Wе previously granted a certificate of appealability (“COA”) in this appeal by Richard Love, Jr., from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (McAvoy,
J.)
that denied § 2254 habeas relief. Our order appointed counsel to brief the question whether the prosecutor in the underlying criminal case violated
Brady v. Maryland,
I
In 1998, Love was charged in Onondaga County, New York, with unlawfully entering an apartment and stealing a wallet that contained credit cards and $350, and was convicted of second degree burglary, fourth degree grand larceny, and petit larceny. Due in part to his status as a second felony offender, the court imposed sentences of ten years on the burglary count, two to four years on the grand larceny count, аnd one year for petit larceny (all to be served concurrently).
The chief evidence at trial was the identification of Love by Jennifer Hethering-ton, who testified thаt on October 2, 1997, she returned home from work to find Love in her apartment rifling through her boyfriend’s wallet; Love left after a brief confrontation, taking the wallet. Hethering-ton’s testimony was based in part on her identification of Love from a photographic array one month after the incident. On the evening of the incident, however, Heth-erington gave a description of the burglar to the police, who used it to develop a composite sketch that allegedly does not resemble Love. It is disputed whethеr defense counsel was told about the sketch, or received it; in any event, it was not placed in evidence at trial.
Love filed a federal habeas petitiоn pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the Northern District of New York (McAvoy, /.), raising
(inter
alia) his
Brady
and ineffectiveness claims. The case was referred to Magistrate Judge Treece, who recommended that the petition be denied. With respect to the
Brady
claim, the magistrate judge relied on a finding by the Onondaga County Court (in connection with a motion for post-conviction relief pursuant to N.Y.Crim. Proc. Law § 440.10) that the prosecution had in fact disclosed the sketch to defense counsel. And as to both the
Brady
and the ineffectiveness claims, the magistratе judge ruled that the use of
Appointed counsel has now moved to withdraw and hаs filed a brief, pursuant to
Anders v. California,
The parties’ submissions requirе us to decide: [i] whether Love’s Brady claim is frivolous; [ii] whether we can and should expand the COA to include the previously omitted ineffectiveness claim; and [iii] if this appeal shоuld go forward, whether the appointment of new counsel is justified.
II
We cannot say, based on our independent review of the record, that Love’s
Brady
claim is frivolous. Appellate counsel to Love, seconded by the Government, argues essentially that Love faces an uphill battle in showing that the prosecution failed to disclose favorable material evidence,
see United States v. Payne,
Ill
The Government argues that Love waived his ineffective assistance claim when he omitted it from his initial COA application.
See Beatty v. United States,
Beatty
holds that claims omitted from a COA applicatiоn normally are “abandoned.” The question was whether, in reviewing a COA application to see if an appealable issue exists, we should consider issues that were raised in the district court, but omitted from the COA application. We concluded in
Beatty
“that the other grounds for relief alleged in [petitioner’s] section 2255 motion have been abаndoned for lack of inclusion in the pa
The remaining question is whether Love’s ineffectiveness claim satisfies the standard fоr issuance of a COA. A COA is appropriate where the petitioner “has made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right,” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c); that is, where “reasonable jurists сould debate whether ... the petition should have been resolved in a different manner or ... the issues presented [are] adequate to deserve encouragemеnt to proceed further.”
Slack v. McDaniel,
This standard is easily satisfied here. The primary evidence against Love at trial was Hetherington’s identification testimony; yet the composite sketch developed from Hetherington’s contemporaneous description of the burglar allegedly does not resemble Love. Whether trial counsel was constitutiоnally deficient for failing to make use of this sketch at trial (or in failing to procure it, as the case may be) is at least an issue that deserves encouragement.
2
See generally Strickland v. Washington,
IV
We think that a lawyer who has contested .the merit of Love’s Brady and ineffectiveness claims in his Anders brief would be placed in a false position if he were to continue his representation of Love. We therefore grant counsel’s motion tо withdraw and will appoint new counsel by separate order.
For the foregoing reasons, [i] the Government’s motion for summary affirmance is denied; [ii] the COA is expanded to include Love’s ineffectiveness claim; and [iii] defense counsel’s motion to withdraw is granted. New counsel will be appointed by separate order.
Notes
. The procedures mandated by
Anders
— when defense cоunsel sees no nonfrivolous appellate issue — do not apply (at least as a matter of constitutional law) in the habeas context because a habeas petitioner has no constitutional right to counsel.
See Pennsylvania v. Finley,
. For the same reason, we cannot say that Love’s ineffectiveness claim is frivolous.
