William C. Longbehn was convicted in 1988 of several drug-related offenses and sentenced to 60 years’ imprisonment, with the proviso that he would not be eligible for parole for 20 years. See
United States v. Longbehn,
After looking at Longbehn’s petition more closely, the district judge recognized that it is not properly a § 2241 action with the Parole Commission as respondent. For what Longbehn wants the judge to do is annul the portion of his sentence prohibiting parole until 20 years have been served. Such a challenge belongs in the sentencing court under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 — in this case, the District of Minnesota. The statutory escape hatch for cases in which § 2255 is “ineffective” to challenge the judgment or sentence (§ 2255 ¶ 5) does not assist Long-behn, for he could have raised his current contention on direct appeal or in a collateral attack on the sentence. See
In re Davenport,
After recognizing Longbehn’s petition for what it is — a successive collateral attack on the sentence (which leads us to identify the United States in the caption as the proper respondent) — the district court applied the formula in § 1915(b)(1) to set a partial filing fee as a condition of proceeding
in forma pauperis
on appeal. The court recognized that, having classified the action as a challenge to the sentence rather than to the action of the Parole Commission,
Newlin, Thunnan,
and
Martin v. United States,
Judge Crabb’s exercise of discretion is sound, and we commend her approach to other district judges. Because the plra does not apply to cases such as this, the rest of its mechanism — such as the collection of the remaining fee by periodic payments from prison accounts under § 1915(b)(2), and the three-strikes exclusion in 8 1915(g) — does not come into play. But every litigant has a legal responsibility to pay the filing and docketing fees to the extent feasible. All that permission to proceed
in forma pauper-is
has ever meant is that the fees need not be prepaid.
Luden v. DeTella,
Longbehn has paid the sum the district court assessed and is entitled to prosecute the appeal
in forma pauperis.
But his appeal is substantively frivolous. The district court saw through Longbehn’s stratagem: this is a third collateral attack on his sentence. Only the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit may authorize additional collateral litigation concerning Longbehn’s conviction or sentence. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244, 2255 ¶ 8;
Valona v. United States,
Affirmed.
