This mаtter comes before us on a denial of a writ of habeas corpus to a Nebraska state prisoner by the federal district court.
The evidence conflicted on the issue of entrapment (
We deеm it best that we should not pass on this constitutional issue until the petitioner has fully exhausted his state remedy on his claim that the affidavit is not truthful. If petitioner is successful in proving this claim the state court may well view the attack on the warrant differently. Although we do not encоurage piecemeal litigation, this court continues to adhere to the policy that the state courts are the proper and logical forums for state prisoners to assert their claims in the first instance. See Blackwell, v. Wolff,
The judgment is vacatеd and the cause remanded with directions to the district court to dismiss the petition for failure to exhaust state remedy.
Notes
. The warrant recites :
“That the said Lаrry LeDent is a resident at the above address and is the son of the registered title holder; that a reliable informant related to the investigative authorities that the said Larry LeDent has offered to the said reliable informant certain narcotic drugs for resale; that on Friday, November 1, 1968, the said Larry LeDent told the said reliable informant that he had fifty (50) lids of marijuana available and also a homemade brick of grass available for resale; and that he knows the reliable informant knows that the narcotics are kept at the residence at 13450 Frederick Street, Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska.”
The affidavit contains the above recitation along with an added statement:
“The reliable informant has given your Affiant other information that coincides with information received from other reliable sources. Said reliable informant’s information has been verified and that information received has been thе truth. The said Larry LeDent is now charged under an information charging him with possession of depressant or stimulant drugs in a separate incident.”
. It might be urged that this is not a new ground since the state district court and the Nebraska Supreme Court did have the opportunity to pass on this issue. Petitioner raisеd this issue in his motion for *1003 new trial in the state court. The trial court did not specifically rule on it. The record indicates that the trial cоurt felt that the issue was not timely raised to be heard on a motion for new trial. Defendant’s counsel had not raised the issue in the earlier hearing on the motion to suppress. In overruling the motion for new trial the trial court indicated that the defendant liad the burden of proof in attacking the search warrant. It may be that the defendant’s counsel in reasoning that the state had the burden of prоving the truthfulness of the affidavit and the regularity of the search warrant felt that he did not have to produce testimony on this issue. In any evеnt, he failed to do so. When the Nebraska Supreme Court was confronted with the issue it did not specifically pass on the question. Thеre was no meaningful record for it to review on this issue. Therefore, we conclude that there was no meaningful opportunity for it to do so. Defendant has never sought a post-conviction hearing in the state court on this issue. Unless the state court would hold that the defendant has procedurally forfeited his right to attack the truthfulness of the affidavit and the regularity of the search warrant we find that defendant must do so before raising this question in the federal court.
Petitioner argues the evidence is undisputed that the affiant-police officer had never met the informant before the day the informant reported that LeDent liad attempted to sell marijuana to him. The federal district court additionally points out that the statement within the affidavit which attempts to corroborаte the informant’s reliability does not appear on the warrant and is from a different typewriter than the rest of the affidavit. The district court suggests this material may have been added after it was presented to the magistrate. The court held nevertheless that petitioner did not sustain his burden of proof before it on these issues. We agree with the district court that the burden of proof in attacking tlie truthfulness of the affidavit would be on the petitioner. However, the state forum is best situated for petitioner to develop the facts ns to whether the affidavit was complete when submitted to the magistrate and if so, whether it set forth facts which were not true.
. Four justices in
Harris
discounted the “dictum” in
Spinelli
that the defendant’s reputation cannot be used in weighing probable cause. United States v. Harris,
. The only statement of direct corroboration is that, “The reliable informant has given your Affiant other information that coincides with information received from other reliable sources.” Cf. Spinelli v. United States,
