OPINION OF THE COURT
The government appeals from the district court’s grant of a new trial pursuant to Allen’s motion for collateral relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1976) from his conviction for conspiring to possess marijuana with the intent to distribute it in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1976). 1
I. Factual Background
The facts in this case revolve around a telephone answering service, a Ryder rent-a-truck, and the Dusselfink Motel in Potts-ville, Pennsylvania. On December 15, 1975, a person using the name “Thomas J. Meador” rented a truck from Ryder in Colorado. The truck was registered in Oregon with license plates from that state. On December 18, two individuals registered at the Dusselfink Motel in Pottsville, signing the names “Tom Meador” and “Richard Cooper.” They were given room 242. The motel records indicate a Ryder truck with Oregon license plates was listed as belonging, to the occupants of room 242.
December 18 was a busy day. At about 4 p. m. Colorado time, Allen left a message with his answering service, which was located in Colorado. The message was that if a “Jeff Stewart” should call, the service should tell him to go to Pottsville, not Pottstown, and check into the Dusselfink Motel. Stewart then should call 717-366-2723 and ask for Mr. Holiday. 2 In addition, the service was to tell Stewart that Allen was on his way.
At 6:49 p. m., Colorado time, someone using the name “Jeff Stewart” called the answering service. He asked the service to tell Allen to call 717-385-2407, room 242. That number is the telephone number for the Dusselfink Motel. The motel’s records indicate that a call was made to the answering service.
Sometime later that evening, an unidentified male came to the Dusselfink Motel registration desk and asked for room 242. Shortly thereafter, federal agents who were staking out the motel observed an individual run through the parking lot. The Ryder truck then was seen being driven away.
Early the next morning, December 19, police arrested Allen at a cabin near Deer Lake, Pennsylvania. The Ryder truck now was parked at the cabin. In the pocket of the jacket worn by Allen at his arrest, the officers found a key that opened the padlock on the truck and the ignition key for the truck. They discovered 1,100 pounds of marijuana in the back of the truck.
Soon after, the police arrested Meador and Cooper in room 242. In the room, the police found a piece of paper with the number 366 — 2723 written on it, the number that Allen asked his answering service to give to Jeff Stewart.
Allen, Meador, and Cooper were indicted and convicted of conspiring to possess marijuana with the intent to distribute it. All three directly appealed to this court. Meador’s conviction was affirmed without opinion.
United States v. Meador,
On remand, the district court resentenced Allen. Allen then made a motion under § 2255 for a new trial, arguing that his conviction was not based on sufficient evidence, a point he did not raise in his direct appeal to this court. 3 The district court granted the motion, and the government took this appeal.
II. Jurisdiction
Although the parties did not brief the issue, we must initially consider our own jurisdiction to hear the government’s appeal. Section 2255 provides: “An appeal may be taken to the court of appeals from the order entered on the motion as from a final judgment on application for a writ of habeas corpus.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1976). As to normal habeas corpus cases, an appeal lies from the final order of the habeas court.
Id.
§ 2253. In general, this has been read to mean that normal principles of finality in cases involving 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1976) apply to appeals involving habeas corpus and § 2255.
See, e. g., United States ex rel. Cleveland v. Warden, New Jersey State Prison,
In a direct criminal appeal, the government may only appeal orders dismissing an indictment or information or suppressing evidence. 18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1976). Moreover, in cases of direct appeal, an order granting a new trial normally is not final and hence not subject to appellate review. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has held, however, that the grant of a new trial is a final order in the context of a § 2255 proceeding that permits the government to appeal.
See United States v. Dunham Concrete Products, Inc.,
First, the language of § 2255 indicates that a grant of a new trial is a final, appealable order. Paragraph 6 of § 2255 provides that an appeal may be taken “from the order entered on the motion.” Paragraph 3 of § 2255 states exactly what orders may be entered if the motion is granted: “the court shall vacate and set the judgment aside and shall discharge the prisoner or resentence him or grant a new trial or correct the sentence as may appear appropriate.” (emphasis supplied). As in all cases of statutory construction, different portions of the same statutory provision should be read in conjunction with each other. Reading paragraphs 3 and 6 together, because the grant of a new trial is an-“order entered on the motion” within the meaning of paragraph 6, it would seem that Congress contemplated appeals from the grant of a new trial. 4
This reading of paragraphs 3 and 6 is supported by the general analytical approach of cases dealing with the meaning of final orders under § 2255. The crucial question in these cases in determining finality is whether the district court has entered one of the orders specified in paragraph 3 of § 2255. For example, in
Andrews v. United States,
Second, the nature of § 2255 proceedings supports the finality of the order here. As opposed to being an integral part of the criminal trial, “a proceeding under Section 2255 is an independent and collateral inquiry into the validity of the conviction.”
United States v. Hayman,
The significance of the separate nature of a § 2255 proceeding lies in its impact on the district court’s jurisdiction. In a typical case, the jurisdictional basis for the original trial, the grant of a new trial, and the retrial remains the same throughout. The same is not true with § 2255. That section confers jurisdiction for a limited purpose and nowhere does it grant the § 2255 court authority to retry the defendant. That simply is not one of the “orders on the motion” listed in paragraph 3. All the § 2255 court can do is grant a motion to retry. Once it does that, jurisdiction to retry the defendant shifts to an entirely severable basis. E. g., 18 U.S.C. § 3231 (1976). Unlike the typical case already postulated, the jurisdictional basis for the trial, grant of a new trial, and retrial is not the same.
In short, once the § 2255 court grants a motion for a new trial, its jurisdiction as a § 2255 court ends and there is “nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.”
Catlin v. United States,
Moreover, the fact that the sentencing judge and the § 2255 judge are the same person is not dispositive. This merely reflects a desire to relieve the case-load burden of judges located in districts containing federal prisoners.
See generally United States v. Hayman,
Nor is
Collins v. Miller,
The Court first noted that the action of the habeas court was similar to the order of an appellate tribunal reversing and remanding to another court.
Id.
at 369,
*1252
Collins
is distinguishable for two reasons. In the first place, it rests on realities of extradition procedure that have no applicability here. Application for extradition can be made to a judge or a magistrate.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3184 (1976). There is no direct appeal from that decision, the only relief being extremely limited review through habeas corpus. The analogy to a remand in
Collins
therefore is very instructive. Where the habeas corpus court sends the case to the extraditing judge or magistrate, that often works just like the usual remand with the habeas court retaining jurisdiction.
See,
e.
g., Jhirad v. Ferrandina,
Moreover, only one of the three affidavits in
Collins
had been disposed of.
Finally, in addressing the question of finality, it is appropriate for us to consider pragmatic factors.
See, e. g., Gillespie v. United States Steel Corp.,
Accordingly, we conclude that the grant of a new trial in this § 2255 proceeding is a final, appealable order.
III. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The district court’s theory was that the evidence concerning the involvement of Meador and-Cooper in a conspiracy was the same. Even though Meador’s conviction was affirmed on direct appeal, the court then reasoned from its reading of the evidence that our holding in Cooper, supra, that there was insufficient evidence of Cooper’s participation in a Meador-Alien conspiracy meant that there was insufficient evidence to convict Meador. The next step in the court’s analysis was that because there was insufficient evidence as to Cooper and Meador, that meant there was no one left with whom Allen could conspire. Relying on the general rule that there must be evidence of two or more conspirators, the district court concluded that the evidence was insufficient as to Allen without evidence that Meador or Cooper conspired with him.
On appeal, the government has abandoned its argument that federal prisoners may not raise an issue as to the sufficiency of the evidence in a § 2255 proceeding.
Cf. Jackson
v.
Virginia,
The indictment here states: “JOHN BRETT ALLEN, RICHARD JOHN COOPER, and THOMAS J. MEADOR, did knowingly and unlawfully conspire, combine, confederate and agree together, and with each other,
and with other persons known and unknown to this Grand Jury . . . .”
(emphasis supplied). In such a case, “the identity of the other members of the conspiracy is not needed, inasmuch as one person can be convicted of conspiring with persons whose names are unknown.”
Rogers v. United States,
Thus the question is not whether there was sufficient evidence that Allen conspired with Meador and/or Cooper, but whether there was sufficient evidence that he conspired with some other person. Here, the evidence shows the following: Allen left a message with his answering service to tell Jeff Stewart to go to the Dusselfink Motel in Pottsville and call a certain number. Allen also said to tell Stewart that he was on his way. Someone using the name Stewart then called the answering service and left a message to call a number and ask for room 242. That number was the phone number at the Dusselfink Motel, and the motel’s records indicate a call from the motel to Allen’s answering service. In addition, a piece of paper was found in room 242 with a number written on it, and that number was the one left by Allen with his service.
Later that same day, someone came to the motel and asked the whereabouts of room 242. The clerk at the registration desk did not recognize him as either of the two persons registered as occupants of the room. A Ryder truck in the lot listed in the motel records as belonging to the occupants of room 242 then was driven away. Early the next morning, Allen was arrested in possession of the keys to the truck’s padlock and ignition. The marijuana was in the back of that truck.
Even assuming absolutely no involvement of Meador and Cooper in a conspiracy, these events show the participation of at least one person other than Allen in two respects. First, the call by “Stewart” to the answering service and the paper with the number on it in room 242 alone indicate the involvement of a second person, unless we are to believe that Allen left messages for himself and then called to receive them. Second, Allen somehow got control of keys to a truck that, as far as the record shows, he had no physical connection with prior to its arrival at the Dusselfink Motel. It defies reason to say that this evidence is insufficient to show that Allen did not act alone.
6
There was ample evidence from which a “rational trier of fact could have found proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia, supra,
Accordingly, we hold there was sufficient evidence that Allen conspired with a second person.
IV.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed.
Notes
. The conspiracy charge was count 1 of the indictment. Count 2, which charged Allen with the substantive offense of possession with intent to distribute, was dismissed after his conviction on count 1.
. A call to this telephone' number from the Dusselfink Motel would be a local call. Thus the record contains no evidence whether any calls from the motel to the number left by Allen with his service were ever made.
. We express no view on what effect Allen’s failure to raise this point on direct appeal has on the availability of § 2255 relief.
. Section 2255 also states the appeal shall be “as from a final judgment on application for a writ of habeas corpus.” When a state prisoner is successful on his petition for habeas, the possibility of retrial by the state does not impugn the finality of the order.
See United States ex rel. Thomas v. State of New Jersey,
. Until recently, § 2255 cases were given a separate civil number. See
Evans v. United States,
. This case is thus quite different from
United States v. Gardner,
