Judge, with whom RILEY, Chief Judge, WOLLMAN, COLLOTON, GRUENDER, and BENTON, Circuit Judges, join.
Marlon Dale Sun Bear pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of his uncle in Indian country. At sentencing, the district court
1
departed upward three levels based upon Sun Bear’s extensive and violent
*702
criminal history, resulting in a sentencing range of 292 to 365 months in prison under the then-mandatory Sentencing Guidelines. The court further ruled that Sun Bear’s prior felony convictions for attempted escape, attempted theft of a vehicle, and attempted burglary of a commercial building were “crimes of violence” under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2(a), resulting in a career offender enhancement that increased the guidelines range to 360 months to life. The court sentenced Sun Bear as a careеr offender to 360 months in prison.
2
Sun Bear appealed, arguing that he should not have been sentenced as a career offender because his three prior felonies were not crimes of violence. We affirmed, concluding that he was properly sentenced as a career offender because, although the attempted escape offense was not proved to be a felony, the felony convictions for attempted auto theft and attempted burglary constituted two crimes of violence warranting the career offender enhancement.
United States v. Sun Bear,
In November 2008, counsel for Sun Bear filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion to vacate his sentence, alleging that the careеr offender determination violated
Be-gay v. United States,
S.Ct. 1581,
The District of South Dakota § 2255 fоrm required Sun Bear to explain why his motion was timely. He alleged:
This motion was filed within one year of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Begay v. United States [which] initially and newly recognized the right asserted herein. Consequently, the motion is timely filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f)(3). 5
The district court granted the government’s motion to dismiss the motion as
*703
time-barred because, in the words of § 2255(f)(3),
Begay
did not initially recognize “a right ... made retroactively applicable to cases on collateral review.”
Sun Bear v. United States,
No. CIV 08-3021,
I. Retroactivity
In
Begay,
the Supreme Court held that a felony conviction for driving under the influence of alcohol is not a “violent felony” for purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii), part of the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA).
The government has conceded in § 2255 proceedings around the country that
Be-gay
announced a new substantive rule that should be applied retroactively if the application of § 924(e)(1) at issue increased the defendant’s statutory maximum sentence, which will be true with many if not most felon-in-possession convictions. At least two of our sister circuits have so held.
See Welch v. United States,
II. Cognizability
Section 2255 “was intended to afford federal prisoners a remedy identical in scope to federal habeas corpus.”
Davis,
These principles are reflected in the text of § 2255, which the Supreme Court described as “somewhat lacking in precision” in
Davis,
Applying these principles, this court and our sister circuits have consistently held “that ordinary questions of guideline interpretation falling short of the ‘miscarriage of justice’ standard do not present a proper section 2255 claim.”
Auman v. United States,
In this case, the panel concluded that the miscarriage-of-justice exception applies because Sun Bear’s claim “is based on a post-conviction change in the law that renders unlawful the district court’s sentencing determination.”
Sun Bear II,
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Davis,
on which the panel relied, is not to the contrary. Although the claim in
Davis,
like Sun Bear’s claim, was based upon an “intervening change in the law,” the Supreme Court explained in
Addonizio
that the miscarriage of justice in
Davis
resulted from “a change in the substantive law that established that the
conduct
for which petitioner had been convicted and sentenced was lawful.”
Our cases applying the eompletemiscarriage-of-justice exception in other contexts support this conclusion. In
Stobaugh,
Abandoning the panel’s view that Sun Bear’s sentence was unlawful, the dissent “keys off’ a statement in
Hill,
For these reasons, the order of the district court denying Sun Bear’s motion to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 is affirmed.
*707 MELLOY, Circuit Judge, with whom MURPHY, BYE, SMITH, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judgеs join, dissenting.
At sentencing and on direct appeal, Sun Bear correctly argued that he did not qualify as a career offender. We rejected his arguments, but the Supreme Court subsequently vindicated his position in an opinion addressing the same question of law.
See Begay v. United States,
The majority correctly notes that, as а general rule, run-of-the-mill sentencing errors are not cognizable in § 2255 proceedings. Neither our court nor the Supreme Court, however, has previously interpreted this general rule as being absolute. In our prior opinions, we carefully left open the possibility of exceptions as demanded by justice. Finally, the government has conceded that this case does not involve a run-of-the-mill sentencing issue.
13
For all of these reasons, as explained below, I would hold that denying relief in the present circumstances would result in a miscarriage of justice and that § 2255 permits a remedy. The contrary result dictated by the majority’s holding promotes finality at the expense of justice in a situation where, unlike most AEDPA cases, there are no concerns of comity or federalism. Thus, I cannot join “[tjhis ... approach to sentencing claims [that] is nothing more than a judicial ‘gotcha.’ ”
Gilbert v. United States,
I. Eighth Circuit Precedent: Exception to the General Rule
Although the en banc court is not strictly constrained by our prior opinions, I find it compelling that no such opinions pre
*708
elude finding a miscarriage of justice in the present circumstances, i.e., where a challenged sentence results from a guidelines error but falls within the statutory range. The majority cites cases in which we defined the concept of a miscarriage of justice in other settings, but we have not previously applied those cases in the present context. In fact, the government’s primary authority,
Auman v. United States,
In Auman, the defendant pleaded guilty to a drug offense. The district court determined that prior convictions qualified as “either ... crime[s] of violence or ... controlled substance offensefs].” Id. at 159. On direct appeal, the defendant failed to contest these career-offender findings. The court of appeals affirmed as to the issues actually raised. The defendant then moved to have the district court vacate and reconsider his sentence pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a), raising for the first time a challenge to the career-offender guideline determination. The district court looked at the conduct underlying the сonviction, determined it was a crime of violence, and refused to grant relief. The defendant appealed, but we determined that the district court had lacked jurisdiction to entertain the order under 18 U.S.C. §§ 3582 and 3742. The defendant then filed a § 2255 motion challenging the career-offender determination as to one of the prior convictions.
The court of appeals rejected his challenge, due in large part to procedural default and the defendant’s failure to preserve eiTor, stating:
Auman’s Sentencing Guideline claim is not properly brought under section 2255, but should have been raised on direct appeal. See United States v. Ward,55 F.3d 412 , 413 (8th Cir.1995) (“Collateral proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 cannot be made to do service for an appeal.”). While section 2255 does provide relief for cases in which “the sentence was in excess of the maximum authorized by law,” this provision applies to violations of statutes establishing maximum sentences, rather than garden-variety Sentencing Guideline application issues.
Id.
at 160-61 (emphasis added). The court continued its discussion, citing an earlier per curiam opinion which stated that a defendant could “ ‘not obtain § 2255 relief for unappealed errors to which no contemporaneous objection was made unless he can show both cause and prejudice.’ ”
Id.
at 161 (quoting
United States v. Wilson,
Finally, Auman cited authority from other circuits and noted general agreement “that issues of guideline interpretation do not constitute proper section 2255 claims unless they rise to the level of being a miscarriage of justice.” Id. The court concluded by reserving ruling on the core issue of the present case:
[W]e reserve judgment on whether violation of the guidelines could ever be cognizable under section 2255. We merely hold that ordinary questions of guideline interpretation falling short of the “miscarriage of justiсe” standard do not present a proper section 2255 claim. Auman’s claim of error in interpreting *709 the career offender guidelines does not present a cognizable claim.
Id. Auman, then, does not preclude relief in the present case, nor does it demonstrate that the miscarriage-of-justice “exception” in the sentencing-guideline context is to be equated solely with sentences outside the applicable statutory range, as held by the majority today. Rather, Auman expressly left open an exception as required by the ends of the justice and rested its holding on procedural default.
After
Auman,
our court repeatedly cited the general prohibition on § 2255 relief for run-of-the-mill sentenсing errors, noted the exception for a miscarriage of justice, but found the exception inapplicable. The court, however, has not firmly limited the miscarriage-of-justice exception to situations involving sentences outside the applicable statutory range, as suggested by the majority.
Supra
at 705-06. In
King v. United States,
King cannot obtain relief on the basis of the guideline error alone, however, because he waived the right to bring all § 2255 claims except claims of ineffective assistance of counsel or prosecutorial misconduct. We have recognized in any case that “ordinary questions of guideline interpretation” are not remediable on a § 2255 motion unless the error rises to the level of being a miscarriage of justice. Auman v. United States,67 F.3d 157 , 161 (8th Cir.1995). This case does not rise to that extraordinary level.
King,
At a minimum, King shows that it is proper to label some guidelines errors as involving miscarriages of justice. In addressing the impropriety of enforcing the waiver, the court in King applied plain error review. The final step of plain error review (integrity of judicial proceedings, etc.) is an articulation of a type of miscarriage-of-justice standard, and, in King, the court granted relief under plain error review due to the imposition of a beyond-the-guideline-range sentence. The court stated:
The dismissal of King’s direct appeal on the basis of an unenforceable waiver was plain error. Furthermore, there can be little doubt that the petitioner’s substantial rights are affected if his prison sentence is longer than it should have been. But for the failure of King’s counsel, the court would have reached the merits of his argument. Since we now conclude that argument succeeds, it follows that there is a strong probability that but for the error he would have received a more favorable sentence.
Finally, we afford relief only where a plain error seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings. King received a sentence many years beyond the correct guideline range. He advanced pro se a meritorious argument which his lawyer ignored, and his аppeal was summarily *710 dismissed for an improper reason. The error seriously affected the fairness and integrity of the proceedings, and we therefore find it proper to grant the relief King seeks.
Id. at 854 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted, emphasis added).
Even more recently, an Eighth Circuit panel granted relief based on a
Begay
retroactivity claim in the context of a § 2255 motion.
See Seebeck v. United States,
II. Miscarriage of Justice Notwithstanding the absence of prior authority to support the majority’s elimination of the often-referenced “exception,” it remains necessary to determine whether a denial of relief in the present circumstances amounts to a miscarriage of justice. In this regard, there is guidance from the Supreme Court as to how we should define the term “miscarriage of justice,” in this and similar settings.
In
Davis v. United States,
Keying off this language, it seems clear that, rather than borrowing а miscarriage-of-justice standard from absolutist and non-analogous settings such as the enforcement of appeal waivers or the application of the actual-innocence exception,
supra
at 705-06, the key inquiry today must be whether the present case satisfies “the rudimentary demands of fair procedure.” The Supreme Court’s own language and the fact that it actually reviewed the alleged error in
Timmreck
for harmlessness,
id.
at 784,
Facing an issue nearly identical to that in the present case, the Seventh Circuit recently held a sentencing error cognizable in an initial §
2255
proceeding even though the sentence at issue fell within the applicable statutory range.
See Narvaez v. United States,
The court in
Narvaez,
and the dissenters in a recent, en banc Eleventh Circuit opinion correctly note that the present issue pits concerns of finality against justice with no attendant issues of comity or federalism as often arise in AEDPA cases.
Gilbert,
Discussing concerns of finality, a first dissenter described the reasons we value finality and convincingly demonstrated that none of those reasons were furthered by a denial of relief:
First, denying relief does not build confidence in our court system because this looks to the world like a court refusing to acknowledge or make amends for its own mistake. Second, to the extent that there have been administrative costs and delay in considering Mr. Gilbert’s request for relief, they have already been incurred, and we need only grant him that relief to end his very expensive incarceration. Third, because the only issue before us is a purely legal one, there is no evidence we must consult. Thus spoliation is not a concern. And finally, Mr. Gilbert’s case presents no comity concerns insofar as he seeks to correct a sentence imposed in federal court and not by the state.
Id. at 1334 (Martin, J., dissenting). Emphasizing the defendant’s diligence, the next dissenter stated, “[The defendant] raised his claim of sentencing error to every court he could, every chance he got. No court correctly resolved his claim until the Supreme Court made clear that [his] claim was meritorious — he was never a career offender.” Id. at 1336 (Hill, J., dissenting).
Judge Hill eloquently concluded:
I recognize that without finality there can be no justice. But it is equally true that, without justice, finality is nothing more than a bureaucratic achievement. Case closed. Move on to the next. Finality with justice is achieved only when the imprisoned has had a meaningful opportunity for a reliable judicial determination of his claim. Gilbert has never had this opportunity.
Id. at 1337.
Like the court in Narvaez and the dissenters in Gilbert, I find the sole justification for the majority’s holding today to be an uncompelling and unjust denial of process resting on hollow claims of a need to promote finality. I find the dissenter’s views in Gilbert to be particularly persuasive because that court was facing a successive petition whereas Sun Bear’s ease is even more compelling: he now advances his fully preserved and diligently pursued argumеnts in this, his first attempt at collateral review pursuant to § 2255.
Finally, I note that the government presents a parade of horribles suggesting there will be an overwhelming burden caused by the application of § 2255 in this context due to the number of career offenders, the number of post-Begay crime of violence disqualifications, and the number of other Guidelines errors likely to be raised in § 2255 motions. This alarmist argument is wholly without merit given the limitation of the facts of the present case: fully preserved error in the context of new Supreme Court authority issued with retroactive effect as applied in a case that cannot pass a harmless error inquiry. Further, the government’s argument suggests that keeping court dockets clear is more important than the liberty of those prisoners who potentially should not be serving career-offender sentences. Even if there were merit to the government’s assertions, resentencings pursuant to recent guideline amendments have shown the courts’ ability to efficiently process sentencing adjustments en mass.
Notes
. The Honorable Charles B. Kornmann, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.
. The court commented that it had "not seen a man this young have a criminal history of this type in the years that I've sat on the bench,” and opined that Sun Bear was "more than a career criminal,” having "done nothing his entire life other than attack people [and] steal their property.”
. Had Sun Bear not raised this issue on direct appeal, this obstacle would have required him to avoid that procedural default using the cause and prejudice analysis mandated by
United States v. Frady,
. Cognizable has been defined as, "Capable of being judicially tried or examined before a designated tribunal; within the court's jurisdiction.” Black’s Law Dictionary 295 (9th ed. 2009).
. Sun Bear further alleged that the decision in Begay uncovered a "fact” supporting his claim, making the motion timely under § 2255(f)(4). We agree with the district court that subsequent interpretations of the law "can be the basis of delay in filing a § 2255 motion only in accordance with § 2255(f)(3).”
.
Williams
was Eighth Circuit precedent binding on the panel in this case, but it is not binding on the court en banc. There were five votes to grant rehearing en banc in
Williams,
one short of the number required for en banc review. We exprеss no view as to whether
Williams
was a correct application of
Begay
except to note that the Supreme Court recently advised that the decision in
Williams,
like those of nearly all our sister circuits, "overreads” the significance of the phrase "purposeful, violent, and aggressive” in the
*704
Bagay
opinion.
Sykes v. United
States,-U.S. -,
. We reject Sun Bear's contention that the Government only argued harmless error to the panel. At page 16 of its brief to the panel, the government argued, "Sun Bear cannot demonstrate the application of the career offender enhancement resulted in a complete miscarriage of justice.” That is a cognizability argument.
. The en banc court recently reversed the panel opinion on other grounds, declining to consider the issue we address — "whether a claim that the sentencing guidelines were misapplied may be bought in a first time § 2255 motion.”
Gilbert v. United States,
For its contrary view, the dissent relies on the recent panel decision in
Narvaez v. United States,
The dissent also cites our unpublished opinion in
Seebeck v. United States,
. Prior to enactment of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(a) provided, "The court may correct an illegal sentence at any time....” In the Reform Act, which established the Sentencing Guidelines, Congress took the unusual step of rewriting this rule of criminal procedure to eliminate Rule 35(a). Pub. L. No. 98-473, § 215(b), 98 Stat. 2015-16 (1984). This evidences an intent that applications of guidelines provisions not be subject to collateral attack beyond the boundaries of what Supreme Court decisions had confirmed were cognizable § 2255 claims — errors that are jurisdictional, constitutional, or result in a complete miscarriage of justice.
See Scott v. United States,
. We have granted, on direct аppeal, plain error review of some errors in applying the mandatory Guidelines.
See United States v. Pirani,
. The majority appears to reluctantly concede, as a general matter, that the limited holding of
Begay
has retroactive effect. The majority suggests, however, that the rule of
Begay
may not. I note, as a I did in
Sun Bear II,
that the government conceded to the court in argument that
Begay
has retroactive effect in this case.
See Sun Bear II,
. I note, as I did in
Sun Bear II,
that the government did not advance arguments alleging harmless error in Sun Bear's direct appeal.
See Sun Bear II,
. At oral argument, counsel for the government stated, “[W]e concede that the Begay issue is not a garden variety issue, particularly, in light of the circumstances of this case because of the fact it was objected to and appealed, and then timely brought up here, we submit that it is our position that would not be a garden variety, just a typical run of the mill Guidelines issue.”
. The majority cites an absence of extra-jurisdictional authority holding a sentencing error may satisfy the miscarriage-of-justice exception. I note, however, that the issue is not as well-settled as suggested. Several circuits have yet to articulate their standard and continue to hold open the possibility of § 2255 relief in cases such as this.
See, e.g., Gilbert,
