ORDER GRANTING PETITIONER’S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION REGARDING ADEQUACY OF STATE PROCEDURAL BARS
On March 31, 2004, this Court granted Respondent’s motion to dismiss as procedurally defaulted several claims contained in Petitioner’s second amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus. At the same time, the Court granted Petitioner leave to file a motion for reconsideration to determine whether certain procedural bars applied by the California Supreme Court should be found adequate to support the state superior court’s judgment against Petitioner under the burden-shifting test for analyzing adequacy announced in
Bennett v. Mueller,
I. BACKGROUND
The factual and procedural history of this case is set forth in
Dennis v. Woodford,
Having been sentenced to death, Petitioner filed his automatic direct appeal to the California Supreme Court on June 19, 1995; he filed his reply brief on direct appeal on May 10, 1996. On August 8, 1996, Petitioner filed his first state petition for a writ of habeas corpus with that court. The court rejected his appeal on February 19, 1998, and denied his first state habeas petition on November 4,1998.
Petitioner’s initial federal petition was filed on May 2, 2001. Because that petition contained both exhausted and unex-hausted claims, this Court dismissed it as required by
Rose v. Lundy,
Petitioner also filed a second state habe-as petition as an exhaustion petition with the California Supreme Court on August 2, 2001. That court denied the exhaustion petition on November 26, 2002. 1 In its order denying the exhaustion petition, the court denied each claim or subclaim “on the merits” and, “separately and independently,” deemed many of the claims and *1126 subclaims to be procedurally barred as untimely, 2 successive, 3 pretermitted, 4 or repetitive. 5
Having exhausted the claims that were deleted from his initial federal petition, Petitioner was granted leave on May 21, 2003, to file a second amended petition that was identical to the initial petition. Respondent then moved for — and obtained — dismissal of those claims that the California Supreme Court had deemed untimely, successive, or pretermitted, arguing that they were procedurally defaulted. Bennett was decided after a substantial portion of the briefing of Respondent’s motion to dismiss had been completed. Thus, in its order dismissing the claims, the Court sua sponte granted Petitioner leave to file a motion for reconsideration as to whether in light of Bennett the relevant state procedural rules are adequate to support the state’s judgment against Petitioner. That motion, which Respondent opposes, is now before the Court.
II. DISCUSSION
As a matter of comity and federalism, a state prisoner must fairly present habeas claims that raise federal questions to the highest state court so as to provide the state with an opportunity to rule on the merits of the claims before the prisoner seeks federal habeas relief.
Picard v. Connor,
A. Independence
“For a state procedural rule to be ‘independent,’ the state law basis for the decision must not be interwoven with federal law.”
La Crosse v. Kernan,
The California Supreme Court’s order denying Petitioner’s exhaustion petition, which was issued in 2002, is a so-called “postcard denial” that does not indicate on its face whether or not the court considered federal law when it invoked procedural bars. However, in 1998 the California Supreme Court declared that it would no longer consider federal law when denying a habeas claim as procedurally barred for untimeliness, with one exception not at issue here.
In re Robbins,
In Bennett, the Ninth Circuit stated that
we respect the California Supreme Court’s sovereign right to interpret its state constitution independent of the federal law. Applying Robbins prospectively, we [conclude] that the California Supreme Court’s post-Robbins denial of [a] state petition for lack of diligence (untimeliness) was not interwoven with federal law and therefore is an independent procedural ground.
As this Court noted in its prior order regarding procedural default, even though the holding in
Bennett
involved only the untimeliness bar,
Bennett’s
analysis, as explained in dicta, compels the same result for claims barred as successive or preter-mitted because the
^re-Robbins
consideration of federal law in connection with all three of these bars was equivalent:
ie.,
it involved the same “constitutional error” exception to the application of all three bars.
B. Adequacy
A state procedural bar is inadequate to support a state-court judgment if it is not “clear, consistently applied, and well-established at the time of the petitioner’s purported default.”
Wells v. Maass,
In Bennett, the Ninth Circuit adopted a new burden-shifting test for determining whether a state procedural bar is adequate. The Ninth Circuit held that
the ultimate burden of proving the adequacy of the California state bar is upon the State of California.... Once the state has adequately pled the existence of an independent and adequate state procedural ground as an affirmative defense, the burden to place that defense in issue shifts to the petitioner. The petitioner may satisfy this burden by asserting specific factual allegations that demonstrate the inadequacy of the state procedure, including citation to authority demonstrating inconsistent application of the rule. Once having done so, however, the ultimate burden is the state’s. [¶] Accordingly, because it is the State who seeks dismissal based on the procedural bar, it is the State who must bear the burden of demonstrating that the bar is applicable....
1. Bennett’s First Burden
Under Bennett, the initial burden to be met in determining the adequacy of a state procedural bar is Respondent’s: the state must “adequately ple[a]d the existence of an independent and adequate state procedural ground as an affirmative defense.” Id. at 586. This is an exceedingly modest burden: to plead procedural default adequately, one need only “assert or allege [it] in a legal proceeding.” Black’s Law Dictionary 483 (pocket ed.1996); cf. Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(a), (b), (e) (pleadings generally require “short and plain” allegations; “[e]ach averment of a pleading shall be simple, concise, and direct”).
In her answer to the second amended petition, Respondent has identified each of Petitioner’s claims that she alleges was procedurally defaulted; she also asserted that the claims at issue were procedurally defaulted when she filed her motion to dismiss procedurally defaulted claims. By “asserting] or alleging]” procedural default in these ways, Respondent plainly has “adequately pled the existence of an independent and adequate state procedural ground as an affirmative defense.”
2. Bennett’s Second Burden
Under
Bennett,
“the burden to place that defense in issue [now] shifts to the petitioner. The petitioner may satisfy this burden by asserting specific factual allega
*1130
tions that demonstrate the inadequacy of the state procedure, including citation to authority demonstrating inconsistent application of the rule.”
The bars of habeas claims as untimely, successive, and pretermitted “were not firmly established and consistently applied at least prior to 1993.”
Cooper v. Calderon,
Petitioner has directed the Court’s attention to approximately 200 capital ha-beas cases decided by the California Supreme Court in which purported procedural defaults occurred or arguably could have occurred as far back as 1980 and potentially as recently as 2003. Virtually all were resolved by postcard denials.
10
Petitioner alleges
*1131
that the California Supreme Court was inconsistent in barring claims in these petitions as untimely, successive, and pretermitted, as demonstrated by the fact that one or more procedural bars was applied to some claims and not to others. By asserting inadequacy with specific factual allegations, Petitioner has placed Respondent’s defense of procedural default at issue.
See Bennett,
In response to Petitioner’s assertions, Respondent contends that Petitioner has not shown that the California Supreme Court in fact applies its procedural bars inconsistently to habeas claims. She relies principally upon an unpublished decision from this district,
Dossman v. Newland,
No. C 00 384 SI (PR),
As an initial matter, the Court notes that
Dossman
is a noncapital case and, as such, is of limited relevance to the present inquiry. This is so because “California’s rules governing timeliness in capital eases differ from those governing noncapital cases.”
Bennett,
However, a petitioner need not “go behind” postcard denials to sustain his
Bennett
burden where the language of the postcard denials demonstrates that a procedural bar was used in some cases and not in others and the petitioner “asserts specific factual allegations” that the procedural bar was applied inconsistently in those cases. Rather,
Bennett
requires a petitioner only “to place that defense in issue.... ” The petitioner need not provide any
evidence
or
prove
or
establish
anything; instead, “because it is the State who
*1132
seeks dismissal based on the procedural bar, it is the State who must bear the burden of demonstrating that the bar is applicable.”
Respondent also relies upon
Stanley v. Woodford,
No. CIV S-95-1500 FCD GGH P (E.D.Cal. Mar. 3, 2004) (findings and recommendations regarding procedural default), a magistrate judge’s unpublished report in a capital habeas case.
11
The
Stanley
report, in finding the untimeliness bar adequate, refused to consider unexplicated decisions in determining whether the California Supreme Court applied the bar consistently. The report concluded, without further explanation, that excluding such decisions “commences [sic] the only feasible methodology.” At the same time, the writer observed that “if this is the sum total of the way respondent meets its adequacy-of-the-bar burden, the undersigned is puzzled why
Bennett
remanded the matter back to district court for an assessment of the four, published timeliness decisions.”
Id.
at 14. Yet postcard denials obviously are unpublished decisions — albeit short ones with little or no analysis — and it is established that a federal court must review unpublished state-court decisions to determine state-court practice. “Indeed, to the extent that decisions of the state courts are unpublished because they involve only routine application of state court rules, unpublished decisions are a particularly useful means of determining actual practice.”
Powell, 357
F.3d at 879;
see id.
at 872 (“We understand the [United States Supreme] Court’s use of the word ‘practice’ to refer to the state courts’ actual practice, not merely to the practice found in their published opinions.”);
Morales,
This Court concludes that Petitioner has alleged adequately that the California Supreme Court was inconsistent in barring claims in approximately 200 specific capital habeas cases as untimely, successive, and pretermitted, as demonstrated by the fact that one or more procedural bars was applied to some claims and not to others. By doing so, Petitioner has placed Respondent’s defense of procedural default at issue and thus has met his burden under
Bennett. See
3. Bennett’s Third Burden
“[T]he ultimate burden of proving the adequacy of the California state bar is upon the State of California.”
Bennett,
As discussed earlier, the procedural bars at issue were inadequate prior to the decisions of the California Supreme Court in
Clark, 5
Cal.4th 750,
Despite the fact that the California Supreme Court has applied these bars to a significant number of claims since 1993 as evidenced by postcard denials citing the relevant authorities,
see supra
notes
3-4,
Respondent has not cited a single published case or other reasoned opinion that demonstrates that California, “in actual practice,”
Powell,
The issue of whether the untimeliness bar is adequate is somewhat more difficult for two reasons. First, as noted, the Court has no way of knowing when between August 8, 1996, and August 3, 2001, Petitioner’s purported defaults of claims as untimely occurred. Second, unlike the situation with respect to the other bars, there are four published cases — all capital — in which the California Supreme Court has addressed whether claims should be barred as untimely.
In
Clark,
These cases alone strongly suggest that the court may not have applied the untimeliness bar consistently. However, even assuming that the majority or plurality opinions in these four cases are consistent with one another, Respondent nonetheless has not met her burden of establishing that the California Supreme Court applies the untimeliness bar consistently. In the years since Clark, that court has explained its practice with respect to only six claims in three petitions apart from the claims in the Sanders petition. However, during the same time period it has determined whether multiple claims in hundreds of other capital habeas petitions were untimely. 13 As the Ninth Circuit has recognized,
It is theoretically possible, we suppose, to reconcile and explain all of the California Supreme Court decisions entertaining on the merits of rejecting as untimely petitions.... Those divergent decisions may indeed represent consistent exercises of discretion rather than random applications' of or exceptions to the timeliness rule. But we have no way of knowing whether that is the case. The California Supreme Court’s denials of habeas petitions that [the petitioner] relies upon were accomplished by brief minute entries in what has been described as ‘post-card denial.’ We can discern no apparent relationship between the time of delay and the findings concerning timeliness. Nor could [the petitioner] be expected to do so.
Morales,
Respondent correctly notes that there is no requirement that a state court issue reasoned decisions. No such requirement is implied here. The California Supreme Court applies its procedural bars “as a means of protecting the integrity of [its]
*1135
own appeal and habeas corpus process,” not to “insulat[e] its judgments from federal court review.”
Robbins,
III. DISPOSITION
Respondent has not demonstrated that the state procedural bars of claims deemed untimely, successive, or pretermitted are adequate to support the state superior court’s judgment against Petitioner, and thus the claims that are the subject of Petitioner’s motion for reconsideration are not procedurally defaulted. Accordingly, the motion for reconsideration is granted.
Respondent shall file either a motion to dismiss any of Petitioner’s claims pursuant to
Teague v. Lane,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The order denying the exhaustion petition that was originally filed was corrected nunc pro tunc on November 27, 2002.
. Pursuant to the California Supreme Court’s then-applicable Standards Governing Filing of Habeas Corpus Petitions and Compensation of Counsel in Relation to Such Petitions in the Supreme Court Policies Regarding Cases Arising from Judgments of Death, claims filed within ninety days of the final due date of Petitioner’s reply brief on direct appeal — that is, by August 8, 1996 — would have been presumed timely. Claims filed after that date were subject to being deemed untimely if the California Supreme Court determined that Petitioner was unable to establish an "absence of substantial delay," “good cause for the delay,” or that the claim fell within one of four exceptions to the bar of untimeliness.
In re Robbins,
. Claims were subject to being deemed successive if the California Supreme Court determined that Petitioner should have raised them in his first state habeas petition on August 8, 1996, unless Petitioner “adequately explain[ed] his ... failure to present
all
claims in the earlier filed petition."
Robbins,
. Claims were subject to being deemed pre-termitted if the California Supreme Court determined that Petitioner could have raised them on direct appeal but did not do so by the time he filed his reply brief on May 10, 1996, and there was an “absence of excuse for failure to employ that remedy."
Ex parte Dixon,
. The bar of repetitive claims is not at issue in the present action.
. Justice Holmes famously has written that "habeas corpus cuts through all forms and goes to the very tissue of the structure.”
Frank v. Mangum,
. Randy Hertz and James S. Liebman note in
Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure
§ 26.2d (4th ed. 2001 & Supp.2003), their authoritative treatise on federal habeas law, that a state procedural rule may be found inadequate if: (1) the rule violates due process,
see, e.g., Dobbs v. Zant,
. The fact that Petitioner
"may
satisfy [his] burden by asserting specific factual allegations" — not that he
must
do so — suggests that there may be other ways that Petitioner could meet his burden.
Cf. Hooks v. Ward,
. The actual date on which a particular claim was defaulted as untimely is one day after the last day that Petitioner would have been able to sustain his burden of establishing the claim's timeliness in the California Supreme Court. It is beyond this Court's purview to determine those dates for the claims in the exhaustion petition that the California Supreme Court deemed untimely.
. Petitioner presents almost all of these cases in tables that include data not found in
*1131
the decisions issued by the California Supreme Court. Petitioner then analyzes these data to demonstrate inconsistency. The Court has reviewed the state-court decisions themselves, whether published or unpublished, including the postcard denials. The Court has considered neither the extraneous data concerning these cases presented by Petitioner nor the arguments of either party analyzing the data.
See Bennett,
. A review of the docket in Stanley indicates that the district court has not yet reviewed the magistrate judge's report. It appears that the magistrate judge is proceeding at this time as if all claims will be decided on the merits.
. Interestingly, after finding the untimeliness bar consistently applied and adequate, the Stanley report found that the California Supreme Court applied the bar inconsistently in Stanley’s case and declined to recommend dismissing Stanley’s claims based on that bar. Stanley at 13-17. The Stanley report did recommend dismissing certain claims as preter-mitted, but only because the petitioner failed to allege anything at all about that bar’s adequacy other than that it was inadequate. Id. at 20-21.
. In addition to reviewing the approximately 200 cases cited by Petitioner (including the four relevant published opinions in Clark, Gallego, Robbins, and Sanders as well as the orders related to Petitioner), this Court conducted a comprehensive examination of the California Supreme Court’s published and unpublished 'post-Clark capital habeas opinions and orders from 1993 to the present to determine whether any might support Respondent's position. None did so.
. Because it concludes that Respondent has not shown that the California Supreme Court applies the relevant procedural bars consistently, the Court need not consider any of the other arguments raised by the parties, such as whether the state procedural rules are clear or well-established or whether Petitioner has demonstrated cause and prejudice to excuse any procedural default.
