This case involves an order issued by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (I. Leo Glasser, Judge)
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denying petitioner Robert Moates’ request for habeas relief and permanently enjoining and restraining him from “filing, bringing, or otherwise instigating any action in the federal court seeking relief whether by petition for a writ of habeas corpus or otherwise, arising out of his convictions in 1975 of Burglary in the Second Degree, Unlawful [Ijmprisonment in the First Degree and Murder in the Second Degree in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Kings County, unless a Magistrate-Judge grants leave.”
Moates v. Barkley,
1.
Moates is a frequent visitor to the courts of our circuit. In March 1996, he filed the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. In it, he challenges a 1975 New York state court conviction. Prior to the filing of this petition, however, Moates had filed some five other habeas petitions with respect to the same conviction.
See Moates v. Walker,
The petition now before us asserts a single ground for relief: that Moates’ prosecution and conviction were barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause because Moates had previously been acquitted of the same charges. Moates had raised precisely this same claim in his fifth habeas petition, however, and Judge Glasser, in due course, had dismissed that petition as an abuse of the writ.
See Moates v. Walker,
Moates then filed a habeas petition directly in this court, which we construed as a notice of appeal and transferred to the district court. Judge Glasser refused to grant Moates a certificate of probable cause. By order of this court dated January 7, 1997, we denied Moates leave to appeal the dismissal of his petition, but we did give him permission to appeal “for the limited purpose of challenging the district court’s injunction limiting appellant’s ability to file future actions.”
In his current appellate brief, Moates— improperly — raises several challenges to his conviction and does not mention the sanctions imposed on him. Because “we find no compelling reason to broaden the scope of review beyond the one issue specified when the prior panel issued a certificate of probable cause,” we defer to that panel’s limitations on the appeal, and dismiss Moates’ claims for habeas relief.
See Vicaretti v. Henderson,
2.
The unequivocal rule in this circuit is that the distinct court may not impose a filing injunction on a litigant
sua sponte
without providing the litigant with notice and an opportunity to be heard.
See Moates v. Rademacher,
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Judge Glasser, in his order imposing the injunction on future challenges by Moates to his 1975 conviction, recognized the existence of this rale, but nonetheless chose not to comply with it because “[t]he observance of a requirement, in this case, that Moates be given notice and an opportunity to be heard would only compound the abuse of the judicial process and further needlessly tax the resources of the court.”
Moates v. Barkley,
As we stated in our decision reversing the earlier ban on filings by Moates, “Moates has clearly abused the judicial process, and we sympathize with [the district court’s] attempt to prevent any misconduct by Moates in the future. However, Moates was not given notice or an opportunity to be heard before the injunction against further filings was imposed.”
Moates v. Rademacher,
The case now before us is similar. We share Judge Glasser’s obvious frustration at the duplicative and frivolous filings by Moates, and we think it is extremely likely that, had the correct procedures been followed, sanctions of the sort imposed would have been entirely proper under the standards enunciated by this court in
Safir v. United States Lines, Inc.,
Nevertheless, also for procedural reasons, the filing ban imposed on Moates can stand. Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a) requires appellants in their briefs to provide the court with a clear statement of the issues on appeal.
See
Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(3), (5), (6). Although
pro se
litigants are afforded some latitude in meeting the rules governing litigation,
see, e.g., Haines v. Kerner,
3.
The only issue certified having been waived, the appeal is dismissed as outside the scope of the certificate of probable cause.
