This is the third time John L. Reese has sought federal collateral review of his conviction for armed robbery. Reese was convicted in 1980, and the state’s appellate court affirmed in 1981. One petition for habeas corpus was dismissed for failure to exhaust state remedies. After Reese filed another petition, we held in 1986 that the evidence met the constitutional minimum, that the state was entitled to try Reese in a special court for recidivists, and that
Stone v. Powell,
Four Justices in
Rose v. Lundy,
Reese lost most of his case in the district court because, the judge believed, he forfeited his arguments by withdrawing them from the state court’s consideration on post-conviction review. On only one contention did Reese persevere: his claim that representation by a lawyer who has been suspended from the bar is always ineffective assistance of counsel.
Reese asks us to equate the “Counsel” to which the sixth amendment refers with “member of the bar in good standing” in modern parlance. Ineffective assistance by counsel leads to relief only if prejudicial to the defense.
Strickland v. Washington,
Judge Friendly’s opinion in
Solina v. United States,
“Counsel” in 1791 meant a person deemed by the court fit to act as another’s legal representative and inscribed on the list of attorneys. See § 35 of the Judiciary Act of 1789. There were no bar exams, no unified bars, no annual dues, no • formal qualifications. Although there were a handful of law schools, none was accredited by the ABA (there was no ABA), and few students completed the program. John Marshall dropped out of law school after a few months of study. Leonard Baker, John Marshall: A Life in Law 61-66 (1974). Would-be lawyers earned the right to practice through apprenticeship, appearing in court under the tutelage of a practitioner until they satisfied the presiding judge that they could handle cases independently. Part of that tradition survives in the practice of admission pro hac vice. Courts grant motions allowing representa *670 tion by persons who do not belong to their bars. Usually the person admitted pro hac vice belongs to some bar, but it may be the bar of a distant state or a foreign nation. The enduring practice of admission pro hac vice demonstrates that there is no one-to-one correspondence between “Counsel” and membership in the local bar.
The
constitutional
question is whether the court has satisfied itself of the advocate’s competence and authorized him to practice law. Mountebanks, as in
Solina,
and persons who obtain credentials by fraud, as in
United States v. Novak,
It would make no sense to say that Snowden could furnish “Counsel” in 1980 in a federal prosecution, to which the sixth amendment applies directly, but not in a state prosecution, to which the sixth amendment applies only by its absorption through the due process clause of the fourteenth. We therefore agree with
Beto v. Barfield,
Illinois may if it wishes annul the convictions of persons represented by lawyers whose licenses have been suspended for financial reasons. But the unpublished decision in Reese’s case, together with
People v. Elvart,
Reese presses on us three additional claims, which the district judge deemed forfeit because withdrawn from the post-conviction proceedings in state court. The district court applied
Wainwright v. Sykes,
Williams and Zellers started from the fact that state law allowed the prisoner to raise a particular claim in post-conviction proceedings. Failure to raise arguments in a manner state law permitted, we held, surrendered any entitlement to a federal decision. When state law does not allow the prisoner to present a particular claim, the omission — submitting to limitations established by law — is not an independent and adequate state ground precluding federal review. It may be that an earlier omission, the one blocking resort to post-conviction relief, will activate Sykes, but the omission of the claim from the state *671 collateral attack is not an additional obstacle.
Illinois allows prisoners to contend on collateral attack that they did not receive effective assistance of counsel, even if no such claim was presented on direct appeal, when the claim depends on facts outside the trial record.
Perry v. Fairman,
Reese’s remaining claims cannot be disposed of in this fashion. He contends that the prosecution used perjured testimony and neglected to reveal exculpatory evidence. See
Brady v. Maryland,
Still, the omission that would lead Illinois to rebuff a collateral attack leads us to the same conclusion. Illinois demands that claims based on
Brady
and
Giglio
be raised on direct appeal. Reese did not raise them when Illinois required him to. Failure to do so forfeits the claims unless Reese can show “cause” and “prejudice”.
Teague,
Affirmed.
