OPINION OF THE COURT
Vincent Fischetti appeals a final order of the District Court denying his petition for habeas corpus. Fischetti argues, inter alia, that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel when he was tried in state court without representation by an attorney. Before facing trial for the second time on burglary charges, Fischetti declared to the state trial judge that he wanted to fire his appointed counsel-his third-and postpone proceedings so that new counsel could be named. The judge gave Fischetti the choice of continuing with his appointed attorney, having the appointed attorney assist as co-counsel, or representing himself. When Fischetti refused all options, the state trial court determined that Fischetti was capable of representing himself and had him proceed pro se. Fischetti was convicted of thirty-eight counts of burglary.
This case presents two principal issues:
First, when a criminal defendant unreasonably rejects appointed cоunsel and also rejects the option of proceeding pro se, is it proper for the trial court to force that defendant to represent himself?
Second, if the correct course for the trial court here would have been to compel Fischetti to continue with his appointed counsel, was the court’s actual decision to compel the defendant to proceed without counsel “contrary to ... clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States” or an “unreasonable application” of that law, so that habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) is authorized?
We conclude that the state trial court should not have compelled Fischetti to represent himself. We also conclude, however, that the trial court’s decision did not violate clearly established federal law as established by the Supreme Court and did not unreasonably apply that law.
We are compelled to reverse the District Court’s judgment in part on one other ground, however. The state court’s admission of prior testimony without a preliminary determination that the witnesses were unavailable for trial infringed on Fischetti’s Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses. We will remand the case to the District Court for further proceedings on this ground alone.
I.
This appeal caps a long and circuitous litigation that has spanned over twenty years in Pennsylvania state court and federal court. On May 6, 1981, Fischetti was convicted by a jury in the Court of Common Pleas, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, of one count of resisting arrest and a total of forty-three counts of burglary. He was subsequently sentenced to twenty-two and one-half years to two hundred and twenty years of imprisonment. Over the next three years, Fischetti filed a series of appeals and post-conviction hearing peti *144 tions contesting his 1981 conviction in Pennsylvania state court. Fischetti filed his first pro se petition for habeas corpus in District Court in 1984, which was dismissed the following year.
On March 13, 1991, Fischetti filed his second pro se motion for post conviction collateral relief. Attorney Ralph Karsh was appointed as Fischetti’s second counsel. In November of 1992, Karsh filed a petition to withdraw as counsel, citing irreconcilable differences. The trial court appointed Thomas Fitzgerald to represent Fischetti in post-conviction proceedings. A series of hearings was held before the trial court, and on December 21, 1993, the trial court granted the relief requested in the post-conviction petition, dismissed three of the burglary charges, and granted a new trial on the remaining counts. The case was assigned to the Honorable Raymond A. Novak for trial. On June 12, 1994, Fischetti filed a pro se petition to dismiss his second court-appointed counsel, Fitzgerald, and to havе new counsel appointed. On June 15, 1994, Fischetti filed a pro se petition to Dismiss Pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedural 1100.
In the following months, the trial court and Superior Court of Pennsylvania reviewed the blizzard of motions filed by Fischetti, which were each denied in turn. 1 On November 18, 1994, Fischetti appeared in trial court, refused to agree to a trial date, and asserted that he did not want Fitzgerald to serve as his counsel. That day, Judge Novak sent a letter to Fischetti rejecting Fischetti’s complaint that Fitzgerald was not acting in his best interest. On December 29, 1994, Judge Novak denied Fischetti’s request for new counsel and gave him three choices: continue to have Fitzgerald represent him, represent himself with Fitzgerald assisting as . co-counsel, or represent himself without co-counsel. Fischetti refused the first two options and claimed that he could not represent himself. Judge Novak determined that Fischetti was capable of reрresenting himself and set the trial date for April 3, 1995. Meanwhile, in the midst of these proceedings, Fischetti filed a pro se Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus in United States District Court on December 20, 1994. On March 14, 1995, the District Court dismissed his petition and denied a certificate of probable cause.
On May 1, 1995, a jury trial began before Judge Novak. Throughout the proceedings, Fischetti sat mute in protest of the court order that he proceed pro se. On May 5, 1995, he was found guilty of thirty-eight counts of burglary. He received a sentence on two of the counts totaling twenty to forty years of imprisonment. 2
Fischetti filed a series of appeals contesting his conviction, some pro se and some through his former counsel Fitzgerald, 3 as well another appointed counsel, *145 Helen Lynch. On December 30, 1997, the Superior Court affirmed the judgment of the trial court. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania denied Fischetti’s petition for Allowance of Appeal on June 28, 1998. On February 1, 1999, Fischetti filed a pro se Motion for Post Conviction Collateral Relief. In the following months, three more new attorneys were appointed for Fischetti; his first and second court-appointed appellate attorneys withdrew. On June 21, 2000, the trial court entered an order dismissing Fischetti’s petition. Fis-chetti timely filed a notice of appeal with the Superior Court, which affirmed the judgment of the trial court on June 21, 2001. On March 20, 2002, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied Fischetti’s petition for appeal.
On May 22, 2002, Fischetti filed, through counsel, his habeas petition in the District Court. On September 30, 2002, the District Court issued an order adopting the Magistrate’s Report and Recommendation to dismiss Fischetti’s petition and to deny a certificate of appealability. This appeal followed. We granted a certificate of appeal on the following questions: (1) “whether appellant was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel when the second trial court required аppellant to represent himself at trial” and (2) “whether the remaining three claims ... should properly be considered defaulted, as procedural mistakes during the second trial, when appellant acted as his own counsel, appear to be the basis of the procedural default for all three remaining claims.”
II.
A.
The thrust of this appeal is Fischetti’s claim that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel at trial when he was not granted new appointed counsel and was left to represent himself. Although we hold that error was committed, it yras not error of a magnitude to warrant vacating the conviction on our habeas review.
Fischetti placed the trial court in an untenable position when, on the eve of trial, he refused to continue with his then-. current counsel in any capacity and also refused to represent himself. This action was part of a pattern of uncooperative conduсt through which Fischetti repeatedly complained about counsel and sought to delay or derail his second trial. The trial court investigated Fischetti’s complaints about his appointed counsel and • determined them to be unfounded. 4 Fischetti nevertheless expressed unwillingness to have his competent and diligent third appointed counsel continue in any capacity and sought to postpone the aging case once again. Worse, he offered the judge no assurance that a fourth appointment of counsel would finally satisfy him.
The trial judge refused to appoint new counsel. This was understandable.
A defendant’s right to counsel is not without limit and cannot be the justification for inordinate delay or manipulation of the appointment system.
United States v. McFadden,
The problem lies -vrith what happened next. Fischetti refused to choose either to proceed with current counsel or to proceed alone. Had the judge at that point instructed Fischetti. to proceed with current counsel, that decision would be wholly supportable under
Morris. See also Wheat,
Was Fischetti’s responsе a truly voluntary waiver of counsel? The law in this Circuit indicates that it was not. In
United States v. Welty,
a defendant was denied new counsel and affirmatively chose to represent himself.
The threshold question in determining whether a defendant can proceed pro se is whether he wants to do so. Only after he has “clearly and unambiguously” asserted the right to self-representation does the court move to the next question-whether the choice is “ ‘intelligent and competent.’ ”
United States v. Stubbs,
Was there another basis, then, to deny Fischetti counsel? To be sure, there are occasions when a defendant can be forced to go to trial without an attorney-when a defendant has forfeited his right to counsel or impliedly “waived it by conduct.” In
United States v. Goldberg,
The circumstances here, however, did not meet the standards necessary to establish that Fischetti actually forfeited the right to an attorney or waived his attorney by misconduct. There is no evidence that Fischetti assaulted his current attorney, or made it impossible for any counsel to appear, or even that the attorney wished to be relieved. Since there was an attorney in place, there was no cost to the.trial court in simply ordering that he continue. Accordingly, there was no necessity to mandate that Fischetti forfeit his attorney. By the same token, there is no record that *147 the trial court formally warned Fischetti that his refusal to proceed with his appointed counsel would result in losing counsel altogether. Moreover, Fischetti’s failure to choose between counsel and pro se representation does not seem to be “conduct” of the sort that impliedly waived his attorney. To the contrary, this “conduct” was literally ambivalent between the two choices. Thus, implied waiver is simply inapposite.
Where, as here, there was no harm or delay to the judicial process in having 'Fis-chetti’s court-appointed counsel continue representation, forfeiture was not appropriate under our precedent. And where the defendant chooses neither attorney representation nor self-representation, the default position for the court should be to mandate attorney representation. After all, while there are competing fundamental rights to counsel and to self-representation, “it is representation by counsel that is the standard, not the exception.”
Martinez v. Court of Appeal,
We emphasize that our ruling does not mean that a trial judge is powerless in the face of a difficult defendant who wants neither to proceed with current counsel nor to continue on his own. If the appointment of new counsel is not warranted, it can be denied. If a defendant refuses to proceed with counsel and also refuses to proceed pro se, the proper course is to move forward with existing counsel. This approach preserves the right to co.unselwhich is the presumptive default position-while allowing the court to manage the case.
B.
If this case were a direct appeal, the preceding reasoning would necessitate a reversal, for an erroneous denial of counsel cannot be harmless.
Stubbs,
But this case arises under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, and we do not review for simple error. The distinction in standard of review makes all the difference.
Under provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AED-PA), 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), the writ may issue after a , stаte conviction only if the state court decision being challenged “was [1] contrary to, or [2] involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” In
Williams v. Taylor,
First, “contrary to ... clearly established federal law” means just that- “ ‘diametrically different,’ ‘opposite in character or nature,’ or ‘mutually opposed.’ ”
Id.
at 405,
Second, an' unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent occurs when a state court applies the correct rule to specific facts in an objectively unreasonable way.
Williams,
Our approach under AEDPA, therefore, requires us to determine what the clearly established Supreme Court decisional law was at the time petitioner’s conviction became final.
See Marshall,
The first aspect is this: When we look to Supreme Court precedent as a touchstone, we must decide the level of specificity at which we decide whether the state decision is contrary to, or unreasonably applies, that precedent. Obviously, if one examines Supreme Court decisions at a broad level of generality, thе universe of state decisions that may be contrary to those decisions will expand. For example, it could be said that
Faretta v. California
broadly established a right to self-representation upon a proper waiver of counsel, and that any subsequent state court decision erroneously upholding a flawed waiver would be contrary to, or an unreasonable application of,
Faretta
That requirement of particularity is evident from the ruling in
Williams
itself. In discussing-the “contrary to” decisional law prong of the statute, the majority held a state decision is contrary to a Supreme Court precedent only if it contradicts the precedent or “if the state court confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision of this Court and nevertheless arrives at a result different from our precedent.”
Williams,
The “unreasonable application” prong also takes as its point of departure “clearly
*149
established” Supreme Court precedent. Not surprisingly, therefore, in analyzing habeas claims for unreasonable application of the law, the Supreme Court has looked at its own baseline precedents through a sharply focused lens. In Price
v. Vincent,
for examрle, the Court reviewed a decision of the Sixth Circuit granting the writ, to a defendant who alleged a violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Indeed, in emphasizing that Supreme Court precederte must be viewed with particularity, we note that in other contexts the Court has held that application of a “clearly established” legal rule is examined narrowly. For example, in the retro-activity context, a decision is viewed as the application of an established “old rule” only if
“dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Teague v. Lane,
We also emphаsize a second aspect to our analysis under AEDPA. In determining whether a state decision is an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent, this court has taken the view that “decisions of federal courts below the level of the United States Supreme Court may be helpful to us in ascertaining the reasonableness of state courts’ application of clearly established United States Supreme Court precedent.”
Marshall,
C.
With these general principles in mind, we review the decision of the state court that ordered Fischetti to proceed on his own behalf when he declined both to proceed with his current counsel and to represent himself. The question here is not whether the state court order was simple error, but whether it was error that contradicted or unreasonably applied Supreme Court precedent.
At the outset, we must articulate the issue presented to the state court precisely. This was not a circumstance in which Fischetti was simply forced to go to trial without counsel or where he received an inadequate waiver hearing under
Faretta.
Here, Fischetti refused to make a choice between proceeding with current counsel and proceeding pro se. Effectively, he sought to defy the trial court’s denial of his mоtion for yet another new counsel. In essence, the state court treated him not as if he had waived the right to his attorney but as having forfeited that right.
See Goldberg,
The Supreme Court has on numerous occasions made clear that the right to counsel can only be waived voluntarily and knowingly.
McKaskle v. Wiggins,
To be sure, the analysis undertaken by the state court, and by the reviewing state appellate court, did not discuss these Supreme Court precedents. That omission, as we have seen, is not dispositive.
See Mitchell,
Whether the state court unreasonably applied the Court’s precedent presents a closer question, however. Undoubtedly, the Supreme Court has made clear that the right to counsel at trial is fundamental and cannot be actually waived except voluntarily and knowingly. As the Court has observed, there is a “strong presumption” against the waiver of the right to counsel.
Patterson v. Illinois,
*151
That is not our role. In reviewing the reasonableness of the state courts’ application of Supreme Court precedent, we must use as our point of departure the specific holdings of the Court’s decisions. When assessing whether the state court acted reasonably in applying or refusing to apply that precedent, we must be mindful that the issue is whether Supreme Court law “dictated” a result in our case,
Teague,
As we have observed, no Supreme Court case has dealt specifically with the case of a defendant who is unwilling to proceed either with or without counsel because he has been denied the particular counsel of his choice. Accordingly, none of the prec-edential decisions provides a template that fits the facts here. Nor has the Supreme Court expressly ruled out forfeiture of counsel. Indeed, the Supreme Court has recognized that the parallel rights to counsel and to self-representation cannot be manipulated to frustrate the orderly processes of the trial court. In
Faretta,
for example, the Court warned that the “right of self-representation is not a license to abuse the dignity of the courtroom.”
More importantly, the Supreme Court has made clear that Sixth Amendment rights generally are not amenable to forfeiture. Through misconduct, defendants can outright forfeit trial rights as fundamental as the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment for example, guarantees that a defendant can bе present in the courtroom throughout a criminal trial. The Supreme Court held in Illinois
v. Allen,
These decisions certainly provide a basis to conclude, as the state judgе did in this case, that defiant behavior by a defendant can properly cost that defendant some of his Sixth Amendment protections if necessary to permit a trial to go forward in an orderly fashion. This precedent, therefore, cuts against a finding that the trial judge unreasonably applied Supreme Court case law in responding to Fischetti’s obduracy by mandating that he prpceed without counsel. Additional support for the reasonableness of the state court’s application of Supreme Court precedent is found in rulings of other courts, including our own, that uphold at least limited forfeitures of right to counsel.
See Price,
*152
As we have already discussed, we confronted forfeiture and waiver by conduct in
Goldberg.
While we found in that case an insufficient factual predicate to apply either doctrine, we did read the applicablе Supreme Court cases as allowing forfeiture and waiver by conduct of counsel. We cited
Illinois v. Allen
as approving the decision to “deprive a defendant of a fundamental constitutional right at least where the defendant is aware of the consequences of his actions, but regardless of whether the defendant affirmatively wishes to part with that right.”
Goldberg,
Other circuits have also interpreted Supreme Court decisions to be consistent with forfeiture of the right to counsel. These cases have interpreted the law to require defendants to go to trial unreрresented when they have failed to hire counsel within a reasonable time,
United States v. Bauer,
None of these cases approves the specific decision made by the trial judge here. But the appellate cases do establish that the Supreme Court’s general right to counsel decisions are reasonably read as qualified by the trial court’s power to remedy abuse of that right through forfeiture. Further, none of these cited appellate cases saw in the Supreme Court’s precedents any clear guidance as to the precise standard to be applied before forfeiture can be triggered. Put another way, the Supreme Court has not fully defined when a defendant’s misconduct or defiance warrants a forfeiture. Our canvass of decisions of our own and sister courts reinforces our view that the state court order that Fischetti proceed without counsel was not an objectively unrеasonable application of Supreme Court case law under the Sixth Amendment.
Williams,
The Second Circuit has reached a similar result. In
Gilchrist v. O’Keefe,
The state court’s mandate that Fischetti proceed pro se was еrror, but was not contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, Supreme Court precedent.
III.
Fischetti raises three other claims. He first claims that his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated when his counsel at the first trial failed to argue that probable cause did not exist with regard to his arrest for burglary, theft, and receipt of stolen property. In the alternative, he contends that appellate counsel was ineffective in not contesting the second trial court’s failure to hold a hearing on this issue. Second, he claims that his Sixth Amendment right to effective counsel was violated when appellate counsel did not appeal the failure of the court at the second trial to provide him with certain court records and transcripts from the first trial. Finally, Fischetti maintains that his Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses and right to effective assistance of counsel werе denied because the trial court failed to conduct a preliminary hearing on the unavailability of certain witnesses before their prior testimony was read into evidence at his second trial (and appellate counsel did not appeal that failure).
The District Court rejected these claims when adjudicating the original habeas petition. The District Court found that each of these contentions was procedurally barred on independent state law grounds because they were not properly presented to the state courts. Claims barred on state procedural grounds cannot be reviewed on habeas unless the “prisoner can demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law, or demonstrate that failure to consider the claim will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
Coleman v. Thompson,
These claims were presented to the Pennsylvania Superior Court on collateral review and rejected as procedurally barred because they were not raised on. direct appeal. Presumably anticipating this result, Fischetti also argued before the Superior Court (and throughout the subsequent state proceedings) that any default on his direct appeal was the consequence of ineffective assistance or the outright denial of counsel at the trial.
6
The Superior Court rejected this excuse, determining that the ■ default ultimately stemmed from Fischetti’s failure to. raise any of these issues at the second trial. Specifically, the Court found that Fischetti, acting pro se, did not request a suppression hearing regarding the arrest; did not perfect a request for court records; and did not request a preliminary hearing regarding admissibility of testimony from the first trial. We note that the federal law, as well as Pennsylvania law, does not allow pro se litigants to avoid their own waivers on the ground that they were ineffective as “counsel.”
Faretta,
422 U.S. at
*154
834 n. 46,
Fischetti argues on this appeal that the District Court was incorrect to rely on these omissions at trial as procedural waivers because he unwillingly proceeded pro se. Put differently, he urged in state court and urges here that the trial court’s erroneous decision to force him to represent himself provides “cause” to overlook the default of all claims he did not raise pro se at trial. 7
Attorney error that rises to the level of ineffective assistance under the Sixth Amendment establishes external “cause” to overcome a procedural default.
Murray,
The Supreme Court decision in
Coleman v. Thompson
itself is instructive in this regard. The Court held there that ineffective assistance of counsel on appeal from a denial of state habeas review was not cause for a procedural default because there was no Sixth Amendment right to counsel for state habeas.
Accordingly, we hold that the constitutionally erroneous denial of counsel to Fis-chetti constitutes cause sufficient to excuse his procedural default of the claims he raises here. Our ruling is consistent with decisions of other circuits.
Shayesteh v. City of S. Salt Lake,
We pause to address an obvious question: How can the denial of counsel suffice to establish cause to overcome a procedural default when we have already ruled that it is not sufficient as a stand-alone claim to warrant reversal of the underlying convictions? The answer lies in the differing standard for evaluating constitutional error as a substantive basis of relief and as a cause to avoid default of other claims. As we have discussed, AEDPA authorizes the writ of habeas corpus to be granted only for clearly erroneous applications of Supreme Court case decisions. The constitutional error here does not meet this threshold. But AEDPA does not establish
*155
a statutory high hurdle for the issue of cause. And the Supreme Court’s pronouncement in
Coleman
applied no AED-PA-style “unreasonable application” test in determining the existence of cause. Rather, it made its determination of cause, or lack of cause, based on a straightforward analysis whether the denial of counsel was “an independent constitutional violation.”
Of course, once the petitioner has established cause, he must show “ ‘actual prejudice’ resulting from the errors of which he complains.”
United States v. Frady,
Fischetti’s first claim is that counsel at his first trial rendered ineffective assistance when he failed to challenge the validity of Fischetti’s arrest and that the court failed to conduct an adequatе suppression hearing. This claim is refuted by the record. As Fischetti’s own submission to the District Court asserts, the first trial court did hold a suppression hearing and upheld the validity, .of Fischetti’s arrest. Memorandum in Support for Writ of Ha-beas Corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 at 23-24. Since the validity of. the arrest was actually adjudicated after a hearing, the allegations that counsel failed to raise the issue at trial or to secure a hearing are utterly without merit. And once the first trial court adjudicated the issue, the law of the case doctrine eliminated any requirement that the second trial court reconsider the issue.
Waldorf v. Shuta,
Fischetti’s next claim, that appellate counsel yras ineffective in not appealing the state court’s failure to provide, him with documents from his previous trial, including court records and transcripts of prior proceedings, also fails. Fischetti admits that the second trial court ordered. Fischetti’s second counsel to provide him with records but complains there was “nothing in the docket, or record to evince that the court ever entered an order directing that all court records in [his] case be turned over to him.” Appellant Br. at 27. Fischetti has failed to establish what records he did not receive, and what possible effect his failure to receive these records had on his second trial. He has therefore failed to establish prejudice for this claim.
Fisehetti’s final claim centers on the second trial court’s decision to allow some witness testimony from the first trial to be admitted into evidence at the second trial without a preliminary determination regarding the unavailability of those witnesses. A number of burglary victims testified at the first trial, held some fourteen years earlier than the second. According to the record, some victims’ testimony *156 from the first trial was admitted in the second trial without any showing that they were unavailable. Fisehetti argues that his Sixth Amendment rights were violated because the second trial court’s failure to hold a preliminary hearing establishing unavailability violated his right to confront witnesses. He contends, by the same token, that his appellate counsel’s failure to contest the admission of this prior testimony on appeal was ineffective assistance of counsel.
The second trial court’s failure to hold a preliminary hearing (and appellate counsel’s failure to appeal this point) were constitutional error. As the Supreme Court has recently reminded us, under the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause, testimony from an earlier sworn proceeding may not be admitted at a criminal trial if the witness is available.
Crawford v. Washington,
— U.S. -,
Was this Confrontation Clause violation prejudicial? Although Fisehetti was convicted in his second trial of thirty-eight counts of burglary, the record discloses that he was sentenced only on two of those counts. The trial court sentenced Fisehetti to ten to twenty years for the burglary of the home of Joseph Kostrub, a victim who did testify at the second trial. The trial court then added a consecutive ten to twenty year sentence for the burglary of the home of Frieda Barnes. However, Frieda Barnes did not testify at the second trial; her testimony was read into the record before the jury.
Since each of these burglaries was distinct, the sentencing on the Kostrub burglary could not have been affected by any error in admitting testimony of victims on separate burglaries. 8 That is not so with respect to the Barnes burglary, however. Absent a determination that Ms. Barnes was not available to appear, it was not proper for Ms. Barnes’s testimony to be read to the jury at the trial.
Accordingly, we will reverse and remand the judgment of the District Court only with respect to Fischetti’s sentence on the Barnes burglary count. On remand, the District Court may hold a hearing to determine whether Ms. Barnes was unavailable at the time of Fischetti’s trial. If she was, then any error will not have been prejudicial after all. If the District Court cannot determine that Ms. Barnes was unavailable, it should consider if the error was prejudicial in light of all the other evidence. If the District Court finds that there was prejudice on this count of the conviction, it should grant the writ as to the Barnes count only with instructions that the state court discharge Fisehetti on completion of his sentence on the Kostrub count unless the state court either (1) sentences Fisehetti under another count for which there was a victim who testified at trial or (2) retries Fisehetti on the Barnes count.
Notes
.On August 30, 1994, the trial court denied Fischetti's May 5, 1994 Motion to Dismiss for Double Jeopardy. The following month, Fis-chetti filed a Notice of Appeal contesting that order, both pro se and through counsel, in Superior Court. On November 10, 1994, the Superior Court deemed the appeals frivolous. Two months earlier, on September 19, 1994, the Superior Court also denied Fischetti’s September 2, 1994 pro se motion for Emergency Order of Court Dismissing Appellant from Custody of Allegheny County Court under Rule 1100 or in the Alternative Immediately Order Allegheny County to Hold Eviden-tiary hearing. Fischetti also filed a pro se Writ of Mandamus with the Supreme Court on September 27, 1994. The Supreme Court . denied the petition on December 12, 1994.
. Sentence was evidently not imposed on the other counts.
. Fitzgerald was re-appointed as counsel on June 29, 1996.
. Indeed, the state judge specifically concluded that his counsel Fitzgerald was well prepared and a "well-trained, skilled defense attorney.” (App.32).
.
Leggett
was decided four years after the state judge in our case ruled that Fischetti must prоceed pro se. That fact does not make a difference. As we have discussed, we look to non-Supreme Court cases not because the state court was obliged to rely on them, but as evidence of what courts would view as reasonable interpretations of Supreme Court law.
See Lockhart v. Fretwell,
. Thus, the ineffective assistance claims themselves were exhausted.
See Murray, 477
U.S. at 489,
. This was the second question on which we granted a certificate of appealability: “whether the remaining three claims in this application should properly be considered defaulted, as procedural mistakes during the second trial, when appellant acted as his own counsel, appear to be the basis of the procedural default for all three remaining claims.’’
. Moreover, since at least nine victims did testify at the second trial, the additional bur-glaiy counts without witnesses were akin to "bringing coals to Newcastle.”
