Robert Lopez Jaramillo appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus petition challenging his conviction by guilty plea to first degree murder of another prisoner. Jaramillo seeks relief based upon newly discovered evidence. The State failed to reveal to Jar-amillo the existence of an eyewitness that could have substantiated a viable argument of self-defense. Jaramillo contends that this constituted a constitutional defect in the trial in violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
I
On January 3, 1984, at a state prison recreation yard in Arizona, Jaramillo was involved in a violent incident that left an inmate, Don Abeyta, stabbed to death. According to grand jury testimony, the State’s primary witness at trial would have been Correctional Service Officer Warren, the officer on duty at the time of the incident. He was the only officer supervising two recreation yards, which were separated by a fence. He was situated between the two yards.
Warren stated in an incident report that he toned from where he was facing and saw a scuffle between Abeyta, Jaramillo, and inmates Lino Flores and Pete Moreno. Warren wrote that he saw Jaramillo stab Abeyta with a shank three times while Flores and Moreno were holding Abeyta. Warren does not claim to have witnessed *879 the events leading up to, or the commencement of, the fight. Warren never testified. His incident report was related to the grand jury by Joseph Savalas, a criminal investigator for the department of corrections.
Jaramillo claims that Abeyta initiated the attack, that Flores and Moreno sought to restrain Abeyta, and that he stabbed Abeyta in self-defense.
Jaramillo, Flores and Moreno were charged with first degree murder and dangerous assault on a prisoner. The State informed appointed counsel it would seek the death penalty. Trial was scheduled to commence April 3, 1984, exactly three months after the incident. Jaramillo twice sought, and the court ordered, the State to provide discovery, including investigators’ reports of interviews and names of all parties who were in a place to observe the incident.
Shortly before trial, the State offered the defendants a package plea deal. On the advice of counsel, all defendants pled guilty to first degree murder, with life sentences to be served consecutively to their current sentences, and with no parole eligibility before twenty-five years. In exchange, the State dropped the deadly assault charge and refrained from seeking the death penalty on the first degree murder charge. The facts set forth in the grand jury transcripts and investigative reports served as the factual basis for the pleas. Sentences were imposed on May 3, 1984. Jaramillo filed his notice of appeal on the day of sentencing.
On August 6, 1984, he filed a petition for post-conviction relief seeking to vacate his guilty plea on the grounds that the plea was not voluntary because he was under the influence of drugs; that he was pressured into accepting the plea by his co-defendants, who feared they would likely receive the death penalty in light of their prior records (Moreno was serving a life sentence for first degree murder, and Flores was serving life without parole for several counts, including attempted second degree murder, deadly or dangerous assault on a prisoner, and sexual assault); and that the State offered the plea as an offer of a package deal, where all or none could accept. Jaramillo also claimed his trial attorney advised him that if he withdrew his plea, he would be convicted and sentenced to death. The prosecuting attorney testified during the evidentiary hearing before the trial court that the plea offer was a package deal. The trial court denied the petition, and Jaramillo appealed. The judgment of the trial court was affirmed by the Arizona Supreme Court.
State v. Jaramillo,
Jaramillo filed and voluntarily withdrew a second petition for post-conviction relief in 1994.
In July 1996, Jaramillo discovered the existence of an undisclosed eyewitness to the incident, inmate Wayne Graham. Jar-amillo filed a third post-conviction petition pursuant to Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure 32.1(e), contending that he had newly-discovered evidence. He submitted an affidavit from Graham, in which Graham swore that he witnessed the victim, Abeyta, initiate the aggression by attempting to stab Jaramillo with a shank, that Jaramillo disarmed Abeyta, and that Jar-amillo stabbed Abeyta in self-defense. Graham further stated that the prosecution had interviewed him shortly after the incident. Jaramillo contends that Graham’s identity and the substance of his statement were never disclosed to him or his co-defendants. This failure to disclose material exculpatory evidence is the substance of the
Brady v. Maryland,
*880 The trial court denied Jaramillo’s third petition without a hearing, characterizing the withholding of evidence as “pre-trial discovery error” that was waived by Jar-amillo’s entry of a guilty plea. Jaramillo’s attorney untimely filed a petition for rehearing of the trial court’s decision. The trial court accepted the petition, notwithstanding its belatedness, in conjunction with a co-defendant’s timely motion for rehearing. The court denied the motion ■for rehearing.
Jaramillo’s counsel again missed the filing deadline for the next step in the appellate process, the petition for review. Counsel also failed to notify his client that the trial court denied the petition for rehearing. Counsel’s employer subsequently attempted to join a co-defendant’s timely petition for review, and Jaramillo filed a pro per motion to file a late petition for review. Both motions were denied. Jar-amillo’s subsequent appeal was denied by the Arizona Court of Appeals on the grounds that Jaramillo did not file a timely petition for review. The court of appeals did not address the issue of the newly discovered evidence. The Arizona Supreme Court denied review without comment.
Jaramillo then filed a petition for habeas corpus relief in the United States District Court on the basis of the alleged Brady violation. The magistrate judge recommended, and the district judge adopted, his conclusion that Jaramillo’s claim was barred by a procedural default, and that Jaramillo was not entitled to have his procedurally defaulted claims reviewed on the merits because he failed to show cause and prejudice for the default. The district court did not address Jaramillo’s claim that the procedural default should be excused under the actual innocence exception to the bar against review of procedurally defaulted claims.
Jurisdiction is proper under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253(c)(3).
II
The district court’s decision to grant or deny a prisoner’s petition for habeas corpus is reviewed de novo.
Benn v. Lambert,
III
We consider whether we should reverse and remand for the district court to consider the alternate ground of the “actual innocence” exception to procedurally defaulted claims for habeas corpus relief under the Supreme Court’s decision
Schlup v. Delo,
513-U.S. 298, 316,
The Court held that Schlup could proceed through the gateway despite his failure to demonstrate cause and prejudice sufficient to excuse his procedural default.
Id.
at 314,
In order for Schlup to satisfy the threshold showing required to justify passage through the gateway, the Court stated that he must present evidence to “establish sufficient doubt about his guilt to justify the conclusion that his execution would be a miscarriage of justice
unless
his conviction was the product of a fair trial.”
Id.
at 316,
The Supreme Court and this circuit have applied
Schlup’s
actual innocence gateway exception in non-capital petitions.
Bousley v. United States,
The State claims that Schlup’s actual innocence standard has been superceded by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) of the Antiter-rorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), so that Jaramillo must demonstrate by “clear and convincing” evidence, rather than Schlup’s “more likely than not” standard, that no reasonable fact-finder would have found him guilty.
The Supreme Court has not yet addressed whether
Schlup’s
standard applies to a post-AEDPA petitioner. While
Bous-ley
was filed post-AEDPA, the petitioner filed his petition in 1994, preceding AED-PA’s enactment. This court has applied
Schlup
to post-AEDPA petitioners. In
Majoy,
this court’s most recent opinion addressing
Schlup,
we applied
Schlup’s
more likely than not standard, and remanded for an evidentiary hearing without reference to section 2254(e)(2) of AEDPA.
In
Sistrunk,
an en banc opinion decided one month earlier than
Majoy,
we declined to decide whether
Schlup
survives AED-PA, including section 2254(e)(2), because the petitioner did not seek an evidentiary hearing.
We need not consider whether AEDPA’s section 2254(e) applies to all actual innocence claims under Schlup, however, because even if it would apply generally to Schlup claims of actual innocence, we are *882 guided by the Supreme Court to conclude that it does not apply to Jaramillo’s claim.
Section 2254(e)(2)’s requirement of clear and convincing evidence applies only to petitioners who “failed to develop the factual basis of a claim in State court proceedings.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2).
1
The Supreme Court has held that “[u]nder the opening clause of § 2254(e)(2), a failure to develop the factual basis of a claim is not established unless there is a lack of due diligence, or some greater fault, attributable to the prisoner or the prisoner’s counsel.”
Williams v. Taylor,
We conclude that Jaramillo was diligent in his attempt to develop the factual basis of his claim. His counsel testified that he wrote letters to and interviewed the eyewitness identified by Jaramillo and the State, including every inmate who would speak with him. He inspected the scene. Counsel interviewed all the officers involved in the evidentiary chain of custody. Counsel also filed two motions to compel discovery in response to the State’s delinquent or deficient discovery requirements.
Jaramillo’s failure to discover Graham and his exculpatory testimony was not due to a lack of diligence. Rather, it was due to the State’s withholding of its knowledge of Graham’s account of the incident. Section 2254(e) was not intended to bar evidentiary hearings on “a claim which was pursued with diligence but remained undeveloped in state court because, for instance, the prosecution concealed the facts.... ”
Williams,
We now turn to the merits of Jar-amillo’s
Schlup
claim. The Supreme Court has stated that when considering
Schlup
claims, “ ‘actual innocence’ means factual innocence, not mere legal insufficiency.”
Bousley,
Jaramillo has presented sufficient evidence, if credible, to support a finding that he is actually innocent of first degree murder. Foremost is the previously undisclosed testimony of Graham, who pro'vided a declaration stating that Abeyta initiated the attack, that Jaramillo wrested the shank from Abeyta, and that he stabbed Abeyta in self-defense. The second item of proof offered is the autopsy report. The report shows that Abeyta covered his right hand with a glove, and then wrapped a bandana around his palm. Jaramillo theorizes that Abeyta did so to protect his hand from the non-hilted shank. Additionally, Jaramillo claims that photographs taken by the medical examiner appear to show that the same fabric tied around Abeyta’s hand was also found on the shank, supporting Jaramillo’s claim that Abeyta had attempted to use the shank against him.
Jaramillo’s proffered evidence of actual innocence supports a theory of justification pursuant to self-defense. Under Arizona law in effect at the time of the offense charged, justification was an affirmative defense rendering the conduct noncriminal.
State v. Farley,
There remains a question of the credibility of the proffered evidence. Jaramillo’s evidence is Graham’s affidavit and the corroborating photographs. This evidence is not inconsistent with the State’s primary evidence, the incident report filed by Officer Warren, because Warren does not claim to have witnessed the beginning of the fight between Jaramillo and Abeyta. Like Graham, Warren has never testified under cross-examination — his eyewitness account was related to the grand jury through a criminal investigator for the department of corrections.
A remand for an evidentiary hearing would allow the parties to develop the factual record, including the facts set forth in the investigative reports and the grand jury transcript. The district court is in the best position to observe the witnesses, including Graham, Warren, or any other necessary witness under cross-examination, together with the other evidence available, and to make the ultimate credibility determinations.
*884
Jaramillo has alleged newly discovered evidence that, if credible, raises a sufficient doubt about his guilt, such that it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have found him guilty of first degree murder.
Majoy,
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opin-ión.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) provides:
"If the applicant has failed to develop the factual basis of a claim in State court proceedings, the court shall not hold an evi-dentiary hearing on the claim unless the applicant shows that—
(A) the claim relies on—
(i) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable; or
(ii) a factual predicate that could not have been previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence; and
(B) the facts underlying the claim would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that but for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.”
. The defense of justification would apply to both charged offenses.
