John J. Zichko appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.'C. § 2254. He is seeking relief from the judgment of conviction entered against him on June 2, 1987, for raping his minor daughter. This appeal raises preliminarily the question of whether a habeas petitioner may challenge an underlying, expired rape conviction while in custody for failing to comply with a state sex offender registration law. We conclude that he may. Zichko alleges substantively in his habeas petition that he was denied effective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to consult with him about appealing his initial conviction, as required by
Roe v. Flores-Ortega,
Background
Zichko pled guilty to the charge of raping his daughter and, on June 2, 1987, the Idaho District Court sentenced him to an indeterminate period of 10 years. He did not appeal.
*1018 Zicbko filed an application for post-conviction relief in the Idaho District Court on September 18, 1989, raising two grounds for relief: (1) that he received ineffective assistance of counsel; and (2) that his guilty plea was not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily given. Specifically, Zichko alleged that his original attorney, William V. Brown, threatened him and his family by advising that he would have to vigorously cross-examine Zichko’s daughter, the alleged victim, to provide an adequate defense. Zichko also claimed that his attorney failed to fully advise him of the matters surrounding the charges and failed to raise statute of limitations and alibi defenses. Zichko and his wife testified at an evidentiary hearing before the Idaho District Court. The court denied the petition, making the following factual findings relevant to this appeal: “Zichko requested neither an appeal nor a motion to withdraw his guilty plea[,] [and] [n]o appeal was filed.”
Zichko appealed to the Idaho Court of Appeals, which affirmed on procedural grounds the trial court’s dismissal of Zich-ko’s petition. The unpublished decision explained that Zichko’s brief “does not specify any error with respect either to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the factual findings made by the district court or the conclusions of law applied by the court to the facts found,” as required by Idaho statutory and case law. Zichko did not appeal to the Idaho Supreme Court.
On March 28, 1996, Zichko wrote a letter to the Clerk of the Idaho Supreme Court inquiring about the status of his appeal in the intermediate appellate court. The Clerk responded that the Court of Appeals had issued its decision on February 21, 1996, and that the time for filing a petition of review in the Supreme Court had expired. Zichko proceeded to file a series of motions, not relevant to this appeal, in the state courts.
Meanwhile, on May 8, 1997, Zichko filed the instant pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court alleging the following grounds: (1) William V. Brown’s threats to Zichko and his family to coerce Zichko to plead guilty rendered Brown’s representation ineffective; (2) Brown had a conflict of interest because he had previously represented a white supremacist and had ties to the tourist industry in Kootenai County; (3) Idaho District Court judge James Judd had a conflict of interest because he had ties to casino gambling and the dog track in Post Falls, which Zichko opposed; and (4) Zich-ko was deprived of a preliminary hearing on a superseding charge.
The district court granted the state’s motion to dismiss the petition on July 16, 1998. Of relevance for this appeal is Zich-ko’s first ground for relief, ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court held that Zichko had procedurally defaulted the ineffective assistance of counsel claim by failing to present it to the Idaho Supreme Court. The court then held that Zichko had failed to show the requisite “cause and prejudice” necessary to overcome the procedural default. In October 1998, the district court denied Zichko’s request for a certificate of appealability (“COA”).
On January 25,1999, however, we granted Zichko a COA on a single issue: whether remand is necessary for the district court to determine whether Zichko consented to his trial counsel’s failure to file a notice of appeal from the judgment of a conviction, as required by
Lozada v. Deeds,
STANDARD Of REVIEW
We review a district court’s decision dismissing a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition de novo.
Bribiesca v. Gatazo,
The district court’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error.
Lopez v. Thompson,
Discussion
A. Jurisdiction
The first issue we confront is whether the district court had jurisdiction over Zichko’s petition. For a federal court to have jurisdiction over a habeas petition filed by a state prisoner, the petitioner must be “in custody.”
See, e.g., Brock v. Weston,
In this case, Zichko was released from prison on his original rape conviction in March 1994. His original 10-year sentence would have ended on June 1, 1997, less than a month before he filed his habe-as petition in district court. The district court never addressed the merits of Zich-ko’s petition; instead, it dismissed the petition on procedural grounds on July 16, 1998, more than a year after the sentence would have been completed had he been incarcerated for the full 10 years.
Zichko was, however, incarcerated for failing to register as a sex offender as required by Idaho law, Idaho Code §§ 18-8301 — 18-8326, at the time he filed his habeas petition and at the time it was dismissed by the district court. Several times, we have held that merely being subject to a sex offender registry requirement does not satisfy the “in custody” requirement after the original rape conviction has expired.
See, e.g., McNab v. Kok,
“It is well settled that a habeas corpus petitioner meets the statutory ‘in custody requirements when, at the time he files the petition[ ] ... he is in custody pursuant to another conviction that is positively and demonstrably related to the conviction he attacks.”
Carter v. Procunier,
Because we now hold that Zichko’s claim is procedurally defaulted, we do not address whether we are barred from reaching the merits of his habeas petition by the Lackawanna County decision or whether his claim is covered by an exception to that rule.
B. Presentation To The District Court
The State of Idaho first argues that we may not consider this claim, that Zichko was denied ineffective assistance of counsel when attorney Brown did not appeal the initial conviction, because Zichko did not present it to the district court. It is true that “ ‘[hjabeas claims that are not raised in the petition before the district court are not cognizable on appeal.’ ”
Selam v. Warm Springs Tribal Corr. Facility,
Zichko did raise an ineffective assistance of counsel claim in the United States district court. The specific factual bases for that claim were that Attorney Brown:
threatened my family to get a bogus guilty plea ...[;] [h]e did not check into exculpatory evidence ...[;][ h]e entered a bogus stipulation in a child protection case that was somehow used in a child protection case ...[;] [he] would not tell me just what it was that was “adjudicated to” at the 1987 criminal case trial, which put the sex offenders jacket on me[;] ... [and he] was on medication for his terminal cancer and had mood-swings.
Zichko did not specifically identify the failure to appeal as one of the grounds for an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. However, we have a “duty ... to construe pro se pleadings liberally.”
Hamilton v. United States,
Zichko did allege that his attorney had failed to communicate with him at times, a concern in which the
Flores-Ortega
decision was grounded.
C. Procedural Default
Next, the state argues that Zichko procedurally defaulted this claim, when his brief to the state appellate court did not comply with the proper form and when he did not subsequently appeal to the Idaho Supreme Court. We agree.
The intermediate appellate court’s denial of Zichko’s petition for post-conviction relief is a procedural bar to our consideration of his claim. The independent and adequate state ground doctrine “applies to bar federal habeas when a state court declined to address a prisoner’s federal claims because the prisoner had failed to meet a state procedural requirement.”
Coleman v. Thompson,
With regard to the adequacy prong, in order “to support a finding of procedural default, a state rule must be clear, consistently applied, and well-established at the time of petitioner’s purported default.”
Petrocelli v. Angelone,
[a] list of issues presented on appeal, expressed in the terms and circumstances of the case.... The issues shall fairly state the issues presented for review. ... The argument shall contain the contentions of the appellant with respect to the issues presented on appeal, the reasons therefor, with citations to the authorities, statutes and parts of the transcript and record relied upon.
Idaho appellate courts have been relying on these provisions for many years, including in cases before Zichko’s original conviction, to reject appeals.
See, e.g., Cox v. Mountain Vistas, Inc.,
We also find that Zichko procedurally defaulted his claim by failing to
*1022
appeal his state post-conviction petition to the Idaho Supreme Court. A habeas petitioner must present his claims to the state’s highest court in order to satisfy the exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. §§ 2254(b)(1) and (c).
O’Sullivan v. Boerckel,
Zichko has not attempted to demonstrate cause and prejudice or to make a showing of actual innocence to overcome the procedural default.
See Kibler v. Walters,
We agree with the district court that Zichko defaulted his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, and we decline to reach, the merits of his habeas petition.
AFFIRMED.
