Pеtitioner, Ramon Mata, Jr. (“Mata”) appeals the dismissal of his Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus. We reverse and remand.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1986, Mata, a Texas prison inmate, was convicted of capital murder for killing a female prison guard with whom he claimed to be romantically involved. He was sentenced to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the convic
*327
tion and sentence in 1992.
See Mata v. State,
No. 69,632 (Tex.Crim.App. Nov. 4, 1992)(unpublished). After exhausting his state remedies, Mata filed a federal Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus on September 18, 1995. The district court denied rеlief. This court reversed and remanded Mata’s Sixth Amendment fair trial claim for an evidentiary hearing.
See Mata v. Johnson,
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Revieio
In considering a federal habeas corpus petition presented by a petitioner in state custody, we review the adequacy of the fact-finding procedure, an issue of law,
de novo. See Clark v. Scott,
B. Competency Determinations that Courts Have Found Adequate
We begin our analysis by examining the Supreme Court’s guidance provided by
Rees v. Peyton,
In
Rees,
a petitioner directed his counsel to withdraw his petition for certiorari and forgo any further attacks on his conviction and death sentence.
Id.
at 313,
We glean two conclusions from the Supreme Court’s
Rees
opinion. First, the directive to hold “such hearings as it deems suitable,”
Rees,
Following
Rees,
this circuit affirmed a district court’s determination that a petitioner was competent to abandon collateral review of his Texas capital murder conviction and death sentence.
See Rumbaugh v. Procunier,
Recently, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed a district court’s grant of a habeas petitioner’s request to dismiss his attorney and to dismiss his collateral attack on his death sentence with prejudice.
See Ford v. Haley,
While Rumbaugh and Ford afford two examples of constitutionally adequate fact-finding inquiry into the competency of a petitioner to abandon collateral review in a capital case, they do not directly answer the question presented to us. In this case, we must first ascertain the boundaries of the district court’s discretion in fashioning procedures constitutionally adequate to be used in such a competency proceeding and second we must determine whether the district court acted within thosе boundaries in this case.
*329 C. Constitutionally adequate procedures
Although we have located no controlling precedent, we find that jurisprudence developed in the context of waiver of due process safeguards and related competency questions in criminal trial proceedings instructive. We start from the proposition that the conviction of a legally incompetent
2
defendant violates constitutional due process.
See Pate v. Robinson,
Assuming,
arguendo,
that a court has not received evidence raising a bona fide doubt as to competency, Supreme Court jurisprudence nonetheless mandates that courts indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver of fundamental constitutional rights.
See Hodges v. Easton,
Applying the rationale employed in
Pate
and
Carter
to the question of whether a death row inmate is competent to drop his collateral attack on his convic
*330
tion and sentence, we conclude that a ha-beas court must conduct an inquiry into the defendant’s mental capacity, either
sua sponte
or in response to a motion by petitioner’s counsel, if the evidence raises a bona fide doubt as to his competency.
See id.
The extent and severity of the petitioner’s history of mental health problems which have been brought to the court’s attention influence the breadth and depth of the competency inquiry required. In
Drope v. Missouri,
Following
Drope,
the Fifth Circuit has held that a suicide attempt, by itself, is not necessarily sufficient to create “reasonable cause” for a competency hearing.
U.S. v. Davis,
The opportunity for face-to-face dialogue between the court and the petitioner and the ability of the court to personally observe the petitioner is likewise important to the equation. The Supreme Court held that Drope’s absence from trial after the suicide attempt bore on its analysis, in that “the trial judge and defense counsel were no longer able to observe him in the context of the trial and to gauge from his demeanor whеther he was able to cooperate with his attorney and to understand the nature and object of the proceedings against him.”
Drope,
The district court, of course, retains discretion to determine the best course of action in each particular case. For instance, in some cases an expert report already in the record may be sufficiently current that a new examination is not necessary, or a сourt may be able to decide the issue on documents without taking live testimony. In any event, the procedures employed must satisfy basic due process concerns. In sum, if the evidence before the district court raises a bona fide issue of petitioner’s competency to waive collateral review of a capital conviction and death sentence, the court can afford such petitioner adequate due process by ordering and reviewing a current examination by a qualified medicаl or mental health expert, allowing the parties to present any other evidence relevant to the question of competency and, on the record and in open court, questioning the petitioner concerning the knowing and voluntary nature of his decision to waive further proceedings.
D. Adequacy of the Procedures Employed in Mata’s Case
1. Details of the procedures employed by the district court
We now turn to the issue of whether the district court acted within these due process boundaries in resolving the question of Mata’s competency. Mata wrote letters to the court, to his lawyers and to the prosecutor dropping, then later reinstating, his appeals in state court in 1991 and in February and May of 1994. In 1994, the state judge set a competency hearing and appointed Dr. Allen Childs, M.D., a psychiatrist, and Dr. Murphey, a psychologist, to evaluate Mata. After the evaluations were completed, but before the hearing in state court, Mata again changed his mind and decided to continue his appeals, whereupon the state judge canceled the competency hearing. After his state habeas petition was deniеd in January 1995, Mata continued to vacillate between pursuing post conviction relief in federal court and dropping his appeals. In 1996, the district court initially denied Mata’s first federal habeas petition. In 1997, we reversed that decision in part and remanded Mata’s Sixth Amendment fair trial claim for an evidentiary hearing.
See Mata v. Johnson,
Mata’s attorneys appealed on his behalf. On December 17, 1998, Mata indicated his desire to reinstate his federal collateral *332 review. On February 3, 1999, we remanded the case to the district сourt for a determination of Mata's competence on July 16, 1998 and December 17, 1998, requiring the district court "to set forth not just its conclusion but its findings and reasoning in sufficient detail to allow meaningful review by this court." Mata v. Johnson, No. 98-20756 (5th Cir.1999) (unpublished). On remand, the Respondent filed a motion requesting that the court appoint a disinterested expert to evaluate Mata's competency (1) at the present time, (2) in December 1998, and (3) in July 1998. Although Respondent advised the court that the motion was opposed, Mata's attorneys filed nothing further оn the issue. Mata again wrote to the district court on July 25, 1999, urging the court grant the Respondent's motion for a competency exam, but stating that he did not want to continue with his appeals and wished to be executed as soon as possible.
On August 3, 1999, the district court entered findings of fact, without benefit of an expert examination of Mata or any further evidence or hearings. The district court found that Mata was competent on July 16, 1998, based on the 1985 expert reports finding him legally competent to stand trial for capital murder. Thе district court stated that "[s]ince that time, nothing indicates that he has become incompetent. The psychological reports in the record support Mata's competence." The district court made no mention of Dr. Childs's report and conclusion to the contrary. The district court went on to find Mata competent on December 17, 1998, when he asked to reinstate his appeal, and July 25, 1999, when he again wrote the district court abandoning his legal attacks on his sentence.
2. Evidence raising bona fide question of Mata's competence
The record contains evidence that Mata suffers from an organic brain disorder resulting from closed head injuries and has a history of mental health problems both before and after his capital murder trial. Since 1986, physicians at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice have prescribed numerous psychotherapeutic and antidepressant medications to alleviate the symptoms of mental illness.
3
He has made numerous suicide attempts and engaged in several hunger strikes. There is a report from Dr. Allen Childs detailing his findings in 1994 that Mata suffers from delusional disorder with paranoid and ero-tomanic features and borderline personality organization. Dr. Childs opined that Mata's efforts at suicide as well as his delusions of seeing and talking with his murder victim are genuine. Dr. Childs also wrote a letter in 1998, based on his examination of Mata in 1994, stating that Mata was not competent to drop his appeals. We conclude that all the evidence presented with respect to Mata's mental stability and competence is sufficient to create "reasonable cause" for a cоmpetency hearing. See U.S. v. Davis,
3. Current examination by an expert
The district court based his fact finding on the expert examination performed twelve years earlier in conjunction with Mata's original trial. The lapse of time, coupled with extensive evidence of change in Mata's condition, lead us to conclude that the district court did not base its decision on a current examination by an expert.
4. Opportunity for the parties to present other evidence
Except for the attachments to the original motion, no evidence was presented to the court on the issue of Mata's compe *333 tence. The court never afforded the parties the opportunity to present testimony or documentary evidence. The court’s statement that nothing indicates that Mata had become incompetent since his trial in 1985 is meaningless in the absence of a hearing or even a summary judgment-type procedure in which the parties could develop the record. We therefore find that the district court did not afford the parties a meaningful opportunity to present evidence relevant to the question of Mata’s competency to discontinue his appeals.
5. District court dialogue with Mata
Mata has not personally appeared before the district court since the question of his competency to drop his appeal arose. The district court received some hand written notes from Mata, but there has been no face-to-face dialogue between the court and the petitioner and no opportunity for the court to personally observe Mata.
6. Proceedings inadequate
Because the evidence submitted by Mata raisеd a bona fide question that he lacked competency to drop his appeal, and because there is no current evaluation of Mata’s competence by a medical expert, no opportunity for the parties to present evidence, and no appearance by Mata in open court, we conclude that the proceedings in this case failed to afford the minimum due process guaranteed by the Constitution.
III. CONCLUSION
We do not imply that a petitioner is free to manipulate the collateral review process by endlessly vacillating between dropping and reinstating his capital appeal. We are sympathetic to the district court’s frustration over the length of the appeals process, frustration that was heightened by the district court’s perception that Mata was playing for time and his attorneys were maximizing their fees in this case. Nevertheless, the answer is not to eviscerate the constitutional protections for state habeas petitioners, but to promptly аfford the parties the opportunity to procure and present evidence on the question of competency, resolve the factual questions presented and allow the petitioner, if found competent, to choose his course of action. Once a reliable, constitutionally adequate competency determination is made, a district court would certainly be justified in presuming that a petitioner continues to be competent. However, such a presumption cannot survive а twelve year gap, coupled with the extensive evidence of incompetency in this record.
Based on the foregoing, we reverse the district court’s order dismissing the petition for habeas corpus and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Further, we direct that this case be reassigned to a different judge, to avoid the appearance of bias arising from the district court’s remarks in this record.
See Johnson v. Sawyer,
REVERSED and REMANDED, WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. Although Mata's July 1998 decision to drop his appeal is the focus of this appeal, Mata has written lеtters to the court, his lawyers and the state dropping and later reinstating his appeals on no fewer than eight separate occasions since his conviction in 1986. See infra, pp. 331-32.
. The competency standard for pleading guilty or for standing trial is "whether the defendant has sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding' and a ‘rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him[.]’ ”
Godinez v. Moran,
. The medical records attached to the original motion for competency examination note prescriptions for Asendin, Sinequan, Triavil, Mal-laril, Haldol, Tofranil, Triavil, Elavil, Desyrel, and Zoloft. See generally PHYSICIANS' DESK REFERENCE (Medical Economics Data Production Co. 48th ed.1994).
