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Wellermen Image **Fifth Circuit Slaps Down Prisoner’s Habeas Bid – No Crypto Link**

A federal inmate’s bid to revive his stalled habeas corpus petition crashed in the Fifth Circuit, where judges dismissed his appeal as meritless and denied pauper status for appeal. Olamide Bello failed to counter the lower court’s dismissal for lack of prosecution, handing a quick win to prison officials. This procedural smackdown underscores courts’ impatience with sloppy filings, but carries zero implications for crypto markets or regulation.

Bello, locked up as federal prisoner #65100-510, targeted Fannin County Sheriff Mark Johnson with a 28 U.S.C. § 2241 petition challenging his detention. The Eastern District of Texas tossed it sua sponte for want of prosecution—basically, Bello didn’t follow through. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit panel of Southwick, Duncan, and Engelhardt demanded he address the dismissal head-on; his pro se brief dodged it entirely, abandoning the core issue under precedents like Brinkmann.

Judges ruled the appeal lacked “arguable merit,” denying in forma pauperis status and deeming it frivolous per Fifth Circuit rules. Bello loses big: no pauper appeal, case dead, and even his side request to borrow exhibits from another appeal got spiked. Sheriffs and feds win procedural housekeeping.

In plain English: Courts won’t chase sloppy prisoners—file right or get bounced, no second chances without smart arguments. Pro se leniency has limits; ignore the judge’s reasons, and your appeal evaporates.

No crypto angle here—no SEC, CFTC, tokens, DeFi, or exchange drama. Pure jailhouse procedural rout, irrelevant to blockchain battles, market sentiment, or regulatory turf wars.

**Skip this for coffee—zero signal for crypto traders.**

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