Petitioner-appellant David P. Pratt, who is currently serving a federal sentence, filed a second petition for post-conviction relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1994 and Supp.1996). 1 Relying on the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996) (codified in scattered sections of 28 U.S.C.), the district court dismissed the petition pro forma because Pratt had not obtained clearance from the court of appeals. AEDPA’s novelty, together with the odd timing and peculiar circumstances of the petitioner’s case, take us down a sometimes recondite legal trail. In the end, we conclude that AEDPA applies here and that, properly construed, it bars Pratt’s attempt to prosecute a second habeas petition.
I. BACKGROUND
In April of 1994, a federal petit jury in the District of New Hampshire heard testimony that, after a local police chief confiscated several of Pratt’s firearms, Pratt sent him a mutilated pig carcass. Weighing this and other evidence, the jury found Pratt guilty of mailing a threatening communication in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 876 (1994). The judge departed upward and sentenced Pratt to a lengthy prison term. The appeal period expired and Pratt’s conviction became final.
After unsuccessfully moving pro se to file a tardy notice of appeal, Pratt filed his first section 2255 petition on March 9, 1995. He alleged a violation of his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel premised on a claim that, despite repeated requests, his trial attorney had failed to perfect a timeous appeal of the conviction. Pratt did not aver, however, that his attorney’s performance at trial was constitutionally defective. The district court granted the petition in an unpublished order, vacated the judgment, and after appointing fresh counsel resentenced Pratt (thus triggering a new appeal period). Pratt’s new lawyer filed a timely appeal, but to no avail; a panel of this court affirmed the conviction.
See United States v. Pratt,
On January 17, 1997, Pratt filed his second section 2255 petition, this time seeking to set aside his conviction on the ground that his original lawyer’s lack of trial acumen violated Pratt’s Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel. On April 8, 1997, the district court dismissed this petition without prejudice for failure to comport with AEDPA’s “prior approval” prerequisite for second or successive habeas petitions. This appeal ensued.
II. ANALYSIS
AEDPA took effect on April 24, 1996, after the district court resolved Pratt’s initial ha-
*57
beas petition but before his second petition eventuated. The new law imposes significant restrictions on second or successive habeas petitions brought on behalf of federal prisoners. These restrictions have both procedural and substantive dimensions. Proeedurally, AEDPA incorporates by reference in section 2255 the same screen that AEDPA makes applicable to second or successive habeas petitions prosecuted on behalf of persons being held in state custody. The statute thus requires a federal prisoner, before docketing a second or successive habeas petition in the district court, to obtain from “the appropriate court of appeals ... an order authorizing the district court to consider the application.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A) (as incorporated in 28 U.S.C. § 2255);
see also Felker v. Turpin,
— U.S. —, —,
(1) newly discovered evidence that, if proven and viewed in light of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable factfinder would have found the movant guilty of the offense; or
(2) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable.
28 U.S.C. § 2255.
This appeal necessitates that we determine whether Pratt’s second section 2255 petition comes within AEDPA’s reach, and if so, whether the statute permits us to authorize further proceedings in the district court. Before pursuing either of these inquiries, however, we pause to address the government’s contention that this court lacks jurisdiction to hear the instant appeal.
A.
In the proceedings below, the district court dismissed Pratt’s second habeas' petition without prejudice, noting that he had failed to obtain clearance from the court of appeals as required by AEDPA The government contends that, inasmuch as the order is not dispositive of any issue, it is not a “final order,” 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1994), and thus cannot support the weight of an appeal. The government is wrong.
AEDPA’s prior approval provision allocates subject-matter jurisdiction to the court of appeals by stripping the district court of jurisdiction over a second or successive habeas petition unless and until the court of appeals has decreed that it may go forward.
See Nunez v. United States,
If Pratt had acknowledged that AEDPA governed his latest petition, the district court’s decision might not have been appeal-able. Here, however, Pratt disputes AED-PA’s applicability. He can regain access to the district court (and thereby vindicate his theory) only by an appeal and a subsequent holding that the district court erred in applying AEDPA to his latest petition. The district court’s order is therefore final in the relevant sense,
see In re Nineteen Appeals Arising Out of the San Juan Dupont Plaza Hotel Fire Litig.,
To be sure, Pratt also contends that even if AEDPA applies generally to cases in the same temporal posture its provisions do not bar his pursuit of post-conviction relief. To this extent, the government’s jurisdictional jousting may hit closer to home. Nevertheless, we need not spend much time on this largely metaphysical debate. In very similar circumstances, the Seventh Circuit has crafted a pragmatic approach to this sort of problem. It has declared that it will treat a notice of appeal as a request for an authorization to file a second section 2255 petition and thus preserve appellate jurisdiction if doing so will save unnecessary paperwork without sacrificing any party’s substantial rights.
See Nunez,
Pratt invites us to employ that approach here, the appellate record is adequate to the task, and taking this avenue expedites adjudication of the matters in issue. We therefore hold that, when a district court dismisses a second or successive petition without prejudice because the court of appeals has not approved its prosecution, and the petitioner appeals, the court of appeals may in its discretion treat the notice of appeal as a request for authorization to file a second or successive petition. We exercise that discretion here to the extent, if at all, that it may be necessary to do so. Either way, we have jurisdiction to hear and determine the issues raised in Pratt’s appeal.
B.
The filing dates of Pratt’s two section 2255 petitions straddle AEDPA’s effective- date. On this basis, Pratt maintains that the question whether the statute applies to his second petition must be answered in the negative because doing so would place an impermissible retroactive burden on his first petition. We disagree.
We begin our analysis by remarking the obvious: applying a statute to a pleading that was filed after the statute’s effective date is not really a “retroactive” application in the classic sense. Here, moreover, we know on the best of authority that Congress intended that AEDPA apply to all section 2255 petitions filed after its effective date (April 24, 1996).
See Lindh v. Murphy,
— U.S. —, —,
We know, too, that the Supreme Court recently and uncritically applied AEDPA to a prisoner’s second habeas petition even though the prisoner had filed his first petition prior to AEDPA’s enactment.
See Felker, at
—,
Faced with these formidable obstacles, Pratt attempts to refocus the definition of retroactivity. He reminds us of the Supreme Court’s directive that a court which confronts a possible retroactivity problem should ask whether a freshly minted statute “attaches new legal consequences to events completed before its enactment.”
Landgraf v. USI Film Prods.,
The particulars of Pratt’s claim are fuzzy.' He appears to be saying, with minimal elaboration, that the district court would have entertained his second section 2255 petition under the prevailing pre-AEDPA standard,
see McCleskey v. Zant,
Even were wé to address the mousetrapping doctrine — a matter that we leave for another day — Pratt could not take advantage of it. The doctrine requires a habeas petitioner to show that he consciously chose to withhold a potential ground for relief from his first petition because he detrimentally relied upon pre-AEDPA law.
See, e.g., Alexander v. United States,
More important than Pratt’s subjective understanding is the utter lack of any facts remotely suggesting detrimental reliance. “In assessing detrimental reliance
vel non,
the test is one of objective reasonableness under the circumstances.”
Henry v. Connolly,
As a general matter, reliance upon pre-AEDPA law as a basis for permitting a second petition- rarely will clear this hurdle. The “cause and prejudice” test that
McCles-key
imposed to screen out abusive deployments of the writ is notoriously difficult to pass.
See, e.g., McCleskey,
The only reason that Pratt advances for exhuming his second habeas petition from the abuse of the writ graveyard is our statement in
Bonneau v. United States,
With
Bonneau
out of the picture, Pratt’s cupboard is bare; he has not proffered any other basis for a finding of detrimental reliance. Consequently, we have no occasion to consider the merits of the mousetrapping doctrine because Pratt’s case does not come within its ambit.
Accord In re Magwood,
To recapitulate, since Pratt has not shown that application of AEDPA to his second section 2255 petition works an impermissible retroactive effect, his second petition is; as a temporal matter, within AEDPA’s jurisprudential reach.
See Lindh,
at —,
C.
Pratt has another string to his bow. He maintains that the instant petition is not “second or successive” within AEDPA’s contemplation and, hence, is not subject to the new statutory restrictions.
Like prior habeas statutes, AEDPA does not define the mantra “second or successive.” Courts that have interpreted the same phrase in relation to the pre-AEDPA version of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b) have determined that' a numerically second petition is not “second or successive” if it attacks a different criminal judgment or if the earlier petition terminated without a judgment on the merits. See 2 James S. Liebman & Randy Hertz, Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure § 28.3a, at 916-20 (2d ed.1994). We agree that AEDPA does not blunt the force of these interpretations, but we are not persuaded that the emergent rule pertains in the circumstances presented here.
1.
Decisions that construe the meaning of “second or successive” most frequently concern a court’s dismissal of a prisoner’s first habeas petition for failure to exhaust state remedies.
See, e.g., Howard v. Lewis,
In a federal forum, habeas petitions that involve federal prisoners, 28 U.S.C. § 2255, differ from those that involve state prisoners, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241-2254, in that the former are not constrained by an exhaustion requirement.
See
2 Liebman & Hertz,
supra,
§ 41.4a, at 1196. In particular, claims of ineffective assistance of counsel embodied in a section 2255 petition generally are not deemed procedurally defaulted simply because they were not raised on direct appeal.
See, e.g., United States v. Soldevila-Lopez,
Pratt seizes upon this body of authority and argues that, under it, the district court probably would have dismissed as premature his ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim had he asserted it in his original petition. Thus, Pratt theorizes, failure to raise the claim in the initial petition is no different, practically speaking, than if the court had dismissed it without deciding the merits. Based on that analogy, he posits that applying AEDPA’s restrictions to pretermit his later petition produces a fundamentally unfair whipsaw effect.
We find Pratt’s suppositional
ex post
justification for his failure to include the claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel in his initial habeas petition unconvincing for two reasons. First, and most obviously, we have classified section 2255 petitions as premature only when the petitioner’s direct appeal was still pending.
See, e.g., Diaz-Martinez,
We discern no unfairness in holding Pratt to this regimen. The requirement that all available claims be presented in a prisoner’s first habeas petition is consistent not only with the spirit of AEDPA’s restrictions on second and successive habeas petitions, but also with the preexisting abuse of-the writ principle. The requirement serves the singularly salutary purpose of forcing federal habéas petitioners to think through all potential post-conviction claims and to consolidate them for a unitary presentation to the district court. This exercise advances the cause of judicial efficiency and further justifies barring Pratt’s second petition.
See Richmond v. Ricketts,
2.
Pratt mounts yet another argument in support of his plea that we not treat his numerically second petition as “second or successive.” This argument derives from the Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings— a set of rules that the Supreme Court has promulgated pursuant to congressionally delegated authority.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2072 (1994). Like all similar federal rules, these rules carry the force and effect of positive law.
See Swazo v. Wyoming Dep’t of Corrections State Penitentiary Warden,
AEDPA did not alter Rule 2(c), and the rule is potentially significant here because, after the district court granted Pratt’s first section 2255 petition, it vacated Pratt’s sentence and resentenced him in order to trig *62 ger a new appeal period. On this basis, Pratt asserts that the second petition chal-leriges a different judgment and is therefore not “second or successive.” This argument is attractive at first blush, but blemishes emerge upon closer study.
In the first place, although Pratt grasped avidly for this apparent lifeline when it surfaced at oral argument in this court, the appearance marked its debut in the case. It is firmly settled in this circuit that arguments not advanced and developed in an appellant’s brief are deemed waived.
See Sandstrom v. ChemLawn Corp.,
In the second place, this laglast argument is more a makeweight than a lifeline. The district court’s method of restoring Pratt’s right to an appeal — vacating the sentence and then reimposing it — is standard practice among federal courts.
See, e.g., United States v. Pearce,
Under ordinary circumstances, a prisoner who successfully brings a habeas petition and is retried, reconvicted, and re-sentenced may collaterally attack the new judgment without fear of hindrance by the legal restrictions that encumber second or successive habeas petitions.
See Palmer v. Clarke,
To illustrate, if the relief granted in response to an initial habeas petition addresses only the petitioner’s sentence, he customarily cannot re-petition after resen-tencing based on alleged errors affecting the underlying conviction.
See Richmond,
This rationale applies squarely to Pratt. He had every incentive to assert his claim of trial error in his initial section 2255 petition. If the district court agreed that his lawyer’s trial performance was constitutionally defective, then there would have been no need to appeal a faulty conviction. The objective that Congress had in mind when it placed curbs on a prisoner’s freedom to file multiple habeas petitions- would be frustrated if a prisoner could negate the legal effect of this kind of omission by the simple expedient of filing another petition.
See Galtieri v. United States,
There is a related reason why the reentered judgment does not transform the legal landscape. It is an. abecedarian rule that, in a second petition for post-conviction relief, the prisoner must be able to point to a new claim of error — that is, a claim of error unavailable the first time around (because, say, it could not have been discovered in the exercise of reasonable diligence or it arose after the resolution of the initial petition).
See
2 Liebman & Hertz,
supra,
§ 26.3b, at 854-56;
id.
§ 28.1, at 896. For example, if a habeas petition results in a retrial that yields a new conviction, the prisoner is free to seek further habeas relief based on errors that transpired in the course of the new trial.
See Palmer,
Measured against the rule, as explicated by these examples, Pratt’s asseveration falls short. His current section 2255 petition seeks to set aside the underlying conviction on a ground that he could have raised, but did not, when he filed his first petition. Pratt does not assert any claim of error that became available only after, or as a result of, the court’s entry of a new judgment of conviction. Thus, his numerically second petition is in fact a second petition as AEDPA uses that term.
D.
The end draws near. Pratt concedes in his appellate brief that he is unable to satisfy AEDPA’s preconditions for filing a second section 2255 petition. In any event, this concession is compelled by the record: Pratt neither claims to possess newly discovered evidence in support of the petition nor invokes a neoteric rule of constitutional law. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
We need go no further. Pratt failed to marshal all his claims of error in his first section 2255 petition, and he must now pay the piper. AEDPA governs here, and, on the facts of this case, AEDPA’s clear language prohibits Pratt from rectifying his omission by means of a second petition.
The district court’s dismissal of the habeas petition is affirmed. The petitioner’s appeal is treated concurrently as a request for leave to file a second or successive habeas petition and, as such, it is denied.
Notes
. In terms, 28 U.S.C. § 2255 speaks of a "motion” rather than a "petition,” yet the latter word is more commonly used to describe the vehicle by which a person held in custody seeks post-conviction relief. Although there may be occasions on which the terms have different meanings, this is not one of them; and, therefore, we use the term "petition" throughout this opinion in order to avoid confusion. By the same token, we use the terms "section 2255 petition," “habeas petition,”- and "petition for post-conviction relief” interchangeably.
. The panel did, however, remand, while retaining appellate jurisdiction, to obtain a clear statement of the reasons underlying the upward departure.
See Pratt,
. Transfers can be accomplished by resort to a statute that provides in pertinent part:
Whenever a civil action is filed in a court ... or an appeal ... is noticed for or filed with such a court and that court finds that there is a want of jurisdiction, the court shall, if it is in the interest of justice, transfer such action or appeal to any other such court in which the action or appeal could have been brought at the time it was filed or noticed, and the action or appeal shall proceed as if it had been filed in or noticed for the court to which it is transferred on the date upon which it was actually filed in or noticed for the court from which it is transferred.
28 U.S,C. § 1631 (1994).
. This extra step is a necessary element of Pratt's position because an affirmative answer to the above-described
Landgraf
inquiry does not automatically render a statute impermissibly retroactive. To the contrary, the
Landgraf
Court warned that a "statute does not operate [retroactively] merely because it ... upsets expectations based on prior law.”
. Of course, the Seventh Circuit did make such a determination in
Burris,
. Although the existence of an incentive may affect the equitable balance, we note that, even in the absence of any incentive, the reported cases refuse to accept the position that Pratt espouses. For example, in
Martinez-Villareal
v.
Stewart,
