AMENDED MEMORANDUM OPINION
Aрplicant, Reginald Dean, filed this ha-beas application under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, attacking his sentence and convictions for his participation in two bank robberies, which were in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113. 1 An earlier application raising different claims had been dismissed on the merits. The civil action was referred to the Honorable Judith Guthrie, United States Magistrate Judge, who reviewed applicant’s claims on the merits, and recommended that parts of applicant’s concurrent sentences be vacated. The government did not file objections. Subject to the clarifications contained in the opinion below, the report and recommendation of the Magistrate Judge will be adopted.
I. Applicant’s Claims
The Magistrate Judge recommended no relief on most of applicant’s claims. A de novo review of these claims has been conducted, and it is found that applicant’s objections are without merit. Accordingly, the report and recommendation of thе Magistrate Judge with respect to these claims is adopted.
The Magistrate Judge also recommended vacating portions of applicant’s sentence for the two bank robberies. Dean was convicted of violating 18 U.S.C. § 2113 in the robbery of the First National Bank of Bullard, as charged in counts two through four of the indictment. In count two, he was charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), (d), armed bank robbery, by using a dangerous weapon to take $81,000 from Billy Dunklin, President of the First National Bank of Bullard, on September 19, 1985. The charge in count three was identical, except that the victim was Robert Weed, Vice President of the Bank. The charge in count four was kidnaрping during the robbery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), (e).
It was erroneously adjudged that the sentence imposed in each count should run concurrently with the sentence prescribed with respect to each of the other two counts. “While separate convictions of subsections (a)(d) and (e) of section 2113 may stand, a dеfendant may receive no more than one penalty.”
United States v. Bates,
II. Collateral Review
The Magistrate Judge correctly determined that applicant’s claims were subject to collateral review under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Even if nоt raised on appeal, a constitutional claim is cognizable under § 2255, unless the applicant deliberately bypassed direct appeal.
2
United States v. Smith,
III. Successive Petitions
The Magistrate Judge also correctly determined that Dean was not barred from asserting this new ground of relief by the abuse of the writ doctrine embodied in Rule 9(b) of the Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings. The Magistrate Judge found that applicant did not raise the claim in the first application because he was acting pro se аnd did not discover the legal significance of the claim until later.
Until recently, it would have been clear that applicant’s explanation was adequate. Under the doctrine of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, a successive application raising new constitutional claims was barrеd from consideration unless the applicant excusably neglected to raise the claim in the first proceeding.
Moore v. Butler,
It must be determined, however, whether the Fifth Circuit’s actual knowledge standard is consistent with the Supreme Court’s most recent formulation of the abuse of the writ doctrine in
McCleskey v. Zant,
— U.S.-,
The
McCleskey
Court did not address, however, whether the same standard would apply to
pro se
applications. In
McCles-key,
the applicant was represented by counsel in both federal habeas applications.
See McCleskey v. Zant,
After reviewing the relеvant authorities, it is held that the “actual knowledge” test still governs the abuse of the writ doctrine for applications filed by
pro se
prisoners. As the
McCleskey
Court noted, the cause and prejudice standard originated as “the ... standard used to determine whether to excuse state procedural defaults” at trial or on direct appeal.
McCleskey,
In general, the same assumption of attorney competence applies when a habеas defendant is represented by retained or appointed counsel, even though there is no constitutional right to counsel in habeas proceedings.
5
See McCleskey,
This assumption of reasonable. competence by the attorney is inapplicable, however, when the defendant proceeds pro se on a habeas application. As the Supreme Court has noted:
Prisoners are often unlearned in the law and unfamiliar with the complicatеd rules of pleading. Since they act so often as their own counsel in habeas corpus proceedings, we cannot impose on them the same high standards of the legal art which we might place on the members of the legal profession.
Price v. Johnston,
Given [the] elemental role of counsel in our adversary system, we think it inevitable that the inquiry into excuse for omitting a claim from an earlier writ will differ depending upon whether petitiоner was represented by counsel in the earlier writ prosecution. Representation by competent counsel has an immediate effect upon the quality of proof necessary to prove an excuse for omitting a prior claim. With counsel the inquiry is not solely the awareness of a petitiоner, a layman, but must include that of his competent counsel.
Jones,
Since the same standard of performance that is expected of attorneys cannot reasonably be expected of a
pro se
applicant, a more lenient standard for
pro se
applications is appropriate and consistent with
McCleskey.
The Fifth Circuit’s five year long experience with the actual knowledge standard demonstrates that the standard is sufficient to further the interest in finality and deter the needless filing of successive applications. As the Advisory Committee Note to Rule 9(b) notes, “ ‘Most prisoners ... are interested in being released as soon as possible; only rarely will one inexcusably neglect to raise all available issues in his first federal application’ ” (quoting
Developments in the Law
— Habeas
Corpus,
83 Harv.L.Rev. 1038, 1153-54 (1970)). “ ‘The occasional, highly litigious prisoner stands out as the rarest exception.’ ”
Id.,
(quoting ABA Standards Relating to Post-Conviction Remedies § 6.2, commentary at 92). Because a
pro se
applicant lacks legal expertise and training, a more rigorous standard will not deter the applicant from omitting a clаim in good faith.
See Murray,
The Tenth Circuit’s reasoning in
Rodriguez v. Maynard,
Hence, it is concluded that the Fifth Circuit's actual knowledge test continues to govern the abuse of the writ doctrine for
pro se
applications. The cause and prejudice test, adopted in
McCleskey,
originated in a context where the accused is constitutionally entitled to representation by competent counsel. Because there is no right to counsel in habeas cases, proper regard must be given for the lesser abilities of
pro se
applicants in determining what constitutes cause and excusable neglect for failing to raise a claim in a prior application. The Fifth Circuit’s actual knowledge test is an appropriate standard by which to measure
pro se
successive applications and is more than adequate to deter the needless raising of new claims. Applicant has therefore demonstrated “cause” and excusable neglect for failure to raise the double jeopardy attack on his concurrent sentences in his first application. It is also held that applicant has demonstrated prejudice, because but for the constitutional error, the concurrent sentences would not have been imposed.
See Strickland,
Even if the cause and prejudice standard applied in
McCleskey
were applicable here, review of applicant’s claims would be appropriate under the “fundamental miscarriage of justice” exceptiоn.
McCleskey,
Notes
. Because 28 U.S.C. § 2255 uses the terms "applicant” and "application”, those terms will be used instead of the more frequently used "petition" and "petitioner”.
. If the applicant has procedurally defaulted on the constitutional claim, for example, by failing to object to a jury charge before deliberation, as required by Fed.R.Crim.P. 30, the applicant must satisfy the more rigorous cause and actual prejudice test in order to obtain review.
United States v. Frady,
. In
Woods,
the court determined that the applicant had not met the burden of demonstrating that he did not have actual knowledge of the legal or factual basis of the omitted claim. Applicant claimed that his counsel had been ineffective in failing to suppress evidence as seized without probable cause. The record revealed that applicant had been present at the suppression hearing, and he was urging the same legal theory that had been rejected by the state courts.
Woods,
.
See Strickland
v.
Washington,
.The Fifth Circuit has held that where the failure of counsel to raisе a claim in a prior federal habeas application falls so far below the standard of reasonable competence that it would constitute ineffective assistance of counsel, the attorney’s inadvertent error constitutes cause for not raising the claim in the first application.
Cuevas,
932 F.2d at. 1083-84;
Jones,
. Cоntinued application of the actual knowledge standard will also not frustrate the interest in finality, noted by the Court in
McCleskey,
