In re: Mervyn Clinton GODDARD, Movant.
No. 98-552.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued Sept. 22, 1998. Decided March 11, 1999.
170 F.3d 435
Before WILKINS and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge.
Dismissed by published opinion. Judge MICHAEL wrote the majority opinion, in which Senior Judge BUTZNER joined. Judge WILKINS wrote a dissenting opinion.
OPINION
MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:
Mervyn C. Goddard has applied to us under
I.
On August 23, 1993, Goddard pled guilty to three counts involving federal drug offenses under
On appeal to us Goddard claimed errors in the determination of drug quantities attributable to him for sentencing purposes. He also asserted that he had ineffective assistance of counsel in the sentencing proceedings. We affirmed Goddard‘s sentence on January 28, 1998. In doing so, we declined to address the ineffective assistance issue because “the record d[id] not conclusively demonstrate ineffectiveness.” United States v. Goddard, No. 96-4885, slip op. at 6 (4th Cir. Jan. 28, 1998). We noted that the ineffective assistance claim “may be asserted in a
Goddard filed another
II.
Efforts to limit second or successive
The claim that Goddard wants to raise in his new motion—that he had an ineffective lawyer in his one sentencing proceeding—does not satisfy the new criteria for a successive attack. We therefore cannot approve his application to proceed with a “second or successive” motion. We can, however, take a look at whether his new motion must be considered as “second or successive.” If it is not, Goddard does not need our authorization to proceed, and the district court should not have dismissed the
After conviction and the entry of judgment, the normal defendant in a federal criminal case may pursue a direct appeal and thereafter take “one further bite at the apple” in a
First, the prisoner could use his one free
Second, the prisoner in his first
A decision not to count Goddard‘s first
We borrow language from the Seventh Circuit in announcing our holding: when a prisoner‘s first
DISMISSED.
WILKINS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Mervyn Clinton Goddard seeks permission from this court to file a “second or successive” motion under
I.
Goddard pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute and to distribute cocaine base, see
Defense counsel did not challenge the conclusion of the presentence report that Goddard satisfied the conditions necessary to trigger application of the 20-year mandatory minimum sentence. However, recognizing that the district court would have discretion to determine the extent of any departure from that mandatory minimum in the event that the court granted the Government‘s request for a downward departure based upon substantial assistance, defense counsel offered evidence that Goddard was at most a minor participant in the conspiracy and was not aware of its full scope. Defense counsel argued that Goddard was responsible for, “at best, around 40 or 50 grams, even maybe perhaps 60.” J.A. 109. And, when specifically asked by the court what finding defense counsel wanted the court to make with respect to the amount of cocaine base attributable to Goddard, defense counsel replied, “I guess I‘m just looking for about 60.... I think that would be going extremely high.” J.A. 111.
The court accepted defense counsel‘s recommendation, finding “that perhaps the Court cannot reasonably place more than 60 grams [with Goddard], although there may be other evidence out there.” J.A. 114. The court noted that accepting the drug amount suggested by defense counsel rather than the estimate in the presentence report did not affect the sentencing guideline calculation because the 60-gram quantity remained sufficient to trigger the 20-year mandatory minimum sentence. The court then granted the Government‘s substantial assistance motion and, departing from the 20-year mandatory minimum term, sentenced Goddard to ten years imprisonment.
On March 18, 1996, Goddard filed a motion seeking collateral relief pursuant to
Thereafter, Goddard filed a second
II.
The AEDPA amended
Although the AEDPA uses the term “second or successive” with respect to both petitions filed pursuant to
unfairly prevent the petitioner from receiving review of his claim employing pre-AEDPA abuse-of-the-writ principles.
The majority apparently agrees that Martinez-Villareal instructs that in interpreting whether an initial petition or motion should “count” as a first, such that a later petition or motion is “second or successive,” we should be guided by whether counting the first petition or motion would work an unfairness on the petitioner or movant considering pre-AEDPA abuse-of-the-writ principles. Furthermore, each of the courts of appeals that has addressed the precise question presented here—the meaning of the term “second or successive” in the context of whether an initial
The Hobson‘s choice envisioned by the majority is illusory, however, because a requirement that a movant must pursue all collateral review in his initial
his Sixth Amendment right to counsel when counsel failed to perfect a timely direct appeal, in his initial
In sum, a
