OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal from a district court denial of a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion to vacate a criminal conviction and sentence involves a five-pronged attack on both the underlying conviction and twenty year sentence for armed robbery. 1 Appellant, Shahid Ali, has challenged his conviction and sentence on the grounds that (1) he was denied a fair trial because of insufficient access to an adequate legal library; (2) he was unable to conduct his defense competently on account of withdrawal from a prior narcotic addiction; (3) he was refused credit on his federal sentence for the time spent in state custody prior to the federal trial; (4) he was denied credit on his federal sentence for time spent in state custody serving various state sentences imposed after the federal sentence; and (5) successive state and federal prosecutions for the same armed bank robbery violated the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Although we are troubled by the double jeopardy issue, we cannot say that the district court erred in disposing of the appellant’s motion, and therefore affirm.
I.
Shahid Ali, formerly known as Iodis X Robinson, was arrested on February 24, 1974 for the robbery of the Llewellyn-Edison Savings and Loan Association of West Orange, New Jersey. It appears that FBI agents as well as Newark police officials interrogated him and that both federal and state authorities thereafter filed charges against him. On March 12, 1974 Ali and a co-defendant, Robert Grimes, were indicted by a federal grand jury for (a) robbing the savings and loan association and (b) putting lives in jeopardy with a dangerous weapon in the course of the robbery, all in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) and (d).
Approximately a month later, on April 8, 1974, a state grand jury indicted Ali on a charge of armed robbery of a liquor store. The following week, two more state indictments were returned, charging Ali with the armed robbery of the savings and loan association, the same act which had formed the basis of the federal indictment, and with armed robbery of a second liquor store.
Ali first went to trial in federal court and was convicted by a jury on June 26,1974 on both § 2113 counts. The district judge sentenced him to a blanket twenty year prison term, and this Court later affirmed the judgment. After imposition of the federal sentence, Ali on December 17, 1974 pleaded guilty to all three state robbery indictments. The state sentences resulted in an aggregate twenty-two and one-half to twenty-four year term of incarceration, with the savings and loan robbery sentence to run concurrently with one of the liquor store robbery sentences. 2
Although we affirm the district court’s order, we believe it is appropriate to address briefly the merits of Ali’s various contentions as well as the underlying issue of the permissibility of successive state-federal prosecutions on which the convictions in question rest.
II.
Ali’s first claim, that as a pro se litigant he was denied a fair trial because of inadequate access to legal materials, was fully addressed by the district court. Before the trial the district judge had warned Ali of the hazards of proceeding pro se and had done everything within reason to insure that Ali had access to the lawbooks that were necessary for the preparation of his defense. As described by the district court in denying Ali’s motion:
[pjrior to trial, the Court ordered the United States Attorney to provide Ali with an entire set of Title 18 of the United States Code Annotated, including those volumes containing the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The Court also arranged for Ali to have access to the courthouse library before each day’s proceedings. Indeed, the Court offered to let Ali use books from the Court’s own chambers. The Court also made inquiry into the books available to Ali at the Trenton State Prison where he had been held prior to trial and ordered the Federal Detention Center where he was held during trial to allow Ali full use of its library. Finally, at several points during the proceedings the Court reminded Ali that Mr. Brown was available to do legal research for him.
Ali’s motion discloses little that would lead us to question the district court’s assessment of the situation — -that a prison inmate’s constitutional right of access to the courts set forth in Younger v. Gilmore, 3 and adumbrated in Bounds v. Smith 4 was properly observed here. In light of the trial court’s intimate knowledge of the case, we cannot find an abuse of discretion in its failure to grant a hearing on the access issue.
Nor do we find that the district court erred in refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing to resolve Ali’s contention that his prior narcotics addiction precluded him from competently conducting his defense. The trial court, at a pre-trial hearing, had specifically found Ali to be a “fully competent individual.” As the court’s letter opinion indicates, Ali did not raise incompetency concerns then or at trial, and “nothing occurred at trial to cast
bona fide
doubts on petitioner’s competency to stand trial.”
Careful scrutiny also illuminates flaws in Ali’s two arguments relating to the computation of the time that he is to serve under his federal sentence. Ali’s insistence that he is being penalized for financial inability to post state bail is in essence a demand that federal bail should have been set and federal custody should have been completed prior to the imposition of state bail and custody. Judicial satisfaction of such a claim, however, would constitute an interference with executive discretion. Insofar as Ali simply seeks credit on his federal sentence for time spent in state custody prior to the federal trial, he must first establish that he has not already received credit on his unrelated state sentences for that time period.
6
Under Federal Prison Bureau Policy, “ordinarily, if a sentence results from the state charges, there will be a presumption that the prisoner did receive credit for presentence time, however, this may be rebutted if the prisoner can demonstrate that the state did not credit the time.” Bureau of Prison Policy Statement 5880.24 (Sept. 5, 1979), § 5(c)(2)(a);
Emig v. Bell,
Ali’s related claim, that he is entitled to federal credit for time spent serving his state sentences, was at most tangentially presented to the district court so that the merits of this contention are not properly before us.
8
Moreover, this claim, like the previous one, is a challenge to the sentence as executed by the prison and parole authorities and should be made on a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2241, not under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 whose terms cover challenges to sentences as imposed.
See Gomori v. Arnold,
III.
A somewhat insecure foundation supports the validity of the conviction which Ali has attacked on the ground of double jeopardy. Ever since
Bartkus v. Illinois,
As articulated in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
This seeming encroachment on a constitutional right, in the context of concurrent state-federal jurisdiction,
13
has to date been
In Bartkus, the petitioner was first tried for robbery of a federally insured savings and loan association and acquitted in federal court; he was then tried on the same facts and convicted of the robbery in a state court. Justice Frankfurter’s opinion for the Court, which sanctioned this double prosecution, appears open to question from two perspectives — one of evolving constitutional principle; one of historical precedent.
First, an important predicate of the
Bartkus
opinion — that the Fifth Amendment Double Jeopardy provision does not bind the states — has been undercut by subsequent constitutional developments.
Benton v. Maryland,
Benton,
however, does not appear to provide an absolute refutation of
Bartkus.
For
Abbate,
decided the same day as
Bartkus,
held that the federal government, which was undeniably subject to Fifth Amendment limitations, could nevertheless prosecute a defendant despite a prior state prosecution based on the same acts. But
Abbate
itself relied on the proposition that “[t]he Fifth Amendment, like all the other guaranties in the first eight amendments, applies only to proceedings by the Federal Government, ... and the double jeopardy therein forbidden is a second prosecution under authority of the Federal Government after a first trial for the same offense under the same authority.”
In other areas of criminal law — such as compelled testimony — recognition of the applicability of a constitutional right to the states has occasioned a complementary retreat from a rigid doctrine of dual sovereignty. Thus, once
Malloy v. Hogan,
The historical precedents on which Justice Frankfurter relied in
Bartkus
constitute the second possible infirmity in that opinion. Three pre-Civil War cases,
Fox v. Ohio,
Another source of support for the
Bartkus
holding,
United States v. Lanza,
Although developments in the application of the Bill of Rights to the states, consequent alterations in the system of dual sovereignty, and the historic idiosyncracies of various of the precedents upon which
Bartkus
relies may deprive the opinion of much of its force, we do not believe we are the proper forum to overturn a legal directive from the Supreme Court. The recent holding in
Wheeler v. United States,
Accordingly, we affirm the order of the district court.
Notes
. Two of petitioner’s claims involve challenges to the computation of time served on his sentence, rather than attacks on the imposition of sentence, and ordinarily would be cognizable under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, the statute authorizing general habeas corpus relief.
. This does not moot Ali’s double jeopardy attack on the bank robbery conviction and sentence. Noting that most criminal convictions do in fact entail adverse collateral consequences, the Supreme Court has stated that the “existence of concurrent sentences does not remove the elements necessary to create a justiciable case or controversy.”
Benton v. Maryland,
Present law on the concurrent sentence doctrine does, of course, permit courts in the exercise of their discretion, to decline to reach issues not mooted by the existence of concurrent sentences.
See Barnes v. United States,
.
.
.
. The case of
United States v. Gaines,
. Should Ali choose to assert a claim under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, the petition must be filed in the district in which there is jurisdiction over the custodian of the petitioner.
Braden v. Thirtieth Judicial Circuit Court,
.
United States v. Dansker,
. In
Abbate v. United States,
.
See Bartkus v. Illinois,
. For an extended discussion of some of the principles underlying the double jeopardy prohibition see this Court’s recent opinion
United States v. Busic and LaRocca,
. Ali’s double jeopardy attack would raise all three concerns if directed against the state prosecution and conviction which occurred after the federal conviction. Given the course of events, the federal sentence only raises the problem of multiple punishment, and the recent case,
United States
v.
DiFrancesco,
.
Bartkus
and
Abbate
have been criticized as contrary to both common and international law which recognize the pleas of
autrefois acquit
and
autrefois convict,
thus barring reprosecu
. The Supreme Court has recently refused to confine the dual sovereignty concept to state-federal interactions. In
United States v. Wheeler,
.
See Bartkus v. Illinois,
.
See,
e.
g., United States v. Guest,
. While the Supreme Court has not overturned
Bartkus
it has acknowledged the inherent unfairness of needless, multiple prosecutions. Shortly after
Bartkus,
the Attorney General adopted a federal policy which barred a federal trial following a state prosecution for the same acts “unless the reasons are compelling.” (Department of Justice Press Release, Apr. 6, 1959). This federal policy, which also encompasses successive federal prosecutions arising out of the same transaction, was recognized by the Court in
Petite v. United States,
It is noteworthy, however, that New Jersey has adopted a provision, “Former Prosecution in Another Jurisdiction: When a Bar,” L.1978, c. 95, § 2C:1-11, effective September 1, 1979 which prohibits a subsequent prosecution by the state, albeit with a few exceptions, when conduct which constitutes an offense within the concurrent jurisdiction of that state and the United States has previously been prosecuted in district court.
. When clauses in the Bill of Rights have been held applicable to the states the Supreme Court has not distinguished their scope and content when enforcing these rights at the state and federal levels.
See Williams v. Florida,
. See Note, Double Prosecution, supra n.10, at 1544-47.
. The protective policies of double jeopardy cannot be divorced from the realities of existing criminal procedure. As a noted historian of double jeopardy has commented: “The policy and purpose of double jeopardy must be a function of the criminal law and procedure of a social system. Double jeopardy, even when established as a general principle, may be empty of specific content.” Sigler, A History of Double Jeopardy, 1 Am.J.Legal Hist. 283, 309 (1963).
. In
Fox,
petitioner had been convicted of passing a counterfeit United States coin in violation of an Ohio State statute. She contended that because the Fifth Amendment prohibited successive state and federal prosecutions, the Court should declare the Ohio statute unconstitutional under the Supremacy Clause in order to preserve the effectiveness of federal law enforcement. In
United States v. Marigold,
. It is noteworthy that another pre-Civil War case,
Ableman v. Booth,
. The Eighteenth Amendment reads in part: SECTION 1. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited. SECTION 2. The Congress and the several States shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation, (emphasis added).
. See
Bartkus v. Illinois,
. The intention of the leaders of the “dry” lobbies in adding the “concurrent power” clause to the Amendment was clearly to prevent Congress from taking “away from the various states the right to enforce the prohibitory liquor laws of those states.” 56 Cong.Rec. 423 (1917). But Chairman Webb, the author of the “concurrent power” clause of the Eighteenth Amendment also noted, “[t]he federal government cannot [prosecute] if the state government does.” 56 Cong.Rec. 424 (1917).
