Riсhard Talbott is among the throngs of state and federal prisoners who believe that
Apprendi v. New
Jersey, U.S. -,
Apprendi
does not state that it applies retroactively to other cases on collateral review. No other decision of the Supreme Court applies
Apprendi
retroactively to cases on collateral review. So, given
Bennett,
no application based on Ap-prendi can be authorized under § 2244(b)(2)(A) or § 2255 ¶8(2). Accord,
Sustache-Rivera v. United States,
Many of the applications we have received have serious problems in addition to
Bennett.
Prisoners seem to think that
Apprendi
reopens every sentencing issue decided by a federal court in the last generation. It does not. All
Apprendi
holds is that most circumstances increasing a statutory maximum sentence must be treated as elements of the offense—and, if the defendant has demanded a jury trial, this means that they must be established beyond a reasonable doubt tо the jury’s satisfaction.
Apprendi
does not affect application of the relevant-conduct rules under the Sentencing Guidelines to sentences that fall within a statutory сap. Thus, for example, when the statutory maximum is life imprisonment,
Apprendi
is beside the point.
United States v. Smith,
Richard Talbott is serving a lengthy federal sentence for possessing ammunition despite multiple prior felony convictions. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). See
United States v. Talbott,
Perhaps Talbott believes that
Custis
is limited to the imposition of sentence and direct appeal, that its rule is avoidable by initiating a collateral attack on the prior conviction (which is what he appears to want) or by using § 2255 to contest the federal sentence. But we held in
Ryan v. United States,
Two final observations. First, Talbott is mistaken in believing that he is entitled to wage a collateral attack in federal court directly against the Indiana sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He is not in custody under that sentence. Sеe
Maleng v. Cook,
We consolidate Talbott’s two applications for leave to commence successive collateral attacks. Both documents, filed a day apart, make the same contentions and are best understood as a single application. That application is denied.
