Lead Opinion
The court delivered a PER CURIAM opinion. MOORE, J, (pp. 467-70), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
Alva Campbell, Jr., an Ohio prisoner sentenced to death, moves this court to remand this case to the district court for initial consideration of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The warden has filed a response -opposing his motion. Upon review, we deny Campbell’s motion.
I
An Ohio jury convicted Campbell of four counts, of aggravated murder, four counts of aggravated robbery, two counts of attempted kidnapping, and one count each of kidnapping, felonious assault, escape, and having a weapon under a disability. The jury recommended that Campbell be sentenced to death. The trial court adopted this recommendation and sentenced Campbell accordingly. On direct appeal, the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed Campbell’s convictions, but the court remanded the case to the trial court for resentencing due to a procedural error. State v. Campbell,
In 2005, Campbell filed his first § 2254 petition, alleging twelve grounds for relief.
In 2015, Campbell filed a second § 2254 petition, this time challenging Ohio’s lethal injection protocol. The magistrate judge ordered that the case be transferred to this court for initial review because Campbell was attempting to file a “successive” habeas petition, and the magistrate judge repeatedly rejected Campbell’s challenges to that order. See Campbell v. Jenkins, No. 2:15-CV-1702,
II
Before a habeas petitioner can file a “second or successive” § 2254 petition, he must receive authorization from the court of appeals. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(A); In re Salem,
However, in limited situations, a § 2254 petition is not considered “second or successive” within the meaning of § 2244(b) even though the petitioner filed a previous habeas application. See Storey v. Vasbinder,
It is undisputed that Campbell is attempting to challenge the same state-court judgment as in his prior § 2254 petition. Thus, a federal habeas court must consult abuse-of-the-writ principles, as modified by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), to determine whether Campbell’s current petition is “second or successive.” See Askew v. Bradshaw,
Ill
Campbell maintains that his current claims are properly raised in a habeas proceeding. Because the law on this subject is not clear and has been the subject of several recent, published decisions by this Circuit and the Supreme Court, we pause at the outset to clarify the standard.
A
Although many citizens have deep-seated objections to the death penalty, execution is not per se unconstitutional. Baze v. Rees,
These two limitations represent two separate facets of the Eighth Amendment. Ford and Panetti recognized that, although execution is permissible, there is a point where a prisoner’s ability to perceive reality is so diminished that imposing the sentence of death becomes constitutionally impermissible. Under such circumstances, the road from sanity to insanity ordinarily being a one-way street, a sentence of death—although legally pronounced—cannot legally be carried out. Baze, on the other hand, permits a prisoner to acknowledge the legality of his sentence while asserting an Eighth-Amendment civil-rights claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to restrain the government from torturing him on his way to the next world. Because a Baze challenge concedes the legality of the death sentence itself, to obtain injunctive relief, a prisoner must show: (1) that the method of execution he currently faces is accompanied by a very high probability that he will experience severe pain, and (2) a “feasible, readily implemented” and significantly less painful alternative. Baze,
This substantive backdrop may be helpful to understanding the procedural labyrinth at issue in this case. Federal law
However, in Nelson v. Campbell, the Court suggested in dicta that some method-of-execution claims could be brought under either scheme.
In Adams v. Bradshaw (Adams II), we declined to read Hill as ending this debate.
After Adams II, the Supreme Court decided Glossip v. Gross, - U.S. -,
B
Notice that this closes the final path into habeas court left open by Hill and Adams II. No one here disputes that a death-penalty challenge is not cognizable in habeas unless a defect impairs the very fact of the death sentence itself. Glossip,
This is precisely the argument a claimant cannot make after Glossip. Indeed, the Court expressly refused to countenance the possibility that a state could be left without any lawful means of execution. Glossip,
. A review of. fundamental habe-as and § 1983 principles confirms that this is the correct view of the law. Only-when a serious error infects the very fact of a death sentence can the writ grant relief. See Heck,
In contrast, § 1983 is engineered to accomplish this lofty goal. The statute empowers a court to enjoin, “in equity,” “the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” of the United States, 42 U.S.C, § 1983 (emphasis added). When properly invoked, the statute can be used to compel the government to recognize that even the guilty have rights, and that even a conviction or death sentence does not deprive a person of their humanity, See, e.g., Baze,
C
One wrinkle remains. After Glossvp was decided, the Adams case returned to this Court. Adams v. Bradshaw,
Notwithstanding the procedural default, the panel proceeded to speculate in dicta about the viability of a psychological-torment claim. Adams III,
We think this dictum mischaracterizes both Adams II and Glossip. And, of course, dictum in a prior decision—as opposed to a holding—does not bind future panels, including this one. 6th Cir. R. 32.1(b); United States v. Turner,
Thus, to the extent that Adams III purported to permit Baze-style habeas claims that refuse to concede the possibility of an acceptable means of execution, it is not controlling. Since Glossip’s holding directly addressed that question, it is binding on us, and we follow it today. In doing so, we do not intend to diminish the importance or correctness of the holding in Adams II that § 1983 and habeas are not mutually exclusive as a per se rule. All Baze and Glossip require is that—in the peculiar context of method-of-execution claims—the death-row inmate must proceed under § 1983.
IY
Having clarified the standard, we examine Campbell’s motion. From our reading, we discern three arguments: (1) that recent changes to Ohio’s execution protocols raise new factual claims that could not have been brought in his first habeas petition; (2) that his newly worsened medical conditions render all lethal injections unconstitutionally painful; and (3) that there is no meaningful difference between mental incompetency (which precludes execution under the Eighth Amendment) and his severe physical ailments. See Atkins v. Virginia,
A
We first address Campbell’s objection to the shifting execution protocols. He notes that Ohio has repeatedly changed its lethal injection protocols since 2005, as certain drugs used in the process became increasingly difficult to acquire. He also argues that the state has experienced difficulties in implementing these protocols. He contends that he could not have raised these concerns in his first § 2254 habeas petition and that he has filed them “when the claim is first ripe.” Panetti,
But that does not change the fact that, in this respect, he has not raised a habeas claim. If we were to hold, today, that Ohio’s lethal-injection protocol has become so erratic and unpredictable that it is now
In other words, our decision would not be an order setting aside Campbell’s death sentence. It would be an injunction against the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, forbidding it from killing Campbell by lethal injection. The State of Ohio could still execute Campbell—it would simply need to find a method that comports with the Eighth Amendment. Thus, while the new facts alleged by Campbell were previously unavailable, they do not create a predicate for any new habeas claims. His claim may be newly ripe, but Campbell is trying to pick an apple from the wrong tree.
B
Campbell next argues that his deteriorating physical condition makes all methods of lethal injection unconstitutional as to him. Because his health has significantly worsened since the filing of his original habeas petition, he maintains that these are new facts making his claim “ripe” for consideration in a “successive” habeas petition. Specifically, he contends that the pain caused by the “air hunger” inherent in a lethal injection would be magnified exponentially by his new respiratory ailments. He attempts to fit this claim into the habeas mold by asserting that this “paradoxical reaction to the administration of any lethal injection drug ... render[s] any attempt of the state to execute him [given the unavailability of alternative methods] unconstitutional.” Petr.’s Mot. to Remand, at 18-19. Therefore, he says, we must vacate his death sentence.
The problem is that Campbell has pled an incomplete Baze challenge that fails as a matter of law after Glossip. A prisoner who challenges a method of execution as unconstitutionally painful must identify an alternative means by which he may be executed. Glossip,
In reaching this conclusion, we do not diminish the gravity of Campbell’s allegations. We suppose that his claims, if substantiated, could raise a significant problem with administering a lethal injection. Nor do we find—as we did with the petitioner in Tibbetts—that Campbell could have raised these specific allegations in 2005. Tibbetts,
C
Campbell attempts to escape this problem by analogizing his claim to one challenging the competency of a prisoner to be executed. A competency claim under Ford is a habeas issue, and it does not become ripe until an execution date is set. Martinez-Villareal,
In Tibbetts, we rejected the argument that the Ford exception should extend to the petitioner’s claim that he was not “well enough physically to face execution.”
For at least twenty years, medical professionals have known that mental disorders are based in biology, just as are them physical counterparts. See Brian D. Shannon, The Brain Gets Sick Too, 24 St. Mary’s L.J. 365, 367 (1993); Betsey J, Grey & Gary E. Marchant, Biomarkers, Concussions, and the Duty of Care, 2015 Mich. St. L. Rev. 1911 (2015). But similarity in fact does not always equal similarity in law. In Tibbetts, we recognized that deteriorating mental health impairs a person’s “capacity to come to grips with his own conscience and deity.” Tibbetts,
But the Court has not indicated that a biological disease lodged in any other part of the body has an impact on this moral calculus. Even a terminally ill cancer patient can often contemplate what is to come. This fact is why we said in Tibbetts that “we know of no comparable solicitude toward those who claim not to be well enough physically to face execution.” Tibbetts,
Y
When placed in this context, it is clear that Campbell is seeking an injunction against a particular method of execution as applied to him, rather than an order vacating his death sentence entirely. See id. at 407 n.2. That relief is not available in a habeas action. He has therefore not pled any new-facts that, if proven, would absolutely prohibit his execution. Neither has he brought any newly ripe legal challenges that would, if successful, require us to vacate his death sentence. Therefore, his petition is second or successive, and we DENY Campbell’s motion to remand the case to the district court. Because it is second or successive, we have jurisdiction to evaluate whether § 2244(b) permits Campbell to proceed in the district court.
Although Campbell does not ask this court for authorization to file a “successive” § 2254 petition, such a request would be pointless. Campbell does not rely on a new rule of constitutional law that applies retroactively to him. While he does rely on new facts relating to Ohio’s lethal injection protocols and his ongoing health problems, none of these facts concern his guilt of the underlying offenses or the legality of imposing the death sentence upon him. Therefore, he is not eligible to file a “successive” petition under § 2244(b). Consequently, as no further matters are outstanding, we DISMISS the petition.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENT
dissenting.
I agree with the majority that Campbell’s petition is newly ripe, but I respectfully dissent from the conclusion that he is necessarily attempting to seek relief in the wrong forum. Because I believe that he has raised sufficient newly present biological facts to render his own death sentence potentially unconstitutional and thus to render his habeas petition not “second or successive” for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b), I would instead remand this case to the district court for further proceedings.
Campbell has, as the majority observes, detailed a host of ailments that have befallen him since 2003, when he filed his first petition. Specifically, he asserts;
Since 2003, ... Campbell’s health has progressively, and acutely, worsened, with multiple severe and life-threatening ailments arising almost every year: 2003—diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension; 2004—diagnosis of increased scarring in the lungs and growing nodules in the upper lungs and severely worsening emphysema leading to concerns with air hunger; 2006—diagnosis of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and emphysema classified as “end stage,” diagnosis of collapsed lung and respiratory failure, sarcoidosis (for which there is not cure), coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, hypertension, deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism; 2012—hypoxemic respiratory failure (starving for oxygen), histoplas-mosis, atrial fibrillation with rapid and out of rhythm heartbeats; 2014—diagno-sis of worsening COPD exacerbation, increasing nodules, in lungs, emphysema increasing in lungs, discovery of an aortic aneurysm; 2015—diagnosis of prostate cancer and surgical prostatectomy, spontaneous collapsed lung requiring a life flight to OSTJ Hospital; and a diagnosis of MRSA while at OSU Hospital;2016—hip replacement surgery after being knocked down by another inmate, while at OSU Hospital staff discovered a gangrenous colon and 2 surgeries were required to remove the colon and equip him with an external colostomy bag; 2017—diagnosis of pneumonia after being hospitalized for coughing up blood. In addition to these physical characteristics that inhibit his ability to breathe, Campbell must take oxygen treatments four times a day in order to function, and he relies on a walker for very limited mobility.
Pet.’s Mot. to Remand at 17-18; see also R. 19-1 (Amended Pet. for Writ of Habeas Corpus at 26-27) (Page ID #522-23). As Campbell argues: “All of these conditions are sure or very likely to increase the air hunger that Campbell will necessarily suffer as the result of the State’s administration of any lethal injection drug, and increase the sure or near certain likelihood that Campbell will suffer a paradoxical reaction to the administration of any lethal injection drug—thus rendering any attempt of the State to execute him [given the unavailability of alternative methods] unconstitutional.” Pet’s Mot. to Remand at 18-19.
Were Campbell simply challenging Ohio’s generalized use of a particular execution protocol without offering a “known and available alternative,” I agree with the majority that Glossip v. Gross, - U.S. -,
The majority correctly characterizes Campbell as seizing on this distinction by drawing an analogy between his biological ailments and the neurobiological ailments that the Court has made clear can under-gird a successful habeas petition without running afoul of the § 2244(b) “second or successive” bar, see Panetti v. Quarterman,
Medical science, as the majority recognizes, has meanwhile debunked the ostensible divide between mental and physical health, showing that many mental-health problems are issues of brain biology just as pulmonary problems are issues of lung biology. See, e,g., Brian D. Shannon, The Brain Gets Sick, Too: The Case for Equal Insurance Coverage for Serious Mental Illness, 24 St. Mary’s L.J. 365, 367 (1993) (observing that “medical researchers have made numerous findings establishing that serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia,
I thus believe that Campbell’s petition is not foreclosed by Glossip, and instead that he has fit his claim into the cognizable form that we outlined in Adams v. Bradshaw,
The Court in Ford did not specify exactly why it would violate the Eighth Amendment to kill someone who is insane at the time of execution; the Court’s ultimate conclusion was simply that “[w]hether its aim be to protect the condemned from fear and pain without comfort of understanding, or to protect the dignity of society itself from the barbarity of exacting mindless vengeance, the restriction [on executing the insane] finds enforcement in the Eighth Amendment.” Ford,
Notes
. Consider, for example, a state that permits execution only by lethal injection and a defendant who after his first habeas petition develops a severe allergy to all available execution drugs, thereby guaranteeing lengthy and excruciating pain at any dose. Why wouldn’t that case be more like Ford than Glossip, when it would apply uniquely to the petitioner—and thus not challenge the state's overall protocol—but still challenge the “fact of the sentence itself,” see Nelson v. Campbell,
