FRANK L. AMODEO v. FCC COLEMAN - LOW WARDEN
No. 17-15456
United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
January 8, 2021
D.C. Docket No. 5:17-cv-00284-WTH-PRL; [PUBLISH]
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida
(January 8, 2021)
Before BRANCH, LUCK, and ED CARNES, Circuit Judges.
Frank L. Amodeo, a federal prisoner, appeals the dismissal of his
The rule is that a federal prisoner who seeks to collaterally attack his conviction or sentence must file a
I. BACKGROUND
In August 2008 a federal grand jury charged Amodeo with 27 crimes relating to conspiracy to defraud the United States. After a magistrate judge found him competent to stand trial and competent to enter a guilty plea, Amodeo pleaded guilty to conspiracy, failure to collect and remit payroll taxes, and obstruction of an agency proceeding. The district court accepted his guilty plea and adjudicated Amodeo guilty. After a five-day sentence hearing, the district court sentenced him to five consecutive 54-month terms of imprisonment for a total of 270 months. See Amodeo v. United States, No. 6:08-CR-176-0RL-28, 2015 WL 5687815, at *1 (M.D. Fla. Sept. 25, 2015).
On direct appeal Amodeo unsuccessfully argued that his counsel was ineffective and also that the district court had failed to determine that Amodeo was competent to plead guilty. See United States v. Amodeo, 387 F. App‘x 953, 954 (11th Cir. 2010). We declined to address his ineffective-assistance claim because the record was not sufficiently developed. Id. And we rejected his competency determination claim because it was not only “without support in the record” but was also “belied by the record.” Id. Even though Amodeo and the government had stipulated that he was competent, the district court had assured itself that he was by questioning him extensively and hearing testimony from his doctor. Id. Amodeo did not raise a factual innocence claim on direct appeal. See id.
After we affirmed his convictions in 2010, Amodeo filed a series of
In 2012 Amodeo filed a third
The district court ruled that Amodeo‘s third
Amodeo filed a notice of appeal from that order, and a motions panel of this Court issued a certificate of appealability on the question of whether the district court erred in dismissing his
In the course of doing so, we summarized Amodeo‘s postconviction filings up to that date:
Amodeo inundated the courts with postconviction filings. In June 2011, a month before we affirmed Amodeo‘s conviction, he filed a motion to vacate that the district court dismissed without prejudice after he disobeyed three orders to amend the contents of his motion. See
28 U.S.C. § 2255 . Amodeo then petitioned unsuccessfully for a certificate of appealability and for a writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, in November 2011, Amodeo filed a second motion to vacate that the district court dismissed after he refused to comply with several orders to reduce the length of his motion. Amodeo moved to vacate the order of dismissal, and when that proved unsuccessful, he applied for a certificate of appealability, which both the district court and this Court denied. And Amodeo moved six times for the district
court to reopen or reconsider its order of dismissal after he filed his third motion to vacate that is the subject of this appeal.
Id. at 730. After the district court had denied his third
In mid-2017 Amodeo filed the
judgment or enjoin further enforcement of the judgment.”
The district court dismissed Amodeo‘s petition for lack of jurisdiction. It ruled that under our McCarthan decision: ”
We review de novo questions of law concerning subject matter jurisdiction, including whether a prisoner may, in a particular circumstance, bring a
II. DISCUSSION
Amodeo contends that in ruling his actual innocence claim could not be brought in a
A. The History of the Saving Clause
Before 1948, federal prisoners who collaterally challenged any aspect of their detention did so in a
What is important for present purposes is that a
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.
B. The McCarthan En Banc Decision
In our 2017 en banc decision in McCarthan, this Court carefully examined the meaning of the saving clause and set out a new standard or test for deciding whether a claim fits within it. See 851 F.3d at 1082–95, 1099–1100. McCarthan pleaded guilty in 2003 to being a felon in possession of a firearm. Id. at 1080. The district court enhanced his sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA) because he had five prior convictions for a “serious drug offense” or “violent felony,” which included one conviction for escape. Id. McCarthan moved to vacate his sentence under
About four years later, the Supreme Court held in Chambers that some variations of the crime of escape do not qualify as a “violent felony” under the ACCA. Id. (citing Chambers v. United States, 555 U.S. 122, 130 (2009)). That decision effectively overruled our precedent that even “walkaway” escape qualified as a violent felony for ACCA purposes. Id. But McCarthan had already filed one
So McCarthan tried a different approach by raising the issue in a
After rigorous textual analysis, see id. at 1085–95, the en banc Court announced these requirements for the narrow saving clause exception:
To determine whether a prisoner satisfies the saving clause, we ask only whether the motion to vacate is an adequate procedure to test the prisoner‘s claim. And to answer this question, we ask whether the prisoner would have been permitted to bring that claim in a motion to vacate. In other words, a prisoner has a meaningful opportunity to test his claim whenever section 2255 can provide him a remedy.
Id. at 1086–87. Our opinion made it clear that the most important words in the saving clause are “remedy” and “test.” We emphasized that a “motion to vacate is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of a prisoner‘s detention only when it cannot remedy a particular kind of claim.” Id. at 1099 (emphasis added). If
That follows from the crucial distinction between “relief” and “remedy.” See id. at 1086. “Relief,” we explained, is “the assistance, redress, or benefit which a complainant seeks at the hands of the court.” Id. (quoting Relief, Black‘s Law Dictionary 1523 (3d ed. 1933)). “Remedy,” by contrast, is “[t]he means by which a right is enforced or the violation of a right is prevented, redressed, or compensated.” Id. (quoting Remedy, Black‘s Law Dictionary 1526 (3d ed. 1933)) (alteration in McCarthan); accord Rosewell v. LaSalle Nat‘l Bank, 450 U.S. 503, 516 (1981) (“[A] remedy is the legal means to recover a right or obtain redress for a wrong.“) (ellipses, emphasis, and quotation marks omitted). Relief is what you want; remedy is how you will get that relief if you prevail.
The failure to prevail does not mean the remedy provided by
The remedial scope of
In McCarthan we responded to the assertion that our holding “renders the saving clause meaningless” because it will result in the clause never applying. See 851 F.3d at 1092–93. We explained that our interpretation of the
The first category comprises cases in which a federal prisoner seeks “to challenge the execution [as opposed to the legality] of his sentence, such as the deprivation of good-time credits or parole determinations.” Id. (emphasis added). In such cases, a
A prisoner claiming the unlawful denial of good-time credits is not seeking to have his sentence set aside or corrected. He is seeking to have prison officials be required to correct their records. He seeks an order directing the officials to release him at the correct time even though the original judgment and sentence will stand.
The second category of cases that fit within the narrow confines of the saving clause are those in which the sentencing
Applying the standard and test we announced, we held that McCarthan‘s ACCA claim did not fit within the narrow exception provided by the saving clause, even though the claim would have failed had he raised it in his initial
The remedy of a [§ 2255] motion to vacate permitted McCarthan to bring his claim and seek en banc or Supreme Court review to change the substantive rule of law. That a court might reject a prisoner‘s argument does not render his “remedy by motion” an inadequate “means by which” to challenge the legality of his sentence. A procedural rule that might prevent success on a particular motion does not render the remedy an inadequate “means” so long as it is capable of
“enforcing” or “redressing” the right. The motion to vacate is an adequate remedy for McCarthan because if he succeeds, the court must “vacate and set the judgment aside” and either release or retry him.
McCarthan, 851 F.3d at 1086 (alterations in original adopted). Failing to prevail on a claim that detention is illegal does not equate to an inadequate or ineffective remedy to test the legality of the detention.
C. Amodeo‘s Flawed Argument
Amodeo‘s argument goes like this: the saving clause permits a federal prisoner to file a
1. The Major Premise
We start with the major premise of Amodeo‘s argument: that the saving clause permits a federal prisoner to file a
All that counts with cognizability is what our controlling decision in McCarthan meant by “cognizable” and what it held. In
Take, for example, the claim in, and facts of, the McCarthan case itself. Consider why we held that claim was cognizable in an initial
To take advantage of that change in the law, McCarthan filed a
A motion to vacate is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of a prisoner‘s detention only when it cannot remedy a particular kind of claim. Even if a prisoner‘s claim fails under circuit precedent, a motion to vacate remains an adequate and effective remedy for a prisoner to raise the claim and attempt to persuade the court to change its precedent, and failing that, to seek certiorari in the Supreme Court. McCarthan does not qualify for the saving clause because his claim that escape is not a violent felony is cognizable under section 2255. Because he “was free to bring” this claim about the interpretation of his sentencing law in his initial motion to vacate, the remedy by motion
was an “adequate and effective means for testing such an argument.” Prost, 636 F.3d at 580. He cannot now use the saving clause to make that claim in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
McCarthan, 851 F.3d at 1099–1100. As that wrap-up shows, a claim is cognizable in a
If Amodeo had his way — if cognizability were the test and non-cognizable meant meritless or blocked by a procedural defense — a federal prisoner could avoid the bar on second and successive
2. The Minor Premise
The minor premise of Amodeo‘s argument is that actual innocence claims are not cognizable in a
The fundamental flaw in Amodeo‘s minor premise is that it confuses merit with cognizability for McCarthan purposes. A meritless claim can be just as cognizable as a non-meritless one. A freestanding claim of actual innocence is as good an example of that as any. It is, under our circuit precedent, meritless in a collateral proceeding. But under McCarthan it is a cognizable claim because it goes to the legality of Amodeo‘s detention, and if the claim were meritorious and not foreclosed by defenses such as the second or successive
3. The Conclusion
Amodeo‘s conclusion that the saving clause applies to his actual innocence
claim fares no better than the two premises of his argument: not well at all. For the reasons we have discussed,
III. CONCLUSION
Amodeo‘s actual innocence claim does not fit within the narrow confines of the saving clause because he could have presented it in his first
AFFIRMED.
