ORDER
The opinion filed on April 20, 1993— Deutscher v. Whitley,
OPINION
I. Introduction
In Deutscher v. Whitley,
II. Background
Deutscher was convicted of felony murder and sentenced to death in 1978. After the Nevada Supreme Court affirmed Deutscher’s conviction and death sentence, Deutscher v. State,
Before we heard Deutscher’s appeal, he changed lawyers. We affirmed the district court’s denial of the petition. Ahlswede v. Wolff,
Deutscher, with the assistance of his new attorney, filed another habeas petition in the district court in 1987. In this petition he claimed, among other things, that Ahlswede provided ineffective representation. The district court denied this petition on its merits. Deutscher v. Whitley,
On remand, we found that Deutscher had demonstrated that a fundamental miscarriage of justice would occur if we did not address his claim. Once again, we held that his sentence must be reversed because of his counsel’s ineffectiveness. Deutscher v. Whitley,
The issue is whether Deutscher authorized the original habeas petition filed by Ahls-wede. If not, then his present petition should be regarded as his first petition, and McCleskey’s and Sawyer’s more stringent standards for claims raised initially in second or subsequent petitions would not be pertinent.
III. Discussion
It cannot fairly be said that Deutscher is raising a new claim at the eleventh hour.
The record supports the district court’s finding that Deutscher did not authorize the initial habeas petition filed by Ahls-wede. We affirm that determination.
Deutscher never signed or otherwise verified the petition, and it was filed in Ahls-wede’s name and signed by Ahlswede. The omission of Deutscher’s signature does not prove that Ahlswede filed the petition without Deutscher’s approval. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the presumption is that petitioners represented by competent counsel have been fully informed of the claims raised in the petition. Williams v. Lockhart,
But the presumption that Deutscher had knowledge of the claims in the petition through a competent counsel has been factually rebutted to the satisfaction of the trier of fact. We previously have determined that Ahlswede did not provide Deutscher with effective representation. Deutscher I,
Moreover, in a declaration submitted to the district court, Ahlswede confirmed that he filed the petition without notifying Deutscher or seeking his authorization. Ahlswede mailed Deutscher a copy of the petition after filing it, but he never explained the nature of federal habeas corpus proceedings, the risk that claims not raised might be barred as abuse of the writ, or the appropriateness of having other counsel file the petition. The record satisfies us that the district court properly found that Deutscher did not understand the significance of federal habeas proceedings and did not authorize Ahlswede to file the federal habeas petition.
Because Ahlswede filed his petition without Deutscher’s signature, knowledge, or consent, we are compelled to hold that the petition Deutscher subsequently filed with the assistance of new counsel is Deutscher’s initial habeas corpus petition. The denial of Ahlswede’s petition has no bearing on our consideration of Deutscher’s petition. Deutscher’s concerns about our decision in Ahlswede are moot, and we deny his motion to recall the mandate in that case. Furthermore, Deutseher’s petition — his first — need not meet the more stringent standards for second and subsequent petitions that may be deemed abuses of the writ.
Each time we revisit Deutscher’s petition, we reaffirm our conclusion in Deutscher I that there is at least a reasonable probability that Deutscher would not have been sentenced to die, but for his counsel’s failure to: 1) present mitigating evidence and 2) challenge an unconstitutional aggravating factor. Deutscher III,
IV. Conclusion
We DENY Deutscher’s motion to recall the mandate in Ahlswede. We AFFIRM Deutscher’s conviction in all respects, except we VACATE our decision in Deutscher III and REMAND to the district court for entry of an order granting a new hearing on the penalty phase so that evidence in mitigation of the death penalty may be introduced, un
