Grеgory Edward Wright moves for a certificate of appealability (“COA”) to appeal the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He argues that reasonable jurists would find debatable whether: 1) his Confrontation Clause claim is procedurally barred; 2) he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial; and 3) the state suppressed evidence in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and
Brady v. Maryland,
*584 I
The evidence at trial established that Donna Vick was stabbed to death in her hоme in DeSoto, Texas, in the early hours of March 21, 1997. Wright, who had been staying with Vick in her home, was seen with her at a VFW lodge on the night before the murder. Around 4:00 a.m. the next morning, Wright and his friend, John Adams, drove Vick’s car to purchase crack cocaine from a drug dealer who was staying at Llewelyn Mosley’s home. Mosley testified that Adams and Wright arrived at his house on the night of the murder and told him that they had some things from a woman in DeSoto that they wanted to get rid of, including a television, a weed eater, a rifle, a color printer, and a microwave. Several of these items were later identified as belonging to Vick. Wright negotiated with the dealer. After exchanging some of the items, Wright and Adams appeared cheerful and exchanged “high fives.”
The next day, Adams asked Daniel McGaughey, an employee at a video store, to call the police because he wanted to turn himself in. Adams directed the police to Vick’s house and assisted in recovering her car. DNA testing revealed that blood found on the steering wheel belonged to Wright. At the house, the police found Vick’s body on her bed and Wright’s bloody fingerprint on her pillowcase. In a trash can, the police found a handwritten note reading, “Do you want to do it?”
Adams also led the police to a shack that Wright sometimes stayed in, where they arrested Wright and seized a bloody and gold-paint splattered pair of blue jeans. Outside the shack, the police found a bloody knife. DNA evidence established that the blood on the knife and jeans was Vick’s. Several cans of gold spray paint were found in Wright’s home, and witnesses testified that Wright had previously been seen with gold paint on his face and clothes. A police officer testified that he had known people to inhale spray paint to get high. The police also found mail addressed to Adams at the shack. After Wright was arrested, he phoned a friend from jail and asked her to remove any of his clothing from the shack.
Adams also led the police to a knife in a vacant lot near Mosley’s home. DNA testing revealed that the knife had Vick’s blood on it. A medical examiner testified that Vick could have been stabbed by more than one knife.
At trial, the prosecution argued that both Adams and Wright attacked Vick. 1 The court instructed the jury that it could convict Wright only in the event that it found that he actually attacked Vick. The court did not instruct the jury on a law of the parties theory of liability. 2 The jury found Wright guilty, and he was sentenced to death.
Wright’s conviction was affirmed on direct appeal to the Texas Court of Criminal
*585
Appeals (“TCCA”).
Wright v. State,
Wright petitioned the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas for a federal writ of habeas corpus. A magistrate judge recommended denying relief on all of Wright’s claims.
Wright v. Dretke,
3:01-CV-0472,
II
We issue a certificate of appealability only when the movant has made “a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(e)(2). This requires him to “demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find the district court’s assessment of the constitutional claims debatable or wrong.”
Slack v. McDaniel,
The movant’s arguments “must be assessed under the deferential standard required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).”
Tennard v. Dretke,
A
Wright argues that his Sixth Amendmеnt right to confront witnesses against him was violated when the trial court admitted into evidence the testimony of Detective Dan Trippel. On direct examination by the prosecution, Trippel described a conversation he had with Adams, who did not testify. Trippel testified that he discovered Vick’s body after meeting with Adams. On cross examination, Wright elicited testimony from Trippel that Adams claimed that he owned one of the knives used in the murder. On redirect, Trippel testified that Adams told him that Wright used Adams’s knife to stab Vick. Wright made a hearsay оbjection. The prosecution responded that the testimony was admissible under the rule of optional completeness.
See
Tex.R. Evid.
*586
107 (“When part of a ... conversation ... is given in evidence by one party, the whole on the same subject may be inquired into by the other .... ”). Under the rule of optional completeness, hearsay is admissible when it serves to clarify other hearsay evidence elicited by the opposing party.
Bunton v. State,
On direct appeal, Wright argued that the admission of Trippel’s testimony violated Texas evidentiary rules
3
and the Confrontation Clause. The TCCA deemed Wright’s Confrontation Clause argument waived because his objection based on hearsay did not alert the trial court to the federal nature of his claim.
Wright,
A federal court may not grant a petition for a writ of habeas corpus where the state court expressly denied the claim based on an independent and adequate state procedural rule.
Coleman v. Thompson,
Wright’s argument is contrary to Texas law, which generally requires a defendant
*587
to make a specific Confrontation Clause objection to preserve such an error. In support of its ruling that a hearsay objection does not generally preserve a Confrontation Clause claim, the TCCA relied on
Dewberry v. State,
The cases Wright cites are not to the contrary. None addresses the specific question of under what circumstances a hearsay objection is sufficient to preserve a Confrontation Clause claim. Wright primarily relies on
Kittelson v. Dretke,
Wright also cites several cases applying Texas’s statutory exception to the hearsay rule for statements made by child abuse victims.
See
Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.072. In
Lankston v. State,
Similarly, in
Gabriel v. State,
We therefore conclude it is not debatable amongst jurists of reason that the Texas court’s application of the contemporane *589 ous objection rule constitutes an adequate and independent procedural bar to Wright’s Confrontation Clause claim.
B
Wright argues that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel. We evaluate such claims under the two-prong test established by
Strickland v. Washington,
Wright сlaims that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to make a Confrontation Clause objection to the admission of Adams’s hearsay statement. As noted, that statement was in sum that Wright used Adams’s knife to kill Vick. Wright argues that Adams’s hearsay statement was critical because the jury was not instructed on a law of the parties theory of liability. The jury therefore had to find that Wright personally attacked Vick. Wright argues that Adams’s hearsay statement that he gave his knife to Wright therefore substantially bolstered the prosecution’s case.
The Texаs habeas court held that the decision not to make a Confrontation Clause objection was the result of a considered trial strategy on the part of Wright’s trial counsel. The court held that it was “reasonable to speculate” that defense counsel “realized that they could not vouch for the reliability of the statements [that Adams owned the murder weapon] and then object to the introduction of the remainder of the statements under the confrontation clause.”
The district court did not address this ground for the Tеxas court’s decision.
9
The district court instead reasoned that the state court could reasonably have concluded that Wright could not establish that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to make a Confrontation Clause objection due to the overwhelming evidence establishing that Wright murdered Vick.
Wright,
In light of AEDPA’s deferential standard of review, we decline to grant a COA on this issue because, assuming arguendo that the objection would have been sustained and the testimony excluded, it is not debatable amongst jurists of reason that the state court could have reasonably concluded that Wright cannot demonstrate that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to object. First, in its closing statement, the prosecution did not rely on Adams’s hearsay statement that he gave one of the murder weapons to Wright. Second, and more significantly, there was overwhelming evidence establishing that Wright personally, and most likely in conjunction with Adams, attacked Vick. At the scene of the crime, the police found Wright’s bloody fingerprint next to the body and his blood on a towel. Immеdiately following Vick’s death, Wright was seen driving Vick’s car and trading her belongings for drugs. His blood was found on the steering wheel. At Wright’s shack, the police recovered a pair of blue *590 jeans with gold paint 10 and Vick’s bloodstains in Wright’s shack. Wright was a known inhaler of gold spray paint. Finally, the police recovered two knives with Vick’s blood, one from near Wright’s shack.
C
Finally, Wright argues that the prosecution suppressed the following evidence in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and Brady v. Maryland: 1) that the State had agreed not to prosecute Llewellyn Mosley in exchange for his testimony; 2) that Adams had confessed to the murder to Jerry Causey at Mosley’s house; 3) the tape of the 911 call Daniel McGaughey made reporting that Adams wanted to turn himself in; 4) police notes recording a statement by Daniel McGaughey to the police concerning Adams; and 5) evidence that the police found papers belonging to Adams in the shack.
The district court rejected each of these claims on several grounds. The court first noted that Wright had procedurally defaulted his
Brady
claims.
Wright,
1
Wright does not dispute that his
Brady
claims are procedurally defaulted. He argues, however, that we should nevertheless consider the merits of these claims bеcause he is actually innocent of the crime.
See House v. Bell,
— U.S. -,
To establish actual innocence under
Schlup,
Wright must demonstrate that in light of all the evidence, including that “tenably claimed to have been wrongly excluded or to have become available only after trial,”
id.
at 328,
The district court summarized Wright’s evidence of actual innocence as follows:
1) exculpatory scientific evidence regarding the bloody fingerprint found at the crime scene; 2) affidavits from Petitioner’s two defense attorneys averring that the jeans that the State contended that Petitioner wore when he murdered the victim were in actuality too small for him; 3) an affidavit from Daniel McGau-ghey, who was “hidden” from the defense; 4) an affidavit from Jerry Cau-sey, a man to whom co-defendant Adams allegedly confessed; 5) an affidavit from another inmate to whom Adams allegedly confessed; and 6) testimony from Adams’ subsequent capital murder trial which undermines the testimony of State’s witness Llewellyn Mosley.
Wright,
The district court held that this evidence did not satisfy the Schlup standard. Id. at *591 *9. In particular, it noted that although much of this evidence was “newly presented,” most of it was available at the time of trial. Id. at *7-*8. The affidavits from Wright’s defense attorneys regarding the size of the bloody jeans was not new because those attorneys had made the same argument to the jury in their closing statements. Id. at *7. The affidavit of Daniel McGaughey, who called 911 on Adams’s behalf, did not differ from statements McGaughey made to the police that were disclosed. Id. at *8. And there was simply no evidence, new or old, that undermined Mosley’s testimony. Id. The district court found the remaining evidence insufficiently persuasive to meet the Schlup standard. Id. at *9.
In this motion, Wright argues that the district court erred in requiring him to present “new” evidence. The courts of appeals disagree as to whether
Schlup
requires “newly discovered” evidence or merely “newly presented” evidence.
Compare Osborne v. Purkett,
2
The suppression of evidence favorable to the accused violates due proсess where that evidence is material to guilt or punishment.
Kyles v. Whitley,
Assuming Wright’s
Brady
claims are not proeedurally defaulted, a federal court must apply a
de novo
standard of review.
Solis v. Cockrell,
The district court held that Wright had failed to establish that the State suppressed evidence of an agreement not to prosecute Mosley, that Adams confessed to Jerry Causey, that the police found letters addressed to Adams in the shack, or the tape of the 911 call by Daniel McGaughey *592 reporting Adams’s desire to turn himself in. Wright does not argue that the district court’s findings or conclusions of law with respect to whethеr the State suppressed this evidence are in error. He has therefore failed to establish that the district court’s resolution of these claims is reasonably debatable.
Wright does argue that the prosecution failed to disclose timely a police note made during an interview with Daniel McGaughey. McGaughey was working at a video store when Adams informed him that he wanted to turn himself in. According to the police note, McGaughey told police that Adams stated, “I murdered someone in DeSoto and I can’t deal with it.” Thе prosecution did not disclose this note until after Wright’s trial began. 11 Although the prosecution’s disclosure of this note was delayed, Wright conceded in his petition for habeas corpus that he was timely provided with the following nearly identical written statement by McGaughey:
At about 7:00 pm on Saturday March 22nd, a man came and asked me to call the police. I asked why and he told me there was a murder and he wanted to turn himself in. I asked him where this murder took place and he got real angry. He told me it took place in DeSoto and and [sic] could not live with himself any longer to call the police give them his description and he would be out by the curb.
The district court held that the suppressed note was not material.
Wright,
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, we DENY Wright’s motion for a COA.
Notes
. (R. 44, 76.) Wright contends that during the sentencing phase of the proceeding, the prosecution argued that he acted alone. But the portion of the transcript he cites in support of that proposition, (R. 51, 17.), is his own attorney's argument. The prosecution did submit testimony relaying Adams's statement to police that Wright alone killed Vick, but the prosecution did not argue that this portion of Adams’s statement was credible. We. thеrefore find no support in the record for Wright's contention that the prosecution argued that Wright alone committed the offense.
. During closing arguments, the prosecutor repeatedly attempted to argue that Wright could be found guilty as an accomplice. Wright's counsel objected each time, and the court sustained the objection. In his closing argument, Wright’s attorney argued to the jury that the charge did not permit conviction merely based on a finding that "[Wright] is a party to this.”
. To the extent that Wright now argues that the Texas сourts misapplied the rule of optional completeness, we note that violations of state law are generally not cognizable on ha-beas review unless they render the trial fundamentally unfair.
Hughes v. Dretke,
. An exception to this doctrine exists where the. petitioner demonstrates either cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law or that failing to consider his claim will yield a fundamental “miscarriage of justice.”
Coleman,
.
See Cantu v. State, 939
S.W.2d
627,
634 (Tex.Crim.App.1997);
Fultz
v.
State,
.
See Reyna v. State,
.
Hutchins v. Wainwright,
. The remaining state court cases Wright cites are not on point.
Cofield v. State,
Finally, the federal cases Wright cites do not apply Texas’s procedural rules and instead concern: 1) whether a claim was рresented to a state court for purposes of Supreme Court appellate jurisdiction,
Lilly v. Virginia,
. In applying the "unreasonable application” test of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), a federal court reviews only the state court's ultimate decision that the petitioner is not entitled to relief, not the state court’s reasoning.
Neal v. Puckett,
. Wright submitted an affidavit to the district court from his state trial attorney, which states that the jeans were too small for Wright. Wright's attorney used the jeans for demonstrative purposes while presenting this argument to the jury. The jury could infer, however, that the gold spray paint sufficiently linked the jeans to Wright, a known user of spray paint as an inhalant.
. So long as the defendant receives the evidence in time for its effective use at trial, the Due Process Clause is not violated.
United-States v. Walters,
