Thе petitioner-appellant, Michael Kurzawa, appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. He contends that the court erred in concluding that the “same elements” double jeopardy test set
*437
forth in
United States v. Dixon,
I. BACKGROUND
To best understand the nature of this appeal, we shall intermingle the facts underlying it with Supreme Court case law. In 1977, Dr. Robert Beekes, who is a surgeon, and his wife, Dr. Clarice Beekes, a dentist, established separate professional practices in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In that same year, the Beckeses retained the petitioner-appellant, Michael Kurzawa, to provide accounting and financial managеment services in connec- ' tion with their respective practices. Because Kurzawa’s position made him responsible for, among other things, paying bills and bookkeeping, he had access to the Beekes’ business cheeking accounts -with the Greater Milwaukee Bank, also located in Milwaukee.
Sometime in 1986, Robert Beekes grew concerned over the financial condition of his medical practice, and had an independent audit conducted to ascertain whether there existed a problem, and if so, the source of it. Upon completion of the audit, it was discovered that, from the early 1980’s through March of 1986, Kurzawa wrote over one-hundred checks, totaling almost $100,000, to himself and his business on Robert and Clarice Beekes’ professional accounts, forging them names as the drawers of thе drafts. Following an investigation by the forgery unit of the Milwaukee Police Department, the Milwaukee County district attorney filed a criminal information against Kurzawa on August 2, 1989, charging him with one count of embezzlement, in violation of Wis. Stats. §§ 943.20(l)(b) and (3)(c). The information was amended in February, 1990, so as to charge the petitioner with two counts of embezzlement and eight counts of forgery, Wis. Stat. § 943.38(l)(a), and was amended a second time on September 18, 1990, charging him with two counts of theft by fraud, where the value of property misappropriated exceeds $2,500, contrary to Wis. Stats. §§ 943.20(l)(d) and (3)(e). In the interim, on May 29, 1990, the United States Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Grady v. Corbin,
The applicable [double jeopardy] rule is that, where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or only one is whether each provision requires proof of an additional fact which the other does not.
Id.
at 304,
On September 24, 1990, the Milwaukee County case against Kurzawa went to trial before a jury on the second amended information charging two counts of theft by fraud.
2
In its ease-in-chief, the prosecution
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sought to establish the “false representation” element of the crime •with evidence' that Kur-zawa had misappropriated funds from the Beekes’ accounts by forging their names as the purported makers of the drafts, naming himself or his business as payee, and then cashing the checks.
See State v. Kurzawa,
173 Wis .2d 769,
' Then, on October 4, 1991, Kurzawa was charged by criminal information in Walworth County (Wisconsin) with 54 counts of uttering a forged instrument, in violation of Wis. Stat. § 943.38(2). Each count arose from separate cheeks Kurzawa had written on the Beekes’ accounts and thereafter deposited in his own account at the Walworth State Bank in Walworth, Wisconsin, between April 16, 1985 and March 24, 1986. These fifty-four cheeks were among the more than one-hundred checks which provided the basis for the previous Milwaukee County theft by fraud prosecution. On October 18, 1991, Kurzawa filed a motion with the Walworth County Circuit Court to dismiss the “uttering a forged instrument” charges against him on double jeopardy grounds. Relying on the then-recent Grady decision, he argued that “[bjecause ... [he] previously was acquitted in Milwaukee County Circuit Court for the same criminal conduct alleged in the present information, further prosecution of this case would subject him to double jeopardy....” The trial judge denied this motion due to the absence of an overlapping оr concurrent “necessary element between theft by fraud and uttering [a forged instrument],” and ordered the Walworth County prosecution to proceed. Kurzawa subsequently appealed that determination to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, which, following an unsuccessful attempt to certify the issue to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, reversed the order of the Walworth County Circuit Court and remanded the ease back to that court with instructions to dismiss the criminal complaint. In so doing, it followed Grady’s “same conduct” double jeopardy test:
Comparing Kurzawa’s conduct in the Milwaukee County theft by fraud prosecution — particularly that concerning the element of false representation-with Kur-zawa’s conduct which the state alleges in this case, it is clear that the state relies on the same core conduct — Kurzawa’s forging the Beekes’ checks and naming himself or his business as payee. This is precisely what Grady forbids.
Kurzawa,
In April of 1993, the Wisconsin Supreme' Court granted the State’s appeal from the court of appeals’ decision dismissing the uttering a forged document charges against Kurzawa. Before oral argument was held in the case, the United States Supreme Court, in
United States v. Dixon,
The Wisconsin Supreme Court ordered supplemental briefing addressing the impact of Dixon on the State’s appeal. Kurzawa argued that retroactive application of Dixon would operate similarly to an impermissible ex post facto law, denying him his right to due process. He also contended that Dixon should be rejected as a matter of Wisconsin constitutional law. The Wisconsin Supreme Court rejected both of these arguments outright, explaining:
[W]e believe that at the time Kurzawa engaged in the conduct for which he stands accused, Blockburger’s “same elements” test was the standard by which his dоuble jeopardy claim would have been analyzed. [Because Dixon’s double jeopardy test is the same as Blockburger’s,] ... applying such an analysis does not violate his due process rights.
He He He He He He
Blockburger is not a perfect test, but it is better than Grady’s “same conduct” approach. We hereby follow the United States Supreme Court and adopt the analysis of Dixon and Blockburger in double jeopardy cases involving successive prosecutions.
State v. Kurzawa,
On January 23, 1995, the Circuit Court for Walworth County found Kurzawa guilty on two counts of uttering a forged instrument, and dismissed the remaining fifty-twо counts of the criminal complaint. It withheld sentencing Kurzawa to imprisonment and placed him on eight years’ probation — four years on each guilty count to run concurrent with one another. Kurzawa did not appeal his conviction. Rather, after allowing the twenty-day period to file a notice of intent to pursue a posteonviction appeal to lapse, see Wis. Stat. § 809.30(2)(b), he petitioned the federal district court for habeas relief on April 19,1996. The judge denied that petition, concluding that “United States v. Dixon should be applied ‘retroactively’ to this case and that, under the ‘same elements’ test set forth in Blockburger v. United States, Kurzawa’s right to be free from double jeopardy was not violated by his subsequent trial, conviction and sentencing in Walworth County.” Mem. & Ord., at 11. Kurzawa appeals.
II. ISSUES
Kurzawa’s appeal presents us with but one issue for review: whether the double jeopardy test sеt forth in United States v. Dixon applies retroactively so as to allow the prosecution of the petitioner in Wisconsin state court on charges of uttering a forged instrument, in violation of Wis. Stat. § 943.38(2). If Dixon is to be applied retroactively, Kur-zawa concedes that the district court’s denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus was appropriate. If not, thereby meaning that Grady v. Corbin governs this case, he contends that habeas relief is warranted.
III. DISCUSSION
This appeal comes to us on denial of Kurzawa’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, a determination pursuant to which we review all questions of law, mixed questions of law, and the district court’s legal conclusions
de novo.
4
See Milone v. Camp,
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A. Satisfaction of Habeas Statute Requirements
The aim of judicial efficiency has always compelled us to disregard issues not raised or upon which the parties before us agree, save for perhaps matters going to jurisdiction of the federal courts.
See Wood v. Mid-Valley Inc.,
1. Exhaustion
“Before considering a [§ 2254] petition for habeas corpus on its merits, a district court' must make two inquiries — [1] whether the petitioner exhausted all available state remedies and [2] whether the petitioner raised all his claims during the course of the state proceedings. If the answer to either of these inquiries is ‘no,’ the petition is barred either for a failure to exhaust state remedies or for a procedural default.”
Henderson,
a. Exhaustion of Remedies
Turning to the first of the two “exhaustion” inquiries, we begin with the recognition that an application fоr federal habeas relief may be granted only if the petitioner “has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State, or ... there is either an absence of available State corrective process or the existence of circumstances rendering *441 such process ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b). The rub here is that Kurzawa decided not to appeal his Walworth County conviction to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. Nevertheless, the Wisconsin Supreme Court had previously ruled that the Double Jeopardy Clause did not preclude his second prosecution in Wal-worth County, and the United States Supreme Court denied his petition for a writ of certiorari from- that judgment. It would therefore have been duplicative — and perhaps futile — for him to appeal his subsеquent conviction on double jeopardy grounds. Indeed, it would be senseless for this Court to require or order the identical issue, arguments, and accompanying facts to be litigated once again through the state appellate process. Under these circumstances, we believe that Kurzawa exhausted his state remedies on the unsuccessful double jeopardy arguments he made to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. And because he foreclosed his opportunity to direct appeal from his Walworth County conviction by having failed to file a notice of intent to pursue postconviction relief within twenty days after being placed on probation, Kurzawa may not call upon either the Wisconsin Court of Appeals or the Wisconsin Supreme Court to once again consider his double jeopardy аrguments.
b. Exhaustion of Claims
Just because Kurzawa exhausted his state remedies does not permit us to immediately proceed to delve into the merits of his arguments.
See Burgin v. Broglin, 900
F.2d 990, 996 (7th Cir.1990). A second level of analysis is required. We must consider whether Kurzawa raised all the issues on direct appeal that he now asks us to entertain because “[i]f a petitioner fails to raise an issue in state court proceedings, he cannot raise it for the first time in a federal habeas corpus petition.”
Sotelo v. Indiana State Prison,
The junction where federal habeas power intersects with state criminal processes is enswathed in a mutuality of respect between sovereigns. It is that principle of comity which underlies the federal courts’ unwillingness to adjudicate too hastily matters of fundamental federal significance arising out of state prosecutions. Requiring that remedies be exhausted in state courts is merely comity’s juridical tool, embodying the federal sovereign’s respect for the state courts’ capability to adjudicate federal rights. Although the federal courts, other conditions being met, will ultimately salve state error of constitutional dimension, the state must first be accorded the opportunity to protect the federally-assured interests of its criminal defendants.
Verdin v. O’Leary,
If the petitioner’s argument to the state court did not: (1) rely on pertinent federal cases employing constitutional analysis; (2) rely on state cases applying constitutional analysis to a similar factual situation; (3) assert the claim in terms so particular as to call to mind a specific constitutional right; or (4) allege a pattern of facts that is well within the mainstream of constitutional litigation, then this court will not consider the state courts to have had a fair opportunity to consider the claim. However, the presence of any one of these factors, particularly factors (1) and (2), does not automatically avоid a waiver; the court must consider the specific facts of each ease.
Pierson v. O’Leary,
Both in his brief to this Court and at oral argument, Kurzawa insists that there exist three independent due process bases for habeas relief from his Walworth County conviction. Initially, he contends that “[r]etroactive application of Dixon’s new analysis ... would operate exactly like an ex post facto law, increasing Kurzawa’s risk of punishment and, as such, would deny him due process.” (Pet. Br., at 26). Next, Kurzawa likens his Milwaukee County acquittal to a civil statute of repose, asserting that criminal liability cannot be revived by retroactive application of Dixon without offending the Due Process Clause. Specifically, he contends:
The restrictions of due process are not, however, limited to protection against decisions having the effect of ex post facto laws. Even in the civil realm, in which the Ex Post Facto Clause does not apply, the government cannot revive liability once extinguished without running afoul of the due process clause. William Danzer & Co. v. Gulf & S.I.R. Co.,268 U.S. 633 ,45 S.Ct. 612 ,69 L.Ed. 1126 (1925).... Once Kur-zawa was acquitted in Milwaukee County, the then controlling decision in Grady acted to extinguish any and all potential liability for the ‘same conduct’ upon which that prosecution was bаsed.
(Id.
at 26-27). And lastly, he argues that “[d]ue process similarly limits the government power retroactively to deprive even a civil litigant of legal rights once they have vested in a final judgment.
McCullough v. Virginia,
Much of Kurzawa’s brief to the Wisconsin Supreme Court reads verbatim with the
ex post facto
analysis he sets forth in his submissions to this Court.
6
He used terms like “repose” and “finality” on direct appeal, albeit sparingly, but certainly cannot be considered to have done so in the context of independent, cognizable arguments.
7
Moreover, the eases he relies upon before us to support his sepаrate “statute of repose” and “finality” arguments,
William Danzer & Co. v. Gulf & S.I.R. Co.,
B. Merits: Retroactive Application of Dixon
It is quite clear to us that the currently-in-effect Dixorir-Blockburger “same elements” double jeopardy test would allow the State of Wisconsin’s prosecution of Kurzawa in Wal-worth County for uttering a forged document, Wis. Stat. § 943.38(2), after his acquittal on charges of theft by fraud, Wis. Stat. § 943.20(l)(d). Each crime requires proof of an element that the other does not. 9 Even Kurzawa concedes as much. Whether the now defunct Grady analysis would bar the second prosecution is a question we need not reach, for it is our opinioh that the Dixorir-Blockburger test governs this habeas appeal, and that Kurzawa’s Walworth County prosecution did not offend the Double Jeopardy Clause of our Constitution.
Some ten years ago, the Supreme Court held “that a new rule for the conduct of criminal prosecutions is to be applied to all eases, state or federal, pending on direct review or not yet final, with no exception for cases in which the new rule constitutes a ‘clear break’ with the past.”
Griffith v. Kentucky,
1. Ex Post Facto Protections and Retroactivity of Dixon
We now proceed to consider whether there is any merit to Kurzawa’s argument that retroactive application of
Dixon
has the effect of an unconstitutional
ex post facto
law. It is noteworthy that the great weight of authority is stacked against Kurzawa on the issue at hand. In fact, the Supreme Court retroactively applied its “new” double jeopardy rule to the parties before it in
Dixon.
And at least one of our sister circuits, as well as numerous state courts, have since retroactively applied
Dixon’s
“same elements” test.
See United States v. Cruce,
In
Beazell v. Ohio,
Kurzawa’s due process attack seems to primarily turn on the second ex post facto protection announced in Beazell• namely, that a judicial or legislative rule, adopted or enacted after an individual commits a crime, may not be applied to such individual if it would make his punishment more severe than the law would have as it stood at the time he engaged in the criminal conduct. See Beazell, 269 U.S.,at 169, 46 S.Ct. at68. Specifically, Kurzawa argues that “[rjetroac-tive application of Dixon’s new analysis ... would operate exactly like an ex post facto law, increasing Kurzawa’s risk of punishment and, as such, would deny him due process.” From our point of view, this argument is unpersuasive for several reasons.
First, Kurzawa is seeking the protections of the Ex Post Facto Clause while ignoring its underlying rationale “that persons have a right to fair warning of that conduct which will give rise to criminal penalties.”
Marks,
We ... hold, in accordance with Bouie, that the Due Process Clause precludes the application of the standards announced in Miller v. California, to the extent that those standards may impose criminal liability for conduct not punishable under Memoirs. Specifically, since the petitioners were indicted for conduct occurring prior to our decision in Miller, they are entitled to jury instructions requiring the jury to acquit unless it finds that the materials involved are[, consistent with Memoirs,] “utterly without redeeming social value. ”
Nevertheless, the appropriate comparison is not, as Kurzawa seems to suggest, between
Dixon
and
Grady,
but rather between
Dixon
and
Blockburger.
After all,
Blockburger,
not
Grady,
was in effect at the time Kurzawa committed his offense, and due process prohibits the application of a decision “which makes more burdensome the punishment for a crime,
after its commission.” Beazell,
Kurzawa relies heavily upon the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Rubino v. Lynaugh,
We conclude that there is no due process violation herein that would compel us to deviate from
Griffith’s
retroactivity principle “that a new rule for the conduct of criminal prosecutions is to be applied to all cases, state or federal, pending on direct review or not yet final_”
Griffith,
479- U.S. at 328,
2. Kurzawa’s Unexhausted Due Process Arguments
As explained above, it is our opinion that Kurzawa has failed to exhaust his state remedies on the “statute of repose” and “finality” arguments he asks that we consider. Even if we assumed, solely for the sake of discussion, that these issues were properly before us, our ultimate conclusion would remain the same.
Kurzawa argues that once he was acquitted in Milwaukee County on charges of theft by fraud, the then-in-effect
Grady
double jeopardy test acted to extinguish any and all future liability for the “same conduct” upon which the prоsecution was based, and that due process barred the State of Wisconsin from reviving such liability. He primarily relies on a 1925 civil case out of the Supreme Court,
William Danzer & Co.,
The Fourteenth Amendment does not make an act of state legislation void merely because it has some retrospective operation. What it does forbid is taking of life, liberty or property without due process of law_ Assuming that statutes of limitation, like other types of legislation, could be so manipulated that their retroactive effects would offend the Constitution, certainly it cannot be said that lifting the bar of a statute of limitation so as to restore a remedy lost through mere lapse of time is per se an offense of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
at 315-16,
And lastly, Kurzawa again relies on a century-old civil ease,
McCullough v. Virginia,
IV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court in denying Kurzawa’s petition for habeas relief. Two of the three due process arguments Kurzawa advances to this Court were not “fairly presented” to the Wisconsin Supreme Court on direct appeal, and they are thus not properly before us. And the one remaining argument he did preserve for collateral review — that retroactive application of Dixon is tantamount to an unconstitutional ex post facto law — is in our view unavailing.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The "same elements” double jeopardy test ac- ' tually did not begin with
Blockburger
— its roots can be traced back as far as
Ex Parte Nielsen,
. The parties stipulated that only the charges in the second amended information, that is, the two theft by fraud counts, went to trial in the Milwau *438 kee County case. (R. 6, Walworth County. Stip., ¶ 3).
. Specifically, the State argued thаt the Greater Milwaukee Bank was the Beekes' agent. The trial judge ruled that the relationship between depositor and financial institution is one of creditor/ debtor, not principal/agent.
. In
Lindh v. Murphy,
. The trial judge exercised his discretion and decided not to address the exhaustion of remedies issue.
. On direct appeal to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, Kurzawa also argued that Dixon should be ■rejected as a matter of state constitutional law.
. Kurzawa did raise his other two double jeopardy arguments in a motion for reconsideration of the Wisconsin Supreme Court's decision. However, under Wisconsin law, a litigant may not set forth new legal theories for the first time in a motion for reconsideration.
See O’Neill v. Buchanan,
. The district court also apparently believed that Kurzawa had failed to exhaust all his claims but his ex post facto claim on direct appeal, since it only addressed that issue in its decision and order denying habeas relief.
, Theft by fraud, as criminalized by Wis. Stat. § 943.20(l)(d), requires that the State prove six elements beyond a reasonable doubt in order to' obtain a conviction:
First, that the defendant made a false representation to (name owner of property).
Second, that the defendant knew that such representation was false.
Third, that the defendant made such representation with intent to deceive and to defraud (name owner оf property).
Fourth, that the defendant obtained title to the property of (name owner of property) by . such false representation.
Fifth, that (name owner of property) was deceived by such representation.
Sixth, that (name owner of property) was defrauded by such representation.
Wis.Crim. Jury Instruction No. 1453. By contrast, uttering a forged writing, as defined under Wis. Stat. § 943.38(2), requires proof by evi- ■ dence demonstrating:
First, that the writing was one by which legal rights or obligations are created or transferred.
Second, that the writing was falsely (made) (altered).
Third, that the defendant uttered the writing as genuine.
Fourth, that the defendant knew the writing was falsely (made) (altered).
Wis.Crim. Jury Instruction No. 1492. As the Wisconsin Supreme Court recognized, "theft by fraud" requires proof that the defendant intended to deceive and defraud the owner of the stolen property, as well as that the owner was in fact deceived and defrauded, whereas "uttering a forged instrument” does not. "Uttering a forged instrument,” on the other hand, requires proof that the defendant forged a writing -"by which legal rights or obligations are created or transferred," while "theft by fraud" does not.
. There exist important distinctions between direct review and collateral review.
See Francis v. Franklin,
. Under
Memoirs,
material was protected under the First Amendment unless it was "utterly without redeeming social value."
Memoirs,
