David Dahler was convicted in 1995 of possessing firearms despite his status as a felon. This violated 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), which normally carries a maximum penalty of ten years’ imprisonment. 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(3). Because Dahler had аt least three independent convictions for crimes of violence, however, § 924(e)(1) branded him an armed career criminal and raised the maximum sentence to life imprisonment, with a mandatory minimum of 15 years. See
United States v. Jackson,
Now he wants to commence a second. By application under § 2255 ¶ 8, Dahler asks us to authorize a new collateral attack on his sentence. See also 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b). Dahler’s theory this time is that the due process clause of the fifth' amendment, as understood in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Prior appellate approval is required only for a “second or successive motion” under § 2255. Counting mоtions can be difficult. See
Johnson v. United States,
Yet Dahler does not want to presеnt a constitutional objection to an error newly made in 1998. He seeks relief from sentencing as an armed career criminal, and the contention he now advances-that his eligibility for recidivist sentencing should have been determined by a jury at his trial-is not something that was introduced by his resentencing in 1998. The choice between judge and jury (and between the preponderance and reasonable-doubt standards) was one made in 1995, and nothing changed between the sentencing in 1995 and the resentencing in 1998. *765 The argument Dahler now seeks to present is one he could have raised at trial, on appeal from the 1995 sentence, in the district court on remand, and on the 1999 appeal from the decision on remand. Neither the language of § 2255 ¶ 8 nor the holding of Walker requirеs us to treat Dahler’s proposed challenge as an initial collateral attack. Walker dealt only with a challenge to matters that occurred at re-sentencing; it did not address any сlaims that could have been raised before the resentencing.
United States v. Smith,
This distinction between challenges to events that are novel to the resentencing (and will be treated as initial collateral attacks) and events that predated the re-sentencing (and will be treated as successive collateral attacks) has been adopted by every other circuit that has considered the subject. See, e.g.,
United States v. Barrett,
Dahler’s application does not meet the statutory standard for a second or successive collateral attack: “a new rule of сonstitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255 ¶ 8(2).
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
One observation before we conclude. Dahler did not comply with Circuit Rule 22.2, which specifies the contents of an application under § 2255 ¶ 8 or § 2244(b). Instead of providing the information (including the attachments) required by Rule 22.2, Dahler filled out a form he received from his prison. This form stаtes, among other things, that “[a]ll applicants seeking leave to file a second or successive petition are required to use this form, except in capital cases.” Apрarently federal prisons across the country are distributing this form to inmates. Yet the Bureau of Prisons lacks authority to limit how prisoners present their claims, for the Executive Branch cannot prescribe rules of practice and procedure in the federal courts. We gather that the form is the work of the eleventh circuit. Prison officials apparently use white-out formula to delete the name of that court and photocopy the redacted form, whose printed caption then reads “United States Court of Appeals” (with blank space underneath to type the name of a circuit). By obliterating the name of the originating court and then handing out forms that profess to be compulsory, prisons are effectively directing all inmates, from every circuit, to use one form.
Prison administrators distributing this form to inmates who must file in circuits other than the eleventh are doing them, and the judges, a disservice. The amended document falsely tells prisoners from the seventh circuit that they
must
use the еleventh circuit’s form — even though this leaves the prisoners out of compliance with Circuit Rule 22.2 and may lead to delay or denial of their applications. Instead of using a one-form-fits-all approach, prison librarians and other officials should help their wards find and comply with the appropriate local rules. We have furnished copies of Circuit Rule 22.2 to every prison in the circuit, and we are disappointed that, despite a request last year (by letter from the Clerk of this Court to the Warden), the federal prison at Oxford, Wisconsin, is continuing to distribute the еleventh circuit’s form, with its demand that prisoners use that form exclusively. We hope that wardens of federal prisons will find a way to avoid giving prisoners bad legal advice, without requiring this court to take additional steps to ensure that prisoners can enjoy their right of access to the judicial system. Cf.
Hall v. Stone,
