Jerry Montgomery and Larriante Sum-bry have long histories of filing frivolous lawsuits in this circuit. For this reason we have sanctioned both: in April 2000 we fined Montgomery $500 and blocked future filings in accordance with
Alexander v. United States,
These appeals represent a growing trend in abusive filings: state prisoners who are restricted filers using habeas corpus petitions to challenge noncustodial state actions. The issue is not the difficulty of the cases. As shown by Montgomery’s and Sumbry’s petitions, they are frivolous, often profoundly so. Rather, the problem is that these prisoners waste time, copious amounts of it, repeatedly filing petitions that they know, or should know because they have been told, are futile. On the appellate level, these prisoners automatically receive briefing and review by a three-judge panel because the screening provision of § 2253(c) does not apply.
Walker v. O’Brien,
The sanctions currently available to the court do not address the problem of abusive habeas corpus petitions because none restricts § 2254 actions. The PLRA applies only to actions filed under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
Martin v. United States,
This must stop. “Every paper filed ... no matter how repetitious or frivolous, requires some portion of the institution’s limited resources. A part of the Court’s responsibility is to see that these resources are allocated in a way that promotes the interests of justice.”
In re McDonald,
Accordingly, Montgomery and Sumbry are fined $500 each and, until they pay all outstanding fees and sanctions, clerks of all federal courts within this circuit must return unfiled any papers submitted by Montgomery or Sumbry in any habeas corpus action unless the petition attacks a state court imposed criminal judgment.
See Whitaker v.Super. Ct. of Cal., San Francisco County,
We add for the sake of clarity that the prior orders sanctioning Montgomery and Sumbry remain in effect as written; this order does not abrogate any previously imposed sanctions. Additionally, the filing bar imposed by this order applies to any post-judgment motions Montgomery or Sumbry might try to file in any existing case. Finally, because this court disapproves of perpetual orders,
Mack,
