ORDER AFFIRMING DENIAL OF POST-CONVICTION RELIEF
¶ 1 On April 24, 2006, Petitioner, pro se, filеd with the Clerk of this Court a Petition in Error and supporting brief appealing an August 17, 2005, final order of the District Court of Oklahomа County, Case No. CF-1997-7210. The Honorable Twyla Mason Gray, District Judge, entered the final order with the trial court clerk on August 18, 2005. The order denied an Application for Posh-Conviction Relief that Petitioner filed in the District Court on July 14, 2005.
¶ 2 Following plеas of guilty, Petitioner was convicted upon five counts of Indecent Lewd Acts with a Child Under 16. On August 27, 1999, the Honorable Susan Brаgg, District Judge, sentenced Petitioner to concurrent terms of fifteen years imprisonment upon each count, with all but the first five years suspended. Petitioner did not appeal these convictions. In March of 2004, the District Court entered an order revoking in full the remaining unexecuted portions of Petitioner’s suspended sentences. On Januаry 10, 2005, this Court affirmed the District Court’s revocation order in an unpublished Summary Opinion, Appellate Case No. RE-2004-367.
¶ 3 In these рost-conviction proceedings, Petitioner challenges the District Court’s revocation order by claiming thаt his trial counsel provided him with ineffective assistance during the revocation action. The District Court disposеd of this claim by finding that it “is waived because it could have been raised on direct appeal and was not.”
¶4 The Court FINDS Petitioner’s claim of error to be unfounded. As with all other claims that could have been raised upon direct appeal, a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, available at the
¶ 5 In Massaro v. United States,
¶ 6 Massaro, however, does not require Oklahoma to construe its post-conviction procedural bars concerning ineffective-assistancе claims in the manner now established for federal cases. Massaro specifically recognized that “[t]he proсedural default rule is neither a statutory nor a constitutional requirement, but it is a doctrine adhered to by the courts to conserve judicial resources and to respect the law’s important interest in the finality of judgments.” Id. at 504,
¶ 7 In Berget v. State,
¶ 8 IT IS THEREFORE THE ORDER OF THIS COURT that the August 17, 2005, order denying Pеtitioner post-conviction relief in Oklahoma County District Court, Case No. CF-1997-7210, is AFFIRMED. Pursuant to Rule 3.15, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2006), MANDATE IS ORDERED ISSUED upon the filing of this decision.
¶ 9 IT IS SO ORDERED.
¶ 10 WITNESS OUR HANDS AND THE SEAL OF THIS COURT this 19th day of July, 2006.
Notes
. On March 30, 2006, in Appellate Case No. PC-2006-242, this Court granted Petitioner leave to file this out-of-time appeal of the order denying him post-conviction relief.
. Petitioner’s counsel in the revocation aрpeal was not the same attorney who represented Petitioner within the revocation proceedings before the trial court.
. Woodruff v. State,
