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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 13-12161
Non-Argument Calendar
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 5:12-cv-00573-JSM-PRL
JAMAL ABU SAMAK,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
WARDEN, FCC COLEMAN - MEDIUM,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
________________________
(September 10, 2014)
Before PRYOR, MARTIN, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Jamal Samak, a federal prisoner proceeding pro se, appeals the district
court’s dismissal for lack of jurisdiction of his 28 U.S.C § 2241 habeas corpus
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petition challenging his convictions and total sentence of life imprisonment,
imposed after a jury found him guilty of one count of conspiracy to violate the
Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 (“OCCA”), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371;
and one count of violating the OCCA through destruction by fire, in violation of
18 U.S.C. § 844(i). The district court’s dismissal was based on its conclusion that
Samak had failed to establish the necessary conditions for his claims to satisfy the
savings clause in 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e) such that they might be considered in a
§ 2241 petition.
On appeal, Samak argues that because the version of § 844(i) in effect at the
time of his conviction and sentencing required a jury recommendation to impose a
life sentence, and because the jury did not provide such a recommendation, the
district court erred in sentencing him to life imprisonment. He also argues that his
counsel was ineffective for failing to advise him to enter into a plea agreement. 1
He provides no argument as to why either of these claims satisfies the savings
clause.
1
Samak also argues on appeal that (1) the government lacked federal jurisdiction under
§ 844(i) to prosecute him for arson involving “uncontained gasoline”; (2) it was inappropriate
and prejudicial for the district court and his trial counsel to engage in “verbal gunfights in [the]
presence of the jury without requesting a sidebar conference”; and (3) the district court
improperly imposed a two-level enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 for obstruction of justice.
However, because he did not raise these issues in the district court, we will not consider them.
See Access Now, Inc. v. Sw. Airlines Co., 385 F.3d 1324, 1331 (11th Cir. 2004) (stating in a civil
case that “an issue not raised in the district court and raised for the first time in an appeal will not
be considered by this court” (quotation marks omitted)). Likewise, we also will not consider the
issues he raised in the district court but did not brief on appeal. See id. at 1330 (stating that “a
legal claim or argument that has not been briefed before the court is deemed abandoned and its
merits will not be addressed”).
2
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Upon a thorough review of the record, and after consideration of the parties’
briefs, we affirm.
Whether a prisoner may bring a § 2241 petition under the savings clause of
§ 2255(e) is a question of law that we review de novo. Bryant v. Warden, FCC
Coleman-Medium, 738 F.3d 1253, 1262 (11th Cir. 2013). The applicability of the
savings clause is a threshold jurisdictional issue, and the savings clause imposes a
subject-matter jurisdictional limit on § 2241 petitions. Williams v. Warden, Fed.
Bureau of Prisons, 713 F.3d 1332, 1337-38 (11th Cir. 2013). The petitioner bears
the burden of demonstrating that the § 2255 remedy was “inadequate or ineffective
to test the legality of his detention” for purposes of § 2255(e). Mackey v. Warden,
FCC Coleman-Medium, 739 F.3d 657, 661 (11th Cir. 2014). Pro se pleadings are
liberally construed. Tannenbaum v. United States, 148 F.3d 1262, 1263 (11th Cir.
1998).
Under § 2241, a district court has the power to grant a writ of habeas corpus
to a prisoner in custody in that district. 28 U.S.C. § 2241(a), (d). This power is
limited by § 2255(e), which states,
An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a prisoner who
is authorized to apply for relief by [a § 2255 motion], shall not be
entertained if it appears that the applicant has failed to apply for relief,
by motion, to the court which sentenced him, or that such court has
denied him relief, unless it also appears that the remedy by motion is
inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.
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28 U.S.C. § 2255(e). “An application for a writ of habeas corpus” includes a
petition filed under § 2241. Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1262.
When a prisoner previously has filed a § 2255 motion to vacate, he must
apply for and receive permission from the court of appeals before filing a
successive § 2255 motion. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244(b), 2255(h). Such restrictions on
successive § 2255 motions, standing alone, do not render that section “inadequate
or ineffective” within the meaning of the savings clause. Gilbert v. United States,
640 F.3d 1293, 1307-08 (11th Cir. 2011) (en banc). In Wofford, we stated that a
petitioner meets the requirements of the savings clause when: (1) the petitioner’s
claim is based on a retroactively applicable Supreme Court decision; (2) the
holding of that Supreme Court decision establishes that the petitioner was
convicted of a nonexistent offense; and (3) circuit law squarely foreclosed such a
claim at the time it otherwise should have been raised at the petitioner’s trial,
appeal, or first § 2255 motion. Wofford v. Scott, 177 F.3d 1236, 1244 (11th Cir.
1999).
In Williams, we held that Wofford resolved Williams’s appeal because he
could not show that our caselaw foreclosed his objection to treating his two Florida
burglary convictions as violent felonies under the ACCA. Williams, 713 F.3d
at 1343-44. We stated that Wofford established two necessary, but not necessarily
sufficient, conditions for a sentencing claim to pass muster under the savings
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clause: (1) “the claim must be based upon a retroactively applicable Supreme
Court decision”; and (2) “the Supreme Court decision must have overturned a
circuit precedent that squarely resolved the claim so that the petitioner had no
genuine opportunity to raise it at trial, on appeal, or in his first § 2255 motion.”
Id. at 1343. We held that there was no circuit precedent during Williams’s direct
and collateral attacks that “squarely held” that the Florida offense of burglary of a
dwelling, which Williams was now contending was not a predicate offense, was a
violent felony for ACCA purposes. Id. at 1344-45. Thus, Williams could have
challenged the use of his burglary of a dwelling convictions as predicate offenses
in his original § 2255 motion, and his § 2255 motion was not “an ineffective test of
his claims.” Id. at 1345.
In responding to Williams’s argument that Begay2 was the “circuit-law
busting, retroactively applicable Supreme Court decision” required by Wofford, we
clarified that the Supreme Court case must be “circuit-law busting” in that it
overturned circuit precedent that specifically addressed the claim the prisoner now
asserts. Id. at 1346-47. We concluded that “Begay is not circuit law-busting in
Wofford’s sense of the term” because it “changed the analytical framework for
determining whether a given state offense is a violent felony at a high level of
abstraction by crafting its ‘purposeful, violent, and aggressive’ test,” but “[i]t did
2
Begay v. United States, 553 U.S. 137, 128 S.Ct. 1581, 170 L.Ed.2d 490 (2008).
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not abrogate all of this Court’s pre-Begay violent felony jurisprudence.” Id.
at 1347.
In Bryant, we held that for a petitioner to bring a § 2241 challenge to the
legality of his detention on the ground that a prior state conviction had been
improperly designated a predicate offense for purposes of the ACCA, he must
make a five-part showing that a prior § 2255 motion was “inadequate or ineffective
to test the legality of his detention.” Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1274. First, a petitioner
must show that, “throughout his sentencing, direct appeal, and first § 2255
proceeding, our Circuit’s binding precedent had specifically addressed [his]
distinct prior state conviction that triggered § 924(e) and had squarely foreclosed
[his] § 924(e) claim that he was erroneously sentenced above the 10-year statutory
maximum penalty in § 924(a).” Id. Second, a petitioner must identify a Supreme
Court decision announced after his first § 2255 proceeding that overturned this
Court’s precedent “that had squarely foreclosed [his] § 924(e) claim.” Id. Third,
he must show that the Supreme Court’s new rule applies retroactively on collateral
review. Id. Fourth, he must show that, as a result of the new rule being
retroactive, his current sentence exceeds § 924(a)’s ten-year statutory maximum.
Id. Finally, he must show that “the savings clause in § 2255(e) reaches his pure
§ 924(e)[] error claim of illegal detention above the statutory maximum penalty in
§ 924(a).” Id.
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The version of 18 U.S.C. § 844(i) in effect at the time of Samak’s conviction
and sentencing provided,
Whoever maliciously damages or destroys . . . by means of
fire . . . any building . . . shall be imprisoned for not more than ten
years . . . and if death results to any person . . . shall also be subject to
imprisonment for any term of years, or to the death penalty or to life
imprisonment as provided in section 34 of this title.
18 U.S.C. § 844(i) (1992). At that time, 18 U.S.C. § 34 provided, “Whoever is
convicted of any crime prohibited by this chapter, which has resulted in the death
of any person, shall be subject also to the death penalty or to imprisonment for life,
if the jury shall in its discretion so direct.” 18 U.S.C. § 34 (1992). The Fifth
Circuit has held that, under the version of § 844(i) in effect at the time of Samak’s
sentencing, a district court may sentence a defendant “only to ‘any term of years’
and not to life imprisonment in the absence of a jury recommendation or jury
waiver.” 3 United States v. Williams, 775 F.2d 1295, 1299 (5th Cir. 1985).
Here, the district court properly dismissed Samak’s § 2241 petition for lack
of jurisdiction. Because binding Fifth Circuit precedent at the time of his
sentencing actually supported his claim that he should not have been sentenced to
life imprisonment, he cannot show that, at the time of his sentencing or any other
relevant time, circuit precedent squarely foreclosed his claim. His
3
Samak was charged, convicted, and sentenced in the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Louisiana. Thus, Fifth Circuit law applied at the time of his conviction,
sentencing, direct appeal, and § 2255 proceeding.
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ineffective-assistance claim related to counsel’s advice as to a guilty plea likewise
fails because no circuit precedent foreclosed his raising that claim in a § 2255
motion.
AFFIRMED. 4
4
Samak’s Motion for Leave to File Reply Brief Out of Time is GRANTED.
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PRYOR, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur in the decision to affirm the dismissal of the petition for habeas
corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2241, and I agree that our prior panel precedent in Bryant v.
Warden, FCC Coleman-Medium, 738 F.3d 1253 (11th Cir. 2013), governs our
analysis of this appeal. See United States v. Hogan, 986 F.2d 1364, 1369 (11th Cir.
1993) (“[I]t is the firmly established rule of this Circuit that each succeeding panel
is bound by the holding of the first panel to address an issue of law, unless and
until that holding is overruled en banc, or by the Supreme Court.”). But I write
separately to explain why the rule contrived in Bryant is indefensible as a matter of
textual interpretation. By an evenly divided vote, our Court has refused to
reconsider that atextual rule. Bryant v. Warden, FCC Coleman-Medium, No. 12-
11212 (11th Cir. May 5, 2014) (order denying rehearing en banc) (“A member of
this Court in active service having requested a poll on whether these cases should
be reheard by the Court siting en banc, and a majority of the judges in active
service on this Court not having voted for granting a rehearing en banc, IT IS SO
ORDERED that the Suggestion of Rehearing En Banc is DENIED.”). If we were
to adhere to the plain text of the savings clause, 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e), our task in
this and other appeals—and the task of the district courts in our Circuit—would be
far easier. Because it is clear from the face of his petition for a writ of habeas
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corpus that Samak is not attacking the execution of his sentence, his petition
should be denied under the plain text of the savings clause.
INTRODUCTION
For fifteen years we have erroneously interpreted the savings clause to mean
that a prisoner may file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, evade the bar on
second or successive motions, and circumvent the one-year statute of limitations if
a decision of the Supreme Court “busts” circuit precedent that previously
foreclosed the prisoner’s claim. See Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1274; Williams v. Warden,
Fed. Bureau of Prisons, 713 F.3d 1332 (11th Cir. 2013); Gilbert v. United States,
640 F.3d 1293 (11th Cir. 2011) (en banc); Wofford v. Scott, 177 F.3d 1236 (11th
Cir. 1999). But whether the law of our Circuit—or in this appeal the law of another
circuit—was once adverse to a prisoner has nothing to do with whether his motion
to vacate his sentence is “inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his
detention.” A motion to vacate under section 2255 allows a federal prisoner to
challenge the legality of his sentence, but a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
under section 2241 allows that prisoner to challenge the legality of his detention in
ways that section 2255 cannot remedy. Only then is the motion to vacate
“inadequate or ineffective.”
Beginning with Wofford, we have fumbled the meaning of twenty simple
words at the end of the following provision:
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An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a prisoner who
is authorized to apply for relief by motion pursuant to this section,
shall not be entertained if it appears that the applicant has failed to
apply for relief, by motion, to the court which sentenced him, or that
such court has denied him relief, unless it also appears that the
remedy by motion is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his
detention.
28 U.S.C. § 2255(e) (emphasis added). When we first endeavored to interpret that
text, we went straight to the legislative history of the clause to divine its meaning,
but unsurprisingly could find no clues. Wofford, 177 F.3d at 1241, 1241–42 n.2.
But see United States v. Pub. Util. Comm’n of Cal., 345 U.S. 295, 319–21, 73 S.
Ct. 706, 719–20 (1953) (Jackson, J., concurring) (“I should concur in this result
more readily if the Court could reach it by analysis of the statute instead of by
psychoanalysis of Congress. . . . Legislative history here as usual is more vague
than the statute we are called upon to interpret.”). We later stated that “the statute
says precious little about what it means . . . to have been ‘inadequate’ or
‘ineffective,’” Williams, 713 F.3d at 1341, even though that problem of statutory
interpretation is common. To be sure, there are no definitions in the Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act, but think of the multitude of statutes we must
interpret each day that leave us to our own wits to understand their meaning.
Our precedents have failed to consider the ordinary meaning of the text of
the savings clause. We have not even tried to interpret the ordinary meaning of its
key terms, such as “inadequate,” “ineffective,” “test,” and “detention.” In Wofford,
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we instead adopted, for the sake of argument, the approach of the Seventh Circuit
because it was purportedly “better reasoned than those of the other circuits, and its
rule ha[d] the advantage of being specific.” 177 F.3d at 1244. There are many
descriptors for our interpretation of the savings clause—overly complex, divorced
from the text, wrong—but “better reasoned” and “specific” are not two of them.
Our flawed interpretation reached its pinnacle late last year when a federal
prisoner named Dudley Bryant returned to our Court. Bryant had previously filed
two motions to vacate his sentence and an application to file a third, but then
petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. 2241, on the ground that he had
been erroneously classified as a violent felon under the Armed Career Criminal
Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). Before Bryant’s appeal, our interpretation of the savings
clause explained only why a prisoner’s claim failed under the savings clause and,
as a result, was dicta. See Gilbert, 640 F.3d at 1307, 1319.
To decide Bryant’s claim, a panel of our Court distilled from our dicta in
Wofford, Gilbert, and Williams the following five-step test:
Bryant must establish that (1) throughout his sentencing, direct
appeal, and first § 2255 proceeding, our Circuit’s binding precedent
had specifically addressed Bryant’s distinct prior state conviction that
triggered § 924(e) and had squarely foreclosed Bryant’s § 924(e)
claim that he was erroneously sentenced above the 10-year statutory
maximum penalty in § 924(a); (2) subsequent to his first § 2255
proceeding, the Supreme Court’s decision in Begay [v. United States,
553 U.S. 137, 128 S. Ct. 1581 (2008)], as extended by this Court to
Bryant’s distinct prior conviction, overturned our Circuit precedent
that had squarely foreclosed Bryant’s § 924(e) claim; (3) the new rule
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announced in Begay applies retroactively on collateral review; (4) as a
result of Begay’s new rule being retroactive, Bryant’s current sentence
exceeds the 10-year statutory maximum authorized by Congress in §
924(a); and (5) the savings clause in § 2255(e) reaches his pure
§ 924(e)-Begay error claim of illegal detention above the statutory
maximum penalty in § 924(a).
Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1274. And for the first time, our Court granted relief to a
federal prisoner, thereby rendering this five-step, atextual, Rube Goldbergian rule
the law of our Circuit.
In Bryant, we failed in our task as a Court to interpret the text of the savings
clause that Congress wrote in 1948 and to make sense of that text so as not to
circumvent provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act that
Congress later adopted in 1996. See Anderson v. Wilson, 289 U.S. 20, 27, 53 S. Ct.
417, 420 (1933) (“We do not pause to consider whether a statute differently
conceived and framed would yield results more consonant with fairness and
reason. We take the statute as we find it.”); see also Antonin Scalia & Bryan
Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 348 (2012) (“[A]lthough
properly informed human minds may agree on what a text means, human hearts
often disagree on what is right. That is why we vote . . . on what the law ought to
be, but leave it to experts of interpretation called judges to decide what an enacted
law means.”). We not only abandoned the text of the clause itself, but we also
adopted a rule at war with the provisions of the statute that limit a movant’s ability
to file a second or successive motion, 28 U.S.C. § 2255(h), and that limit the
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statute of limitations to one year, id. § 2255(f). Moreover, that rule undercuts the
interest in finality that pervades the Act.
The text of the savings clause creates a rule that is both easy to understand
and easy to apply. When read in harmony with the other provisions of the Act, the
savings clause allows a federal prisoner to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
only when he attacks the execution of his sentence or when his sentencing court no
longer exists. For example, a prisoner who challenges the deprivation of good-time
credits or parole determinations may file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
because a motion to vacate his sentence is “inadequate or ineffective” to test that
aspect of his detention. See, e.g., Hajduk v. United States, 764 F.2d 795, 796 (11th
Cir. 1985). Or, for example, a military prisoner whose sentencing court no longer
exists must have a forum for his one opportunity to challenge the legality of his
sentence. See Prost v. Anderson, 636 F.3d 578, 588 (10th Cir. 2011). But only in
those kinds of limited circumstances is section 2255 “inadequate or ineffective to
test the legality of his detention.” Id. § 2255(e).
DISCUSSION
In 1948, Congress created a new mechanism for a federal prisoner to
challenge the legality of his sentence. Instead of filing a petition for a writ of
habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2241, “[a] prisoner in custody under sentence of a court
. . . may move the court which imposed the sentence to vacate, set aside or correct
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the sentence.” Id. § 2255(a). That prisoner may contest his sentence “upon the
ground that the sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of
the United States, or that the court was without jurisdiction to impose such
sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the maximum authorized by law, or
is otherwise subject to collateral attack.” Id.
One year later, Congress explicitly limited the ability of a federal prisoner to
file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Congress instead provided that a federal
prisoner must use the new mechanism provided in section 2255, that is, moving to
vacate his sentence in the court that sentenced him:
An application for writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a prisoner who is
authorized to apply for relief by motion pursuant to this section shall
not be entertained if it appears that the applicant has failed to apply
for relief, by motion, to the court which sentenced him, or that such
court has denied him relief . . . .
Id. § 2255(e); see also United States v. Hayman, 342 U.S. 205, 220–21, 72 S. Ct.
263, 273 (1952) (“The very purpose of Section 2255 is to hold any required
hearing in the sentencing court because of the inconvenience of transporting court
officials and other necessary witnesses to the district of confinement.”); Thomas v.
Crosby, 371 F.3d 782, 806 (11th Cir. 2004) (Tjoflat, J., specially concurring)
(discussing this “exclusivity provision” for federal prisoners, which “prevent[s]
convicted federal prisoners from seeking relief under § 2241”).
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Congress left open the following exception for a convicted federal prisoner
to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district of his confinement:
[U]nless it also appears that the remedy by motion[, 28 U.S.C.
§ 2255,] is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his
detention.
28 U.S.C. § 2255(e). That exception—the “savings clause”—recognizes that a
motion to vacate a sentence may sometimes be inappropriate, that is, “inadequate
or ineffective,” so in that circumstance Congress allows a federal prisoner to “test
the legality of his detention” in the traditional action against his custodian. We
have attempted to interpret this exception, but have failed mightily.
In Bryant, we held that a motion to vacate a sentence is “inadequate or
ineffective” when our precedent is at odds with a prisoner’s claim and the Supreme
Court later corrects that precedent, but this rule fails to consider the ordinary
meaning of the text of the savings clause and the text of the Antiterrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act in at least four ways. First, Congress created this
alternative mechanism for a federal prisoner to challenge his “sentence,” id.
§ 2255(a) (emphasis added), but Congress left open the opportunity for a federal
prisoner to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to challenge his “detention,”
id. § 2255(e) (emphasis added). Second, Congress stated that a prisoner unable “to
test” his claim of illegal detention may file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus,
id. (emphasis added), not that a prisoner unlikely to win his claim about an illegal
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sentence may file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Third, Congress stated that
the section 2255 “remedy” must be “inadequate or ineffective” before a prisoner
can file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, not that a court merely denied a
prisoner’s motion because of the law of our Circuit. Fourth, Congress barred
federal prisoners from filing second or successive motions for new rules of
statutory law, id. § 2255(h)(2), and limited the time federal prisoners had to file a
motion to vacate their sentence based on “new rights,” id. § 2255(f)(3).
In the discussion that follows, I address each of these four textual arguments,
which together point to a wholly different way of thinking about the savings
clause. I then explain why that interpretation is necessary to save the
constitutionality of section 2255. I conclude by acknowledging that we are not the
only court to have misinterpreted the clause.
A. Congress Distinguished between Challenging the Legality of a “Sentence” in a
Motion to Vacate and “Test[ing] the Legality of . . . Detention” in a Petition for a
Writ of Habeas Corpus.
When Congress enacted section 2255, it created a mechanism for a prisoner
to challenge his “sentence” in the court that sentenced him, but Congress left open
the opportunity for a prisoner to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the
district of his confinement “to test the legality of his detention”:
(a) A prisoner in custody under sentence of a court established by Act of
Congress claiming the right to be released upon the ground that the
sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the
United States, or that the court was without jurisdiction to impose
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such sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the maximum
authorized by law, or is otherwise subject to collateral attack, may
move the court which imposed the sentence to vacate, set aside or
correct the sentence.
...
(e) An application for a writ of habeas corpus . . . shall not be entertained
if it appears that the applicant has failed to apply for relief, by motion,
to the court which sentenced him, or that such court has denied him
relief, unless it also appears that the remedy by motion is inadequate
or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.
28 U.S.C. § 2255 (emphasis added).
A federal prisoner who challenges his sentence may challenge only the
validity of the proceedings that resulted in his sentence, but a prisoner who
challenges his detention under the savings clause may challenge the execution of
his sentence. Cf. Antonelli v. Warden, U.S.P. Atlanta, 542 F.3d 1348, 1352 n.1
(11th Cir. 2008) (“It is well-settled that a § 2255 motion to vacate is a separate and
distinct remedy from habeas corpus proper. . . . A prisoner in custody pursuant to a
federal court judgment may proceed under § 2241 only when he raises claims
outside the scope of § 2255(a), that is, claims concerning the execution of his
sentence.”). When Congress uses one word in a subsection of a statute, but uses an
alternative word in another, we should give those different words different
meanings. See Iraola & CIA, S.A. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp., 232 F.3d 854, 859
(11th Cir. 2000) (“[W]hen Congress uses different language in similar sections, it
intends different meanings.”); see also Scalia & Garner, supra, at 170 (“If it says
land in one place and real estate later, the second provision presumably includes
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improvements as well as raw land.”). Here, we should presume that Congress
conceived of two different kinds of challenges when Congress used “sentence” in
one part of the statute and “detention” in another.
The “detention” of a prisoner encompasses much more than a criminal
“sentence.” When Congress enacted section 2255, the word “detention” meant
“[k]eeping in custody or confinement,” 3 Oxford English Dictionary 266 (1st ed.
1933), or “[t]he act of keeping back or withholding, either accidentally or by
design, a person or thing,” Black’s Law Dictionary 569 (3d ed. 1933). For
example, a pretrial detainee could challenge his detention because he is in “custody
or confinement” even though he has not been tried. Or a federal prisoner could
challenge his detention by raising claims about his good-time credits or the
revocation of his parole, which involve the “act of keeping back or withholding”
the prisoner by the Executive branch.
This ordinary meaning of the term “detention” also comports with the
separation of labor that Congress created between the court that sentenced a
prisoner and the court in the district of his confinement. In 1942, the Judicial
Conference of the United States tasked a committee of federal judges to study
collateral attacks of sentences in federal courts, and the committee recommended
that a federal prisoner challenge the validity of his sentence in the district that
sentenced him instead of in the district in which he was confined. Hayman, 342
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U.S. at 214–15, 72 S. Ct. at 270. Congress adopted that proposal in 1948. 28
U.S.C. § 2255. This new mechanism to challenge the validity of a sentence
alleviated the burden on overwhelmed courts located in districts with federal
prisons and the burden on witnesses to the habeas corpus proceeding who would
have to travel from the district where the prisoner was tried to the district where the
prisoner was detained. Id. at 217 n.25, 72 S. Ct. at 271 n.25; see also id. at 219, 72
S. Ct. at 272 (“[T]he sole purpose was to minimize the difficulties encountered in
habeas corpus hearings by affording the same rights in another and more
convenient forum.”); Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court of Ky., 410 U.S. 484,
497, 93 S. Ct. 1123, 1131 (1973) (“In enacting [section 2255], Congress explicitly
recognized the substantial advantages of having these cases resolved in the court
which originally imposed the confinement or in the court located nearest the site of
the underlying controversy.”). When Congress passed section 2255, it did not
impinge “prisoners’ rights of collateral attack upon their convictions”; it provided
only a new venue for that kind of collateral attack. Hayman, 342 U.S. at 219, 72 S.
Ct. at 272.
This division of labor Congress crafted when it passed section 2255 also
comports with the nature of sentencing and confinement in 1948. Congress passed
section 2255 in an era where the length of “detention” was governed by parole
determinations and good-time credits. See Mistretta v. United States, 488 U.S. 361,
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363–67, 109 S. Ct. 647, 650–52 (1989). In this era of indeterminate sentencing,
many prisoners reliant on the Parole Commission and good-time credits would
have “detention” claims separate from claims about the legality of their conviction
and sentence. See, e.g., United States v. Addonizio, 442 U.S. 178, 186–87, 99 S. Ct.
2235, 2241 (1979).
In the light of this history, it is inconceivable that the savings clause is
reserved for those prisoners who want a second bite at the apple to challenge the
legality of their sentences by petitioning for a writ of habeas corpus in the districts
that confine them after they already challenged the legality of their sentences in the
courts that sentenced them. What an odd result that yields in this appeal: Even after
the District Court of the Eastern District of Louisiana dismissed his first motion to
vacate his sentence, Samak v. United States, No. CRIM A. 91-189, 2000 WL
557331, at *5 (E.D. La. May 4, 2000), and the Fifth Circuit denied him a certificate
of appealability, Samak attempts to evade those denials and hopes for a different
result by challenging his sentence again in our Court under our multi-prong Bryant
rigmarole. Even stranger, our Court must now review the law of the Fifth Circuit to
determine whether any decision of the Supreme Court has “busted” precedents of
that circuit court. See Majority Op. at 7 n.3.
Prisoners not only sue in the wrong court when they attack the legality of
their sentences in the district of their confinement, but they also sue the wrong
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defendant. Our faulty interpretation of the savings clause places wardens in the
precarious position of defending against the resentencing of a prisoner, instead of
the United States Attorney who participated in the prisoner’s original sentencing.
A prisoner who files a motion to vacate his sentence serves that motion upon the
United States Attorney. 28 U.S.C. § 2255(b). But when a prisoner like Samak
petitions for a writ of habeas corpus, he must allege “the name of the person who
has custody over him,” that is, the warden. Id. § 2242. Here, the remedy requested
by Samak—resentencing—is not the kind of remedy we would expect a warden to
oversee.
Judge Martin’s partial dissent in Bryant highlights this problem about the
proper defendant and venue. Judge Martin urged the panel to grant the writ by
directing the warden to release Bryant immediately. Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1293
(Martin, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). As she explained, releasing a
successful habeas petitioner from custody is the sort of remedy a warden has
historically carried out since the inception of the Writ, which roughly translates to
“bring the body.” Id. at 1295–96. Of course, courts may now dispose of a habeas
petition “as law and justice require,” 28 U.S.C. § 2243, but our interpretation of the
savings clause defies logic. Prisoners like Bryant or Samak have already sued the
United States; they cannot now substitute a new defendant, who played no role in
their sentencing years ago, for a second try.
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Congress divided collateral attacks between the sentencing court and the
court in the district of confinement. A prisoner files a motion to vacate his
sentence, which challenges the validity of a sentence, in the court that sentenced
him, but he files his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which challenges the
execution of his sentence, in the court that confines him. See, e.g., Preiser v.
Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 475, 487, 93 S. Ct. 1827, 1835 (1973) (stating that prisoners’
suits challenging good-time credits “fell squarely within th[e] traditional scope of
habeas corpus”); Carmona v. U.S. Bureau of Prisons, 243 F.3d 629, 632 (2d Cir.
2001) (ruling that a prisoner may file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
challenging administrative sanctions imposed on him for possession of narcotics);
McIntosh v. U.S. Parole Comm’n, 115 F.3d 809, 812 (10th Cir. 1997) (“[A] § 2241
action challenging prison disciplinary proceedings, such as the deprivation of
good-time credits, is not challenging prison conditions, it is challenging an action
affecting the fact or duration of the petitioner’s custody.”); United States v. Cleto,
956 F.2d 83, 84 (5th Cir. 1992) (“The government correctly points out that Cleto’s
claim should have been filed as a petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28
U.S.C. § 2241, as he challenges the execution of his sentence rather than the
validity of his conviction and sentence.”); Tucker v. Carlson, 925 F.2d 330, 331
(9th Cir. 1991) (stating that a challenge of the execution of a prisoner’s sentence is
“maintainable only in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28
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U.S.C. § 2241”); United States v. Hutchings, 835 F.2d 185, 186 (8th Cir. 1987)
(“Such an attack on the execution of the sentence is not properly cognizable in a §
2255 motion.”); Hajduk, 764 F.2d at 796 (challenging a change to parole
determinations).
Collateral review for federal prisoners, in this way, is fundamentally
different from petitions for writs of habeas corpus for state prisoners. A state
prisoner may seek relief by filing a petition “on the ground that he is in custody in
violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. §
2254(a) (emphasis added). Some courts understand this language to require a state
prisoner to challenge the execution of their sentences, including the deprivation of
good-time credits or parole, in a petition under section 2254 instead of a petition
under section 2241. See, e.g., Coady v. Vaughn, 251 F.3d 480, 485 (3d Cir. 2001).
For example, the Second Circuit explained that a state prisoner challenging the
decision of a parole board must file a petition under section 2254, not a petition
under section 2241, because the decision of the parole board affected his
“custody.” Cook v. N.Y. State Div. of Parole, 321 F.3d 274, 278 (2d Cir. 2003). In
Cook, the prisoner argued that section 2254 was inapplicable to his claim because
he challenged his “custody” based on a decision of the parole board and not a state
court. Id. But the Second Circuit rejected this argument and used the differences
between section 2254 and section 2255 to explain its decision. Id. The Second
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Circuit emphasized that “section 2255, which is the vehicle by which persons in
federal custody may assert that their sentence violates the federal Constitution or
federal law, is critically narrower than section 2254, by which persons in state
custody may challenge that custody.” Id. (emphasis added). Unlike a federal
prisoner who moves to vacate his sentence under section 2255, a state prisoner
may bring a petition under section 2254 to challenge his “custody,” which is
“broader than a claim that the imposition of one’s sentence is illegal.” Id. (quoting
James v. Walsh, 308 F.3d 162, 167 (2d Cir. 2002)). The court concluded that the
state prisoner was unlike a federal prisoner, who must resort to a petition under
section 2241 to challenge the execution of his sentence. Id. Similarly, the Seventh
Circuit contrasted the use of “sentence” in section 2255 with the use of “custody”
in section 2254 to explain that a state prisoner must take a “different path” than a
federal prisoner to challenge prison disciplinary proceedings. Walker v. O’Brien,
216 F.3d 626, 632–33 (7th Cir. 2000). The Seventh Circuit ruled that a state
prisoner must challenge those disciplinary proceedings in a petition under section
2254 instead of a petition under section 2241 because, unlike section 2255 for
federal prisoners, the “focus” of section 2254 is “on the fact of custody, not
necessarily on the flaws in the underlying judgment or sentence that brought the
person there.” Id. at 633. Similarly, our Circuit requires state prisoners who
challenge the execution of their sentences to comply with the procedural
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requirements of section 2254. See, e.g., Thomas v. Crosby, 371 F.3d 782, 787 (11th
Cir. 2004); Medberry v. Crosby, 351 F.3d 1049, 1058–62 (11th Cir. 2003). Unlike
these state prisoners who challenge their “custody,” a motion under section 2255 is
the exclusive mechanism for a federal prisoner to challenge his “sentence,” see
Thomas, 371 F.3d at 806 (Tjoflat, J., specially concurring), while remaining
challenges to his “detention” are cognizable in a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus.
B. “To Test” Is Not Synonymous with “To Win.”
A prisoner may file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus if he cannot
adequately or effectively test the legality of his detention, and “to test the legality
of his detention” means only to have the opportunity to raise an argument about the
legality of his detention. The definition of “to test” is “to try,” 11 Oxford English
Dictionary 220 (1st ed. 1933), or “to ascertain the truth or the quality or fitness of a
thing,” Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 1720. In the light of these definitions,
whether a prisoner may “test” a claim about the legality of his detention is not
coterminous with whether he wins or loses that claim; whether a prisoner may
“test” his claim requires us to ask only whether the prisoner has the opportunity to
raise that claim for our examination. See Prost v. Anderson, 636 F.3d 578, 584
(10th Cir. 2011) (“[T]he clause is concerned with process—ensuring the petitioner
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an opportunity to bring his argument—not with substance—guaranteeing nothing
about what the opportunity promised will ultimately yield in terms of relief.”).
A prisoner cannot adequately or effectively test the legality of his detention
if his claim is not cognizable in a motion to vacate his sentence. If the claim is not
cognizable, then a prisoner cannot “test” it and obtain a “remedy” as the clause
requires. For example, a prisoner cannot “test” a claim about the revocation of his
parole in a motion to vacate his sentence. That claim and other claims related to the
execution of a prisoner’s sentence do not contend that the sentence “was imposed
in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States” or that “the court was
without jurisdiction to impose such sentence,” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(a). The prisoner
must instead raise claims about the execution of his sentence in a petition for a writ
habeas corpus. See, e.g., Hajduk, 764 F.2d at 796 (dismissing a motion to vacate a
prisoner’s sentence and instead requiring that the prisoner file a petition for a writ
of habeas corpus). Or, as a rare example highlighted by the Tenth Circuit in Prost,
a military prisoner cannot challenge the legality of his sentence in the court that
sentenced him because his “sentencing court literally dissolves after sentencing
and is no longer available to test a prisoner’s collateral attack.” Prost, 636 F.3d at
588 (citing Ackerman v. Novak, 483 F.3d 647, 649 (10th Cir. 2007)).
In Bryant, we conflated the words “to test” with the words “to win” or
“likely to win.” We decided that, if settled circuit precedent goes against a
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movant’s claim, then that circuit precedent deprived that movant of “a reasonable
opportunity to obtain a reliable judicial determination” of his claim. Bryant, 738
F.3d at 1263; see also Wofford, 177 F.3d at 1244 (citing Davenport, 147 F.3d at
610–11). But neither our Circuit rules nor section 2255 prohibit a prisoner from
raising an argument that is foreclosed by circuit precedent. So long as the
prisoner’s argument attacks the legality of his sentence, he can raise it. For
example, had Bryant “test[ed]” his conviction by arguing that his prior felony for
carrying a concealed firearm was not a “violent felony,” 18 U.S.C. § 924(e), then
Begay v. United States might have been Bryant v. United States instead. Any
prisoner has an opportunity to raise arguments in his direct appeal or his initial
motion to vacate his sentence just as Larry Begay or Roland Bailey did, Begay v.
United States, 553 U.S. 137, 128 S. Ct. 1581; Bailey v. United States, 516 U.S.
137, 116 S. Ct. 501 (1995), and we may adopt those arguments en banc or the
Supreme Court may adopt those arguments as the law of the United States. A
prisoner may always “test” or “try” his claim in our Court so that we may
“ascertain . . . the quality” of his argument, even if circuit precedent does not
support it.
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C. The Section 2255 Remedy Is “Inadequate or Ineffective” When a Prisoner
Contests Something Other Than the Legality of His Sentence, Not When Circuit
Precedent Is Merely Adverse to His Claim that Challenges the
Legality of His Sentence.
For the savings clause, we have surmised that two conditions must be
present to render section 2255 “inadequate or ineffective” to test a claim. First,
erroneous circuit precedent “foreclosed” a prisoner’s argument during sentencing,
direct appeal, and first collateral proceeding. Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1274. Second, a
Supreme Court decision later “busted” that circuit precedent. Id. at 1275–76. But
this approach contravenes the legal meaning of “inadequate or ineffective.”
The words “inadequate” and “ineffective” have ordinary legal meanings, and
we cannot abandon the meanings of these words because we think a prisoner’s
claim ought to be cognizable in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. For example,
we do not call a lawyer’s work “ineffective” because his client lost. See Brown v.
Caraway, 719 F.3d 583, 597 (7th Cir. 2013) (Easterbrook, J., concerning the
circulation under Circuit Rule 40(e)) (“A lawyer’s work satisfies the ‘ineffective
assistance’ doctrine if counsel presents the best available defense, even if that
defense is doomed.”). Instead, counsel is “ineffective” only when “counsel’s
conduct so undermined the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the
trial cannot be relied on as having produced a just result.” Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 686, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 2064 (1984); see, e.g., Missouri
v. Frye, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S. Ct. 1399, 1410 (2012); Cullen v. Pinnholster, ___
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U.S. ___, 131 S. Ct. 1388, 1406–07 (2011); Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 524–
25, 123 S. Ct. 2527, 2536–37 (2003). Likewise, we do not call a remedy at law
“inadequate” solely because a defendant is unlikely to win an award of money
damages. Cf. Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 940. Instead, a remedy at law is
“adequate” when a plaintiff’s claim is cognizable in a court of law and redressable
with a legal remedy, regardless of the plaintiff’s chances of success. Bolin v. Story,
225 F.3d 1234, 1242–43 (11th Cir. 2000); Weaver v. Fla. Power & Light Co., 172
F.3d 771, 773 (11th Cir. 1999); United Steelworkers of Am. v. USX Corp., 966
F.2d 1394, 1404–05 (11th Cir. 1992); Hobson v. Fischbeck, 758 F.2d 579, 581
(11th Cir. 1985). Similarly, writs of mandamus are unavailable “where there is
another means to obtain adequate review,” In re Bethesda Mem’l Hosp., Inc., 123
F.3d 1407, 1408 (11th Cir. 1997) (emphasis added), but the adequacy of an appeal,
in lieu of a petition for a writ of mandamus, does not depend on whether the
petitioner is likely to win his appeal. Instead, we ask only whether his claim is
addressable in an appeal. See, e.g., In re Smith, 926 F.2d 1027, 1030 (11th Cir.
1991) (ruling that mandamus was the only appropriate remedy because “[t]he trial
judge has effectively frozen the litigation and thwarted the possibility of an
appealable final order”); see also Ex parte Fahey, 332 U.S. 258, 260, 67 S. Ct.
1558, 1559 (1947) (stating that the “extraordinary remed[y]” of mandamus “should
be resorted to only where appeal is a clearly inadequate remedy” (emphasis
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added)). This understanding of adequacy “ensure[s] that the writ will not be used
as a substitute for the regular appeals process.” Cheney v. U.S. Dist. Court for
D.C., 542 U.S. 367, 380–81, 124 S. Ct. 2576, 2587 (2004). A remedy at law or an
appeal in lieu of a petition for a writ of mandamus are “inadequate” only if they are
“unfit[] or not adapted to the end in view.” Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 940.
That a prisoner’s claim is unlikely to succeed on the merits because of the
time and place a prisoner raised it does not render section 2255 “inadequate or
ineffective.” In Bousley v. United States, 523 U.S. 614, 617–18, 118 S. Ct. 1604,
1608 (1998), for example, a prisoner collaterally attacked his sentence on the
ground that he was innocent of “using” a firearm after the Supreme Court defined
“use” in Bailey v. United States, 516 U.S. 137, 144, 116 S. Ct. 501, 506 (1995).
Bousley had procedurally defaulted his claim, but he argued that he could establish
cause to justify his procedural default because, “before Bailey, any attempt to
attack his guilty plea would have been futile.” Bousley, 523 U.S. at 621, 623, 118
S. Ct. at 1610, 1611 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). The
Supreme Court rejected Bousley’s argument and ruled that “futility cannot
constitute cause if it means simply that a claim was ‘unacceptable to that particular
court at that particular time.’” Id. (quoting Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. 107, 130 n.35,
102 S. Ct. 1558, 1573 n.35) (internal quotation marks omitted). Likewise, a federal
prisoner cannot argue that a motion to vacate his sentence was “inadequate or
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ineffective” merely because his claim was “unacceptable to that particular court at
that particular time.” Id.
Our understanding of the terms “inadequate or ineffective” has been doomed
from the start. We adopted our understanding of “adequacy” based on the rationale
of the Seventh Circuit in Davenport, 147 F. 3d 605, 609 (7th Cir. 1998) (Posner,
C.J.). The Seventh Circuit did not give adequacy its plain meaning, but instead
declared that adequacy “should mean” that “a prisoner [has] a reasonable
opportunity to obtain a reliable judicial determination of the fundamental legality
of his conviction and sentence.” Id. (emphasis added). That pragmatic approach is
wholly unsuited for the task before us—the interpretation of text enacted by
Congress. Moreover, the rule adopted by the Seventh Circuit—that a prisoner must
have a reasonable opportunity to obtain a reliable judicial determination of the
fundamental legality of his conviction and sentence—is not what the savings
clause says. The clause asks whether the “remedy by motion is inadequate or
ineffective to test the legality of his detention.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e) (emphasis
added). The Seventh Circuit’s overly broad understanding of “adequacy” reads out
the other words in the provision—namely, “to test” and “detention.” A “reliable
judicial determination” is not the same as “test[ing]” a claim. The former is
concerned with substance, and the latter is concerned with procedure. And testing
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the “legality of a conviction and sentence” is not the same as testing the “legality
of his detention.”
Contrary to this flawed approach inspired by the Seventh Circuit, a prisoner
who files a motion under section 2255, has both an adequate and effective forum to
litigate the legality of his conviction and sentence, but the remedy under section
2255 might not be adequate or effective to resolve some claims about his
detention. When a prisoner challenges the execution of his sentence, vacating that
sentence entirely is “not adapted to the end in view,” Black’s Law Dictionary,
supra, at 940, or is “[o]f such a nature as not to produce . . . the intended[] effect,”
5 Oxford English Dictionary 239 (1st ed. 1933) (defining “ineffective”). For
example, if a prisoner challenges a parole determination or the deprivation of
good-time credits, he challenges the actions of executive officials and not the
actions of the court that sentenced him. A motion to vacate his sentence, therefore,
is inadequate to address those actions by parole or prison officials. Compare
Addonizio, 442 U.S. at 186, 99 S. Ct. at 2241 (rejecting section 2255 motion
challenging changes to parole), with Preiser, 411 U.S. at 487, 492 n.10, 93 S. Ct. at
1835, 1838 n.10 (stating that a section 2241 petition that “alleged that the
deprivation of [prisoners’] good-conduct-time credits was causing or would cause
[the prisoners] to be in illegal physical confinement” was “squarely within the
traditional scope of habeas corpus”). Moreover, a motion filed in the sentencing
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court is “ineffective” to test the legality of a prisoner’s detention when he
challenges events that occurred after his sentencing because the motion to vacate
his sentence concerns only whether that sentence was illegal or whether the court
was without jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255(a). For the same reasons that
Congress decided that challenges about the legality of the prisoner’s sentence
ought to be heard in the court that sentenced him, a challenge about the prisoner’s
confinement ought to be heard in the district of confinement where the witnesses to
the allegedly illegal action are located. See Hayman, 342 U.S. at 217 n.25, 72 S.
Ct. at 271 n.25; Hajduk, 764 F.2d at 796 (“A challenge to the lawfulness of the
parole commissions actions cannot be brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
Hajduk’s ex post facto argument is nothing more than a challenge to the lawfulness
of the parole commission’s actions, not the lawfulness of the sentence imposed by
the court. Such an action must be brought as a petition for writ of habeas corpus
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241.” (internal citation omitted)).
D. Our Interpretation of the Savings Clause Is at War with the Other
Provisions of Section 2255, But an Interpretation Focused on “Test[ing] the
Legality of . . . Detention” Avoids that Problem.
When we have interpreted the savings clause, we have professed to take into
account the other provisions of the Act, but that was an empty promise. The effect
of our interpretation has been the very opposite—we have armed prisoners with a
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way to circumvent the bar on second or successive motions, 28 U.S.C. § 2255(h),
and the statute of limitations, id. § 2255(f).
In Williams, we defended our interpretation of the savings clause as
purportedly respecting other provisions of section 2255 while not making the
savings clause meaningless:
[T]he savings clause cannot simply mean that every § 2255 motion
that appears to have been incorrectly decided based on subsequent
Supreme Court precedent may be revisited through a § 2241 habeas
petition; if it did, then the bar on second or successive motions would
effectively be written out of the statute, and the savings clause would
swallow up the specific allowance for a second motion when the basis
of the challenge is “a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive
to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was
previously unavailable.” See 28 U.S.C. § 2255(h)(2). Yet by the same
token, the circumstances delineated in § 2255(h)(1) and (2) cannot be
the only instances in which the § 2255 remedy is inadequate; if that
were true, then it would be the savings clause that was rendered
meaningless.
713 F.3d at 1342–43.
Contrary to Williams, the savings clause is not an end-run around the bar on
second or successive petitions or the statute of limitations of the Antiterrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act. Each of those limitations has a fixed set of
exceptions. The savings clause is not an additional, unenumerated exception.
Instead, the purpose of the savings clause both predates and postdates the bar on
second or successive motions and the statute of limitations. A prisoner who
properly invokes the savings clause need not worry about those bars because that
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prisoner challenges the execution of his sentence—distinct from challenges about
the proceedings that resulted in his conviction and sentence. Under that
interpretation, the savings clause is far from “meaningless,” and the limitations
imposed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act remain intact.
1. Evading the Bar on Second or Successive Petitions Some of the Time Is As
Much an Affront to Congress As Evading It All of the Time.
We have previously attempted to limit the savings clause by ruling that it is
not broad enough to catch “every § 2255 motion that appears to have been
incorrectly decided based on subsequent Supreme Court precedent,” lest “the
savings clause . . . swallow up the specific allowance for a second motion” for new
rules of constitutional law made retroactive by the Supreme Court. Williams, 713
F.3d at 1342–43. In Williams, for example, we limited the savings clause by
explaining that Begay was not “circuit law-busting in Wofford’s sense of the term”
for Williams because we had never held that his exact prior felony, Fla. Stat.
§ 810.02, was a violent felony before Begay. Id. In other words, Williams’s
remedy in the court that sentenced him was “adequate” because the law of our
Circuit was not against him, and he was free to argue that he was erroneously
sentenced under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e), in his first
motion to vacate.
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This circuit law-busting approach is a charade. We decide thousands of
criminal and habeas appeals per year. And under our approach, whether a prisoner
like Williams wins or loses his petition for a writ of habeas corpus rests on his
teeny-tiny hope that, once before in one of those other prisoners’ appeals, we
declared some state-law crime a “violent felony” under the Armed Career Criminal
Act. Likewise, whether Samak wins or loses in this Court depends on whether
some other court’s precedent directly foreclosed his argument at the time of his
sentencing in Louisiana, when he directly appealed to the Fifth Circuit, and when
he first filed his motion to vacate his sentence in Louisiana.
Even if we so heroically disallow prisoners like Williams and Samak to
circumvent the bar on second or successive petitions, our interpretation of the
savings clause still circumvents the bar on second or successive petitions for the
remaining successful prisoners like Bryant. Our interpretation is not any less bad
because we ignore the clear statutory ban on second or successive motions that
raise non-constitutional issues for Bryant, but heed that ban for Wofford, Gilbert,
Williams, and now Samak. We must instead, at all times, adhere to the clear
directive of federal law that federal prisoners may file a second or successive
motion challenging the legality of their sentences based on only two changed
circumstances:
(1) newly discovered evidence that, if proven and viewed in
light of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient to establish
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by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable factfinder
would have found the movant guilty of the offense; or
(2) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases
on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously
unavailable.
28 U.S.C. § 2255(h).
Our interpretation of the savings clause circumvents that directive in three
ways. First, we allow a prisoner to seek relief even though he has no “newly
discovered evidence” that he is innocent of his “offense.” Second, we allow a
prisoner to seek relief based on a new rule interpreting a statute, not the
Constitution, even if he previously filed a motion to vacate his sentence. Third, we
allow prisoners to seek relief based on that new rule even if the Supreme Court did
not make it retroactive.
The successful petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Bryant is paradigmatic.
In 2008, the Supreme Court crafted a rule about what constitutes a “violent felony”
under the Armed Career Criminal Act. See Begay, 533 U.S. at 144–45, 128 S. Ct.
at 1586. Bryant then argued that he was legally innocent of his sentence in a
motion to vacate his sentence. But we denied Bryant’s application to file this third
motion because Begay was not a new rule of constitutional law. Bryant, 738 F.3d
at 1260. So then Bryant asked to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus that
raised the same argument—the new rule in Begay rendered his enhanced sentence
unlawful. Id. at 1260—61. And we let him. Next, we gave him relief because we
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decided, not the Supreme Court, that Begay applied retroactively to the Armed
Career Criminal Act. Id. at 1276–78.
When we grant a prisoner like Bryant relief under the savings clause for an
argument that he is legally innocent of his sentence and not actually innocent of his
offense, we sidestep the clear command of Congress. To file a second or
successive motion based on actual innocence, the prisoner must have “newly
discovered evidence” proving that “no reasonable factfinder would have found
[him] guilty of the offense.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(h)(1). A decision by the Supreme
Court is not “newly discovered evidence.” Nor is a prisoner actually innocent of
his “offense” if all he can establish is legal innocence of his sentence. See
Williams, 713 F.3d at 1346 (“[H]e is asserting only legal innocence: that his
burglary convictions should have been considered violent felonies under the
[Armed Career Criminal Act].”); McKay v. United States, 657 F.3d 1190, 1199
(11th Cir. 2011) (“McKay does not even suggest, because he cannot, that he did
not actually commit the crime of carrying a concealed weapon.”); see also In re
Hill, 715 F.3d 284, 296 (11th Cir. 2013) (“A sentence is not a conviction for an
‘underlying offense.’”). Bryant was still guilty of his offense—possessing a
firearm as a felon, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)—and still guilty of his prior drug offenses
and carrying a concealed firearm. Because Bryant could not possibly have proved
that he was actually innocent of his offense, he was prohibited from filing a second
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or third motion to vacate his sentence. But under our flawed interpretation of the
savings clause, Bryant and others get another try.
Allowing federal prisoners to attack the legality of their convictions and
sentences via the savings clause evades the bar on second or successive petitions
that governs both state and federal prisoners. For a striking example, we recently
denied an application to file a successive habeas petition of a state prisoner
sentenced to death because his claim was a “pure sentencing claim.” In re Hill, 715
F.3d at 296, 301. The prisoner argued that the state could not execute him because
new evidence proved that he was mentally handicapped. Id. at 289–90. But we
denied his application because any claim that he was mentally handicapped was
not “newly discovered evidence of actual innocence.” Id. at 296. That prisoner
could not “point[] to any newly discovered facts that establish[ed], or could even
possibly establish, his innocence of the underlying offense of murder.” Id. But our
Court this year refused to acknowledge that our hands are similarly tied for federal
prisoners like Bryant who allege only that they are legally innocent of their
sentences. Instead, our Court has rendered the savings clause a loophole for federal
prisoners while state prisoners—even if sentenced to death—get no such relief.
Our interpretation has also gutted the second exception for second or
successive motions—new rules of constitutional law. Surely, if Congress intended
prisoners to file multiple motions about new rules of statutory law, then it would
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have said so. We cannot add exceptions when Congress already specified that
federal prisoners may file a second or successive petition only for new rules of
constitutional law. It is not our role to “elaborate unprovided-for exceptions to a
text.” Scalia & Garner, supra, at 93 (discussing the omitted-case canon of
construction). And “[w]here Congress explicitly enumerates certain exceptions to a
general prohibition, additional exceptions are not to be implied, in the absence of
evidence of a contrary legislative intent.” TRW Inc. v. Andrews, 534 U.S. 19, 28,
122 S. Ct. 441, 447 (2001) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Moreover, Congress did not include the requirement that a new rule be made
retroactive by the Supreme Court willy nilly. For the identically worded bar on
second or successive petitions for state prisoners, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(A), the
Supreme Court has made clear that “the Supreme Court is the only entity that can
‘make’ a new rule retroactive. The new rule becomes retroactive, not by the
decisions of the lower court or by the combined action of the Supreme Court and
the lower courts, but simply by the action of the Supreme Court.” Tyler v. Cain,
533 U.S. 656, 663, 121 S. Ct. 2478, 2482 (2001) (alteration omitted); see In re
Anderson, 396 F.3d 1336, 1339 (11th Cir. 2005) (applying the rule in Cain to
section 2255 motions). But our interpretation allows federal prisoners to rely on a
new rule announced by the Supreme Court even though the Court never once
uttered the word “retroactive” in its decision. See Bryant, 738 F.3d at 1276–78.
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Instead of our flawed interpretation of the savings clause—which allows
some prisoners to avoid these congressionally erected barriers—imagine an
interpretation of the savings clause that avoids circumventing the bar on second or
successive motions altogether. The plain meaning of the savings clause reaches
different claims than Bryant ever conceived. This understanding does not require
us to weave through the bar on second or successive motions and its exceptions; it
leaves those claims challenging the legality of a prisoner’s sentence to the
sentencing court and reserves the claims challenging the legality of the prisoner’s
continued confinement for the court in the district of confinement. Generally, no
prisoner is entitled to multiple rounds of collateral review for the purpose of
attacking his sentence. Congress carved out only two narrow circumstances in
which a prisoner may try again, and we must adhere to those narrow exceptions,
not widen them.
2. Our Interpretation Circumvents the Statute of Limitations and Undercuts the
“Central Concern” of Finality in the Act.
When Congress enacted the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act,
it imposed a one-year statute of limitations for federal prisoners to attack the
validity of their sentences. The statute of limitations may toll until a “right asserted
[by the prisoner] was initially recognized by the Supreme Court, if that right has
been newly recognized by the Supreme Court and made retroactively applicable to
cases on collateral review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f)(3). Our “circuit-busting precedent”
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rule, of course, flies in the face of that statute of limitations. Take Samak’s repeated
collateral attacks, for example. Samak filed his first motion to vacate his sentence
two and a half years too late. Samak, 2000 WL 557331, at *1. But in our Circuit,
Samak now has another chance to raise arguments he should have raised more than
fifteen years ago.
When we allow a prisoner to challenge his sentence years after the statute of
limitations expired, we frustrate the “central concern” of the Act: finality.
Calderon v. Thompson, 523 U.S. 538, 558, 118 S. Ct. 1489, 1502 (1998). At some
point, collateral attacks must cease and a conviction must be final. That finality “is
essential to the operation of our criminal justice system. Without finality, the
criminal law is deprived of much of its deterrent effect.” Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S.
288, 309, 109 S. Ct. 1060, 1074 (1989). And “[a] procedural system which permits
an endless repetition of inquiry into facts and law in a vain search for ultimate
certitude implies a lack of confidence about the possibilities of justice that cannot
but war with the effectiveness of underlying substantive commands.” McCleskey v.
Zant, 499 U.S. 467, 492, 111 S. Ct. 1454, 1469 (1991) (quotation marks omitted).
But if we instead interpret the text of the savings clause according to its
plain meaning—that it reaches challenges about a prisoner’s detention that arise
well after the prisoner was sentenced—then we do not undermine the time limits
that Congress imposed for challenges about the legality of his sentence. The
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savings clause is not a do-over in a different forum for challenges to the legality of
a prisoner’s sentence long after that one-year statute of limitations had expired;
instead, the savings clause leaves open petitions for writs of habeas corpus for
those prisoners who challenge the execution of their sentences.
E. The Savings Clause Is Constitutionally Necessary so that Claims about the
Execution of a Sentence Do Not Go Unheard.
Some courts have stated that the savings clause is necessary to avoid “a
thorny constitutional issue” about the suspension of habeas corpus, see, e.g., In re
Dorsainvil, 119 F.3d 245, 248 (3d Cir. 1997); Triestman v. United States, 124 F.3d
361, 377 (2d Cir. 1997), and I agree, but for a wholly different reason. A prisoner
who challenges the execution of his sentence must have a forum where he may
bring that challenge, even though it arises long after a court sentenced him. The
only constitutional problem inherent in the savings clause is when a prisoner seeks
to challenge the execution of his sentence, and no court will hear his challenge.
Challenges about good-time credits or parole revocation or other prison
disciplinary proceedings affecting a prisoner’s confinement are challenges about
executive detention. These challenges mirror challenges brought by pretrial
detainees, who are the quintessential habeas petitioners because they have been
detained by the Executive before courts have determined their guilt. See The
Federalist No. 84, at 512 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961) (“To
bereave a man of life or by violence to confiscate his estate, without accusation or
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trial, would be so gross and notorious an act of despotism as must at once convey
the alarm of tyranny . . . but confinement of the person, by secretly hurrying him to
jail . . ., is a less public, a less striking, and therefore a more dangerous engine of
arbitrary government.” (quoting 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries *136; 4 id.
at *438) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)); see also, e.g., Schall v.
Martin, 467 U.S. 253, 104 S. Ct. 2403 (1984); Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 99 S.
Ct. 1861 (1979). These challenges of executive detention were the kinds of
challenges that the Framers anticipated when they adopted the Suspension Clause
more than 200 years ago. See Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S. 723, 739–46, 128 S.
Ct. 2229, 2244–47 (2008); Preiser, 411 U.S. at 484, 93 S. Ct. at 1833 (“[T]he
essence of habeas corpus is an attack by a person in custody upon the legality of
that custody.”). The savings clause remedies any constitutional problem posed by
section 2255 by allowing a prisoner, whose challenge to his detention is not
cognizable in a motion to vacate his sentence, to challenge his detention by
petitioning for a writ of habeas corpus in the court that confines him.
Prisoners like Samak do not face that same constitutional pitfall. He could
file a petition for an Original Writ from the Supreme Court to attack the legality of
his sentence. The Supreme Court, not our Court, is his court of last resort. See, e.g.,
Chavez v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., No. 14-10486, slip op. at 19 (11th Cir. Feb.
10, 2014) (Martin, J., concurring in the judgment) (“Mr. Chavez, like all capital
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habeas petitioners, is free to file an original habeas corpus petition in the United
States Supreme Court.”).
Regardless of the limits that the Act places on the power of our Court, the
Act does not strangle the power of the Supreme Court to grant an Original Writ.
Felker v. Turpin, 518 U.S. 651, 658, 116 S. Ct. 2333 (1996). The Act cannot
transgress the constitutional rights of prisoners who allege that they have been
erroneously sentenced or unfairly tried when the Supreme Court retains its power
to grant an Original Writ. The Supreme Court affirmed this proposition as early as
1868 when it decided Ex Parte Yerger, 75 U.S. (8 Wall.) 85, 105 (1868), and as
recently as 1996 when it decided Felker v. Turpin, 518 U.S. 651, 116 S. Ct. 2333
(1996).
Travel back to 1868 when Congress stripped the Supreme Court of all of its
appellate jurisdiction to review decisions of circuit courts denying habeas petitions,
Act of Mar. 27, 1868, ch. 34, § 2, 15 Stat. 44, and the Supreme Court rejected the
argument that this Act unconstitutionally suspended the writ of habeas corpus. Ex
parte Yerger, 75 U.S. (8 Wall.) at 105. Before 1868, the Supreme Court had the
power to grant an Original Writ, Act of Sept. 24, 1789, ch. 20, § 14, 1 Stat. 82, and
appellate jurisdiction to hear appeals from inferior courts that had decided petitions
for habeas corpus, Act of Feb. 5, 1867, ch. 28, 14 Stat. 385. But then Congress
took away the latter. Act of Mar. 27, 1868, ch. 34, § 2, 15 Stat. 44. The Supreme
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Court decided that, when Congress took away the jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court to hear those appeals, it did not also impliedly repeal the Supreme Court’s
power to issue an Original Writ of habeas corpus. Ex parte Yerger, 75 U.S. (8
Wall.) at 105. The Court explained, “It is true that exercise of appellate
jurisdiction, under the act of 1789, was less convenient than under the act of 1867,
but the provision of a new and more convenient mode of its exercise does not
necessarily take away the old. . . . Addition is not substitution.” Id. The clear
import of Ex Parte Yerger is that, so long as the Supreme Court retains the power
to entertain an Original Writ, Congress does not violate the Suspension Clause.
More than 100 years later, Congress again limited the ability of prisoners to
attack their sentences collaterally, and the Supreme Court again rejected an
argument that Congress violated the Suspension Clause. Felker, 518 U.S. at 664,
116 S. Ct. at 2340. Ellis Felker, a state prisoner, challenged the bar on second or
successive petitions as an unconstitutional suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.
Id. at 658, 116 S. Ct. at 2337. Shortly before his execution, Felker attempted to file
a second habeas petition on the ground that he was innocent of the offense because
postconviction experts had established that his victim died when Felker was under
police surveillance. Id. at 657–58, 116 S. Ct. at 2337. Our Court rejected his
application to file a second petition, and the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act precluded Felker from seeking Supreme Court review of our denial. 28
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U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(E); Felker, 518 U.S. at 658, 116 S. Ct. at 2337. The Supreme
Court stayed Felker’s execution to determine whether the Act constituted an
unconstitutional restriction on its appellate jurisdiction and whether it
unconstitutionally suspended the writ of habeas corpus. Id. The Supreme Court
rejected the argument that the Act unconstitutionally infringed on its appellate
jurisdiction because it “makes no mention of [the Supreme Court’s] authority to
hear habeas petitions filed as original matters in this Court.” Id. at 661, 116 S. Ct.
at 2339. The Court also explained that the bar on second or successive petitions
was not an invalid suspension of the writ of habeas corpus because “[t]he new
restrictions on successive petitions constitute a modified res judicata rule, a
restraint on what is called in habeas corpus practice ‘abuse of the writ.’” Id. at 664,
116 S. Ct. at 2340.
Any argument that a prisoner like Bryant was unconstitutionally deprived of
his right to attack his sentence fails just as Yerger’s and Felker’s arguments failed.
Bryant had many opportunities to test the legality of his sentences. He knowingly
pleaded guilty to his offense; he appealed his sentence to our Court; he collaterally
attacked his sentence, but failed to comply with the statute of limitations; we
reviewed Bryant’s application for a certification of appealability, but denied it; he
collaterally attacked his sentence again in the district court, but failed to comply
with the bar on second or successive motions; we rejected his application to file a
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third motion attacking his sentence; and finally, he petitioned for a writ of habeas
corpus.
At some point, collateral review must end. See Henry J. Friendly, Is
Innocence Irrelevant? Collateral Attack on Criminal Judgments, 38 U. Chi. L.
Rev. 142, 145 (1970) (“The proverbial man from Mars would surely think we must
consider our system of criminal justice terribly bad if we are willing to tolerate
such efforts at undoing judgments of conviction.”). The law will forever be in a
state of flux, and Congress, in a state of legislation. A federal prisoner’s sentence
cannot always be vulnerable to collateral attack, lest the finality of convictions
ceases to exist. As the Supreme Court plainly explained in Sunal v. Large, “It is
not uncommon after a trial is ended and the time for appeal has passed to discover
that a shift in the law or the impact of a new decision has given increased relevance
to a point made at the trial but not pursued on appeal.” 332 U.S. 174, 182, 67 S. Ct.
1588, 1592 (1947). But “[i]f in such circumstances, habeas corpus could be used to
correct the error, the writ would become a delayed motion for a new trial.” Id. at
182, 67 S. Ct. at 1593. As the Supreme Court prudently concluded, “Wise judicial
administration of the federal courts counsels against such course, at least where the
error does not trench on any constitutional rights of defendants nor involve the
jurisdiction of the trial court.” Id.
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Once a prisoner has used his one motion to challenge the legality of his
sentence, Congress has given him only limited options to continue to challenge that
sentence: He can present new evidence proving his innocence, 28 U.S.C.
§ 2255(h)(1), or take advantage of a new rule of constitutional law made
retroactive by the Supreme Court, id. § 2255(h)(2). Or he can file a petition for an
Original Writ from the Supreme Court, id. § 2241, or seek a pardon from the
President, U.S. Const. Art. II, § 2, cl. 1; compare Gilbert, 640 F.3d at 1326–27
(Pryor, J., concurring) (“[I]f [Ezell Gilbert] suffers some ‘injustice’ that Congress
has not empowered the courts to correct, the President can exercise his ‘Power to
grant Reprieves and Pardons.’”), with Elaine Silvestrini, Obama Grants Clemency
to Tampa Man, Tampa Trib. (Dec. 19, 2013), available at
http://tbo.com/news/crime/obama-grants-clemency-to-tampa-man-20131219/
(announcing clemency granted to Ezell Gilbert). But he cannot continue to
challenge the legality of his sentence in our Court after he has exhausted the
remedies available to him in section 2255.
F. The Interpretation of the Savings Clause Varies Among the Circuit Courts, But
Only the Ordinary Meaning of the Text of the Clause Matters.
Our sister circuits have adopted varying interpretations of the savings clause,
but few have considered the ordinary meaning of the text of the clause. A textual
analysis would clean up this mess.
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The majority of our sister circuits have adopted variations of the Seventh
Circuit rule from In re Davenport. Most of those courts allow prisoners relief
under the savings clause only if they can prove that they are actually innocent of
their conviction, not their sentence. See, e.g., Wooten v. Cauley, 677 F.3d 303,
307–08 (6th Cir. 2012) (“One way to establish factual innocence is to show an
intervening change in the law that establishes the petitioner’s actual innocence.
This may be achieved by demonstrating (1) the existence of a new interpretation of
statutory law, (2) which was issued after the petitioner had a meaningful time to
incorporate the new interpretation into his direct appeals or subsequent motions,
(3) is retroactive, and (4) applies to the merits of the petition to make it more likely
than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him.” (internal quotation
marks, citations, and alterations omitted)); In re Smith, 285 F.3d 6, 8 (D.C. Cir.
2002) (“Smith is actually innocent, having been convicted on the basis of an
incorrect understanding of § 924(c), and § 2255 relief is unavailable to him.”);
Reyes-Requena v. United States, 243 F.3d 893, 904 (5th Cir. 2001) (“[T]he savings
clause of § 2255 applies to a claim (i) that is based on a retroactively applicable
Supreme Court decision which establishes that the petitioner may have been
convicted of a nonexistent offense and (ii) that was foreclosed by circuit law at the
time when the claim should have been raised in the petitioner’s trial, appeal, or
first § 2255 motion.”); In re Jones, 226 F.3d 328, 333–34 (4th Cir. 2000) (“§ 2255
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is inadequate and ineffective to test the legality of a conviction when: (1) at the
time of conviction, settled law of this circuit or the Supreme Court established the
legality of the conviction; (2) subsequent to the prisoner’s direct appeal and first
§ 2255 motion, the substantive law changed such that the conduct of which the
prisoner was convicted is deemed not to be criminal; and (3) the prisoner cannot
satisfy the gatekeeping provisions of § 2255 because the new rule is not one of
constitutional law.”). Other courts have adopted a similar approach and ask
whether a petitioner had an earlier, “unobstructed” procedural opportunity to
challenge his conviction. See, e.g., Abdullah v. Hedrick, 392 F.3d 957, 963 (8th
Cir. 2004) (denying relief because the “failure to seize that opportunity does not
render § 2255 inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his conviction.); Ivy v.
Pontesso, 328 F.3d 1057, 1061 (9th Cir. 2003) (“[H]e has not been denied an
unobstructed procedural opportunity to present it. For that reason, § 2255 does not
provide an inadequate or ineffective remedy.”). The Seventh Circuit later
broadened its understanding of the savings clause to include claims that the
sentencing court imposed a sentence exceeding the statutory maximum penalty,
and other circuits have acknowledged that some prisoners might be entitled to
relief under the savings clause for a sentencing claim. See Brown v. Rios, 696 F.3d
638, 644 (7th Cir. 2012) (granting relief under the savings clause for a petitioner
erroneously sentenced under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e));
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see also, e.g., Gibbs v. United States, 655 F.3d 473, 478 (6th Cir. 2011) (“Even if
the ‘actual innocence’ exception applies in some noncapital sentencing contexts,
we believe that the exception does not permit prisoners to raise claims about
guidelines calculations in a collateral attack.”). But all of these circuit courts make
the same mistake that we have made. They adopted wholesale the approach first
devised by the Seventh Circuit without considering the ordinary meaning of the
text of the savings clause.
The Second and Third Circuits have adopted an approach similar to those
circuit courts, but they have stated explicitly that their approach is necessary to
avoid a question about the constitutionality of section 2255. In Treistman v. United
States, the Second Circuit construed the savings clause “to provide that habeas
corpus remains available to federal prisoners when § 2255 is not available and
when the failure to allow for some form of collateral review would raise serious
constitutional questions.” 124 F.3d at 377. And the Third Circuit decided that the
savings clause reached a prisoner’s claim that he is “factually or legally innocent as
a result of a previously unavailable statutory interpretation”; otherwise, “we would
be faced with a thorny constitutional issue.” In re Dorsainvil, 119 F.3d at 248. I
agree with the Second and Third Circuits that the savings clause is constitutionally
necessary, but not for the reasons that the Second and Third Circuits espoused.
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Instead, as I explained above, the savings clause is constitutionally necessary to
reach claims about a prisoner’s detention that are not cognizable in section 2255.
Only the Tenth Circuit has considered the ordinary meaning of the savings
clause. In Prost v. Anderson, the Tenth Circuit evaluated the words “inadequate or
ineffective” and “test.” 636 F.3d at 584–85. After evaluating these terms, the court
concluded that “it is evident that a prisoner generally is entitled to only one
adequate and effective opportunity to test the legality of his detention, in his initial
§ 2255 motion.” Id. at 586. The Tenth Circuit adopted the rule that “a prisoner can
proceed to § 2241 only if his initial § 2255 motion was itself inadequate or
ineffective to the task of providing the petitioner with a chance to test his sentence
or conviction.” Id. at 587. But even the Tenth Circuit failed to consider the
distinction between a challenge to the legality of a prisoner’s “sentence,” 28 U.S.C.
§ 2255(a), and a challenge to the legality of his “detention,” id. § 2255(e). The rule
of the Tenth Circuit, quoted above, replaces the word “detention” from the clause
with “sentence or conviction.” Prost, 636 F.3d at 587.
CONCLUSION
Contrary to what many circuit courts following blindly in the wake of the
Seventh Circuit in Davenport have concluded, the savings clause does not require a
federal court to ask whether a claim about the legality of a conviction or sentence
was foreclosed by circuit precedent when a prisoner filed his first motion to vacate
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his sentence. A remedy by motion to vacate a sentence is both adequate and
effective to test the legality of a prisoner’s sentence in his sentencing court, even
though Congress has erected procedural bars to limit his challenge. The savings
clause opens the door for a prisoner to bring claims in a petition for habeas corpus
that section 2255 cannot remedy—that is, claims challenging the execution of his
sentence. A motion under section 2255 is neither adequate nor effective to remedy
a prisoner’s claim about a parole determination or the deprivation of good-time
credits, for example. Only in those kinds of circumstances is a federal prisoner
entitled to relief under the savings clause.
Our decision in Bryant is wrong, and we should do away with this “circuit-
busting precedent” sham. Bryant does not even attempt to offer a plausible
interpretation of the text of the savings clause. Our judicial oath requires that we
respect the law—that is, the text enacted by the elected representatives of the
American people—and not employ a judicial contrivance to get around provisions
of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act.
55