Robert A. Cornell appeals the district court’s
1
denial of his Rule 60(b), Fed.R.Civ. P., motion to reopen his petition for habeas corpus filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1994).
2
The petition attacked Cornell’s 1976 first-degree murder conviction on two grounds: first, that new evidence showed Cornell was actually innocent of the crime, and second, that the prosecution unconstitutionally had suppressed exculpatory evidence. In an en banc decision, we rejеcted on the merits Cornell’s claim based on suppression of evidence.
Cornell v. Nix,
Cornell was convicted in Iowa state court of first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment for the 1976 killing of Kenneth Crow. The principal witness against Cornell was his fourteen-year-old half-brother, Glenn Albert Oliver, who was riding in a car with Cornell and Crow before the killing. Albert sаw Cornell and Crow leave the car together and go into the woods, and later heard a shot. When Cornell returned to the car alone, Albert asked Cornell if “he did what I think he did,” and Cornell answered, “Yes, does it bother you?” Two other witnesses, Eric Lynn Cross and Cornell’s half-brother, Bryce Oliver, testified that Cornell told them after the fact not to worry about Crow, that he and Crow had had a fight and Crow had a brоken neck. Cornell’s defense at trial was that Crow had left the car alive after an argument with Cornell and had stolen Cornell’s gun; his theory was that Bryce Oliver actually had committed the killing.
See Cornell,
The Iowa Supreme Court affirmed Cornell’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal.
State v. Cornell,
Cornell filed a second habeаs petition in 1988, raising the suppression of exculpatory evidence claim. Cornell later sought to supplement the record to include a 1989 affidavit from Cross, recanting Cross’s trial testimony and denying that Cross had been interviewed by Pontious after writing the 1977 letter. The district court denied the motion to supplement the record with the 1989 affidavit, but we reversed, ordering an evidentiary hearing on whether thе recantation was newly discovered evidence that would “probably produce an acquittal on retrial,” warranting a new trial under our
(pre-Herrera)
ease of
Mastrian v. McManus,
In our en banc decision, we held that Cornell had committed procedural default by failing to raise the matters covered in the 1989 Cross affidavit in state court and that he had not demonstrated cause for this default.
Id.
at 380-81. We then reasoned that his procedural default could be excused only if he demonstrated that a fundamental miscarriage of justice would result from our refusal to hear his claim and that to do so he must show that he was “actually innocent.”
Id.
at 381. We held that the proper gauge of “actual innocence” in this context was the test stated in
Sawyer v. Whitley,
Cornell’s other claim, that the prosecution suppressed exculpatory evidence, was not procedurally barred. We rеviewed that claim on the merits and concluded that the allegedly suppressed evidence was not material. Id. at 384.
Three years after our en banc decision, the Supreme Court decided
Schlup v. Delo,
The Supreme Court reversed, explaining that we should have judged Sehlup’s claim under the standard from
Murray v. Carrier,
After the Supreme Court decided Schlup, pointing out the Eighth Circuit’s misunderstanding of the level of proof necessary to establish innocence to excuse procedural default, Cornell filed a Rule 60(b) motion, seеking to have his habeas proceedings reopened on the basis of “extraordinary circumstances.” The extraordinary circumstance he alleged was the change in this circuit’s law wrought by Schlup. The district court denied the Rule 60(b) motion because the court did not consider itself to have the power to enter an order contrary to what we had instructed it to do in our en banc decision.
On appeal, Cornell argues that under Schlup we must evaluate his newly discovered evidence claim under the less demanding “more likely than not” standard, and that if we do so, we will conclude that his procedural default should be excused.
Rule 60(b) allows a court to grant relief from a final judgment or order.
See Mohammed v. Sullivan,
Here, Cornell argues that Schlup is a material change in the law previously applied by this court in his case. We thus analyze Schlup to determine if it is a change in the law constituting sufficient extraordinary circumstances to warrant relief from a judgment under Rule 60(b).
Cornell’s claim for relief is that the new evidence of Cross’s recantation shows that he is actually innocent of the crime. When this court heard Cornell’s appeal in 1990, we ordered an evidentiary hearing on both the newly discovered evidence claim and the suppression of evidence claim.
Because this court has disposed of the Brady claims on the merits, only the newly discovered evidence claim could be resurrected by reopening the case to apply Schlup. This remaining claim is a Herrera-type free standing claim of innocence, unconnected to any other constitutional violation. Whether Cornell’s procedural default would be excused under Schlup is irrelevant because his substantive Herrera claim requires a stronger showing of innocence than Schlup demands. Cornell’s reliance on Schlup in his 60(b) motion is thus misplaced.
Schlup
explained that a petitioner’s request for relief because of actual innocence can be based on different grounds and that the level of proof required to establish “actual innocence” depends upon the type of ground the petitioner basеs his or her petition for relief. Of particular relevance to this case,
Schlup
described the difference between Schlup’s procedural claim of actual innocence and the substantive claim of actual innocence raised in
Herrera v. Collins,
In contrast, Schlup’s constitutional claims were not based on his innocence, but instead on his argument that the ineffectiveness of his counsel under
Strickland v. Washington,
Becаuse Schlup’s claim of actual innocence was accompanied with an assertion of constitutional error at trial, the court held that Schlup’s procedural default could be excused only if he could show that “it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in the light of the new evidence.”
Schlup,
Schlup’s evidence of innocence need carry less of a burden [than a Herrera claimant] ____
... If there were no question about the fairness of the criminal trial, a Herrera-type claim would have to fail unless the federal habeas court is itself convinced that those new facts unquestionably establish Sеhlup’s innocence. On the other hand, if the habeas court were merely convinced that those new facts raised sufficient doubt about Sehlup’s guilt to undermine confidence in the result of the trial without assurance that that trial was untainted by constitutional error, Schlup’s threshold showing of innocence would justify a review of the merits of the constitutional claims.
Id.
at 316-17,
While the Supreme Court did not clеarly articulate the quantum of proof necessary for a claim based solely on actual innocence when it drew the distinction we quote above, it is evident that such claims require that the court be “convinced that those new facts unquestionably establish [the defendant’s] innocence.” Id. Cornell, however, argues that we should apply to his claim the Schlup gateway standard, which оnly requires that the new facts raise sufficient doubt about his guilt to undermine confidence in the result of the trial. This argument, however, provides no relief to Cornell, because regardless of whether he can satisfy the Schlup-gateway standard, his substantive claim must still meet the Herrera standard, which requires him to show new evidence that “unquestionably establishes” his innocence.
In our en banc decision we held that Cornell had not established by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have convicted him. Even though later
Schlup
establishes that this was the wrong standard to apply in the procedural default context, our holding nevertheless establishes that Cornell cannot meet the
Herrera
standard of proof. In
Allen v. Nix,
The Supreme Court has considered the meaning of the clear and convincing evidence standard in civil contexts other than habeas corpus. In
Colorado v. New Mexico
the Supreme Court stated that the clear and cоnvincing evidence standard “placets] in the
*1335
ultimate factfinder an abiding conviction that the truth of its factual contentions are highly probable.”
Though not susceptible to precise definition, see
id.
at 1463,
Cruzan
refers to the clear and convincing evidence as an “intermediate standard” and
Colorado
indicates that it is an even more exacting standard. We believe that the
Herrera
burden we reiterated in
Allen v. Nix
as requiring the petitioner to show “new facts that unquestionably establish the petitioner’s innocence,”
4
Since Cornell’s only remaining substantive claim requires a showing of innocence at least equal tо the clear and convincing evidence Sawyer standard, and we have already held en banc that Cornell did not meet this standard, he cannot prevail on the merits of his petition. Therefore, it would be in vain to reopen the case, even if Cornell made a sufficient showing to excuse his procedural default. Because our earlier denial of Cornell’s claim for relief will not bе changed in light of Schlup, Rule 60(b) relief is inappropriate here.
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Harold D. Vietor, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.
. On April 24, 1996, after the parties filed briefs in this case, President Clinton signed the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-132, sec. 106, 1996 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1214, 1220-21. This Act works changes to section 2254,
see Felker v.
Turpin,U.S. -,
. Justice White, concurring separately, stated that the standard for a
Herrera
claim ought "at the very least” to be as stringent as the
Jackson v. Virginia,
.
Cf. Bowman v. Gammon,
. In
Carriger v. Stewart,
