Respondent-appellant Robert J. Henderson, Warden of the Auburn Correctional Facility, appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in October 1990, Vincent L. Broderick, J., granting petitioner-appellee William Cody’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Judge Broderick granted the petition on the ground that extensive delay in the processing of Cody’s criminal appeal in the New York State courts violated his constitutional right to due process, even though the New York State Appellate Division, Second Department (Appellate Division), affirmed Cody’s conviction a few months after he brought his habeas petition. Appellant Warden argues that Cody is not entitled to habeas relief because he failed to establish that the delayed disposition of his appeal in the state courts prejudiced his appeal. For reasons given below, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions to allow Cody the option of recasting his habeas petition as an action for damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
I. Background
In 1978, William Cody was indicted in Westchester County on charges of attempted robbery in the first degree, burglary in the second degree, attempted grand larceny in the second degree and unlawful imprisonment in the first degree. The indictment arose out of the robbery of the home of actor Hume Cronyn, during which Cody gagged and handcuffed Cronyn, his secretary and a real estate broker and threatened two of the three at gunpoint. In June *717 1979, Cody pled guilty to the single charge of attempted robbery in the first degree in exchange for dismissal of the other counts of the indictment. Cody was sentenced in July 1979 to a term of imprisonment of six to 12 years, to run consecutively to parole time owed by Cody from a prior conviction.
On July 18, 1979, a notice of appeal was filed on Cody’s behalf. In February 1980, Cody moved for permission to proceed in forma pauperis and for the assignment of appellate counsel. The Appellate Division granted the motion in March 1980 and assigned Alton Maddox, Jr., Esq., as counsel. At the same time, the Appellate Division ordered the court stenographer to make, certify and file within 60 days the typewritten transcripts of the minutes of all the proceedings below. In March 1981, the Appellate Division also ordered the court stenographer to produce two copies of the transcripts of a Wade hearing that had been conducted shortly before Cody’s guilty plea and to provide those transcripts to Maddox without cost. Despite these two orders, the transcripts still had not been filed with the Clerk of the Appellate Division as of July 6, 1984, almost five years after Cody’s original notice of appeal. Also, Maddox apparently did not receive a copy of the complete minutes until October 1985.
Cody escaped from state prison in July 1980 and was not returned until October 1981. While out of prison, he was convicted of assault in the second degree in Bronx County, for which he received a sentence of six years to life imprisonment. Subsequently, he was also convicted of escape in the first degree and sentenced to a term of two to four years, to run concurrently with the six years to life term but consecutive to any time owed on prior convictions.
In October 1982, the District Attorney of Westchester County moved to dismiss Cody’s appeal. Cody apparently contested this motion on the ground that he had not yet received a transcript of the lower court proceedings, and in November 1982 the Appellate Division denied the motion. Nonetheless, two and one-half years later, in June 1985, the Appellate Division dismissed Cody’s appeal sua sponte even though Maddox still had not received complete transcripts of the lower court proceedings. Neither Maddox nor the Clerk of the Appellate Division informed Cody at this time that his appeal had been dismissed. Cody was apparently unaware of the dismissal until 1988, when he wrote to the Appellate Division requesting that Maddox be replaced as his assigned counsel and was informed that his appeal had been dismissed three years earlier. Between 1986 and 1988, Cody and his family members had made repeated attempts to contact Maddox in order to clarify the status of the appeal, but they rarely received even a reply in response to their inquiries much less notice that the appeal had actually been dismissed.
Upon learning that his appeal had been dismissed, Cody moved pro se in the Appellate Division to vacate the 1985 dismissal order and to obtain assignment of new counsel. In July 1988, the Appellate Division granted Cody’s motion, reinstated his appeal and assigned John F. Clennan, Esq. to prosecute it expeditiously. In February 1989, Cody sent the present habeas corpus petition to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel and unconstitutional delay in the processing of his state criminal appeal. Shortly thereafter, the petition was transferred to the Southern District where it was filed. Six months later, in September 1989, the Appellate Division affirmed Cody’s judgment of conviction, more than 10 years after his notice of appeal had first been filed. Subsequently, Cody was denied leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals.
In November 1989, Cody moved for appointment of counsel in his habeas action in the Southern District. The district court granted the motion in March 1990, and directed counsel to address the issue of undue delay in the appellate process. In October 1990, the district court granted Cody’s application for habeas corpus relief and ordered his release from custody. The court applied the four-factor analysis of undue delay set forth in
Barker v. Wingo,
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II. Discussion
A. Appellant’s Threshold Argument
Appellant Warden challenges the ruling of the district court on grounds that may best be described as jurisdictional. Appellant points out that Cody’s habeas petition does not attack the validity of the state judgment of conviction under which he is incarcerated. Rather, the petition relates only to defects in the state appellate process. Such defects, appellant Warden argues, simply do not affect the validity of a trial court’s judgment of conviction; this is why, for example, the proper remedy for an ineffective appeal is not release from custody but rather the assignment of new appellate counsel to prosecute the appeal de novo. See, e.g.,
Anders v. California,
In his habeas petition, Cody alleges that he is being held unlawfully because “after 9% years of confinement [he] has not had timely appellate review” in “state court[ ]” of “the conviction for which he stands” incarcerated. He argues that this lengthy delay is a constitutional violation of his due process rights, a violation for which New York State is solely responsible owing to “[(Inexcusable bad faith.” Cody’s contention is that by flagrantly violating his due process rights in this way the state has rendered his otherwise lawful incarceration unlawful. Such a claim satisfies the jurisdictional prerequisite for habeas review.
We agree with Cody that the district court properly considered his claim on the merits. The Supreme Court has not yet directly addressed the issue of whether the Constitution guarantees a speedy criminal appeal, once an opportunity for an appeal is provided. The lower federal courts, however, have grappled with the question, and it is now clear in this circuit that substantial delay in the state criminal appeal process is a sufficient ground to justify the exercise of federal habeas jurisdiction. See, e.g.,
Diaz v. Henderson,
B. Arguments Concerning the Merits
Appellant next argues that even if the district court had jurisdiction, it erred in granting Cody the remedy of unconditional release. To determine whether release was an appropriate remedy, however, we must first determine whether Cody suffered a due process violation. With respect to the merits of Cody’s claim, we have acknowledged that the right to a reasonably timely appeal is included among the protections afforded by the due process clause when a state does provide for an appeal.
Simmons,
But appellant Warden argues that in this circuit, “[t]he usual disposition of a meritorious habeas petition based on a delayed appeal is to grant an alternative writ that orders the state either to prosecute the appeal within a reasonable period of time, or to release the petitioner.”
Simmons,
We find appellant’s argument persuasive. Diaz and Simmons clearly stand for the proposition that unconditional release from custody is not an appropriate remedy unless Cody can demonstrate that appellate delay caused substantial prejudice to the disposition of his appeal. Cody did not establish substantial prejudice nor did the district court make such a finding. It is true that Cody’s second state-appointed appellate counsel, John F. Clennan, submitted an affidavit to the district court stating that due to the delay unspecified transcripts could not be located, unnamed issues could not be recalled and unidenti *720 fied character references could not be obtained. Even if these allegations are accepted as true, none of them is sufficiently specific to show that, the appeal was substantially prejudiced. It follows that under our precedents the district court erred in granting the remedy of release.
Cody challenges this view, pointing out that it elevates substantial prejudice to the status of a necessary condition for granting habeas release from custody. According to Cody, such a rule is constitutionally deficient because it may serve to deprive a petitioner who has suffered a serious due process violation through state appellate delay of an effective legal remedy. Cody emphasizes that the due process violation is a direct consequence of the appellate delay, and is therefore not remedied by the subsequent provision of a fair, albeit late, appellate review process.
This is a troubling argument. We agree with Cody that a due process violation may occur — and did occur here — as a direct consequence of undue appellate delay, regardless of whether the victim of that delay subsequently receives a fair appellate review. The more difficult question, however, is what the proper remedy is for such a violation when the delay does not taint the disposition of the appeal. As we have just noted, on this issue we are constrained by our precedents. Under Diaz and Simmons, the remedy of unconditional release is not available unless the appeal has been tainted.
Simmons
and
Diaz
apparently rest upon the following reasoning. The traditional function of the writ is to secure release from illegal custody.
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
Cody argues, however, that this reasoning is faulty for a number of reasons. First, he claims that it undermines the basis for issuance of a conditional writ, which requires an unduly dilatory state court either to hear the appeal within a specific period of time or release the prisoner. This is the course we followed, for example, in
Brooks,
We do not accept this argument. When a conditional writ is ordered, the court has already found a due process infringement. Prejudice to the outcome of the appeal is not a necessary condition for such a finding. The question then becomes one of remedy. The ground for release under the conditional writ is not merely that additional time has elapsed after the district court’s finding and initial warning, but that the state court has purposely allowed the con
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tinuation of a due process violation after the district court gave it notice that failure to provide a prompt appeal would result in invalidation of its judgment of conviction. Such deliberate state neglect of a petitioner’s due process rights in the face of the district court’s clear warning that further delay would not be tolerated is sufficiently egregious to suggest an impairment of the “constitutional integrity of the appeal itself,”
Simmons,
discharge is a generally available remedy where lesser remedies prove ineffective in curbing a continuing due process violation. Where a court order has denied discharge on the condition that a lesser remedy be granted, but that order has gone unfulfilled, discharge is indeed appropriate.
Burkett v. Cunningham,
Moreover, Cody’s argument neglects the important pragmatic function of the conditional writ in offering federal assistance to state prisoners whose due process rights are violated by unreasonably delayed state appeals. While
Diaz
and
Simmons
make clear that the remedy of unconditional release in the absence of a showing of prejudice to the appeal grants too much, it is equally clear that “[djenial of all relief is too little — it ignores the denial of effective counsel and a reasonably speedy appeal, rights a prisoner does have.”
Simmons,
Cody also argues that the requirement of
Simmons
and
Diaz
that prejudice to the appeal be shown in order to justify release is inconsistent with the analysis of unconstitutional delay in the speedy trial context set forth in
Barker v. Wingo.
Cody points out that under
Barker
prejudice is merely one of four factors taken into account in assessing whether a delay has risen to unconstitutional proportions, and that if the district court determines that a delay is unconstitutional release remains the appropriate remedy even when the delay itself did not prejudice the trial’s outcome. Thus, in
Strunk v. United States,
Cody’s argument rests on the premise that a defendant’s right to a speedy trial is fully congruent with his right to a speedy appeal. However, we have already pointed out that there are obvious differences between the two rights. One of the most obvious is the effect of a violation of the respective rights upon the validity of a judgment of conviction. The Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial imposes an essential limitation upon the right of the state to try a defendant in the first instance and to reach a valid judgment of conviction that overcomes the defendant’s initial presumption of innocence. Failure to satisfy this condition means that the state forfeits its right to try the defendant on the original indictment, and as a result the judgment of conviction pursuant to these flawed proceedings is also void. See
United States v. Furey,
In contrast, the violation of a defendant’s right to a speedy appeal does not by itself have the comparable effect of directly invalidating the court’s judgment of conviction. At the appellate stage, a defendant has been “stripped of his presumption of innocence” and is in the position of trying “to upset the prior determination of guilt.”
Ross v. Moffitt,
It follows that, as we have noted above, the
Barker
criteria must be applied differently in analyzing the constitutional significance of appellate, as opposed to trial, delay. In the trial context, to determine whether a delay violates the Sixth Amendment all four
Barker
factors, including prejudice, must be weighed in conjunction, with no one factor either a necessary or a sufficient condition to the finding of a constitutional violation.
Barker,
In the appellate context, the finding of a due process violation of the right to a speedy appeal does not end the inquiry. To decide whether the due process violation warrants the extraordinary habeas remedy of release from custody (or even a lesser remedy such as ordering a new appeal), the court must further determine whether the delay so tainted the appellate process as to “affect the constitutional integrity of the appeal itself.”
Simmons,
The judgment of the district court granting Cody’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is reversed. We vacate the judgment of the district court and remand the case to allow Cody the option of recasting his habeas corpus petition as a suit for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We commend assigned counsel for his diligent efforts on Cody’s behalf.
Notes
. For criticism of use of the Barker criteria, see Arkin, Speedy Criminal Appeal: A Right Without A Remedy, 74 Minn.L.Rev. 437, 495-98 (1990).
. It should also be noted that lesser remedies may be available such as "release on bail pending appeal or sentence reduction by a factor proportioned to the delay suffered by the defendant.” See Arkin, supra note 1, at 443.
