PER CURIAM:
Appellant, a District of Columbia prisoner, noticed this appeal from the District Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The Government moves to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Since appellant has not obtained a certificate of probable cause to appeal
or shown that a certificate is warranted, we are without power to entertain the appeal. Accordingly, we grant the motion.
I
Appellant was convicted in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia of murder and related offenses. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed the convictions, specifically rejecting appellant’s Sixth Amendment claim that the Superior Court improperly refused his mid-trial request for leave to represent himself.
Subsequently, the Court of Appeals rejected appellant’s bid for rehearing
en banc,
and the Supreme Court denied his petition for certiorari.
Appellant then filed his habeas corpus petition in the District Court.
That court,
sua sponte,
dismissed the petition
on authority of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Swain v.
Pressley.
Appellant then noticed this appeal and simultaneously moved the District Court for a certificate of proba
ble cause.
Without acting on appellant’s motion, the District Court transmitted the notice of appeal to this court, and later, stating merely that “a notice of appeal has been previously filed,” denied the motion as moot.
In this collateral proceeding, appellant raises the same Sixth Amendment issue that was presented and decided on his direct appeal. Appellant acknowledges that he is foreclosed from relitigating that issue through a motion for post-conviction relief in the Superior Court.
He argues, however, that this very inability to do so rendered the remedy by motion inadequate,
and enabled the District Court to consider his habeas corpus petition. We disagree.
II
Congress has ordained that
[a]n appeal may not be taken to [a federal] court of appeals from the final order in a habeas corpus proceeding where the detention complained of arises out of process issued by a State court, unless the justice or judge who rendered the order or a circuit justice or judge issues a certificate of probable cause.
This requirement is both mandatory and jurisdictional.
As we have observed, the District Court denied appellant’s motion for a certificate of probable cause, but on the ground — which we cannot accept — that the motion was moot because the appeal had already been taken.
Treating appellant’s
notice of appeal as a request that we issue such a certificate,
we are called upon to determine whether we should do so to enable this appeal to proceed.
It was to prevent frivolous appeals from impeding a state’s ability promptly to effectuate sentences imposed by its courts that Congress insisted that a state prisoner obtain a certificate of probable cause to proceed with a habeas corpus appeal.
And “[i]t is generally agreed that probable cause requires something more than the absence of frivolityf;] ... [it] requires petitioner to make a ‘substantial showing of the denial of a federal right.’ ”
Appellant has made no such showing in the case before us.
As we have indicated, a prisoner under a sentence imposed by the Superior Court of the District Court of the District of Columbia may collaterally challenge the constitutionality of his conviction by moving in that court for vacatur of his sentence.
The prisoner may also, if unsuccessful on his motion in the Superior Court, prosecute an appeal to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
In
Swain v.
Pressley,
the Supreme Court held that the District Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain a habeas corpus petition attacking the constitutional validity of a Superior Court sentence even after the local remedy, if adequate and effective, has been pursued unsuccessfully.
Consequently, although prisoners sentenced by state courts may resort to federal habeas corpus after exhaustion of their state remedies,
a District of Columbia prisoner has no recourse to a federal judicial forum unless the local remedy is “inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.”
III
In determining whether the local remedy is “inadequate or ineffective,” we are guided by judicial interpretations of the statutory provisions enabling federal prisoners to challenge their convictions.
The federal and local statutes are nearly identical in language, and functionally they are equivalent.
The remedy now available to District of Columbia prisoners was patterned after that conferred upon federal prisoners,
and both remedies are commensurate with habeas corpus.
That judges of the Superior Court do not have the tenure and salary protection afforded federal judges
does not call for a different conclusion.
“[T]he judges of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia must be presumed competent to decide all issues, including constitutional issues, that routinely arise in the trial of criminal cases.”
It is well established in the federal circuits that a federal prisoner cannot raise collaterally any issue litigated and adjudicated on a direct appeal from his conviction,
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PER CURIAM:
Appellant, a District of Columbia prisoner, noticed this appeal from the District Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The Government moves to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Since appellant has not obtained a certificate of probable cause to appeal
or shown that a certificate is warranted, we are without power to entertain the appeal. Accordingly, we grant the motion.
I
Appellant was convicted in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia of murder and related offenses. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed the convictions, specifically rejecting appellant’s Sixth Amendment claim that the Superior Court improperly refused his mid-trial request for leave to represent himself.
Subsequently, the Court of Appeals rejected appellant’s bid for rehearing
en banc,
and the Supreme Court denied his petition for certiorari.
Appellant then filed his habeas corpus petition in the District Court.
That court,
sua sponte,
dismissed the petition
on authority of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Swain v.
Pressley.
Appellant then noticed this appeal and simultaneously moved the District Court for a certificate of proba
ble cause.
Without acting on appellant’s motion, the District Court transmitted the notice of appeal to this court, and later, stating merely that “a notice of appeal has been previously filed,” denied the motion as moot.
In this collateral proceeding, appellant raises the same Sixth Amendment issue that was presented and decided on his direct appeal. Appellant acknowledges that he is foreclosed from relitigating that issue through a motion for post-conviction relief in the Superior Court.
He argues, however, that this very inability to do so rendered the remedy by motion inadequate,
and enabled the District Court to consider his habeas corpus petition. We disagree.
II
Congress has ordained that
[a]n appeal may not be taken to [a federal] court of appeals from the final order in a habeas corpus proceeding where the detention complained of arises out of process issued by a State court, unless the justice or judge who rendered the order or a circuit justice or judge issues a certificate of probable cause.
This requirement is both mandatory and jurisdictional.
As we have observed, the District Court denied appellant’s motion for a certificate of probable cause, but on the ground — which we cannot accept — that the motion was moot because the appeal had already been taken.
Treating appellant’s
notice of appeal as a request that we issue such a certificate,
we are called upon to determine whether we should do so to enable this appeal to proceed.
It was to prevent frivolous appeals from impeding a state’s ability promptly to effectuate sentences imposed by its courts that Congress insisted that a state prisoner obtain a certificate of probable cause to proceed with a habeas corpus appeal.
And “[i]t is generally agreed that probable cause requires something more than the absence of frivolityf;] ... [it] requires petitioner to make a ‘substantial showing of the denial of a federal right.’ ”
Appellant has made no such showing in the case before us.
As we have indicated, a prisoner under a sentence imposed by the Superior Court of the District Court of the District of Columbia may collaterally challenge the constitutionality of his conviction by moving in that court for vacatur of his sentence.
The prisoner may also, if unsuccessful on his motion in the Superior Court, prosecute an appeal to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
In
Swain v.
Pressley,
the Supreme Court held that the District Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain a habeas corpus petition attacking the constitutional validity of a Superior Court sentence even after the local remedy, if adequate and effective, has been pursued unsuccessfully.
Consequently, although prisoners sentenced by state courts may resort to federal habeas corpus after exhaustion of their state remedies,
a District of Columbia prisoner has no recourse to a federal judicial forum unless the local remedy is “inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.”
III
In determining whether the local remedy is “inadequate or ineffective,” we are guided by judicial interpretations of the statutory provisions enabling federal prisoners to challenge their convictions.
The federal and local statutes are nearly identical in language, and functionally they are equivalent.
The remedy now available to District of Columbia prisoners was patterned after that conferred upon federal prisoners,
and both remedies are commensurate with habeas corpus.
That judges of the Superior Court do not have the tenure and salary protection afforded federal judges
does not call for a different conclusion.
“[T]he judges of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia must be presumed competent to decide all issues, including constitutional issues, that routinely arise in the trial of criminal cases.”
It is well established in the federal circuits that a federal prisoner cannot raise collaterally any issue litigated and adjudicated on a direct appeal from his conviction,
absent an intervening change in the law.
Any other rule would frustrate policies strongly favoring conservation of judicial resources and finality of judicial deci
sions.
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals has similarly held that resolution of an issue on direct review bars relit-igation of that issue in a District of Columbia court.
Because the local statutory motion for vacatur of sentence is thus unavailable to appellant, he insists that the local remedy was inadequate and ineffective, and that therefore his habeas corpus petition in the District Court was proper.
This is not a case in which a District of Columbia prisoner has been deprived of a full and fair opportunity to litigate a color-able claim in the District of Columbia courts.
On the contrary, appellant pressed his Sixth Amendment argument on appeal to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, although he did not prevail. Collateral review may be available to rectify an error not correctable on direct appeal, or when exceptional circumstances excuse a failure to assert the error on appeal.
But “it must be remembered that direct appeal is the primary avenue for review of a conviction or sentence,”
and mere lack of success on that appeal does not pave the way for collateral attack.
Habeas corpus is available to appellant, we repeat, only if “the remedy by motion is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.”
It is the inefficacy of the remedy, not a personal inability to utilize it, that is determinative, and appellant’s difficulty here is simply that his circumstances preclude him from invoking it.
We therefore reject appellant’s argument that he was entitled to relitigate his Sixth Amendment claim in the District Court. Appellant’s habeas corpus petition thus lacks merit and, consequently, issuance of a certificate of probable cause to appeal is not warranted. Since without such a certificate this court has no jurisdiction over this appeal, we grant the Government’s motion to dismiss.
So ordered.