ELY, Circuit Judge:
The subject causes have been consolidated on appeal. Because the cases involve a single defendant and arise from the same criminal proceeding, the facts of each cause are discussed together. The legal issues, however, are distinct and require separate resolution.
FACTS
Richard E. Taylor appeals from his conviction of wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (1976) (No. 78-2512) and an order of the District Court denying his motion for a writ of error coram nobis (No. 79-1240).
Taylor and Dennis B. Wittman were jointly indicted for their part in the assertedly fraudulent acquisition of a substantial loan from the Continental Bank of Texas (“Continental”), in Houston, Texas. During the period of time covered by the indictment, late 1974 to early 1975, Taylor was a vice-president of the real estate department of Home Federal Savings and Loan Association (“Home Federal”), located in San Diego, California. The fraudulent “scheme or artifice” alleged by the Government was that Taylor and Wittman, who was a principal in several San Diego real estate development entities, had induced Continental to make a $1.97 million loan to a corporation run by Wittman, on the basis of their false representations of several material facts. In a January 16, 1975 letter signed by Taylor and containing an initialed postscript, Taylor and Wittman blatantly misrepresented to Continental that Home Federal held a first lien on certain California real property. This letter was telecopied from San Diego to Houston, where Wittman received it, photocopied it, and delivered the photocopy to a loan officer of Continental. The photocopy tendered to Continental, which was the copy of the letter Continental relied on in approving the loan, was admitted into evidence at Taylor’s trial as Government Exhibit “24.” On January 23, 1975, Taylor signed a letter agreement with Continental purporting to confirm Home Federal’s first lien commitment.1 After Taylor signed the letter agreement, without authorization, in his capacity as an officer of Home Federal, Continental funded the $1.97 million loan.
In July 1975, Wittman’s corporation defaulted on the loan. Taylor and Wittman were indicted in June 1977; the Government’s motion for severance was granted on January 16,1978. Taylor’s trial commenced on March 14, 1978.
[568]*568An issue at trial critical to the jurisdictional element of the crime charged2 was whether Taylor had already signed the fraudulent letter dated January 16, 1975 (the predecessor of Exhibit “24”) when it was telecopied from California to Texas, or whether Taylor had signed it after its transmission to Texas. Neither the “original” nor the telecopy was ever produced at trial. Instead, the Government introduced Exhibit “24,” which was either a photocopy of the telecopy or a more remote reproduction.3 While Exhibit “24” did reflect Taylor’s signature, it was never conclusively established that the exhibit was a direct copy of the telecopy, leaving open the possibility that the signature was not affixed prior to interstate communication. Taylor’s counsel at trial objected to the admission of this potentially spurious document on the basis of the “best evidence rule.” The trial court ultimately admitted Exhibit “24” as secondary evidence, relying on the Government’s claim that the original document had been unsuccessfully subpoenaed from the relevant parties, i. e., Continental, Home Federal, and Wittman’s corporation.4
In the course of the District Court’s probe of the prosecuting attorney on the subpoena issue, Taylor’s trial counsel made a qualified stipulation to the admission of the exhibit based on the truth of the Government’s representations.5
[569]*569Exhibit “24” proved to be a vital piece of evidence for the Government. It was used to rebut Taylor’s contention that a fraudulent scheme did not exist at the time of the transmission of the January 16, 1975 letter; it was used to corroborate in important respects the testimony of the prosecution’s key witness, Continental loan officer Michael Wells; and, most importantly, it provided evidence of an essential element of the charged offense — interstate communication to execute a fraud.6
The jury rendered a guilty verdict on March 29, 1978. Taylor was sentenced to a term of one year and a day. On July 12, 1978, Taylor filed a direct appeal from his conviction (No. 78-2512), assigning a variety of trial errors. The most significant allegation of error was that the District Court erred in the admission of Exhibit “24” because, inter alia, the copy was improper under the “best evidence rule” of the Federal Rules of Evidence.7 In his direct appeal Taylor did not impugn the veracity of the Government’s statements concerning the inability of the subpoena power to uncover the original document, since resolution of that matter necessarily involved matters outside the trial record. Taylor made a personal request for proof of the subpoenas. Unfortunately, the Government did not respond with such proof.8
On November 15, 1978, Taylor filed a motion in the District Court for a writ of error coram nobis challenging the Government’s subpoena representations and requesting a hearing thereon. The District Court denied Taylor’s motion without a hearing, due, in part, to the pendency of the direct appeal before this Court. Taylor filed an appeal (No. 79-1240) from the order of summary denial on March 12, 1979. Later, on May 3, 1979, following oral argument in the direct appeal, the two causes— direct and collateral — were consolidated. On January 15, 1980, both were submitted for decision.
DISCUSSION
I. No. 78-2512
Taylor raises several claims of error in his direct appeal, the most serious of which is that the District Court erred in admitting [570]*570Exhibit “24” into evidence. Having determined that these claims are without merit, we affirm Taylor’s conviction.
Taylor argues that because Exhibit “24” is at best a photocopy of the telecopied January 16,1975 letter, it was improperly admitted into evidence. Federal Rule of Evidence 1002, Taylor correctly asserts, requires the production of the “original” writing to prove the contents thereof, “except as otherwise provided.” Taylor contends that since Éxhibit “24” is neither an “original” under Rule 1002 nor a “duplicate” within the exception of Rule 1003,9 it should not have been admitted into evidence. Taylor’s argument overlooks the state of the trial record and the clear application of the exception of Rule 1004(2), which allows the admission of secondary evidence when the “original” cannot be obtained by available judicial procedures.10 When Exhibit “24” was offered for introduction into evidence at trial, the Government represented to the District Court that subpoenas requesting the “original” letter— i. e., the one typed in San Diego — 11 had been served on the parties and that the “original” was not produced.
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ELY, Circuit Judge:
The subject causes have been consolidated on appeal. Because the cases involve a single defendant and arise from the same criminal proceeding, the facts of each cause are discussed together. The legal issues, however, are distinct and require separate resolution.
FACTS
Richard E. Taylor appeals from his conviction of wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (1976) (No. 78-2512) and an order of the District Court denying his motion for a writ of error coram nobis (No. 79-1240).
Taylor and Dennis B. Wittman were jointly indicted for their part in the assertedly fraudulent acquisition of a substantial loan from the Continental Bank of Texas (“Continental”), in Houston, Texas. During the period of time covered by the indictment, late 1974 to early 1975, Taylor was a vice-president of the real estate department of Home Federal Savings and Loan Association (“Home Federal”), located in San Diego, California. The fraudulent “scheme or artifice” alleged by the Government was that Taylor and Wittman, who was a principal in several San Diego real estate development entities, had induced Continental to make a $1.97 million loan to a corporation run by Wittman, on the basis of their false representations of several material facts. In a January 16, 1975 letter signed by Taylor and containing an initialed postscript, Taylor and Wittman blatantly misrepresented to Continental that Home Federal held a first lien on certain California real property. This letter was telecopied from San Diego to Houston, where Wittman received it, photocopied it, and delivered the photocopy to a loan officer of Continental. The photocopy tendered to Continental, which was the copy of the letter Continental relied on in approving the loan, was admitted into evidence at Taylor’s trial as Government Exhibit “24.” On January 23, 1975, Taylor signed a letter agreement with Continental purporting to confirm Home Federal’s first lien commitment.1 After Taylor signed the letter agreement, without authorization, in his capacity as an officer of Home Federal, Continental funded the $1.97 million loan.
In July 1975, Wittman’s corporation defaulted on the loan. Taylor and Wittman were indicted in June 1977; the Government’s motion for severance was granted on January 16,1978. Taylor’s trial commenced on March 14, 1978.
[568]*568An issue at trial critical to the jurisdictional element of the crime charged2 was whether Taylor had already signed the fraudulent letter dated January 16, 1975 (the predecessor of Exhibit “24”) when it was telecopied from California to Texas, or whether Taylor had signed it after its transmission to Texas. Neither the “original” nor the telecopy was ever produced at trial. Instead, the Government introduced Exhibit “24,” which was either a photocopy of the telecopy or a more remote reproduction.3 While Exhibit “24” did reflect Taylor’s signature, it was never conclusively established that the exhibit was a direct copy of the telecopy, leaving open the possibility that the signature was not affixed prior to interstate communication. Taylor’s counsel at trial objected to the admission of this potentially spurious document on the basis of the “best evidence rule.” The trial court ultimately admitted Exhibit “24” as secondary evidence, relying on the Government’s claim that the original document had been unsuccessfully subpoenaed from the relevant parties, i. e., Continental, Home Federal, and Wittman’s corporation.4
In the course of the District Court’s probe of the prosecuting attorney on the subpoena issue, Taylor’s trial counsel made a qualified stipulation to the admission of the exhibit based on the truth of the Government’s representations.5
[569]*569Exhibit “24” proved to be a vital piece of evidence for the Government. It was used to rebut Taylor’s contention that a fraudulent scheme did not exist at the time of the transmission of the January 16, 1975 letter; it was used to corroborate in important respects the testimony of the prosecution’s key witness, Continental loan officer Michael Wells; and, most importantly, it provided evidence of an essential element of the charged offense — interstate communication to execute a fraud.6
The jury rendered a guilty verdict on March 29, 1978. Taylor was sentenced to a term of one year and a day. On July 12, 1978, Taylor filed a direct appeal from his conviction (No. 78-2512), assigning a variety of trial errors. The most significant allegation of error was that the District Court erred in the admission of Exhibit “24” because, inter alia, the copy was improper under the “best evidence rule” of the Federal Rules of Evidence.7 In his direct appeal Taylor did not impugn the veracity of the Government’s statements concerning the inability of the subpoena power to uncover the original document, since resolution of that matter necessarily involved matters outside the trial record. Taylor made a personal request for proof of the subpoenas. Unfortunately, the Government did not respond with such proof.8
On November 15, 1978, Taylor filed a motion in the District Court for a writ of error coram nobis challenging the Government’s subpoena representations and requesting a hearing thereon. The District Court denied Taylor’s motion without a hearing, due, in part, to the pendency of the direct appeal before this Court. Taylor filed an appeal (No. 79-1240) from the order of summary denial on March 12, 1979. Later, on May 3, 1979, following oral argument in the direct appeal, the two causes— direct and collateral — were consolidated. On January 15, 1980, both were submitted for decision.
DISCUSSION
I. No. 78-2512
Taylor raises several claims of error in his direct appeal, the most serious of which is that the District Court erred in admitting [570]*570Exhibit “24” into evidence. Having determined that these claims are without merit, we affirm Taylor’s conviction.
Taylor argues that because Exhibit “24” is at best a photocopy of the telecopied January 16,1975 letter, it was improperly admitted into evidence. Federal Rule of Evidence 1002, Taylor correctly asserts, requires the production of the “original” writing to prove the contents thereof, “except as otherwise provided.” Taylor contends that since Éxhibit “24” is neither an “original” under Rule 1002 nor a “duplicate” within the exception of Rule 1003,9 it should not have been admitted into evidence. Taylor’s argument overlooks the state of the trial record and the clear application of the exception of Rule 1004(2), which allows the admission of secondary evidence when the “original” cannot be obtained by available judicial procedures.10 When Exhibit “24” was offered for introduction into evidence at trial, the Government represented to the District Court that subpoenas requesting the “original” letter— i. e., the one typed in San Diego — 11 had been served on the parties and that the “original” was not produced. In reliance on this representation, the District Court admitted Exhibit “24” into evidence. Taylor’s counsel did not object to the exhibit’s admission.12 Because Taylor’s counsel failed to object to the admission of Exhibit “24,” and even stipulated to the unavailability of the “original” letter, the record on direct appeal compels that we reject Taylor’s “best evidence” argument.13
We have carefully considered Taylor’s remaining claims and find that the District Court did not abuse its discretion, that the jury was properly instructed, and that the evidence was adequate to support the jury verdict. Therefore, Taylor’s conviction of wire fraud in the District Court is affirmed.
II. No. 79-1240
During the pendency of Taylor’s direct appeal, he also filed a coram nobis motion with the District Court, the summary denial of which is the subject of the collateral appeal. In ruling on the denial of his collateral motion, we address solely the issue of whether Taylor has demonstrated that he is entitled to a hearing and do not decide whether relief is warranted. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the District Court and remand for further proceedings.
In the motion for a writ of error coram nobis14 presented to the District Court below, Taylor levels alarming charges against the Government. He contends that the prosecuting attorney misled the trial judge and defense counsel to believe that subpoenas had been issued at trial for the “original” letter, with the result that a less reliable document was admitted. In short, [571]*571Taylor’s claim gives rise to the somber prospect that the Government committed a fraud on the court which ultimately worked a great prejudice to Taylor’s case.15
While Taylor points to no cases involving facts closely tracking those alleged in his motion, we have no doubt that Taylor’s general assertion of principle is grounded in respectable authority, /. e., prosecutorial misconduct may so pollute a criminal prosecution as to require a new trial, especially when the taint in the proceedings seriously prejudices the accused. Courts, therefore, have ordered new trials when the prosecution has knowingly used perjured testimony16 or withheld materially favorable evidence from the defense;17 have excluded evidence seized pursuant to unlawful searches;18 and have dismissed indictments when the defendant was entrapped by the creative concert of police officers in the criminal activities.19 We see nothing that limits the due process principle to these situations. When a conviction is secured by methods that offend elementary standards of justice, the defendant may invoke the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee of a fundamentally fair trial. See Irvine v. California, 347 U.S. 128, 144-49, 74 S.Ct.' 381, 389-92, 98 L.Ed. 561 (1954) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting). Moreover, this principle is not strictly limited to those situations in which the defendant has suffered arguable prejudice; the principle designed to maintain also public confidence in the administration of justice.20
Thus, a claim of prosecutorial impropriety of the type pleaded in the subject motion may be a basis for relief in a coram nobis action.21 We must determine, therefore, whether the District Court erred in denying Taylor an opportunity to prove his allegations.22
[572]*572Before determining whether Taylor is entitled to a hearing, however, we note the problem presented by the assertion of a collateral challenge during the pendency of the direct appeal from a conviction. Generally, the noting of such an appeal severely restricts the filing of a collateral claim with the District Court, to avoid any anomaly associated with the simultaneous consideration of the same case by two courts. See Black v. United States, 269 F.2d 38, 41 (9th Cir. 1959), cert. denied, 361 U.S. 938, 80 S.Ct. 379, 4 L.Ed.2d 357 (1960); Welsh v. United States, 404 F.2d 333 (5th Cir. 1968) (per curiam); Womack v. United States, 395 F.2d 630, 631 (D.C.Cir.1968) (per curiam). The usual practice is to make a collateral assertion of error subsequent to the date of decision in the direct appeal. When this path is followed the risk of duplicitous and conflicting judicial administration is minimized, inasmuch as the disposition of the direct appeal may render the motion moot. See Black v. United States, 269 F.2d at 41.
The general rule of forebearance is not, however, a jurisdictional impediment. The District Court may entertain a collateral motion during the pendency of a direct appeal if “extraordinary circumstances” outweigh the considerations of administrative convenience and judicial economy. See Jack v. United States, 435 F.2d 317, 318 (9th Cir. 1970) (per curiam), cert. denied, 402 U.S. 933, 91 S.Ct. 1530, 28 L.Ed.2d 867 (1971); United States v. Davis, 604 F.2d 474, 484-85 (7th Cir. 1979); United States v. Tindle, 522 F.2d 689, 692-93 (D.C.Cir. 1975) (per curiam); Womack v. United States, 395 F.2d at 631; United States v. Deutsch, 321 F.Supp. 1356 (S.D.N.Y.1971), aff’d, 451 F.2d 98, 119 n.22 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 404 U.S. 1019, 92 S.Ct. 682, 30 L.Ed.2d 667 (1972). Hence, Taylor’s prior appeal from his conviction is not an absolute bar to his concurrent coram nobis motion, though it imposes the burden upon him of proving the existence of circumstances sufficiently extraordinary to warrant dual proceedings.
Whether that burden has been carried in this case is a close and difficult question. Taylor’s coram nobis claim directly and seriously implicates this Court’s decision in Taylor’s direct appeal. We affirmed the conviction largely because of our decision to uphold the admission of Exhibit “24” under the aegis of Federal Rule of Evidence 1004(2). That decision, in turn, was founded on the Government’s unsubstantiated, albeit unrebutted, declaration at trial that the subpoena power had failed to produce the original document. Therefore, Taylor’s collateral claim — challenging the truth of the Government’s representation— raises a disquieting question which threatens the very basis of our affirmance of Taylor’s conviction.
When, as in the exceptional facts of this case, the collateral claim casts such a dark shadow on a pivotal aspect of the direct appeal and, at the same time, implicates the fundamental fairness of the trial and propriety of the Government’s actions, it is our view that the concerns for justice are best served by prompt inquiry either confirming or dispelling the suspicion of irregularity raised. This is particularly true when, as here, the Government has refused forthrightly to account for or support its critical representations of fact. Accordingly, we hold that the District Court erred in dismissing Taylor’s motion solely because the direct appeal was pending before this Court.
Passing to the merits of this appeal, we must decide whether the District Court otherwise acted properly in dismissing Taylor’s motion for writ of coram nobis without the benefit of a hearing. Our task in analyzing his contention is made more difficult by the fact that the District Court, in passing on Taylor’s motion, gave only scant elaboration for its summary dismissal.
[573]*573The prosecuting attorney’s alleged misrepresentations, which form the basis of Taylor’s motion, are included in the trial record.23 As a consequence, the District Court appears to suggest in the order denying the motion, and the Government clearly argues on appeal, that any error in the trial court’s admission of Exhibit “24” was reflected in the trial record and, hence, should have been asserted in the direct appeal. Therefore, the argument proceeds, Taylor is relegated to asserting his argument, if at all, in the direct appeal and not by way of writ of error coram nobis. We have little quarrel with the proposition that ordinarily the erroneous admission of evidence at trial is an error which should be challenged by taking an appeal from the judgment of conviction. See Cauley v. United States, 294 F.2d 318, 320 (9th Cir. 1961); Barber v. United States, 197 F.2d 815 (10th Cir.) (per curiam), cert. denied, 344 U.S. 857, 73 S.Ct. 94, 97 L.Ed. 665 (1952). Yet that salutary principle finds no application here, and to invoke it is to misapprehend and obscure Taylor’s claim. The coram nobis motion does not focus on the propriety of the trial court’s reliance on the prosecuting attorney’s statements, without more, in the admission of Exhibit “24.” That matter was, properly, addressed in the direct appeal. Taylor’s collateral motion, rather, strikes at the veracity vel non of the Government’s representations to the trial court. On that issue, the record is barren. Indeed, it is because the collateral challenge propels us outside the record into the murky realm of speculation that we harbor doubts about the fairness of Taylor’s trial.24
Thus, in our view, the District Court erred in summarily denying Taylor’s claim merely because the challenged statements appear in the trial record.
The Government, in opposition to such a conclusion, insists that Taylor has not carried his burden of raising a question about the falsity of the prosecuting attorney’s comments. Since we deal here with the dismissal of a petition for coram nobis with no hearing, we must determine, as we do with claims under § 2255,25 whether the “motions and the files and records of the case conclusively show that the prisoner is entitled to no relief.”26 See United States v. Boniface, 601 F.2d 390, 393 (9th Cir. 1979); Dukes v. United States, 492 F.2d 1187, 1188 (9th Cir. 1974) (per curiam); Lopez v. United States, 439 F.2d 997, 999-1000 (9th Cir. 1971). This inquiry necessitates a twofold analysis: (1) whether the petitioner’s allegations specifically delineate the factual basis of his claim, Diamond v. United States, 432 F.2d 35, 37 (9th Cir. 1970); Wagner v. United States, 418 F.2d 618, 621 (9th Cir. 1969); and, (2) even where the allegations are specific, whether the records, files and affidavits are conclusive against the petitioner. United States v. Moore, 599 F.2d 310, 312 (9th Cir. 1979), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 1024, 100 S.Ct. 687, 62 L.Ed.2d 658 (1980). Since the subpoena issue does not appear on the record, but is an extrinsic matter, the principal legal question is whether Taylor has endowed his petition with sufficient factual particulars to require a hearing.
[574]*574In support of his assertion that the Government misled the trial court and defense counsel, Taylor points first to the record to demonstrate that the Government’s statements were not substantiated. To overcome the presumption of verity borne by the prosecuting attorney’s statements, Taylor relies largely on the affidavit of Stephen D. Guy, defense counsel at trial. Guy states in his affidavit that he was informed by Donald Seifers, the agent responsible for the Government’s subpoenas in this case, that, at best, some grand jury subpoenas may have been issued, but that Seifers was certain that the original letter had not been subpoenaed for the purpose of trial from at least two of the appropriate parties, i. e., Continental Bank and Home Federal.
Viewed against the record, Taylor’s claim does not lack for clarity, focusing as it does on the subpoena issue. Moreover, his charge is fortified by an affidavit which sets forth clear factual averments giving rise to a serious question as to the subpoenas. Compare Wagner v. United States, 418 F.2d at 621 (§ 2255 movant need not “detail his evidence,” only make “factual allegations”), with Wacht v. Cardwell, 604 F.2d 1245 (9th Cir. 1979) (mere allegation that the state trial judge failed to inform the defendant about his parole ineligibility was too general to require a § 2254 hearing), and Eaton v. United States, 384 F.2d 235 (9th Cir. 1967) (in a motion to vacate sentence based on defense counsel’s failure to call a material witness, the allegations were insufficient to sustain an inference that the testimony would have been favorable to appellant). Likewise, the consequences of the claim presented, if true, are manifest, since Exhibit “24” bore heavily on a pivotal issue at trial, i. e., Taylor’s usage of interstate communication to perpetrate a fraud.27 In short, Taylor’s claim is clear, detailed, plausible, and unrebutted by the record.
Further, this ease presents an unusual situation because the Government has made no effort specifically to deny Taylor’s charges — much less to produce the subpoenas in question. Despite the uncertainty surrounding its trial declarations, the Government has consistently resisted accountability by interposing technical arguments, some of which have been referred to above. The Government’s response plainly does nothing to controvert the substance of appellant’s claim. To the contrary, it serves to reinforce the lingering doubts in this case since proof of the subpoenas, if it exists, is presumably in the hands of the Government. Taylor’s inquiry, rather than being opposed, should have been welcomed by the Government as a means of building greater public confidence in our judicial system.
In the particular circumstances of this case — where at stake are both the rights of the individual before this Court and the sanctity of the courts generally — we are unprepared to say at this juncture that Taylor has failed to state a claim. Whether or not there is factual support for Taylor’s allegations should be the subject of further proceedings before the District Court.
We have concluded that there should have been a hearing in this case. If the Government did, in fact, subpoena the original letter, this should be easily demonstrated. It is frankly and sincerely our hope that such proof is forthcoming, obviating the need for further inquiry. But, on the other hand, if in the course of the hearing Taylor’s claims are borne out, the appropriate remedy can be promptly determined.28
[575]*575Accordingly, the coram nobis writ will be remanded to the District Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
SO ORDERED.