Petitioner-appellant, Arlene Cruz, appeals from the denial of her petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court dismissed her petition for failure to exhaust state remedies. The issue on appeal is whether the district court properly dismissed Cruz's habeas petition on the ground that she did not fairly present her ineffective assistance of counsel claims to the state courts and that a remedy is available under the Illinois Post-Conviction Hearing Act. We affirm the decision of the district court.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On July 26, 1985, Cruz was convicted of aggravated battery of a minor child in the Circuit Court of Cook County. Cruz immediately appealed her conviction to the Appellate Court of Illinois contending, inter alia, 2 that she was denied the effective assistance of trial counsel when counsel failed:
(1) to call her as a witness at the suppression hearing to establish that her confession had been involuntary; and
(2) to move to quash her arrest as illegal and to suppress her confession as a product of that arrest.
Contemporaneous with her direct criminal appeal, Cruz filed a petition for post- *667 conviction relief alleging, inter alia, 3 that she was denied the effective assistance of trial counsel when counsel failed:
(1) to call her as a witness at the suppression hearing to establish that her confession had been involuntary; and
(2) to prepare adequately for the suppression hearing or for the trial which caused counsel to fail to move to suppress her confession as having been obtained in violation of the fourth amendment. 4
The trial court refused to rule on the petition for post-conviction relief pending the outcome of the direct appeal because the petition raised issues similar to those asserted in the direct appeal. The appellate court affirmed her conviction in
People v. Cruz,
Cruz then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 which is the subject of this appeal. In addition to the ineffective assistance of counsel claims Cruz raised in her direct appeal and post-conviction petition, she asserted in the habeas petition, as she had in the petitions for rehearing and for leave to appeal, that counsel’s performance prejudiced her in that she would not have testified at trial had the court suppressed her confession. Respondents moved to dismiss the habeas petition on the ground that Cruz had failed to exhaust state remedies. The district court granted the motion to dismiss on April 19, 1989. The district court concluded that “[determining whether Ms. Cruz’s attorney performed deficiently in preparing and conducting the suppression hearing and whether this alleged deficiency prejudiced Ms. Cruz by forcing her to testify to counter the statement she provided to [the] police require an evaluation of the circumstances which preceded the suppression hearing and events which occurred outside the trial. Ms. Cruz therefore could not have raised these issues in her direct appeal. Ms. Cruz therefore may still raise these issues in a state post-conviction petition.” Cruz appeals from this decision.
II. CASE LAW
A petition for a writ of habeas corpus must be dismissed if state remedies have not been exhausted as to any one of a petitioner’s federal claims.
Castille v. Peoples,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Cruz Has Not Fairly Presented Her Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims to the State Courts
As a preliminary matter, we note the difference between the ineffective assistance claims as stated in the brief on appeal and the post-conviction petition. 5 The emphasis of claim (2) as presented in the direct appeal is on counsel’s failure to make two specific motions at trial, that is, to move to -quash the arrest as illegal and to move to suppress Cruz’s confession as the product of an illegal arrest. The emphasis of claim (2) as presented in the post-conviction petition is on counsel’s failure to prepare for the suppression hearing and to prepare for trial which caused counsel to fail to move to quash the arrest as illegal and to move to suppress Cruz’s confession as the product of an illegal arrest. We do not think that these are equivalent for two reasons. First, claim (2) in the direct appeal addresses only counsel’s deficiencies in conducting the trial; whereas, the post-conviction petition also addresses counsel’s deficiencies at the suppression hearing. Nor do we think that the failure to prepare for the suppression hearing is subsumed in the statement of claim (1) on direct appeal which solely addresses counsel's failure to take a specific action at the suppression hearing, that is, to call Cruz as a witness. Second, the direct appeal addresses counsel’s failure to make specific motions at trial; whereas, the post-conviction petition addresses the failure to prepare for trial which caused counsel to fail to make these motions at trial.
Given our conclusion that the claims as presented in the direct appeal and the post-conviction petition are not equivalent, the first issue we must consider is whether appending the post-conviction petition to the brief on direct appeal was sufficient to fairly present the failure to prepare claim to the state appellate court. Cruz argues that it was. We disagree.
The opinion of the appellate court does not address the failure to prepare claim, nor could it. The record before the court was not sufficiently developed to enable the court to consider this claim. While the appeal was pending, Cruz did attempt to obtain an evidentiary hearing in the trial court so to develop the record; however, the trial court refused to act until the appellate court ruled. It does not appear that Cruz renewed the request for an evidentia-ry hearing once the appellate court ruled. Despite Cruz’s effort, without the necessary facts on record, we cannot say that the failure to prepare claim was “fairly presented” to the appellate court.
Even if, as a general matter, appending the post-conviction petition to the appellate brief would be sufficient to fairly present the failure to prepare claim, it is insufficient here because Cruz’s habeas petition contained a claim that she did not present, and could not have presented, in the post-conviction petition since it was filed contemporaneously with her direct appeal. It was not until her petition for rehearing, in reaction to the appellate court’s conclusion that her testimony was incredible, that Cruz began to argue that she was prejudiced by counsel’s ineffectiveness in that she would not have testified had her confession been suppressed. Cruz contends that her petition for rehearing and appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court provided the state courts with an opportunity to consider her claim that counsel failed to prepare and that she was preju *669 diced by counsel’s ineffectiveness. (We will refer to these contentions as Cruz’s “expanded” claim.) Thus, we must decide whether the expanded claim was fairly presented by Cruz’s petitioning for rehearing or appealing to the Illinois Supreme Court. The appellate court denied the petition for rehearing, and the Illinois Supreme Court denied her leave to appeal. Cruz argues that although “no proper review ever was had on the issue,” the state courts had a full opportunity to consider her claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Submitting a new claim to a state’s highest court on discretionary review does not constitute a fair presentation.
Castille,
489 U.S. at-,
Our analysis thus far has focused on whether the expanded claim had been actually presented to the state courts. However, we must also consider whether the claim
could
have been raised on direct appeal.
Perry v. Fairman,
The latest version of Cruz’s claim in the habeas petition is materially different than that presented to the state courts. The exhaustion requirement is not satisfied if a petitioner presents new legal theories or new factual allegations in federal court which cast her claim in a significantly different light.
Domaingue v. Butterworth,
B. A Meaningful and Presently Available State Remedy Exists through Which Petitioner Could Present Her Expanded Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claims
Even though Cruz’s claim is unex-hausted, we may nonetheless consider it if
*670
there is no meaningful and presently available state court remedy. Cruz argues that the Illinois Post-Conviction Hearing Act is not an effective remedy in circumstances where the Illinois courts strictly apply the doctrine of res judicata or waiver in post-conviction petitions. Because an issue raised on direct appeal from a conviction is res judicata in a subsequent Illinois post-conviction petition, ■
United States ex rel. Williams v. Brantley,
There is precedent indicating that Illinois courts will treat the various alleged errors of counsel as separate and distinct claims.
See Gornick,
In addition, Cruz overlooks the “fundamental fairness” exception to the res judi-cata rule which the Illinois courts have developed. The exception is a narrow one, and this court has held that a habeas petition should be dismissed for failure to exhaust “only if there is direct precedent indicating that under the particular circumstances of a prisoner’s case the [res judica-ta or] waiver doctrine will be relaxed.”
Brantley,
While relief is generally available in this context through a post-conviction proceeding, petitioner has already filed one petition for post-conviction relief. The status of this petition is important to our decision.
See Gray,
We do not believe that requiring Cruz to exhaust her state remedies is an exercise in futility. We are cognizant of the procedural “merry-go-round” upon which some state habeas petitioners have been forced needlessly to ride through the state and federal systems; however, competing with state habeas petitioners’ interest in an expeditious resolution of their petitions are the systemic interests in avoiding federal-state conflicts and comity.
See Perry,
IV. CONCLUSION
Because Cruz has not exhausted state remedies on her ineffective assistance claim to the extent she alleges that counsel failed to prepare for the suppression hearing and for trial, and because a meaningful state remedy is apparently available, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of petitioner’s unexhausted claim.
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. Cruz also argued in her direct appeal that she was denied procedural due process when the trial court excluded her fiance’s testimony as irrelevant at the hearing on the motion to suppress her confession and that her fourth, fifth and fourteenth amendment rights were violated when her confession was admitted into evidence.
. Cruz also alleged in her post-conviction petition that the police seized her without a warrant or probable cause in violation of her fourth amendment rights, interrogated and pressured her into making an incriminating statement which was improperly admitted into evidence.
. Cruz also alleged that counsel was ineffective in failing to make the court aware of her cooperation with the child welfare agencies. Cruz did not renew this allegation in her habeas petition, and thus we need not consider it.
. We note that claim (1) is the same in both the direct appeal and in the post-conviction petition. There is no question of exhaustion as to this ineffective assistance claim.
. Cruz contends that the state’s assertion of res judicata in the state collateral proceedings and its assertion of nonexhaustion in federal court are inconsistent positions. Cruz suggests that it would be a miscarriage of justice to require her to return to state court where, as the state admitted at oral argument that, "we could argue, 'yes, there is a remedy available in the state courts’; then again, we could say conceivably, ‘no, there is no remedy,’ but that is not for us to decide now.” This, Cruz contends, would force her onto the procedural merry-go-round.
The positions the state has taken are not necessarily inconsistent. It was appropriate to seek to suspend decision on the post-conviction petition since any issues which were raised or which could have been raised would be res judicata in the post-conviction hearing. However, because Cruz expanded her ineffective assistance claims in federal court, it was appropriate for the state to argue nonexhaustion. Nor will it be duplicitous for the state to argue res judicata as to the ineffective assistance claims that were presented on direct appeal once back in state court.
