Cаrlos K. Williams was sentenced to 55 years in prison for the murder of Amondo Nelson. Williams filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, claiming that his trial counsel was ineffective, and the district cоurt granted his petition. We find that the claim was procedurally defaulted, and no cause and prejudice has been shown to excuse the default; *684 we therefore vacate the district cоurt’s judgment and remand for denial of the petition.
On May 5, 1999, a dispute between Amondo Nelson and Ramar Daniels— Williams’s brother — escalated into a confrontation involving gunshots. Witnesses saw Williams and Daniels bоth shoot Nelson through the windows of a car in which Nelson was sitting.
On the first morning of his trial, Williams’s lawyer was notified of a surprise witness: Norman Richardson, who had been standing behind the car when the confrontation toоk place. (Daniels was tried and convicted separately.) Counsel immediately realized that he had represented Richardson on a separate matter and was still owed fees from that representation. Counsel alerted the court to the potential conflict of interest, indicating that he felt there would be no problem, even with cross-examination. In turn, the court discussed the matter with Williams. Williams said that he understood what was going on, that he had “no problem,” and that he wanted to go to trial on schedule. He was ultimately convicted and sentenced to 55 years in prisоn. On direct appeal, he questioned only the sufficiency of the evidence. The Supreme Court of Indiana affirmed his conviction on June 28, 2001.
His state petition for post-conviction relief, first filеd on December 12, 2001, did not proceed smoothly. The state public defender withdrew its representation of Williams on August 9, 2002, leaving Williams to continue pro se. While this was going on, Williams was found to be mentally disabled by the Sоcial Security Administration (by letter dated December 3, 2002, with a finding that his disability dated back to 1988). This letter apparently was not filed with the court. Based on the record before it, on June 3, 2003, the trial court deniеd post-conviction relief, stating that Williams “has presented no evidence ... that he was ever declared mentally handicapped.”
At this point, matters became more complicаted. Williams filed a notice of appeal and later, on October 21, 2003, a brief, but he did not file the required appendix. This rendered his submission nonconforming according to the rules of the court. The state court of appeals gave Williams 30 days to cure the filing defects in his petition, starting the clock on February 26, 2004. He did nothing within the permitted time, leading the State to file a motion to dismiss for lack оf compliance with the order on May 17, 81 days after the court’s order issued. The state court finally dismissed the petition with prejudice for failure to prosecute on June 1, 2004, Day 96. Williams did not file for transfеr to the Supreme Court of Indiana. Instead, he turned to federal court and filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, signing it on March 29, 2005, with an official filing date of April 18.
The State argues that Williams’s petition was untimely. A prisoner has one year to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, starting (as pertinent here) from “the date on which the judgment became final by the conclusion оf direct review or the expiration of the time for seeking such review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A). Williams’s direct review concluded and his conviction became final on September 26, 2001. The time during which a “properly filed аpplication for State post-conviction or other collateral review” is pending, however, is not counted against the federal period of limitation. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2). Williams filed for state relief 77 days into his one-year clock.
As the State sees it, the appellate court dismissed Williams’s cause on June 1, restarting the clock with 288 days left. His one-year clock would expire on March 16, *685 2005, which wоuld make his filing 13 days late. Williams contends that the case was still pending during the 30-day period when he was entitled to file for transfer to the Supreme Court of Indiana, and it did not become final (thereby restarting the one-year clock) until July 1. If he is right, then his limitations period did not end until April 15, 2005, and his petition was timely.
The district court thought that it could avoid deciding whose account was correct by holding that Williams’s time for filing his federal petition was equitably tolled. We have not, however, ruled whether or not equitable tolling should be available at all in a § 2254 context.
Johnson v. Chandler,
Although the State argues that our decision in
Fernandez v. Sternes,
Williams cannot prevail for an equally compelling reason: his ineffective assistance claim was procedurally defaulted. The State asserts that he never presented this claim to the state courts, and Williams does not indicate otherwise. Even if it had been presented on the merits in the petition before the appellate court (and if we assumed that the defective рetition was good enough for this purpose), Williams did not file for transfer to the Supreme Court of Indiana once his petition was dismissed with prejudice. This was not a step that he was entitled to omit, evеn for a post-conviction petition and even if review (as it usually is at that level) is discretionary. O'Su
llivan v. Boerckel,
Williams tacitly acknowledges this in his briefs before this court. He offers
*686
two reasons why the state court of appeals should have forgiven his nonconforming filings, and (we assume generously) that support a finding of good cause for the procedural default. See
Dretke v. Haley,
In any event, we are not persuaded that Williams was able to demonstrate good cause to excuse his procedural default. Williams asserts that he did not have proper access to the prison law library through no fault of his own. This court examines claims of cause based on lack of access to a library on a ease-by-cаse basis. See,
e.g., O’Donnell v. Davis,
Williams also suggests that his mental incapacity provides cause, but once again the recоrd does not support him. This court has held that “borderline mental retardation” diagnosed by a neuropsy-chologist does not constitute cause.
Harris v. McAdory,
The district court reached the merits of the petition without discussing the procedural default.
Williams,
