Charles Jess Palmer appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2241 habe-as petition. We affirm the district court’s rejection of Palmer’s double jeopardy challenge to his second conviction. We remand Palmer’s double jeopardy challenge to his third trial and retain jurisdictiоn to consider the findings and conclusions made on remand.
This is a procedurally complex case. Although the complete history is not necessary to our decision, we believe we should explain the course of state and federal proceedings over the past eleven years. Nebraska has tried Palmer three times for the murder of a Grand Island coin dealer. Each time, a jury convicted Palmer of capital felony murder and judges sentenced him to death. The Nebraska Supreme Court reversed Palmer’s first conviction becаuse the trial court erroneously admitted the testimony of witnesses who had been hypnotized.
State v. Palmer,
After the Nebraska Supreme Court reversed Palmer’s second conviction in September 1983, Palmer filed a pro se motion in state court to dismiss the proceedings against him. Palmer asserted a third trial would violate the Double Jeopardy Clause because at his second trial the prosecutor and judge committed misconduct in offering and admitting the testimony of Palmer’s wife. Palmer contended that without his wife’s inadmissible testimony, the evidence was insufficient to convict him. In December 1983 the Nebraska trial court denied Palmer’s motion. On March 1,1984, Palmer filed this habeas action under 28 U.S.C. § 2241(c)(3) asserting “his second trial had subjected him, and his third trial also would subject him, to double jeopardy because the remaining evidence in
Palmer I
and
Palmer
// — the properly admitted evidence that remained after the erroneously admitted evidence had been thrown out — was legally insufficient to convict him.”
Palmer v. Grammer,
We remanded Palmer’s habeas case to the district court for further consideration on May 10, 1984. We believed the district court should reconsider the exhaustion question in light of a recent Supreme Court case,
Justices of Boston Municipal Court v. Lydon,
Palmer appealed the district court’s ruling on May 24, 1984, and we held the appeal in abeyance pending resolution of proceedings in Nebraska state courts. After a capital sentencing hearing, a panel of Nebraska judges sentenced Palmer to death. On December 29, 1986 the Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed Palmer’s third conviction and sentence.
Palmer III,
A properly exhausted and nonproeedurally barred claim by Palmer challenging the sufficiency of all the evidence in his first or second trial (or both) would constitute a cognizable double jeopardy claim.... We certainly do not decide, but only note that it is conceivable ... that the state did not muster enough *774 evidence in Palmer’s first or second trials even to submit its case to the jury, so that ... Palmer should not have been retried. It is because of this possible double jeopardy violation that we remand this case rather than affirm outright the decision of the [district [cjourt.
We recognize that any such amended petition must persuade the [djistrict [cjourt that Palmer has exhausted his state remedies. Because that issue is not properly before us, we express no opinion [on the issue]. If an amended petition is filed, it will be for the [djistrict [cjourt to determine whether Palmer has exhausted his state remedies (and, if he has not, whether there is a procedural bar) with respect to a double jeopаrdy claim based on the theory that the totality of the evidence at either his first or second trial (or both) was insufficient to warrant submission of the case to the jury.
Id. at 594-95 (citations omitted).
Palmer filed his amended petition on March 9, 1989, asserting his imprisonment before his third trial violated double jeopardy and due process for several reasons. Palmer contended the totality of the evidence at each of his first two trials was insufficient to convict him. Palmer asserted the district court should not consider his former wife’s testimony when reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence at his second trial because the testimony was obtained through judicial and prosecutorial misconduct. Palmer contended the judge and prosecutor knew Palmer’s wife’s testimony was inadmissible, but offered and admitted it anyway, knowing that Palmer could be retried if his conviction was reversed based on admission of his wife’s testimony. To develop the facts of Palmer’s misconduct claim, the magistrate judge originally granted Palmer’s request to depose the prosecutors and trial judge in Palmer’s second trial. After the State sought a protective order, however, the magistrаte judge cancelled the depositions. In deciding Palmer’s petition, the magistrate judge declined to consider Palmer's misconduct argument because the magistrate judge believed it was beyond our remand order and thus not properly before the district court. Reviewing all thе evidence in each of the first two trials, including the improperly admitted evidence, the magistrate judge concluded sufficient evidence supported Palmer’s first two convictions. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation and denied Palmer’s pеtition.
On appeal, the State asserts this entire action should be. dismissed because Palmer should be required to assert all his constitutional challenges to his third conviction in a single habeas action or be precluded from raising the additional claims in a later petition. We disagree.
It is well established that federal district courts can entertain pretrial habeas petitions in which the petitioner asserts an impending state trial’ violates the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Lydon,
Contrary to the State’s assertion, we believe Palmer can raise constitutional challenges to his third conviction and sеntence in a later habeas petition. In the habeas petition before us, Palmer did not (and could not) challenge the legality of the third conviction or resulting sentence be
*775
cause the third trial had not yet occurred. Because claims arising from Palmer’s third trial were unavailable when he filed this habeas petition, a new petition raising these claims will not abuse the writ.
See Olds v. Armontrout,
We turn to Palmer’s double jeopardy challenge to his third trial. The district court concluded the totality of the evidence at the second trial, including the testimony of Palmer’s wife, was sufficient to convict him. The district court did not consider whether it should exclude the testimоny of Palmer’s wife based on Palmer’s misconduct claim because the court believed it was beyond the scope of our remand order. On appeal, Palmer does not argue the totality of the evidence was insufficient to convict him. Instead, Palmer asserts the district сourt should have considered his misconduct claim and conducted an evidentiary, hearing to explore the underlying facts.
In our view, Palmer’s misconduct argument is an integral part of his sufficiency argument. Palmer relies on dicta in
Lock-hart
suggesting prosecutorial misconduct in the submission of evidence may be an exception to
Lockhart’s,
rule that courts must include erroneously admitted evidence when reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence.
See
Because Palmer’s misconduct claim is part of his sufficiency argument, it is compatible with our earlier remand order,
Neither party raises arguments concerning the first trial. The district court .concluded the totality of the evidence at Palmer’s first trial was sufficient to convict him. Having reviewed the record, we agree. Thus, Palmer’s second trial did not violaté the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of Palmer’s double jeopardy challenge to his *776 second trial, but remand Palmer’s double jeopardy challenge to his third trial for further consideration. Because this habeas action is old, we ask the district court to certify its findings and conclusions to us as promptly as possible. This panel will retain jurisdiction to review the district court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.
