Kelly Patrick Hartung appeals from a final judgment entered in the District Court 1 for the District of Minnesota denying his petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. For reversal Hartung argues that the district court erred in finding that (1) Hartung’s placement in a juvenile treatment center did not constitute an adjudication such that jeopardy would attach, thereby barring subsequent certification for adult prosecution; (2) Hartung waived any double jeopardy claims that might have arisen from his placement in the juvenile treatment center; and (3) the placement and waiver did not constitute an enforceable bargain barring subsequent adult prosecution. 2 For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court.
*1232 The relevant facts are as follows. On May 12, 1978, a petition was filed in the Hennepin County Juvenile Court (juvenile court) alleging that Hartung, then seventeen years of age, was involved in the commission of first degree murder. On that same date, the State of Minnesota (state) moved for an order referring Hartung for prosecution as an adult pursuant to Minn. Stat.Ann. § 260.125. 3 On October 10, 1978, after a referral hearing, the juvenile court granted the state’s motion. During the course of the hearing, the juvenile court suppressed an incriminating statement made by Hartung to the authorities after his arrest.
Subsequently, Hartung’s counsel filed a motion with the juvenile court requesting that the October 10 order of reference be stayed indefinitely for purposes of allowing Hartung to appeal the order and requesting that Hartung be placed in a juvenile correction treatment center during the pendency of the appeal. A hearing was held and on October 26, 1978, the juvenile court granted the motion on the following conditions:
(a) The child [Hartung] will accept and be accepted by Nexus [a community juvenile treatment center] . .. until released by the court as rehabilitated;
(b) The child waives his rights (a) to a speedy trial, (b) to claim this placement as a disposition in the event of subsequent referral to the adult system, and (c) accept the findings of a Morrissey-style hearing as to whether he has violated any of the terms of this stay.
Hartung v. Omodt, No. 4-81-331 (D.Minn. Nov. 18, 1981), Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, Exhibit C. On October 31, 1978, Hartung and his counsel accepted the conditions of the stay and both signed a form expressly waiving Hartung’s rights to a speedy trial and to claim that the stay order and his placement in Nexus constituted a disposition for double jeopardy purposes.
On appeal the Minnesota Supreme Court reversed and remanded the October 10th order of reference holding that the juvenile court had erred in (1) applying the wrong criteria in determining whether Hartung should be certified as an adult,
In re Welfare of K. P. H,
On remand the juvenile court conducted a supplementary reference hearing limited to the issue of Hartung’s present dangerousness and again certified Hartung for adult prosecution. Hartung appealed the second reference order to the Minnesota Supreme Court alleging that the juvenile court’s placement of him in Nexus as a condition of the stay of the October 10 reference order constituted a
de facto
adjudication and disposition causing jeopardy to attach, thereby barring subsequent prosecution as an adult.
4
The court rejected the arguments holding that Hartung had validly waived the double jeopardy claim,
In re Welfare of Hartung,
Hartung then filed the present petition for habeas corpus alleging that the juvenile court had implicitly made an adjudication
*1233
of juvenile delinquency in its order of October 26, 1978, as evidenced by the fact that he was to remain in the Nexus program “until released by the court as rehabilitated” and that such adjudication placed him in jeopardy and barred subsequent prosecution as an adult under
Breed v. Jones,
The district court rejected the arguments based on its findings that Hartung’s reference hearing, unlike the proceeding in Breed, was not an adjudicatory hearing to determine whether Hartung had committed the crime charged, but rather only determined the propriety of prosecuting Hartung as an adult. The district court noted that facts of Hartung’s alleged crime were considered at the reference hearing but also noted that, under Breed, states may, as a prerequisite to the transfer of a juvenile, require substantial evidence that the juvenile committed the offense charged so long as the showing is not made in an adjudicatory proceeding. Hartung v. Omodt, slip op. at 7. Alternatively, the district court found that even if jeopardy had attached, Hartung had waived his right to claim that the stay order and placement constituted a disposition such that jeopardy would attach.
On appeal Hartung argues that the district court erroneously distinguished Breed on the basis that the juvenile court in the present case did not make a formal statement of adjudication. Hartung again contends that the condition of the stay placing him in Nexus “until released by the court as rehabilitated” required, as a precondition, an adjudication that Hartung had committed delinquent acts, thereby barring subsequent prosecution as an adult under Breed.
There is no merit to this argument. In
Breed
the Supreme Court held that an individual is put in jeopardy at an adjudicatory hearing in juvenile court when “the object is to determine whether he has committed acts that violate a criminal law and whose potential consequences include both the stigma inherent in such a determination and the deprivation of liberty for many years.”
Subsequently, the juvenile court stayed the October 10 reference order and placed Hartung in the Nexus treatment program at Hartung’s request and the court agreed to do this only after Hartung expressly waived any claim that the stayed order and his placement in Nexus constituted a disposition for double jeopardy purposes. Hartung made a voluntary choice to appeal the October 10th order and to remain in a juvenile rather than an adult facility during the pendency of the appeal. Under these circumstances we conclude that jeopardy did not attach. “[T]he Double Jeopardy Clause, which guards against Government oppression, does not relieve a defendant from the consequences of his voluntary choice.”
United States v. Scott,
Hartung’s reliance on
Parojinog v. State,
Alternatively, we conclude that the express waiver signed by Hartung and his counsel was a valid waiver of the double jeopardy claim now raised. Hartung argues that the waiver was invalid because it was not voluntarily made under the reasoning in
Green v. United States,
There is no merit to this argument. Initially we note that we disagree with Hartung’s characterization of the choices available to him when he signed the waiver. Hartung faced being subjected to a first degree murder trial on October 10,1978, the date the juvenile court referred him for adult prosecution. The only way Hartung could avoid prosecution as an adult was to be successful on appeal. The choices available to Hartung when he waived his double jeopardy claim were to be incarcerated in an adult facility during the pendency of his appeal or execute the waiver and remain in a juvenile facility during the pendency of his appeal. Hartung’s choice of placement had no bearing on whether he would face adult prosecution. More importantly, under Minnesota law an order of reference is an appealable order and may be stayed by the reviewing court.
See
Minn.Stat.Ann. § 260.291;
In re Welfare of Sweats,
Hartung also stresses that the terms of the stay were not the terms he requested. However, even if this were true, Hartung still had the option of refusing the stay without jeopardizing his right to appeal or his ability to seek a stay from the Minnesota Supreme Court.
The final argument raised by Hartung in his petition for habeas corpus was that his waiver of the double jeopardy claim in exchange for the juvenile court’s stay of the order of reference constituted an enforceable bargain under which Hartung had the right to demand specific performance. The district court rejected the argument based on its findings that there was no enforceable agreement and, alternatively, assuming the existence of an enforceable agreement, it was breached by Hartung’s conviction for unauthorized use of an automobile. We agree with the district court.
Hartung’s basic contention throughout the habeas proceedings has been that he sought a stay and placement in a juvenile treatment center
pending appeal.
Hartung accepted the conditions of the stay on October 31, 1978, and did in fact appeal the reference order on November 2, 1978. On appeal the Minnesota Supreme Court held that the juvenile court erred in granting the stay.
In re Welfare of K. P. H.,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Diana E. Murphy, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota. The petition had been referred to the federal magistrate (Hon. Floyd E. Boline) for a report and recommendation. The magistrate resolved the allegations adversely to Hartung. The district court adopted the report and recommendation.
. Hartung also raised various due process claims relating to the voluntariness of a confession he made to authorities shortly after his arrest and to evidence concerning his conduct after the first reference hearing which was admitted at the second reference hearing. The district court dismissed those issues without prejudice based in part on consideration of federalism and comity.
On March 4, 1982, subsequent to the district court’s decision, Hartung pled guilty to murder in the second degree. The guilty plea bars Hartung’s challenges to the voluntariness of his confession,
McMann v. Richardson,
. Minn.Stat.Ann. § 260.125(2)(d), provides in relevant part: “[t]he juvenile court may order a reference only if .. . [t]he court finds that the child is not suitable to treatment or that the public safety is not served under the provisions of laws relating to juvenile courts.”
. Hartung also alleged that the juvenile court erred in considering his felony conviction for unauthorized use of an automobile on the issue of his present dangerousness. Hartung’s theory was that the juvenile court should have conducted a “reconstructed” reference hearing with the only new evidence admitted being his incriminating statement which was erroneously excluded from the first reference hearing. The Minnesota Supreme Court rejected this argument holding that the juvenile court properly admitted Hartung’s subsequent conduct into evidence.
In re Welfare of Hartung,
