Opinion by Judge KAUFMAN.
Defendant-appellant Richard Chambers has filed two appeals from the denial of his motions made pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2255 to set aside his two convictions for receipt of child pornography, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252. Chambers asserts that the district courts erred in denying his petitions because this court has declared the statute under which he was convicted, namely 18 U.S.C. § 2252, unconstitutional in
U.S. v. X-Citement Video,
FACTS
Defendant-appellant Richard Chambers challenges his two convictions for receipt of child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252. 1 On September 2, 1986, Chambers pled guilty to a two-count information charging him with the receipt of child pornography under 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2). He was sentenced to a five-year term of imprisonment followed by five years of probation. While on probation, Chambers was again charged, in an indictment, for violating § 2252 on April 30, 1991. On July 22, 1991, Chambers pled guilty to that indictment. On November 22, 1991, he was sentenced to five years in custody, followed by three years of supervised release. He is currently serving that sentence.
On December 16, 1992, in litigation not involving Chambers, this court held that the statute under which Chambers had been convicted, 18 U.S.C. § 2252, is facially unconstitutional because it does not require knowledge of the minority of at least one of the performers as an element of the crime.
U.S. v. X-Citement Video Inc.,
In light of that decision, Chambers filed a habeas motion to vacate, set aside or correct his November 22, 1991, conviction. The district court denied his motion on April 14, 1993, without prejudice because the government had filed a petition for rehearing with this court in the X-Citement Video case. Chambers then filed a motion to reconsider the district court’s order denying his habeas petition. The district court subsequently denied that motion to reconsider.
Meanwhile, on April 6, 1993; Chambers filed a second motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to vacate, set aside, or correct the sentence imposed in connection with his November 10, 1986 conviction. The district court denied his petition because the mandate in X-Citement Video had not yet issued.
On January 27, 1993, the government, in X-Citement Video, filed a petition for rehear *942 ing with a suggestion for rehearing en banc, thereby causing the mandate to be stayed in that case. Thereafter, on July 9, 1993, this Court denied all such relief sought by the government. Currently, however, the mandate in X-Citement Video has been stayed because the government filed, on November 5, 1993, a petition for certiorari in the Supreme Court of the United States in that case, which was granted by the Supreme Court on February 28, 1994.
DISCUSSION
The government argues that
X-Citement Video
cannot be applied retroactively to vacate Chambers conviction in the light of
Teague v. Lane,
As a threshold matter, we must consider whether
X-Citement Video
announced a new rule. We conclude that it did not. The Supreme Court has “defined new rules as those that were not
‘dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.’ ”
Sawyer v. Smith,
Even if
X-Citement Video
could be considered to create a new rule, there is another independent basis for our holding.
Teague’s
non-retroactivity principle does not apply to substantive decisions like
X-Citement Video.
The government fails to recognize that we have previously distinguished between new rules of criminal procedure and new substantive decisions rendering invalid a statute under which the person seeking collateral relief was previously convicted and punished.
Teague
does not apply to the latter.
U.S. v. Sood,
In
Davis,
the Supreme Court held that habeas petitioners can use § 2255 motions to challenge convictions obtained under a statute subsequently declared invalid by the circuit courts. The Supreme Court reasoned that to uphold a conviction “for an act that
*943
the law does not make criminal_ ‘inherently results in a complete miscarriage of justice’ and ‘present[s] exceptional circumstances’ that justify collateral relief under § 2255.”
Id.,
Because our decision in X-Citement Video invalidated an entire statute, thereby "affecting the substance of criminal laws," Teague does not apply to limit the retroactive application of X-Citement Video. Id. at 77. 6 While Congress can surely prohibit the receipt of child pornography by enacting a valid statute with a scienter requirement, as the law stands in this circuit, it has not done so.
In addition, even if
X-Citement Video
is considered to create a new rule, we believe that this case is controlled by the first exception to
Teague’s
non-retroactivity. Under that exception, a new rule will be applied retroactively on collateral review “if it places ‘certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to proscribe.’ ”
Teague,
The government argues, erroneously, that Teague's first exception applies only in cases where the petitioner invokes a new rule which makes constitutionally protected the specific conduct in which he engaged. A~though no case has ever suggested that the exception is so limited, the government relies on a quotation which is taken out of context from Justice Harlan's opinion in Mackey.
7
Justice Harlan's Mackey opinion, of course, set forth the approach to retroactivity which the Supreme Court adopted in Teague. See Teague,
Specifically, four elements of Justice Harlan’s discussion make clear that the exception applies where, as here, the statute under which the petitioner was convicted is subsequently declared unconstitutional on substantive grounds. First, as Justice Harlan explained, this exception serves to limit the nonretroactivity principle to cases involving “new ‘procedural due process’ rules.”
Mackey,
Second, Justice Harlan explained that his nonretroactivity analysis would only apply where the government is “enforcing concededly valid societal proscriptions on individual behavior.”
Id.
at 692,
Third, Justice Harlan stated that the first exception was designed to track the historic scope of the Writ.
See id.
at 692-93 & n. 8,
Finally, Justice Harlan justified the first exception by noting that issuance of the writ on substantive grounds “entails none of the adverse collateral consequences of retrial” which retroactive application of a new rule of procedure normally creates.
Mackey,
We also reject the government’s argument that neither Teague’s first exception nor the limitation we recognized in Sood applies to a First Amendment overbreadth claim. The government contends that a habeas petitioner who asserts an overbreadth claim is not asserting his own constitutional rights, but merely those of others who might be chilled by the overbroad statute. Because Chambers is not asserting any right of his own, the government argues, he should not be entitled to the retroactive application of X-Citement Video.
We disagree with the government’s premise. Chambers is most certainly invoking
his own
constitutional rights. Although the statute under which he was convicted is unconstitutional because of its effect on others, Chambers is asserting the
personal
right not to be convicted and incarcerated under an unconstitutional rule of law.
See Massachusetts v. Oakes,
Thus, the government is wrong when it argues that application of the Sood doctrine here “equates the release of prisoners convicted under a statute that is later held not to cover their conduct (which involves nothing more than freeing the innocent) with the quite different action of releasing prisoners whose conduct is properly reached by a statute that a court has subsequently determined impermissibly chills the rights of third parties (which involves freeing the guilty).” The defendants in Sood were just as “guilty” as Chambers is here, for there is no doubt that Congress could “properly reach” the conduct there at issue — bribery in Guam. There, as here, we faced only the question whether Congress had done so through a valid statute. Even though the defendants in Sood had engaged in prohibitable and morally blameworthy conduct, we granted collateral relief because Congress had not prohibited their conduct through a valid enactment. Similarly, even if we assume that Chambers’ conduct fell within the core of the child pornography exception to the First Amendment, there is no valid statute on the books in this circuit that prohibits it. While perhaps morally “guilty,” he is legally innocent. There is no justification for failing to apply the Sood doctrine and the first Teague exception.
The government contends further, that Chambers waived his right to challenge the validity of his conviction. Specifically, the government argues that Chambers committed a procedural default by failing to raise his constitutional challenge before pleading guilty or on direct appeal. Thus, the government contends that
United States v. Frady,
We note that a conflict exists in the circuits regarding whether challenges to guilty pleas are subject to Frady’s cause and prejudice requirement.
Compare United States v. Baylin,
We need not resolve this conflict today, nor must we decide the outer extent of
Frady.
Whatever the scope of the cause and prejudice requirement, it clearly does not bar review when a defendant raises a
jurisdictional
claim, such as the invalidity of the statute under which the defendant was convicted. “Claims that ‘the applicable statute is unconstitutional or that the indictment
*946
fails to state an offense’ are jurisdictional claims not waived by the guilty plea.”
United States v. Mantilla,
Because Chambers asserts a jurisdictional claim, his failure to challenge the constitutionality of the statute in the district court prior to his plea or in this court on direct review does not bar him from raising the claim for the first time in a § 2255 proceeding. See id.; see also United States v. Caperell,
Mitchell’s failure before trial and on direct appeal to challenge the indictment on the ground now asserted does not bar collateral attack. “If [Mitchell’s] claim were correct, the indictment would fail to state an offense against the United States and the district court would be deprived of jurisdiction. Because the defect complained of is jurisdictional, [Mitchell’s] claim is reviewable.”
Id.
at 1233 n. 1 (quoting
Broncheau,
At this time, we remand the case to the district court for the limited purpose of setting appropriate conditions for Chambers’ release, 14 pending issuance by this Court of the mandate in X-Citement Video, if that occurs. Further, we withhold the mandate in this consolidated appeal and retain jurisdiction herein pending further developments in X-Citement Video.
Notes
. By an order dated August 31, 1993, this court granted Chamber’s motion to consolidate his appeals because of the similarity in the issues raised.
. "[Tlhe First Amendment to the United States Constitution mandates that a statute prohibiting the distribution, shipping or receipt of child pornography require as an element knowledge of the minority of at least one of the performers who engage in or portray the specified conduct. Section 2252, as authoritatively construed by
[United States v.
]
Thomas,
[
. We reject the government's argument that X-Citement Video is not binding precedent until the mandate issues in that case. In this circuit, once a published opinion is filed, it becomes the law of the circuit until withdrawn or reversed by the Supreme Court or an en banc court. However, we withhold the mandate in the within case until the mandate issues in X-Citement Video.
. The Court in
Teague
stated: "We therefore hold that, implicit in the retroactivity approach we adopt today, is the principle that habeas corpus cannot be used a vehicle to create
new constitutional rules of criminal procedure
unless those rules would be applied retroactively to
all
defendants on collateral review through one of the two exceptions we have articulated."
Teague,
. The reasoning set forth in
Davis
and
Sood
is equally applicable to laws stricken down in over-breadth grounds, the grounds which underpin our holding in
X-Citement Video.
Thus, Chambers's "conviction and punishment are for an act that the law does not make criminal.”
. The government also relies on
Greenawalt v. Ricketts,
.Mackey,
.Thus, after the language the government quotes, Justice Harlan concluded that the first exception did not apply because Mackey only alleged
procedural
defects in the conduct of his trial.
See id.
at 701,
. A majority of the court joined in this section of Justice Scalia’s opinion.
. This discussion assumes that the narrowing construction afforded fair warning to him,
see Dombrowski v. Pfister,
. Our analysis has been consistent with the approach the Second Circuit took in
Corsentino,
.
See also Valencia v. United States,
. If the government were correct that
X-Citement Video
announced a new rule, this would provide an additional ground for our conclusion that the cause and prejudice requirement does not apply. We have consistently permitted defendants to challenge their convictions in § 2255 motions, where there has been an intervening change in the law after the time for direct appeal has run.
See, e.g., Sood,
.The district court shall enter an order setting conditions for Chambers’ release within twenty-eight days of the date of this opinion. Either party is given the right to challenge that Order in this Court, by filing a brief with the clerk of this court in this docket number within seven days of the entry of the district court's order. The other party may file a reply brief within seven days of the receipt of the opening brief. All briefs may be in the form of a letter to the clerk, and no brief shall exceed ten double-spaced pages in length.
