Francisco Gomez appeals from a district court final order that denied him a writ of habeas corpus. Gomez alleges that he is being held in the custody of the respondent at the East Moline Correctional Center in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. More specifically, he argues that his conviction in Illinois state court for delivery of a controlled substance was not supported by sufficient evidence to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, as the Due Process Clause requires. We hold that the new § 2254(d) of Title 28 (as amended by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub.L. No. 104^132, § 104, 110 Stat. 1214, 1218 (1996)) *194 mandates that federal courts give deferential review to state court decisions on sufficiency of the evidence claims. We find in this case that Gomez has not met the high burden that the AEDPA now requires, and we therefore affirm the District Court’s decision not to issue the writ.
I. HISTORY 2
On August 21,1989, Petitioner Gomez’s co-defendant, Arturo Martinez, sold one kilogram of cocaine to an undercover Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) special agent at the Holiday Inn in Hillsdale, Illinois. Gomez, who is an acquaintance of Martinez, was also present at the hotel at various times with Martinez that night. Gomez was convicted of delivery of a controlled substance in a bench trial in Illinois’ Cook County Circuit Court on March 19, 1991. In his habeas petition, however, Gomez protests his innocence of any involvement in the drug transaction.
Martinez and the DEA agent negotiated the drug deal over the phone during the day of August 21, 1989. That evening, the agent called Martinez to say that he was at the hotel and ready to complete the deal. Martinez told the agent that he wanted to count the money before turning over the drugs and that he would have a friend bring the drugs to the hotel only after the money was counted.
Shortly after 9 p.m., a state police officer conducting surveillance at the hotel parking lot witnessed Martinez arrive at the hotel in a Camaro. Martinez went into the hotel to the DEA agent’s room where the agent let Martinez count the money. Martinez then said he would page his friend who would bring the cocaine. Martinez made a phone call from the agent’s room, but when he did not receive a call back, he told the agent that his friend probably could not return the call without knowing the agent’s room number at the hotel. Martinez then left the room saying he was going to page his friend from the hotel lobby. Around 9:40 p.m., a DEA agent stationed in the lobby witnessed Martinez making a phone call. Martinez then went back to the hotel room and told the agent there that the friend would arrive in 20 minutes with the cocaine. Martinez never identified Gomez as the friend.
Approximately 20 minutes later, however, the police officer in the parking lot witnessed Gomez arrive on a motorcycle and then enter the hotel. The agent in the hotel room testified that Gomez knocked on the door at about 10 p.m. and that Martinez left the room to talk with Gomez in the hallway, where the agent observed them through a peephole. (This testimony is somewhat inconsistent with that of the agent in the lobby, who testified that Martinez left the hotel around 10 p.m. and then returned to the hotel room a few minutes later with Gomez.) After talking with Gomez, Martinez came back into the room and told the agent that Martinez would exchange the cocaine outside in the parking lot. The agent, however, refused to move the deal outside. Martinez agreed to do the deal the agent’s way, but Martinez and Gomez then left the hotel in Martinez’s Camaro at about 10:08 p.m.
Gomez testified at trial that Martinez drove him to a gas station where Martinez made a phone call and then drove Gomez back to the hotel. Gomez denied talking with Martinez or anyone else that night about selling cocaine, and he also denied possessing cocaine at any time that night. Sometime before 11 p.m., the agent in the hotel received a call from Martinez who said that he had the cocaine and would be returning alone in 20 minutes. Both Martinez and Gomez returned to the hotel a little after 11 p.m. The officer stationed in the parking lot observed both of them leave the car and walk around the parking lot for about a minute. Gomez then walked over to the sidewalk while Martinez moved the Camaro a couple of parking spaces over. Martinez got out of the car, opened the hood, and then closed it again. The officer was unable to see what either Gomez or Martinez was doing while the hood was up. Martinez and Gomez then walked side-by-side into the hotel, and Gomez waited in the lobby while Martinez went back to the hotel room. At *195 approximately 11:12 p.m., Martinez entered the room and gave the agent a brown paper bag containing one kilogram of cocaine. Both Martinez and Gomez were then arrested. Neither Martinez nor Gomez was ever seen carrying the cocaine into the hotel, and Gomez’s fingerprints were not found on any of the contraband.
Gomez testified at trial that he was at the Hillsdale hotel on August 21 because of a $500 loan he had made to Martinez a week before. Gomez cleared only $350 per week at his job, but he said the $500 loan came from three weeks of vacation pay he received on August 14. Gomez said Martinez called him at around 9 p.m. on August 21 telling him to come to the hotel to get the loan repaid. Gomez testified that he wanted the money as soon as possible because he wanted to leave on a vacation to California with his children. The prosecution stipulated that Gomez had received the vacation pay on August 14, but the prosecution also presented Gomez’s prior conviction for possession of a controlled substance as evidence relevant to his credibility.
The state trial judge convicted Gomez, stating that he did not believe Gomez’s testimony and that the prosecution had proven that Martinez and Gomez were acting in concert. The trial court sentenced Gomez to 18 years in prison. Gomez appealed to the Appellate Court of Illinois on two issues: 1) whether Martinez’s statements were improperly admitted at trial under the eoconspirator exception to the hearsay rule, and 2) whether the evidence was sufficient to prove Gomez guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The Appellate Court rejected both arguments and affirmed the conviction.
People v. Gomez,
II. Analysis
A Exhaustion and Procedural Default
Before we reach the merits of Gomez’s petition, we must first determine whether federal review is barred because either 1) Gomez failed to exhaust state remedies,
see
28 U.S.C. § 2254(b); or 2) Gomez’s state conviction rests on an independent and adequate state procedural ground,
see Coleman v. Thompson,
Gomez failed to raise his sufficiency of the evidence claim either in his direct appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court or in any state post-conviction review proceeding. Regarding the exhaustion requirement, the state post-conviction review process technically remains open to Gomez. Gomez’s failure to avail himself of that process is not fatal, however, because we have generally not required petitioners to exhaust that option if the effort would be futile.
See Cawley v. DeTella,
The distinction between
res judica-ta
and waiver is relevant, however, to whether Gomez
procedurally defaulted
his sufficiency of the evidence claim. The State asserts that Gomez defaulted the claim by not including it in his petition to the Illinois Supreme Court. Although we have stated in the past that a habeas petitioner must present his or her claim to a state’s highest court before petitioning for federal habeas relief, our more recent and more considered view has been to look to state law to see how the state defines and treats procedural missteps.
See Hogan v. McBride,
The issue has an air of unreality about it because Illinois courts need not decide which rationale prohibits claims like Gomez’s on post-conviction review. The distinction does not matter to Illinois courts because either
res judicata
or procedural waiver would be sufficient to dismiss a post-conviction review petition. The distinction, of course, does matter for federal courts. The closest Illinois case law we can find on the subject is a 1975 case stating that a petition for leave to appeal “is not necessarily an adversary proceeding to which the application of ... the doctrine of waiver ... is appropriate.”
People v. Edgeworth,
*197 B. Standard of Review
After oral argument, we asked the parties to submit supplemental briefs regarding the proper standard of review for this ease. We asked them specifically to address the effect of the newly-amended § 2254(d) on the standard of review. The issue is relevant, of course, because we held in
Lindh v. Murphy,
In 1867, Congress granted federal courts expansive jurisdiction to grant writs of habe-as corpus to prisoners held by state authorities in violation of the Constitution or the laws of the United States.
See Ex parte McCardle,
In 1979, the Supreme Court expanded the availability of the writ in
Jackson v. Virginia,
*198
Jackson’s
“no rational' trier of fact” standard is undoubtedly deferential to the factfin-der, but it accords no deference whatsoever to state appellate courts applying the “no rational trier of fact” standard. In other words, a federal district court reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim on habeas repeats the same constitutional exercise that a state appellate court must undertake.
Jackson
thus applied a
de novo
standard of review for habeas sufficiency of the evidence claims, as six justices of the Supreme Court explicitly recognized in a recent leading habeas case.
See Wright v. West,
The Court in
Wright,
however, considered whether it should, using its equitable discretion on habeas matters, pare back habeas review by shifting from
de novo
review to “deferential review for reasonableness” on mixed constitutional questions of law and fact such as
Jackson
claims.
See Wright,
Although the Court in 1992 was hesitant to shift the standard of review, Congress in 1996 rushed in where the Court feared to tread. Congress passed and the President signed the AEDPA, which now statutorily prohibits federal courts from granting a writ of habeas corpus on a claim adjudicated on the merits in state court, unless that adjudication
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined, by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (emphasis added). Mixed constitutional questions of law and fact are exactly those decisions “which require the
application
of a legal standard to the historical-fact determinations.”
Thompson v. Keohane,
— U.S. —, —,
Because
Jackson
claims are mixed questions of law and fact, we are compelled to hold that a writ of habeas corpus may be issued for evidence insufficiency only if the state courts have unreasonably applied the
Jackson
standard. Federal review of these claims therefore now turns on whether the state court provided fair process and engaged in reasoned, good-faith decisionmaking when applying
Jackson’s
“no rational trier of fact” test.
6
As we stated in
Lindh,
§ 2254(d)(1) “requires federal courts to take into account the care with which the state court considered the subject_ [A] responsible, thoughtful answer reached after a full opportunity to litigate is adequate to support the judgment.”
Gomez asserts in his supplemental brief that § 2254(d)(1) “cannot plausibly be read to render the standard of review in Jackson v. Virginia cases any more deferential than it already is.” 7 We cannot agree. The Supreme Court framed the issue in Wright when it floated the idea that Jackson claims and other mixed constitutional questions involving the application of legal standards should be given only deferential review for reasonableness. When Congress four years later restricts the habeas remedy to cases involving the “unreasonable application” of federal law, its action must be interpreted in light of the meaning the Supreme Court attached to those words. As the Court itself has stated;
A cardinal rule of statutory construction holds that: “[Wjhere Congress borrows terms of art in which are accumulated the legal tradition and meaning of centuries of practice, it presumably knows and adopts the cluster of ideas that were attached to each borrowed word in the body of learning from which it was taken and the meaning its use will convey to the judicial mind unless otherwise instructed. In such case, absence of contrary direction may be taken as satisfaction with widely accepted definitions, not as a departure from them.”
Molzof v. United States,
*200
Moreover, if the federal courts continue to apply
Jackson’s
“no rational trier of fact” test directly to the facts, state appellate decisions will continue to receive no deference, and the AEDPA will have had zero effect on this contentious area of habeas corpus law. Like the Fifth Circuit, we find ironic any suggestion that “after all the years of failed attempts by Congress to adopt a deferential standard of review in this area the passage of subsection (d)(1) represents no more than the codification of existing Supreme Court precedent.” Dri
nkard,
The idea that Congress might want to make habeas review in
Jackson
cases more deferential is hardly an absurd or unprecedented notion. Justice Stevens, joined by two justices in his
Jackson
concurrence, argued that neither the record in that case nor general experience with sufficiency of the evidence cases “supports, much less compels, the conclusion that there is
any
need for this new constitutional precept.”
Jackson,
C. Review for Reasonableness
Under Illinois accountability theory, a conviction for unlawful delivery requires the State to prove that: 1) the defendant solicited, ordered, abetted, agreed, or attempted to aid another in the planning or commission of the delivery; 2) the defendant’s participation took place before or during the commission of the delivery, and 3) the defendant had the concurrent, specific intent to promote or facilitate the commission of the offense.
People v. Roppo,
The Appellate Court of Illinois ruled unanimously that the evidence was sufficient to convict Gomez beyond a reasonable doubt. The court carefully stated the requirements for conviction under Illinois accountability theory, and the court employed the proper
Jackson
standard in its analysis. The court also showed a familiarity with the trial evidence both in the court’s analysis of Gomez’s hearsay evidence claim (not on review here) and in its consideration of Gomez’s evidence insufficiency claim. After our review of the facts and of the Appellate Court’s decision-making process, we cannot say the state judges acted as unreasonable jurists in their application of the
Jackson
standard. “The Appellate Court of Illinois correctly cited the factors [that are] relevant and, in applying
*201
these factors, the court carefully relied on evidence in the record to support its determi-nation_”
Abrams v. Barnett,
The District Court’s order denying the writ of habeas corpus is Affirmed.
Notes
. We would remind counsel for the petitioner that a statement of the case in an appellate brief should be free of any argument or comment. See Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(4); 7th Cir. R. 28(d)(1).
. As amended by the AEDPA, 28 U.S.C. § 2253 now requires a "certificate of appealability” prior to a habeas appeal. That provision does not apply to Gomez, however, because he legitimately relied on the predecessor statute which required a “certificate of probable cause.” Although we held in
Lindh v. Murphy,
. Even if Gomez did procedurally default his sufficiency of the evidence claim, we find in the alternative that the State waived its procedural default defense. In its June 16, 1994 answer to Gomez's habeas petition, the State indicated in a footnote that it did not yet have the records from Gomez’s petition to the Illinois Supreme Court and thus did not know what claims Gomez had previously raised. The footnote also stated that if the records showed that Gomez had not properly raised his sufficiency of the evidence claim, then the State asserted the procedural default *197 defense. For the next four and a half months, however, the State made no further mention of procedural default. The District Court’s November 2, 1994 opinion ignored the procedural default defense and rejected Gomez's petition on the merits.
It is the State’s obligation to assert a procedural default defense “in a manner reasonably calculated to alert the court.”
Bloyer v. Peters,
. Although
Jackson's
specific holding is limited to federal habeas review, the Court's opinion indicates a similar duty for state appellate courts. The Court stated generally, for example, that a conviction in state court "cannot constitutionally stand” where no rational trier of fact could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson,
Since the
Jackson
decision, other courts have seen its obvious relevance for state proceedings.
See, e.g., White v. Estelle,
. Although § 2254(d) mandates that federal courts give deference to state court applications of Jackson, the new provision says nothing about the deference federal appellate courts must give to federal district court decisions on Jackson claims in habeas proceedings. Without any statutory command to change our practice, we will continue to review these district court final orders de novo.
. Gomez thus rightly acknowledges that § 2254(d)(1) is the relevant statute, not subsection (d)(2) which deals with pure factual determinations. Any argument that
Jackson
claims should be viewed as factual determinations is foreclosed 1) by
Jackson’s
failure to mention as relevant the statutory presumption that state court factual determinations are presumed correct in habeas proceedings,
see
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (1966); 2) by
Jackson's
mandate that federal habeas courts are “to assess the historic facts,”
see Jackson,
Nonetheless, the statutory presumption of correctness for factual determinations remains relevant to
Jackson
claims.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), (e)(1). These statutory provisions control when a federal court may disregard state court determinations of "basic, primary, or historical facts: facts ‘in the sense of a recital of external events and the credibility of their narra
tors_Thompson,
— U.S. at —,
