Kenneth Shelton appeals the district court’s 1 dеnial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for habeas corpus relief. Two Sixth Amendment issues-the denial of counsel at a critical stage and the ineffective assistance of counsel-have been certified for appeal. We affirm the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
In December 1998, Shelton and two others forcibly entered a private home аnd robbed the residents at gunpoint. The primary witness at trial was Marcus Hughes, one of the robbery participants, who testified in exchange for a reduced sentence. Hughes also provided a written statement to police which mentioned that Shelton stayed out of sight during the robbery because the residents would have reсognized him from a prior drug sale.
Shelton was charged with first-degree robbery, burglary and two counts of armed criminal action in Missouri state court. Prior to trial, the trial judge granted a *406 motion in limine to exclude any references to Shelton’s prior drug purchases. However, at the close of the evidence, the state offеred, without objection, Exhibit 8, which was a copy of Hughes’ statement that made reference to Shelton’s drug involvement. During deliberations, the jury asked to view the exhibit, and the court granted this request without informing counsel that it had received a communication from the jury. After the jury returned a guilty verdict, counsel unsuccessfully moved for a mistriаl and a new trial based on the exhibit.
On direct appeal, Shelton challenged the exhibit’s publication to the jury on the basis that the exhibit made reference to an inadmissible prior act and also on the basis that the publication violated his Sixth Amendment right to have counsel present at all stages of the procеeding-a ground he did not raise with the trial court in the motion for new trial. The Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed his conviction.
State v. Shelton,
Shelton filed the current petition for habeas corpus on March 1, 2005, as relevant to this appeal, allеging that he was denied counsel at a crucial stage of trial when the trial court sent the exhibit to the jury without notifying counsel, and that counsel was ineffective for failing to present the Sixth Amendment claim in the motion for new trial. The district court denied relief on the merits, finding that although Shelton’s Sixth Amendment rights were violated when the trial court published the exhibits to the jury without notifying counsel, there was no prejudice to Shelton’s rights. The district court also found that counsel was not ineffective because the motion for new trial on the basis of the purported Sixth Amendment violation would have been overruled by the Missouri trial court, under Missouri law.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Timeliness
As an initial matter, the government asserts that Shelton’s March 1, 2005, petition was not timely filed. The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) provides for a one-year statute of limitations for habeas corpus petitions, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d), which begins to run when the state court judgment became final by the conclusion of direct review, or when the time for seeking such review expires, whichever is later.
Id.
§ 2244(d)(1)(A). “Direct review” in § 2244(d) encompasses review of a state court conviction by the United States Supreme Court.
Clay v. United States,
The government did
not
object to the magistrate judge’s conclusion that Shel
*407
ton’s habeas corpus petition was timely filed, likely because at the time the district court issued its order, the petition was considered timely under the law of our circuit.
See Nichols v. Bowersox,
Under the prior rule, Shelton’s petition was considered timely. Under
Nichols,
his AEDPA one-year statute of limitations clock did not begin to run until April 24, 2002, ninety days after the last entry of judgment on the direct appeal was issued. The clock stopped twenty-five days later on May 20, 2002, when Shelton filed his applicatiоn for post-conviction relief.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2). The one-year clock began to run again on March 26, 2004, when the post-conviction mandate was issued. At this point, Shelton had 340 days, or until March 1, 2005, (the petition date), to timely file. Because Shelton’s petition was just barely timely under
Nichols,
it is clear that under the Riddle
2
rule, which does not give him the benefit of the certiorari-seеking ninety-days, Shelton’s petition was untimely. Further, the effect of
Riddle’s
change in circuit precedent, as noted above, is an extraordinary circumstance that would allow equitable tolling, if Shelton has otherwise been diligently pursuing his rights. The issue of whether Shelton has been diligently pursuing his rights is a factual issue about which the record is not yet developed, which would normally require remand to the district court.
Streu v. Dormire,
B. Sixth Amendment Violation
In his petition for habeas corpus, Shelton alleges that the state trial court violated the Sixth Amendment by granting the deliberating jury’s request to view еx-
*408
Mbits, specifically Exhibit 8, without informing counsel that the court was communicating with the jury. We note at the outset that the government seems to concede this was constitutional error, but argues that under our standard of review it is one we cannot correct. In
Stewart v. Nix,
Because the Missouri courts conducted plain error review of the Sixth Amendment claim, Shelton may arguably have procedurally defaulted this claim. Unfortunately, there exists an oft-noted, yet surprisingly persistent, split of authority in our circuit about whether plain error review “cures” the procedural default.
Compare Toney v. Gammon,
As the Missouri courts noted, the reference in the exhibit to Shelton’s involvement with drugs was brief and was neither highlighted nor a focal point of the exhibit. And, under Missouri state law, all of the evidence admitted was able to be viewed by the jury in the jury room because it was admitted during trial without objection.
State v. Hornbuckle,
C. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Shelton asserts that counsel was ineffective for failing to raise the Sixth Amendment grounds to the state trial court in the motion for new trial. Although Shelton apparently raised this claim to the state post-cоnviction court, the post-conviction court did not squarely address this aspect of Shelton’s ineffective
*409
assistance of counsel claim. App’x at 53-58. The government’s brief summarily asserts that the claim was adjudicated on the merits and is entitled to the deferential standard of review spelled out in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). We are not as convinced that the claim was adjudicated on the merits. We are also not certain, after thoroughly reviewing the post-conviction court’s order, that the claim was
not
adjudicated. It would have been helpful to have Shelton’s application for post-conviction relief included in the record on appеal, so that we could more clearly connect the dots between the claims alleged and those adjudicated on post-conviction review.
3
The district court appears to have reviewed the claim de novo, rather than under AEDPA’s deferential unreasonable-application-of-Supreme-Court-precedent standard from § 2254(d).
See Brown v. Luebbers,
A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is governed by the performance and prejudice standard set forth in
Strickland v. Washington,
Like the district court, we turn immediately to Strickland’s prejudice prong and find that Shelton cannot еstablish a meritorious claim for ineffective assistance of counsel. Had counsel made the Sixth Amendment claim to the trial court in the motion for new trial, there is no reasonable probability that the outcome-the trial court’s refusal to overturn the guilty verdict-would have been different. Trial counsel did, in fact, raise the exhibit issue in the motion for new trial, though not the constitutional argument, and the trial court found that the exhibit was not prejudicial to Shelton’s case. There is no reasonable probability that the addition of Sixth Amendment grounds to the argument would have persuaded the trial court to change its ruling on that basis. As stated in the previous section, the exhibit was permissibly seen by the jury because it was admitted without objection at trial, and trial counsel’s presence at the colloquy between the judge and jury would not have altered the fact that the trial judge was going to allow the jury to view the exhibit.
*410
Shelton also argues that counsel’s failure to raise the constitutiоnal issue to the trial court resulted in less favorable appellate review of the issue, citing
Burns v. Gammon,
Shelton’s citation to Bums is understandable, but we think there is a qualitative difference between counsel’s error of omission in Bums and the one alleged here. In Bums, counsel failed to sufficiently object to the prosecutor’s improper comment on the accused’s exercise of his constitutional right to a jury trial and to confront witnesses. Here, counsel failed to raise, in a motion for new trial, a Sixth Amendment argument 4 about the right to counsel during a colloquy between the judge and jury regarding whether the jury could view trial exhibits. While we recognize that the plain error review this claim was subjected to on appeal was onerous, there is no reasonable probability that the outcome of Shelton’s direct appeal or post-conviction proceedings would have been different absent counsel’s error under any level of rеview. Accordingly, because Shelton was not prejudiced by the “plain error” review, his Bums argument is without merit.
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable E. Richard Webber, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, adopting the Report and Recommendation of the Honorable Audrey G. Fleissig, United States Magistrate Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. However, under
Riddle,
Shelton’s clock would not have started running until February 20, 2002, when the direct appeal mandate issued, rather than January 24, 2002, when the last judgment was entered.
. Shelton's application for post-conviction relief is not contained in the Appendix. However, the government does not contend that this ground is procedurally defaulted, and both the magistrate judge and the district court refer to this claim being included, but ignored by the post-conviction court.
. Again, as earlier noted, we seriously question whether a Sixth Amendment violation even occurred when counsel was not present during the exchange between the judge and jury over whether the jury could view properly admitted trial exhibits.
