Lead Opinion
Thе court has considered Ramiro Rubi Ibarra’s application for a Certificate of Appealability (“COA”) from the district court’s denial of habeas relief following his capital murder conviction. The issues he raises concerning mental retardation, ineffective trial counsel and breach of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations were rejected by the district court in terms that are not debatable among reasonable jurists. We therefore DENY the application.
Background
The district court ably detailed the facts of this case; we recite them only as material here. Ramiro Rubi Ibarra (“Petitioner”), an illegal alien, brutally raped, sodomized, and strangled 16-year-old Maria De La Paz Zuniga. Forensic and eyewitness evidence quickly led to Petitioner’s arrest and indictment, but a technicality prevented police from obtaining a necessary warrant for his blood and hair samples, permitting him to escape justice for nearly a decade. A change in Texas law allowed police to obtain the requisite warrant, and DNA analysis matched Petitioner to the crime. He was indicted, tried, found guilty, and sentenced to death.
At the punishment phase of trial, the jury heard evidence that Petitioner sodomized his eight-year-old nephew and threatened to kill the boy if he told anyone. Thе jury also heard evidence that he molested his nephew on other occasions. Petitioner’s sister-in-law testified that there was some indication he had abused her son. It heard testimony from his sometime paramour Maria Luna Diaz that Petitioner had beaten and sexually assaulted her, including once forcing her to undress at knife-
Petitioner’s wife, Maria Gandera Ibarra, testified on his behalf, but admitted on cross-examination that he beat her several times, including when she was pregnant. She also testified that he brought an 18-year-old girl from Mexico to live with them; although Petitioner said that she was his daughter, he kissed her on the mouth and spent hours alоne with her in a bedroom behind closed doors. A psychiatrist testified for the state that in his expert opinion, an offender with Petitioner’s history and sexual proclivities would constitute a continuing threat to society.
Petitioner’s sentence and conviction were affirmed on direct appeal. See Ibarra v. State of Texas,
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals remanded Petitioner’s Atkins claim to the trial court for an evidentiary hearing. The trial court determined that Petitioner was not mentally retarded, and this holding was adopted on appeal by the Court of Criminal Appeals (“CCA”). In the same order, the CCA dismissed his separate petition for relief under Avena as a subsequent writ under Article 11.071, Section 5 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. Ex parte Ibarra, Nos. WR-48832-02 and WR-48832-03,
Petitioner’s federal habeas petition asserted eleven grounds for relief, all of which were rejected by the district court. Petitioner seeks a COA to challenge three of those claims. First, he seeks a COA regarding his Atkins claim that he is mentally retarded. The district court conclud
Standard for a Certificate of Appealability
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2), a prisoner requesting а COA must make “a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” This standard is met when a petitioner demonstrates “that jurists of reason could disagree with the district court’s resolution of his constitutional claims or that jurists could conclude the issues presented are adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed further.” Druery v. Thaler,
Where the district court has denied a claim on procedural grounds, a COA will issue only if the petitioner demonstrates both that jurists of reason might debate whether his petition states a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right and “that jurists of reason would find it debatable whether the district court was correct in its procedural ruling.” Slack v. McDaniel,
Discussion
We address each of Ibarra’s claims in turn: his Atkins claim, his Wiggins claim, and his VCCR claim.
A. Atkins claim.
Petitioner claims he is mentally retarded and therefore, under Atkins, may not be subjected to the dеath penalty. To establish that he falls under Atkins, Petitioner must demonstrate that he possesses significantly subaverage intellectual functioning and impaired adaptive functioning, both of which manifested before the age of 18. See Lewis v. Quarterman,
At the state court evidentiary hearing regarding his Atkins claim, he presented essentially no supporting evidence. He
Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Cullen v. Pinholster, — U.S. -,
We are inclined to agree with the district court that the evidence Ibarra offered to bolster his Atkins claim in federal court, which included an admissible affidavit of his psychologist in addition to numerous other affidavits, was essential to his claim of mental retardation. Even if there were a debatable issue about the scope of exhaustion based on Lewis, however, Cullen resolves the issue in favor of the state. By disallowing federal courts (with few exceptions) from considering additional evidence not developed in the state court record, Cullen necessarily rules out the use of such proffered evidence to flesh out claims inadequately presented to the state courts. The federal district court therefore properly disregarded this newly proffered evidence.
Moreover, jurists of reason could not find debatable the alternative ground for disposition offered by the district court, that even if Petitioner’s claim is exhausted, his claim was meritless. When evaluating the merits of a claim for habeas relief from a state court judgment, federal courts must employ only the record before the state court. Cullen,
Additionally, relying on Rivera v. Quarterman,
B. Wiggins claim.
Petitioner argues that his trial counsel wаs ineffective in his investigation, development, and presentation of mitigation evidence, as well as the development of rebuttal evidence for the state’s aggravating factors at sentencing. He claims this deficiency merits relief under Wiggins v. Smith,
Federal courts cannot reach the merits of a habeas claim if the state court denied relief on an adequate and independent state law ground. Coleman v. Thompson,
Here, the relevant state court order stated that the petitioner’s Wiggins claim “does nоt meet the requirements for consideration of subsequent claims under Article 11.071, Section 5. Therefore, we dismiss this subsequent application.” Ex parte Ibarra, No. 48,832-04,
It was inadequate, he suggests, because “an emerging equitable exception” to Section 5 permits an applicant to seek relief where his first appointed counsel fails to rаise a single cognizable claim in his application. See Ex parte Granados, No. WR-51135-1 (Tex.Crim.App. Jan. 10, 2007) (unpublished) (denying relief because Petitioner failed to identify claims that would be revealed in new petition); Ex parte Moreno,
Petitioner finds Medina especially suggestive of his idea that the Texas abuse of writ bar is not firmly established or regularly followed. Medina, he argues, should have been applied in Petitioner’s case. But in fact, the Medina court took pains to distinguish that case from cases like Petitioner’s. Not only was it sui generis in that counsel “intentionally] refus[ed] to plead specific facts that might support habeas corpus relief,” but even more because “counsel’s filing was not a proper habeascorpus application,” as the state there acknowledged. Id. at 642-43. The circumstances in that case involved “not habeas counsel’s lack of competence but his misplaced desire to challenge the established law at the peril of his client.” Id. at 643. Petitioner makes no such allegation regarding intentional malfeasance on the part of his state habeas counsel here. Texas’s Section 5 bar remains an adequate state ground for finding procedural bars based on TCCA decisions. See, e.g., Balentine v. Thaler,
Likewise, reasonable jurists could not disagree with the district court’s conclusion that the TCCA’s decision was based on an independent state ground. The TCCA’s decision was not interwoven with federal law. As the district court noted, “[t]here is no indication in the order that the Court of Criminal Appeals relied on anything other than abuse of the writ.” Ibarra v. Thaler, No. W-02-CA-052, slip op. 30 (S.D.Tex. Mar. 31, 2011). Where a Texas court does not state which prong of Article 11.071, Section 5 it relies on in
C. VCCR claim.
Petitioner argues that the district court’s decision denying his claim for relief under the VCCR is debatable. The court held that this claim, too, was procedurally defaulted. The state courts so held on direct appeal and in rejecting his successive state writ application. The state courts’ dismissal of this claim as defaulted is enforceable. Leal Garcia v. Quarterman,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude thаt jurists of reason could not find debatable the district court’s disposition of the claims for which Petitioner seeks a COA. We therefore DENY his application for a COA.
APPLICATION DENIED.
Notes
. Petitioner also asserts that he should benefit from two recent Supreme Court decisions. First, Maples v. Thomas, - U.S. -,
. Petitioner strenuously protests the district court’s finding that he was not prejudiced by the state's failure to notify him earlier about his right to consult with the Mexican consulate. His allegations of prejudice have no evidentiary support in the state court record, and he was furnished constitutionally sufficient counsel and resources for trial. Mere hypotheses about the further assistance the consulate could have offered do not carry Ibarra’s burden to prove prejudice. Petitioner further suggests that the court below conducted a 2254(d) review of the state court decision's reasonableness, rather than a de novo merits review which found no prejudice. There is nothing in the district court’s opinion to suggest this; rather, the distriсt court wrote that the claim was "without merit” because "no reasonable jury would have made a different decision” in light of the powerful inculpatory and aggravating evidence against him.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I disagree with the majority’s finding that Ibarra’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim is defaulted. The majority rejects Ibarra’s reliance on Martinez v. Ryan, — U.S.-,
