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When I first turned my eye toward law school and the criminal justice system, the echoing refrain was that we, in this country, were the best. The criminal justice system, the jury system, the resources, the level of intelligence on both sides of the aisle on the bench all combined to create the best that the world had to offer. Law school, immersing us in the vagaries and nuances of Constitutional and criminal law, making us read and learn awe-inspiring quotes from Justices past, only served to reinforce that notion.

We were fooled. Years later, with years of practice and actual experience under my belt, I’ve come to the conclusion that while the system may still be the “best” in the world, it is only so by comparison to the others that are currently in existence (and even that I doubt, but since I’m no comparative law scholar, what do I know?). That makes me sad, both for the systems of other countries and our own.

There are two indelible truths about the system here in the US: it is the criminal conviction system and finality is king (an idea that deserves a fuller post; upcoming).

And when you combine those two inescapable conclusions, you get Lee v. Lampert (pdf). Lee, you see, got stuck in that quagmire that is AEDPA. Lee, you may also see, has proven that he is actually innocent of the crimes of which he stands convicted. And yet, because he missed the statutory, non-jurisdictional, arbitrary deadline for filing a federal habeas corpus petition, he will get no justice.

The case is troubling for several reasons, but mostly it serves as an example of the ridiculous and arbitrary nature of filing deadlines. Lee, who filed his first Federal habeas petition, will not get the benefit of the “innocence exception” to the statute of limitations.

On the other hand, if Lee had filed a successive or second Federal petition and could show that he was actually innocent, the missed deadline would be forgiven. If Lee had procedurally defaulted in State court, he could avail himself of the actual innocence exception and receive review and relief.

But since Lee timely filed a State petition and this was only his first Federal petition, his actual innocence means nothing to the judges on the Ninth Circuit.

AEDPA is poor legislation at its finest. When courts can rely on flimsy statutes of limitations and even flimsier rationales to look an innocent man straight in the eye and say “sorry, you didn’t make your innocence argument before end of business today, so you’re SOL”, something’s gone horribly wrong.

A distaste for those caught elastic arms of the law, a false reliance on notions of “finality” and a “conviction at all costs” culture has brought us to this nauseating point.

the actual innocence exception arises from the judiciary’s equitable discretion, not the Constitution. Murray v. Carrier, 477 U.S. 478, 496 (1986) (“Accordingly,  we think that in an extraordinary case, where a constitutional violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent, a federal habeas court may grant the writ even in the absence of a showing of cause for the procedural default.”) (emphasis added); Schlup, 513 U.S. at  314-17 (not mentioning constitutional concerns while formulating exception); id. 324-27 (not mentioning constitutional concerns in holding that Sawyer standard was too strict for actual innocence inquiry); House, 547 U.S. at 536-38 (not mentioning constitutional concerns while formulating exception). We   decline to rule otherwise and instead follow Ferguson: AEDPA’s statute of limitations without an actual innocence exception does not violate the Suspension  Clause. Consequently, we conclude that there is no Schlup actual innocence exception to override AEDPA’s statute of limitations. Lee’s habeas petition is thus  time-barred and must be dismissed.

Since there now seems to be a Circuit split, one can only hope that SCOTUS has the courage to look an innocent man in the eye and say “finality be damned, justice shall be served”.

Via C&F, Gamso too.

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