Case o' The Week: "Start Making Sense" - Guerrero-Jasso and Apprendi harmless error review
Judge Berzon wants to know, too.
United States v. Guerrero-Jasso, 2014
WL 2180101 (9th Cir. May 27, 2014), decision available here.
Players: Decision by Judge Berzon, joined
by Judge Paez and concurring Judge Fernandez. Concurrence by Judge Berzon (on Apprendi harmless error). Great win by
ND Cal AFPD Cynthia Lie and R&W Attorney Mara Goldman.
Facts: Guerrero-Jasso, an alien, was
removed three times. Id. at *1. Before
one of those removals, he was convicted of an aggravated felony. Id. at *1. He returned and was charged
with illegal reentry, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b). Id. Guerrero-Jasso pleaded guilty to an information alleging all
three removals, but didn't admit any particular one of them (only one of the
three removal dates followed the agg felony, and would trigger the twenty-year
stat max, instead of the two-year stat max exposure). Id. at *1-*2.
At sentencing, he contested the 42-month term by
arguing he only faced two years – he hadn’t admitted the date of removal
necessary to trigger twenty. Id. at *2.
The government, faced with this objection, introduced new evidence of removals
(over defense objections). Id.
The
district court found the defendant had sufficiently admitted the key removal date
in the Information, and Guerrero-Jasso was sentenced to 42 months. Id.
Issue(s): “Guerrero-Jasso’s sole contention
on appeal is that under Apprendi, it
was error to apply 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b)'s increased statutory maximum, because
his guilty plea to the essential elements of 8 U.S.C § 1326(a) did not
establish that he had been removed after an aggravated felony conviction.” Id. at *2.
Held: “We hold that,
in applying the twenty-year statutory maximum penalty instead of the two-year
statutory maximum penalty, the district court impermissibly relied on facts
that were neither admitted by the Defendant nor found by a jury beyond a
reasonable doubt . . . See Apprendi .
. . . Accordingly, we vacate the sentence, and remand for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.” Id.
at *1.
Of Note: This is a remarkable opinion. The
Ninth rejects the government’s attempt to circumvent Apprendi by introducing evidence of the removals at sentencing, and
also rejected a gambit to salvage all through harmless error in a thoughtful
analysis. Id. at *5-*7. It is an
extraordinarily refreshing read, that goes back to the heart of the Apprendi right and makes it very clear
that the government bears the burden to prove these facts. Id. at *3. A seminal Ninth Circuit Apprendi case.
How to
Use: Judge Berzon is concerned. Id. at *8 (Berzon, J., concurring). She
wonders, “how did we get here,” to a state of the law where “harmless error”
review (NOT plain error) can routinely cure all and eviscerate the important Apprendi constitutional right? Id. at *10. Her scholarly concurrence
traces the devolution of appellate review of Apprendi error, and correctly opines: “To sanction such a procedure
is to allow the protections accorded by Apprendi
entirely to atrophy.” Id. at *15. Flag
this concurrence for a future en banc
pitch on Apprendi harmless error
review: Judge Berzon is ready to get the Ninth’s Apprendi law back on track.
For
Further Reading: The AUSA here invited the district court to err, assuring the judge that the sentencing
decision would be reviewed under the deferential harmless error standard. Id. at *9. Is it ethical for a
prosecutor to invite error, with the assurance that gov’t-friendly standards of
review will mean no reversal? For an intriguing argument that deliberate
violations by the government should trigger automatic reversal instead of
harmless error review, see Vilija
Bilasis, Harmless Error: Abettor of
Courtroom Misconduct, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol. 74
Issue 2, available here.
Image of
David Byrne from https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzcUQ2rlziphKXxgSxRtSxLZxi1kqrXjMyRurBIQ2TgGF6mMGRsREbxFfNCmoEfgDjmPnhlmKJOM_MpNjA47ajK9AiNsoMdclH7W7oWU9EAf0KNg9EVRnT57FaoE6OpATaWEK_UQ/s320/StopMakingSense.jpg
Steven
Kalar, Federal Public Defender, N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
Labels: 8 USC 1326, Apprendi, Berzon, harmless error, Illegal reentry
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