Mario Morales pleaded guilty in Wisconsin to two counts of first degree sexual assault of a child. After receiving an unexpectedly long sentence, he sought multiple reviews of his conviction in the Wisconsin state courts; after losing there, he sought a federal writ of habeas corpus. *655 The district court denied his petition. We affirm.
I. Background
Mario Morales was charged with two counts of first degree sexual assault of a child. He gave a statement to the police in which he admitted knowing the victim was eleven years old when he had sex with her, but that he could not control his urges because she was always teasing him. According to his confession, he had sex with the victim on at least five occasions beginning in the fall of 1999. His account, and that of the victim, was corroborated by a sexual assault nurse at a hospital. The nurse determined that the victim had recently had intercourse and was infected with a sexually transmitted disease. The victim told police that she had not had sexual intercourse with any other partners in her life. She was not yet thirteen at the time. Later, prosecutors informed the court that the victim had been assaulted at another time by another man.
In June 2000, Morales entered an
Alford
plea to two counts of first degree sexual assault of a child and was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of forty and sixty years (twenty of which were extended supervision).
See North Carolina v. Alford,
Morales then attacked his conviction collaterally, under Wis. Stat. § 974.06, arguing that his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to attack the effectiveness of his trial counsel. At this point, he raised the second ineffectiveness claim we have here regarding his trial counsel’s failure to’ inform him of the sentencing consequences of his Alford plea. His collateral attack failed in the Wisconsin circuit court and court of appeals on the merits and because he failed to raise the claim in his response to his appellate counsel’s no-mérit brief. His petition for review of his § 974.06 motion was denied by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Proceeding onward, Morales filed a habeas petition in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, challenging the effectiveness of his appellate counsel for his failure to raise the claim that his trial counsel was ineffective for not ensuring Morales understood all the elements of the crime. His petition was dismissed for a number of reasons discussed infra.
On May 16, 2006, Morales filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, and presented the issues we have before us in various forms. The state moved to dismiss, arguing that the petition was untimely and that Morales had procedurally defaulted on all of his claims. The district court found the petition timely and that Morales had not defaulted on the claims that we have here. But the district court denied the petition on the merits.
*656 Morales requested a certificate of appealability, which the district court denied. We granted a certificate of appealability, finding that Morales “made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right as to whether his trial counsel rendered constitutionally sufficient assistance and whether his guilty plea was knowing and voluntary.”
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s decision to deny habeas relief de novo.
Daniels v. Knight,
B. Timeliness
Morales had one year after his conviction became final in Wisconsin state court to bring a federal habeas petition. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A). This limitation period is tolled while petitions for relief in state court are pending, as long as such petitions were properly filed. Id. § 2244(d)(2).
A brief word about Wisconsin’s postconvietion procedures is in order. It is obviously incumbent on a defendant to raise all the issues necessary to his defense at trial. If he does not do so, these are ordinarily waived. However, after his trial, a defendant has an opportunity to challenge the effectiveness of his trial counsel in a post-conviction motion.
See
Wis. Stat. § 974.02. This motion allows the defendant to preserve issues that should have been raised at trial but were not, due to his counsel’s alleged ineffectiveness. Failure to make this motion results in a forfeiture of all of defendant’s claims, except for any claims that his postconviction counsel was ineffective for failing to raise. After a loss at trial and the denial of the postconviction motion, the defendant can then take his direct appeal to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals; there, the court considers any trial errors, including the ineffectiveness claims that the defendant raised in his postconviction motion. On direct appeal, defendant’s appellate counsel, instead of pursuing the appeal, may file a no-merit report, which details the defendant’s potential claims and the reasons that each claim lacks merit. A defendant may elect to file a pro se response to his counsel’s no-merit report. After the disposition of his appeal, the defendant still may file a § 974.06 motion, which is equivalent to a petition for habeas corpus, if he is in custody “in violation of the U.S. constitution or the constitution or laws of [Wisconsin] .... ” Wis. Stat. § 974.06. The Wisconsin Supreme Court has held that § 974.06 motions challenging the effectiveness of appellate counsel should be filed directly in the court of appeals.
State v. Knight,
Morales’s conviction became final on April 22, 2004, at the end of the ninety days after the Wisconsin Supreme Court denial of his direct appeal during which he could have sought a writ of certiorari from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Jones v. Hulick,
The crux of the timeliness issue is whether the second § 974.06 motion, filed in state appeals court, was properly filed for purposes of tolling the federal statute of limitations on habeas actions. If so, Morales filed this petition 262 days (after the tolled time is subtracted) from the date his conviction became final. If the second § 974.06 motion was not properly filed, Morales loses the 108 days during which his petition in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals was pending and thus, at 370 days, misses the cutoff date by five days.
Morales relies on
Knight
to support his contention that the petition was properly filed in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. In
Knight,
the Wisconsin Supreme Court established the court of appeals as the proper forum for a § 974.06 motion alleging ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
Knight,
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals denied the habeas petition in an unpublished opinion “for a number of reasons.” First, Morales did not submit sufficient information to support the claim that the circuit court did not properly ensure that he was aware of the elements of the charges against him. Second, Morales did not claim he did not understand the elements of the charges. Third, Morales forfeited the issue. Finally, the court determined that the challenge to the effectiveness of his appellate counsel was actually an attack on the effectiveness of his trial counsel, a claim that should have been raised in the trial court. The question then is whether the Wisconsin Court of Appeals dismissed Morales’s Knight petition as an improperly filed claim.
Morales claims that under Knight, the petition was properly filed and that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals did not rely on the improper filing to dispense of his claim. The district court found that Morales arguably complied with a state rule despite the Wisconsin court’s “remark” to the contrary and gave him the benefit of the doubt, allowing him to proceed with his habeas claim.
Wisconsin argues that Morales’s petition ran afoul of our decision in
Johnson v. McCaughtry,
Johnson is of little help to Wisconsin if, as Morales argues, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals entertained his petition on its merits, which would mean it was “properly filed” under Johnson. Wisconsin argues that because the court of appeals “clearly and expressly” relied on a filing error, specifically that the petition was filed in the wrong court, “as a basis for its ruling,” the claim was not properly filed. A fair reading of the Wisconsin opinion, however, reveals something less than clarity.
In
Smith v. Battaglia,
What Smith teaches is that it is incumbent on this court to parse the state court’s language to determine whether that court believed dismissal was appropriate based on a filing error. If so, the instant petition is time-barred. It is at best difficult to discern the Wisconsin court’s intent here. After delineating the “number of reasons” the court denied the habeas corpus petition, none of which included a finding that the instant petition is “improperly filed,” the court addressed whether Morales filed his petition in the correct court. The key sentences read: “Finally, the court notes that Morales frames the issue as one of appellate counsel’s ineffectiveness for failing to challenge trial counsel’s effectiveness regarding the validity of the plea colloquy. This is the sort of issue that, if viable, must first be raised in the circuit court.” State ex rel. Morales v. Farrey, No.2006AP214-W at 3 (Wis.Ct.App. Mar. 2, 2006).
Given that the proper court to file an attack on appellate counsel is apparently an issue of some confusion in Wisconsin,
Panama,
Accordingly, we find that Morales’s petition is timely and we may turn to the two issues he raises: his counsel’s ineffectiveness due to a misunderstanding of Wisconsin’s rape shield law and the voluntariness of Morales’s guilty plea in light of the actual potential sentencing consequences of such a plea.
C. Wisconsin’s Rape Shield Law
Morales alleges that his counsel was ineffective for failing to correctly understand Wisconsin’s rape shield law. Morales argues that, contrary to his counsel’s advice, Wisconsin law would have allowed him to impeach the victim’s testimony that she had not had any sexual contact other than with Morales. Furthermore, contrary to his counsel’s advice, Morales believes the law would have allowed him to argue that because the victim was infected with a sexually transmitted disease and he was not, he was not guilty of the sexual assault. Morales claims he would have proceeded to trial armed with these tools of impeachment.
Our review here is constrained by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), because the Wisconsin Court of Appeals rejected Morales’s rape-shield-based claim on direct review of Morales’s conviction. Because the ineffectiveness claim regarding the rape shield law is a matter of law that was litigated on the merits in both Morales’s direct appeal and state postconviction proceedings, we can only disturb the state court’s adjudication if it “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law....” Id.
Here, the applicable federal law governing ineffective assistance of counsel claims is found in
Strickland v. Washington,
Wisconsin’s rape shield law excludes the admission of “any evidence concerning the complaining witness’s prior sexual conduct” with certain relevant exceptions. Wis. Stat. § 972.11(2)(b). Exceptions exist for “[ejvidence of the complaining witness’s past conduct with the defendant,” “[ejvidence of specific instances of sexual conduct showing the source or origin of semen, pregnancy or disease, for use in determining the degree of sexual assault or the extent of injury suffered,” and “[evidence of prior untruthful allegations of sexual assault made by the complaining witness.”
Id.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has found a constitutional exception to the statute, making evidence of a prior sexual assault admissible to rebut an inference that a child victim’s sexual knowledge came from her experience with the defendant.
State v. Pulizzano,
Morales argues that his counsel was constitutionally deficient in two respects. First, he should have investigated the *660 source of the victim’s sexually transmitted disease as a potential defense to the rape and investigated her prior false accusations of sexual assaults. Second, Morales’s counsel failed to investigate whether Morales had the same sexually transmitted disease that the victim had. Morales’s posteonviction motion offered evidence that he did not have a sexually transmitted disease. Had counsel investigated these leads, Morales believes he would not have advised Morales to plead guilty.
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals, on direct appeal, denied the ineffective assistance claim (essentially presented on the same basis as it is here) based on the “overwhelming evidence” of Morales’s guilt. Similarly, the district court found that evidence of the source of the victim’s sexually transmitted disease was irrelevant because the only issue in the case was whether Morales had intercourse with the victim and Morales had admitted repeated instances of sexual intercourse with the victim.
While neither court analyzes the case exactly under the guidelines established by
Strickland
and
Hill,
their message is clear: Morales suffered no prejudice because the potential outcome at trial would have been the same.
See Hill,
D. Morales’s Guilty Plea
1. Procedural Default
The state contends that Morales defaulted his claim that his counsel did not ensure that he knowingly and voluntarily waived his rights when pleading guilty because Morales did not raise the issue on direct appeal in his response to his counsel’s no-merit brief.
3
The Wisconsin courts subsequently treated the issue as defaulted in their rulings on Morales’s
*661
§ 974.06 motions, relying on
State v. Escalonar-Naranjo,
The district court relied on our holding in
Page v. Frank,
Wisconsin distinguishes Page from Morales’s case by pointing out that Morales raised several ineffective assistance claims in his first postconviction motion in the trial court (including the rape shield one discussed above) and a few new ones in response to his counsel’s no-merit report. In sum, because Morales was able to raise these claims, and the Wisconsin court entertained them, the state argues that Morales was not barred from raising the instant sentencing claim in state court, an issue that Page turned on.
But, it appears that under Wisconsin law, Morales could not have raised the ineffectiveness issue in his no-merit response. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals, ruling on his direct appeal, plainly stated that “[a]ny claim of ineffective assistance must first be raised in the trial court,” citing
State v. Machner,
2. Merits
At last, we reach the merits of Morales’s challenge to the voluntariness of his plea. This claim is presented to us in two ways. First, Morales challenges the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ determination that his plea was knowing and voluntary, a determination that rested on an examination of the procedures of the trial court. This is subject to AEDPA’s “contrary to” or “unreasonable application of’ requirements because the Wisconsin state court ruled against Morales on the merits. Second, Morales challenges the effectiveness of his trial counsel, arguing that he failed to ensure that he understood the effect of Wisconsin’s truth-in-sentencing law.
a. Alleged Trial Court Errors
When a defendant pleads guilty, he waives constitutional rights. “Waivers of constitutional rights not only must be voluntary but must be knowing, intelligent acts done with sufficient awareness of the relevant circumstances and likely consequences.”
Brady v. United States,
Smith
does not control the outcome of Morales’s case. First,
Smith
concerned the application of Fed. Rule Crim. P. 11 and thus established no constitutional standard applicable to state sentencing. Second, Rule 11 has subsequently been amended to specify the exact consequences of the plea of which a defendant must be advised; these consequences do not include parole eligibility.
See Hill,
Morales does not contend that he had no idea of the maximum sentence or that he did not understand that the prosecution’s recommendation was not binding on the court. He only argues that he did not understand the actual, practical consequences of his plea. But, in Hill, the Supreme Court made clear that there is no constitutional requirement that a trial court ensure this understanding. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ finding that “Morales’s pleas were knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently entered” therefore comports with Hill and was thus a reasonable application of Supreme Court precedent. 7
b. Alleged Counsel Errors 8
Under
Hill,
to make out a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel in this context, Morales must show that counsel performed below a minimum level of competency and that, but for counsel’s errors, it was reasonably probable that he would not have pleaded guilty.
Id.
at 58-59,
The objective evidence here reveals that Morales would have accepted the deal even if he were aware of the truth-in-sentencing consequences of his crime. First, as part of his plea deal, his prosecutors recommended fifteen years in prison. After this agreement, the sentencing judge’s imposition of the maximum sentence must have been shocking, even though the defendant acknowledged in court and his plea agreement that he was aware that the judge could impose such a sentence. We believe that the recommendation the prosecutors offered would have been even more enticing had Morales known the extent of time he could have faced under Wisconsin’s truth-in-sentencing regime. Second, as the Wisconsin courts noted, the evidence of Morales’s guilt was overwhelming. Choosing to hope that the state’s fifteen-year recommendation would be followed in order to avoid the possibility that he would be sentenced to a much longer term after being convicted at trial would have been the most reasonable decision that Morales and his counsel could make. He therefore cannot establish the requisite prejudice for an ineffective assistance claim. See id. at 360.
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we Affirm the district court’s denial of the writ.
Notes
. A close reading of the rape shield law and Pulizzano indicates that Morales’s trial coun *660 sel was very likely correct that testimony about the victim’s prior sexual assault and disease are inadmissible. Such evidence is only admissible to prove the existence of sexual knowledge (not at issue here), the extent of injury from sexual assault (also not at issue), and prior untruthful allegation of sexual assault (not at issue, because while the victim denied being assaulted by another man, she made no false allegation). Morales cites no Wisconsin law to say that a child victim can somehow be impeached by this type of testimony or that it would exonerate the defendant. In fact, the law seems designed exactly to forbid this evidence.
. Furthermore, because the victim's mother was not cooperating before trial, the state was going to proceed with simply the evidence of the victim's visit to the hospital and Morales’s confessions. It's unclear at what point in a hypothetical trial the fact that the victim had been previously assaulted and had a disease would be admissible, particularly if the prosecution never alleged that the disease came from Morales, a tactic that would have been appropriate in light of the other overwhelming evidence against him. In other words, the prosecution's case was tight enough to be presented without any evidence that Morales could have rebutted using the information he contends his counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate.
. The state does not contend that our review of the trial court's role in Morales's plea is precluded. This issue was raised in his direct appeal.
. The state argues that a defendant whose counsel submitted an
Anders
brief is not allowed habeas review of any claim submitted in the
Anders
process unless he proves that the court of appeals acted contrary to or unreasonably applied
Anders. See Anders v. California,
If Morales is in custody unlawfully, and therefore has a meritorious habeas petition, it is not because the appeals court unlawfully applied the procedural rules of Anders, but because his Sixth Amendment rights were violated. Subject to the procedural requirements discussed above, once we assure ourselves that he attempted, at every opportunity, to raise his Sixth Amendment claims in Wisconsin courts, we are obligated to reach these claims, even if his counsel and the court of appeals found them without merit.
. Recently, the Wisconsin Supreme Court granted review of a case that deals with the same interplay between the
Escalona-Naranjo
bar and no-merit procedures.
State v. Allen,
. Furthermore, in
Page
we relied on "an even more fundamental reason” than the intricacies of Wisconsin habeas law. "It would be incongruous to maintain that [petitioner] has a Sixth Amendment right to counsel on direct appeal, but then to accept the proposition that he can waive such right by simply failing to assert it in his pro se response challenging his counsel’s
Anders
motion.”
Page,
. Morales’s subsidiary claim that Wisconsin law required the trial court to ensure that he knew about the parole consequences of his plea is not cognizable in a federal habeas action.
See Lambert v. Davis,
. We are not constrained by AEDPA regarding this second issue because this issue was not decided on the merits in the Wisconsin courts (see above).
