Victor Steele was convicted and sentenced for a number of federal charges arising from his kidnapping of Anita Woodridge. We affirmed his conviction and sentence in United States v. Steele, no. 99-2129,
Before we address the merits, a few words on jurisdiction. The government contends that we lack jurisdiction to review three of Steele’s appellate arguments. In his motion (including supplements) Steele not only asserted claims that newly discovered evidence entitled him to a new trial (failing in large part to describe such evidence), but also claims that he was convicted in violation of the Constitution. Chief Judge Barker separated out the claims of constitutional error reserving them for consideration along with already pending claims of constitutional error brought in a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. She then entered the order, now appealed from, denying the motion for a new trial.
This poses the question whether her order lacked finality because it did not decide all the claims made in Steel’s motion.
§ 2255 and Rule 33 are utterly distinct procedural vehicles, each with it’s own rules and time limits. See United States v. Evans,
Steele’s appellate arguments do not cause us to second-guess the district court’s well-reasoned opinion. Steele contends that the judge should have considered the cumulative effect of his “new evidence” and should have held an evidentiary hearing. But Steele’s evidence even taken together is insufficient to create a probability of acquittal at retrial and to call for an evidentiary hearing. It is true that Anita Woolridge was the only witness who related all facets of the conduct charged. Her testimony was, however, thoroughly corroborated at many points along the way by other independent evidence. Her testimony was almost irrefutably corroborated by the fact that Steele was arrested just blocks away from his building in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, several hundred miles and two states away from Anita’s home in Kokomo, Indiana, and that on search of the building she was found shut in a cabinet which could only be opened from the outside.
The judgment appealed from is AFFIRMED.
