Petitioner-Appellant Farley Charles Matchett, a Texas death-row prisoner (# 999060), seeks a certificate of appeala-bility (“COA”) to appeal the district court’s dismissal of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus application on the ground that his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are procedurally defaulted.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In 1993, Matchett pleaded guilty to the capital murder of Uries Anderson by stabbing him and hitting him with a hammer during a robbery.
See Matchett v. State,
Represented on direct appeal by the same attorneys who represented him at trial, Matchett raised 37 points of error.
Matchett,
In 1997, represented by newly appointed counsel, Matchett filed a state post-convic *847 tion application summarily listing 72 individual grounds for relief. He briefed but a few of these claims in a memorandum filed in support of the application. The state trial court adopted the respondent’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law and concluded that most of the grounds for relief “were unsupported by argument and/or authorities.” In 2001, the Court of Criminal Appeals denied Matchett’s post-conviction application, ruling that “[t]he findings and conclusions by the trial court are supported by the record.”
Later that year, the federal district court appointed a new attorney for Match-ett so that he could file a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas application. This attorney first filed a successive post-conviction application in state court, however, raising several claims of ineffective assistance of counsel that had not been raised previously, viz., failing to investigate and present a complete and accurate mitigation defense; failing to challenge the admissibility of the rebuttal testimony of State psychological expert, Dr. Walter Quijano, on the ground that the testimony was not reliable; and advising Matchett to plead guilty, with the effect of forfeiting his right to challenge the legality of his arrest and the admissibility of his confession on direct appeal. In May of 2002, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied this second post-conviction application as an abuse of the writ.
Matchett then filed the instant 28 U.S.C. § 2254 application, raising the same claims of ineffective assistance of counsel that had been raised in his second state post-conviction application. He also contended that the trial court had issued an unconstitutional jury instruction on intoxication when it “severely limited” the jury’s ability to consider and give effect to the cocaine-intoxication evidence. The respondent moved for summary judgment, arguing that Matchett’s ineffective-assistance claims were procedurally defaulted, based on the Court of Criminal Appeals’ abuse-of-the-writ ruling, and that the intoxication-charge claim, which had been raised on direct appeal, was procedurally defaulted as well. Matchett replied that he had “cause” for any procedural default because the performance of his attorney during his first state post-conviction proceeding was ineffective, in that counsel failed to raise the ineffective-assistance claims during that proceeding.
The district court issued a memorandum and order granting the respondent’s summary-judgment motion and dismissing Matchett’s 28 U.S.C. § 2254 application. The court concluded that all of Matchett’s ineffective-assistance claims were procedurally defaulted and that Matchett’s assertion that counsel performed ineffectively during his first state post-conviction proceeding did not qualify as “cause” to excuse such default. The court also concluded that the intoxication-charge claim was procedurally defaulted. Matchett now seeks a COA from us.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. COA standard
A COA may issue “only if the applicant has made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). “The COA determination under § 2253(c) requires an overview of the claims in the habeas petition and a general assessment of their merits.”
Miller-El v. Cockrell,
B. Abandoned claims
In the brief filed in support of his COA application, Matchett does not pursue either his claim that counsel performed ineffectively by failing to object to Dr. Quijano’s testimony or his claim that the trial court gave an improper instruction with respect to cocaine intoxication. We deem these claims abandoned.
Hughes v. Johnson,
C. Remaining Claims
Matchett does continue to assert his substantive claims that trial counsel performed ineffectively by advising him to plead guilty and by failing to investigate and present a complete mitigation defense at the punishment phase. He acknowledges that these claims were not presented to the state courts prior to their inclusion in his' second state post-conviction application; that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found that application to be an abuse of the writ; and that the federal district court therefore found the claims to be procedurally defaulted. Matchett does not explicitly dispute the district court’s conclusion that the allegedly ineffective assistance of his appointed attorney during his first state post-conviction proceeding was not “cause” to excuse such procedural default. Rather, Match-ett emphasizes that Texas provides a statutory right to post-conviction counsel for death-row inmates.
The procedural-default doctrine precludes federal habeas review when the last reasoned state-court opinion addressing a claim explicitly rejects it on a state procedural ground.
Ylst v. Nunnemaker,
“Cause is defined as ‘something external to the petitioner, something that cannot fairly be attributed to him’ that impedes his efforts to comply with the [state] procedural rule.”
Moore v. Roberts,
We have repeatedly held that ineffective assistance of state habeas or post-conviction counsel
cannot
serve as cause for a procedural default.
See, e.g., Henderson,
Finally, on at least two occasions, we have rejected contentions like Match-ett’s that Texas’s statutory provision of post-conviction counsel to death-row offenders requires that the post-conviction process must comply with the Due Process Clause.
Ogan v. Cockrell,
III.
CONCLUSION
Matchett has failed to demonstrate that jurists of reason would find it debatable that the district court erred in ruling that his substantive claims were procedurally defaulted.
See Slack,
DENIED.
Notes
. Matchett cites
Welch
v.
Beto,
