Affirmеd by published opinion. Judge AGEE wrote the opinion, in which Judge SHEDD and Judge DUNCAN joined.
OPINION
Shawn Pethtel (“Pethtel”) appeals the judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia, which denied relief on Pethtel’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus (hereinafter “habeas petition”) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (2006). For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
In September 1999, Pethtel was charged in West Virginia with twenty counts of sexual assault in the third degree, three counts of filming a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct, two counts of possession with the intent to deliver a controlled substance, two counts of conspiracy to commit the felony offense of delivery of a controlled substance, one count of conspiracy to commit nighttime burglary, one count of conspiracy to film a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct, one count оf grand larceny, and one count of conspiracy to commit grand larceny.
At the time the indictment was returned in West Virginia, Pethtel was already serving a sentence in Ohio for unrelated charges. West Virginia lodged a detainer against Pethtel with Ohio, and Pethtel sought voluntary return to West Virginia to dispose of the West Virginia charges. *301 Pethtel was extradited to West Virginia for arraignment; however, he was returned to Ohio shortly after his arraignment аnd before final disposition of the West Virginia charges.
Upon return to Ohio, Pethtel made a motion in the West Virginia trial court to dismiss the West Virginia charges with prejudice, claiming a violation of the “anti-shuttling” or “trial before return provision” of the Interstate Agreement on Detainers Act (“IADA”). 1 After multiple hearings, the West Virginia trial court denied the motion to dismiss, holding that Pethtel “did not languish in the court system in West Virginia,” and finding that West Virginia “operated under the аssumption that he was going back [to Ohio] for a probation hearing of some sort that would allure [sic] to his benefit.” (J.A. 213).
Pethtel pled guilty in West Virginia to the burglary charge and to one count of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver. He was then convicted in a jury trial of a total of twenty-six felony offenses, including the sexual assault, filming a minor, and conspiracy charges. The remaining charges were dismissed. Pethtel was sentenced tо 53 to 155 years’ imprisonment.
Pethtel filed a direct appeal with the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (“WVSCA”), asserting in relevant part that “the trial court erred when it refused to dismiss the charges against the petitioner after his rights under the [IADA] were violated.” (J.A. 55).
2
Citing
Alabama v. Bozeman,
Pethtel also filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the West Virginia trial court, asserting that his convictions must be vacated due to the alleged IADA violation. The trial court granted the petition and vacated his convictions, finding that West Virginia violated the IADA, and holding that “[t]his Court has no discretion in applying the harsh remedies of the [IADA] for the violation, as mandated by Alabama v. Bozeman and accordingly, the Court finds that the only appropriate remedy is dismissal, with prejudice, of all counts of the Indictment.” (J.A. 84).
West Virginia appealed that decision to the WVSCA, which reversed the trial court’s grant of habeas relief in a published opinion. Relying in part on this Court’s decision in
Bush v. Muncy,
Pethtel then filed a § 2254 petition for habeas relief in the district court asserting that the IADA “was violated when, pursuant to Article 111(a) of the IAD[A], the Petitioner requested final disposition of his case in West Virginia while imprisoned in Ohio. Specifically, the ‘anti-shuttling’ prоvision of the IAD[A] ... was violated in that the Petitioner was transferred to West Virginia, and then back to Ohio, before his' West Virginia case was finished.” 4 (J.A. 7) (emphasis omitted). The magistrate judge held that Pethtel “is simply not afforded federal habeas relief on [the IADA] issue,” pursuant to Bush, (J.A. 438), and noted that the Bush Court “found that the anti-shuttling provision [of the IADA] does not involve a ‘fundamental right historically considered critical to the protection of the criminal accused against the unfair prosecution and trial by the state.’ ” (J.A. 439-40). The magistrate judge concluded that “[w]hether or not this Court concurs with the opinion of the Fourth Circuit, ... the Court is nevertheless constrained to its finding and must deny the petitioner’s claimed IADA violation.” (J.A. 440^41).
The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation, holding that, while a “violation of the IADA occurred in Pethtel’s case” and “Pethtel [was not] afforded meaningful review on his direct aрpeal,” relief was nonetheless unavailable pursuant to
Bush.
(J.A. 451). The district court found that “this Court’s power to grant habeas relief ... is constrained by the Fourth Circuit’s holding in
Bush
that a violation of the anti-shuttling provision of the IADA ‘does not constitute a fundamental defect entitling a petitioner to habeas relief under section 2254.’ ” (J.A. 451-52) (quoting
Bush,
Pethtel requested a certificate of appeal-ability (“COA”) from the district court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1) (2006). In his application, Pethtel continued to assert that he was entitled to habeas relief due to the alleged IADA violation, arguing that “[i]n this case, the U.S. District Court relied exclusively on Bush v. Muncy to deny petitioner’s application for post-conviction relief without giving meaning [sic] consideration to petitioner’s claim that exceptional circumstances warrant habeas corpus relief.” (J.A. 462). For the first time during proceedings in either state or federal court, Pethtel also argued that he had “never had any meaningful direct review” of his IADA claims. (J.A. 460).
The district court granted a COA, which was construed as a timely notice of appeal pursuant to
Smith v. Barry,
II.
A.
Pethtel first argues that he is entitled to habeas relief on his claim that the trial before return provision of the IADA was violated (hereinafter “IADA claim”). Pethtel contends that “the WVSCA’s arbitrary refusal to redress the IADA violation is the type of fundamental defect that is redressable, even when the underlying statutory claim is not generally reviewable in habеas corpus.” (Appellant’s Br. 28). Although Pethtel recognizes that the
Bush
decision directs that a violation of the trial before return provisions of the IADA is not cognizable on habeas corpus review, he contends that the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Reed v. Farley,
Specifically, Pethtel asserts that Reed recognized an IADA claim as cognizable in habeas if it is accompanied by “aggravating” or “exceptional” circumstances. Pethtel insists that his case was accompanied by such circumstances; namely, (1) “[t]he West Virginia trial court returned Pethtel to Ohio to save the state money, an impermissible consideration ..., and then made wholly unsupported findings that Pethtel was returned to Ohio for his own benefit, seemingly to conceal the IADA violation,” (Appellant’s Br. 31); (2) “[t]he WVSCA denied Pethtel’s petition for direct review without explanation, even though the validity of the claim was apparent,” (Appellant’s Br. 33); аnd (3) due to “the WVSCA’s unreasonable and incorrect application of established federal and state law on habeas review.” (Appellant’s Br. 37).
The decision of a district court on a matter of habeas corpus relief is reviewed
de novo
and under the standards set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
Bell v. Ozmint,
It is a fundamental principle of habeas review that not “every asserted error of law can be raised on a [§ 2254] motion.”
Davis v. United States,
This standard arose from
Hill v. United States,
The Supreme Court again addressed the lack of cognizable еrror on habeas review in
United States v. Timmreck,
Applying
Hill
and its progeny, the
Bush
Court found that “a violation of the trial-before-return provisions of article IV(e)
7
[of the IADA] does not constitute a fundamental defect entitling a petitioner to habeas relief under section 2254.”
The Supreme Court in
Reed
addressed a similar question to that in
Bush
and the case at bar as to whether the so-called “speedy trial” provision of the IADA
8
“may [be] enforcefd] ... in a federal habeas corpus action under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.”
Reed,
Although this language in
Reed
ostensibly recognizes some exception to the bar on collateral review where a violation of federal law “occurred in the context of other aggravating circumstances,”
Hill,
Nor did the Supreme Court’s holding in
Bozeman
call
Bush
into question.
Bozeman
was a direct appeal from state court and involved no issues of collateral review. Instead,
Bozeman
analyzed the question of what constitutes a violation of the trial before return provision of the IADA; namely, whether a
de minimis
exception exists.
Bozeman,
Pethtel argues that
Bozeman
abrogates
Bush
insofar as it holds that there exist no insignificant violations of the IADA. However,
Bozeman
dealt with a matter of statutory construction and never addressed whether such nonconstitutional error unrelated to the underlying criminal charge could bе “a fundamental defect which inherently results in a complete miscarriage of justice, nor an omission inconsistent with the rudimentary demands of fair procedure.”
Hill,
Although we recognize West Virginia likely did violate the IADA in this case, we are constrained by the clear precedent set by this Court’s decision in
Bush,
which remains controlling and is dispositive of this case.
See United States v. Collins,
B.
Pethtel next argues that, even if an IADA violation is not cognizable on habeas review in its own right, it is reviewable if “the state courts’ refusal to enforce the IADA violated clearly established principles of fundamental due process.” (hereinafter “due process claim.”) (Appellant’s Br. 39). Pethtel asserts that two of his liberty interests were denied arbitrarily in violatiоn of his due process rights: his right to relief under the IADA and his “right to a meaningful appeal of his conviction and sentence of imprisonment.” (Appellant’s Br. 40). He alleges that, although West Virginia’s appeals process “when functioning properly” may be sufficient, in this case it was “reduced to a meaningless ritual that was fundamentally unfair.” (Appellant’s Br. 44) (emphasis omitted). Specifically, Pethtel asserts that the West Virginia circuit court “made findings of fact that were entirely without support in the record,” (Appellant’s Br. 45); and that “the WVSCA arbitrarily refused Pethtel’s petition for direct appeal, despite the fact that the [IADA] violation should have been readily apparent.” (Appellant’s Br. 46).
Although the district court did certify this question for appeal, we find that Pethtel has waived his due process claim by failing to raise the issue in state court. “[A] federal habeas court may consider only those issues which have been ‘fairly presented’ to the state courts.”
Matthews v. Evatt,
This Court’s decision in
Ramdass
is instructive on this issue. The petitioner in that case made the claim in his state habeas petition that “his rights under the state statute [at issue] had been denied.”
Ramdass,
Therefore, we find that Pethtel did not “fairly present” the due process claim to the state court. Although the underlying
*307
facts for the IADA claim and the due process claim were the same, the “controlling legal principles” of the due process claim—whether the state courts arbitrarily deprived Pethtel of his due process rights and whether he received meaningful appellate review—were never raised in state court.
See Mallory,
C.
Finally, Pethtel “challenges the constitutionality of the West Virginia system of appellate review under which he was denied relief,” (Appellant’s Br. 48), although he recognizes that this panel is bound by
Billotti v. Legursky,
Applicable Fourth Circuit precedent clearly holds that “the appeals procedures afforded by West Virginia [give a defendant] an adequate opportunity to present his claims.”
Billotti,
III.
For the foregoing reasons we hold that, consistent with this Court’s precedent as set forth in Btish, a violation of the trial before return provision of the IADA is not cognizable on habeas review. We further hold that Pethtel has waived his due process claim. Therefore, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The IADA is a compact among 48 states, the District of Columbia, and the federal government with the aim of establishing procedures for resolution of one jurisdiction's outstanding criminal charges against another jurisdiction's prisoner.
See New York v. Hill,
The trial before return provision requires that the prisoner be tried on the charges in the receiving state before he is returned to the sending state. The remedy for violation of the provision is dismissal with prejudice of any untried charges. See W. Va.Code Ann. § 62-14-1, Art. III(d).
. Pethtel alsо argued that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that his sentence was unconstitutionally disproportionate. However, he does not raise those issues in this appeal.
. We note that Appellant's name was spelled differently in the WVSCA opinion.
. Pethtel also made the argument that he was denied effective assistance of counsel; however, that issue is not raised in this appeal.
. This wаs the first explicit mention of a due process claim during Pethtel’s proceedings in either state or federal court.
. See
Etheridge v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co.,
. The anti-shuttling or trial before return provisions of Article IV and Article III of the IADA arе materially similar to one another; in fact, at one point the
Bush
Court comingled the two provisions.
See Bush,
. The speedy trial provision "provides that trial of a transferred prisoner 'shall be commenced within one hundred and twenty days of the arrival of the prisoner in the receiving State, but for good cause shown in open court....”'
Reed,
. The conclusion that Pethtel has waived this claim is underscored by his failure to raise the issue not only in state court, but also in federal court. A recognizable due process argument did not appear until raised sua sponte by the district court in the order granting the COA.
