Although the petitioner, Wesley William Walter, and his co-defendants raised the identical speedy trial act claim on their separate appeals from their criminal convictions on narcotics offenses, we held that Walter’s claim lacked merit but reached the opposite conclusion in his codefendants’ case. As a result, we affirmed Walter’s conviction and reversed his codefendants’. The instant appeal raises the question of whether a federal prisoner may remedy such disparate treatment by means of collateral attack. We conclude he may.
I
Walter was charged with the offenses relevant to the instant appeal on June 12, 1986. The indictment was voluminous; it included 56 counts and named 33 defendants, including Walter, Leslie Roy Jordan, and Ronald Bernard Croft. The Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3161 et seq., ordinarily requires that a defendant be tried within 70 days of a filing of an indictment or information, or the first appearance before a judge or a magistrate. 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1). In exceptional cases, however, the act allows delay in excess of 70 days. Specifically, it contains certain exclusions that toll the running of the 70 day period. Relevant to this case is the exclusion for delay incurred to serve “the ends of justice.” 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(8)(A).
On July 14, the district court entered a “general order” that tolled the 70 day period under the “ends of justice” exclusion on the basis of “the complexity” of the indictment. The court offered no further explanation. As the court never stated when the period of exclusion would end, its order amounted to an indefinite continuance of the defendants’ trial date.
On November 12, 1986, the district court severed some counts and some defendants for trial. In February of the following year, it set a trial date for Walter and a separate one for Jordan and Croft. Walter filed a motion to dismiss for violation of the Speedy Trial Act. Jordan and Croft filed similar motions. They were all denied by the district court.
Jordan and Croft were tried in a jury trial that began in November of 1987. Walter’s jury trial did not commence until March 1, 1988. All three were convicted
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and appealed their convictions to this court. All three raised the same Speedy Trial Act issue on appeal, namely, that the district court failed to set a specific time limit for the delay permitted under the “ends of justice” exception and failed to give specific reasons for invoking that exception. On appeal, Walter’s conviction was affirmed. In an unpublished memorandum decision, we found no violation of the Speedy Trial Act. After we decided Walter’s appeal, Croft’s and Jordan’s appeals were heard and decided together. In a published opinion, we found that the Speedy Trial Act had been violated on the very grounds we rejected in Walter’s appeal. We held that the indictment must be dismissed because the district court had not limited its continuance to a specific period of time and had not made specific findings to support the “ends of justice” exception.
United States v. Jordan,
After the Jordan decision, Walter filed a § 2255 motion, arguing that his conviction should be reversed due to the inconsistent decisions of this court on the Speedy Trial Act issue. The district court denied Walter’s motion. The reasons the district court gave for its ruling were that Walter had not raised the issue prior to trial and that he had failed to appeal his conviction. Walter now appeals the denial of his § 2255 motion.
II
A
It is clear from the record that the district court was mistaken in its belief that Walter failed to raise the Speedy Trial Act issue prior to trial and that he did not appeal his conviction. The government concedes that the district court erred in both these findings, but it urges us to consider Walter’s petition on the merits rather than remanding for reconsideration. We have the power to do so,
see Jaffke v. Dunham,
B
We first consider the effect of our rejection of Walter’s speedy trial claim on direct appeal on his petition for postconviction relief. It is clear that neither issue nor claim preclusion is applicable to Walter’s petition; like habeas corpus and cor-am nobis, § 2255 is a well-established exception to the principles of res judicata.
See United States v. Donn,
*817
We need not rest our decision on an exercise of discretion. A ground for the mandatory exercise of our § 2255 authority, manifest injustice, is present in Walter’s case. Fundamental fairness requires that like cases be treated alike.
See, e.g., Griffith v. Kentucky,
The necessity of treating identically-situated co-defendants identically is embodied in our decision in
United States v. Olano,
C
Having determined that Walter may assert his speedy trial claim in a § 2255 petition, we .next turn to the merits of Walter’s claim. It is, of course, clear that Walter’s right to a speedy trial was violated; we determined as much in
Jordan.
Were we considering Walter’s claim on direct appeal, we would be obligated to vacate his conviction and order the charges dismissed.
See Griffith,
The government contends that Walter is nevertheless barred from obtaining relief on a § 2255 post-conviction petition by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Teague v. Lane,
We need not determine whether
Teague
is applicable to § 2255 cases, because contrary to the government’s contention, our decision does not constitute new law, nor
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would granting the relief sought here “create a new rule because the prior decision is applied in a novel setting.”
See Stringer v. Black, -
U.S. -,
The rules Walter seeks to have applied to his case were clearly established before
Jordan
in
United States v. Pollock,
Pollock
created a simple rule for application to a wide spectrum of “ends of justice” exclusion cases; to be valid the exclusion must be for a specific period of time and be accompanied by a valid set of reasons based on the statutory factors. Our analysis in
Jordan
required no more than a simple examination of the record to determine that the exception in that case was not limited to a specific time period and was not justified by a reference to the • pertinent statutory factors.
See Jordan,
The error in Walter’s appéal was not that w'e declared the wrong rule; rather we merely misapplied the correct rule. The correct application of Pollock was made in Jordan. However understandable the error we made in Walter’s appeal was, it is the Jordan application that controls and that requires reversal here.
Conclusion
As has been noted above,
Jordan
is indistinguishable from the instant case; indeed, it is literally the same case. Its application of
Pollock
constitutes the law of this circuit. We therefore find a violation of the speedy trial act — Walter’s conviction must be vacated and the indictment against him dismissed.
See Jordan,
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. For this reason, at oral argument we permitted Gray to join in Olano’s claim of Rule 24(c) error.
