Didn’t read this yet, but that seems pretty surprising.

RT @[email protected]

The Fifth Circuit, in a published opinion by Judge Oldham, has held that prisoners with *meritorious* constitutional objections to their conviction or sentence can’t prevail in post-conviction federal habeas petitions unless they show “factual innocence.”

https://utexas.box.com/s/jrqx68xf2wnze2g9w8zyogj4342kuu53

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/steve_vladeck/status/1603581422429949952

Crawford.pdf - Box

Is this whole holding about the new limits on habeas dicta?
I’m not enough of an expert on criminal law to know, but what would be left of habeas if this is the law - basically nothing, right?

How much of habeas practice is about claims of actual innocence?

I really don’t know what it can’t be much.

Definitely seems to be.

@RMFifthcircuit

I think it's an alternative holding? See, e.g., the final paragraph of the opinion ("Crawford unquestionably raped a 17-year-old girl. AEDPA and “law and justice” both require denying his request for federal habeas relief.")

Of course, there's little chance of cert because of the AEDPA vehicle problems, so it will presumably be circuit law until a better case arises. /1

@RMFifthcircuit

And the holding seems truly bonkers. If I'm reading it correctly, a state could pass a law prohibiting "criticizing the governor," convict and imprison someone for violating it, and even though the law would obv. be unconsitutional under clearly established S. Ct. precedent, the petitioner couldn't get habeas b/c he was "factually guilty."

I suppose one answer is that in that egregious a case, the conviction would presumably be reversed on direct appeal, but still... /x

@RMFifthcircuit

cc: @LeahLitman - if you're using your Mastodon account, any thoughts on this thread about the latest 5th Cir. #habeas decision?