Lowell Woods appeals the district court’s denial of his pro se 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court denied Woods’s petition, without an evidentiary hearing, because it found all of Woods’s claims to be barred by the Missouri escape rule. We agree that the district court could not address Woods’s claims, but for reasons of nonexhaustion rather than because of the escape rule or procedural bar. We therefore vacate the district court’s order of denial and remand for entry of an order of dismissal without prejudice.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1987, Woods was convicted in state court of possession of stolen property. Pending his January 19, 1988, sentencing date, Woods was released on a bond containing no travel restrictions. Before his scheduled sentencing, Woods traveled to Oklahoma and was arrested there on separate charges. Missouri law enforcement officers participated in Woods’s Oklahoma arrest and immediately placed a hold on him. His Oklahoma bail was set at over $40,000. Woods contacted his Missouri bailbondsman on January 4, 1988, to arrange his Oklahoma bail, but was unable to make bail because of various Missouri holds. Although both the Oklahoma authorities and Woods’s bondsman informed the Missouri authorities of Woods’s situation and whereabouts, Missouri did not arrange for Woods to be transported to Missouri for sentencing. Woods, therefore, missed his Missouri sentencing hearing awaiting his Oklahoma trial. Woods’s Missouri bond was not forfeited because “Woods was in custody at the time and was not able to appear” and the prosecuting attorney did not believe that Missouri law permitted forfeiture in those circumstances. Webster County Trial & Sentencing Transcript, p. 220.
After Woods was tried, convicted, and had served his time in Oklahoma, Missouri took custody of Woods and sentenced him for his *1245 1987 stolen property conviction. Woods then filed a motion for post-conviction relief. The state moved for dismissal oh the basis of the Missouri escape rule, by which courts may refuse to entertain defendants’ complaints about their trials. The Missouri post-conviction motion court applied the rule and declined to consider Woods’s motion. Woods’s appeal from this ruling was consolidated with his direct appeal, and the Missouri Court of Appeals, also applying the escape rule, declined to consider either. Woods then filed a petition for a writ of state habeas corpus with the Missouri Court of Appéals, which was summarily denied. Finally, Woods filed a petition for federal habeas relief complaining of constitutional errors at his initial state trial. The federal district court applied the Missouri escape rule, and denied the petition without a hearing. Woods now appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
Missouri argues that the district court correctly applied the escape rule to deny Woods’s petition, and that even if the district court’s independent application of the Missouri escape rule was in error, the Missouri courts’ application of the escape rule operates as an independent and adequate state ground proeedurally barring consideration of Woods’s habeas claims. We have doubts that the Missouri escape rule suffices,
per se,
as an independent and adequate state ground to proeedurally bar habeas review. The procedural bar question is complicated by the summary denial of Woods’s' state habeas petition, for we cannot be certain whether the denial was based on the merits of his claims or on the escape rule. Further, we find that, due to an erroneous factual assumption, the district court could not have adequately performed the analysis required by
Perko v. Bowers,
denied,
— U.S. -,
Exhaustion of state remedies is a prerequisite for federal habeas review. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b). Woods has exhausted his ordinary state remedies of direct appeal, post-conviction motions, and state habeas. However, he has yet available one extraordinary and unexhausted state remedy. That is .a motion to the Supreme Court of Missouri to recall the mandate.
See Reimers v. Frank B. Connet Lumber Co.,
In Missouri, a motion to recall the mandate may be granted in certain situations, such as when there has been a prejudicial mistake of fact, a deprivation of constitutional rights, or when there has. been a recent United States Supreme Court decision contrary to the Missouri appellate decision in issue.
See State v. Thompson,
Even if Missouri concludes that such circumstances qualify as an escape, Woods still has a substantial possibility for relief under a motion to recall the mandate based on the constitutional implications of his situation and based on an intervening United States Supreme Court decision,
Ortega-Rodriguez v. United States,
— U.S. -,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we vacate the district court’s order of dismissal and remand for entry of an order of dismissal without prejudice.
Notes
. Perhaps because there was no hearing, the district court mistakenly presumed that Woods's Oklahoma conviction, rather than his arrest and incarceration pending trial, prevented his presence at the Missouri sentencing. Thus the district court did not consider the effect of the presumption of innocence when analyzing whether Woods’s failure to appear at his Missouri sentencing hearing was volitional. Regardless, the ultimate question for the escape rule is whether Woods intended to absent himself from his sentencing hearing by going to Oklahoma, and that question has never been the subject of any hearing.
See Stradford v. State,
. We note that the Supreme Court presupposes, throughout its discussion of the escape rule, that flight has occurred. The state argues that the escape rule should be applied to Woods, even if he did not flee, because Woods’s intervening arrest was due to a volitional bad act, and his failure to appear was, thus, voluntary. That logic would permit appellate rights to be lost based on confinement for intervening jaywalking offenses, hospitalizations for suicide attempts, fault-based car accidents, or innumerable other intervening volitional and blameworthy acts that may prevent defendants from appearing before the court. We question whether the Missouri escape rule is devoid of a requirement of flight.
