On April 24, 1997, Michael Newell filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court dismissed the petition as untimely, or alternatively for lack of merit, and Newell appeals. We vacate the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
I. Background
In 1990 Newell was convicted in the Superior Court of Knox County, Indiana, of dealing cocaine, Ind.Code § 35-^18^4 — 1, and was sentenced to 30 years’ imprisonment. The evidence at trial had showed that an individual named Fred Wells, driving one of Newell’s vehicles, met police officer Richard McGee and confidеntial informant Brad Foote at a Quickstop gas *830 station in Vincennes, Indiana, where he sold McGee a bag of cocaine for $950. McGee testified that when he asked whether the substance was “Newell’s stuff,” Wells replied, “Yea, I just came from there.”
The sale had been preceded by the following telephone conversation between Newell (“Mike”) and Foote (“Brad”), recorded and corroborated at trial by police officer Dennis Holt:
MIKE: Hello.
BRAD: Mike?
MIKE: Yes.
BRAD: Hey, how’s it going?
MIKE: Okay.
BRAD: I’m sorry to take so long, but I’m back with you.
MIKE: Uh huh.
BRAD: So, can ah ... can you take off and meet me at the, ah, out by the Executive or something?
MIKE: What about the place ... ah, being Bobe’s?
BRAD: Wеll, we can go over there, but like I said I’m here right now.
MIKE: Well, he doesn’t want to go there, he wants to go to Bobe’s.
[MIKE]: Yeah, and ... ah, are you going to be by yourself, you know, he’s kind of paranoid, you got to understand why.
BRAD: Yeah, I can understand that.
MIKE: But it’s all together, everything, right ... is everything right on your end?
BRAD: Yeah, yeah.
MIKE: For sure?
BRAD: For sure.
MIKE: Okay, how about Quickstop in twenty minutes?
BRAD: Quickstop in twenty minutes? MIKE: Yeah.
BRAD: Okay, what kind of car do you ... is he coming up in?
MIKE: Ah, probably my red pickup truck.
BRAD: The one with the back window out?
MIKE: Yeah, either that or the other one.
BRAD: Okay, I’ll recog ... I’ll recognize that, I just want to make sure it’s somebody I know cause I just hate standing around, hanging around.
MIKE: It’s Freddy. Okay, I’ll see ya.
BRAD: Okay, it’s be all right, bye.
The audiotape and transcript of this conversation, together with the testimony of officers McGee and Holt, were apparently the only pieces of evidence linking Newell to the charged transaction. Neither Wells nor Foote testified at Newell’s trial.
On April 24, 1997, Newell (through his attorney) filed his first § 2254 petition, in which he principally alleges that the state ■ violated
Brady v. Maryland,
According to Newell’s petition, prosecutor Hoefling failed to disclose any of the above information, not even in response to discovery requests that would have required its production. Newell’s petition further claims that Hoefling affirmatively concealed the existence of Wells’s cooperation agreement, going so fаr as to “cause [] the records of the Knox Superior Court Division 1 to reflect the State’s objection to Wells’s Motion for Bond Reduction (which was granted) when, in fact, the State had affirmatively agreed to his release on the date of his cooperation.” Moreover, New-ell claims, Hoefling told the jury during his opening statement that he had subpoenaed Wells but could not predict whether he would testify, and argued that the out-of-court statement submitted through McGee’s testimony was not hearsay because Wells was under subpoena, “there by implying that he bеlieved Wells would testify and be subject to cross-examination.” Newell also alleges that Hoefling pointed out in his closing argument that Newell did not challenge Wells’s out-of-court statement “despite the fact that Wells himself had not testified and that, by virtue of the State’s actions, Mr. Newell was deprived of his opportunity to challenge that statement by cross-examination.”
Newell’s petition raises a second Brady argument: that Hoefling concealed evidence of the state’s agreement with Foote “governing his activities as a confidential informant.” ■ Newell elaborated on this claim in additiоnal pleadings before the district court, alleging that Foote’s absence at trial was in part the result of the state’s assistance and that the state had the ability to locate Foote at all times. Hoefling, however, allegedly told the jury during his opening statement that an individual named David Schlomer had threatened Foote, and later elicited testimony to the effect that Schlomer was a friend of Newell’s. Newell contends that the implication of Hoefling’s statements was that Newell “had participated in the transmission of threats to Brad Foote and, thereby, contributed to his absence at trial.” But, according to Newell, “[a]t the time he gave his Opening Statement, [Hoefling] had no basis for asserting that Foote had been threatened by anyone including Mr. Schlomer and, in fact, no such threats were made.”
On December 31, 1997, the district court, at Newell’s request, dismissed his petition without prejudice on the ground that he had presented a “ ‘mixed’ petition in the sense that some of his habeas claims have been exhausted in the Indiana courts, while other claims are now being litigated in the Indiana courts through a successive petition for post-conviction relief.” (More precisely, Newell had pending a motion for leave to file a successive state post-conviction petition.) Judgment was entered on January 5,1998.
On September 8, 1998, the Indiana appeals court denied Newell’s motion for leave to file a successive post-conviction petition, stating that “having examined the Petitioner’s Petition for Successive Post *832 Conviction Relief [the court] finds that the Petition conclusively shows that the Petitioner is entitled to no relief.” Over two months later, on November 20, Newell returned to federal court and moved to “re-docket his Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, amending said Petition only insofar as the Petition contains references to the procedural status and disposition of his Petition for Successive Post Conviction Relief before the Indiana Court of Appeals.” On November 25 the district court granted the motion and ordered that the “judgment entered on the clerk’s docket on January 5, 1998, is vacated and the clerk shall reopen the action on the docket.”
After further proceedings, howеver, the district court determined that Newell’s amended petition was untimely and accordingly dismissed the case with prejudice. The court first reasoned that New-ell’s original filing on April 24, 1997, missed the cutoff date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AED-PA”) by one day. Alternatively, the court held that, even if Newell’s original petition was timely, his amended one was not because it could not “relate back” to the earlier filing date. The court also purported to reach the merits of the case and held that irrespective of untimeliness Newell was not еntitled to relief because “the decisions of the Indiana Court of Appeals — and principally its decision affirming the trial court’s denial of Newell’s [first] petition for post-conviction relief ... reasonably applies the law and principles applicable to Newell’s claims as established by the Supreme Court of the United States.” In January 2001 this court granted a certificate of appealability on three issues: (1) whether AEDPA’s one-year grace period ended on April 23 or April 24, 1997; (2) whether the district court erred in dismissing Newell’s original petition and whеther his amended petition relates back to the earlier filing date; and (3) whether Newell’s constitutional rights were violated by the prosecutor’s misconduct.
II. Discussion
A. Timeliness
AEDPA imposes a one-year statute of limitations on.habeas corpus petitions brought by state prisoners, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d), but for prisoners whose convictions became final prior to AEDPA’s enactment on April 24,1996, there was a one-year grace period in which to file.
Lindh v. Murphy,
Notwithstanding
Lindh,
however, whether AEDPA’s grace period ended on April 23 or April 24, 1997, is still an open question in this circuit. As we observed in
*833
United States v. Marcello,
The general rule for computing time limitations in federal courts is Federal Rule of Civil Proсedure 6(a), which excludes from the computation “the day of the act, event, or default from which the designated period of time begins to run.” In
Marcello
we applied this rule to AED-PA — specifically, to § 2255 para. 6(1), which provides that the one-year limitations period for federal prisoners will run in some cases from the date on which the judgment of conviction became final — and held that, for defendants who try unsuccessfully to take their case to the Supreme Court, the one-year time limit begins to run the day
after
the Court denies certiorari, thereby giving defendants until the closе of business on the “anniversary date” of the denial to file their habeas motion.
Marcello,
But this does not end the timeliness inquiry. Anticipating that reasonable jurists might differ as to whether AEDPA’s cutoff date was April 23 or April 24, the district court went on to hold that, even if Newell’s original petition was timely, his amended petition filed on November 25, 1998, was not. The district court seemed to proceed along the following analysis: (1) assuming the original petition was timely, its filing tolled the statute of limitations from the filing date (April 24, 1997) to the dismissal date (December 31, 1997); (2) the^ statute was running again from the dismissal date to the filing date of the amended petition (November 25, 1998); (3) Newell’s motion for leave to file a successive post-conviction petition was not a “properly filed” application within the meaning of § 2244(d)(2),
see Tinker v. Hanks,
There are several problems with this analysis. First, the district court mistakenly assumes that the filing of a case stops the running of the statute of limitations even if that case is later dismissed without prejudice.
Elmore v. Henderson,
But these errors are of little import. The crucial flaw in the decision is the district court’s not recalling that, in its November 25, 1998 order, it already had
vacated
the judgment dismissing Newell’s original petition and allowed the amended petition to be redocketed under the same cause number. And though the state argued at oral argument that the district court abused its discretion in vacating its earlier dismissal, we conclude that the court’s decision was entirely proper. When dismissing Newell’s first petition, the district court did not have the benefit of our decisions in
Freeman v. Page,
Because Newell’s initial filing was, in effect, never dismissed, the tolling principles discussed in
Tinker
are inapplicable. Rather, we are left with a much simplified situation: Newell filed his original petition on April 24, 1997, and with leave of the district court amended that petition on November 25, 1998. The only question then is whether the amended petition (which supersedes the first,
Kelley v. Crosfield Catalysts,
Rule 15(c) permits relation back where the claims in an amended pleading are based on the same core of facts advanced in the original.
Bularz v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
B. Procedural Default
Newell’s petition is timely, but the state maintains that, even so, dismissal was proper because Newell procedurally defaulted his claims. It is true that Newell did not present his claims on direct appeal or in his first state post-conviction proceeding; he did, however, present them during his second post-conviction proceeding. According to Newell the parties litigated his second petition “through [New-ell’s] portion of an evidentiary hearing,” before realizing that he had failed to comply with Indiana Post-Conviction Rule 1(12), which requires leave from the Indiana Court of Appeals before filing a successive collateral attack. Newell accordingly moved for leave in December 1996, but the appeals court declined to authorize filing, stating that “having examined the Petitioner’s Petition for Successive Post-Conviction Relief [the court] finds that the Petition conclusively shows that the Petitioner is entitled to no relief.” See Indiana PosNConviction Rule l(12)(b) (“If the pleadings conclusively show that the petitioner is entitled to no relief, the court will decline to аuthorize the filing of the [successive] petition.”).
The state argues that the Indiana appeals court’s statement that Newell’s successive petition “conclusively shows that the Petitioner is entitled to no relief1’ was an “adequate and independent state ground” that bars Newell from raising his claims on federal habeas corpus review. But even if Newell procedurally defaulted his claims, he could undoubtedly show “cause” for the default if he has evidence to support his underlying allegations.
See Crivens v. Roth,
C. Merits
In a last-ditch effort, the state argues that, even if Newell’s claims are timely and are not defaulted, they are otherwise without merit. Specifically, the state contends that
Even if the State had entered into ... agreements with Wells and Foote, neither Wells nor Foote testified at trial. Newell fails to point to any Supreme Court case to support his assertion that the stаte’s agreement with person [sic] who does not testify at trial is material evidence. Such evidence would be relevant only to show Wells’s and Foote’s *837 bias. Because neither testified, their credibility was not at issue, and it cannot be said that such evidence was material to Newell’s guilt.
This argument is circular. In essence the state contends that it can deny a defendant the benefit of favorable witness testimony and later use the absence of that testimony as the reason why there was no constitutional violation.
The district court also believed that Newell was not entitled to relief on the merits, specifically because “the decisions of the Indiana Court of Appeals — and principally its decision affirming the trial court’s denial of Newell’s [first] petition for post-conviction relief ... reasonably applies the law and principles applicable to Newell’s claims as established by the Supreme Court of the United States.” But whether the Indiana Court of Appeals was correct to affirm the denial of Newell’s first post-conviction petition is not relevant — it was not until his second post-conviction рroceeding that Newell raised the claims he raises here.
Contrary to the state’s assertions, Newell has at least two colorable
Brady
arguments: that the state failed to disclose Wells’s pretrial statements exonerating Newell and failed to disclose evidence of Wells’s cooperation agreement. The state’s case depended almost entirely on officer McGee’s testimony that Wells told him that he got the cocaine from Newell. Had Wells testified that he did not make that statement and that the cocaine was not evеn Newell’s, the state would have been left with only the phone conversation to link Newell to the charged transaction (assuming Wells would have been found credible). Thus, if Newell can prove his allegations, we believe that he might also be able to show a reasonable probability that the result of his trial would have been different if the suppressed evidence had been disclosed, which makes that evidence material for Brady purposes.
See Giglio v. United States,
Newell may also be able to establish a due process claim based on state interference with defense access (sometimes couched as a Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process). It is well-settled that substantiаl government interference with a defense witness’s free and unhampered choice to testify violates the defendant’s due process rights.
E.g., United States v. Vavages,
Newell’s allegations regarding Foote present a harder ease. Pоtentially, Newell could have a viable claim under Webb and its supporting cases: that the state violated his due process rights by deliberately concealing Foote’s whereabouts and sending him out of the state before trial. But Newell has failed to show how Foote’s absence at trial prejudiced him in any way. That failure, however, could be due to the fact that the district court’s conclusion regarding timeliness prevented Newell from developing the factual bases of his claims.
In such circumstances the appropriate step is to remand the case for further proceedings (including an evidentiary hearing, if necessary) so that the district court can determine the merits of Newell’s claims in the first instance.
See Rice v. Bowen,
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is Vaoated, and the case is Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. After he was released on bond on the cocaine charge, Wells was arrested on new charges of burglary and possession of stolen property. The six-year sentence he received was for those nеw charges, both Class C felonies; the cocaine charge, a Class A felony, was dismissed. Wells testified in his May 1996 deposition that Hoefling was the prosecuting attorney at his sentencing hearing.
. The trial court did not issue a written decision regarding Newell’s successive post-conviction petition. This case therefore does not fall within the ambit of
Ylst v. Nunnemaker,
