MEMORANDUM & ORDER
Petitioner, Gurmeet Singh Dhinsa, was convicted of numerous offenses following a jury trial that involved approximately 100 witnesses and lasted nearly four months. United States v. Dhinsa,
Dhinsa was sentenced to eight life terms for two counts of racketeering, two counts of murder in aid of racketeering, two counts of obstruction of justice murder, one count of conspiracy to commit kidnapping in aid of racketeering, and one count of kidnapping in aid of racketeering. Judgment at 1, United States v. Dhinsa, No. 97-cr-672-ERK (E.D.N.Y. Oct. 15, 1999), EOF No. 440. Several other terms of imprisonment were imposed for various firearm, conspiracy, and fraud offenses, including four 120-month terms to run consecutive with' each other but concurrent with the life terms; eight 60-month terms to run consecutive with each other but concurrent with the life terms; and one 60-month term to run consecutive with all other terms. Id. The Second Circuit ultimately vacated two of the counts for which Dhinsa had been sentenced to life terms and one of the counts for which he had been sentenced to a 60-month term to run concurrent with the life terms. See Dhinsa,
I. Obstruction of Justice Murders
The two obstruction of justice murder convictions at issue here are predicated on the murders of Manmohan Singh and Sa-tinderjit Singh, two Citygas employees. Dhinsa,
Powell’s testimony and cellular telephone and pager records corroborate Dodson’s version of the events surrounding Manmohan’s murder. The telephone records establish that Dodson made numerous attempts to contact Dhinsa and Gulzar during the period March 14 through March 16, 1997, the day Man-mohan was murdered. These records also indicate that Dodson called Dhinsa and Gulzar within'hours after Manmo-han was murdered, presumably to inform them of his success. The government also presented evidence that the vehicle driven by Dodson during the murder was registered to a company owned by Dhinsa, and that Dhinsa arranged- to have the truck repainted and re-registered following Manmohan’s murder.
Id. at 661.
The evidence supporting Satinderjit’s obstruction of justice murder was equally overwhelming:
Numerous witnesses testified that Satin-derjit was actively cooperating with police in an investigation of Dhinsa and the Singh - Enterprise at the time he was murdered. Uberoi, Satinderjit’s girlfriend, testified that Dhinsa contacted her twice, threatening to have her and Satinderjit shot if Satinderjit continued to assist the police in its investigation of Dhinsa. Dodson testified that Dhinsa ordered Satinderjit murdered shortly after [a] July 1997 police raid of his Citygas offices in Brooklyn, New York. Dodson further testified that Dhinsa drove him to Satinderjit’s neighborhood and identified his apartment. A short time later, Dhinsa provided Dodson with a photograph of Satinderjit and a printout ofthe registration and license plate for Satinderjit’s car....
Similar to Manmohan’s murder, cellular telephone records corroborate Dodson’s version of Satinderjit’s murder. These records show that Dhinsa made in excess of thirty telephone calls to Dodson in the days and weeks before Satinderjit was murdered and establish a sequence of calls between Dhinsa, Samuels [another of Dhinsa’s hitmen] and Powell on June 18, 1997, the day Satinderjit was murdered. The telephone records confirm Dhinsa’s presence in calling .areas near the location where Satinderjit was murdered. The government also presented testimony from Samuels and Powell, who corroborated Dodson’s version of Satinderjit’s murder, and from Santokh, an employee at a Citygas station owned by Dhinsa, who testified that Dhinsa directed him to change the license plate on the van used by Dodson during Satinderjit’s murder.
Id. The Second Circuit continued: “With respect to Satinderjit, the evidence presented at trial established that Satinderjit was in fact cooperating with the [local] police at the time Dhinsa ordered Dodson to kill him, providing police with information regarding Manmohan’s murder, Kul-want’s disappearance and the Citygas pump-rigging scheme.” Id. at 657. The evidence at trial demonstrated that federal officers began an extensive investigation of Dhinsa in July 1997, just one month following Satinderjit’s June 1997 murder and four months following Manmohan’s March 1997 murder. Id. at 644-45, 647. Indeed, as relevant to this petition, the Second Circuit specifically held that “[t]he record amply demonstrates that Dhinsa murdered Man-mohan and Satinderjit to ‘depriv[e] the government of ... potential witnesses].’ ” Id. at 657 (citations omitted).
II. Post-Conviction History
On September 16, 2002, Dhinsa filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the Central District of California, where he was incarcerated, in which he: argued that he had received the ineffective assistance of trial counsel (and not that he was actually innocent). Resp’t’s Mem. Opp’n Habeas Pet., Gov’t App’x at 66, 69, ECF No. 25. The petition was dismissed on the ground that a' petition for a' writ of habeas corpus challenging the validity of a judgment of conviction had to be filed in the judicial district in which he was convicted. See id. at 74. Dhinsa then filed a motion to vacate sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 in the Eastern District of New York. Id. at 51. Dhinsa had filed his petition in California at the eleventh hour, and the statute of limitations was not tolled during that proceeding in California. See Dhinsa v. Herrera,
On June 29, 2004, Dhinsa filed a motion under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6) in the Central District of California, arguing that his original § 2241 petition, should have been transferred to the Eastern District of New York rather than dismissed. Motion for Relief from Judgment, Dhinsa v. Herrera, No. 02-CV-7211-VAP-SGL (C.D. Cal. June 29, 2004), ECF No, 6; Dhinsa,
Dhinsa’s petition was transferred to the Eastern District of New York, Order, Aug. 17, 2012, ECF No. 11, and then to the Second Circuit pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255(h) for certification as a successive petition. Order at 2, Aug. 23, 2012, ECF No. 14. On May 6, 2013, the Second Circuit remanded the petition to determine whether (1) Dhinsa “satisfies the criteria set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e), and may therefore bring his petition under ... 28 U.S.C. § 2241, see Triestman v. United States,
DISCUSSION
Title 28 U.S.C. § 2255 provides that “[a] prisoner in custody under sentence of a court established by Act of Congress claiming the right to be released ... may move the court which imposed the sentence to vacate, set aside or correct the sentence.” Dhinsa, who previously filed a motion pursuant to § 2255, is precluded from filing a petition challenging his conviction because he cannot satisfy the criteria for filing a successive and otherwise untimely petition as set out in 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f), (h). Nevertheless, § 2255(e) provides that § 2255 will not bar a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to § 2241, so long as “it also appears that the remedy by motion [pursuant to § 2255] is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.” Under circumstances that I will discuss more fully, the Second Circuit has held that § 2255(e) may permit a prisoner to file a petition challenging the legality of his detention. Triestman v. United States,
Indeed, to the extent that a federal habeas petitioner challenges a conviction for which he received a concurrent sentence, he is not challenging the validity of his detention. Instead, his standing to bring such a challenge is predicated on
I. The Concurrent-Sentence Doctrine
While it has taken slightly different forms throughout history, the concurrent-sentence doctrine is understood today as a principle of law under which an appellate court reviewing a conviction need not hear the challenge if another valid conviction carries a sentence equal to or greater than the challenged conviction. Concurrent-Sentence Doctrine, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). The doctrine traces back to at least 1711 and was expressly utilized throughout the Eighteenth Century by English appellate courts hearing criminal cases. See Nathan H. Jack, Toward a Uniform Rule: The Collapse of the Civil-Criminal Divide in Appellate Review of Multitheory General Verdicts, 81 U. Chi. L. Rev. 757, 760 & n.16 (2014). The Supreme Court employed an early variation of the doctrine in Claassen v. United States,
For nearly one hundred years following Claassen, the Supreme Court utilized the concurrent-sentence doctrine regularly and without hesitation. Thus, in Lawn v. United States, the Court employed the then-most recent iteration of the doctrine. Specifically, it observed that the defendant “also contests the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdicts against him on Counts 7 and 9, but since the sentence upon those counts run concurrently with the sentence on Count 10, which we have found sustained by the evidence, it is unnecessary for us to consider those contentions.”
In Benton v. Maryland,
Subsequently, in Rutledge v. United States,
Ultimately, in Spencer v. Kemna,,
The Spencer Court explained that, as a general matter, the conception'of Article III standing has changed since the days of Benton v. Maryland, evolving to require concrete injuries-in-fact rather than speculative collateral consequences.
While I need not go so far in order to decide the concurrent-sentence aspect of this case, in my view virtually none of the far-fetched hypothetical collateral consequences that have been cited in earlier cases are sufficient to satisfy the standard set out in Clapper, and these cases are no longer good law. Indeed, even before Clapper, the Supreme Court focused on the issue of whether collateral consequences are adequate to meet Article Ill’s injury-in-fact requirement. See United States v. Juvenile Male,
Perhaps out of deference to the Supreme Court’s marked shift in focus to the application of Article Ill’s injury-in-fact requirement, federal courts still sometimes invoke the concurrent-sentence doctrine on direct appeal, such as when a defendant appeals only his sentence rather than his entire conviction. See, e.g., United States v. Pardo,
Significantly, the concurrent-sentence doctrine is most applicable within the context of habeas review because a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241 attacks only the legality of the petitioner’s confinement. Put another way, habeas corpus serves “to examine the legality of the commitment” and to “liberate an individual from unlawful imprisonment.” Ex parte Watkins,
Habeas corpus ad subjiciendum is today, as it has always been, a fundamental safeguard against unlawful custody. The importance of this prerogative writ, requiring the body of a person restrained of liberty to be brought before the court so that the lawfulness of the restraintmay be determined, was recognized in the Constitution, and the first Judiciary Act gave the federal courts authority to issue the writ ‘agreeable to the principles and usages of law.’ Although the wording Of earlier statutory provisions has been changed, the basic question before the court to which the writ is addressed has always been the same: in the language of the present statute, on the books since 1867, is the detention complained of ‘in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States’?
Fay v. Noia,
Yet, as stated earlier, Dhinsa admits that the success of his current petition will not alter the length or nature of his custody, or affect the legality of his continued detention—he will not be released. Pet’r’s Ltr., Feb. 25, 2015, ECF No. 27. Specifically, as I observed earlier, in the event that the obstruction of justice murder convictions (counts 5 and 9) are vacated, Dhin-sa will still remain imprisoned serving four other life sentences, including two life sentences imposed for murder in aid of racketeering involving the same victims as those in the obstruction of justice murders. In his briefing, Dhinsa contested the application of the concurrent-sentence doctrine based primarily on the special assessments that were imposed on counts 5 and 9. Pet’r’s Mem. Addressing Concurrent Sentence Doctrine at 1-4, ECF. No. 32. At oral argument, however, Dhinsa’s counsel conceded that special assessments are a “legal fiction” within the context of collateral consequences, and that Dhinsa has no interest in actually obtaining a refund. See Transcript of Oral Argument, July 8, 2015, at 20, ECF No. 36. Instead, Dhinsa relied on Gonzalez v. United States,
Moreover, Dhinsa’s counsel conceded during oral argument that none of the hypothetical collateral consequences set out in United States v. Vargas,
Indeed, these concurrent sentences provide a more compelling reason for not presuming far-fetched hypothetical collateral consequences that may be sufficient in a case involving a single count of conviction and an expired prison sentence. Thus, in a recent case involving such a single count of conviction, the Second Circuit indulged a presumption that such collateral consequences were present. See Nowakowski v. New York,
[A] - petitioner seeking habeas review must identify some continuing collateral consequences that may flow from his criminal conviction—including those that, as discussed above, are merely hypothetical and speculative. Once a petitioner does so, however, the state bears the burden to prove by sufficient evidence that there is “no possibility” such consequences will attach to his conviction. See Sibron v. N.Y.,392 U.S. 40 , 57[,88 S.Ct. 1889 ,20 L.Ed.2d 917 ] (1968).
Nowakowski,
While this standard is hard to reconcile with the Article III analysis set opt in Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA,
While the foregoing analysis should suffice to; reject Dhinsa’s petition based on the application of the concurrent-sentence doctrine, I add this caveat. In a line of cases, the most recent of which is Tavarez v. Larkin,
II. Merits of the Petition
The foregoing considerations aside, I address the merits of Dhinsa’s petition because the order of the Second Circuit on remand directed me to consider the issue whether (1) Dhinsa “satisfies the criteria set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e), and may therefore bring his petition under ... 28 U.S.C. § 2241, see Triestman v. United States,
A. Fowler’s Change in Law
In Triestman v. United States,
Dhinsa claims that Fowler “changed the law” regarding obstruction of justice murder. The underlying statute— referred to as the “federal witness tampering statute”—makes it a crime “to kill another person, with intent to ... prevent the communication by any person to a law enforcement officer ... of the United States of information relating to the ... possible commission of a Federal offense.” 18 U.S.C. § 1512(a)(1)(C). In Fowler v. United States,
Fowler cannot be said to have changed the law, either by overruling one of its own cases or by adopting a rule contrary to the law of the Second Circuit (as was true in Triestman, where the Supreme Court expressly overruled the standard that had been applied in the Second Circuit). See Triestman,
Fowler held that, in order to satisfy the “reasonable likelihood” standard, “[t]he Government need not show that such a communication, had it occurred, would have been federal beyond a reasonable doubt, nor even that it is more likely than not,” but only that the chance of such a communication “was more than remote, outlandish, or simply hypothetical.”
Dhinsa argues that Fowler presents a standard that was not available at the time of his direct appeal. He is wrong. Fowler did not change the law of the Second Circuit, except possibly to make it less defendant-friendly. While Dhinsa takes comfort from a recent Second Circuit case that declined to “explore what gap, if any, exists between Fowler’s ‘reasonable likelihood’ standard and our previous ‘plausibility’ formulation,” United States v. Veliz,
Dhinsa seems to draw some comfort from the fact that Diaz,
Significantly, Dhinsa raised at trial the very argument he now presents in his habeas petition. That is, he specifically objected to jury instructions that permitted a finding of guilt based only on the presence of federal crimes rather than a likelihood of communication to a federal officer. See Pet’r’s Suppl. Mem. Supp. Collateral Relief at 11-13, ECF No. 24. Indeed, Dhinsa’s briefing claims that Dhinsa “forecast[ed] Fowler1 s holding almost a decade in advance [when he argued at trial that] there has to be some kind of reasonable connec
The Ninth Circuit confronted a similar issue in Harrison v. Ollison,
B. Actual Innocence
Nor can Dhinsa establish that the alleged due process error “has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent.” Bousley v. United States,
The evidence at Dhinsa’s trial meets Fowler’s federal nexus standard because: (1) “Dhinsa instructed Dodson to kill Man-mohan because [Manmohan] was cooperating with the police in a murder investigation involving [Dhinsa’s] brother,” United States v. Dhinsa,
Significantly, there is substantial indication that a federal investigation would have ensued had Manmohan and Santinderjit not been murdered. Particularly relevant here was Dhinsa’s involvement in numerous kidnappings, including the kidnapping of Muchtir Ghuman (an investor in a local Indian restaurant) and Kulwant (Manmo-han’s brother), for whom Manmohan was
Moreover, the FBI regularly engages in kidnapping investigations. Indeed, the FBI’s webpage containing a list of “frequently asked questions” repeatedly highlights the role it plays in investigating kidnappings. The webpage states that the FBI “absolutely” works with state and local law enforcement on kidnapping matters, and that it will “initiate” a kidnapping investigation involving sensitive victims such as children even where “there is no known interstate aspect.” See Frequently Asked Questions, Fed. Bureau of Investigations (last visited Mar. 1, 2017), available at https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/faqs [https://perma.cc/XEP9-KK32]. And even where the victim is not particularly vulnerable due to his or her status or age, the FBI will “monitor” kidnapping situations even when “there is no evidence of interstate travel, and [offer its] assistance from various entities including the FBI Laboratory.” Id. Considering the FBI’s commitment to investigating kidnapping, one of the offenses of which Dhinsa was convicted, there is, if nothing else, a “reasonable likelihood” that it would have investigated Dhinsa and had relevant communications with Manmohan or Satinderjit, especially considering the existence of Dhinsa’s wide spread pump-rigging scheme, which implicated federal mail and wire fraud statutes. Dhinsa,
CONCLUSION
I answer both of the questions in the Second Circuit’s mandate in the negative. I grant a certificate of appealability with respect to my answer to both of those questions.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. "The majority of the people involved in this case share' the same religious affiliation; which requires the men to adopt the last name 'Singh.’ To avoid confusion, we will refer to [the petitioner] as Dhinsa and other persons by their first name.” United States v. Dhinsa,
. Perhaps because the issue was not the subject of serious contention at trial, the record provided by the United States Attorney in response to the petition does not malee it possible to determine the exact date when the FBI became involved in the investigation. Nevertheless, additional development of the record could potentially establish that federal involvement may have begun in early June 1997, prior to the murder of Satinderjit, and possibly as early as May 16, 1997. Specifically, after a seizure of weapons from Dhinsa on May 16, 1997, "members of the FBI were able to recover several serial numbers from two Llama handguns.” Gov't’s Brief,
