WIENER, Circuit Judge:
The opinion in this case filed on June 15, 2009, is withdrawn and the following opinion is substituted therefor.
Petitioner Humberto Leal Garcia (“Leal”) appeals from the district court’s finding that it was without jurisdiction to consider his second petition for habeas corpus relief because Leal failed to first seek authorization from this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244. Leal contends that because his petition is not successive within the meaning of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), he was not required to obtain authorization and the district court had jurisdiction to hear his petition. We agree, but we nevertheless affirm the dismissal on the basis of the intervening Supreme Court decision in
Medellin v. Texas.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Leal was convicted of murder in a Texas court in 1995 for killing a 16-year-old girl during the course of an aggravated sexual assault. On a jury’s recommendation, Leal was sentenced to death. We assume the parties are well familiar with the facts of the case so we will not repeat them here;
it goes without saying that the details of the crime are graphic and brutal.
Procedural History
This is Leal’s second attempt at federal habeas relief.
AEDPA requires that a petitioner filing a “second or successive” petition first obtain authorization to do so from the appropriate federal appellate court. Leal did not do so, claiming that his petition was not successive. The district court disagreed, holding that it was successive and that, because Leal failed to obtain authorization pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A), the court was -without jurisdiction to hear the petition. The district court dismissed Leal’s petition without prejudice. He now appeals the holding of no jurisdiction.
To assist in better understanding of this opinion, we set forth the timeline of Leal’s proceedings to date and critical events paralleling his petitions for relief:
March 2000
— Leal files his first federal habeas petition in the District Court for the Western District of Texas.
March 200k
— The International Court of Justice (the “ICJ”) issues the
Avena
decision.
October 200k
— The Western District of Texas denies habeas relief to Leal.
December 200k
— Leal seeks a Certificate of Appealability (“COA”) in this court to appeal denial of his first federal habeas petition.
February 2005
— President Bush signs a declaration ordering state compliance with the mandate of the
Avena
decision.
March 2005
— Leal requests that this court stay further proceedings while he returns to state court to litigate his
Ave-
%a-related claim, which motion we denied without further discussion.
October 2005
— This court denies Leal’s request for a COA.
November 2006
— Texas Court of Criminal Appeals holds that the
Avena
decision and the Bush declaration are not binding on the state of Texas.
March 7, 2007
— Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denies Leal’s pending
Avena
related state petition.
March lk, 2007
— Leal files this, his second, federal habeas petition.
December 2007
— -The District Court for the Western District of Texas dismisses Leal’s petition for lack of jurisdiction.
January 2008
— Leal files- timely notice of appeal.
March 2008
— Supreme Court decides
Medellin v. Texas,
affirming the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
A.
Standard of Review
In a petition for habeas corpus, we review
de novo
the district court’s determination that it was without jurisdiction to consider the petitioner’s claim.
B. The Vienna Convention and the Avena Decision
Before delving into the specifics of this case, we must outline the singular international and domestic legal background from which Leal’s petition arises. The Vienna Convention, to which the United States has been a signatory since 1969, requires member nations to permit detained foreign nationals access to their consular officers.
The United States also signed the Optional Protocol Concerning the Compulsory Settlement of Disputes to the Vienna Convention, which established the ICJ and made its decisions binding on the parties before it.
Alleging that the United States had violated the right to consular access estáb
lished in Article 36 of the Vienna Convention, Mexico took a dispute to the ICJ for review.
The case (the
“Avena
decision”) concerned 51 named Mexican citizens convicted of capital crimes and imprisoned in the United States; Leal was one of the 51 named individuals.
In 2004, the ICJ held that the United States had violated the Vienna Convention’s guarantee of consular access and must review the convictions and sentences of those individuals whose rights were so violated.
In its decision, the ICJ stated that procedural barriers — such as state law procedural default rules — to reviewing the cases of the 51 individuals should be suspended to permit review.
To obtain state compliance with the ICJ’s edict, President George W. Bush then issued a memorandum (the “Bush declaration”) in February 2005, ordering states to review the cases identified in the
Avena
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WIENER, Circuit Judge:
The opinion in this case filed on June 15, 2009, is withdrawn and the following opinion is substituted therefor.
Petitioner Humberto Leal Garcia (“Leal”) appeals from the district court’s finding that it was without jurisdiction to consider his second petition for habeas corpus relief because Leal failed to first seek authorization from this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244. Leal contends that because his petition is not successive within the meaning of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), he was not required to obtain authorization and the district court had jurisdiction to hear his petition. We agree, but we nevertheless affirm the dismissal on the basis of the intervening Supreme Court decision in
Medellin v. Texas.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Leal was convicted of murder in a Texas court in 1995 for killing a 16-year-old girl during the course of an aggravated sexual assault. On a jury’s recommendation, Leal was sentenced to death. We assume the parties are well familiar with the facts of the case so we will not repeat them here;
it goes without saying that the details of the crime are graphic and brutal.
Procedural History
This is Leal’s second attempt at federal habeas relief.
AEDPA requires that a petitioner filing a “second or successive” petition first obtain authorization to do so from the appropriate federal appellate court. Leal did not do so, claiming that his petition was not successive. The district court disagreed, holding that it was successive and that, because Leal failed to obtain authorization pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A), the court was -without jurisdiction to hear the petition. The district court dismissed Leal’s petition without prejudice. He now appeals the holding of no jurisdiction.
To assist in better understanding of this opinion, we set forth the timeline of Leal’s proceedings to date and critical events paralleling his petitions for relief:
March 2000
— Leal files his first federal habeas petition in the District Court for the Western District of Texas.
March 200k
— The International Court of Justice (the “ICJ”) issues the
Avena
decision.
October 200k
— The Western District of Texas denies habeas relief to Leal.
December 200k
— Leal seeks a Certificate of Appealability (“COA”) in this court to appeal denial of his first federal habeas petition.
February 2005
— President Bush signs a declaration ordering state compliance with the mandate of the
Avena
decision.
March 2005
— Leal requests that this court stay further proceedings while he returns to state court to litigate his
Ave-
%a-related claim, which motion we denied without further discussion.
October 2005
— This court denies Leal’s request for a COA.
November 2006
— Texas Court of Criminal Appeals holds that the
Avena
decision and the Bush declaration are not binding on the state of Texas.
March 7, 2007
— Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denies Leal’s pending
Avena
related state petition.
March lk, 2007
— Leal files this, his second, federal habeas petition.
December 2007
— -The District Court for the Western District of Texas dismisses Leal’s petition for lack of jurisdiction.
January 2008
— Leal files- timely notice of appeal.
March 2008
— Supreme Court decides
Medellin v. Texas,
affirming the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
A.
Standard of Review
In a petition for habeas corpus, we review
de novo
the district court’s determination that it was without jurisdiction to consider the petitioner’s claim.
B. The Vienna Convention and the Avena Decision
Before delving into the specifics of this case, we must outline the singular international and domestic legal background from which Leal’s petition arises. The Vienna Convention, to which the United States has been a signatory since 1969, requires member nations to permit detained foreign nationals access to their consular officers.
The United States also signed the Optional Protocol Concerning the Compulsory Settlement of Disputes to the Vienna Convention, which established the ICJ and made its decisions binding on the parties before it.
Alleging that the United States had violated the right to consular access estáb
lished in Article 36 of the Vienna Convention, Mexico took a dispute to the ICJ for review.
The case (the
“Avena
decision”) concerned 51 named Mexican citizens convicted of capital crimes and imprisoned in the United States; Leal was one of the 51 named individuals.
In 2004, the ICJ held that the United States had violated the Vienna Convention’s guarantee of consular access and must review the convictions and sentences of those individuals whose rights were so violated.
In its decision, the ICJ stated that procedural barriers — such as state law procedural default rules — to reviewing the cases of the 51 individuals should be suspended to permit review.
To obtain state compliance with the ICJ’s edict, President George W. Bush then issued a memorandum (the “Bush declaration”) in February 2005, ordering states to review the cases identified in the
Avena
decision.
As a result of this series of events, Leal — like others of the 51 named individuals — filed a petition for habeas corpus under Texas law seeking the review outlined in the
Avena
decision. After the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied his petition, Leal filed his second habeas petition in the Western District of Texas seeking the state of Texas’s compliance with the
Avena
decision and the Bush declaration. A year after Leal filed his second federal petition, the Supreme Court, in
Medellín v. Texas,
considered the issue of Texas’s refusal to conduct a review pursuant to
Avena.
The Court held that although the ICJ’s
Avena
decision creates an international obligation binding on the United States, (1) the decision cannot automatically create enforceable domestic law,
and (2) the President, acting without legislative or constitutional authority, could not pre-empt state law to make it binding.
In short, the Court held that the several states are not bound to conduct the review ordered by the ICJ in the
Avena
decision. The Court then affirmed the Texas Court of Criminal Ap
peals’s rejection of Medellin’s successive habeas petition as an abuse of the writ under state law.
The claim on which Leal’s federal petition is based has been foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Medellín v. Texas.
We proceed with our analysis, however, because the issue before us is whether the district court properly determined that it was without jurisdiction, a question not mooted by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Medellin.
C. Applicability of § 224-i to Leal’s Petition
AEDPA requires a prisoner to obtain authorization from the federal appellate court in his circuit before he may file a “second or successive” petition for relief in federal district court.
Without such authorization, the otherwise-cognizant district court has no jurisdiction to entertain a successive § 2254 petition.
Leal asserts, however, that his petition is not successive because it is based on a claim that was not available to him at the time of his prior petition. If he is correct, the stringent requirements of § 2244 for obtaining authorization would not apply
Leal filed his first federal habeas petition in 2000, long before the
Avena
decision and the Bush declaration. In March 2004, when the ICJ decided
Avena,
Leal’s first petition was still pending; the District Court for the Western District of Texas did not deny him relief until seven months later. The State asserts that this gap between the
Avena
decision and the district court’s denial afforded Leal the opportunity and ample time to amend his first petition to include the claim on which he now bases this later petition. As such, according to the State, Leal’s A/rem-based claim was previously available and required, but did not merit, authorization from this court.
Leal counters that his claim did not arise until (1) the Bush declaration attempted to make the
Avena
decision binding on the states and (2) the Texas courts refused to afford review.
As a result, he insists, the claim on which this petition is based was not previously available to him and so, although it is numerically second, it is not “second or successive” within the meaning of AEDPA.
1. Second or Successive Petition
AEDPA was enacted in part to bring finality to state court judgments.
Section 2244 lays out the requirements for filing successive petitions, serving as gatekeeper by preventing the repeated filing of habeas petitions that attack the prisoner’s underlying conviction.
The statute does not define “second or successive,”
however, and we have made clear that a petition is not “second or successive” merely because it is numerically second.
In
In re Cain,
we defined a “second or successive” petition as one that “1) raises a claim challenging the petitioner’s conviction or sentence that was or could have been ■raised in an earlier petition; or 2) otherwise constitutes an abuse of the writ.”
Section 2244 specifies when a later-in-time petition will be heard. Despite its strictures, the case law clarifies that there is a category of petitions that, even though later in time, are outside the confines of § 2244 and will be heard because they are not “second or successive” within the meaning of AEDPA.
Leal relies on the
Cain
definition to assert that his petition falls into the exceptional category — that is, it is non-successive — because it is based on a claim unavailable to him at the time of his first habeas petition. According to Leal,
Cain’s
sole requirement for a permissible nonsuccessive petition is that the claim on which it was based had been unavailable at the time of a first petition. We agree with Leal that his petition is non-successive, but we cannot embrace the full scope of the rule he advocates. Broadly understood, such an expansive interpretation of
Cain
would run foul of the plain language of AEDPA and be incorrect. We must therefore consider the contours of
Cain.
2. Statutory and Jurisprudential Context
Cain
cannot be read in isolation, but must be considered in the context of AEDPA, the statute that it interprets.
The
Cain
definition of “successive” is broadly worded while AEDPA’s treatment of “successive” is narrow; and herein lies the logical flaw in Leal’s broadly stated understanding of
Cain
and the reason why we cannot simply apply
Cain
without further consideration. To read
Cain
as does Leal would require us to hold that a petition is non-successive if it rests on a rule of constitutional law decided after the petitioner’s first habeas proceeding because such a claim would not have been previously available. But § 2244(b) prohibits such a result. Newly available claims based on new rules of constitutional law (made retroactive by the Supreme Court) are
successive
under § 2244(b)(2)(A): Indeed, this is the reason why authorization is needed to obtain review of a successive petition. Leal’s view of
Cain
would permit an end-run around § 2244. The new rule of constitutional law would be non-successive because it was previously unavailable, so no authorization would be required. Were Leal correct, § 2244(b)(2) would be rendered surplusage.
A second petition based on newly discovered
evidence
presents a similar, although less pristine, example of the problem created by Leal’s proffered interpretation. Leal’s view of
Cain
would permit petitioners filing later habeas petitions to assert that, because the evidence was not previously discovered or discoverable, the claim was unavailable; therefore, the later petition is non-successive. Again, AEDPA forbids such a reading: Section 2244(b)(2)(B)(i) states that claims based on a
factual
predicate not previously discoverable are successive.
Cain
itself is not so broad as Leal contends; his argument ignores the context in which the decision’s definition of “successive” was provided. In
Cain,
we contrasted permissible successive petitions with those in which prisoners “repeatedly [attack] the validity of their convictions and
sentences.”
It is these repeated attacks, which often take on new forms as the legal landscape shifts, that are the evil against which AEDPA is directed and the counterpoint to the rule laid out in Cam.
If AEDPA is aimed at minimizing repeated attacks on an underlying judgment and, to that end, permits “second or successive” petitions to be heard only via § 2244, then the small subset of permissible non-successive petitions must fit within these boundaries. When we look to the jurisprudence we find that contrasting petitions typically deemed non-successive with those typically deemed successive illuminates this middle ground. Later habeas petitions attacking the same judgment that was attacked in a prior petition tend to be labeled successive and must meet the standards for authorization under § 2244.
In contrast, later habeas petitions attacking distinct judgments,
administration of an inmate’s sentence,
a defective habeas proceeding itself,
or some other species of legal error — when the error arises after the underlying conviction
— tend to be deemed non-successive.
In essence, if the purported defect existed, or the claim was ripe, at the time of the prior petition, the later petition is likely to be held successive even if the legal basis for the attack was not. If, however, the purported defect did not arise, or the claim did not ripen, until after the conclusion of the previous petition, the later petition based on that defect may be non-successive.
We need look no farther than
Cain
itself for illustration. We held that Cain’s peti
tion was non-successive because it attacked the administration of his sentence, not his underlying conviction. Cain contended that the prison board had deprived him of his good-time credit without due process of law.
The complained-of disciplinary proceeding by the prison board did not occur until after proceedings in Cain’s first habeas petition concluded.
We noted that not only could Cain’s challenge to those proceedings not have been included in Ms first habeas petition, but that the challenge was essentially independent of Cain’s underlying conviction.
As
Cain
illustrates, we may deem a later petition based on a newly available claim non-successive and outside the confínes of § 2244 if the defect that it attacks did not arise until after the prior habeas proceeding.
With the framework within which we determine whether a petition is successive or non-successive thus established, we now consider whether Leal’s second petition was successive or non-successive when filed in March 2007.
S. Application
The State claims that Leal could have amended his prior federal petition to include the Avena-based claim once the ICJ’s judgment was rendered in March 2004. At that point, Leal’s first petition had been pending for four years. There may be room for debate as to whether, while a petitioner is this far along in his initial petition and awaiting a decision, he should be required to add a freshly minted claim to it, but we are satisfied that in this case the State’s argument misses the mark.
Remember, Leal does not contend that
Avena
was immediately enforceable on the states;
he claims that it was the Bush declaration implementing the
Avena
decision and Texas’s refusal to comply with the presidential order that has denied him rightful review — and he filed his second federal petition one week after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied him relief.
As the Bush declaration was not issued until after Leal’s first peti
tion was denied,
the basis for his claim— Texas’s refusal to conduct the review of his conviction — did not occur until well after proceedings on his first petition had concluded.
As we have explained, when determining whether a later petition is nonsuccessive, we consider the defect that the later petition attacks and when that defect arose. Here, Leal does not rely on some novel legal basis to again attack his conviction, an undertaking we would likely deem successive. Rather, he alleges a defect that arose, he insists, after his conviction.
Although the ultimate goal of Leal’s petition is to obtain court review of his conviction, he is actually attacking the State’s failure to comply with the
Avena
decision as implemented by the Bush declaration. And, we will not require courts to divine a petitioner’s underlying ulterior motives. Texas did not deny Leal’s claim based on
Avena
and the Bush declaration until March 2007, well after the resolution of Leal’s first habeas petition. As a result, the
AvenafBvAa
declaration claim was not previously available to him, making Leal’s petition non-successive.
A
The Effect of
Medellin v. Texas
As it was non-successive, Leal’s second habeas petition did not require authorization, so it follows that the district court did ■ have jurisdiction. The legal ground has shifted once again, however, and although the district court was incorrect in finding that it was without jurisdiction, Leal will get no further. In the unusual posture of this ease, Leal once had a newly available claim, but no longer has it. As we have said, Leal’s petition attacked Texas’s refusal to comply with
Avena
and the Bush declaration, but that refusal can no longer serve as the basis for a petition for habeas corpus. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Medellín v. Texas,
has deprived the
Avena
decision and the Bush declaration of whatever legal force Leal might claim they ever had.
Leal cannot now argue that Texas was required to review his case because
Medellín v. Texas
foreclosed this contention by holding that neither the ICJ nor President Bush had authority to order the State to conduct such a review.
III. CONCLUSION
Leal’s second habeas petition was nonsuccessive, so it did not require authorization from us to be considered by the district court. Therefore, we reverse the district court’s holding that it lacked jurisdiction to consider Leal’s petition. That said, however, for the reasons last stated, we affirm the dismissal of his habeas petition, albeit with prejudice.
We also va
cate the district court’s determination based on its erroneous assumption of hypothetical jurisdiction.
AFFIRMED in part; VACATED in part.