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No. 10803758
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
United States v. Okechukwu Dimkpa
No. 10803758 · Decided March 3, 2026
No. 10803758·Fourth Circuit · 2026·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
March 3, 2026
Citation
No. 10803758
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 23-6245
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff – Appellee,
v.
OKECHUKWU DIMKPA,
Defendant – Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, at
Greensboro. Catherine C. Eagles, Chief District Judge. (1:19-cr-00443-CCE-1; 1:22-cv-
00770-CCE-LPA)
Argued: September 9, 2025 Decided: March 3, 2026
Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, and WYNN and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge Diaz
and Judge Wynn joined.
ARGUED: Blair T. Westover, THE LAW OFFICES OF BEAU B. BRINDLEY, Chicago,
Illinois, for Appellant. Julie C. Niemeier, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY, Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Beau B. Brindley,
THE LAW OFFICES OF BEAU B. BRINDLEY, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellant. Randall
S. Galyon, Acting United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY, Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appellee.
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PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
Dr. Okechukwu Dimkpa pled guilty to unlawfully distributing oxycodone in
violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Three years later, in Ruan v. United States, 597 U.S.
450 (2022), the Supreme Court held that § 841’s scienter provision requires the
government to prove that a physician knew he was acting in an unauthorized manner when
prescribing a controlled substance, such as oxycodone. Dimkpa then filed a § 2255 motion
challenging his convictions under § 841, arguing that his guilty plea was not knowing and
voluntary because he was not informed of the mens rea requirement articulated in Ruan.
The district court denied Dimkpa’s motion, finding that Dimkpa had procedurally
defaulted his Ruan-based claim by failing to raise it during his initial criminal proceeding,
and that he had not shown cause to overcome this default. Although Ruan had yet to be
decided when Dimkpa pled guilty, the district court reasoned, the legal basis for a Ruan-
style claim was reasonably available to Dimkpa at that time. Accordingly, Dimkpa’s mens
rea argument was not sufficiently novel to constitute cause for his procedural default. We
agree and therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
A.
Defendant Okechukwu Dimkpa, a physician, was charged with six counts of
unlawfully distributing oxycodone, a Schedule II controlled substance, in violation of 21
U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). That statute makes it a federal crime, “[e]xcept as authorized,” for any
person “knowingly or intentionally” to “manufacture, distribute, or dispense” a controlled
2
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substance. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Registered doctors may prescribe such substances to
their patients, but pursuant to federal regulations, “a prescription is only authorized when
a doctor issues it ‘for a legitimate medical purpose . . . acting in the usual course of his
professional practice.’” Ruan, 597 U.S. at 454 (alteration in original) (quoting 21 C.F.R.
§ 1306.04(a) (2021)).
Dimkpa’s charges corresponded to six instances in which he prescribed oxycodone
to the same patient. According to the government, those prescriptions were not
“authorized” under § 841 and were instead “outside the course of usual medical practice”
and “not medically legitimate.” J.A. 44–45. Dimkpa was aware, the government alleged,
that his patient was addicted to opioids – because his patient told him so – and nevertheless
continued to prescribe oxycodone. And each of the six prescriptions in question was issued
immediately after the patient tested positive for heroin or cocaine. Five days after receiving
the last of his oxycodone prescriptions from Dimkpa, the patient died of an opioid-involved
drug overdose. 1
Dimkpa pled guilty to all six charges in September 2019. At the plea hearing, the
district court informed Dimkpa that should the case proceed to trial, the government would
be required to prove each element of the charged § 841 offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
And that would include, the district court explained, proof that Dimkpa had acted in an
unauthorized manner by prescribing oxycodone “outside the usual course of professional
practice.” J.A. 60. But consistent with then-governing Fourth Circuit precedent, the
More specifically, a medical examiner determined that the patient died of “Acute
1
Combined Drug Toxicity (oxycodone, alprazolam).” J.A. 43.
3
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district court did not inform Dimkpa that the government would have to prove that he knew
his prescriptions were unauthorized as outside the bounds of professional practice. See
United States v. Hurwitz, 459 F.3d 463, 477–80 (4th Cir. 2006) (applying an objective
rather than subjective standard to a physician’s “good faith” defense that his prescriptions
were authorized).
Satisfied that Dimkpa’s guilty plea was knowing and voluntary, the district court
accepted it and sentenced Dimkpa to 46 months of imprisonment – the low end of the
applicable Sentencing Guidelines range – followed by three years of supervised release.
Dimkpa did not pursue a direct appeal.
B.
In June 2022, nearly three years after Dimkpa’s 2019 guilty plea, the Supreme Court
held in Ruan v. United States that a physician can be convicted under § 841 only if the
government proves that he “knowingly or intentionally acted in an unauthorized manner.”
597 U.S. at 457. Section 841, recall, makes it unlawful, “[e]xcept as authorized[,] . . . for
any person knowingly or intentionally . . . to manufacture, distribute, or dispense” a
controlled substance. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). In Ruan, the Supreme Court, citing the
“presumption of scienter,” held that § 841’s “knowingly or intentionally” mens rea applies
not only to the “manufacture, distribute, or dispense” clause, but also to the “except as
authorized” clause. 597 U.S. at 457–59. To convict a physician under § 841, in other
words, it is not enough that “a prescription was in fact not authorized”; the government
must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that “the doctor knew or intended that the
prescription was unauthorized.” Id. at 454–55 (emphasis in original).
4
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Dimkpa, proceeding pro se, moved to vacate his § 841 convictions pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 2255. He argued that his guilty plea was constitutionally invalid because the
district court did not inform him of the scienter requirement newly recognized in Ruan.
The government did not dispute that Dimkpa’s plea colloquy was inadequate under Ruan. 2
Instead, the government invoked the doctrine of procedural default. Dimkpa’s Ruan claim
was barred, the government argued, because it was not raised during Dimkpa’s initial
criminal proceeding or on direct appeal, and Dimkpa failed to overcome this default by
showing either cause and prejudice or actual innocence.
The district court agreed with the government and denied Dimkpa’s motion.
Dimkpa v. United States, 2023 WL 2349599, at *1 (M.D.N.C. Mar. 3, 2023). As the court
recounted, Dimkpa did not challenge the mens rea required to sustain a § 841 conviction
at the time he pled guilty, nor did he file a direct appeal from his convictions. Id. at *2, *4.
The claim was therefore procedurally defaulted, and could be raised in post-conviction
proceedings only if Dimkpa established a basis for excusing the default. Id. at *4. Relevant
here, the district court ruled that Dimkpa’s reliance on Ruan – new authority that post-
dated his guilty plea – was not enough to demonstrate cause under the cause and prejudice
standard. Id.
A claim based on intervening Supreme Court precedent can constitute cause for
purposes of procedural default, the court explained, but only if the claim is “so novel that
its legal basis [was] not reasonably available to counsel” before the Supreme Court’s
2
The government expressly conceded that Ruan applies retroactively on collateral
review, and that Dimkpa’s § 2255 motion was timely filed.
5
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decision and at the time the claim should have been raised. Id. (alteration in original)
(quoting Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. 1, 16 (1984)). And here, the district court concluded,
Dimpka’s Ruan-style claim was “reasonably available” at the time of his guilty plea in
2019, regardless of whether it could have succeeded under then-governing Fourth Circuit
precedent. See id. (“[A]lleged futility cannot serve as ‘cause’ for a procedural default . . . if
it means simply that a claim was unacceptable to that particular court at that particular
time.” (alteration in original) (quoting Whiteside v. United States, 775 F.3d 180, 185 (4th
Cir. 2014) (en banc))).
In 2019, the district court reasoned, the Supreme Court had not foreclosed Dimkpa’s
argument regarding the mens rea required to convict a physician under § 841. Id.
Moreover, other defendants had taken advantage of that opening, raising claims just like
Dimkpa’s around the time of Dimkpa’s guilty plea. Id. And finally, months before
Dimkpa’s plea colloquy, the Supreme Court had adopted a defendant’s very similar mens
rea argument under a different statute: In Rehaif v. United States, 588 U.S. 225 (2019),
the Supreme Court applied the same presumption of scienter it would rely on in Ruan and
held that in a prosecution under 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(2) for a “knowing” violation of 18
U.S.C. § 922(g), the government must prove not only that a defendant knew he possessed
a firearm but also that he knew he was within a class of persons prohibited from possessing
a firearm under § 922(g). 588 U.S. at 227, 229; see Dimkpa, 2023 WL 2349599, at *4 &
n.7 (discussing Rehaif). For these reasons, the district court concluded, the claim pressed
by Dimkpa in his § 2255 motion was reasonably available at the time of his plea and on
6
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direct review, and the intervention of Ruan did not qualify as cause for his failure to raise
the claim then. Dimkpa, 2023 WL 2349599, at *4. 3
Having determined that Dimkpa could not overcome his procedural default on the
basis of cause and prejudice, the district court turned to Dimkpa’s remaining argument:
that his procedural default could be excused by actual innocence. Id. at *5. But Dimkpa
could not prevail on that ground, either, the court concluded: “The inference that Dr.
Dimkpa knew prescribing these medicines was not appropriate is strong,” and Dimkpa
could not show that “in light of all the evidence available, ‘it is more likely than not that
no reasonable juror would have convicted him’ of any charge.” Id. (quoting Bousley v.
United States, 523 U.S. 614, 623 (1998)).
Accordingly, the district court ruled that the procedural default doctrine precluded
Dimkpa from asserting his Ruan-based claim on collateral review, and denied Dimkpa’s
motion to vacate his § 841 convictions. Id. at *6. The district court then issued Dimkpa a
certificate of appealability, and this timely appeal followed.
3
The district court did find that Dimkpa could satisfy the prejudice prong of the
cause and prejudice standard. His argument at sentencing focused on a claim that he did
not know his prescriptions were unauthorized – specifically, that he did not know
prescribing oxycodone to a patient using heroin and cocaine was medically inappropriate
if the patient had other legitimate medical needs supporting the prescription. Given that
argument, the district court explained, “Dimkpa probably would not have pled guilty if he
had realized the government would have to prove that he knew the distribution of
oxycodone was inappropriate.” Dimkpa, 2023 WL 2349599, at *4. But as the district court
correctly recognized, prejudice alone is insufficient to overcome a procedural default; the
cause prong must also be satisfied. Id.
7
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II.
We review the district court’s denial of a § 2255 motion de novo. United States v.
McKinney, 60 F.4th 188, 191 (4th Cir. 2023). On appeal, Dimkpa challenges only the
district court’s determination that he failed to show cause for his procedural default,
maintaining that his Ruan-based mens rea claim was sufficiently novel at the time he pled
guilty that his failure to raise it on direct review should be excused. 4 We disagree and
therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
A.
Habeas review should not take the place of an appeal. Bousley v. United States, 523
U.S. 614, 621 (1998). Accordingly, “[w]here a defendant has procedurally defaulted a
claim by failing to raise it on direct review, the claim may be raised in habeas only if the
defendant can first demonstrate either ‘cause’ and actual ‘prejudice,’ or that he is ‘actually
innocent.’” Id. at 622 (citations omitted). “[A] claim that ‘is so novel that its legal basis
is not reasonably available to counsel’ may constitute cause for a procedural default.” Id.
(quoting Reed, 468 U.S. at 16).
That “novelty” standard is a high one. Poyner v. Murray, 964 F.2d 1404, 1424 (4th
Cir. 1992). As the district court explained – and Dimkpa does not dispute – it is not enough
that at the time Dimkpa pled guilty, Fourth Circuit precedent foreclosed application of a
subjective scienter standard to § 841’s “except as authorized” clause. See Hurwitz, 459
F.3d at 477–80 (rejecting subjective “good faith” standard in favor of objective standard);
Dimkpa does not challenge the district court’s ruling that he failed to show actual
4
innocence.
8
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United States v. Smithers, 92 F.4th 237, 247 (4th Cir. 2024) (explaining, on direct review,
that it “would have been futile for [the defendant] to argue for a subjective standard” in the
Fourth Circuit before Ruan was decided). That kind of futility, the Supreme Court has held
– that a claim cannot prevail in front of a specific court at a particular point in time – cannot
qualify as cause for a procedural default. Bousley, 523 U.S. at 623. Nor is it enough that
this issue was unsettled in 2019, when Dimkpa entered his plea. The law is “often in a
state of flux,” and the “mere fact that certain legal principles are unsettled” at the relevant
time “does not deprive a competent attorney of a ‘reasonable basis’ for asserting a claim.”
United States v. Gaylor, 828 F.2d 253, 256–57 (4th Cir. 1987). “[T]he question is not
whether subsequent legal developments have made counsel’s task easier, but whether at
the time of the default the claim was ‘available’ at all.” Smith v. Murray, 477 U.S. 527,
537 (1986).
In Reed v. Ross, 468 U.S. 1 (1984), the Supreme Court identified three situations in
which “the novelty of a claim could constitute cause,” McKinney, 60 F.4th at 194:
First, a decision of the Supreme Court may explicitly overrule one of its
precedents. Second, a decision may overturn a longstanding and widespread
practice to which the Supreme Court has not spoken, but which a near-
unanimous body of lower court authority has expressly approved. And,
finally, a decision may disapprove [of] a practice the Supreme Court
arguably has sanctioned in prior cases.
Id. (cleaned up) (quoting Reed, 468 U.S. at 17). Dimkpa relies heavily on these Reed
categories in making his argument, and we agree that this framework may helpfully inform
the inquiry into whether a claim is so “novel” that it was not “reasonably available” at the
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time of a default. But as subsequent Supreme Court precedent makes clear, the Reed
categories may not be dispositive, and the analysis does not stop there.
As our court has explained, after the Supreme Court decided Reed, it “elaborated on
just what constitutes a novel claim” in Bousley v. United States. United States v. Sanders,
247 F.3d 139, 144–45 (4th Cir. 2001). There, the Court held that a claim about the scope
of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)’s prohibition on “use” of a firearm was “reasonably available” for
years before it was adopted by the Supreme Court. Id. (citing Bousley, 523 U.S. at 616,
622–23). In reaching that conclusion, the Court did not reference the Reed categories.
Instead, it focused directly on the bottom-line inquiry: Was the “legal basis” for the
defendant’s claim “reasonably available to counsel” at the time of the default? Bousley,
523 U.S. at 622; see Sanders, 247 F.3d at 144. And while the Court recognized that its
decision narrowing the scope of § 924(c)(1) in Bailey v. United States, 516 U.S. 137
(1995), had “changed the relevant legal landscape,” it still concluded that the basis for the
petitioner’s claim was “reasonably available” years before Bailey was decided,
emphasizing that other defendants already were raising Bailey-style claims. Sanders, 247
F.3d at 145 (citing Bousley, 523 U.S. at 622–23).
Consistent with that approach, we have held that a claim is not sufficiently “novel”
to qualify as cause for a default where prior Supreme Court decisions provided a defendant
with the “essential legal tools” for his claim. Sanders, 247 F.3d at 146. Even if it is only
later that the Supreme Court actually settles the issue, in other words, a claim is “reasonably
available” if prior precedent “laid the basis for” it. Engle v. Isaac, 456 U.S. 107, 131–33
(1982); see, e.g., Turner v. Jabe, 58 F.3d 924, 929 (4th Cir. 1995). And the fact that other
10
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defendants “perceived and litigated” similar claims around the same time indicates that a
claim is not so “novel” that it can excuse a default. Engle, 456 U.S. at 134; see, e.g.,
Bousley, 523 U.S. at 622–23, 623 n.2; Sanders, 247 F.3d at 145; Turner, 58 F.3d at 929.
B.
Against that background, we turn to Dimkpa’s contention that his claim was
sufficiently “novel” to constitute cause for his 2019 default. We appreciate that it was not
until three years later that the Supreme Court embraced Dimkpa’s position in Ruan. And
we recognize, as Dimkpa argues, that Ruan’s endorsement of a subjective mens rea
requirement for § 841’s “except as authorized” clause “changed the law in this circuit” and
many others. United States v. Kim, 71 F.4th 155, 160 (4th Cir. 2023). But that alone is not
enough to establish cause in this case.
In our 2006 decision in Hurwitz, we adopted what we believed to be the consensus
position of the federal courts of appeals, holding that § 841 did not require the government
to prove that a doctor knew or intended to prescribe in an unauthorized manner, but only
that a doctor’s prescriptions were objectively unauthorized. 459 F.3d at 479 (“We believe
that the inquiry must be an objective one, a conclusion that has been reached by every court
to specifically consider the question.”). And it appears that this consensus only grew in
the years after Hurwitz was decided. See Brief for Defendant-Appellant at 21–22
(collecting cases). 5 So when Ruan held that the government was required in a § 841
5
Still, the consensus was not unanimous: The Seventh and the Ninth Circuits
required the government to prove that a doctor intended to act in an unauthorized manner.
See United States v. Chube II, 538 F.3d 693, 698 (7th Cir. 2008); United States v. Feingold,
454 F.3d 1001, 1008 (9th Cir. 2006).
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prosecution to prove that a doctor knowingly or intentionally acted in an unauthorized
manner, it abrogated the law in multiple circuits, including our own, see Smithers, 92 F.4th
at 250, and “changed the relevant legal landscape,” Sanders, 247 F.3d at 145. See Reed,
468 U.S. at 17 (describing category of cases in which a Supreme Court decision
“overturn[s] a longstanding and widespread practice to which [the Supreme Court] has not
spoken, but which a near-unanimous body of lower court authority has expressly
approved”).
But however strong this former circuit-court consensus, it did not place the “legal
basis” for Dimkpa’s Ruan-style challenge beyond the realm of “reasonable availability” at
the time of Dimkpa’s default. That is primarily because of an unusual feature of this case,
emphasized by the district court: Three months before Dimkpa pled guilty and six months
before he was sentenced, a strikingly similar mens rea claim was embraced by the Supreme
Court in Rehaif v. United States. See Dimkpa, 2023 WL 2349599, at *4 & n.7. Whatever
the state of play before Rehaif, after Rehaif, Dimkpa “plainly had at his disposal the
essential legal tools with which to construct his claim.” Sanders, 247 F.3d at 146.
Dimkpa’s claim, again, rests on the proposition that § 841’s “knowingly or
intentionally” mens rea modifies not only “manufacture, distribute, or dispense” – the
clause immediately following it – but also the preceding “except as authorized” clause. In
Rehaif, the Court considered an analogous (if slightly more ambitious) claim about the
scope of the word “knowingly” as used in 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(2), which penalizes anyone
who “knowingly” violates a different statute, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). 588 U.S. at 227.
Section 922(g), in turn, prohibits firearm possession by certain individuals, including
12
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convicted felons and noncitizens illegally in the United States. Id. The defendant in Rehaif
argued that § 924(a)(2)’s mens rea requirement applied across statutes to modify all
elements of an antecedent § 922(g) offense. And the Supreme Court agreed, holding that
§ 924(a)(2)’s “knowingly” modifier is not limited to the words immediately following it,
see Ruan, 597 U.S. at 461 (discussing Rehaif), and instead requires that “in a prosecution
under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) and § 924(a)(2), the [g]overnment must prove both that the
defendant knew he possessed a firearm and that he knew he belonged to the relevant
category of persons barred from possessing a firearm,” Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 237.
Despite these parallels, Rehaif might be less important here if the Supreme Court
had “carefully crafted [that] holding to avoid deciding whether [its] logic . . . applied
outside the context” of the particular statutory scheme at issue. United States v. Brown,
868 F.3d 297, 302 (4th Cir. 2017). But the Court in Rehaif did exactly the opposite. It
framed its holding as an application of broad and basic criminal law principles: the
“universal” understanding that “an injury is criminal only if inflicted knowingly,” and the
concomitant “longstanding” and “ordinary presumption in favor of scienter” when
construing criminal statutes. Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 229, 231. It situated its holding within a
“legion” of cases “emphasiz[ing] scienter’s importance in separating wrongful from
innocent acts.” Id. at 231. And it underscored that while the presumption of scienter
applies even when a statute specifies no mens rea, the presumption applies “with equal or
greater force” when – as in § 924(a)(2) in Rehaif, and § 841 in this case – Congress has
included a general scienter provision in the statutory scheme. Id. at 229.
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Those principles apply straightforwardly to Dimkpa’s Ruan-style claim. And we
know this because when the Supreme Court decided Ruan three years later, its reasoning
mirrored that of Rehaif, and it relied on Rehaif throughout. In Ruan, as in Rehaif, the Court
started from fundamental principles of criminal law: the maxim that “wrongdoing must be
conscious to be criminal” and the presumption of scienter. Ruan, 597 U.S. at 457–58
(citing Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 229). The Court observed, again, that because § 841 contains a
general scienter provision, the presumption of scienter “applies with equal or greater force”
in construing its scope. Id. at 458 (quoting Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 229). The Court
characterized Rehaif, specifically, as “[a]nalogous precedent” concerning “the mental state
that applies to a statutory clause” – in Ruan, the “except as authorized” clause – “that does
not immediately follow the scienter provision.” Id. at 461. And the Court concluded, as it
had before, that application of a scienter requirement would play a “crucial role” in
separating presumptively innocent acts (such as possession of a licensed firearm or
prescription of medication by a physician) from wrongful conduct. Id. at 458–59, 464
(citing Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 231–32).
Ruan was not, of course, a carbon copy of Rehaif. See id. at 468–73 (Alito, J.,
concurring in the judgment) (arguing that Rehaif is distinguishable). But “reasonable
availability” does not demand an exact match. See Gaylor, 828 F.2d at 256–57 (claim may
be “reasonably available” before an issue is settled by the Supreme Court). For procedural
default to apply, it is enough if a defendant and his counsel have available the “tools to
construct their [] claim.” Engle, 456 U.S. at 133. And months before Dimkpa pled guilty,
was sentenced, and forwent an appeal in 2019, Rehaif had given Dimkpa and his lawyer
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“the legal tools, i.e., case law, necessary to conceive and argue” a Ruan-style claim.
Poyner, 964 F.2d at 1424; see Sanders, 247 F.3d at 145–46 (applying similar reasoning to
find that Apprendi-style claims were “reasonably available” in years before Supreme Court
decided Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000)).
It is no surprise, then, that other defendants were raising Ruan-style claims well
before Ruan was decided. As the district court noted, defendants in the Fourth Circuit were
bringing such challenges around the time of Dimkpa’s default, Dimkpa, 2023 WL 2349599,
at *4, as were defendants in other circuits, see Response Brief of the United States at 19 &
n.2 (listing cases from the Fourth Circuit and other circuits). That other defendants already
were pursuing what would become Ruan claims is good evidence that “the foundation for
[Ruan] was laid” before Ruan was decided in 2022, Sanders, 247 F.3d at 145, and that
Dimkpa’s claim was not so “novel” that it can constitute cause for a default. See Bousley,
523 U.S. at 622 (reasoning that petitioner’s claim did not qualify as “novel” because “at
the time of petitioner’s plea, the Federal Reporters were replete with cases involving
[similar] challenges”).
Finally, we are unpersuaded by Dimkpa’s argument that his claim was not
“reasonably available” until Ruan was decided because Ruan overturned the Supreme
Court’s prior precedent in United States v. Moore, 423 U.S. 122 (1975), or at least
“disapprove[d] [of] a practice [the Supreme Court] arguably ha[d] sanctioned” in Moore.
Reed, 468 U.S. at 17 (identifying situations in which claim might not be reasonably
available to petitioner). Ruan did not overrule Moore. Instead, it distinguished it: “[T]he
question in Moore was whether doctors could ever be held criminally liable under § 841.
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Moore did not directly address the question before us here regarding the mens rea required
to convict under the statute.” Ruan, 597 U.S. at 466 (emphasis in original) (citation
omitted). Moreover, the Court expressly rejected the argument Dimkpa now advances,
pressed in Ruan by the government: that Moore had “effectively endorsed” an objective
scienter standard. See id. Given the Supreme Court’s own analysis of its precedent, we
are not at liberty to adopt a contrary view and find that Moore sanctioned the objective
standard later disapproved of in Ruan.
This case is thus distinguishable from United States v. McKinney, in which we found
cause for a petitioner’s default of a vagueness challenge to the residual clause of 18 U.S.C.
§ 924(c) in the years before the Supreme Court invalidated a similar residual clause in
Johnson v. United States, 576 U.S. 591 (2015). See McKinney, 60 F.4th at 191, 193–95.
Until 2015, we explained, Supreme Court precedent had “effectively foreclosed” such a
claim, “affirmatively uph[olding] the constitutionality of residual clauses like the one at
issue.” Id. at 194. A claim “foreclosed” by binding Supreme Court precedent may well be
“unavailable” in a way that constitutes cause for a default. See id.; Reed, 468 U.S. at 17.
Here, however, the Supreme Court has expressly instructed that its decision in Moore did
not even address, let alone foreclose, the mens rea claim Dimkpa defaulted. Ruan, 597
U.S. at 466.
Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the legal basis for Dimkpa’s mens
rea claim was “reasonably available to him” at the time he pled guilty and then failed to
pursue a direct appeal. His failure to assert that claim was therefore a procedural default
for which no cause can be shown, and on that ground, collateral relief is precluded.
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USCA4 Appeal: 23-6245 Doc: 62 Filed: 03/03/2026 Pg: 17 of 17
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
17
Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 23-6245 Doc: 62 Filed: 03/03/2026 Pg: 1 of 17 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 23-6245 Doc: 62 Filed: 03/03/2026 Pg: 1 of 17 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
02(1:19-cr-00443-CCE-1; 1:22-cv- 00770-CCE-LPA) Argued: September 9, 2025 Decided: March 3, 2026 Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, and WYNN and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
03Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge Diaz and Judge Wynn joined.
04Niemeier, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Greensboro, North Carolina, for Appellee.
Frequently Asked Questions
USCA4 Appeal: 23-6245 Doc: 62 Filed: 03/03/2026 Pg: 1 of 17 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for United States v. Okechukwu Dimkpa in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on March 3, 2026.
Use the citation No. 10803758 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.