Here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_Christian
Now there have been heretical movements called "Judaizers" that have tried to align Christian teaching and practice with those of Judaism.
I'm primarily talking about Jewish in the cultural sense, which obviously wouldn't necessarily contradict being Christian. Secular Jews obviously don't adhere much to the religious aspects of Judaism, but primarily identify with the more cultural aspects of being Jewish. Culture and faith often go together.
Jesus's status as messiah or at least a prophetic figure has some advocates among religious Jews, most famous being Martin Buber.
Is that the haisdic Jews? Buber's books focus on that tradition a lot.
There's Jewish humanists (is that what is meant by secular jew?) like Erich Fromm who dont believe in an afterlife, miracles, God in the sense of anything other than a human invented concept or, effectively, anything supernatural who would consider Jesus as a prophet, in the same sense or tradition of other, earlier, prophets. Although I think that those individuals have parted ways from judaism in some sense, at least religiously, if not culturally or ethno-national identity.
The judeo-Christian traditions to me are nonsensical, many of them appear political, especially American ones and their relationship towards Jewish people is at best unflattering, either orthodox Jews consider them gentiles or outsiders in any case anyway or they themselves believe that Jews have a special status only because their final, complete return from diasporia communities will result in the advent of the apocalypse which will end them anyway.