A state prisoner who is under sentence of death appeals from the denial of federal ha-beas corpus. One night back in 1982 Johnny Neal entered the home of a neighbor with whom he was friendly, Lillian Waid, a 63-year-old widow, robbed her, and, though she put up no resistance, bashed in her head with a length of lead pipe filled with concrete and *843 then stabbed her. The principal ground on which he seeks relief is that his lawyer rendered ineffective assistance of counsel at the hearing in 1983 in which a jury sentenced him to death. She did this, Neal argues, by failing to conduct a full investigation of his personal and psychiatric history and character. That history would have revealed that as a child he 'was severely beaten by his mother, that he was a good worker and a good neighbor (other than to Mrs. Waid, of course), and that, according to an affidavit of a clinical psychologist retained by Neal’s current counsel, he killed Mrs. Waid under the illusion that she was his mother and was trying to hurt him.
The state courts in which Neal first made this claim, in postconvietion proceedings attacking his conviction and sentence, determined that his counsel had,not been ineffective. The scope of our review of that determination is extremely limited. Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) — which was added to the law by the newly enacted Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, § 104(3), Pub.L. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, 1219, and which we held in
Lindh v. Murphy,
There is no federal constitutional right to counsel in a postconvietion proceeding, and from this the Supreme Court has reasoned that procedural defaults due to the blunderings of such counsel are not to be excused.
Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
The fact that the state court in the second round of postconvietion proceedings touched on the merits of Neal’s federal constitutional claim does not permit us to disregard the default. When it is unclear whether the state court’s decision rests entirely on a procedural or other state law ground rather
*844
than on the merits of the federal constitutional claim, the federal court can reach those merits.
Harris v. Reed,
At argument Neal’s lawyer seemed to be contending that due process of law requires that the procedures employed in state post-conviction proceedings be simple enough to be proof against attorney negligence. No authority for such a contention was advanced.
The issue of ineffective assistance of Neal’s trial counsel comes to us after a full and fair hearing, and so the only question we have to answer is whether the state courts, on the basis of the evidence presented in the first postconviction proceeding, were unreasonable to conclude that Neal’s trial lawyer had been competent. That evidence was meager — a couple of affidavits attesting that Neal was a good person and a good worker, but without elaboration; an affidavit from his jailer that Neal was not remembered as having been an unruly prisoner when he was in jail awaiting trial; and a police report that a cousin of Neal’s had said that Neal had been abused as a child. The determination that the failure of Neal’s trial counsel to present such evidence at the sentencing hearing did not establish ineffective assistance of counsel could not be thought unreasonable. It is not as if counsel had failed to submit any evidence of mitigation, as in
Emerson v. Gramley,
An affidavit from a jailer that Neal had not raised hell while awaiting trial for capital murder would not have been worth the paper it was written on, so far as appealing to a jury’s rational or for that matter irrational faculty of mercy. The cousinly hearsay in the police report was worth little more. And the “good person-good worker” affidavits would have opened up Neal’s past to an examination that would have created a different and worse impression than that created by his counsel and her witness, Neal’s wife. According to the presentence investigation report, the accuracy of which we do not *845 understand Neal’s ' present counsel to be questioning, Neal was not employed at the time of the robbery arid murder, and the swindle consisted of embezzlement from a previous employer (so much for the “good worker”). As for the “good person,” the report indicates that while in the army Neal had been jailed for six months for going AWOL and imprisoned for 17 months following a court-martial at which he was found guilty of breaking and entering, that he had received a bad-conduct discharge, and that he is a former alcoholic and drug abuser. Had Neal’s counsel opened up his history by introducing the “good person-good worker” affidavits, that action would be the cornerstone of Neal’s case for ineffective assistance of counsel.
Of course if counsel had investigated further, she might have found more — might have found, we may assume would have found, the history of maternal abuse on which the second posteonviction petition in state court pivoted. And the first petition did fault her for having failed to conduct an adequate investigation, a common charge in these cases. But since, as we have noted already, establishing ineffective, assistance requires proof of harm to the client from his lawyer’s ineffectiveness, and not just ineffectiveness, the first petition could not succeed without proof of that harm. All that the later investigation came up with was the four worthless affidavits. The state court, based on what was before it, had no choice but to turn down the petition. That decision was not merely reasonable; it was correct. The more complete investigation conducted later came too late to help Neal.
But even if we set to one side
all
the procedural obstacles to Neal’s claim of ineffective assistance, and consider all the evidence he wants us to consider, de novo, as if we were the court of first instance, the claim fails. His case, even taking into account all the evidence that he and his lawyers have obtained or manufactured in the past 13 years, is weaker than the parallel case that we rejected in
Stewart v. Gramley,
*846
The other grounds on which Neal seeks relief are frivolous, barred by procedural default, or barred by the decisions of this court. We rest on the district court’s discussion of them. Also before us, however, is Neal’s motion to defer our decision of his appeal until a state court in which he has filed a third petition for postconviction relief conducts an evidentiary hearing. There is no suggestion here, as there was in
Pitsonbarger v. Gramley,
No. 95-3912 (7th Cir. Sept. 10, 1996) (per curiam), where another panel of this court granted an otherwise similar motion, that the issues presented by Neal’s third postconvietion petition are entangled with the issues of federal law presented by this appeal or that their resolution might affect our decision of the appeal. The state did not oppose Pitsonbarger’s motion
(id.
at 2); had it insisted on a prompt federal decision, it would have been entitled to one even if the pending state petition presented federal claims. Otherwise the prisoner could obtain indefinite delay by splintering his federal claims, a course of action disapproved by the Supreme Court even before the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act,
In re Blodgett,
In light of the fact that Neal’s third petition for state postconviction relief presents, we are told, issues solely of state law, we remind Neal that the commission of errors of state law in a state judicial proceeding does not deny the party harmed by those errors due process of law. E.g.,
Estelle v. McGuire,
Affirmed.
