Hearn v. Dretke ( 2004 )


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  •                                                                               United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    F I L E D
    July 6, 2004
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    No. 04-10245
    IN RE: YOKAMON LANEAL HEARN,
    Movant.
    No. 04-70010
    YOKAMON LANEAL HEARN,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    DOUG DRETKE, DIRECTOR, TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE,
    CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS DIVISION,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    Transfer Order from the United States District
    Court and Appeal from the United States District Court
    from the Northern District of Texas
    (No. 3:04-CV-450)
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
    EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge:
    Yokamon Laneal Hearn, an indigent Texas inmate seeking to challenge his death sentence
    pursuant to Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    (2002), moves this Court to appoint counsel to prepare
    1
    his application for authority to file a successive federal habeas corpus peti tion, and to stay his
    execution pending the disposition of such petition. For the following reasons, the motions to appoint
    counsel and stay the execution are GRANTED.
    I.
    Hearn was convicted of capital murder in Texas and sentenced to death. He appealed to the
    Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which affirmed both the conviction and sentence. Hearn v. State,
    No. 73,371 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 3, 2001) (per curiam). The Supreme Court later denied Hearn’s
    petition for writ of certiorari. Hearn v. Texas, 
    535 U.S. 991
    (2002).
    After Hearn was denied state post-conviction relief, Ex parte Hearn, No. 50,116-01 (Tex.
    Crim. App. Nov. 14, 2001), he filed a federal habeas petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the
    United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. On July 11, 2002, the district court
    granted summary judgment on behalf of the Director of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice
    (“Director”), thereby denying Hearn’s request for federal habeas relief. Hearn v. Cockrell, No. 3:01-
    CV-2551-D, 
    2002 WL 1544815
    (N.D. Tex. July 11, 2002). Both the district court and this Court
    denied Hearn’s application for a certificate of appealability (“COA”), finding that he had failed to
    make a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right. Hearn v. Cockrell, No. 02-10913,
    
    2003 WL 21756441
    (5th Cir. June 23, 2003). On November 17, 2003, the Supreme Court denied
    Hearn’s petition for writ of certiorari. Hearn v. Dretke, 
    124 S. Ct. 579
    (2003). The State of Texas
    scheduled Hearn’s execution for March 4, 2004.
    On March 2, 2004, Hearn filed a successive application for state post-conviction relief,
    claiming that he is mentally retarded and that his death sentence is cruel and unusual punishment
    under the Eighth Amendment. See Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    (2002). On March 3, 2004, the
    2
    Texas Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed Hearn’s application on the ground that it constituted an
    abuse of writ, finding that he failed to make a prima facie showing of mental retardation. Ex parte
    Hearn, No. 50,116-02 (Tex. Crim. App. Mar. 3, 2004). Later that day, Hearn moved the United
    States District Court for the Northern District of Texas for appointment of counsel pursuant to 21
    U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B), and for a stay of execution under 28 U.S.C. § 2251. The district court sua
    sponte transferred the motions to this Court, and Hearn filed a separate notice of appeal—asking us
    to reverse the transfer order, appoint counsel, and enter a stay of execution.1 In order to thoroughly
    address Hearn’s claim, we granted a temporary stay of execution, requested supplemental briefing,
    and heard oral argument.
    II.
    A.      Appointment of Counsel
    The legality of Hearn’s detention was determined on a prior application for a writ of habeas
    corpus. Hearn v. Dretke, 
    124 S. Ct. 579
    (2003). “Before a second or successive application [for a
    writ of habeas corpus] is filed in the district court, the applicant shall move in the appropriate court
    of appeals for an order authorizing the district court to consider the application.” 28 U.S.C. §
    2244(b)(3)(A). In order to facilitate the preparation of his application for § 2244(b)(3)(A) authority,
    Hearn now moves this Court to appoint counsel pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B).2
    1
    Hearn’s current lawyers, members of the Texas Defender Service, have volunteered their
    services for the limited purpose of assisting Hearn in his effort to obtain permanent habeas counsel
    pursuant to § 848(q)(4)(B).
    2
    As an initial matter, we decline to characterize Hearn’s motion for appointment of
    counsel as a motion for actual § 2244(b)(3)(A) authority to file a successive federal writ petition.
    Hearn has made it abundantly clear that he is not asking this Court for such authority, and we are
    not persuaded that our precedent requires us to presume otherwise. United States v. Key, 
    205 F.3d 773
    , 774-75 (5th Cir. 2000), cited by the Director, is inapposite because it involves neither
    3
    (1)     Scope of § 848(q)(4)(B)
    The Director contends that § 848(q)(4)(B) does not authorize the appointment of counsel to
    prepare an application for authority to file a successive habeas writ petition. We disagree.
    Section 848(q)(4)(B) provides that:
    In any post-conviction proceeding under section 2254 or 2255 of Title 28, seeking
    to vacate or set aside a death sentence, any defendant who becomes financially unable
    to obtain adequate representation or investigative, expert, or other reasonably
    necessary services shall be entitled to the appointment of one or more attorneys and
    the furnishing of other services in accordance with paragraphs (5), (6), (7), (8), and
    (9).
    21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B) (emphasis added). Significantly, this provision expressly incorporates
    subsection (q)(8), which states that
    each attorney so appointed shall represent the defendant throughout every subsequent
    stage of available judicial proceedings, including pre-trial proceedings, trial,
    sentencing, motions for new trial, appeals, applications for writ of certiorari to the
    Supreme Court of the United States, and all available post-conviction process,
    together with applications for stays of execution and other appropriate motions and
    procedures, and shall also represent the defendant in such competency proceedings
    and proceedings for executive or other clemency as may be available to the defendant.
    21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(8) (emphases added). On their face, these statutes grant indigent capital prisoners
    a mandatory right to qualified legal counsel and reasonably necessary legal services in all federal post-
    conviction proceedings. Needless to say, this is not language of limitation.3
    21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B), a capital prisoner, nor the Supreme Court’s ruling in McFarland v.
    Scott, 
    512 U.S. 849
    (1994).
    3
    The Director argues that we must deny the appointment of counsel on the ground that an
    application for § 2244(b)(3)(A) certification is not a “post-conviction proceeding under section
    2254 or 2255.” This argument is without merit. Section 2255, for example, provides that
    motions filed by successor petitioners “must be certified as provided in section 2244.” This clause
    in effect designates § 2244(b)(3)(A) certification as an element of § 2255 relief. As a result, we
    find that a certification inquiry is a proceeding “under” § 2255. Further, this Court has on prior
    4
    The expansive nature of § 848(q)(4)(B) is further evinced by the Supreme Court’s decision
    in McFarland v. Scott, 
    512 U.S. 849
    (1994). The question before the Court was whether a motion
    to appoint counsel under § 848(q)(4)(B) qualified as a “post-conviction proceeding under section
    2254 or 2255,” invoking the district court’s jurisdiction and allowing it to appoint counsel and grant
    a stay of execution. The language of § 2254 and § 2255 make no reference to motions to appoint
    counsel, and a simple reading of the habeas statutes would lead one to believe that a motion to
    appoint counsel would not be a “post-conviction proceeding under section 2254 or 2255.” The
    McFarland Court, however, heeded Congress’s concern for unrepresented capital prisoners and came
    to the opposite conclusion, holding that the right to the appointment of counsel adheres before the
    filing of a formal habeas corpus petition.
    This interpretation is the only one that gives meaning to the statute as a practical
    matter. Congress’ provision of a right to counsel under § 848(q)(4)(B) reflects a
    determination that quality legal representation is necessary in capital habeas corpus
    proceedings in light of “the seriousness of the possible penalty and . . . the unique and
    complex nature of the litigation.”
    ...
    [C]riminal defendants are entitled by federal law to challenge their conviction and
    sentence in habeas corpus proceedings. By providing indigent capital defendants with
    a mandat ory right to qualified legal counsel in these proceedings, Congress has
    recognized that federal habeas corpus has a particularly important role to play in
    promoting fundamental fairness in the imposition of the death penalty.
    
    McFarland, 512 U.S. at 855
    , 859 (quoting 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(7)). The McFarland Court’s
    explanation of Congress’s intent to provide capital prisoners with habeas counsel, and its illustration
    occasions characterized other § 2244 hearings as “post-conviction proceeding[s] under section
    2254 or 2255.” See Cantu-Tzin v. Johnson, 
    162 F.3d 295
    , 302 (5th Cir. 1998) (discussing the
    appointment of § 848(q)(4)(B) counsel for the limited purpose of preparing an equitable tolling
    claim pursuant to § 2244(d)).
    5
    of how far it was willing to go to effectuate that intent, guide our analysis in this case.
    The Director asserts that the relief recognized in McFarland is limited to those capital
    prisoners who have not yet filed an initial habeas petition. Such a contention is without merit. While
    the petitioner in McFarland was indeed pursuing his first federal habeas writ, no language in the
    Supreme Court’s opinion limits its holding to initial petitions. We note, however, that the Court did
    place special emphasis on the necessity of counsel during the initial investigation of potential habeas
    claims. McFarland explains that Congress, through § 848(q)(4)(B), granted indigent capital
    prisoners the opportunity to investigate and research the factual bases of possible habeas claims. 
    Id. at 855
    (discussing the right to “[t]he services of investigators and other experts that may be critical
    in the pre-application phase of a habeas corpus proceeding, when possible claims and their factual
    bases are researched and identified”); 
    id. at 858
    (recognizing the importance of the petitioner’s
    “opportunity” to “meaningfully research and present [his] habeas claims”). The Court found that
    McFarland—who was without counsel, and was pursuing previously unavailable habeas relief—was
    denied this opportunity to investigate the factual bases of his potential habeas claims. It seems clear
    to us that the McFarland Court would have been just as concerned with a capital prisoner in need
    of investigating a successive habeas petition, based on a claim previously unavailable to the prisoner,
    as it was with the capital prisoner seeking to file an initial petition. Under both scenarios, the prisoner
    has been denied the opportunity to conduct an initial investigation into the factual bases of a potential
    habeas claim.
    One of our cases, however, includes language suggesting that indigent capital prisoners are
    never entitled to the appointment of counsel to prepare a successive habeas petition. See Kutzner v.
    Cockrell, 
    303 F.3d 333
    , 338 (5th Cir. 2002) (“‘The McFarland Court was concerned only with that
    6
    period of time between the habeas petitioner’s motion for the appointment of counsel and the filing
    of the initial petition.’ Thus, McFarland does not justify appointment of counsel or stay of execution
    for the preparation of a second federal habeas petition.”) (quoting Turner v. Johnson, 
    106 F.3d 1178
    ,
    1182 (5th Cir. 1997)). 4 While such a statement, taken by itself, strongly supports the Director’s
    position, its authoritative value is significantly diminished when read in the proper context.
    The issue before the Kutzner Court was whether the petitioner was entitled to counsel
    pursuant to § 848(q)(4)(B) in light of McFarland. Kutzner begins its analysis by recognizing that the
    “core concern of McFarland [is] that an un-counseled prisoner would be required to ‘proceed
    without counsel in order to obtain counsel and thus would expose himself to the substantial risk that
    his habeas claim never would be heard on the merits’ . . . 
    .” 303 F.3d at 338
    (quoting 
    McFarland, 512 U.S. at 856
    ). The Court then reviewed the facts of Kutzner’s case, and found that he was
    equipped with competent counsel throughout the entire habeas process. 
    Id. (“Kutzner was
    well-
    represented by qualified counsel . . . [and] current counsel has represented Kutzner for over a year”).
    The Court also reasoned that his “original § 2254 petition was fully litigated on the merits.” 
    Id. at 338.
    The opinion takes particular note that Kutzner had been long-aware of the Brady material and
    false testimony alleged in his proposed petition, and that he was not seeking relief pursuant to a new
    4
    The petitioner in Turner was seeking a stay—rather than the appointment of
    counsel—pursuant to McFarland. Importantly, Turner’s habeas petition was pending in federal
    court at the time of the Court’s decision. Seeing that the federal habeas corpus statute grants any
    federal judge “before whom a habeas corpus proceeding is pending” power to stay an execution,
    28 U.S.C. § 2251, the Turner Court’s observation that the “McFarland Court was concerned
    only with that period of time between the habeas petitioner’s motion for the appointment of
    counsel and the filing of the initial petition” is far from remarkable. 
    Turner, 106 F.3d at 1182
    . It
    is clear that such language does not concern McFarland’s applicability to successive petitions, but
    instead restates the well-established rule that McFarland is the improper channel through which
    to seek a stay of execution while a habeas petition is before the federal courts.
    7
    rule of constitutional law. 
    Id. at 336,
    337. Based on these findings, the Court ultimately concluded
    that Kutzner’s situation did not implicate the “core concern” of McFarland, and that his request for
    counsel should be denied accordingly.
    We read Kutzner as holding that the relief enunciated in McFarland does not apply to
    successive habeas petitioners who had been afforded sufficient opportunities to investigate the factual
    bases of their proposed claim. The statement of law cited by the Director, limiting McFarland to
    initial petitions, is not an alternative rationale supporting this narrow fact-based holding.5 It would
    be illogical to find otherwise, as this statement of law would wholly subsume, rather than facilitate,
    the Court’s analysis of whether Kutzner enjoyed an opportunity to raise his habeas claim in an earlier
    petition. Moreover, the contested statement of law does not stand by itself as an alternative holding.
    The statement is found in the final sentence of a paragraph that addresses the wholly distinct subject
    of Kutzner’s foregone opportunities to raise habeas claims. Further, the Court does not expressly
    apply the contested statement of law to the facts of Kutzner’s case. This absence of analysis is
    particularly striking in light of the Court’s detailed discussion, in the preceding sentences, whether
    McFarland’s “core concern” is implicated by the petitioner’s situation.
    We find, after reading Kutzner in its proper context, that its limitation on McFarland does not
    5
    It is well-established that alternative holdings of this Court are binding on future panels.
    See, e.g., McClendon v. City of Columbia, 
    305 F.3d 314
    , 327 n.9 (5th Cir. 2002) (en banc);
    McLellan v. Mississippi Power & Light Co., 
    545 F.2d 919
    , 925 n.20 (5th Cir. 1977) (en banc)
    (stating that all alternative rationales for a given result have precedential value). Our en banc
    Court in McClendon noted, however, that an “alternative analysis should be rare in qualified
    immunity cases and should not be undertaken routinely by the panels of this court.” 
    McClendon, 305 F.3d at 327
    n.9. While we are mindful that this case does not involve a claim of qualified
    immunity, McClendon clearly supports the proposition that alternative analyses should not be
    common practice in this Circuit. In light of this principle, we find it improper for this Court to
    infer alternative rationales or holdings where ones are not clearly expressed.
    8
    constitute an alternative rationale or an alternative holding, but rather a mere “judicial comment made
    during the course of delivering a judicial opinion, but one that is unnecessary to the decision in the
    case and therefore not precedential.” Black's Law Dictionary 1100 (7th ed. 1999) (defining “obiter
    dictum”); see also Centennial Ins. Co. v. Ryder Truck Rental, Inc., 
    149 F.3d 378
    , 385-86 (5th Cir.
    1998) (“That which is ‘obiter dictum’ is stated only ‘by the way’ to the holding of a case and does
    not constitute an essential or integral part of the legal reasoning behind a decision.”) (internal
    quotations omitted). Further, we do not find such dictum persuasive because it contravenes
    McFarland’s intent to provide indigent capital prisoners with the opportunity to conduct—at the very
    least—a single, cursory investigation into the factual bases of each potential habeas claim.
    Upon review of the statutory language, McFarland, and the prior decisions of this Circuit,
    we hold that courts are not barred from appointing § 848(q)(B)(4) counsel to prepare an application
    for authority to file a successive habeas petition. We now proceed to a discussion of whether the
    petitioner in the case sub judice is entitled to such relief.
    (2)     Hearn’s opportunity to investigate the factual bases of his Atkins claim
    The Director asserts that Hearn’s motion for § 848(q)(4)(B) counsel should be denied on the
    ground that Hearn, like the prisoner in Kutzner, had a sufficient opportunity to investigate the factual
    bases of his proposed habeas claim. We disagree. Hearn’s proposed successive petition will seek
    habeas relief pursuant to the new constitutional rule created in Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    (2002). Atkins, however, had not yet been decided when Hearn filed his initial habeas petition.
    Although Atkins was issued while Hearn’s first petition was pending in federal court, Texas’s habeas-
    abstention procedure—which barred the filing of a state petition while a habeas writ was pending in
    9
    federal court—effectively precluded him from seeking Atkins relief until his initial habeas petition was
    disposed of by the federal courts. See discussion infra Part II.A(4).
    Upon the denial of his initial federal habeas pet ition, Jan Hemphill withdrew from her
    representation of Hearn. Put plainly, Hearn lost his court-appointed habeas counsel on the very day
    he became eligible to raise his Atkins claim. Hearn made various efforts to persuade Hemphill to file
    a successive writ petition, and even dispatched family members to the federal district court and Texas
    Attorney General’s Office in an effort to compel her to investigate a successive claim. When all else
    failed, Hearn promptly contacted his current pro bono counsel, who conducted an expedited
    investigation into Hearn’s records and brought such evidence before this Court. We find that Hearn
    has made a sufficient showing that Texas’s habeas-abstention procedure, and the unavailability of
    qualified habeas counsel after the dispo sition of his initial petition, denied him the opportunity to
    sufficiently investigate the factual bases underlying his Atkins claim.
    (3)    Hearn’s showing of mental retardation
    The Director maintains that, even if Hearn were, in fact, denied an opportunity to investigate
    the factual bases of his Atkins claim, we should withhold § 848(q)(4)(B) counsel on the ground that
    Hearn has failed to make the requisite prima facie showing of mental retardation.6 Such an assertion
    is without merit. Because § 848(q)(4)(B)—read in conjunction with McFarland—affords counsel
    6
    The American Association on Mental Retardation defines mental retardation as: (1)
    subaverage general intellectual functioning (i.e., an IQ of approximately 70 to 75 or below)
    existing concurrently with (2) related limitations in adaptive functioning; and (3) onset before the
    age of eighteen. AM. ASS’N ON MENTAL RETARDATION, MENTAL RETARDATION: DEFINITION,
    CLASSIFICATION, AND SYSTEMS OF SUPPORTS 1 (9th ed. 1992). “Psychologists and other mental
    health professionals are flexible in their assessment of mental retardation; thus, sometimes a
    person whose IQ has tested above 70 may be diagnosed as mentally retarded.” Ex parte Briseno,
    No. 29,819-03, WL 244826, at *7 n.24 (Tex. Crim. App. Feb. 11, 2004).
    10
    to prisoners to prepare federal habeas petitions, “a substantive, merits assessment of the petition is
    irrelevant to the appointment of counsel.” Weeks v. Jones, 
    100 F.3d 124
    , 127 (11th Cir. 1996); see
    Barnard v. Collins, 
    13 F.3d 871
    , 879 (5th Cir. 1994) (“On its face, § 848(q)(4)(B) does not condition
    the appointment of counsel on the substantiality or non-frivolousness of petitioner’s habeas claim.”).
    As a result, a prisoner’s motion for counsel to investigate and prepare a successive Atkins claim need
    only be supported by a colorable showing of mental retardation.7
    We hold that Hearn has met this modest evidentiary threshold. For instance, Hearn has
    presented school records showing that he failed first grade, and that his marks often hovered in the
    50s (or below) despite his regular attendance. He further proffered evidence that his score on the
    state-administered Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (“WAIS-R”) Short-form test—taking
    into account its inherent band of error—falls within the upper range of scores indicating mild mental
    retardation.8 Hearn also presents a note from Hemphill st ating her belief that he was “not very
    7
    Congress enacted the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
    (“AEDPA”) with the intent to curb the vast number of habeas filings in the federal courts. In
    furtherance of this objective, AEDPA requires that potential successive petitioners present the
    merits of their habeas writ to the courts of appeals before such claim is filed in district court. 28
    U.S.C. § 2244(c). We think it concomitant with this Congressional intent to withhold §
    848(q)(4)(B) counsel for certification proceedings absent some colorable showing by the prisoner
    that he is, in fact, entitled to habeas relief.
    8
    Hearn scored an 82 on the WAIS-R Short-form test. “The basic requirement for any
    short-form is a minimum correlation of .90 with the full administration. . . . [W]ith a .90
    correlation, two-thirds of the IQs will fall within 9 points of a person’s actual IQ and a full one-
    third will be 10 or more points away from the actual IQ.” GARY GROTH-MARNAT, HANDBOOK
    OF PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT 200 (3d ed. 1999). Due to the Short-form’s substantial margin
    of error, we find that Hearn may have an IQ “between 70 and 75 or lower, which is typically
    considered the cutoff IQ score for the intellectual function prong of the mental retardation
    definition.” 
    Atkins, 536 U.S. at 309
    n.5.
    11
    intelligent—maybe below normal.”9 He further cites the trial testimony of a family member to
    demonstrate his compromised social skills.10 We find that this evidence, while certainly insufficient
    to establish a prima facie case of mental retardation, nonetheless presents a colorable claim of mental
    retardation sufficient to justify the appointment of counsel to investigate and prepare a §
    2244(b)(3)(A) application.
    (4)    Hearn’s showing of rare and equitable circumstances
    The Director lastly contends that Hearn’s motion for counsel should be denied because his
    eventual Atkins claim will be time-barred. It is true that potential procedural bars may be so
    conclusive that the right to counsel under § 848(q)(4)(B) becomes unavailable. See Cantu-Tzin v.
    Johnson, 
    162 F.3d 295
    , 298-99 (5th Cir. 1998); 
    Barnard, 13 F.3d at 879
    . This Court in Cantu-Tzin
    explained that the “[a]ppointment of counsel for a capital-convicted defendant would be a futile
    gesture if the petitioner is time-barred from seeking federal habeas 
    relief.” 162 F.3d at 299
    . Hearn
    cannot bring his Atkins claim within the one-year statute of limitations dictated by the Anti-Terrorism
    and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”).11 The AEDPA limitations period, however,
    9
    To show that Hearn has not established a colorable claim of mental retardation, the
    dissent points to Hearn’s “long, personalized request for a pen pal via a web site.” The dissent
    quite ably finds that the request “used complete sentences.” If this request were in fact
    transcribed by Hearn, it may well be relevant to the ultimate issue of whether Hearn is in fact
    mentally retarded. Unlike the dissenting judge, however, we refuse to accord such weight to
    mere hearsay evidence.
    10
    Hearn’s aunt testified that he was a “follower” who tended to be “influenced by the
    wrong type of people,” and that when he left home at age 18, she was still “concerned [sic] about
    if he was being taken care of.”
    11
    AEDPA tolls the limitations period for one-year after a new retroactive constitutional
    rule is enunciated. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(C). The retroactive rule in Atkins was issued on June
    20, 2002; the AEDPA one-year limitations period for filing an Atkins claim therefore expired on
    12
    is subject to equitable tolling in “rare and exceptional circumstances.” Davis v. Johnson, 
    158 F.3d 806
    , 811 (5th Cir. 1998). Hearn contends that Texas’s habeas-abstention procedure, known as the
    “two-forum rule,” presented a rare and exceptional circumstance that precluded him from raising an
    Atkins claim.
    Texas state law has traditionally barred prisoners from having pending habeas litigation in both
    state and federal courts. Through its judicially-created two-forum rule, Texas prevented petitioners
    from lodging a mixed petition in federal court and simultaneously returning to state court, or having
    a federal court hold a petition in abeyance while further state court rem edies were sought. See
    generally Ex parte Green, 
    548 S.W.2d 914
    , 916 (Tex. Crim. App. 1977) (“A petitioner must decide
    which forum he will proceed in, because [the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals] will not, and a trial
    court in this State should not, consider a petitioner’s application so long as the federal courts retain
    jurisdiction over the same matter.”).12
    On February 11, 2004, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals expressly modified the two-
    forum rule, enabling Texas courts to consider the merits of a subsequent writ application once a
    federal court stays the federal habeas proceedings. Ex parte Soffar, No. 29,890, 
    2004 WL 245190
    (Tex. Crim. App. Feb. 11, 2004). The court in Soffar reasoned:
    June 20, 2003. Hearn has not yet raised his Atkins claim in federal court.
    12
    Other states have traditionally permitted petitioners to file a mixed petition in federal
    court, and subsequently litigate the unexhausted claims in state court while the federal petition
    was held in abeyance. See, e.g., Zarvela v. Artuz, 
    254 F.3d 374
    , 381 (2d Cir. 2001) (holding that
    a federal court, presented with a mixed petition, should dismiss the unexhausted claims and stay
    the exhausted claims to avoid the AEDPA time bar); Freeman v. Page, 
    208 F.3d 572
    , 577 (7th
    Cir. 2000) (noting that the proper action for petitioner was “filing in both courts” and requesting
    that the district judge stay the federal proceedings).
    13
    Because of the strict one-year statute of limitations in the Anti-Terrorism and
    Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), the application of [the two-forum
    rule], combined with the federal exhaustion requirement, may lead to unintended and
    unfortunate consequences. The problematic situation is when the Supreme Court
    announces a “watershed” procedural or substantive change in the law which applies
    retroactively to all cases, even those on collateral review. Atkins v. Virginia seems
    to be one such case.
    
    Id. at *3.
    By June 20, 2003, the date the AEDPA limitations period for Atkins claims expired, Hearn
    had already filed his initial federal habeas petition, and he was awaiting this Court’s ruling on his
    application for a COA. If Hearn had petitioned for Atkins relief in Texas court, he would have been
    compelled to move the federal court to dismiss without prejudice his then-pending federal petition.
    Such a dismissal likely would have time-barred Hearn from later asserting the claims in his pending
    federal petition. See Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. 167
    , 172 (2001) (stating that the AEDPA
    limitations period is not tolled during the pendency of a federal habeas petition). On the other hand,
    because Hearn waited to file his Atkins claim until the disposition of his then-pending federal habeas
    proceeding, he faced Texas’s assertion of a time bar on his Atkins claim. The two-forum rule appears
    to have effectively forced Hearn to choose between federal review of his pending writ petition and
    his right to pursue successive habeas relief under Atkins.
    The Director contends that equitable tolling is improper because—four months prior to
    Soffar—the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals implicitly negated the two-forum rule when it remanded
    a petitioner’s Atkins claim for review on the merits even though that petitioner had a writ pending in
    federal court. Ex parte Smith, No. 40,874-02 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 8, 2003). This argument is
    without merit. One petitioner’s willingness to jeopardize review of his pending federal habeas petition
    14
    in order to file an Atkins claim does not mean that all others must. For instance, it is plausible that
    the petitioner in Smith was prepared to sacrifice review of his federal writ peti tion because it was
    comprised of frivolous claims. Moreover, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’s decision to remand
    one case for review on the merits, absent any express criticism of the governing two-forum rule, does
    not undermine decades of Texas precedent reinforcing the preclusive effect of that rule. Although
    it is not apparent that the AEDPA limitations period must be equitably tolled on Hearn’s behalf, we
    find that the facts relevant to this analysis are in dispute such that Hearn is entitled to counsel to
    investigate and prepare a tolling claim.
    As discussed above, Hearn has made sufficient showings that he was not afforded an
    opportunity to investigate his Atkins claim, that he is in fact mentally retarded, and that his potential
    Atkins claim is not time-barred. This case therefore implicates the “core concern of McFarland . .
    . ‘that an un-counseled prisoner would be required to proceed without counsel in order to obtain
    counsel and thus would expose himself to the substantial risk that his claim would never be heard on
    the merits’ . . . .” 
    Kutzner, 303 F.3d at 338
    (quoting 
    McFarland, 512 U.S. at 856
    ). As a result, we
    hold that Hearn is entitled to the appointment of counsel and reasonably necessary services under §
    848(q)(4)(B) to investigate and prepare his application for authority to file an Atkins claim.
    B.      Stay of Execution
    Hearn also moves this Court for a stay of execution to provide his appointed counsel with
    sufficient time to prepare an application for authority to file his Atkins claim. The Director contends
    that this Court is not authorized to grant a stay of execution because a writ of habeas corpus is
    currently not pending before this Court as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2251. The Director’s claim is
    15
    meritless. The Supreme Court in McFarland held that a habeas proceeding is pending before a court,
    for the purposes of staying an execution, once a capital prisoner moves for the appointment of habeas
    counsel pursuant to § 
    848(q)(4)(B). 512 U.S. at 856
    . The McFarland Court explained that the pre-
    application appointment of counsel alone, without the time to adequately develop the facts and brief
    the claims, renders the statutory guarantee of counsel an empty promise. 
    Id. In accordance
    with the reasoning of McFarland, we find that a stay of execution is imperative
    to ensure the effective presentation of Hearn’s application for authority to file his Atkins claim.
    Because Hearn was not dilatory in his search for counsel, and the stay of execution will not
    substantially harm the State of Texas, the preliminary stay ordered March 4, 2004, is hereby extended
    to provide Hearn’s counsel with sufficient time to prepare an application for § 2244(b)(3)(A)
    authority.
    III.
    For the reasons stated above, Hearn’s motions for the appointment of counsel and for stay
    of execution are GRANTED. Accordingly, we REMAND to the district court to appoint counsel
    and furnish reaso nably necessary services to help Hearn present his application for authority,
    and—should such authority be granted—his formal Atkins petition. Hearn shall file his completed
    application for § 2244(b)(3)(A) authority no later than six months from today. Accordingly, Hearn’s
    execution is STAYED pending the resolution of proceedings consistent with this order.
    16
    PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge, concurring.
    I concur fully in Judge Clement’s opinion.    Hearn is on
    death row in Texas.   He does not have counsel.   The Texas
    Defender Service, lacking the resources to undertake the
    representation of Hearn and aware that Hearn’s date of execution
    was looming, asked the federal district court to stay the
    execution and appoint counsel to develop his claim that he is
    mentally retarded and ineligible for execution.    This case
    reached the panel only hours before the execution.    We granted a
    stay to allow sufficient time to properly decide the request.    We
    found the case sufficiently complex and uncertain that additional
    briefs and oral argument were requested.   The dissent now
    “regrets” not dissenting from that stay.
    I remain convinced that the stay was proper and that this
    prisoner is entitled to a lawyer and an opportunity to
    investigate and present any claim of retardation that he may
    have.   I am not prepared to hold that he must first make a prima
    facie case that he is retarded to be entitled to a lawyer to make
    that case.   The dissent argues just that and is prepared to
    disregard a filed affidavit as incompetent evidence.    This
    approach has it backwards.   We don’t have enough evidence to peg
    Hearn’s ability.   What little “evidence” that has been presented
    is equivocal and needs explanation.   If the record before us is
    17
    all that Hearn can produce    before the district court with the
    assistance of a lawyer, I would quickly agree that it falls far
    short of a prima facie showing. There is enough, however, to
    warrant development as Judge Clement explains.    As best I sift
    from its rhetoric, the dissent would hold that a prisoner on
    death row with no lawyer must make a prima facie case that he is
    so retarded that he cannot be executed in order to have the
    benefit of counsel.
    We are instructed that we must take this approach or face
    the fact that every person on death row with no lawyer but with
    colorable claims of retardation would be entitled to a lawyer.      I
    do not see that as a frightening possibility.    Rather, that it is
    being urged by the dissent as such is a chilling comment on the
    confused state of the law of capital punishment in this circuit.
    The dissent would run the one year clock on Hearn during the
    time he had no lawyer.    If there is a doctrine of equitable
    tolling, it must not tolerate a limitations bar to a retarded
    prisoner awaiting execution and without counsel.    It is no answer
    to assert that Hearn is not retarded unless we are prepared to
    dispense with lawyers and hearings.
    But, it is argued, Hearn did have counsel for part of the
    time.    The dissent has no answer for the fact that during that
    period of representation a claim of retardation could not have
    been filed, given the two-forum rule Texas then adhered to.     The
    18
    dissent in a footnote asserts, with no authority, that Texas was
    never serious about that rule, passing over the fact that much
    later, Texas, recognizing the plight it created for petitioners
    such as Hearn, abandoned it.   The dissent says the two-forum rule
    was   never real.
    The dissent accuses the majority of ignoring circuit
    precedent, Judge Davis’s opinion in Kutzner and Judge Politz’s
    opinion in Turner.    It bears mention that neither petitioner in
    these cases had an available writ path.       The panel in Kutzner
    pointedly observed that the petitioner had no right to pursue a
    successive writ with a claim that did not rely upon a new rule of
    constitutional law.   Petitioners had counsel in both cases at all
    relevant times and neither petitioner presented Akins claims.
    This is not an easy case.   The state has been represented at
    all times by counsel and has full access to prisoner records and
    other resources to reply to this claim.       I cannot be so
    dismissive of Hearn’s statutory right as to refuse him a lawyer
    when at the least there is enough to warrant examination.       If
    there is nothing there, as the dissent seems to know, the
    district court will so conclude.       In the end I have more
    confidence in facts decided by an Article III trial judge with
    competent counsel before him than those determined on appeal by
    appellate judges.
    19
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Even by his own lawyer’s estimation, petitioner Hearn is not
    retarded.          He has made good grades off and on throughout his aca-
    demic career.           He helped orchestrate a multi-stage crime ending in
    murder.         He has scored well above the retardation threshold on
    standardized tests.               Yet, on the thin assertion that he “may be re-
    tarded,” the majority has allowed him to succeed in a last-minute
    petition for stay, filed two days before his scheduled execution,
    and has done so in blatant violation of governing Fifth Circuit
    law.13
    The majority has seriously undermined this court’s capital
    habeas jurisprudence.                  In much the same way as a good advocate
    would do, the majority has painted a roadmap for virtually any
    capital habeas petitioner to obtain an indefinite delay in his ex-
    ecution by raising a frivolous, eleventh-hour claim of possible
    retardation.14           In the process, the majority has clouded the claims
    of those inmates who may be truly retarded and are properly en-
    titled to benefit from the Supreme Court’s recent attention to
    their plight.
    The majority certainly reaches a happy result for petitioner
    13
    I regret not having dissented from the initial order granting a stay of execution.
    14
    The majority opinion might thus be aptly described as “a triumph of lawyering from the
    bench.” Kennedy v. Lockyer, No. 01-55246, 
    2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 11585
    , at *47, *70-*71 (9th
    Cir. June 14, 2004) (O’Scannlain, J., dissenting).
    Hearn:       He receives an attorney and the resources to investigate a
    last-minute and totally meritless claim of mental retardation.
    Courts, however, typically encounter and analyze such things as
    precedents and statutory language. They do not merely plow precip-
    itously through binding caselaw, sidestep a Congressionally-enacted
    habeas regime, and declare that the equities mandate a different
    result.       Unfortunately, the majority here, acting with the best of
    intentions, has engaged in just such an enterprise.                              Accordingly,
    I respectfully dissent.
    I.
    The majority ignores precedential language from a binding
    opinion of this circuit.                  In McFarland v. Scott, 
    512 U.S. 849
    (1994), the Court offered a broad interpretation of the attorney
    appointment provision of 21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B)15 and granted the
    petitioner an attorney to investigate grounds for an initial peti-
    tion.       Hearn, by contrast, requests an attorney to investigate and
    develop a record for a successive petition.                        Congress, through the
    Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”),
    has    created      a   plain      distinction        between       those     two     types        of
    15
    “On its face, [§ 848(q)(4)(B)] grants indigent capital defendants a mandatory right to
    qualified legal counsel and related services ‘in any [federal] post conviction proceeding.’”
    
    McFarland, 512 U.S. at 854
    (footnote omitted) (brackets in original).
    21
    investigations.16
    Although McFarland’s use of broad language arguably could, on
    its own, prompt one to apply its “core concerns” to a successive
    setting, two binding Fifth Circuit opinions bar the majority’s
    application of § 848(q)(4)(B).                   One discusses the context in which
    McFarland operated:             “The McFarland Court was concerned only with
    that period of time between the habeas petitioner’s motion for the
    appointment of counsel and the filing of the initial petition.”
    Turner v. Johnson, 
    106 F.3d 1178
    , 1182 (5th Cir. 1997).                                 The other
    flatly forecloses the appointment of habeas counsel to prepare a
    successive petition:               “McFarland does not justify appointment of
    counsel or stay of execution for the preparation of a second
    federal habeas petition.”                 Kutzner v. Cockrell, 
    303 F.3d 333
    , 338
    (5th Cir. 2002) (citing 
    Turner, 106 F.3d at 1182
    ).
    A.
    The majority skips past Kutzner by making two flawed argu-
    ments.      First, it attempts to limit Kutzner largely to its facts.17
    16
    Compare 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (describing the procedures for filing a habeas petition on
    behalf of a “person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court”) with 28 U.S.C. §
    2244(b) (describing additional hurdles a party must satisfy if it presents a claim in a second or suc-
    cessive habeas petition).
    17
    “We read Kutzner as holding that the relief enunciated in McFarland does not apply to
    successive habeas petitioners who had been afforded sufficient opportunities to investigate the
    factual bases of their proposed claim.”
    22
    The majority also refers to the quoted language from Kutzner as a
    “narrow fact-based holding.”18                   The majority’s stated factual dif-
    ferences do not distinguish Kutzner from the instant case.
    One factual difference apparently involves the presence and
    competence of counsel.19 As discussed infra, Hearn cannot challenge
    the quality of his habeas counsel.                       See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(i).                 His
    counsel never abandoned him but merely determined that she could
    not help him because he had no further claims.                              Moreover, any al-
    leged abandonment or withdrawal occurred well after the time during
    which Hearn could have filed his petition.
    A second factual difference centers on the probability that
    the Kutzner petitioner could have known of the claim contained in
    the successive petition.20                 Although Hearn could not have known of
    18
    The majority also makes the surprising assertion that Kutzner contains language only
    “suggesting” that indigent capital prisoners are never entitled to the appointment of counsel to
    prepare a successive habeas petition” (emphasis added). There is nothing merely “suggestive”
    about Kutzner’s explicit holding that “McFarland does not justify appointment of counsel or stay
    of execution for the preparation of a second federal habeas petition.” 
    Kutzner, 303 F.3d at 338
    .
    Thus, Kutzner makes an emphatic statement, not just a hint, about the law, and the majority’s des-
    perate description of it as a “suggestion” is transparent.
    19
    “The [Kutzner] Court then reviewed the facts of Kutzner’s
    case, and found that he was equipped with competent counsel
    throughout the entire habeas process.”
    20
    
    Kutzner, 303 F.3d at 336
    (stating that Kutzner, who claimed that the government
    withheld forensics evidence, “knew of the [skin] scrapings, blot, and first hair at trial, on appeal,
    during his state habeas petition and during the federal habeas petition. He never requested its
    testing.”).
    23
    an Atkins21 claim during his trial or through portions of his direct
    appeal,22 he certainly knew of it when the Supreme Court decided
    Atkins.         Hearn could have acted on it within the one-year window
    that AEDPA grants to petitioners who pursue some newly-announced
    Constitutional claims that the Supreme Court applies retroac-
    tively.23
    Even if the specific circumstances of Kutzner have some dif-
    ferences with the facts of this case, the larger circumstances to
    which the quoted language refers are identical:                               “McFarland does
    not justify appointment of counsel or stay of execution for the
    preparation of a second federal habeas petition.”                               In both cases,
    party       has    requested        an    attorney       to    help    prepare      and    file   a
    successive habeas petition; in both, procedural default bars their
    consideration.
    B.
    The majority, however, parries the Kutzner language by invok-
    ing the mantra of “dictum” and concluding that Kutzner has no ef-
    21
    Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
    (2002).
    22
    The Atkins claim, of course, did not exist at that time.
    23
    28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(C). Additionally, as discussed infra, Hearn has offered
    insufficient evidence to suggest either the presence of mental retardation or the effect of the
    alleged retardation on his ability to press an Atkins claim during the one-year period.
    24
    fect on future panels facing the same situation.24 The majority in-
    correctly characterizes the Kutzner statement and its relationship
    to Kutzner’s holding.
    As part of its discussion of McFarland, this court in Kutzner
    provided alternative rationales for denying the petitioner’s re-
    quest for an attorney and a stay. Both justifications independent-
    ly blocked the petitioner in Kutzner, and one has direct applica-
    tion in the instant case.                   Neither reason, therefore, functions
    only as dictum.25
    The first justification looked to “[t]he core concern of Mc-
    FarlandSSthat an un-counseled prisoner would be required to ‘pro-
    ceed without counsel in order to obtain counsel and thus would ex-
    pose him to the substantial risk that his habeas claims never would
    be heard on the merits.’”               
    Kutzner, 303 F.3d at 338
    (quoting McFar-
    
    land, 512 U.S. at 856
    ).               The opinion noted that Kutzner’s attorney
    served adequately and helped prepare a petition pursuant to § 2254.
    
    Id. After stating
    that Kutzner’s “current” counsel had “represent-
    24
    “We find, after reading Kutzner in its proper context, that its limitation on McFarland . .
    . constitute[s] a mere ‘judicial comment made during the course of delivering a judicial opinion,
    but one that is unnecessary to the decision in the case and therefore not precedential.’” (quoting
    the definition of “obiter dictum” from BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1100 (7th ed. 1999)).
    25
    By way of contrast, a rationale explained by way of analogy to a situation different from
    that presented in the case at issue is dictum and not an alternative holding. E.g., Shepherd v. Int’l
    Paper Co., No. 03-20721, 
    2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 10592
    , at *11-*12 (5th Cir. May 28, 2004).
    25
    ed Kutzner for more than one year,” the opinion took a dramatic
    two-sentence turn.              Specifically, it moved from a fact-specific
    analysis of Kutzner’s claim to a more general analysis of McFarland
    and its impact on successive petitions in this circuit.                                The opin-
    ion quoted the aforementioned language from 
    Turner, 106 F.3d at 1178
    , and quickly applied it to all successive petitions:                                  “Thus,
    McFarland does not justify appointment of counsel or stay of exe-
    cution for the preparation of a second federal habeas petition.”
    
    Kutzner, 303 F.3d at 338
    .
    Either justification articulated in Kutzner would block that
    petitioner’s request for an attorney.                      “When confronting decisions
    of prior panels[,] we are bound by ‘not only the result but also
    those portions of the opinion necessary to that result.’” Gochicoa
    v. Johnson, 
    238 F.3d 278
    , 286 n.11 (5th Cir. 2000) (quoting Semin-
    ole Tribe v. Florida, 
    517 U.S. 44
    , 67 (1996)).                           Furthermore, “‘the
    principle of stare decisis directs us to adhere not only to the
    holdings of our prior cases, but also to their explications of the
    governing rules of law.’”                
    Id. (quoting County
    of Allegheny v. Am.
    Civil Liberties Union, 
    492 U.S. 573
    , 668 (1989) (Kennedy, J., con-
    curring in part and dissenting in part)).26
    26
    Chief Justice Rehnquist has defined “dicta” as a court’s consideration of “abstract and
    hypothetical situations not before it.” Connecticut v. Doehr, 
    501 U.S. 1
    , 30 (1991) (Rehnquist,
    C.J., concurring). See also BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1100 (7th ed. 1999) (defining “obiter
    dictum” as “A judicial comment . . . that is unnecessary to the decision in the case and therefore
    not precedential”).
    (continued...)
    26
    Either rationale advanced in Kutzner would control the outcome
    of that case.                Neither rationale considers “unnecessary” matters,
    because each addresses an element of the petitioner’s situation.
    The Kutnzer petitioner both (1) had adequate counsel for an extend-
    ed period of time and (2) wished to file a successive petition.
    The petitioner filed a request for an attorney as part of prepara-
    tion of a successive federal habeas petition.
    Thus, although the second reason for denying the petitioner’s
    request addresses a broader issue than does the fact-intensive
    reason, it produces the identical resolution.27                               Because “alterna-
    tive holdings are binding precedent,” Kutzner has bound subsequent
    panels with respect both to the “core concern” fact-intensive in-
    quiry and to the broader successive petition analysis. Williams v.
    Cain, 
    229 F.3d 468
    , 474 n.5 (5th Cir. 2000) (internal citations and
    quotations omitted).28
    26
    (...continued)
    27
    In essence, the Kutzner panel told the petitioner that (1) the facts do not line up with the
    core concerns of McFarland; and (2) even if your facts did align with McFarland, your general
    situationSSfiling a successive petitionSSlies outside of McFarland.
    28
    See also Kanida v. Gulf Coast Med. Pers. LP, 
    363 F.3d 568
    , 574 (5th Cir. 2004):
    . . .”[I]t is the firm rule of this circuit that one panel may not overrule the
    decisions of another.” United States v. Taylor, 
    933 F.2d 307
    , 313 (5th Cir. 1991)
    . . . . See, e.g., United States v. Adamson, 
    665 F.2d 649
    , 656 n.19 (5th Cir. 1982)
    (holding that decisions on issues that were fully presented and litigated, and likely
    to arise on retrial, are not dictum and are still binding precedent even if the de-
    cision was not necessary to support the ultimate ruling, such as an alternative
    (continued...)
    27
    C.
    The panel provides a third spurious reason to ignore Kutzner:
    “Further, we do not find such dictum persuasive because it contra-
    venes McFarland’s holding.”                  A subsequent panel cannot determine
    that a prior panel’s binding decision undermines or conflicts with
    a Supreme Court decision issued before that of the prior panel.
    Instead, we assume the prior panel took all pre-existing Supreme
    Court precedent into account.
    “Our rule of orderliness prevents one panel from overruling
    the decision of a prior panel.”                      Teague v. City of Flower Mound,
    
    173 F.3d 377
    , 383 (5th Cir. 1999).                     Rather, if a panel identifies
    28
    (...continued)
    holding).
    In its frantic attempt to escape the bounds of Kutzner, the majority, while acknowledging that
    alternative holdings are both binding on future panels, observes that in McClendon v. City of
    Columbia, 
    305 F.3d 314
    , 327 n.9 (5th Cir. 2002) (en banc), cert. denied, 
    537 U.S. 1232
    (2003),
    the court warned that in qualified immunity cases, panels should not routinely announce
    alternative holdings. From that, the majority concludes that we should not infer that the two
    rationales in Kutzner are both holdings. The obvious flaw in that theory is that Kutzner was
    decided before McClendon, so the Kutzner panel could not possibly have known about the
    warning in McClendon when it issued its alternative holdings.
    The majority also announces, out of whole cloth, that under McClendon it is “improper
    for this Court to infer alternative rationales or holdings where ones are not clearly expressed.” As
    the majority admits, however, McClendon was addressing only the peculiar methodology used in
    qualified immunity cases, see Siegert v. Gilley, 
    500 U.S. 226
    , 232-34 (1991), so footnote 9 of
    McClendon does not apply here. Outside the context of qualified immunity, no opinion of this
    court has ever suggested that alternative holdings are improper. The majority’s bold assertion to
    the contrary is handy for it to use in its attack on Kutzner but finds no support in our
    jurisprudence.
    28
    a purported conflict, it must acknowledge the binding circuit opin-
    ion and recommend taking the matter to the en banc court.                                Because
    the Kutzner language is a binding holding, not dictum, the majori-
    ty, remarkably, has attempted to hurdle our regular procedures for
    reconciling allegedly conflicting or important caselaw.                                   FED. R.
    APP. P. 35(a).29          Such nimble methodology is easy and convenient,
    and it may turn out to be effective advocacy, but it is not right.
    D.
    Curiously, despite the majority’s desire to distinguish the
    facts and to dismiss the language of Kutzner, it cites that very
    opinion in support of a broader point regarding the “core concern
    of McFarland” (quoting 
    Kutzner, 303 F.3d at 338
    ).                               The quotation
    serves little purpose but to parrot language from McFarland.                                     The
    citation of an opinion that the majority has otherwise disregarded
    factually and doctrinally suggests that the majority cares what the
    prior panel stated only when it suits the majority’s general out-
    look. Apparently, the line between precedential authority and dic-
    tum lies in the eye of the majority.
    Consequently, McFarland does not stretch as far as the major-
    ity would like.          Kutzner cabins McFarland in this circuit and                            di-
    29
    “An en banc hearing or rehearing is not favored and ordinarily will not be ordered
    unless: (1) en banc consideration is necessary to secure or maintain uniformity of the court's
    decisions; or (2) the proceeding involves a question of exceptional importance.”
    29
    rectly forecloses the application of § 848(q)(4)(B) to a successive
    petition.   Hearn is not entitled to      the appointment of an attorney
    to investigate and prepare a successive petition.
    II.
    Even if Kutzner did not apply, and even if § 848(q)(4)(B) al-
    lowed Hearn to request an attorney to prepare a successive habeas
    petition, Hearn faces another problem: on-point statutory language
    that blocks any habeas relief.
    A 1-year period of limitation shall apply to an ap-
    plication for a writ of habeas corpus by a person in cus-
    tody pursuant to the judgment of a State court. The lim-
    itation period shall run from the latest of . . . the
    date on which the constitutional right asserted was ini-
    tially recognized by the Supreme Court, if the right has
    been newly recognized by the Supreme Court and made re-
    troactively applicable to cases on collateral review[.]
    28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(C).       Both Hearn and his purported Atkins
    claim fit the statute’s requirements.
    Although   the   majority    makes    the   broad   statement   that
    § 848(q)(4)(B) and (8) “grant indigent capital prisoners a manda-
    tory right to qualified legal counsel . . . in all federal post-
    conviction proceedings,” § 848(q)(8) limits that right to “avail-
    able judicial proceedings” (emphasis added).          Section 848(q)(8)
    states only that an attorney will represent the defendant through
    “every subsequent stage of available judicial proceedings” (empha-
    sis added).     Though a petitioner theoretically has any motion
    30
    available to him, some motions do not articulate cognizable claims
    and have no chance of success.30                     For example, “neither McFarland
    nor § 848(q)(4)(B) requires appointment of counsel for the wholly
    futile enterprise of addressing the merits of a time-barred habeas
    petition.”          Cantu-Tzin v. Johnson, 
    162 F.3d 295
    , 296 (5th Cir.
    1998).
    The majority concedes that the one-year period has passed and
    that Hearn cannot file a successive writ based on Atkins.31                              The ma-
    jority, however, applies the unusual device of equitable tolling to
    allow       Hearn    “sufficient        time     to    prepare       an    application         for
    § 2244(b)(3)(A) authority.”                 Although courts may equitably toll a
    statute of limitations under AEDPA, a court cannot take such action
    lightly.       Rather, as the majority admits, “[e]quitable tolling [is
    permitted[ ‘in rare and exceptional circumstances.’”32
    The majority cites a number of inadequate reasons to toll lim-
    itations.       Two of those reasonsSSHearn’s alleged abandonment at the
    hands of his counsel and his showing of a “colorable” claim of men-
    30
    See, e.g., Washington v. Alaimo, 
    934 F. Supp. 1395
    (S.D. Ga. 1996) (discussing
    whether to impose rule 11 sanctions in response to an inmate’s self-titled “Motion To Kiss My
    Ass”).
    31
    Contrary to the claim made in the concurrence, I do not take issue with the notion that
    “every person on death row with no lawyer but with colorable claims of retardation would be
    entitled to a lawyer.” Hearn’s problem is that he (1) had a capable lawyer for many months and
    (2) began proceedings for an out of time, successive petition and has presented hardly a shred of
    evidence to suggest that his claim is anything more than frivolous.
    32
    United States v. Riggs, 
    314 F.3d 796
    , 799 (5th Cir. 1999) (emphasis added) (quoting
    Davis v. Johnson, 
    158 F.3d 806
    , 811 (5th Cir. 1998)).
    31
    tal retardationSSoffer nothing rare or exceptional to warrant the
    temporary invalidation of a carefully-drafted habeas regime.33
    A.
    Although we have applied equitable tolling on behalf of defen-
    dants as a result of attorney misbehavior, we have granted tolling
    only in very specific situations involving egregious and deceptive
    behaviorSSfor example, where a petitioner alleged that his attorney
    actively misled him into believing that the attorney filed a timely
    § 2255 petition, United States v. Wynn, 
    292 F.3d 226
    , 230 (5th Cir.
    2002).34     “Equitable tolling applies principally when the plaintiff
    is actively misled by the defendant . . . or is prevented in some
    33
    The majority also discusses the Texas “two forum” rule of comity, under which a
    “petitioner must decide which forum he will proceed in, because this Court will not, and a trial
    court in this State should not, consider a petitioner's application so long as the federal courts
    retain jurisdiction of the same matter.” Ex parte Green, 
    548 S.W.2d 914
    , 916 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1977). Texas courts have rarely applied the rule, and it was recently amended so that state courts
    could entertain a petitioner’s Atkins claim while that same petitioner had a federal habeas writ
    pending. Ex parte Soffar, No. 29,980-02, 2004 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200, at *9 (Tex. Crim.
    App. Feb. 11, 2004).
    Hearn did not investigate his possible Atkins claim while his federal claim worked its way
    through the Fifth Circuit and the Supreme Court. He also did not even attempt to file anything in
    state court to challenge the traditional application of the rule. Even if the two forum rule
    prevented Hearn from filing his Atkins claim, the factors discussed infraSSespecially the absolute
    lack of any evidence to support Hearn’s retardation claimSSrender equitable tolling entirely
    inappropriate.
    34
    “We agree with the district court that Wynn's allegation that he was deceived by his
    attorney into believing that a timely § 2255 motion had been filed on his behalf presents a ‘rare
    and extraordinary circumstance’ beyond petitioner’s control that could warrant equitable tolling
    of the statute of limitations.” 
    Wynn, 292 F.3d at 230
    .
    32
    extraordinary way from asserting his rights.”                          Coleman v. Johnson,
    
    184 F.3d 398
    , 402 (5th Cir. 1999)
    Hearn has not alleged that Jan Hemphill, his appointed habeas
    counsel, engaged in any kind of deceit, and the record does not re-
    motely support any such contention.                      Rather, any conceivable lack
    of attention by Hemphill did not affect the timeliness or legiti-
    macy of Hearn’s possible Atkins claim.                          Hemphill did not “with-
    dr[a]w her representation of Hearn” until well after the one-year
    statute of limitations had ended. Although Hemphill could have in-
    vestigated a possible Atkins claim while she awaited the decisions
    of this court and the Supreme Court, she chose not to do so.
    Hemphill provides a simple reason for her inaction:                                “During
    the time I represented Mr. Hearn I did not believe him to be men-
    tally retarded.           This is based on my dealings with him and in rep-
    resenting him.”35           Importantly, Hearn has not alleged, and cannot
    allege, that his counsel offered deficient performance during the
    time in which he could have raised an Atkins claim.36
    Although the majority flatly states that “Upon the denial of
    his initial federal habeas petition, Jan Hemphill[, Hearn’s court-
    35
    Hemphill subsequently moderated her statement in a declaration given on March 10,
    2004: “At the time, I did not consider mental retardation one way or the other.” Both statements
    show, at the least, that the possibility that Hearn is retarded never entered Hemphill’s mind.
    36
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(i) (“The ineffectiveness or incompetence of counsel during Federal or
    State collateral post-conviction proceedings shall not be a ground for relief in a proceeding arising
    under section 2254.”).
    33
    appointed habeas counsel,] withdrew from her representation of
    Hearn[,]” it does not inform the reader of Hemphill’s specific
    conduct in representing Hearn.                    After sending her certiorari peti-
    tion to the Supreme Court, Hemphill sent a letter to Hearn inform-
    ing him that “[f]or all practical purposes, this is the last ser-
    vice I can give you as my client.”                     She also told him to “let [her]
    know” if she could answer any questions he might have.                             When Hearn
    contacted Hemphill to file more appeals, Hemphill “told him [she]
    was not aware of any claims that he could raise in a successive
    petitions [sic] and that if he wanted to file other appeals, he
    should obtain other counsel.”
    Consequently, Hemphill did not “withdraw from her representa-
    tion of” Hearn in any meaningful sense.                         She filed every claim and
    pursued every ground37 of appeal that she considered valid.                             When
    asked about other claimsSSwhich may or may not have included an
    Atkins claimSSshe did not walk away and refuse to talk to Hearn,
    but instead told him merely that she did not see any other valid
    grounds of habeas relief. The majority’s allegations and claims of
    attorney failure function as another means of considering the “in-
    effectiveness or incompetence of counsel during Federal or State
    collateral post-conviction proceedings.”                             28 U.S.C. § 2254(i).
    AEDPA, however, proscribes such a consideration.
    Moreover, assuming arguendo that Hemphill’s behavior is ques-
    37
    Hemphill’s initial habeas petition listed nineteen grounds for relief.
    34
    tionable, any inadequate service on her part occurred after the
    time in which Hearn could have pursued his Atkins claim.                                    The Su-
    preme Court decided Atkins in June 2002.                           Hemphill sent her final
    letter to Hearn fifteen months laterSSin September 2003.                                 Had Hemp-
    hill not “withdrawn” her representation of Hearn, his alleged evi-
    dence of retardation would not have given him the chance to file an
    Atkins claim beyond the one-year statute of limitations.38                                     Thus,
    the majority has taken Hemphill’s judgment that Hearn had no other
    valid       claimsSSsomething           a   petitioner         may     not    challenge        under
    AEDPASSand used it to provide Hearn with an opportunity he would
    not otherwise have had to pursue an out-of-time, and totally frivo-
    lous, claim of mental retardation.39
    38
    I should also note that in its apparent rush to grant Harris relief, the majority has unfairly
    besmirched Ms. Hemphill’s reputation as a competent attorney. Hemphill filed a thorough and
    reasonable initial habeas petition that contained nineteen separate grounds for relief. Contrary to
    the majority’s cheap implication, Hemphill did not pass her time by eating crayons and blowing
    bubbles at the ceiling. The majority should not allow its zeal in trying to establish a point to be
    expressed at the unfair expense of a diligent attorney.
    39
    As part of equitable tolling, we have looked to the incentives such a grant may create.
    Larry v. Dretke, 
    361 F.3d 890
    , 898 (5th Cir. 2004) (“Finally, to grant equitable tolling in these
    kinds of situations would invite the premature filing of state habeas petitions[.] This would allow
    applicants to circumvent the exhaustion requirement and would undermine the system of comity
    established by federal law.”). Under the majority’s rule, an attorney’s purported “withdrawal”
    gives life to claims otherwise procedurally barred. Such a rule certainly could invite some less-
    than-scrupulous parties to manipulate the majority’s good intentions and to withdraw so as to
    resurrect defaulted claims.
    35
    B.
    As part of its weighing of the equities, the majority finds
    that Hearn has offered sufficient evidence to present “a colorable
    claim of mental retardation sufficient to justify the appointment
    of counsel[.]”          Hearn’s proffered evidence does not remotely sup-
    port such a conclusion.
    In reaching its result, the majority makes two contradictory
    statements.         First, it quotes Weeks v. Jones, 
    100 F.3d 124
    , 127
    (11th Cir. 1996), to assert that “a substantive, merits assessment
    of the petition is irrelevant to the appointment of counsel.”40 The
    sentence and accompanying footnote that follow the Weeks citation,
    however, indicate that a petitioner has to offer some arguable evi-
    dence to support an Atkins claim.
    The majority correctly understands that AEDPA is meant “to
    curb the vast number of habeas filings in the federal courts.”                  It
    also rightly observes that it should “withhold § 848(q)(4)(B) coun-
    sel for certification proceedings absent some colorable showing by
    the prisoner that he is, in fact, entitled to habeas relief.”                  
    Id. Something “colorable”
    “appear[s] to be true, valid, or right.”
    BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (7th ed. 1999).               As shown, infra, Hearn has of-
    fered no evidence that satisfies the “colorable claim” standard.
    The majority has fashioned a new evidentiary standard, then
    40
    See also Barnard v. Collins, 
    13 F.3d 871
    , 879 (5th Cir. 1994).
    36
    has craftily viewed Hearn’s evidence as satisfying that standard.
    The result, effectively, is that any petitionerSSregardless of the
    procedural defaults or the inadequacy of offered evidenceSSmay
    receive an attorney to pursue an Atkins claim.                             He needs only to
    file a petition containing the magic words “mental retardation” and
    to include some evidence that he underachieved at some point early
    in life. In oral argument, Hearn’s counsel admitted that he wished
    for such a ruling from this court.
    Indeed, the panel majority has given counsel pretty much
    everything he has asked for. The majority describes the “colorable
    showing of mental retardation” standard as a “modest evidentiary
    threshold.” Indeed, if Hearn’s proffered “evidence” is deemed suf-
    ficient, the majority’s standard is no real threshold at all; the
    mere mention of slowness in school, or poor grades, triggers the
    right to a panoply of rights, including counsel and other assis-
    tance.
    The majority has attempted to moderate the effect of this rul-
    ing by creating the “colorable showing” requirement.                               The paucity
    of Hearn’s evidence, however, suggests that, in reality, almost
    every prisoner will meet that threshold.41
    In Texas, a party suffers from mental retardation if he sat-
    41
    Additionally, neither the majority nor the concurrence remotely addresses the fact that
    Hearn filed his request for an attorney a scant two days before his long-scheduled execution.
    Obviously if Hearn knew of his claim and believedSSbased on his anemic evidenceSSthat it was
    valid, he could have filed something weeks earlier.
    37
    isfies three requirements.42 First, he must exhibit “‘significantly
    subaverage general intellectual functioning’ (an IQ of about 70 or
    below)[.]”43        Secondly, he must have “‘related limitations in adap-
    tive functioning.”44            Finally, both the intelligence and adaptation
    problems must have manifested themselves before age eighteen.45
    1.
    Although the majority quotes these three requirements,46 it
    focuses almost entirely on the intelligence prong.                            The majority’s
    evidence, in summary, is this:                   Hearn performed poorly in school.
    He failed first grade, he regularly did not succeed in his classes,
    and he placed 174th out of 200 students in the tenth grade.                                    The
    majority does not note that Hearn regularly performed well in some
    classes.          In some semesters, he passed every course.47
    One might attribute some of Hearn’s worst grades to apparent
    42
    Hall v. State, No. 73,787, 2004 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 817, at *32 (Tex. Crim. App.
    May 5, 2004)
    43
    
    Id. (quoting Ex
    parte Briseno, No. 29,819-03, 2004 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 199,
    at *15 (Tex. Crim. App. Feb. 11, 2004)).
    44
    
    Id. 45 Id.
           46
    In truth, the majority ignores Hall’s threshold of sub-par intelligence by stating that a
    party with “an IQ of approximately 70 to 75 or below” satisfies the first prong. The person must
    show “an IQ of about 70 or below.” Hall, 2004 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 817, at *32.
    47
    In the spring of 1994, Hearn passed every class at Horizons Alternative School. In the
    spring of 1996, he passed every class but one.
    38
    zeroes on a number of final exams.                     The zeroes do not represent a
    calculated number grade but represent some sort of unexcused ab-
    sence.      The explanation of poor attendance would correlate with
    Hearn’s withdrawal from the tenth grade. The school district list-
    ed his reason for withdrawal as “non-attendance.”48
    Hearn offers nothing to suggest a need for further testing,
    beyond the opinion of a witness who submitted an affidavit in his
    behalf but whose lack of a Texas license prevents him from offering
    any expert testimony in a trial.49                   That evidence, on which the ma-
    jority heavily relies, is incompetent as a matter of law and should
    have been stricken.50
    That “expert” admits that “the results of the IQ testing . . .
    indicated an IQ above the cut-off typically associated with mental
    retardation” and cannot provide any reason to conduct further test-
    48
    Wanda Bell, who obtained custody of Hearn in 1995, testified in the punishment phase
    of the trial that Hearn “worked to a certain degree. I guess, you know, you get moody and you
    don’t want to do what the teachers tell you to do.” Bell also recounted that Hearn stopped
    attending school in the tenth grade: “I dropped them off [at school] that morning, and Yokamon
    didn’t come home that evening.” Hearn returned in January of the next year.
    49
    Although James Patton has authored a number of books and articles focusing on mental
    retardation, he cannot, for purposes of a Texas trial, diagnose someone as having mental
    retardation. TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 591.003(16) (defining “Person with mental
    retardation” as “a person determined by a physician or psychologist licensed in this state or certi-
    fied by the department to have subaverage general intellectual functioning with deficits in adaptive
    behavior”).
    50
    The majority chides me for relying cumulatively on website hearsay in pointing out that
    Hearn writes articulately. See infra. This is bizarre in light of the majority’s heavySSindeed,
    almost total reliance on testimony from an “expert” who is not even authorized to render profes-
    sional opinions in Texas.
    39
    ing other than the “gravity of the current situation (i.e., the im-
    portance of the decisions that have been made in regard to Mr.
    Hearn)[.]”           Essentially, Hearn’s expert would like Hearn to have
    further tests based not on evidence but on the seriousness of the
    capital sentence.              The expert advances a policy argument that lies
    outside our properly-understood and limited judicial role.51
    Furthermore, the one test52 Hearn has taken places his I.Q.
    at 82.         The majority emphasizes the variability inherent in the
    score and places Hearn’s I.Q. somewhere between 70 and 75.                                   Even if
    Hearn’s “real” I.Q. score lies at the remote low ends that the ma-
    jority has listed,53 such a score does not satisfy the threshold
    that Texas has adopted, namely, an I.Q. of 70 or below.                                 Hall, 2004
    Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 817, at *32.
    Some scattered evidence suggests that Hearn has, at the least,
    an adequate level of intelligence. He wrote a coherent and lengthy
    request for clemency to the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles:
    “My Execution date is set for March 4, 2004.                               And I am trying to
    51
    The concurrence makes the amazing statement that requiring a petitioner to shoulder the
    burden of offering sufficient evidence to justify equitable tolling is a “backwards” approach.
    Apparently, by that logic, offering an inadmissible statement from someone who offers no reason,
    beyond the gravity of the death sentence, to conduct further investigation places the burden on the
    state to disprove Hearn’s claims. That theory, in fact, stands the burden of proof on its head; the
    burden to obtain a stay is always on the petitioner, not the respondent.
    52
    Upon entering state custody, Hearn took the Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised
    (“WAIS-R”) Short-Form test, which serves a screening function to help determine whether an
    inmate warrants additional treatment or counseling.
    53
    Of course, Hearn’s “real” I.Q. could also lie at the high end of the purported variability.
    40
    get the help of you ladies and gentlemen in getting my sentence
    commuted to life.”           He submitted a long, personalized request for
    a pen pan via a web site.               In the request, he used complete sen-
    tences and told the reader he “enjoy[s] reading novels (horror,
    Western, Suspense) [and] doing drawings.”54
    Neither the majority nor Hearn has made an arguable showing
    that Hearn has the degree of sub-par intelligence associated with
    mental retardation.             Although he certainly did not achieve the
    greatest educational success, he did not languish in the public
    school system.        At times, he performed well; at other times, it ap-
    pears that he did not attend class with sufficient regularity to
    achieve a laudable score.              He had ample chance to provide greater
    details regarding his educational problems but has not presented
    any information beyond a list that includes some unimpressive
    grades.
    To hold that a few poor grades constitute a “colorable show-
    ing” of mental retardation gives no limiting principle and offers
    no guidance to district courts who will entertain similar claims.
    Undoubtedly, almost every individual sentenced to death will have
    shown, at some point in his life, some underachieving or deviant
    behavior.
    We have an obligation to set some sort of meaningful eviden-
    54
    Voices From Inside, http://www.alive-abolish-deathpenalty.org/-
    death_penalty/voices_tx_hearn.htm (visited June 8, 2004).
    41
    tiary threshold and to articulate fairly transparent criteria for
    satisfying that mark.               The majority’s decision to accept some bad
    grades as satisfactory evidence of sub-par intelligence does not
    meet that obligation and invites standardless review.55
    2.
    The majority also errs in deciding that Hearn has satisfied
    the second prong of the Texas definition of mental retardation.
    Though a party must prove all three prongs, the majority merely
    winks at the adaptive-functioning prong:56                        “H[earn] further cites
    the trial testimony of a family member to demonstrate his compro-
    mised social skills.”              The majority offers nothing else.                    With re-
    spect to the family member, an aunt57 of Hearn’s named Wanda Bell,
    the majority notes only that she “testified that he was a ‘fol-
    lower’ who tended to be ‘influenced by the wrong type of people,’
    and that when he left home at age 18, she was still ‘concerned
    [sic] about if he was being taken care of.’”
    55
    If slowness in school is enough to meet the requirements of McFarland, a large percent-
    age of death row inmates will be entitled to virtually automatic stays as a result of the majority’s
    action in this case. That may be an unintended result, but it is a very real one.
    56
    The majority does not even discuss the third prong. Hearn has not cited a specific or
    even general time when his alleged retardation began. He was, however, below the age of
    eighteen during the time during which evidence of his mental retardation allegedly appeared. If
    the school records satisfy the first prong of mental retardation, Hearn presumably will satisfy the
    third prong, as well.
    57
    Bell received permanent custody of Hearn beginning in 1995.
    42
    In making such a statement, Bell may well have described a
    large proportion of American teenagers. Although her testimony may
    reflect genuine concern regarding Hearn, it cannot possibly, on its
    own, reasonably lead to the conclusion that Hearn has problems with
    adaptive functioning. The majority’s reliance on Bell’s statement,
    however, conflicts with two other matters relating to her.   First,
    the family court that awarded permanent custody to Bell noted that,
    after Hearn stayed with Bell permanently, “[h]e followed all the
    rules and did quite well in school.” Hearn responded positively to
    a functional, stable home.
    Secondly, Bell’s testimony in the punishment phase of Hearn’s
    trial indicates that Hearn understood right from wrong, could suc-
    ceed when he applied himself, and possessed the ability to live on
    his own.   As part of her testimony, Bell stated that “[w]ell when
    [Hearn] applied hisself [sic].    HeSShe wasSShe’s good head on him
    and, you know, when you apply yourself to your studies, you do
    well.”   Bell responded “Yes” to the question “if he would work, he
    could do okay?”     Bell twice affirmed that Hearn “knew right from
    wrong” by age seventeen.    She noted that Hearn left her care when
    he turned eighteen and apparently took care of himself adequately
    during that time.
    Furthermore, the majority’s lone citation to Bell’s testimony
    is somewhat out of context.   Bell did not attribute Hearn’s desire
    to follow others to a mental defect, but instead to a desire to
    43
    compensate for his poor socioeconomic standing:     “It’s just like
    kids develop this when they’reSSsome kids, when they’re young.
    They’re not proud of the environment that they’re in.”     Bell did
    not suggest that Hearn possessed any kind of adaptive problem.
    Additionally, the facts of the crime suggest that Hearn func-
    tioned rather well with others.    He participated in the carjacking
    and shooting of an individual.    Testimony and evidence showed that
    he drove the victim’s car to an isolated area and shot the victim
    in the head multiple times.   He bragged of his exploits and pro-
    vided details of the killing to three others not associated in the
    crime.
    Hearn also understood that he needed to dispose of the evi-
    dence to avoid prosecution.   Two witnesses testified that he asked
    about where to locate a “chop shop” to dispose of the victim’s car.
    When the police questioned him, he provided a coherent but false
    explanation as to how his fingerprints appeared on the victim’s
    car’s steering wheel.   Hearn functioned well enough to kidnap a
    man, drive a stolen car, shoot a victim multiple times, brag about
    his exploits, and create an untruthful, exculpatory story.       If
    Hearn had not functioned so well, the victim would not have died.
    Thus, the majority’s lone citation to one statement from a relative
    cannot possibly satisfy the adaptive-functioning prong of mental
    retardation.
    44
    III.
    Thus, in its apparent zeal to grant Hearn an attorney and a
    stay of execution,58 the majority neglects and unpersuasively re-
    sponds to two significant problems that are fatal to its spirited
    position. First, it cannot factually distinguish, and cannot logi-
    cally dismiss as dictum, the binding language of Kutzner that
    forecloses       the    application        of    McFarland       to   successive           habeas
    petitions.
    Secondly, the one-year statute of limitations bars Hearn’s ap-
    plication.        The majority has apparently lowered the standard of
    “rare and exceptional” circumstances required to grant equitable
    tolling so that anyone may obtain an attorney, at any stage of lit-
    igation, by simply claiming mental retardation.                            Hearn, and the
    majority on his behalf, offer a dearth of evidence to suggest that
    Hearn has satisfied any of the three prongs of Texas’s definition
    of mental retardation.
    Without precedential basis, a supportive statute of limita-
    tions, or evidence justifying equitable tolling, the panel must re-
    ly on good intentions and an unreasonably generous reading of
    everything that Hearn has alleged and submitted.                              The majority
    opinion brings this panel squarely in conflict with binding prece-
    dent and does not assist district courts in considering the similar
    58
    Because Hearn should not be appointed an attorney, I likewise dissent from the
    majority’s stay of execution.
    45
    claims that will undoubtedly follow from this opinion.   I respect-
    fully dissent.
    46