Case o' The Week: Illegal and Affirmed - Castro-Verdugo and Review of Illegal Sentences
Hon. Charles R. Breyer |
Should the Ninth Circuit
tolerate a patently unlawful sentence, for an alien defendant who had no
effective opportunity to bring a challenge?
Judge Breyer (dissenting)
doesn’t think so either.
United States v. Castro-Verdugo, 2014 WL 1778152 (9th Cir. May 6, 2014), decision
available here.
Players: Decision by Judge Graber, joined
by Chief Judge Kozinski. Dissent by Sr. District Judge Charles Breyer. Hard-fought appeal by AFD Matthew Pritchard, Federal Defenders of San Diego, Inc.
Facts: Castro-Verdugo was convicted of
illegal reentry and sentenced to probation, with a stayed custodial sentence. Id. at *1. The district court doesn’t
have authority to impose that type of sentence. Id. (citing 18 USC Section 3561(a)(3)). Defense counsel did not
object. Id. Castro-Verdugo returned
to the US, was convicted of illegal reentry again, and with violation of his “probation”
for his original Section 1326 sentence. Id.
On appeal, the government conceded that the original sentence was clear error. Id. at *2.
Issue(s): “Defendant argues that the
district court lacked jurisdiction to revoke his probation in 2013 because,
when the district court imposed probation in 2011, it did so in conjunction
with a sentence of imprisonment, which it lacked authority to do under 18
U.S.C. § 3561(a)(3). Id. at *2.
Held: “We
do not have a freestanding mandate to fix every mistake that we see . . . .
However much we may agree that the 2011 sentence was imposed in error and that
Defendant’s 2011 counsel should have moved to correct it promptly, Defendant in
fact was still serving a term of probation in 2013. The district court in 2013
therefore had jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3565(a).” Id. at *5.
Of Note: Judge Breyer doesn’t buy it. “Today
the majority affirms an illegal sentence while acknowledging that the sentence
imposed was clearly erroneous, and offers no practical remedy to correct the
wrong.” Id. at *6 (Breyer, D.J.,
dissenting). He correctly distinguishes two Ninth cases relied on by the
majority, pointing out the defendant here doesn’t seek to attack the original
sentence and withdraw a plea (as was the case in those earlier opinions).
Instead, Castro-Verdugo challenged the authority of the district court to
revoke his illegally-imposed probation. Id.
at *6.
Judge Breyer then explains the realities ignored by the majority: an
alien, immediately deported, has no practical or effective remedy to challenge
these types of illegal sentences when originally
imposed. Id. at *7. (Here
Castro-Verdugo was deported the day after
the sentence was imposed.) Id. at *8.
Six thousand
defendants – 29% of all criminal defendants in the Ninth – are illegal
reentry cases. Id. at
*9. The upshot of Castro-Verdugo is that these alien
defendants in the Ninth have no effective way of challenging a concededly
illegal sentence. It is a troubling result that denies equal justice
to a quarter of the Circuit’s defendants.
Castro-Verdugo deserves a second look by the en banc court.
How to
Use: Why didn’t Castro-Verdugo flatly
waive his right to challenge an illegal sentence at the time of his plea?
Because “this Court has wisely held, along with many of its sister circuits,
that appellate courts must reject such a waiver if to enforce it would result
in the affirmance of an illegal sentence.” Id.
at *6 & n.1. A thin silver lining of Castro-Verdugo
is that there’s no talk of any waiver issues: seems clear now that one can’t
waive the right to appeal an illegal sentence. Turn to Judge Breyer’s
discussion and footnote to fend off any waiver nonsense in the context of an
appeal of an illegal sentence.
For
Further Reading: A huge loss for Defenders is a gain
for clemency efforts. Cynthia Roseberry, Executive Director of the Federal Defenders
for the Middle District of Georgia, has been appointed as the Project Manager
for Clemency Project 2014. See NACDL Press Release here. It is a great development for the clemency effort, which is quickly ramping up.
On May 5th, the BOP sent clemency notices and surveys to federal inmates –
expect inquiries from your clients in short order.
Image
of Judge Charles Breyer from http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6b/Judge_Charles_Breyer_official_portrait_United_States_District_Court_by_Scott_Johnston.jpg
Steven
Kalar, Federal Public Defender N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
.
Labels: Appellate Review, Graber, illegal sentence, Kozinski, Probation
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