OPINION
Dwight Rashad, a Michigan prisoner serving a life sentence for possessing more than 650 grams of cocaine, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court denied the petition. We affirm.
I.
At 9:30 p.m. on September 7, 1988, Dwight Rashad pulled up to his girlfriend’s house in suburban Detroit and proceeded inside carrying a black briefcase. As luck would have it, the police were conducting surveillance of the house and had a warrant to search it for evidence of drug trafficking. Officers executed the warrant thirty minutes later. A drug-sniffing dog reacted positively to a locked closet in the basement, and when officers pried off the lock they found several kilograms of cocaine inside. Continuing their search of the house, officers opened Rashad’s black briefcase and found a key inside that opened the cocaine-filled closet in the basement. Officers arrested Rashad and impounded his car. A few weeks later, based on a separate warrant, they searched the car, where they found several kilograms of cocaine hidden behind a quarter panel.
The State charged Rashad with possession of more than 650 grams of cocaine with intent to deliver it. In April 1989, a jury convicted him of the lesser-included offense — possession of more than 650 grams of cocaine. At the time, this offense required a mandatory sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
See Harmelin v. Michigan,
Rashad appealed the conviction, and the State cross-appealed the trial court’s ruling that the mandatory life sentence was unconstitutional. In June 1992, the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed Rashad’s conviction but reversed his sentence, holding that a mandatory life sentence did not violate the state constitution. The Michi *567 gan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal in May 1993.
Rashad waited more than a decade for the trial court to resentence him. Prompted by a motion for resentencing filed by Rashad in March 2004, the court held a new sentencing hearing in May 2004. Two significant changes in Michigan’s sentencing laws had taken place over the prior twelve years. First, in June 1992, the Michigan Supreme Court held that the without-parole component of this kind of life sentence violated the state constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment and mandated that parole be made available to defendants convicted under the statute.
People v. Bullock,
Rashad appealed his new sentence, arguing that the trial court should have sentenced him under the no-mandatory-minimum version of Michigan’s drug laws. Reviewing this argument for plain error because Rashad had not raised it in the trial court, the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed Rashad’s sentence on the ground that the new sentencing provisions do not apply retroactively to defendants who committed their crimes and were convicted before the amendments went into effect. The Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal.
In December 2008, Rashad filed a federal habeas petition raising six errors: two concerning the jury instructions given at his original trial; two challenging his sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole; one challenging the admission of evidence seized during the search of the house; and one alleging ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. The district court denied Rashad’s petition, and we granted a certificate of appealability.
II.
At the outset, the State urges us not to reach the merits of three of Rash-ad’s claims — two jury instructions, one evidentiary ruling — on the ground that AEDPA’s statute of limitations bars consideration of them. AEDPA requires a state prisoner to file a habeas petition within one year of “the date on which the judgment became final by the conclusion of direct review or the expiration of the time for seeking such review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A). Rashad’s judgment, as the State sees it, became final in 1993 after the state appellate courts affirmed his conviction, giving him until April 24, 1997 — one year after AEDPA’s effective date — to file his petition.
See Searcy v. Carter,
Another premise is not. Although the Michigan appellate courts affirmed Rashad’s conviction in 1993, they threw out his sentence and remanded the case for resentencing. When does a petitioner’s *568 “judgment bec[o]me final,” § 2244(d)(1)(A), in this setting? After direct review of the conviction? Or after direct review of the new sentence imposed at resentencing?
Burton v. Stewart,
Burton’s situation parallels Rashad’s in all material ways. Burton’s 1998 petition raised claims challenging his conviction from several years before, but the statute of limitations had not yet started to run because direct review of the new sentence he received on resentencing was not yet complete. So too here. Rashad filed his petition within the limitations period after direct review of his new sentence ended. Rashad timely filed all of his claims, including those challenging the underlying conviction.
A contrary approach would require Rashad to bifurcate the claims arising from his criminal case into distinct judgments — one related to the conviction, one related to the sentence. Yet the AEDPA statute of limitations speaks of one “judgment,” § 2244(d)(1)(A), not many. And
Burton
tells us the “judgment in a criminal case means sentence.”
*569
Contrary to the State’s argument,
Bachman v. Bagley,
III.
Jury Instructions.
At the conclusion of Rashad’s 1989 trial, the court instructed the jury (1) that it could convict Rashad of the lesser-included offense of possession if it did not find him guilty of possession with intent to deliver, and (2) that it could convict him if it found that he aided and abetted the drug offense. Rash-ad seeks habeas relief on both instructions, contending that the State charged him only with possession with intent to deliver and the State introduced no evidence at trial that he was an aider and abetter. The Michigan Court of Appeals upheld both instructions under state law because the evidence introduced at trial supported liability as an aider and abettor,
see People v. Mann,
Generally speaking, a state court’s interpretation of the propriety of a jury instruction under state law does not entitle a habeas claimant to relief. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a);
Estelle v. McGuire,
Search and Seizure.
Rashad argues that the state trial court erred by admitting evidence found in his briefcase— namely the key to the cocaine-filled closet in the basement — because the search violated the Fourth Amendment. Longstanding precedent precludes us from granting habeas relief based on a state court’s failure to apply the exclusionary rule of the Fourth Amendment, unless the claimant shows that the State did not provide him “an opportunity for full and fair litigation of [his] Fourth Amendment claim.”
Stone v. Powell,
Sentencing Claims.
Rashad raises two challenges to his life sentence. He first argues that the trial court should have resentenced him under Michigan’s amended drug laws (which carry no mandatory minimum) rather than the law that was in force at the time of his offense and conviction (which carried a mandatory minimum of life in prison). The Michigan Court of Appeals has held that Michigan’s amended sentencing laws do not apply retroactively, which is to say they do not apply to defendants who were convicted before the amendment.
See, e.g., People v. Doxey,
Rashad also claims that the disparity between the sentence he received under Michigan’s old sentencing regime and the sentence an offender would receive under the new regime violates equal protection and due process. But the federal Constitution does not require “that two persons convicted of the same offense receive identical sentences.”
Williams v. Illinois,
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
