Bowe v. United States | Case No. 24-5438 | Oral Argument Date: 10/14/25 | Docket Link: Here
Questions Presented:
- Whether 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(1) applies to a claim presented in a second or successive motion to vacate under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
- Whether 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(3)(E) deprives this Court of certiorari jurisdiction over the grant or denial of an authorization by a court of appeals to file a second or successive motion to vacate under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
Overview
This episode examines Bowe v. United States, where the government concedes error but argues the Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction to correct it. The case explores whether the "do-over bar" in AEDPA applies to federal prisoners and whether an acknowledged legal error will go unremedied due to jurisdictional barriers.
Episode Roadmap
Opening: An Acknowledged Error Without a Remedy
- Government's unusual position: conceding error but claiming the Court can't fix it
- Michael Bowe's years-long struggle to challenge his conviction
- Constitutional context: Ex Post Facto Clause and retroactive application of Davis and Taylor
The Two Questions Presented
Question One: Does the do-over bar (§ 2244(b)(1)) apply to federal prisoners even though it references only state prisoner applications under § 2254?
Question Two: Does § 2244(b)(3)(E) bar Supreme Court certiorari review of authorization decisions for federal prisoners?
Background: Michael Bowe's Journey
- 2008: Pled guilty including Section 924(c) conviction (using firearm during crime of violence)
- 2019: Davis strikes down residual clause; Bowe seeks authorization but Eleventh Circuit denies based on circuit precedent
- 2022: Taylor abrogates that precedent; Bowe seeks authorization again
- 2022: Eleventh Circuit dismisses under do-over bar in In re Baptiste
- 2024: Third authorization request denied; all alternatives rejected
- 2025: Supreme Court grants certiorari; government switches position
Legal Framework
Section 2255: Federal prisoner post-conviction relief vehicle
Section 2244: Originally for state prisoners; contains:
- (b)(1): Do-over bar—bars claims "presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application under section 2254"
- (b)(3): Authorization procedures, including (b)(3)(E)'s certiorari bar
Section 2255(h): "Second or successive motion must be certified as provided in section 2244"—key question is what this incorporates
Circuit Split: Six circuits apply do-over bar to federal prisoners; three reject it
Petitioner's Main Arguments
Argument One: Plain Text Excludes Federal Prisoners
- Do-over bar explicitly references "section 2254" (state prisoners only)
- Federal prisoners use § 2255 motions, not § 2254 applications
- Section 2255(h) incorporates certification procedures only, not substantive bars
- Even Eleventh Circuit admits § 2255(h) doesn't incorporate § 2244(b)(2)—can't incorporate (b)(1) either since both use identical "section 2254" language
Argument Two: Federalism Explains Differential Treatment
- AEDPA repeatedly subjects state prisoners to stricter requirements
- State prisoner habeas implicates federalism and comity concerns
- Federal prisoners challenging federal convictions raise no federalism issues
- Do-over bar fits pattern of protecting state sovereignty, not restricting federal prisoner access
Argument Three: Court Has Jurisdiction
- No clear statement stripping jurisdiction for federal prisoners
- Eleventh Circuit "dismissed" rather than "denied"—certiorari bar covers only "grant or denial"
- No actual authorization determination made; court applied wrong legal standard
- Constitutional avoidance: barring all review raises Exceptions Clause concerns
- Circuit split needs resolution; federal prisoners lack alternative Supreme Court access unlike state prisoners
Respondent's Main Arguments
Argument One: Certiorari Bar Applies
- Section 2255(h) comprehensively incorporates § 2244(b)(3) as integrated whole
- All five subparagraphs use "authorization" language
- Castro implicitly recognized incorporation
- Cannot separate certiorari bar from rehearing bar
Argument Two: "Dismissal" Is "Denial"
- Plain meaning: "deny" means "refuse to grant"
- Binary framework: must "grant or deny" within 30 days—no third category
- Courts frequently style identical dispositions as "denials"
- Accepting distinction would create arbitrary geographic lottery
- Court acted on authorization request; applying wrong standard doesn't remove it from "authorization" category
Argument Three: No Constitutional Problem
- Common law provided no right to habeas appeal or successive attacks
- Felker rejected Exceptions Clause challenge for state prisoners
- Alternative mechanisms exist: certification, All Writs Act, potential district court review
- Bowe's claim is statutory (not constitutional), so doesn't satisfy § 2255(h)(2) anyway
- Preexisting doctrines (Sanders, law of case) prevent abuse without statutory bar
Key Points for Oral Arguments
- Justice reactions to government conceding error but claiming no remedy
- Practical consequences if do-over bar doesn't apply—floodgates or manageable?
- Whether ensuring circuit uniformity is "essential" Supreme Court jurisdiction
- Formalism of "dismissal" versus "denial" distinction
- Federalism pattern throughout AEDPA's structure
- What happens to thousands of potentially affected prisoners in six circuits?
Broader Implications
- Immediate impact on hundreds or thousands of federal prisoners
- Geographic lottery based on circuit precedent
- Statutory interpretation of AEDPA's cross-references and incorporation provisions
- Jurisdictional doctrine: clear statement rule and constitutional limits on jurisdiction-stripping
- Access to justice: when procedural barriers prevent meritorious claims
- Separation of powers: congressional authority to limit Supreme Court review