Jоhn M. Wyatt is caught in a procedural mess from which we cannot extricate him. Wyatt was convicted of a drug offense in the Southern District of Illinois, a court sitting within the Seventh Circuit. He is incarcerated in the Western District of Texas, which sits in the Fifth Circuit. The district court that sentenced him concluded that he was a career offender under section 4B1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines,
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based, in part, on an erroneous assumption that it should treat his prior conviction for a walkaway escape from a halfway house as a qualifying felony for the career-offender adjustment. The court did not make this assumption without cause; that was the law of this circuit at the time.
See United States v. Bryant,
We affirmed Wyatt’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal, rejecting his argument that the walkaway escape was not a crime of violence under the career offender guideline.
United States v. Wyatt,
We also affirmed the district court’s subsequent denial of Wyatt’s first motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
Wyatt v. United States,
While Wyatt’s appeal from the denial of his first section 2255 motion was pending, he filed a
habeas corpus
petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the Western District of Texas based on the Supreme Court’s then-recent decision in
Chambers v. United States,
Based on those two cases, Wyatt asked in his section 2241 petition that his sentence be vacated because the sentencing court (in the Southern District of Illinois) had erred in concluding that his conviction for walking away from a halfway house was a qualifying violent crime for career offender status under the guidelines. The district court (in the Western District of Texas) determined that Wyatt could not bring a section 2241 petition challenging this sentencing error because the escape hаtch of section 2255(e) was not satisfied. 3 Wyatt v. Bragg, No. EP-09-CA-71-DB (W.D.Tex. Mar. 4, 2009). The Texas court also recharacterized Wyatt’s section 2241 petition as an application to file a successive section 2255 motion and transferred it to the Seventh Circuit. Id.
We issued an order transferring the matter to Wyatt’s pending appeal of his section 2255 action and construing it as a motion to amend the certificate of appealability.
4
Wyatt v. United States,
No. 09-1624 (7th Cir. Mar. 13, 2009). Although we characterized the transferred section 2241 petition as a request to amend the certificate of appealability in Wyatt’s appeal of his section 2255 motion, we ultimately did not treat it as such. Instead we concluded that it was improper for the Texas court to recharacterize the section 2241 petition, but we found that it would be pointless to transfer it back to the Western District of Texas where it had been considered and dismissed.
Wyatt II,
After we affirmed the denial of Wyatt’s first section 2255 motion, he filed in the Seventh Circuit his first application fоr permission to file a second or successive section 2255 motion, raising a stand-alone Chambers/Begay issue. See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3). As we have noted, Wyatt previously raised this issue in his first section 2255 appeal only in the context of ineffective assistance of counsel. We denied Wyatt’s application because Chambers and Begay did not announce constitutional rules but instead interpreted statutory terms. Wyatt’s application therefore failed to meet the standard for authorizing a second or successive section 2255 motion. See Wyatt v. United States, No. 10-2386 (7th Cir. June 15, 2010).
Wyatt then filed his third section 2241 petition in the Western District of Texas, this one also based on
Begay
and
Chambers.
As it had done before, the Texas district court determined that Wyatt could not bring this claim in a section 2241 рetition, and the court again recharacterized the petition as an application to file a second or successive section 2255 motion and transferred it to the Seventh Circuit.
Wyatt v. Bragg,
No. EP-10-CA-237-DB (W.D. Tex. June 29, 2010)
(Wyatt III).
We dismissed that transferred matter as duplicative of Wyatt’s first Seventh Circuit application for a second or successive section 2255 motiоn. We noted, however, that, “under this circuit’s law, Wyatt properly brought his
Begay/Chambers
claim under § 2241 in Texas, where the court has jurisdiction over his custodian.”
Wyatt v. United States,
No. 10-2607 (7th Cir. July 12, 2010).
See also Welch v. United States,
This tortured history brings us to Wyatt’s latest attempt to obtain relief from his sentence as a career offender, a status that he would not be assigned under current Supreme Court and Sеventh Circuit law. On November 1, 2010, Wyatt filed a Rule 33(a) motion for a new trial in the Southern District of Illinois, where he was originally sentenced. Wyatt argued that he was entitled to a new trial because Chambers and Begay constituted newly discovered evidence of his innocence. The district court found that Wyatt’s motion was untimely and that Supreme Court cases do not cоnstitute evidence. The court then concluded that Wyatt’s motion was an unauthorized successive collateral attack on his conviction and the court dismissed the motion for lack of jurisdiction. On appeal, we affirmed the district court. We noted that Wyatt had an appeal pending in the Fifth Circuit related to a prior dismissal of one of his section 2241 petitions in which he raised the same Chambers/Begay issue. Again citing our decision in Welch, we advised Wyatt that this was the proper vehicle for obtaining relief. See United States v. Wyatt, No. 10-3792 (7th Cir. April 4, 2011) (“Wyatt IV”) (Order affirming denial of Rule 33 motion).
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Before us now is Wyatt’s Petition for Rehearing in
Wyatt IV
as well as his December 22, 2011 request to convert his Rule 33 motion into an application for a successive section 2255 motion. Since we last advised Wyatt that his Fifth Circuit appeal was the proper avenue of relief, the Fifth Circuit has sidestepped the substantive question.
Wyatt v. Bragg,
The Supreme Court has held that the first decision about where a suit belongs is the law of the case, and that in the usual case another court should not respond by batting the suit back again.
Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp.,
Regardless of where the case рroceeds, it is doubtful that Wyatt has a viable claim for relief on collateral review at this stage of the proceedings. We now know from
Chambers
and
Begay
that if Wyatt had filed a petition for a writ of certiorari in his direct appeal, the Supreme Court likely would have ruled in his favor. We know from
Narvaez v. United States,
We have told Wyatt that section 2255 is not the proper vehicle for having his claim considered on the merits. Our denial of leave to file a second or successive section 2255 is not appealable and the district courts lack jurisdiction to consider a section 2255 motion by Wyatt. Therefore, Wyatt will get nowhere filing a section 2255 motion or an appliсation under section 2244(b) in the Seventh Circuit. See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(E) (“The grant or denial of an authorization by a court of appeals to file a second or successive application shall not be appealable and shall not be the subject of a petition for rehearing or for a writ of certiorari.”). The time has expired for Wyatt to file a petition for a writ of certiorari from Wyatt V, the Fifth Circuit’s dismissal of Wyatt’s appeal of his third section 2241 petition in the Western District of Texas.
The instant case, which came to us as a motion for a new trial, is not the correct vehicle for relief, and so we deny Wyatt’s Petition for Rehearing. We also deny his recent request to convert his Rulе 33 motion into an application for a successive section 2255 motion. For the reasons we stated in
Wyatt II,
he cannot meet the standards for a second or successive section 2255 motion. The district court in Texas repeatedly has declined to rule on Wyatt’s section 2241 petitions on the merits, instead erroneously recharacterizing his petitions as successive section 2255 claims. And the Fifth Circuit has held that it has no jurisdiction to review the district court’s orders transferring Wyatt’s claims to us.
See Wyatt V,
Wyatt would not be sentenced as a career offender today and likely would receive a substantially lower sentence; the taxpayer is footing the bill to keep Wyatt in prison far longer than Congress or the Sentencing Commission intended, but there is no longer any judicial procedure to remedy the situation. At this point, only the executive branch has the authority to grant Wyatt the relief he seeks.
See Herrera v. Collins,
Denied.
Notes
. Wyatt was convicted of one count of possession with intent to distribute more than 100 kilograms of marijuana, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The career offender finding by itself would have resulted in a sentencing guideline level of 37, which the sentencing court apparently reduced by three levels for acceptance of responsibility. The resulting offense level of 34, combined with Wyatt’s criminal history category of VI, rеsulted in a sentencing guidelines range of 262 to 327 months. If Wyatt had not been sentenced as a career offender, it is difficult to tell from the record as it stands what enhancements and reductions the court might have applied to his base level of 26. There is little doubt that the career offender enhancement significantly raised the guidelines range for Wyatt.
. Section 4B1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines defines the term "career offender," and section 4B1.2 defines the term "crime of violence” as it is used in section 4B1.1.
. Section 2255(e) provides: "An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a prisoner who is authorized to apply for relief by motion pursuant to this section, shall not be entertained if it appears that the applicant has failed to apply for relief, by motion, to the court which sentenced him, or that such court has denied him relief, unless it also appears that the remedy by motion is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.” This provision is commonly known as the "escape hatch” because it allows a prisoner to file an application for habeas corpus relief without first moving for section 2255 relief, and also allows a prisoner to apply for habeas corpus relief if section 2255 relief has already been denied, if section 2255 is "inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention.”
. Shortly after we entered this order, Wyatt filed a second section 2241 petition in the Western District of Texas, this time challenging his conviction under the Supreme Court’s then-recent decision in
Arizona v. Gant,
