeas application, is an issue of law

that we review de novo.     See Kiser v. Johnson, 163 F.3d 326, 326-

27 (5th Cir. 1999).   The two alternative pleadings are properly

directed to us, rather than to the district court, in the first

instance:   The Motion to Recall Mandate in Previous Habeas Case

asks us to withdraw our own prior decision, see Calderon v.

Thompson, 118 S. Ct. 1489, 1498 (1998) (“[T]he courts of appeals

are recognized to have an inherent power to recall their

mandates, subject to review for an abuse of discretion.”), and

the Motion for Order Authorizing District Court to Consider

Successive Habeas Petition must be filed in the appropriate court

of appeals, see 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A).

                            III.   DISCUSSION

A.   Appeal of Dismissal

     Enacted on April 24, 1996, AEDPA made it significantly

harder for prisoners filing second or successive federal habeas

                                    23
applications under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 to obtain hearings on the

merits of their claims.   As amended by AEDPA, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)

provides:

     (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.

     (2) A claim presented in a second or successive habeas
     corpus application under section 2254 that was not presented
     in a prior application shall be dismissed unless--

            (A) the applicant shows that the claim relies on a new
            rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases
            on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was
            previously unavailable; or

            (B)(i) the factual predicate for the claim could not
            have been discovered previously through the exercise of
            due diligence; and

            (ii) the facts underlying the claim, if proven and
            viewed in light of the evidence as a whole, would be
            sufficient to establish by clear and convincing
            evidence that, but for constitutional error, no
            reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant
            guilty of the underlying offense.

     (3)(A) Before a second or successive application permitted
     by this section is filed in the district court, the
     applicant shall move in the appropriate court of appeals for
     an order authorizing the district court to consider the
     application.

     (B) A motion in the court of appeals for an order
     authorizing the district court to consider a second or
     successive application shall be determined by a three-judge
     panel of the court of appeals.

     (C) The court of appeals may authorize the filing of a
     second or successive application only if it determines that
     the application makes a prima facie showing that the
     application satisfies the requirements of this subsection.

     (D) The court of appeals shall grant or deny the
     authorization to file a second or successive application not
     later than 30 days after the filing of the motion.

                                    24
     (E) The grant or denial of an authorization by a court of
     appeals to file a second or successive application shall not
     be appealable and shall not be the subject of a petition for
     rehearing or for a writ of certiorari.

     (4) A district court shall dismiss any claim presented in a
     second or successive application that the court of appeals
     has authorized to be filed unless the applicant shows that
     the claim satisfies the requirements of this section.

28 U.S.C. § 2244(b).   AEDPA also added a stringent statute of

limitations to the federal habeas statute:

     (d)(1) A 1-year period of limitation shall apply to an
     application for a writ of habeas corpus by a person in
     custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court. The
     limitation period shall run from the latest of--

          (A) the date on which the judgment became final by the
          conclusion of direct review or the expiration of the
          time for seeking such review;

          (B) the date on which the impediment to filing an
          application created by State action in violation of the
          Constitution or laws of the United States is removed,
          if the applicant was prevented from filing by such
          State action;

          (C) the date on which the constitutional right asserted
          was initially recognized by the Supreme Court, if the
          right has been newly recognized by the Supreme Court
          and made retroactively applicable to cases on
          collateral review; or

          (D) the date on which the factual predicate of the
          claim or claims presented could have been discovered
          through the exercise of due diligence.

     (2) The time during which a properly filed application for
     State post-conviction or other collateral review with
     respect to the pertinent judgment or claim is pending shall
     not be counted toward any period of limitation under this
     subsection.

28 U.S.C. § 2244(d).

                                25
     AEDPA’s amendments to the federal habeas statute impact

Graham in the following manner.    With respect to § 2244(b),

Graham concedes in his brief on appeal that his November 1998

application is second or successive to his 1988 application,

which was fully adjudicated on the merits.7   Thus, if AEDPA

applies to this latest application, he would be required to

obtain an order from this court authorizing the district court to

consider it.   Graham admits that he cannot meet § 2244(b)’s

prerequisites for the issuance of such an order.    He contends,

however, that he need not obtain authorization from this court

because AEDPA does not apply to his November 1998 application.

This is the crucial issue before us.

     1.   Is the district court’s dismissal of Graham’s
          application appealable?

     Before deciding whether AEDPA does, in fact, apply to

Graham’s application, we pause to consider whether the district

     7
        We are aware that the Supreme Court recently granted
certiorari on the following question: “If a person’s petition
for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 is dismissed for failure
to exhaust state remedies and he subsequently exhausts his state
remedies and refiles the § 2254 petition, are claims included
within that petition that were not included within his initial
§ 2254 filing ‘second or successive’ habeas applications?” Slack
v. McDaniel, No. 98-6322, 1999 WL 80303 (U.S. Feb. 22, 1999)
(granting certiorari). Under current law, however, it is clear
that an application filed after a previous application was fully
adjudicated on the merits is a second or successive application
within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b), even if it contains
claims never before raised. See Felker v. Turpin, 518 U.S. 651,
655-58, 662-63 (1996). Graham’s current application is therefore
unquestionably second or successive.

                                  26
court’s order dismissing his application for lack of jurisdiction

as a result of his failure to comply with 28 U.S.C.

§ 2244(b)(3)(C) is appealable.    Although neither party has

suggested that it is not, we may determine the existence of our

own jurisdiction sua sponte.     See Thompson v. Betts, 754 F.2d
1243, 1245 (5th Cir. 1985).

     As a general rule, federal law limits our appellate

jurisdiction to reviewing final decisions of the district courts.

See 28 U.S.C. § 1291.   Similarly, the federal habeas corpus

statute provides that “[i]n a habeas corpus proceeding . . .

before a district judge, the final order shall be subject to

review, on appeal, by the court of appeals for the circuit in

which the proceeding is held.”    Id. § 2253.   A final judgment is

one that “ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing

for the court to do but execute the judgment.”     Coopers & Lybrand

v. Livesay, 437 U.S. 463, 467 (1978) (quoting Catlin v. United

States, 324 U.S. 229, 233 (1945)) (internal quotation marks

omitted).   We have taken a practical approach to determining

whether a district court decision meets this standard; a judgment

reflecting an intent to dispose of all issues before the court is

final.   See National Ass’n of Gov’t Employees v. City Pub. Serv.

Bd., 40 F.3d 698, 705 (5th Cir. 1994); Vaughn v. Mobil Oil

Exploration & Producing Southeast, Inc., 891 F.2d 1195, 1197 (5th

Cir. 1990).

                                  27
     Our own court and one of our sister circuits have found

dismissals for failure to move for authorization to file a

successive application to be appealable final orders.   In

Spotville v. Cain, 149 F.3d 374, 375 (5th Cir. 1998), we reviewed

such a dismissal without questioning the existence of

jurisdiction.   The First Circuit considered an analogous

situation in Pratt v. United States, 129 F.3d 54, 57-58 (1st Cir.

1997), cert. denied, 118 S. Ct. 1807 (1998), and concluded that

it had jurisdiction to consider an appeal from a dismissal of a

federal prisoner’s successive 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion for failure

to obtain the required clearance from the court of appeals.8

Pratt, like Graham, challenged the dismissal on the grounds that

AEDPA did not apply to his successive motion.   See id. at 57.

Under such circumstances, the court determined, he could regain

access to the district court and vindicate his theory that AEDPA

     8
        AEDPA added the following language to § 2255, which
authorizes federal prisoners to seek relief from custody by
filing a motion to vacate, set aside, or correct sentence:

     A second or successive motion must be certified as provided
     in section 2244 by a panel of the appropriate court of
     appeals to contain--
          (1) newly discovered evidence that, if proven and
          viewed in light of the evidence as a whole, would be
          sufficient to establish by clear and convincing
          evidence that no reasonable factfinder would have found
          the movant guilty of the offense; or
          (2) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive
          to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court,
          that was previously unavailable.

28 U.S.C. § 2255.

                                28
did not apply to him only by an appeal and a subsequent holding

that the district court erred in considering his latest petition

under the new statute.     See id.    The district court’s order was

therefore final “in the relevant sense” and appealable even

though it was without prejudice to Pratt’s refiling after

obtaining the necessary authorization from the court of appeals.

Id. at 57-58.    We find this reasoning persuasive and conclude

that we have jurisdiction to review the district court’s

dismissal of Graham’s application.

     2.   Does AEDPA apply by its terms?

     We now turn to the merits of Graham’s appeal.      It appears to

us that, on its face, AEDPA applies to Graham’s application.      The

statute was enacted on April 24, 1996, and Graham did not file

his current federal habeas application until November 18, 1998.

In Lindh v. Murphy, 521 U.S. 320, 336 (1997), the Supreme Court

held that “the new provisions of chapter 153 [the chapter of

Title 28 of the United States Code containing § 2244 and §§ 2253-

2255] generally apply only to cases filed after the Act became

effective.”     We are comforted in our conclusion by the fact that,

in Felker v. Turpin, 518 U.S. 651, 655-58, 665 (1996), the Court

applied AEDPA to a successive application filed after April 24,

1996 where the first application was filed before that date.      It

seems equally apparent that § 2244(b)’s restrictions on second or

successive habeas applications govern Graham’s current

                                     29
application, which he concedes is second or successive within the

meaning of the statute.

     Graham, however, contends that AEDPA does not govern his

most recent federal habeas application.    First, he argues that it

is not a new application but a continuation of his third

application for federal habeas relief, which he filed in July

1993 and which was dismissed without prejudice in October 1996

for failure to exhaust state remedies.9    Because this earlier

application was pending on appeal on the date of AEDPA’s

enactment, he claims, the statute does not apply to it under

Lindh.   In the alternative, he asserts that there is no

indication that Congress intended AEDPA to govern applications in

the procedural posture of his own--specifically, where one or

more habeas applications were filed before the enactment of the

statute and a successive application was filed afterward--and to

apply the Act to him would be impermissibly retroactive.    We

address each of these arguments in turn.

     9
        We point out that Graham’s third claim--that he was
unconstitutionally tried as an adult and that the Texas death
penalty statute in effect at the time of his trial did not permit
adequate consideration of youth as a mitigating factor--was not
raised in his third federal habeas application and cannot
properly be considered a continuation of that application.
Otherwise, a prisoner whose habeas application, pending on the
date of AEDPA’s enactment, was later dismissed without prejudice
could present any number of new claims in a later application
without subjecting them to AEDPA’s restrictions. But even if the
pre- and post-AEDPA applications raise identical claims, the
latter cannot, as we demonstrate infra, be considered a
continuation of the former for purposes of determining whether
the statute applies.

                                30
     3.   Is Graham’s application exempt from AEDPA because it is
          a continuation of an application pending on the date
          of AEDPA’s enactment?

     Graham’s first argument goes thus:    AEDPA does not apply to

habeas applications pending on the date of its enactment.       See

Lindh, 521 U.S. at 336.   A habeas application filed after a

previous application was dismissed for non-exhaustion is a

“continuation” of the earlier application.    In re Gasery, 116
F.3d 1051, 1052 (5th Cir. 1997) (per curiam).   Therefore, AEDPA

does not apply to his November 1998 application because, in the

words of Gasery, it is a “continuation” of its 1993 predecessor,

which was pending on appeal on the day AEDPA became law.

     We think that Graham reads too much into Gasery.    Our

decision in Gasery does not exempt from AEDPA an application in

the same procedural posture as Graham’s.    Instead, it holds that

an application refiled after an earlier application was dismissed

without prejudice for failure to exhaust state remedies is not

second or successive to that earlier application within the

meaning of § 2244(b) as amended by AEDPA.    See id. at 1052.     In

doing so, however, it assumes that AEDPA governs the refiled

application.10

     10
        Gasery was decided before Lindh, at a time when the law
in this circuit was that AEDPA applied to applications pending on
the date of its enactment. See Drinkard v. Johnson, 97 F.3d 751,
766 (5th Cir. 1996). Thus, even if Gasery’s first application
had been, like Graham’s, pending on the day that AEDPA became
law, we would have assumed that the Act governed the later
application. As we discuss infra, however, the Supreme Court, in

                                31
     Moreover, the Supreme Court’s only pronouncement on the

relationship under AEDPA of applications refiled after their

predecessors have been dismissed without prejudice provides

little support for Graham’s reading of Gasery.    In Stewart v.

Martinez-Villareal, 118 S. Ct. 1618 (1998), the habeas applicant

was convicted in Arizona state court of two counts of first-

degree murder and sentenced to death.   See id. at 1619.      He filed

three federal habeas applications, all of which were dismissed on

the ground that they contained claims on which state remedies had

not yet been exhausted.   See id. at 1620.   In March 1993,

Martinez-Villareal filed a fourth federal habeas application

asserting, inter alia, that he was incompetent to be executed

under Ford v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 399, 409-10 (1986).     The

district court dismissed the Ford claim as premature.

Thereafter, the state obtained a warrant for Martinez-Villareal’s

a post-Lindh case, has applied AEDPA to a habeas application in
the same procedural posture as Gasery’s. See Stewart v.
Martinez-Villareal, 118 S. Ct. 1618, 1620-22 (1998). Two post-
Lindh cases from other circuits have applied AEDPA in the same
way. See Carlson v. Pitcher, 137 F.3d 416, 419 (6th Cir. 1998);
McWilliams v. Colorado, 121 F.3d 573, 575 (10th Cir. 1997).
Furthermore, our own citations to Gasery understand it as
standing for the proposition that an application filed after a
predecessor is dismissed for failure to exhaust state remedies is
not successive to that earlier petition and not as holding that
the two are in fact the same petition. See Alexander v. Johnson,
163 F.3d 906, 909 (5th Cir. 1998); In re Cain, 137 F.3d 234, 236
(5th Cir. 1998). Tellingly, two circuits have held that
applications in the same procedural posture as Graham’s do not
relate back to their predecessors for the purposes of determining
whether the petitioner was in custody at the time of filing. See
Henry v. Lungren, 164 F.3d 1240, 1241-42 (9th Cir. 1999); Tinder
v. Paula, 725 F.2d 801, 805-06 (1st Cir. 1984).

                                32
execution, and the Arizona courts found him competent to be

executed.   Martinez-Villareal then moved in federal district

court to reopen his Ford claim, and the district court ruled that

under § 2244(b), it did not have jurisdiction over a “second or

successive” habeas application unless (as Martinez-Villareal had

not) the prisoner obtained permission to file such an application

from the appropriate court of appeals.   The Ninth Circuit

reversed, holding that § 2244(b) does not apply to an application

that raises only a competency-to-be-executed claim.    See

Martinez-Villareal v. Stewart, 118 F.3d 628, 634 (9th Cir. 1997),

aff’d, 118 S. Ct. 1618 (1998).

     In the Supreme Court, the state argued that because

Martinez-Villareal already had had one fully litigated habeas

petition (in which his Ford claim was found to be premature),

§ 2244(b) required his new application11 to be treated as

successive.   The Court held that the new application, based on

the Ford claim, was not a “second or successive” application

within the meaning of § 2244(b) because it never had been

adjudicated on its merits.   See 118 S. Ct. at 1622.   In that way,

     11
        Both the parties and the Supreme Court treated Martinez-
Villareal’s motion to “reopen” his Ford claim as a new
application for habeas corpus. The term suggests, however, that
Martinez-Villareal, at least, viewed the new application as a
continuation of, or motion for permission to continue, the
previously dismissed application.

                                 33
it said, a claim dismissed as premature is analogous to one

dismissed for failure to exhaust state remedies:

      But none of our cases expounding [the non-exhaustion]
      doctrine have ever suggested that a prisoner whose habeas
      petition was dismissed for failure to exhaust state
      remedies, and who then did exhaust those remedies and
      returned to federal court, was by such action filing a
      successive petition. A court where such a petition was
      filed could adjudicate these claims under the same standard
      as would govern those made in any other first petition.

Id.   Graham interprets Martinez-Villareal as holding that the new

application was a continuation of the dismissed petition and thus

not successive.   The opinion provides no direct support for this

proposition, however.   Rather, the Court held simply that a

habeas claim that has not been adjudicated on the merits is not

“successive” under AEDPA even if it has been brought before the

courts before and dismissed on procedural grounds.   Both where a

claim is dismissed as premature and for failure to exhaust state

remedies, “the habeas petitioner does not receive an adjudication

of his claim.   To hold otherwise would mean that a dismissal of a

first habeas petition for technical procedural reasons would bar

the prisoner from ever obtaining federal habeas review.”   Id.

The Court’s conclusion provides no indication that the dismissed

application should be treated as a continuation of the first so

as to preclude the application of AEDPA.   To the contrary, the

Court applied AEDPA in reaching its result.

      Graham could fairly point out that in neither Gasery nor

Martinez-Villareal was the dismissed habeas application pending

                                34
on the date of AEDPA’s enactment.    That difference, he would

argue, compels the conclusion that AEDPA does not apply in his

own case even though it did in Gasery and Martinez-Villareal.

See Lindh, 521 U.S. at 323-24, 336 (holding that “the new

provisions of chapter 153 generally apply only to cases filed

after the Act became effective” and refusing to apply AEDPA to

Lindh because his first habeas application was pending in the

court of appeals on the date the statute was enacted).    To accept

that conclusion would create a distinction between applications

in an identical procedural posture whose predecessor applications

were dismissed only a few days apart.    That is, if a prisoner’s

prior application was dismissed on or before April 23, 1996,

AEDPA would govern his “continuation” of this application; if it

was dismissed after April 23, 1996, AEDPA would not apply to the

“continuation” application.   We can see no justification for this

disparate result.

     As further support for his position that AEDPA does not

apply to his current application, Graham argues that federal

courts retain an interest in unexhausted habeas suits that they

do not in conventional civil suits dismissed without prejudice.12

     12
        Graham points to the federal courts’ “inchoate” interest
in dismissed habeas cases in an effort to refute the state’s
observation that habeas applications are a species of civil
action, see Fisher v. Baker, 203 U.S. 174, 181 (1906) (observing
that a federal habeas case is “a civil and not a criminal
proceeding”), and that civil suits dismissed without prejudice
are generally treated as though they had never been filed. For
example, in the limitations context, this circuit does not

                                35
For this reason, he claims, courts often have held or permitted

habeas cases to be held in abeyance pending the exhaustion of

state remedies, rather than dismissing them outright.   As

examples, he points to Burris v. Farley, 51 F.3d 655, 659 (7th

Cir. 1995); Fetterly v. Paskett, 997 F.2d 1295, 1301-02 (9th Cir.

1993); Scott v. Dugger, 891 F.2d 800, 802 (11th Cir. 1989);

Giarratano v. Procunier, 891 F.2d 483, 485 (4th Cir. 1989);

Johnson v. Texas, 878 F.2d 904, 906 (5th Cir. 1989); Collins v.

Lockhart, 754 F.2d 258, 260 (8th Cir. 1985); and Chenault v.

Stynchcombe, 581 F.2d 444, 448 (5th Cir. 1978).   Furthermore,

Graham insists, we recently made clear in Brewer v. Johnson, 139
F.3d 491, 493 (5th Cir. 1998), that district courts may either

hold an unexhausted federal habeas application in abeyance or

dismiss it without prejudice, subject to review for abuse of

consider a suit filed after a dismissal without prejudice a
continuation of the first suit. See Hawkins v. McHugh, 46 F.3d
10, 12 (5th Cir. 1995) (“A federal court that dismisses without
prejudice a suit arising from a federal statutory cause of action
has not adjudicated the suit on its merits, and leaves the
parties in the same legal position as if no suit had been
filed.”); Lambert v. United States, 44 F.3d 296, 298 (5th Cir.
1995) (“[T]he district court’s order dismissing the suit without
prejudice left Lambert in the same position as if the first suit
had never been filed.”). Other circuits have reached the same
conclusion. See Chico-Velez v. Roche Prods., Inc., 139 F.3d 56,
59 (1st Cir. 1998); Johnson v. Nyack Hosp., 86 F.3d 8, 11 (2d
Cir. 1996); Garfield v. J.C. Nichols Real Estate, 57 F.3d 662,
666 (8th Cir. 1995). The state argues that, consistent with this
view, the dismissal of Graham’s third federal habeas application
without prejudice means, in effect, that it was never filed and
was therefore not pending on the date AEDPA became effective for
purposes of deciding whether the statute governs Graham’s current
application.

                               36
discretion.   If a federal court can hold an unexhausted habeas

case in abeyance rather than dismiss it outright, Graham

contends, we should view his third habeas application not as

never having been filed, but as stayed pending exhaustion.

     Graham misunderstands the law governing unexhausted federal

habeas applications.   The Supreme Court has held that “a district

court must dismiss habeas petitions containing both unexhausted

and exhausted claims.”   Rose v. Lundy, 455 U.S. 509, 522 (1982).

Subsequent opinions have interpreted Lundy as requiring the

dismissal of an application containing any claims that have not

been exhausted in the state courts.    See, e.g., Coleman v.

Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 731 (1991) (“This Court has long held

that a state prisoner’s federal habeas petition should be

dismissed if the prisoner has not exhausted available state

remedies as to any of his federal claims.”); Castille v. Peoples,

489 U.S. 346, 349 (1989) (“Respondent’s habeas petition should

have been dismissed if state remedies had not been exhausted as

to any of the federal claims.”); Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. 107,

124 n.25 (1982) (“If [an unexhausted due process claim] were

present, Rose v. Lundy, 455 U.S. 509 (1982), would mandate

dismissal of the entire petition.”).   Of course, because

exhaustion is based on comity rather than jurisdiction, there is

no absolute bar to federal consideration of unexhausted habeas

applications.   See Lundy, 455 U.S. at 515; Narvaiz v. Johnson,

134 F.3d 688, 693 n.1 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 118 S. Ct. 2364

                                37
(1998); Earhart v. Johnson, 132 F.3d 1062, 1065 (5th Cir.), cert.

denied, 119 S. Ct. 344 (1998).   Thus, under certain

circumstances, a federal court may consider an unexhausted habeas

application.   See Granberry v. Greer, 481 U.S. 129, 134-35 (1987)

(concluding that a federal appellate court may consider an

application to which the state raises a non-exhaustion defense

for the first time on appeal).   Unless the court decides to

consider an unexhausted application, however, Lundy dictates that

it be dismissed.   Indeed, we recognized this principle in Graham,
94 F.3d at 968, when we noted, citing Lundy, that “[t]he

exhaustion doctrine, generally codified in section 2254(b) & (c),

requires that normally a state prisoner’s entire federal habeas

petition must be dismissed unless the prisoner’s state remedies

have been exhausted as to all claims raised in the federal

petition” and dismissed Graham’s petition because he “presented

significant evidentiary support for his claims of actual

innocence and ineffective assistance of counsel that was never

presented to the state courts,” id. at 969.

     Moreover, neither the cases Graham cites nor the current

practice of the federal courts support the proposition that

abatement of an application containing unexhausted claims is

generally an acceptable substitute for dismissal.   We turn first

to Graham’s own citations.   One of these, Chenault v.

Stynchcombe, 581 F.2d 444 (5th Cir. 1978), predates Lundy.

Burris and Fetterly held fully exhausted habeas applications in

                                 38
abeyance pending exhaustion of other claims that had not yet been

presented to the state courts.    See Burris, 51 F.3d at 658-59;

Fetterly, 997 F.2d at 1297-98; see also Calderon v. United States

Dist. Ct., 134 F.3d 981, 987 (9th Cir.) (pointing out that

Fetterly involved an application containing only exhausted

claims), cert. denied, 119 S. Ct. 274 (1998); Greenawalt v.

Stewart, 105 F.3d 1268, 1274 (9th Cir.) (same), cert. denied, 117
S. Ct. 794 (1997).   It is not clear that the district courts in

Scott and Giarratano held in abeyance petitions containing

unexhausted claims; at any rate, neither appellant challenged the

legitimacy of such an action.    See Scott, 891 F.2d at 802;

Giarratano, 891 F.2d at 485.     Lockhart permitted the abatement of

an application containing unexhausted claims, but the Eighth

Circuit has since rejected its reasoning in that case.     See

Victor v. Hopkins, 90 F.3d 276, 280-82 (8th Cir. 1996).     Our own

court often has dismissed unexhausted habeas applications rather

than hold them in abeyance pending dismissal.     See, e.g.,

Sterling v. Scott, 57 F.3d 451, 454 (5th Cir. 1995) (concluding

that the district court was required to dismiss the unexhausted

application and, citing Coleman, that it did not err in refusing

to hold it in abeyance); McGrew v. Texas Bd. of Pardons &

Paroles, 47 F.3d 158, 161 (5th Cir. 1995) (“McGrew’s allegations

reflect that he has not exhausted his state remedies and,

therefore, insofar as his complaint can be construed as seeking

                                  39
habeas relief, it must be dismissed for failure to exhaust.”);13

Alexander v. Johnson, 163 F.3d 906, 908 (5th Cir. 1998) (“A

habeas petition containing both exhausted and unexhausted claims

is a ‘mixed’ petition which should be dismissed without

prejudice.”); Whitehead v. Johnson, 157 F.3d 384, 387 (5th Cir.

1998) (“A federal habeas petition should be dismissed if state

remedies have not been exhausted as to all of the federal court

claims.”).   It is true, as Graham points out, that in Brewer, 139
F.3d at 493 (5th Cir. 1998), we stated, citing Johnson v. Texas,

878 F.2d 904 (5th Cir. 1989), that district courts may either

hold an unexhausted petition in abeyance or dismiss it without

prejudice.   In Brewer, however, the prisoner had been appointed

counsel, but had not yet filed a federal habeas application, at

the time he sought to have his federal proceeding held in

abeyance.    See 139 F.3d at 492.    Thus, despite its citation to

Johnson, the court was not squarely confronted with a situation

in which a prisoner seeks to abate an application containing

unexhausted claims.

     Similarly, several other circuits have concluded that

district courts should dismiss without prejudice, and not hold in

     13
        In the past, we have permitted district courts to abate
a prisoner’s § 1983 action that we concluded should be treated as
a habeas corpus application. See Johnson v. Texas, 878 F.2d 904,
906 (5th Cir. 1989). This practice was an attempt to prevent the
§ 1983 statute of limitations from barring the prisoner’s refiled
suit upon his post-exhaustion return to federal court. See Serio
v. Members of La. State Bd. of Pardons, 821 F.2d 1112, 1119 (5th
Cir. 1987); Jackson v. Torres, 720 F.2d 877, 879 (5th Cir. 1983).

                                    40
abeyance, habeas applications containing unexhausted claims.      See

Calderon v. United States Dist. Ct., 144 F.3d 618, 620 (9th Cir.

1998) (stating that “a petition with exhausted and unexhausted

claims must be dismissed or the unexhausted claims stricken from

the petition,” but permitting amendment of applications to delete

unexhausted claims and holding amended petition containing only

exhausted claims in abeyance pending exhaustion of deleted

claims); Christy v. Horn, 115 F.3d 201, 206-08 (3d Cir. 1997);

Victor, 90 F.3d at 280-83; see also Morris v. Bell, 124 F.3d 198,

No. 96-5510, 1997 WL 560055, *2-*3 (6th Cir. Sept. 5, 1997)

(unpublished table decision) (affirming dismissal of federal

habeas application for failure to exhaust even where prisoner

argued that district court should have abated proceedings so as

to prevent application of AEDPA upon post-exhaustion return to

federal court), cert. denied, 118 S. Ct. 1169 (1998).    Thus,

there is no general consensus that dismissing a federal habeas

application for non-exhaustion is the equivalent of holding it in

abeyance pending exhaustion.

     Certainly the Texas courts have acknowledged a fundamental

difference between the two.    A district court that holds a habeas

petition in abeyance but does not dismiss it retains jurisdiction

over the case.   See Ex parte Powers, 487 S.W.2d 101, 102 (Tex.

Crim. App. 1972).   Therefore, as a matter of comity, the Texas

courts will not consider a habeas petition while a federal habeas

proceeding concerning the “same matter” or seeking the same

                                 41
relief is presently pending.   See May v. Collins, 948 F.2d 162,

169 (5th Cir. 1991); Carter v. Estelle, 677 F.2d 427, 435-36 (5th

Cir. 1982); Ex parte McNeil, 588 S.W.2d 592, 592-93 (Tex. Crim.

App. 1979); Ex parte Green, 548 S.W.2d 914, 916 (Tex. Crim. App.

1977); Powers, 487 S.W.2d at 102.    Graham suggests that Texas’s

habeas abstention doctrine forced the district court to dismiss

his application, that, but for the doctrine, it would have held

the proceeding in abeyance, and that we should therefore act as

though it did so.   But he provides no evidence for his contention

that the lower court would have held his third federal

application in abeyance; indeed, it would not have been justified

in so doing even absent the Texas abstention doctrine.

Furthermore, Texas’s refusal to consider a habeas petition

raising the same claims or seeking the same relief as a pending

federal application underscore the fact that dismissal and

abatement are not the same for all purposes.

     Indeed, a contrary conclusion would allow a prisoner to

avoid AEDPA (and, inter alia, its statute of limitations) for

many years after the passage of the statute.   We note that, when

Gasery himself returned to the district court after we held that

he was not required to seek permission under § 2244(b)(3)(A) to

file a new application when his initial application was dismissed

for failure to exhaust, the district court found it time-barred

under § 2244(d), even though he filed the first, dismissed

petition before Congress enacted AEDPA.    See Gasery v. Johnson,

                                42
No. H-97-1685, slip op. (S.D. Tex. Mar. 5, 1998), appeal

docketed, No. 98-20221 (5th Cir. Mar. 30, 1998).   According to

the district court,

     if § 2244(d) were interpreted as Petitioner argues, the
     result would be impractical. A habeas petitioner could file
     a non-exhausted application in federal court within the
     limitations period and suffer a dismissal without prejudice.
     He could then wait decades to exhaust his state court
     remedies and could also wait decades after exhausting his
     state remedies before returning to federal court to
     “continue” his federal remedy, without running afoul of the
     statute of limitations.

Id. at 5-6.   Construing an application filed after a previous

application is dismissed without prejudice as a continuation of

the first application for all purposes would eviscerate the AEDPA

limitations period and thwart one of AEDPA’s principal purposes.

See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d); H.R. CONF. REP. NO. 104-518, at 111

(1996), reprinted in 1996 U.S.C.C.A.N. 944, 944 (“[Title I of

AEDPA] incorporates reforms to curb the abuse of the statutory

writ of habeas corpus, and to address the acute problems of

unnecessary delay and abuse in capital cases.   It sets a one year

limitation on an application for a habeas writ and revises the

procedures for consideration of a writ in federal court.”).    We

decline to do so.

     Finally, we must address Graham’s argument that this court

implicitly held when it dismissed his 1993 application that his

current application would not be subject to AEDPA.   In his Motion

to Recall Mandate in Previous Habeas Appeal, Graham asserts:

“The Court’s purpose clearly was not to avoid decision of the

                                43
merits of his claims, to give the new arguments that the merits

of Mr. Sankofa’s claims should not be decided, or to foreclose

review of Mr. Sankofa’s claims on the merits.”   Graham elaborates

further in his reply brief:

     [The court] viewed [Graham’s] case as a pre-AEDPA case, to
     which the application of the AEDPA was not a material
     question. There had been a ruling on the merits of the
     issues in Mr. Sankofa’s case in 1993, and the case had been
     under submission in this Court since the oral argument in
     March, 1994. The state did not want further exhaustion. In
     these circumstances, this Court’s decision to defer
     addressing the merits and to require further exhaustion was
     based wholly on its view that its eventual decision of the
     merits would be enhanced by any additional resolution of
     facts that the state courts might undertake. . . .
          In these circumstances, it is not only fair, but
     accurate, to infer that this Court viewed the dismissal for
     further exhaustion and the eventual return of Mr. Sankofa’s
     case to the federal courts as a continuation of the 1993
     habeas proceeding. . . . Now that the further exhaustion
     ordered by this Court has occurred, and the state courts
     have again declined to undertake additional factfinding
     proceedings, and now that Mr. Sankofa has returned to the
     federal courts with the same allegations and claims he had
     in 1993, it is time for this Court to declare explicitly
     what has been implicit--that the refiling of his federal
     habeas case in 1998 “is merely a continuation of
     his . . . [1993] collateral attack . . .,” In re Gasery, 116
F.3d 1051, 1052 (5th Cir. 1997), for purposes of whether Mr.
     Sankofa’s 1993 case is still pending and, under Lindh, not
     subject to the AEDPA.

As with Gasery, we think Graham reads too much into this court’s

1996 decision in Graham v. Johnson, 94 F.3d 958 (5th Cir. 1996).

That opinion declined to accept the state’s waiver of exhaustion.

See id. at 970-71.   Not once did it mention AEDPA or suggest in

any way that a post-exhaustion application would be considered

under the same standards that prevailed in 1993.   While it may be

true, as Graham points out, that at approximately the same time,

                                44
this court applied AEDPA to proceedings pending on the date of

the statute’s enactment, see Moore v. Johnson, 101 F.3d 1069,

1072-74 (5th Cir. 1996); Drinkard v. Johnson, 97 F.3d 751, 764-66

(5th Cir. 1996), our failure to mention AEDPA in Graham’s case

cannot be read as implying that it should not apply to him upon

his return to federal court.   We had no reason to consider

AEDPA’s impact on Graham, we made no pronouncements as to our

views on that topic, and we certainly did not hold that the

statute would not apply to a refiled post-exhaustion application.

     4.   Is AEDPA impermissibly retroactive as applied to
          Graham’s application?

     Graham next argues that even if his most recent application

is not a continuation of its 1993 predecessor, AEDPA would be

impermissibly retroactive as applied to him.     Landgraf v. USI

Film Products, 511 U.S. 244 (1994), and Lindh v. Murphy, 521 U.S.
320 (1997), must guide our inquiry.     Under both these cases, we

look first to congressional intent in determining the temporal

reach of a statute.   In Landgraf, the Court said:

          When a case implicates a federal statute enacted after
     the events in suit, the court’s first task is to determine
     whether Congress has expressly prescribed the statute’s
     proper reach. If Congress has done so, of course, there is
     no need to resort to judicial default rules. When, however,
     the statute contains no such express command, the court must
     determine whether the new statute would have retroactive
     effect, i.e., whether it would impair rights a party
     possessed when he acted, increase a party’s liability for
     past conduct, or impose new duties with respect to
     transactions already completed. If the statute would
     operate retroactively, our traditional presumption teaches
     that it does not govern absent clear congressional intent

                                   45
      favoring such a result.
511 U.S. at 280; see Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Bonjorno,

494 U.S. 827, 837 (1990) (“[W]here the congressional intent is

clear, it governs.”); cf. Lonchar v. Thomas, 517 U.S. 314, 328

(1996) (criticizing, in a pre-AEDPA regime, the practice of

amending a Federal Habeas Corpus Rule “through an ad hoc judicial

exception, rather than through congressional legislation or

through the formal rulemaking process”).   Lindh indicated that

despite Landgraf’s language about “express” congressional

commands, “in determining a statute’s temporal reach generally,

our normal rules of construction apply.” 521 U.S. at 326.   Thus,

the Court concluded, congressional intent may be implied as well

as explicit:

      Although Landgraf’s default rule would deny application when
      a retroactive effect would otherwise result, other
      construction rules may apply to remove even the possibility
      of retroactivity (as by rendering the statutory provision
      wholly inapplicable to a particular case), as Lindh argues
      the recognition of a negative implication would do here.14

Id.

      14
        Of course, a court will not apply a statute as Congress
directs if doing so would violate a constitutional provision,
such as the Ex Post Facto Clause or article I, § 10, cl. 1, which
prohibits states from passing laws “impairing the Obligation of
Contracts.” See Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 266-67. But “[t]he
Constitution’s restrictions . . . are of limited scope,” and
“[a]bsent a violation of one of those specific provisions, the
potential unfairness of retroactive civil legislation is not a
sufficient reason for a court to fail to give a statute its
intended scope.” Id. at 267.

                                46
     When Congress’s intent is not clear, however, we employ the

default rule against retroactivity, using the analysis laid out

in Landgraf to determine whether the statute is genuinely

retroactive.   Although the Court did not articulate a bright-line

test for determining a law’s temporal reach in the absence of

clear congressional intent, it warned that “[t]he Legislature’s

unmatched powers allow it to sweep away settled expectations

suddenly and without individualized consideration,” 511 U.S. at

266, and observed:

          A statute does not operate “retrospectively” merely
     because it is applied in a case arising from conduct
     antedating the statute’s enactment or upsets expectations
     based in prior law. Rather, the court must ask whether the
     new provision attaches new legal consequences to events
     completed before its enactment. The conclusion that a
     particular rule operates “retroactively” comes at the end of
     a process of judgment concerning the nature and extent of
     the change in the law and the degree of connection between
     the operation of the new rule and a relevant past event.
     Any test of retroactivity will leave room for disagreement
     in hard cases, and is unlikely to classify the enormous
     variety of legal changes with perfect philosophical clarity.
     However, retroactivity is a matter on which judges tend to
     have “sound . . . instinct[s],” and familiar considerations
     of fair notice, reasonable reliance, and settled
     expectations offer sound guidance.

Id. at 269-70 (emphasis added) (citations and footnote omitted).

With these principles in mind, we turn to the question we face

today.

          a.   Congressional Intent

     As we observed above, it appears to us that Congress fully

intended that AEDPA govern applications such as Graham’s.   The

                                47
Second Circuit agrees with us.   See Mancuso v. Herbert, 166 F.3d
97, 101 (2d Cir. 1999) (“We conclude that the AEDPA applies to a

habeas petition filed after the AEDPA’s effective date,

regardless of when the petitioner filed his or her initial habeas

petition and regardless of the grounds for dismissal of such

earlier petition. . . . [T]his holding comports both with the

statute’s plain meaning and with congressional intent.”).

Several circuits, while not explicitly holding that AEDPA applies

to an application such as Graham’s, have evaluated applications

in the same procedural posture with reference to AEDPA.     See

Vancleave v. Norris, 150 F.3d 926, 927 (8th Cir. 1998) (“AEDPA’s

restrictions on successive habeas petitions govern this petition

because it was filed two months after the statute’s effective

date.”); Hatch v. Oklahoma, 92 F.3d 1012, 1014 (10th Cir. 1996)

(“Because the 1996 Act was already in place at the time of

Hatch’s filing with this Court, the application of the 1996 Act

to his case is not retroactive, and thus does not implicate the

Ex Post Facto Clause.”); cf. Pratt, 129 F.3d at 58 (“Congress

intended that AEDPA apply to all section 2255 petitions filed

after its effective date (April 24, 1996).”); In re Vial, 115
F.3d 1192, 1198 n.13 (4th Cir. 1997) (en banc) (assuming without

deciding that AEDPA applies to prisoner who filed his first

§ 2255 motion before and his second motion after AEDPA’s

effective date).   But see In re Minarik, 166 F.3d 591, 599 (3d

Cir. 1999) (“Based on our reading of Landgraf and Lindh, we join

                                 48
two other courts of appeals in holding that AEDPA contains no

unambiguous guidance regarding retroactive application of AEDPA’s

new ‘second or successive’ petition standards and procedures to

cases in which the first habeas petition was filed before AEDPA’s

enactment.”); cf. United States v. Ortiz, 136 F.3d 161, 165 (D.C.

Cir. 1998) (“Congress did not expressly indicate whether the

AEDPA amendments to the procedures and standards for filing

second § 2255 motions are to be applied in cases where the first

§ 2255 motion was filed before the enactment of AEDPA.”); In re

Hanserd, 123 F.3d 922, 924 (6th Cir. 1997) (same).   Nevertheless,

even if Congress’s intent on this score is not clear, § 2244(b)

is not impermissibly retroactive as applied to Graham.

          b.   AEDPA’s New Procedural Requirements

     Under Landgraf, the retroactivity analysis may have to be

applied separately to discrete parts of AEDPA.    See 511 U.S. at

280 (“[T]here is no special reason to think that all the diverse

provisions of the [Civil Rights Act of 1991] must be treated

uniformly for [retroactivity] purposes.”).    Therefore, we first

consider AEDPA’s new procedural requirement that before filing a

second or successive application, the prisoner must move in the

appropriate court of appeals for an order authorizing the

district court to consider the application.    See 28 U.S.C.

§ 2244(b)(3)(A).    Substituting the court of appeals for the

district court as the gatekeeper against abusive or procedurally

                                49
defaulted claims would seem to raise no retroactivity concerns.

A litigant has no reasonable expectation that a particular

tribunal will adjudicate his claims.     See Landgraf, 511 U.S. at

274; Vial, 115 F.3d at 1199 (Hall, J., dissenting).     Moreover,

§ 2244(b)(3)(A)’s requirement that a prisoner desiring to file a

second or successive habeas application first approach the court

of appeals is a purely procedural change that rarely raises

retroactivity concerns.     See Landgraf, 511 U.S. at 275; Minarik,
166 F.3d at 599-600.     Thus, we conclude that the district court

did not err in concluding that Graham was required to obtain an

order from us authorizing the district court to consider his

current habeas application.     See Minarik, 166 F.3d at 599-600;

Hanserd, 123 F.3d at 934.

            c.   AEDPA’s New Substantive Standards

       We now consider whether applying AEDPA’s new substantive

standards would have an impermissibly retroactive effect in

Graham’s case.     As a preliminary matter, we note that Graham’s

situation does not present the typical retroactivity problem

because he filed his current application well after AEDPA became

law.    Nevertheless, Graham contends that § 2244(b) would unfairly

devastate his settled expectations and attach new legal

consequences to an event--the filing of an unexhausted federal

habeas application in 1993--completed before its enactment.     In

his reply brief, he argues that he relied on pre-AEDPA law in

                                  50
deciding in 1993 to proceed to federal court without having

exhausted state remedies:

     Mr. Sankofa “relied to . . . [a significant] extent on
     the . . . [then existing] federal standards of habeas review
     [of successive petitions in] making [his] strategic . . .
     decision[] during the [1993 state and federal
     habeas] . . . litigation,” Drinkard, 97 F.3d at 766, to
     forego further exhaustion of state remedies. In short, he
     “relied to his detriment upon the pre-amendment versions of
     [§ 2244] . . . .” Hunter, 101 F.3d at 1572. Had he known
     in 1993 when he made this decision that, because of an
     intervening and wholly unpredictable change in federal law,
     he would not be able to have his constitutional claims heard
     at all in federal court in 1998 if the federal courts
     ordered him to re-exhaust state remedies, indisputably he
     would not have taken the risk in 1993 that he might be
     dismissed from federal court for non-exhaustion. Clearly,
     “he would have proceeded . . . differently . . . .”
     Drinkard, 97 F.3d at 766, by going through what appeared in
     1993 to be a futile attempt to obtain relief in state court,
     if for no other reason than to preserve the right to go back
     to federal court after the state courts refused to hear his
     case, which is what eventually happened.

Graham claims to have reasoned that if he was unable to convince

the federal courts that exhaustion was futile and the federal

court therefore dismissed his application, he would simply would

have exhausted his state remedies and, if unsuccessful in state

court, would have returned to federal court under the same law as

governed his dismissed application.   But through no fault of his,

he asserts, resolution of his application was delayed for several

years.   First, the state waived exhaustion; then the Fifth

Circuit waited three years before declining to accept the waiver

and ordering the dismissal of the application.   By this time, a

new Texas statute made it considerably more difficult for

condemned prisoners to obtain a hearing on the merits of a

                                51
successive habeas application, and AEDPA created similar hurdles

in federal court.   Thus, Graham argues, applying AEDPA in this

case would attach legal consequences to an act completed before

its enactment, as it was wholly unforeseeable in 1993 that the

filing of an unexhausted application later would subject Graham

to AEDPA’s strict limitations on successive applications.

     In evaluating Graham’s argument, we turn first to Supreme

Court case law.   As we said above, the Landgraf retroactivity

analysis focuses on “familiar considerations of fair notice,

reasonable reliance, and settled expectations.” 511 U.S. at 270.

The Court noted, for example, that it often had applied a

presumption against statutory retroactivity in cases involving

contractual or property rights, “matters in which predictability

and stability are of prime importance,” id. at 271, and observed

further that changes in procedural rules rarely raise

retroactivity problems because of “the diminished reliance

interests in matters of procedure,” id. at 275.

     A number of our fellow courts of appeals, following the high

Court’s guidance, have analyzed this issue in terms of whether

AEDPA bars the successive habeas application of a prisoner who

relied on pre-AEDPA law in filing a previous application.    We

find this approach sensible and correct given that retroactivity

is disfavored precisely because it upsets settled expectations;

if a litigant in no way relies on existing law, then a change in

that law cannot fairly be said to harm him.   In Burris v. Parke,

                                52
95 F.3d 465 (7th Cir. 1996) (en banc), the Seventh Circuit

considered whether applying AEDPA to a successive application

filed after April 24, 1996 where the prisoner had filed a

previous application before that date was impermissibly

retroactive.   The court concluded that AEDPA did not apply to the

second petition because the statute, if applied to the refiled

application, would attach a new legal consequence, namely that

Burris could not file a second application, to a completed event,

the filing of the first petition:

     Had Burris foreseen the new law he would in all likelihood
     have waited, as most prisoners do, until his second sentence
     was affirmed and then filed a single petition for habeas
     corpus consolidating his attacks on both the conviction and
     the sentence. He made a deliberate choice to file two
     petitions, having no way of knowing (unless gifted with
     prevision) that the second petition would be subject to a
     far more stringent test than the test in the existing law,
     the test of abuse.

Id. at 468 (emphasis added).15   Later court of appeals opinions

distinguish Burris on the ground that the prisoners in their own

cases had not shown detrimental reliance on pre-AEDPA law.     See

In re Magwood, 113 F.3d 1544, 1552 (11th Cir. 1997) (“The present

case, however, is distinguishable from Burris because Petitioner

has not relied to his detriment upon pre-AEDPA law.”); In re

     15
        Under Lindh, of course, AEDPA would not apply to
Burris’s second petition because it was pending on the date the
statute became law; indeed, the Seventh Circuit decided Burris
against the backdrop of its own opinion in Lindh v. Murphy, 96
F.3d 856 (7th Cir. 1996) (en banc), which the Supreme Court later
reversed. As we explain infra, however, Lindh does not overrule
Burris.

                                 53
Medina, 109 F.3d 1556, 1563 (11th Cir. 1997) (applying AEDPA to a

successive habeas application even though a first application had

been filed before April 24, 1996 because the prisoner had not

shown detrimental reliance on pre-AEDPA law); Roldan v. United

States, 96 F.3d 1013, 1014 (7th Cir. 1996) (holding in § 2255

case that Burris did not apply because prisoner did not “contend

that he withheld issues from his first collateral attack in the

belief that the doctrine of abuse of the writ permitted such a

step”).16

     Lindh, which simply concludes that there was clear

congressional intent that AEDPA apply only to habeas cases filed

after its enactment, overrules neither the result nor the

analysis of Burris and its progeny.   Indeed, several post-Lindh

courts have reaffirmed the detrimental reliance approach to

     16
        Before Lindh, our own court used detrimental reliance
analysis to decide whether AEDPA’s increased deference to state
court factfindings, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), applied to a case
pending on appeal on April 24, 1996. See Drinkard, 97 F.3d at
764-66. In Drinkard, we concluded that AEDPA applied to a
prisoner’s habeas application because he could not “argue
credibly” that he would have proceeded any differently during his
state post-conviction proceedings had he known at the time of
those proceedings that the federal courts would not review claims
adjudicated on the merits in the state court proceedings de novo.
The Eleventh Circuit employed a similar mode of analysis. See
Hunter v. United States, 101 F.3d 1565, 1573 (11th Cir. 1996)
(discussing application of amended § 2253(c) and Federal Rule of
Appellate Procedure 22(b) to pending cases). Although Lindh
overruled Drinkard’s holding, it did not discredit our analysis;
rather, it merely concluded that there was clear congressional
intent that AEDPA apply only to cases filed after the Act became
effective, and that further retroactivity analysis was therefore
unnecessary.

                               54
retroactivity problems where two habeas applications straddle the

Act’s effective date.     In Alexander v. United States, 121 F.3d
312 (7th Cir. 1997), the Seventh Circuit applied AEDPA to a

§ 2255 motion in the same procedural posture as Graham’s current

habeas application because the prisoner could not show that he

had relied on pre-AEDPA law in litigating his previous § 2255

motions.    Anthony Alexander filed his first collateral attack on

his criminal conviction before AEDPA became law.     See id. at 313.

He then filed at least two additional motions after April 24,

1996; despite this, he claimed that AEDPA did not apply to him.

See id. at 313-14.    The Seventh Circuit noted that “Alexander

made that contention in his last application, and we rejected

it.”    Id. at 314.   It then quoted from a previous unpublished

order:

       Alexander argues that, under Burris v. Parke, 95 F.3d 465
       (7th Cir. 1996) (en banc), he need not satisfy the statutory
       standard, because his first collateral attack predated the
       AEDPA. This contention was resolved adversely to him when
       he filed his second collateral attack. We observed then,
       and reiterate now, that the new law applies because
       Alexander has not furnished any evidence that, when omitting
       issues from his first collateral attack, [begun] in 1995,
       Alexander relied on a plausible belief that the approach
       then governing--the “abuse of the writ” doctrine detailed in
       McCleskey v. Zant, 499 U.S. 467, 111 S. Ct. 1454, 113 L. Ed.
2d 517 (1991)--would have permitted a successive collateral
       attack.

Id. (quoting Alexander v. United States, No. 96-9063 (7th Cir.

June 4, 1997) (unpublished order)).     Moreover, the First Circuit

has concluded that even when a prisoner subjectively relies to

his detriment on pre-AEDPA law, he is exempt from the new statute

                                  55
only if his reliance was reasonable.      See Pratt, 129 F.3d at 59

(noting that “reliance upon pre-AEDPA law as a basis for

permitting a second petition rarely will [be objectively

reasonable]” because “[t]he ‘cause and prejudice’ test that

McCleskey imposed to screen out abusive deployments of the writ

is notoriously difficult to pass” and “Pratt cannot satisfy its

rigors”).

     The Sixth Circuit is the only court of appeals that has

explicitly rejected a detrimental reliance analysis.       See

Hanserd, 123 F.3d at 931.    In Hanserd, the state argued that

because the prisoner did not “consciously” or “for strategic

reasons” omit an issue from his first habeas application, he

could not be said to have relied on the pre-AEDPA rule and would

have to proceed under AEDPA, if at all.      See id.   The court held

that where AEDPA bars a claim that could have been raised under

pre-AEDPA law, it attaches a new adverse legal consequence to an

event completed before its enactment and is therefore

impermissibly retroactive.    See id.    According to Hanserd, the

detrimental reliance approach is based on an incorrect reading of

Landgraf:

     The central question in [Landgraf] was whether the 1991
     Amendments to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which
     provided for compensatory damages in hostile-work-
     environment suits, should be applied to misconduct that
     antedated the new law. The Court held that it did not
     apply, even though the conduct at issue had been unlawful
     for thirty years before the new law’s enactment and could
     previously have supported an award of damages. The Court

                                    56
     did not speculate as to whether the employer had consciously
     relied on the old law in allowing discrimination
     against the plaintiff.

Id. (citations and footnote omitted).   In the same breath,

however, the court said: “Instead, the Court held that the new

provision should not be applied because doing so would attach a

significant new adverse legal consequence to the conduct such

that the defendant might have acted differently had he known of

that new consequence.”   Id. (emphasis added).   Applying this

analysis to the case at hand, the court opined that “[u]nder the

old law, inmates were supposed to file § 2255 motions promptly.

Had Hanserd known that AEDPA would change this, and that his

initial § 2255 motion would bar a later motion based on a new

Supreme Court interpretation of § 924(c), he might well have

waited to file that initial motion.”    Id. (citations omitted).

But this approach--that a retroactive legal change is one such

that a party might have acted differently had he known of it--

amounts to the detrimental reliance rule that Hanserd purports to

reject.   The only difference between the standard detrimental

reliance approach and Hanserd’s formulation is that the former

requires a showing of actual reliance, while Hanserd demands

merely that the litigant might have relied on the superseded

legal regime.17

     17
        In addition to the Sixth Circuit, the Third Circuit has
held that if a prisoner “can show that he would have been
entitled to pursue his second petition under pre-AEDPA law, then
the Landgraf default rule prohibits applying AEDPA’s new

                                57
     Thus, the Supreme Court, many of the circuit courts, and

Graham’s own briefs agree that the focus of our retroactivity

inquiry should be on the detrimental reliance he placed on pre-

AEDPA law and the extent to which the statutory changes upset his

settled expectations.   Graham cannot show that he might have

reasonably relied on pre-AEDPA law in filing any of his federal

previous habeas applications.

     As a preliminary matter, we note that it is the 1988

application, not the 1993 application, that makes Graham’s

current application successive and potentially subject to

§ 2244(b).   The relevant time frame for retroactivity analysis is

thus 1988, not 1993, because the current application is

successive to the one filed in the former year, not the latter.

That is, when the cases speak of AEDPA attaching new legal

consequences to an application filed before its effective date,

they mean that because the prisoner filed that pre-AEDPA

substantive gatekeeping provisions to bar his claims.” Minarik,
166 F.3d at 602. Similarly, the District of Columbia Circuit has
held that “the new standards and procedures under AEDPA for
filing § 2255 motions could only be improperly retroactive as
applied to [the prisoner] if he would have met the former cause-
and-prejudice standard under McCleskey and previously would have
been allowed to file a second § 2255 motion, but could not file a
second motion under AEDPA.” Ortiz, 136 F.3d at 166. Both of
these courts concluded that pre-AEDPA law would have barred the
prisoner’s successive application and did not consider a
situation in which pre- and post-AEDPA law would have led to
different results but there was no detrimental reliance. A
number of other courts, as we noted above in Subsection
III.A.4.a, have applied AEDPA to applications in the same
procedural posture as Graham’s without explicitly considering the
retroactivity issue.

                                58
application, he becomes subject to § 2244(b), which in turn

effectively bars a post-AEDPA application.   In Graham’s case,

AEDPA does not attach new legal consequences in this sense to the

1993 application, but to the 1988 one.   Graham has not alleged

detrimental reliance on pre-AEDPA law in 1988, and he cannot even

plausibly claim that he might have acted differently had he known

that AEDPA later would bar his claims.   Even under pre-AEDPA law,

a prisoner was required to present all his claims in his first

application, see McCleskey, 499 U.S. at 494-95 (holding that a

prisoner wishing to bring a new claim in a second or successive

habeas application had to show either that the application did

not constitute an “abuse of the writ” or that he had made “a

colorable showing of innocence”), and it would not have been

reasonable for Graham consciously to hold back claims that he has

conceded, see infra Section III.C, he could have included in the

1988 application.    Thus, unlike the prisoner in Hanserd, who

filed his § 2255 motion promptly in obedience to the statute in

effect at the time, Graham defied pre-AEDPA law by neglecting to

include claims and evidence that he could have discovered in 1988

in his first application.   Accordingly, AEDPA is not retroactive

with respect to Graham’s 1988 application under any detrimental

reliance approach.

     Graham, however, argues that AEDPA attaches new legal

consequences to his 1993 application:    namely, that when he filed

it, he thought that he would be able to return to federal court

                                 59
under existing (pre-AEDPA) law, but if the new statute applies,

he cannot.   But AEDPA does not “attach new legal consequences” to

the 1993 application in the sense that his current application is

barred because he filed the unexhausted application.    Rather, the

1993 application has legal consequences only insofar as filing

the unexhausted application delayed the third federal habeas

proceeding so long that state and federal statutes modifying the

scope of habeas relief were enacted during its pendency.18   Even

putting aside the argument that such delay may have been Graham’s

goal, he had no right to place any reliance on the filing of an

unexhausted application.   Under Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes, 504 U.S.
1, 5-12 (1992), he was required to present his new evidence to

the state courts before bringing it to federal court.   Although

the state waived the exhaustion requirement, it did so after

Graham decided to file his unexhausted application and could have

played no role in his initial decision to file.19   Thus, Graham’s

     18
        In addition, the 1993 application could have affected
Graham adversely only if, had he exhausted state remedies before
filing his federal application, he would have reached federal
court before the passage of AEDPA.
     19
        Fifth Circuit case law suggested that the federal courts
typically would honor such a waiver. In McGee v. Estelle, 722
F.2d 1206, 1211 (5th Cir. 1984), we held:

     If, out of respect, the federal courts defer to the state so
     that its courts can first pass on claims that the state has
     denied a person his constitutional rights, it is a corollary
     that they should defer equally to the state’s desire that
     federal courts not abide a state court ruling. The
     supremacy of the federal constitution and the laws made
     pursuant to it do not convert the fifty states into

                                60
reliance argument boils down to this:   He deliberately flouted

federal law by filing an unexhausted application, expecting that

if it were dismissed without prejudice, he could return to state

court and then, perhaps, to federal court under the same law that

had been in effect when he filed the unexhausted application.     We

find such reliance patently unreasonable.20

     5.   Does applying AEDPA to Graham’s application constitute
          an unconstitutional suspension of the writ of habeas
          corpus and violate the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth
          Amendments?

     dependencies. Respect should not turn into a fetish for
     non-precedence with the federal Alphonse endlessly insisting
     that the state Gaston pass first through the doorway without
     regard for Gaston’s wishes.

The McGee court also asserted, “In the usual case . . .
federalism, expense to litigants, and the conservation of
judicial resources are all served by honoring the waiver and
deciding the merits.” Id. at 1214. But none of the applicable
case law requires a federal court to accept a state’s waiver of
exhaustion. Indeed, McGee said: “A finding of waiver does not
conclude our consideration, for a district court or a panel of
this court may consider that it should not accept a waiver,
express or implied.” Id. Thus, while Graham may have hoped that
the federal courts would accept the state’s waiver, it was not
reasonable for him to rely on such an acceptance.
     20
       The state urged both in its briefs and in oral argument
that we should deny Graham’s Motion for Order Authorizing
District Court to Consider Successive Habeas Petition because his
current application is time-barred under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d). We
need not reach the limitations question, however, because Graham
concedes, see infra Section III.C, that he cannot meet the
requirements for the issuance of such an order. We express no
opinion as to whether a court of appeals should consider the
timeliness of a habeas application in deciding a prisoner’s
motion for authorization to file it.

                                61
     Finally, Graham presents a sketchy argument that AEDPA cuts

off federal court review of a constitutional violation that

resulted in a conviction and death sentence for a factually

innocent person and, as such, constitutes an unconstitutional

suspension of the writ of habeas corpus and a violation of the

Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments.

     We accept Graham’s concession that AEDPA would preclude his

application, see infra, but we do not agree that the statute is

therefore unconstitutional.   The Supreme Court has rejected the

argument that AEDPA’s new restrictions on successive habeas

petitions are a “suspension” of the writ of habeas corpus

contrary to article I, § 9, clause 2 of the federal Constitution.

See Felker, 518 U.S. at 663-64.

     Nor do AEDPA’s amendments to § 2244(b) violate the Fifth,

Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments.     We have found no support for

Graham’s argument that denying federal court review of a

successive habeas application alleging that constitutional

violations resulted in the conviction of an innocent person

contravenes due process and constitutes cruel and unusual

punishment.   The Supreme Court has stated that a procedural

limitation “is not subject to proscription under the Due Process

Clause unless it offends some principle of justice so rooted in

the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as

fundamental.”   Medina v. California, 505 U.S. 437, 445 (1992)

(quoting Patterson v. New York, 432 U.S. 197, 201-02 (1977))

                                  62
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted).    As Felker

pointed out, the first Congress made the writ of habeas corpus

available only to federal, not state, prisoners.    See 518 U.S. at

663.   Thus, the Framers could not have viewed the availability of

habeas relief to inmates such as Graham as “so rooted in the

traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as

fundamental.”    Even assuming, as Felker did, see id. at 663-64,

that state prisoners’ right to petition federal courts for writs

of habeas corpus has become such a fundamental prerogative over

the years, AEDPA’s restrictions on successive applications fall

within Congress and the courts’ traditional power to limit abuses

of the writ.    “[T]he doctrine of abuse of the writ refers to a

complex and evolving body of equitable principles informed and

controlled by historical usage, statutory developments, and

judicial decisions.    The added restrictions which the Act places

on second habeas petitions are well within the compass of this

evolutionary process . . . .”    See id. at 664 (citations and

internal quotation marks omitted).    As such, we do not see how

the pre-AEDPA abuse-of-the-writ standards can be fundamental to

our notions of due process.    Similarly, a punishment is not cruel

and unusual so as to violate the Eighth Amendment unless it is

inhuman and barbarous, see In re Kemmler, 136 U.S. 436, 447

(1890), or, in a more modern formulation, “shocks the conscience

and sense of justice of the people,” Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S.
238, 360 (1972) (Marshall, J., concurring).    Given that AEDPA’s

                                 63
successive application rules are, in the words of the Supreme

Court, “well within” the traditional authority of Congress and

the courts to curb abuses of the writ, we do not see how they can

“shock the conscience.”

     Finally, assuming for the purpose of argument only that

Graham is actually innocent, this court has rejected a claim such

as that made by Graham that the execution of an innocent person,

even where no constitutional violation has taken place,

contravenes the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments.      While

the Supreme Court assumed arguendo that in a capital case a

“truly persuasive” demonstration of actual innocence made after

trial would render the execution of a defendant unconstitutional

and warrant federal habeas relief if there were no state avenue

open to process such a claim, Herrera, 506 U.S. at 417, we have

rejected that theory, see Lucas v. Johnson, 132 F.3d 1069, 1074-

76 (5th Cir.), cert. dism’d, 1998 WL 313489 (1998).    Moreover,

there is a state avenue open to Graham:    He retains his right to

petition the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles for clemency.

     In summary, we find that AEDPA, as construed by the Court in

Lindh, applies by its terms to Graham’s fourth federal habeas

application.   We reject Graham’s contention that this application

is a continuation of the application dismissed in 1996 for

failure to exhaust state remedies for purposes of determining

whether AEDPA applies.    If we are wrong in concluding that

Congress clearly evinced an intent that AEDPA should govern

                                 64
applications such as Graham’s, we nevertheless find that the

statute is not impermissibly retroactive as applied to Graham’s

fourth application.   Finally, we hold that applying AEDPA to

Graham’s current application does not violate the Constitution.

In this case, Congress has spoken, and we are compelled to

listen.

B.   Motion to Recall Mandate in Previous Habeas Case

     As an alternative to finding that § 2244(b) does not apply

to his application, Graham urges us to recall the mandate in his

third federal habeas proceeding, Graham v. Johnson, 94 F.3d 958

(5th Cir. 1996), ordering the district court to dismiss the

application in that case for failure to exhaust state remedies.

Citing Thompson, 118 S. Ct. at 1498, he asserts that the courts

of appeals have an inherent power, to be used as a last resort

against “grave, unforeseen contingencies,” id., to recall their

mandates and that they may revisit the merits of an earlier

decision denying habeas corpus relief to a state prisoner if they

act to “avoid a miscarriage of justice as defined by our habeas

corpus jurisprudence,” id. at 1502.   A prisoner meets this

standard, Graham says, if he demonstrates that “it is more likely

than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in

light of the new evidence presented in his habeas petition.”     Id.

at 1503.    Applying these principles to his own case, Graham

contends that the 1996 dismissal without prejudice was not meant

                                65
to cause harm to his legal rights and interests and that the

court’s intentions were thwarted by a grave, unforeseen

contingency--namely, the passage of the 1995 Texas habeas statute

and AEDPA.   Because he can show that recalling the 1996 mandate

would avert a miscarriage of justice, he argues, he is entitled

to such relief.   But Thompson held that if a court of appeals

recalls a pre-AEDPA mandate as a result of a post-AEDPA motion,

AEDPA applies to the motion, although this is not true if the

court recalls its mandate of its own accord.   See id. at 1499-

1500.   Our consideration of Graham’s argument is, quite

obviously, not a sua sponte decision but a response to his

request that we do so. AEDPA therefore applies to Graham’s Motion

to Recall Mandate in Previous Habeas Case; because he concedes,

see infra, that he cannot meet AEDPA’s substantive requirements,

we must deny that motion.

C.   Motion for Order Authorizing District Court to Consider
     Successive Habeas Petition

      Under AEDPA, a court of appeals may authorize a district

court to consider a second or successive habeas application only

if it determines that the application makes a prima facie showing

that the application satisfies the requirements of § 2244(b).

See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(C).   Graham concedes that he cannot

make any such showing, either with respect to the claims he

brought in his earlier application or those never before

presented.   He admits that § 2244(b)(1)’s absolute bar against

                                 66
re-raising “in a second or successive habeas corpus application

under section 2254" a claim “that was presented in a prior

application” precludes the alibi defense aspect of his

ineffective assistance and actual innocence claims, which he

raised in his first federal habeas proceeding in 1988.   Graham

also acknowledges that AEDPA bars his previously unpresented

claims.   According to his Motion for Order Authorizing District

Court to Consider Successive Habeas Corpus Petition, his current

application “relies on his actual innocence, not on ‘a new rule

of constitutional law,’ to satisfy the criteria of § 2244(b).”

Thus, under § 2244(b)(2)(B), he must show that (i) the factual

predicate for the claim could not have been discovered previously

through the exercise of due diligence; and (ii) the facts

underlying the claim, if proven and viewed in light of the

evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear

and convincing evidence that, but for constitutional error, no

reasonable factfinder would have found him guilty of the

underlying offense.   These requirements, Graham admits, foreclose

                                67
his application.21   In his Motion for Order Authorizing District

Court to Consider Successive Habeas Petition, he states:

          The AEDPA’s addition of another requirement, in
     addition to the actual innocence requirement, for the
     presentation of a previously-unpresented claim in a
     successive habeas petition--“the factual predicate for the
     claim could not have been discovered previously through the
     exercise of due diligence,” 28 U.S.C. §§ [sic]
     2244(b)(2)(B)(i)--has a preclusive effect in Mr. Sankofa’s
     case. The information that allowed Mr. Sankofa to present
     his multi-faceted claims of ineffective assistance and
     innocence in 1993 was the offense report in the district
     attorney’s file, Appendix 17 to the 1998 federal habeas
     petition. This report was obtained through a state open
     records act request that could as readily have been made in
     connection with the first habeas proceeding in 1988 as it
     was in connection with second habeas proceeding in 1993.
     Thus, Mr. Sankofa will not be able to show that “the factual
     predicate for the claim could not have been discovered
     previously through the exercise of due diligence,” 28 U.S.C.
     §§ [sic] 2244(b)(2)(B)(i). Under the law that applied to
     Mr. Sankofa’s petition in 1993, he is entitled to have his
     ineffective assistance and actual innocence claims
     considered on the merits. Under the AEDPA, he will not be.

Graham’s habeas counsel also conceded at oral argument:    “We

acknowledge that we cannot show that these claims could not have

been raised in 1988.”   The following colloquy with the court

ensued:

     21
        Graham’s briefs do not explicitly address whether the
third claim in his current habeas application--namely, that he
was unconstitutionally tried as an adult and that the Texas death
penalty statute does not permit adequate consideration of youth
as a mitigating factor--meets § 2244(b)’s requirements. The
former claim apparently has not been raised before and is
governed by § 2244(b)(2). Graham does not contend that it is
based on a new rule of constitutional law or that he could not
have discovered the factual basis for it in 1988, when he filed
his first federal habeas application. The latter claim was
thoroughly litigated in his first federal habeas proceeding, see
supra Part I, and is barred under § 2244(b)(1).

                                 68
     THE COURT: So your view is, then, that if the AEDPA applies
     to this petition, then you don’t have a case.

     COUNSEL: If the AEDPA applies in every way that it is
     written, that’s right. We are precluded. And there is--
     there is--

     THE COURT: This is really, in a basic sense, a one-issue
     case. I mean, you have all of this, uh, evidence that
     you’ve brought forward, but it all comes down to the
     question of, a legal question, which is, does the AEDPA
     apply to the habeas petition that’s pending in front of us?

     COUNSEL: That’s exactly right.

     THE COURT: If it does, you don’t have a case; if it
     doesn’t, then you think that you do.

     COUNSEL: I mean, we certainly think we have at least the
     case that we had in 1993.

AEDPA does apply to Graham’s application.    He concedes that he

cannot meet its requirements for filing a second or successive

habeas application.   Under these circumstances, we are compelled

to deny his motion for an order authorizing the district court to

consider such an application.

                          IV.   CONCLUSION

     For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the

district court and DENY Graham’s Motion to Recall the Mandate in

Previous Habeas Case.   As stated in our order of February 8,

1999, Graham’s Motion for Order Authorizing District Court to

Consider Successive Habeas Petition is likewise DENIED.

                                 69