In 1998, a Wisconsin court ordered that Bruce Brown be committed civilly as a “sexually violent person” (“SVP”) pursuant to Chapter 980 of the Wisconsin Statutes. In 2006, Mr. Brown filed a petition for habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. He contended that his continued state custody deprived him of his right to due process of law. The district court denied the writ but issued a certificate of appealability on that issue. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A.
Since 1974, Mr. Brown has been incarcerated frequently for crimes that are sex *604 ual in nature. 1 Between 1974 and 1978, his actions resulted in convictions for attempted sexual perversion and several counts of first-degree sexual assault. Three of his later offenses were committed while he was on parole in connection with the 1974 offense and involved serious threats to the victims’ safety. The charging document for a 1978 case, for example, indicates that Mr. Brown committed the offense while threatening the victim with a knife as she lay in her bed with her young grandchild next to her. In February 1984, just two months after his release from custody in connection with his prior offenses, Mr. Brown committed two other serious crimes against two separate victims within the space of four days; the first of these acts, committed on a juvenile with use of a knife, resulted in another conviction for first-degree sexual assault and a sentence of 20 years’ imprisonment. The second offense of reckless endangerment resulted in a sentence of three years’ imprisonment, to be served consecutively. 2
As his mandatory release date approached in 1996, the State declined, for reasons undisclosed by the record, to file a petition to have Mr. Brown committed as a SVP pursuant to Chapter 980. Consequently, Mr. Brown was released on parole in 1996. Shortly thereafter, his parole again was revoked, and he was returned to state custody. According to the state court records, his parole revocation violations included using alcohol, marijuana and cocaine and staying overnight at an unapproved residence. He again was released from custody, this time with an electronic monitoring device, but he cut it off and absconded. He was out of custody for more than a year before he again was apprehended.
In addition to his conduct while out of prison, Mr. Brown’s custodial records reveal that he received approximately 100 conduct reports, several of which related to sexual conduct. The incidents included an occasion where Mr. Brown made a sexually suggestive comment to a nurse dur *605 ing a physical examination and numerous incidents where he was disciplined for conduct with a visitor, such as inappropriate touching, “excessive kissing and hugging” or “fondling a visitor’s breasts.” Wis. R.92 at 54. 3
B.
In 1998, as Mr. Brown’s new release date neared, Wisconsin began Chapter 980 proceedings, seeking to have him committed civilly as a SVP. After extensive pretrial proceedings challenging various proposed experts, proffered testimony and supporting documents, the matter was tried to a jury. See Wis. Stat. § 980.05(2) (providing that civil commitment may be tried to a jury at the request of the State or the respondent).
In support of its case, the State called Dennis Doren, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist employed by the Wisconsin Department of Corrections who had been working with sex offenders since 1983. Dr. Doren testified that he had reviewed approximately 1,500 pages of documents from Mr. Brown’s corrections record, including presentence investigation reports, social worker reports, social history information, treatment behaviors, disciplinary reports and other similar materials. Dr. Doren testified that, after analyzing the documents available to him, he had diagnosed Mr. Brown with two conditions that he believed satisfied the Wisconsin standard of a “mental disorder,” 4 namely, a paraphilia not otherwise specified involving nonconsenting persons (“paraphilia NOS nonconsent”) and Antisocial Personality Disorder (“APD”). With respect to the paraphilia diagnosis, Dr. Doren began by noting that the term generally describes a condition that involves “recurrent, intense sexual fantasies, sexual urges, and[/3or behaviors” involving “something other than consenting adults.” Wis. R.94, Tr.Z at 6. In reaching the specific paraphilia NOS nonconsent diagnosis, Dr. Doren testified that he had relied upon a number of facts in Mr. Brown’s record. First, Dr. Doren noted that, at various times, Mr. Brown “effectively acknowledged a sexual problem,” id. at 10, that he had “given ... to God,” id. at 11. Next, Dr. Doren found significant that one of Mr. Brown’s offenses occurred after “he had sex twice earlier in the day,” id. at 11; the behavior pattern suggested that Mr. Brown was not simply looking for a “sexual outlet,” since this was available to him with consenting partners, id. at 18. This evidence, coupled with Mr. Brown’s documented sexual arousal during the attacks, was instead indicative of a specific interest in nonconsensual sex. See id. at 13, 18. In addition, the speed with which Mr. Brown returned to his criminal sexual conduct after being released suggested to Dr. Doren that Mr. Brown “is driven towards the behavior despite the fact [that he] has had a consequence for it.” Id. at 13. Although Mr. Brown’s offense pattern began as primarily non-sexual in his youth, his later criminal history involved offenses that were mostly sexual in nature, demonstrating a “continued ambush toward ... sex offending.” Id. at 18. In addition to the record evidence that suggested that Mr. Brown could be diagnosed with paraphilia NOS nonconsent, Dr. Doren also *606 testified about clinical indicators that he believed were not particularly pronounced in Mr. Brown’s case: no clear “script” from offense to offense, no great diversity among victims and no proclivity for offending in circumstances in which he was likely to be caught. Id. at 19-21. Evaluating the records in light of “general indicators” from his clinical experience, however, Dr. Doren’s conclusion was that a diagnosis of paraphilia NOS nonconsent was appropriate. Id. at 21. In Mr. Brown’s case, according to Dr. Doren, his paraphilia “impairs his decision-making process and makes it more difficult for him to control his behavior” and further impairs his ability “for having a degree of empathy or degree of remorse with his potential victims.” Id. at 22.
With regard to the diagnosis of APD, Dr. Doren testified that the condition was generally marked by “disregard for and violation of the rights of others.” Id. at 24. Mr. Brown’s criminal history, stretching back to age eighteen, both sexual and non-sexual in nature, reflected a failure to conform to social norms. His social, employment and criminal history also reflected a characteristic impulsivity such that his “life was about .... going from moment to moment.” Id. at 27. His crimes manifested aggression, and he had further admitted that “he hit women for purposes of controlling them on a regular basis to enforce their compliance ... with his desires.” Id. at 29. In Dr. Doren’s view, Mr. Brown exhibited five of the seven criteria identified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (“DSM”) 5 as indicative of APD, although the DSM only requires three of seven be satisfied for a diagnosis. Dr. Doren also testified that APD affected both Mr. Brown’s emotional and volitional capacity, causing a lack of remorse and an impairment of “his ability to control his behavior.” Id. at 34.
On cross-examination, Dr. Doren admitted that the indicators used to reach a diagnosis of paraphilia NOS nonconsent were not identified in the DSM; instead, they were indicators Dr. Doren himself had identified to “bridge the gap or deficiency [that] ... exist[s] in the DSM[ ]” that he had “offered to the field” in his own book on the subject of civil commitment. Wis. R.95, Tr.AA at 32, 34. When asked for a professional organization that accepted his clinical indicators for the diagnosis of paraphilia NOS nonconsent, Dr. Doren further admitted that there “isn’t a single one.” Id. at 33.
Finally, Dr. Doren testified that, in his view, each of Mr. Brown’s conditions, that is, paraphilia NOS nonconsent and APD, “creates a substantial probability that he will engage in a sexually violent offense in the future.” Id. at 18. He acknowledged that, although he employed actuarial risk assessment models, he also considered his own set of clinical considerations not recognized in the literature. Based on these additional factors, he had made upward adjustments to the results of reoffense probabilities that resulted from use of the standardized actuarial models.
In response, Mr. Brown presented significant contrary expert testimony. First, he called Marc Goulet, who holds a doctorate in mathematics. Dr. Goulet testified about the limitations of the actuarial instruments Dr. Doren had used to make predictions about Mr. Brown’s likelihood of recidivism. Dr. Goulet also questioned *607 specific features of Dr. Doren’s own methodology in interpreting an individual’s scores. He concluded that the tools used were “fundamentally statistically flawed.” Wis. R.96, Tr.BB at 39. Next, Mr. Brown called Lynn Maskel, M.D., a private forensic psychiatrist. Dr. Maskel testified that, because of its absence from the DSM, “psychiatrically the disorder [of paraphilia NOS nonconsent] does not exist.” Id. at 75. Moreover, she considers APD a “circular diagnosis” that is “descriptive of many criminals, but doesn’t really tell [an evaluator] much.” Id. at 79. She further testified that in her experience, she never has seen a case of APD that she would identify as a “predisposing disorder within the operative definition in Wisconsin law,” id. at 78; she noted that the psychiatric profession does not generally view individuals with APD “as people who have serious difficulty in controlling their behavior,” id. at 83. Finally, the defense called Stephen Hart, Ph.D., a professor of clinical and forensic psychology. He had assisted in the development of one of the actuarial tools employed by Dr. Doren, but testified that, in his view, “it’s inappropriate to use actuaríais to make absolute probability assessments.” Wis. R.97, Tr.CC at 40. He further testified about the ethical obligations for psychologists and his view that Dr. Doren had “create[d][a] fictional mental disorder[]” in identifying paraphilia NOS nonconsent. Id. at 56.
At the close of the evidence, the jury was instructed that, to declare Mr. Brown a sexually violent person, it must find that (1) he had been convicted of a sexually violent offense, (2) he had a mental disorder and (3) his disorder made him dangerous to others. See Wis. Stat. § 980.02(2). The court further instructed the jury that a mental disorder is “a condition affecting the emotional or volitional capacity that predisposes a person to engage in acts of sexual violence and causes serious difficulty in controlling behavior. Mental disorders do not include merely deviant behaviors that conflict with prevailing societal standards.” Wis. R.98, Tr.DD at 10. Mr. Brown had requested a special verdict form identifying the mental disorder with which the jury concluded Mr. Brown was afflicted, laying out the elements of the statute separately and requiring the jury to affirmatively link the disorder to dangerousness, but the trial court denied his request. During deliberations, the jury sent out a note requesting a copy of the DSM, but the court denied the request.
The jury returned a general verdict declaring Mr. Brown a sexually violent person.
C.
Mr. Brown appealed his commitment to the Court of Appeals of Wisconsin. In his direct appeal, Mr. Brown contended that he was denied due process by the admission of the challenged actuarial evidence and by failing to require proof of a recent overt act demonstrating his current dangerousness. He also pressed his challenge to the failure to provide his requested special verdict form. The Court of Appeals affirmed his commitment, and the Supreme Court of Wisconsin denied review.
D.
After his direct appeal, Mr. Brown filed a petition in the district court seeking a writ of habeas corpus. R.l; see 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In his petition, Mr. Brown argued that he was denied due process when the state court relied on evidence that was not supported by scientific knowledge or accepted in the medical community. Mr. Brown also argued that his APD diagnosis was overly broad and could not justify his confinement. The *608 district court concluded that Mr. Brown had failed to exhaust his state court remedies and stayed the petition. R.24. The court noted that, while dismissal is the ordinary fate for unexhausted claims, where a petitioner had good cause, the court had discretion to stay the federal proceeding. In its ruling granting a stay, the district court acknowledged that states have “considerable leeway” in defining mental abnormalities rendering an individual eligible for civil commitment, but that it “ha[d] some doubt” about the particular diagnosis in Mr. Brown’s case. R.24 at 3.
Mr. Brown next apparently initiated a state habeas proceeding in Wisconsin state courts. 6 His petition was denied on procedural grounds.
Mr. Brown returned to the district court, where the stay was lifted and the proceedings reopened. After various additional submissions from the parties, the district court issued an order denying the federal writ. The district court held the claims to have been defaulted and found that Mr. Brown had not established cause and prejudice to excuse the default. Finding the issue of how to apply the fundamental miscarriage of justice exception to the procedural default rule more complicated, the district court determined that it need not be resolved because Mr. Brown’s claims failed on the merits.
At the outset of its analysis, the court again noted that states have wide latitude in defining the relevant conditions for civil confinement and that the State’s chosen criteria need not reflect the prevailing views in the mental health community. R.38 at 6. That he had a disorder, and that his disorder caused an inability to control behavior, the court ruled, was an issue sufficiently resolved against Mr. Brown by the jury. The court continued:
This is not to say anything goes. I presume that a psychologist could render an opinion that an individual has a disorder characterized by an inability to avoid criminal behavior that is so irrational or unpersuasive that it would not support indefinite confinement consistent with the Due Process Clause. However, this case does not present such a diagnosis.
Id. at 7. The court held that, despite the contrary evidence presented and despite its “novel[ty],” paraphilia NOS nonconsent was “consistent with recognized diagnostic principles.” Id. It further noted that NOS categories are listed in the DSM and that courts in Wisconsin and other states have upheld commitments on the basis of such diagnoses. The court found the challenge to the diagnosis of APD similarly insufficient.
Mr. Brown, again proceeding pro se, filed a motion for a certificate of appealability. The district court granted the motion as to both the procedural and substantive questions Mr. Brown presents to this court. In its order, the court noted that its decision had been based on a reading of the relevant precedent “as giving states a tremendous amount of freedom in creating categories of mental disorders so long as states define disorders with reference to difficulty controlling behavior.” R.47 at 4. However, the court continued, “there must be some line to be drawn.” Id. The precise boundaries, the court concluded, were matters about which reasonable jurists could disagree.
II
PROCEDURAL DEFAULT
Mr. Brown challenges the diagnoses underlying his commitment as a SVP. Mr. *609 Brown concedes that he did not pursue this issue before the state courts.
The parties are in agreement, at this stage in the proceedings, that there is no remaining state court remedy, and that, accordingly, Mr. Brown’s claims are procedurally defaulted.
See Lewis v. Sternes,
We are barred from considering procedurally defaulted claims unless the petitioner “can establish cause and prejudice for the default or that the failure to consider the claim would result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
Johnson v. Hulett,
A.
Mr. Brown first asserts that appellate counsel was ineffective for failure to raise his due process claims on direct appeal and that counsel’s performance amounts to cause for any default. When preserved, meritorious claims of ineffective assistance can excuse default.
Murray v. Carrier,
B.
Mr. Brown further contends that he is actually innocent of SVP status, and thus that failure to excuse his default works a fundamental miscarriage of justice. We need not resolve squarely in this case whether the actual innocence exception to the general rule of procedural default applies in the context of civil commitment proceedings. In
Lambrix v. Singletary,
*610
Ill
ANALYSIS
As briefed to this court, Mr. Brown’s due process challenge has three elements. First, he challenges the diagnoses themselves. Mr. Brown claims that the diagnosis of paraphilia NOS nonconsent is lacking in scientific foundation and that the diagnosis of APD is overbroad and imprecise; in his view, the use of either diagnosis, alone or in combination, as the basis for a civil commitment, violates due process. He further contends that the diagnosis of APD cannot be used by the State of Wisconsin as a basis for confinement
*611
because the State does not allow a defendant to invoke the disorder as part of an insanity plea. Finally, he contends that Wisconsin’s permissive standards for the admissibility of expert testimony should be replaced, in the context of civil commitment, with a
Daubert-like
test.
See Daubeit v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
In our recent opinion in
McGee,
we set forth the controlling precedent in detail.
A.
As in all habeas corpus proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, the successful petitioner must demonstrate that he “is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a). For claims actually “adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings,” the statute commands that we undertake a limited review. Id. § 2254(d). We evaluate the record to discern only whether the state court’s adjudication of the claim (1) “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” id. § 2254(d)(1), or (2) “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented,” id. § 2254(d)(2).
These narrow and deferential standards of review do not apply here, however, because the relevant state courts did not adjudicate the claims presented on a federal habeas petition.
Cheeks v. Gaetz,
B.
We begin with Mr. Brown’s challenge to the sufficiency of his paraphilia NOS nonconsent diagnosis for due process purposes. His argument is, in all material respects, identical to the challenge raised by the petitioner in
McGee.
In that case, we rejected the claim,
McGee,
Despite the considerable leeway afforded to states in this context, we acknowledged that:
a medical diagnosis can be based on so little evidence that bears on the controlling legal criteria that any reliance upon it would be a violation of due process. Therefore, a particular diagnosis may be so devoid of content, or so near-universal in its rejection by mental health professionals, that a court’s reliance on it to satisfy the “mental disorder” prong of the statutory requirements for commitment would violate due process.
McGee,
Although we accepted the diagnosis as minimally sufficient for due process purposes, we noted that the existence of a psychiatric debate about its validity “is a relevant issue in commitment proceedings and a proper consideration for the factfinder in weighing the evidence that the defendant has the ‘mental disorder’ required by statute.” Id. at 581. We also noted that the “methodology and the outcome of any mental health evaluation offered as evidence is a proper subject for cross-examination, and we would expect that, in the ordinary case, such efforts would expose the strengths and weaknesses of the professional medical opinions offered.” Id. at 577.
We again reject the challenge to the paraphilia NOS nonconsent diagnosis as so lacking in scientific validity that to rely upon it for civil commitment amounts to a denial of due process. Our conclusion is strengthened where, as here, able assistance of counsel actually did expose the professional debate to the jury and substantial contrary professional opinions were offered.
C.
Mr. Brown next challenges the diagnosis of APD as constitutionally insufficient to support civil commitment. He claims the diagnosis is too imprecise and overbroad to provide meaningful evidence of a qualifying mental disorder. He also claims that the State of Wisconsin is judicially estopped from petitioning for commitment on the basis of APD when it has concluded that APD is not a permissible basis for a defendant to raise in an insanity plea.
1.
Chapter 980 of the Wisconsin statutes defines a SVP as:
a person who has been convicted of a sexually violent offense, has been adjudicated delinquent for a sexually violent offense, or has been found not guilty of or not responsible for a sexually violent offense by reason of insanity or mental disease, defect, or illness, and who is dangerous because he or she suffers from a mental disorder that makes it likely that the person will engage in one or more acts of sexual violence.
Id.
§ 980.01(7) (emphasis added). In a prior challenge, the State of Wisconsin determined that APD can serve as the “mental disorder” that supports civil commitment consistent with due process.
See In re Commitment of Adams,
Like the petitioner in
Adams,
Mr. Brown contends that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Foucha
suggests that APD is an invalid basis for civil commitment.
See
Moreover, since
Foucha,
the Supreme Court has decided
Crane,
in which APD was one of two diagnoses supporting commitment.
See Crane,
Mr. Brown further contends that, even if the Supreme Court’s treatment of APD itself does not indicate that it is an impermissible basis for civil commitment, the diagnosis fails to satisfy the due process requirements for civil commitment. By virtue of its over-inclusiveness, he contends, it is not “sufficient to distinguish the dangerous sexual offender whose serious mental illness, abnormality, or disorder subjects him to civil commitment from the dangerous but typical recidivist convicted in an ordinary criminal case.”
Crane,
Like the diagnosis of paraphilia NOS nonconsent, the diagnosis of APD is the subject of some significant professional debate. The existence of the disorder is not debated; indeed, it is a listed disorder with diagnostic criteria identified in the DSM.
See
DSM at 701. The subject of the professional debate as it has been presented to us is not, therefore, whether it is a real or imagined diagnosis, but whether the diagnosis can bear the weight of a civil commitment.
13
As we noted in
McGee
and
*614
already have repeated here, however, the existence of a professional debate about a diagnosis or its use in the civil commitment context does not signify its insufficiency for due process purposes, particularly where, as here, that debate has been evaluated by the factfinder.
McGee,
We acknowledge the studies demonstrating that a significant percentage of the male prison population is diagnosable with this condition.
See Crane,
[T]here must be proof of serious difficulty in controlling behavior. And this, when viewed in light of such features of the case as the nature of the psychiatric diagnosis, and the severity of the mental abnormality itself, must be sufficient to distinguish between the dangerous sexual offender whose serious mental illness, abnormality, or disorder subjects him to civil commitment from the dangerous but typical recidivist convicted in an ordinary criminal case.
Id.
at 413,
Finally, we need not decide whether a diagnosis of APD
alone
suffices for due process purposes: Mr. Brown was diagnosed with a paraphilic disorder as well, and testimony at his commitment trial supported the view that both diagnoses caused, in Mr. Brown, significant emotional and volitional impairments.
Cf Crane,
2.
Mr. Brown next contends that the State of Wisconsin is judicially es-topped from asserting APD as the basis for civil commitment when it has refused to allow criminal defendants to raise the disorder as part of an insanity plea.
See
Appellant’s Br. 33 (citing
State v. Lindh,
In an attempt to cast an estoppel argument in a light appropriate to our task in this habeas proceeding, without arguing that judicial estoppel is itself an element of due process, Mr. Brown asserts that the State’s “inconsistent” positions “further undermine[] the diagnosis’s scientific validity.” Appellant’s Br. 34. For the reasons stated in the previous section, we are not persuaded that the scientific validity of APD is so patently lacking that consideration of it in a civil commitment proceeding violates due process.
D.
Finally, Mr. Brown contends that Dr. Doren’s testimony was so unreliable that it would have been inadmissible in a federal proceeding under
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
We are not persuaded by this argument. Mr. Brown points to no authority in which the Daubert standard has been imposed on states as a requirement of due process in any context, including criminal trials. Indeed, as we have stated on habeas review of a criminal conviction:
Absent a showing that the admission of the evidence violated a specific constitutional guarantee, a federal court can issue a writ of habeas corpus on the basis of a state court evidentiary ruling only when that ruling violated the defendant’s right to due process by denying him a fundamentally fair trial. The standard, then, is not whether the testimony satisfied the Frye [v. United States,293 F. 1013 (D.C.Cir.1923),] or Daubert tests — neither of which purports to set a constitutional floor on the admissibility of scientific evidence — but rather is whether the probative value of the state’s evidence was so greatly outweighed by its prejudice to [the defendant] that its admission denied him a fundamentally fair trial.
Milone v. Camp,
In our view, the real substance of Mr. Brown’s request that this court view Daubert as the due process floor in this context merely echoes his claim that the diagnoses at issue are so lacking in scientific pedigree or so over-inclusive that their use in his commitment proceedings violated due process. Having concluded that the diagnoses, as implemented in this case, satisfy the requirements set forth by the Supreme Court, the disposition of his secondary argument, cast as an evidentiary challenge, necessarily follows.
Conclusion
As we have stated, “[t]he primary due process concern of the Supreme Court in the area of civil commitment is the necessity of distinguishing between the typical dangerous recidivist and the offender whose dangerousness is caused by some identifiable mental condition that impairs his ability to refrain from activity danger
*617
ous to others.”
McGee,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court denying the writ of habeas corpus must be affirmed.
Affirmed
Notes
. The record of Mr. Brown's commitment proceedings in Wisconsin was not presented in the district court. It was offered by counsel for the State, with the caveat that, because “the sole claim in Brown's petition is unexhausted and does not state a constitutional violation, [the State] does not believe that any of the transcripts are relevant to the resolution of Brown's petition at this time.” R.ll at 5. The district court declined to order preparation of the transcripts or other state record evidence.
We determined that, in order to properly review the due process challenges raised by Mr. Brown with regard to the scientific evidence presented at his commitment trial, review of the state court record was appropriate. Although we generally decline to supplement the record on appeal with materials not before the district court, we have not applied this position categorically.
See, e.g., Ruvalcaba v. Chandler,
. The records introduced at his Wisconsin commitment proceeding also reveal a significant history of other non-sexually based offenses including, among other things, burglary, possession of a controlled substance, carrying a concealed weapon and attempted armed robbery.
. We shall use the abbreviation "Wis. R.” to refer to docket entries in the state court commitment proceeding that were not made a part of the record in the district court proceeding and thus have no separate federal record number.
. See Wis. Stat. § 980.01(2) (defining a "mental disorder” for purposes of the SVP statute as "a congenital or acquired condition affecting the emotional or volitional capacity that predisposes a person to engage in acts of sexual violence”).
. All references to the DSM refer to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision, published by the American Psychiatric Association in 2000. In the profession, the text is sometimes referred to as the DSM-IV-TR. For the sake of simplicity, we use the shorthand “DSM.”
. The record of the Wisconsin collateral review proceeding is not before us.
. Because we do not recognize a constitutional right to counsel in these circumstances, we cannot accept the cause-and-prejudice analysis urged by Mr. Brown, in which ineffective assistance provides the requisite cause. Accordingly, we also do not address whether the failure to raise attorney ineffectiveness in the petition procedure outlined by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in
State v. Knight,
. In
Levine v. Torvik,
. For instance, they have not addressed squarely the problem noted by our colleague in the district court as to whether the “new evidence” language of
Schlup v. Delo,
. Our course of proceeding here is not only in accordance with
Lambrix v. Singletary,
. We have equated this standard with de novo review.
See Carlson v. Jess,
. We note that in
Adams v. Bartow,
. See Brett Trowbridge & Jay Adams, Sexually Violent Predator Assessment Issues, 26 Am. J. Forensic Psychol. 29, 46-47 (2008) (noting the considerable controversy about the diagnosis as a basis for commitment, the potential that it is “over-inclusive” and the studies showing poor inter-rater reliability); Shoba Sreenivasan el al., Expert Testimony in *614 Sexually Violent Predator Commitments: Conceptualizing Legal Standards of "Mental Disorder’’ and "Likely to Reoffend," 31 J. Am. Acad. Psychiatry & L. 471, 477 (2003) (noting that, although based on a "misinterpretation] [of] the law” as it currently stands, "[t]he use of [APD] to justify civil commitment is unlikely to find general acceptance among mental health professional groups”); Jack Vognsen & Amy Phenix, Antisocial Personality Disorder is Not Enough: A Reply to Sreenivasan, Weinberger, and Garrick, 32 J. Am. Acad. Psychiatry & L. 440, 442 (2004) (noting that while reliance on APD for a SVP determination is not precluded by law, neither is a "caffeine-related disorder[ ],” but that neither is "clinically appropriate”).
. Mr. Brown suggests that, with this brief reference, the Court "suggested, albeit obliquely, that a diagnosis of APD alone might be too imprecise and overbroad to survive constitutional scrutiny.” Appellant's Br. 30. We need not resolve that question, as the case before us does not involve a diagnosis of APD alone, but a diagnosis that couples APD with a sexually-related disorder.
See Crane,
. As the Court of Appeals of Wisconsin noted:
[H]e brings his challenges in large part because the disorder affects so many who are not sexually violent. But, even assuming that the diagnosis of "antisocial personality disorder” is relatively common, the countless citizens who suffer from it are not ipso facto vulnerable to commitment under ch. 980, stats. Only the relatively few who also satisfy the remaining criteria of § 980.01(7), stats., may be found to be "sexually violent persons.”
In re Commitment of Adams,
