Dеfendant Lewis Aaron Cook appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion, raising thirty-one grounds for relief. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
On December 22, 1989, Defendant was convicted of two counts of possessing a controlled substance with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), (b)(l)(B)(iii), and one count of knowingly maintaining a place for the distribution of controlled substances, 21 U.S.C. § 856(a). On April 3, 1990, the district court sentenced Defendant to prison terms of 262 months and 240 months to run concurrently, followed by five years of supervised release. That same day, Defendant filed a notice of appeal. Also on April 3, 1990, long before we decided Defendant’s appeal, Defendant filed a number of motions in the district court including a motion styled “writ of habeas corpus and/or motion for new trial and/or motion to dismiss.” On November 5, 1991, we decided Defendant’s appeal and issued an opinion.
See United States v. Cook,
1. Illegal search in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
2. Government witness Yvonne Cross was threatened and forced to testify.
3. Conflict of interest in that Defendant’s counsel met with government witness Yvonne Cross after she refused to testify.
4. Ineffective assistance of counsel in examination of government witness Officer *1316 Mark McCrory of the Tulsa Police Department.
5. Ineffective assistance of counsel in that counsel failed to investigate the facts of the affidavit supporting the search warrant.
6. District court curtailed cross-examination of government witnesses.
7. Ineffective assistance of appellate counsel in that counsel failed to present certain important issues to the Tenth Circuit on direct appeal.
In its order, the district court considered only the first five of these issues. The court found that it was without jurisdiction to address the first and second issues because it had previously addressed the arguments and found them meritless. 2 The district court found no support in the record for Defendant’s conflict of interest assertion, and further found Defendant had abused the writ by failing to bring his ineffective assistance of counsel claims in his first “habeas” motion. 3
In the present appeal, Defendant raises thirty-one grounds for relief. To the extent that he failed to raise these grounds in his § 2255 motion to the district court, he has waived them.
4
See Lucero v. United States,
Of the six preserved issues, we first address the four issues that were actually addressed by the district court. First, we ad *1317 dress the district court’s rejection of Defendant’s Fourth Amendment claims. 5
Today, we join the Ninth Circuit and hold that Fourth Amendment violations are not reviewable in a § 2255 mоtion when the federal prisoner has had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the Fourth Amendment claim at trial and present issues on direct appeal.
See United States v. Hearst,
In
Kaufman v. United States,
After Stone v. Powell,428 U.S. 465 [96 S.Ct. 3037 ,49 L.Ed.2d 1067 ] (1976), the only cases raising Fourth Amendment challenges on collateral attack are those federal habeas corpus cases in which the State has failed to provide a state prisoner with an opportunity for full and fair litigation of his claim, analogous federal cases under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, аnd collateral challenges by state prisoners to their state convictions under postconviction relief statutes that continue to recognize Fourth Amendment claims.
Johnson,
Although the district court has previously found that Defendant had, a full and fair opportunity to litigate his Fourth Amendment claims at trial,
see United States
*1318
v. Cook,
No. 89-CR-107-E (N.D.Okl. May 2, 1990) (order denying post-trial motions), we remand to the district court for a determination of whether Defendant had a full and fair opportunity to raise his Fourth Amendment issues on direct appeal. We note that Defendant asserted one Fourth Amendment violation on direct appeal, which this court rejected.
See United States v. Cook,
Next, the district court addressed Defendant’s allegation that government witness Yvonne Cross was threatened and forced to testify against him at trial. 6 Like the Fourth Amendment claim, the district court rejected this clаim because it had previously addressed the argument and found it meritless. Because we were unable to find in the record where the court had previously addressed this issue, we were unable to ascertain the basis for the issue’s rejection. Therefore, we remand this issue to the district court for further consideration.
Third, the district court rejected Defendant’s conflict of interest claim, stating that “neither Cook’s Petition nor anything in the reсord supports a conflict of interest.” The district court relied on the fact that “[sjeparate counsel was retained for the co-defendants in this action and therefore any issue of conflict by virtue, of multiple representation of co-defendants was eliminated at an early stage.” However, Defendant did not assert conflict of interest based on multiple representation but asserted conflict of interest by alleging that Defendant’s own counsel met with government witness Yvonne Cross and encouraged her to testify against Defendant after she initially refused to testify. Because the district court did not properly address Defendant’s conflict of interest assertion, we remand this issue for reconsideration.
Finally, the district court rejected Defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim that counsel failed to investigate the fаcts of the affidavit for the search warrant. The district court seemed to have based its rejection on Defendant’s abuse of the writ.
Abuse of the writ occurs when claims are raised for' the first time in a second or subsequent habeas petition or § 2255 motion.
McClesky v. Zant,
499 U.S, 467, -, -,
The district court in this case improperly characterized Defendant’s § 2255 motion as his second motion. It is his first § 2255 motion. Although Defendant filed a motion styled “writ of habeas corpus and/or
*1319
motion for new trial and/or motion to dismiss,” which apparently was construed by the district court to be his first § 2255 motion, he filed the motion on April 3, 1990, approximately a year and a half before we decided Defendant’s direct appeal.
See Cook,
The district court failed to directly address two arguments raised by Defendant in his § 2255 motion: (1) whether the district court curtailed cross-examination of government witnesses; and (2) whether Defendant’s counsel was ineffective in that counsel failed to present certain important issues to the Tenth Circuit on direct appeal. The court did, however, make a blanket statement that all of Defendant’s motions were frivolous.
The district court’s use of the word frivolous informs us that, at least as to some of Defendant’s issues, the court relied on 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). We therefore must first determine whether § 1915(d) can be applied to § 2255 proceedings. A brief history of these two sections is in order.
Section 1915(d) authorizes dismissal of any in forma pauperis proceeding if the cоurt is “satisfied that the action is frivolous or malicious.” “The purpose of § 1915(d) is ‘to discourage the filing of, and waste of judicial and private resources upon, baseless lawsuits that paying litigants generally do not initiate.’ ”
Hall v. Bellmon,
Prior to the 1976 enactment of the Rules Governing § 2255 Proceedings, which became effective on February 1, 1977, this circuit, following the lead of the Supreme Court, interpreted § 2255 to be a separate civil action which required either payment of a filing fee in the district court or leave to proceed in forma pauperis by the district court.
Martin v. United States,
We note that Defendant may be procedurally barred from raising, on collateral attack, four of the issues we today remand to the district court. These issues include: (1) whether government witness Yvonne Cross was threatened and forced to testify; (2) whether Defendant’s counsel encouraged Ms. Cross to testify against Defendant creating a conflict of interest; (3) whether Defendant’s counsel was ineffеctive in failing to investigate the facts of the affidavit for the search warrant; and (4) whether the district court curtailed cross-examination of government witnesses.
Section 2255 motions are not available to test the legality of matters which should have been raised on direct appeal.
See United States v. Frady,
Defendant’s failure to present the four issues listed above in his direct appeal suggests procedural default. However, Defendant’s final assertion on remand — ie., that his appellate counsel was ineffective — if found by the district court to hаve merit, may allege sufficient cause to excuse this failure. If the district court finds that Defendant has alleged sufficient cause for his procedural default, the court must then address whether Defendant has been prejudiced by these four alleged errors.
As his eleventh ground for § 2255 relief in his appellate brief, Defendant asserts for the first time that the federal courts lacked jurisdiction over Defendant for the offenses alleged. Wе address this issue because jurisdictional issues are never waived and can be raised on collateral attack,
see Joe v. United States,
In sum, with regard to the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel in the examination of Officer MeCrory, we AFFIRM. With regard to the Fourth Amendment issues, we REVERSE and REMAND for the district court to determine whether Defendant had a full and fair opportunity to raise these claims on direct appeal. With regard to all other issues — ie., whether government witness Yvonne Cross was threatened and forced to testify, whether Defendant’s counsel encouraged Ms. Cross to testify against Defendant creating a conflict of interest, whether Defendant’s counsel was ineffective in failing to investigate the facts of the affidavit for the search warrant, whether the district court curtailed cross-éxamination of government witnеsses, and whether Defendant’s appellate counsel was ineffective — we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The district court clerk filed the motion in the underlying criminal action, and then the clerk opened a separate file with a civil docket number. Although § 2255 motions are a continuation of the same criminal proceeding,
see
Rules Governing § 2255 Proceedings, Rule 3 and accompanying Advisory Committee Nоte, this practice "appears to be the result of instructions from the Administrative Office of the United States Courts.”
See Williams
v.
United States,
. Although the district court did not specify where it had previously addressed these arguments, we have located the court’s rejection of the first issue in its disposition of Defendant's post-trial motion for an evidentiary hearing. We were unable to find the court’s prior consideration of the second issue.
. Although a § 2255 motion has many of the characteristics of a writ of habeas corpus, it is technically not a habeas proceeding, but is instead a motion attacking Defendant’s sentence. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
. Defendant’s appellate brief contained twenty grounds not raised below which are therefore waived:
(1) the arresting officer violated Defendant’s Fourth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights at the time of arrest by beating, choking and kicking Defendant; (2) Defendant was singled out for selective prosecution in the federal forum; (3) Defendant was denied due process of law' because state charges were referred for federal prosecution; (4) the federal courts, upon learning that identical state charges were pending in state court, should have exercised abstention under the doctrine of Younger v. Harris,401 U.S. 37 [91 S.Ct. 746 ,27 L.Ed.2d 669 ] (1971); (5) the federal courts violated the principles of cоmity by taking jurisdiction over Defendant's state charges without the state court waiving its original jurisdiction; (6) the state was a mere tool and had no say in the government's taking over the state charges; (7) Defendant was denied due process of law and equal treatment at all three detention hearings; (8) Defendant’s prosecution was the result of a conspiracy between a police officer and a federal agent; (9) the distriсt court’s refusal to grant Defendant's motion for a continuance violated his Sixth Amendment rights; (10) the district court’s refusal to remove a federal agent who was a government witness from the courtroom denied petitioner a fair trial; (11) Defendant was denied a fast and speedy trial; (12) the prosecution denied Defendant a fair trial by failing to disclose perjured testimony of Officer Mark McCrory, by failing to disclose the identity of the confidеntial informant, and by failing to produce the drugs and the property room receipt; (13) the prosecution obtained the conviction by using the perjured testimony of Officer Mark McCrory, Agent Mark Siebert, Officer Joseph H. Vandiver, Trisha Swimp, and Yvonne Cross (this ground is not waived to the extent that Defendant alleged below that Yvonne Cross was threatened and forced to testify); (14) Defendant was denied the right to call his wife as a defense witness; (15) Dеfendant was denied a fair trial, because the prosecution disclosed to the jury, witness Yvonne Cross’ pre-trial detention status; (16) Defendant's sentence is unconstitutional because the government failed to serve notice on Defendant of its intent to use a state conviction for purpose of enhancement; (17) Defendant's sentences are unconstitutional due to the district court's reliance for enhancement purposes on void or voidable, tainted, infirm, and unconstitutionally obtained prior state convictions; (18) the district court erred in not conducting an evidentiary hearing into the validity of the former conviction used to enhance Defendant’s sentence; (19) the district court erred in not requiring the government to prove the constitutionality of the former state conviction; and (20) the district court erred in accepting the probation officer’s calculation of the drug quantity.
. Specifically, Defendant alleges the following Fourth Amendment violations in his appellate brief: (1) the officer's affidavit was constitutionally inadequate to support a lawful search of Defendant’s apartment; (2) the issuance of the search warrant "for night time service” was unlawful where the affidavit did not indicate that the property would be lost, stolen or destroyed; (3) the search warrant was issued in violation of state law in that the underlying affidavit, founded upon allegations of a confidential informant, lacked facts or reasons proving the confidential informant to be a credible or reliable person; (4) the judge issuing the warrant erred in granting night time execution when the affidavit failed to set forth special circumstances, exigencies or reasonableness for carrying out the unusual night time search of Defendant's home; and (5) the judge issuing the warrant was not neutral or detached.
. Defendant challenges the district court’s resolution of this issue on two grounds: (1) that Defendant was denied a fair trial because Ms. Cross was forced to testify against Defendant; and (2) that the district court erred in accepting the unprpven, unsupported, perjured and recanted testimony of government witness Yvonne Cross. We fully addressed the second allegatiоn on direct appeal.
See Cook,
. However, it is permissible in appropriate circumstances for this court to dismiss an in forma pauperis § 2255 appeal as frivolous under § 1915(d), because a filing fee or in forma pau-peris status is required to appeal a district court’s § 2255 determination. Fed.R.App.P. Rule 24(a).
