George Ochoa was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death in 1996.
See Ochoa v. State,
Mr. Ochoa’s first habeas petition was denied in 2001. He appealed that disposition to this court, but, following the Supreme Court’s 2002 decision in
Atkins,
he
*540
returned to state court to pursue an
Atkins
claim while his first habeas appeal was abated. Unlike defendants tried after
Atkins,
who can raise the issue of mental retardation in their initial criminal prosecution,
see Blonner v. State,
Before turning to the issues raised by that motion, we emphasize that Mr. Ochoa falls within a narrow category of habeas petitioners. Obviously only those facing the death penalty may even invoke Atkins. And Atkins reflects one of the rare instances in which the Supreme Court has announced a new rule of constitutional law that it has also expressly made retroactively applicable to cases on collateral review. 2 Finally, Mr. Ochoa was not only convicted before Atkins but had also filed and been denied relief on his first habeas petition by that time. Our decision today authorizes the pursuit of a second or successive petition in light of this unique combination of circumstances.
The Need for § 2244(b) Authorization
Mr. Ochoa argues as a threshold matter that authorization under § 2244(b) is unnecessary so long as his first habeas action has not been finally adjudicated on appeal. He relies on a Second Circuit case,
Whab v. United States,
In
United States v. Nelson,
Mr. Ochoa emphasizes that in Nelson, unlike here, no appeal was pending in the first habeas action when new claims were raised by post-judgment motion. But this procedural circumstance has nothing to do with the relevance of Nelson to our analysis. The point is that § 2244(b) authorization is required whenever substantively new claims are raised; procedural associations with prior habeas matters must not obscure the fact that the petitioner is really pursuing a second or successive petition. Given this basic point, nothing in Gonzalez, Nelson, or our other cases suggests that whether a Rule 60(b) motion or other procedural vehicle may be used to circumvent § 2244(b) depends on the incidental fact that an appeal is or is not pending from the underlying habeas proceeding. 3
The approach advocated by Mr. Ochoa would greatly undermine the policy against piecemeal litigation embodied in § 2244(b). Multiple habeas claims could be successively raised without statutory constraint for as long as a first habeas case remained pending in the system. If the proper treatment of post-judgment proceedings in habeas, carefully explained in Gonzalez to prevent procedural circumvention of § 2244(b), left open an exception this broad, that point would have been made explicit in the statute or, at least, in the Supreme Court’s primary decision implementing the statute.
We conclude that Mr. Ochoa’s Atkins claim is second or successive within the meaning of § 2244(b). Accordingly, we turn to his alternative argument that his claim satisfies the conditions for authorization under § 2244(b)(2)(A).
Second or Successive Authorization under § 2244(b)(2)(A)
The State concedes that Mr. Ochoa’s Atkins claim satisfies the conditions stated in § 2244(b)(2)(A), i.e., the claim “relies on a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable.” Nevertheless, the State opposes authorization because, it contends, Mr. Ochoa’s “prima facie showing” under § 2244(b)(3)(C) must also include a preliminary demonstration of mental retardation that he has not made. We find no basis in the plain language and functional structure of the statute to expand our gatekeeping role to include such a merits review. Having satisfied the conditions in § 2244(b)(2)(A), Mr. Ochoa is entitled to proceed on his Atkins claim in the district court.
1. Merits Review under §§ 2244(b)(2)(A) & 2244(b)(3)(C)
Section § 2244(b)(3)(C) directs the appellate court to determine whether the petitioner has “ma[d]e a prima facie showing that [his] application satisfies the requirements of this subsection.” (Emphasis added). This statutory mandate does not direct the appellaté court to engage in a preliminary merits assessment. Rather, it focuses our inquiry solely on the conditions specified in § 2244(b) that justify raising a new habeas claim, i.e., the claim *542 relies on a new rule of law made retroactive on collateral review by the Supreme Court, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(A), or involves new facts clearly and convincingly showing that, but for the alleged constitutional error, no reasonable jury would have found the petitioner guilty of the offense, 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(B). The conditions in § 2244(b)(2)(A), with which we are concerned, look solely to temporal issues relating to the availability of the constitutional authority invoked, not to any assessment regarding the strength of the petitioner’s case. 4
Nor is the authorization process structured to suggest an inquiry beyond the conditions specified in § 2244(b)(2). The typical authorization proceeding is an ex parte matter, with little if any factual record, that is to be decided — conclusively, if denied 5 - — -in thirty days. These parameters indicate a streamlined procedure with a narrow focus on a fixed set of pre-specified and easily assessed criteria, which would be disrupted by engaging the manifold merits issues raised by potentially complex, fact-bound constitutional claims. Moreover, the authorization process is assigned to an appellate court, whose institutional role ordinarily excludes evidence-gathering and fact-finding of the sort implicated, for example, in the State’s demand that we make a determination in the first instance whether Mr. Ochoa is in fact mentally retarded. The distribution of judicial responsibility reflected in the plain language of the statute — by which the appellate court makes an expedited assessment of whether a new habeas claim falls within a formally defined category and, if it does, then leaves the adjudication of that claim to the district court in the first instance — is clearly in keeping with the respective roles of appellate and trial courts in our system.
We have never directly addressed the broad question whether § 2244(b) review includes a merits-screening of proposed second or successive claims. But our decision in
Hatch v. Oklahoma,
This claim [a § 2244(b)(2)(A) claim based on the Supreme Court’s then-recent abrogation of Oklahoma’s scheme for handling trial competency issues in Cooper v. Oklahoma,517 U.S. 348 ,116 S.Ct. 1373 ,134 L.Ed.2d 498 (1996)] is not exhausted.... Exhaustion is not, however, a precondition to our consideration of this Application for Order Authorizing a Successive Petition for Habeas Corpus Relief. Were we to grant this application, the district court would then have before it the merits of Hatch’s habeas petition, and in that context the district court would need to decide whether the claim was exhausted or whether waiver of the exhaustion requirement is warranted. In this proceeding, however, we are merely performing a gatekeeping function. Exhaustion of the Cooper claim is not a prerequisite to our consideration of the question whether a successive application is appropriate [under the conditions specified in ... 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2) ].
Id. at 1016 (citation omitted).
The broader point implied in
Hatch
received more explicit recognition by the Fourth Circuit in
In re Williams,
The State nevertheless argues that the “prima facie showing” required by § 2244(b)(3)(C) must refer to the merits of the underlying claim because there is nothing else it could refer to and statutory language should not be construed to be meaningless. We disagree. The point of the language is to make it clear that the authorization provided by an appellate court under § 2244(b)(3)(C) is only a preliminary determination that a claim satisfies the statutory conditions; it is for the district court, under § 2244(b)(4), to confirm that “the petition d[oes], in fact, satisfy the requirements of § 2244(b)” when it hears the case (and to summarily dismiss if the requirements are not met).
LaFevers v. Gibson,
In sum, the plain language of the statute directs us to focus solely on the conditions Congress has designated as controlling with respect to the authorization of second or successive habeas petitions. And those conditions specified in § 2244(b)(2)(A) for the pursuit of claims resting on new rules of constitutional law do not involve the appellate court in any preliminary assessment of the merit of the claims for which second or successive authorization is sought.
2. Showing of Mental Retardation for Atkins Claim
Our conclusion that Congress did not include a preliminary merits review in the authorization inquiry under § 2244(b)(2)(A) directly undercuts the State’s opposition to Mr. Ochoa’s Atkins claim. The State insists that Mr. Ochoa must make a prima facie showing of mental retardation before he may proceed on this claim. That is a paradigmatic example of injecting the merits of a claim into the authorization inquiry: the petitioner’s mental retardation is the Atkins claim; the constitutional validity of a petitioner’s capital sentence hinges entirely on that single premise. For the reasons explained above, resolving Mr. Ochoa’s motion for § 2244(b) authorization on the basis that he has or has not demonstrated the strength of this central element of his case would take us outside the authority with which we are invested by the statute. Development and resolution of the mental retardation issue is, rather, the province of the district court in the proceedings we properly authorize on the distinct grounds specified in § 2244(b)(2)(A).
We are aware of some case authority, relied on by the State, requiring a prima facie showing of mental retardation before allowing a petitioner to proceed on an Atkins claim under § 2244(b)(2)(A). As explained below, this case law derives from a misapplication of an innocence-related principle derived from a seminal § 2244(b)(2)(B) case, a confusion we have carefully tried to avoid. See supra note 4. More fundamentally, this case law focuses singularly on Atkins claims, to the exclusion of the larger implications of merits review in the second or successive context, and as a consequence does not address the broader textual and structural considerations underpinning our decision here.
Shortly after passage of the statutory scheme under review, the Seventh Circuit addressed the “prima facie showing” language in § 2244(b)(3)(C) and, consistent with what we have said, related it to whether “it appears reasonably likely the application satisfies the stringent requirements
for the filing of a second or successive petition.” Bennett v. United States,
When the Fifth Circuit was presented with a motion seeking authorization for a newly recognized
Atkins
claim under § 2244(b)(2)(A), it relied on
Bennett
to require the petitioner not only to satisfy the conditions specified in the statute but also to make an evidentiary showing that he was in fact mentally retarded.
In re Morris,
As explained above, Bennett’s formulation regarding a “showing of possible merit to warrant a fuller exploration by the district court” had an apt referent in the context of § 2244(b)(2)(B), i.e., the condition that new evidence demonstrates the petitioner’s innocence. But the Bennett formulation is misused if relied on in the § 2244(b)(2)(A) context as the premise for a preliminary merits inquiry having no basis in the conditions set out in that section.
We recognize that there is another concern underlying efforts to inject a merits-related element in the authorization inquiry for
Atkins
claims: “otherwise, then literally any prisoner under a death sentence could bring an
Atkins
claim in a second or successive petition regardless of his or her intelligence.”
In re Holladay,
*546 Based on satisfaction of the conditions specified in § 2244(b)(2)(A), we GRANT Mr. Ochoa authorization to pursue a second or successive habeas petition raising an Atkins challenge to his death sentence. This decision is not appealable and may not be the subject of a petition for rehearing or for a writ of certiorari. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(E).
Notes
. While 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(D) provides that a motion for authorization of a second or successive petition should be resolved within thirty days, this time limit is "hortatory or advisory rather than mandatory.” Browning
v. United States,
. We accept the State's concession on this point. The Supreme Court’s anticipatory holding on the retroactivity of the
Atkins
rule in
Penry
v.
Lynaugh,
. Indeed, § 2244(b) may not be circumvented by injecting new claims into a habeas action even while it is still pending
in the district court.
In
United States v. Espinoza-Saenz,
. In contrast, what is often referred to as the ''innocence” component in § 2244(b)(2)(B) imposes a merits-type condition to which the prima facie showing. attaches (though even this does not directly concern the merit of the constitutional claim itself but rather the extent to which its predicate facts undercut the jury's finding of guilt). This difference between § 2244(b)(2)(A) claims resting on new rules of constitutional law, which require a showing only that a rule is retroactively applicable on collateral review, and § 2244(b)(2)(B) claims resting on rules of law previously available to the petitioner, which require a showing of new facts compellingly demonstrating that, absent the alleged error, no reasonable jury would have found the petitioner guilty of the offense, is essential to keep in mind. Cases reflecting something akin to merits review in the evaluation of claims under § 2244(b)(2)(B), such as
Bennett v. United States,
. Under § 2244(b)(3)(E), the grant or denial of § 2244(b)(2) authorization is not appeal-able and may not be the subject of a petition for rehearing or for a writ of certiorari. If authorization is granted, of course, the case proceeds in the district court, which under § 2244(b)(4) has final say regarding satisfaction of § 2244(b)(2) conditions, subject to ordinary appellate review following the entry of judgment in the event a certificate of appealability is granted with respect to the issue,
see LaFevers v. Gibson,
