WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Defendant-Appellant Richard F. “Dick-ie” Scruggs appeals the denial of his § 2255 motion challenging one of his two convictions for bribing a judge. We affirm.
I. Facts & Proceedings
Scruggs made both a name and a fortune as a plaintiffs’ attorney in asbestos and tobacco litigation. Along the way, he became entangled in many fee-sharing disputes with co-counsel, one of which resulted in a lawsuit filed by Roberts Wilson in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi (“the
Wilson
Case”). Robert “Bobby” DeLaughter, best known first for successfully prosecuting Byron De La Beckwith for murdering civil rights leader Medgar Evers, sat on the Circuit Court of Hinds County, where he was assigned the
Wilson
Case and his path crossed with Scruggs.
Scruggs wanted a sure thing in the
Wilson
Case, having recently lost a similar fee fight. As the presiding judge, DeLaughter could put his finger on the scales. De-Laughter coveted a federal Article III judgeship more than anything else; as the brother-in-law of then-United State Senator Trent Lott, Scruggs could influence the person who sent candidates to the President. In early 2006, Scruggs retained Ed Peters, a close friend and mentor of De-Laughter’s, as a secret go-between who conveyed an offer: If DeLaughter would help Scruggs win the
Wilson
Case, Scruggs would recommend DeLaughter to Lott for a district court judgeship.
DeLaughter kept his end of the bargain: When Scruggs badly needed a trial continuance, DeLaughter entered, verbatim, a scheduling order prepared by one of Scruggs’s attorneys, despite having disclaimed input from either party. De-Laughter also reviewed yet-to-be-filed motions for Scruggs, advising how he would rule and which arguments needed work.
During 2006, three judicial vacancies opened on Mississippi federal district courts. In March 2006, after being passed over for nomination to one of those seats, DeLaughter relayed his dissatisfaction and concern that “he was doing his part of the bargain and that ... Scruggs was not going to fulfill his part of the deal.” Immediately thereafter, Scruggs had Senator Lott call DeLaughter. Although the record suggests that Lott did not say that DeLaughter was being considered, De-Laughter nonetheless came away with the impression that he was in the running for the seat.
Mollified that Scruggs was keeping his end of the bargain, DeLaughter continued secretly to tilt the- scales in the
Wilson
Case'. When Wilson filed a potentially dis-positive motion asking DeLaughter to quantify the amount of fees Scruggs still owed, Scruggs’s attorneys did not know whether to oppose the motion and pursue a full trial or to agree to submit the quantification issue to the judge. DeLaughter assured them that Scruggs would win the quantification motion, and he did. After faxing a preview of his order to Scruggs’s counsel, DeLaughter held that Scruggs owed no more than he had already paid and denied Wilson’s motion for. reconsideration without comment. But the quantification order was so favorable that even Scruggs’s attorneys worried that it could not be affirmed on appeal, so Scruggs settled the
Wilson
Case before appeal with the help of DeLaughter, who revealed Wilson’s confidential settlement position.
These machinations came to light when members of Scruggs’s legal team began cooperating with the government’s investigation of an unrelated judicial bribery scheme. A grand jury returned an indict
ment charging Scruggs and DeLaughter with one count of conspiracy to commit federal programs bribery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 666, and three counts of aiding and abetting honest-services mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1346.
The honest-services counts in the indictment alleged “a scheme and artifice to secretly and corruptly influence” De-Laughter, thus “depriving [Wilson] and the citizens of the State of Mississippi of their intangible right to [his] honest services.” In particular, the indictment alleged that Scruggs prevailed on Lott to consider De-Laughter, and “in return” DeLaughter provided secret access and favorable treatment.
Scruggs pleaded guilty to a superseding information charging him with a single count of aiding and abetting honest-services mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1346. Like the original indictment, the information alleged a scheme corruptly to influence DeLaughter and deprive the citizens of Mississippi of their right to his honest services, describing Scruggs’s call to Lott on DeLaughter’s behalf. But the Information omitted that which DeLaughter did for Scruggs “in return.”
Pursuant to a plea agreement, the charges in the indictment were dismissed. Scruggs was sentenced to imprisonment for seven years, concurrent with a prior five-year term for conspiring to bribe another judge who was presiding over a different fee dispute.
On June 24, 2010, the Supreme Court issued
Skilling v. United States
in which it addressed the constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. § 1346, the honest-services statute.
Section 1346 states that “the term ‘scheme or artifice to defraud’ includes a scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.” To avoid problems of constitutional vagueness with this definition, the Court in
Skilling
limited the application of the statute to paradigmatic bribery and kickback schemes only.
In June 2011, Scruggs filed a motion to vacate his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, contending in light of
Skilling
that, as he did not admit to bribing Judge DeLaughter, he is not guilty of a crime.
The district court concluded that, by pleading guilty, Scruggs had procedurally defaulted on that claim. After a two-day evidentiary hearing, the district court issued a thorough 48-page opinion denying the § 2255 motion because Scruggs had not shown either his actual innocence or cause and, prejudice. The district court issued a certificate of appealability on the issue of ‘‘actual innocence” and “other issues in the opinion,” and Scruggs timely filed a notice of appeal.
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
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WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Defendant-Appellant Richard F. “Dick-ie” Scruggs appeals the denial of his § 2255 motion challenging one of his two convictions for bribing a judge. We affirm.
I. Facts & Proceedings
Scruggs made both a name and a fortune as a plaintiffs’ attorney in asbestos and tobacco litigation. Along the way, he became entangled in many fee-sharing disputes with co-counsel, one of which resulted in a lawsuit filed by Roberts Wilson in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi (“the
Wilson
Case”). Robert “Bobby” DeLaughter, best known first for successfully prosecuting Byron De La Beckwith for murdering civil rights leader Medgar Evers, sat on the Circuit Court of Hinds County, where he was assigned the
Wilson
Case and his path crossed with Scruggs.
Scruggs wanted a sure thing in the
Wilson
Case, having recently lost a similar fee fight. As the presiding judge, DeLaughter could put his finger on the scales. De-Laughter coveted a federal Article III judgeship more than anything else; as the brother-in-law of then-United State Senator Trent Lott, Scruggs could influence the person who sent candidates to the President. In early 2006, Scruggs retained Ed Peters, a close friend and mentor of De-Laughter’s, as a secret go-between who conveyed an offer: If DeLaughter would help Scruggs win the
Wilson
Case, Scruggs would recommend DeLaughter to Lott for a district court judgeship.
DeLaughter kept his end of the bargain: When Scruggs badly needed a trial continuance, DeLaughter entered, verbatim, a scheduling order prepared by one of Scruggs’s attorneys, despite having disclaimed input from either party. De-Laughter also reviewed yet-to-be-filed motions for Scruggs, advising how he would rule and which arguments needed work.
During 2006, three judicial vacancies opened on Mississippi federal district courts. In March 2006, after being passed over for nomination to one of those seats, DeLaughter relayed his dissatisfaction and concern that “he was doing his part of the bargain and that ... Scruggs was not going to fulfill his part of the deal.” Immediately thereafter, Scruggs had Senator Lott call DeLaughter. Although the record suggests that Lott did not say that DeLaughter was being considered, De-Laughter nonetheless came away with the impression that he was in the running for the seat.
Mollified that Scruggs was keeping his end of the bargain, DeLaughter continued secretly to tilt the- scales in the
Wilson
Case'. When Wilson filed a potentially dis-positive motion asking DeLaughter to quantify the amount of fees Scruggs still owed, Scruggs’s attorneys did not know whether to oppose the motion and pursue a full trial or to agree to submit the quantification issue to the judge. DeLaughter assured them that Scruggs would win the quantification motion, and he did. After faxing a preview of his order to Scruggs’s counsel, DeLaughter held that Scruggs owed no more than he had already paid and denied Wilson’s motion for. reconsideration without comment. But the quantification order was so favorable that even Scruggs’s attorneys worried that it could not be affirmed on appeal, so Scruggs settled the
Wilson
Case before appeal with the help of DeLaughter, who revealed Wilson’s confidential settlement position.
These machinations came to light when members of Scruggs’s legal team began cooperating with the government’s investigation of an unrelated judicial bribery scheme. A grand jury returned an indict
ment charging Scruggs and DeLaughter with one count of conspiracy to commit federal programs bribery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 666, and three counts of aiding and abetting honest-services mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1346.
The honest-services counts in the indictment alleged “a scheme and artifice to secretly and corruptly influence” De-Laughter, thus “depriving [Wilson] and the citizens of the State of Mississippi of their intangible right to [his] honest services.” In particular, the indictment alleged that Scruggs prevailed on Lott to consider De-Laughter, and “in return” DeLaughter provided secret access and favorable treatment.
Scruggs pleaded guilty to a superseding information charging him with a single count of aiding and abetting honest-services mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1346. Like the original indictment, the information alleged a scheme corruptly to influence DeLaughter and deprive the citizens of Mississippi of their right to his honest services, describing Scruggs’s call to Lott on DeLaughter’s behalf. But the Information omitted that which DeLaughter did for Scruggs “in return.”
Pursuant to a plea agreement, the charges in the indictment were dismissed. Scruggs was sentenced to imprisonment for seven years, concurrent with a prior five-year term for conspiring to bribe another judge who was presiding over a different fee dispute.
On June 24, 2010, the Supreme Court issued
Skilling v. United States
in which it addressed the constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. § 1346, the honest-services statute.
Section 1346 states that “the term ‘scheme or artifice to defraud’ includes a scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.” To avoid problems of constitutional vagueness with this definition, the Court in
Skilling
limited the application of the statute to paradigmatic bribery and kickback schemes only.
In June 2011, Scruggs filed a motion to vacate his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, contending in light of
Skilling
that, as he did not admit to bribing Judge DeLaughter, he is not guilty of a crime.
The district court concluded that, by pleading guilty, Scruggs had procedurally defaulted on that claim. After a two-day evidentiary hearing, the district court issued a thorough 48-page opinion denying the § 2255 motion because Scruggs had not shown either his actual innocence or cause and, prejudice. The district court issued a certificate of appealability on the issue of ‘‘actual innocence” and “other issues in the opinion,” and Scruggs timely filed a notice of appeal.
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
“In reviewing a district court’s denial of a motion to vacate sentence under § 2255, we review questions of fact for clear error and questions of law de novo.”
B. Merits
Scruggs pleaded guilty. A voluntary and unconditional guilty plea waives
all non-jurisdictional defects.
Not surprisingly, then, most of the issues raised by Scruggs in this appeal are attempts to evade that waiver.
He first tries to parlay
Skilling
into a challenge to the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction; he then attempts to excuse his procedural default; and finally, he challenges the constitutionality of the honest-services statute. The district court rejected each argument, and we agree.
1. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
After
Skilling,
honest-services fraud requires proof of a bribe.
Because his information does not use the word “bribe,” Scruggs urges that it no longer charges an offense. Therefore, he contends, the district court had no jurisdiction over his “non-offense” and could not accept his guilty plea. Scruggs understandably leads off with this assertion because subject matter jurisdiction “can never be forfeited or waived.”
This contention is no more successful now, however, than it was when Dickie’s son Zach raised it in
United States v.
Scruggs.
As we explained in Zach’s case, Scruggs “confuses a failure of fact with want of power to adjudicate” and does not implicate subject matter jurisdiction.
Subject matter jurisdiction, or the “court’s power to hear a case,”
is straightforward in the criminal context. Title 18 U.S.C. § 3231 grants “original jurisdiction ... of all offenses against the laws of the United States” to the district courts.
To invoke that grant of subject matter jurisdiction, an “ ‘indictment need only charge a defendant with an offense against the United States in language similar to that used by the relevant statute.’ ”
That is the extent of the jurisdictional analysis: “[A] federal criminal case is within the subject matter jurisdiction of the district court if the indictment charges ... that the defendant committed a crime described in Title 18 or in one of the other statutes defining federal crimes.”
In charging Scruggs with honest-services mail fraud under § 1346, the information used the language of that stat
ute, which
Skilling
did not change.
The district court thus had subject matter jurisdiction over this case. Although there was no express allegation of a
quid pro quo
bribe, the Supreme Court has held unequivocally in
United States v. Cotton
that “defects in an indictment do not deprive a court of its power to adjudicate a case.”
“[T]he objection that the indictment does not charge a crime against the United States goes only to the merits of the case” and does not affect subject matter jurisdiction.
Even though
Skilling
might have “rendered the instant information
factually
insufficient, it did not divest the district court of subject matter jurisdiction over the case.”
All that Scruggs can really say is that, as a factual matter, the allegations of the information no longer suffice to allege honest-services fraud in light of
Skilling.
This is simply not a jurisdictional argument, and none of the cases that might appear to hold otherwise withstand scrutiny.
Scruggs first cites
United States v. Meacham,
an old,
pre-Cotton
case, in which we vacated a conviction based on a guilty plea to. the non-existent crime of “conspiracy to attempt” to import drugs.
We did so because “entry of a guilty plea does not act as a waiver of jurisdictional defects such as an indictment’s failure to charge an offense.”
In light of
Cotton,
we have disavowed
Meacham’s
“classification] as jurisdictional the requirement that the indictment state an offense.”
Meac-ham
does not help Scruggs.
He next cites
United States v. Roscir-Ortiz,
in which the First Circuit stated that a district court “lacks jurisdiction to enter a judgment of conviction when the indictment charges no offense under federal law whatsoever.”
But the First Circuit has abandoned that holding as “an awkward locution” inconsistent with
Cotton.
As that court later explained, the factual failure of an indictment to charge an offense is not a jurisdictional flaw in “the district court’s power to adjudicate the case.”
Scruggs lastly relies on the Eleventh Circuit decision in
United States v.
Peter.
The defendant in
Peter
pleaded guilty to a RICO conspiracy predicated on a single count of mail fraud that was based on misrepresentations in a liquor license application.
The Supreme Court later held
that state licenses are not property for the purposes of the mail fraud statute, thus undermining the conviction in
Peter.
The Eleventh Circuit concluded that this caused a jurisdictional defect in the defendant’s indictment: As “the indictment consisted only of specific conduct that, as a matter of law, was outside the sweep of the charging statute,” this defect went to the jurisdiction of the district court.
Although
Peter
acknowledged
Cotton,
it attempted to limit the Supreme Court’s holding to defects based on omissions from an indictment rather than on a factual failure to charge an offense.
In
Scruggs,
we implied reservations about
“Peter’s
fidelity to
Cotton.”
Subsequently, the Tenth Circuit issued a thoughtful opinion in
United States v. De Vaughn,
rejecting
Peter
for its inconsistency with
Cotton.
De Vaughn
carefully analyzed
Cotton
and the authorities on which it relied, then rejected
“Peter’s
overly narrow reading of Cotton.”
We agree with that reasoning.
Cotton
unambiguously declared that a defective indictment does not deprive a district court of subject matter jurisdiction.
We join the Tenth Circuit in holding that
Peter
was wrongly decided and cannot be squared with
Cotton.
To summarize, nothing about
Skilling
has any effect on the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction over Scruggs’s guilty plea. As there is no jurisdictional problem, and as Scruggs pleaded guilty, we consider whether he has shown an exception for his procedural default.
2. Procedural Default
“It is well settled that a voluntary and intelligent plea of guilty ... may not be collaterally attacked.”
Scruggs pleaded guilty, took no direct appeal, and never contended that § 1346 was unconstitutionally vague. To pursue this collateral attack, therefore, he must show “cause and prejudice or that he is actually innocent.”
He attempts to demonstrate the presence of both.
a. Cause and Prejudice
Scruggs claims that our pre-Skill-
ing
precedent precluded any assertion that his information did not charge a crime, so he was prohibited from raising the issue at that time. But “futility cannot constitute cause if it means simply that a claim was unacceptable to that particular court at that particular time.”
Indeed, Scruggs could have challenged the honest-services statute as unconstitutionally vague, just as did Skilling.
In fact, parties routinely raise arguments to preserve them for.further review despite binding authority to the contrary. We join other circuits and
the overwhelming majority of district courts in recognizing no cause for procedural default of a Skilling-type challenge to § 1346.
And, as Scruggs has not shown cause, we need not and therefore do not reach prejudice.
b. Actual Innocence
Scruggs professes in the alternative that he is actually innocent of honest-services fraud. The district court rejected this claim, concluding that Scruggs actually bribed Judge DeLaughter. Scruggs contends that the district court erred on both the law and the facts by (1) requiring him to show innocence on a bribery theory of honest-services fraud to which he did not plead guilty, and (2) finding a
quid pro quo
exchange when none existed. We address each contention in turn.
i. Actual Innocence of Honest-Services Fraud Under What Theory?
A § 2255 petitioner must show that he is factually innocent of both (1) the charges to which he pleaded guilty and (2) any “more serious” charges forgone by the government in the course of plea bargaining.
The petitioner need not, however, show actual innocence of alternative theories not charged in the information or indictment.
The district court concluded that because Scruggs pleaded guilty to honest-services fraud, he must show actual innocence of honest-services fraud as it is now limited,
viz.,
under a bribery theory. Scruggs disagrees and insists that he should not have to show actual innocence of bribery because (1) the one-count information did not allege a bribery theory, and (2) the counts in the dismissed indictment, although bribery-based, were not “more serious.”
Citing our opinion in
United States v. Arreola-Ramos,
Scruggs suggests that a crime’s statutory maximum sentence is the measure of that crime’s “seriousness.”
He insists that, because the charges in his original indictment and in his superseding information were all honest-services fraud charges with the same twenty-year statutory maximum, the dismissed charges were only “as serious as,” not “more serious than,” the charge to which he pleaded.
But, in
Arreola-Ramos
we assessed
“seriousness” by cumulating the statutory máximums for all of the forgone counts and all of the pleaded counts to determine the petitioner’s “maximum exposure” before and after the plea, not by comparing the highest single maximum sentence on each side.
Although
Arreola-Ramos
is unpublished and thus not precedential, we agree with its implicit reasoning based on a district court’s discretion to impose consecutive sentences on multiple counts.
Pursuant to the plea agreement in this case, the government dismissed three honest-services fraud counts in the indictment in exchange for Scruggs’s guilty plea to one honest-services fraud count in the superseding information. Three honest-services counts have a potential sentence of sixty years when assessed consecutively and are thus more serious than one count with a twenty-year maximum. Under
Bousley,
Scruggs was therefore required to show actual innocence of the honest-services counts in the original indictment, which he concedes charged a bribery theory that survives Skilling.
ii. Actual Innocence of Bribery
The burden is on the § 2255 petitioner to show that “in light of all the evidence it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him,”
“or, to remove the double negative, that more likely than not any reasonable juror would have reasonable doubt.”
In
Skilling,
the Court did not crystallize what constitutes a “paradigmatic bribe,” but it did observe that the “prohibition on bribes and kickbacks draws content” from case law and federal statutes.
And, the Court cited our decision in
United States v. Whitfield
as an example.
In that case, we considered honest-services fraud in the context of bribes disguised as campaign contributions to Mississippi state judges.
We assumed without deciding that, in the context of campaign contributions, the First Amendment requires proof of an express
quid pro quo
or a corrupt agreement to exchange something for a specific official act.
Because Scruggs insists that his exercise of influence on behalf of Judge DeLaughter was a political endorsement protected by the First Amendment, we again assume
arguendo,
for the purposes of this case only, that a quid
pro quo
is required.
We agree with the district court in concluding that the record overwhelmingly establishes the existence of a corrupt bribery agreement between Scruggs and De-Laughter. Early in the
Wilson
Case,
Scruggs raised the issue of DeLaughter’s federal aspirations and his own ability to assist. And Scruggs’s recommendation to his Senator brother-in-law was a thing of value, at least to DeLaughter. There is abundant testimony regarding the “deal” or “arrangement” that they reached shortly thereafter, and of DeLaughter’s official actions in exchange for the bribe. In short, the record supports all of the elements of a paradigmatic
quid pro quo
bribe.
Scruggs argues on appeal that there is no proof of a causal connection between his actions and DeLaughter’s, insisting that the record reveals only parallel favorable action without the causative
pro
in .the
quid pro quo.
According to Scruggs, he already had secret
ex parte
access before there were any vacancies in Mississippi federal courts and before Senator Lott called DeLaughter, so nothing Scruggs did to assist DeLaughter’s ambitions could have caused DeLaughter to take any actions in his favor.
This view is too narrow. In
Whitfield,
we held that a
quid pro quo
bribe is still a bribe even if it is offered “in exchange for an official act to be performed sometime in the future.”
For the same reason, a bribe that takes the form of a promise to assist later—here, with a future district court vacancy—is still a bribe.
Scruggs promised to assist DeLaughter, and in exchange DeLaughter favored him in the
Wilson
Case. The fact that Scruggs was delayed in upholding his end of the bargain is at most a difference without a distinction.
Scruggs has shown neither his actual innocence of
post-Skilling
honest-services fraud nor that there was cause and prejudice for failing to raise a constitutional-vagueness challenge to § 1346. Accordingly, he procedurally defaulted the claim, and the district court correctly denied his § 2255 motion.
3. Overbreadth
Finally, Scruggs throws in a First Amendment overbreadth challenge to § 1346. If the honest-services statute applies to bribes that take the form of political endorsements, then—according to Scruggs—it is facially overbroad. This, he contends, is because it will chill protected political speech.
“A statute is overbroad if in banning unprotected speech, a substantial amount of protected speech is prohibited or chilled in the process.”
“The overbreadth of a statute must not only be real, but substantial as well, judged in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.”
Scruggs argues at length that, if § 1346 applies to political endorsements, then overzealous prosecutors will perceive nefarious bribery in routine political activity, such as when a politician appoints a
former backer to a position, thereby discouraging endorsements. He cites well known historical examples of run-of-the-mill political back-scratching that, although not bribery, would be suppressed by such an expansive reading of § 1346. For example, Scruggs suggests that if he is guilty of honest-services fraud then so was President John Adams for appointing his supporter, William Marbury, as a District of Columbia justice of the peace.
We see no real likelihood that § 1846 will chill a significant amount of protected political speech, if any, and even less likelihood that President Adams would have had cause to worry about prosecution for honest-services fraud. “As to arbitrary prosecutions,” the Supreme Court itself “perceive[d] no significant risk that the honest-services statute ... will be stretched out of shape.”
We also note that the honest-services statute has been on the books for a quarter of a century, most of that time without the limitations imposed by
Skilling,
with no sign of chilled political endorsements or the overreaching prosecutions prophesied by Scruggs. Moreover, judged in relation to the plainly legitimate sweep of § 1346, any de minimis chilling effect that might occur will hardly be substantial. Scruggs’s overbreadth argument fails.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of Scruggs’s § 2255 motion is AFFIRMED. We REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.