Charged with possessing a firearm despite being a convicted felon, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), Kenneth Craig pleaded guilty and was sentеnced to 57 months’ imprisonment. At the conclusion of sentencing, Craig announced that he did not want to appeаl. Just in case, however, the judge told Craig that his lawyer would continue to represent him through the period allowed fоr appeal and would file a notice at his request. Craig said that he understood.
The judgment was entered on March 12, 2003, so the time for appeal expired on March 26. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(b)(1)(A)®, 26(a). On April 8 a notice of appеal, signed by Craig personally, arrived at the district court. When we directed the parties to address the question whethеr the appeal is timely, Craig’s lawyer asked the district judge for a 30-day extension under Rule 4(b)(4). The application rеpresented that Craig had changed his mind while in prison and then prepared and mailed a notice on his own because he thought that his lawyer would no longer represent him. The district court denied this motion, ruling that changing one’s mind after the time for appeal has expired is not “good cause” for an extension, and that Craig is in no position to plead ignorance in light of the information furnished in open court.
Despite this ruling, Craig has bombarded us with additional statements and affidavits in an effort to show an entitlement to an appellate decision. The latest asserts that he рut the notice of appeal in the prison mail system on March 20, while time remained, and that he acted pro se not because of any misunderstanding but because he feared that he would not be able to reach counsel by phone before the time for appeal expired. We directed the parties to brief the jurisdictional question along with the merits — which we need not reach.
Having told the district judge that he changed his mind and mailed his notice after thе time for appeal expired, Craig now tells us that he appealed in time after all-if he really did depоsit the notice on March 20 and if he is entitled to the
The United States contends that the appeal is late because the mailbox rule aрplies only if the prisoner is unrepresented. As we said in
United States v. Kimberlin,
Today the mailbox rule depends on Rule 4(c), not on how
Kimberlin
understood
Houston.
Rule 4(c) applies to “an inmate confined in an institution”. Craig meеts that description. A court ought not pencil “unrepresented” or any extra word into the text of Rule 4(c), which as writtеn is neither incoherent nor absurd. Craig therefore is entitled to use the mailbox rule. Accord,
United States v. Moore,
Still, to get its benefit he had to comply with it, and he did not — not when he filed the appeal, and not in the ensuing year. His affidavit states that he depоsited the notice in the prison mail system on March 20, 2003, but not that he prepaid first-class postage. Rule 4(c)(1) requires the declaration to state only two things; 50% is not enough. The postage requirement is important: mail bearing a stamp gets going, but an unstamped document may linger. Perhaps that is exactly what happened: Craig may have dropped an unstamped notice of appeal into the prison mail system, and it took a while to get him to add an envеlope and stamp (or to debit his prison trust account for one). The mailbox rule countenances
some
delay, but nоt the additional delay that is inevitable if prisoners try to save 37<t plus the cost of an envelope. Rule 4(c)(1) is clearly written; any literate prisoner can understand it (and Craig is literate). Respect for the text of Rule 4(c) means that represented prisoners can use the opportunity it creates; respect for the text equally means that prisoners must use that opportunity
Craig’s notice of appeal was untimely, and his appeal is dismissed.
