Case o' The Week: Ninth Tacks to Lee of Constitutional Issue -- Lee, Johnson, and the Sentencing Guidelines
Want to know whether Johnson applies to the guidelines?
So does Judge Ikuta.
United States v. Lee, No.
13-10517 (9th Cir. May 6, 2016), decision available here.
Players: Decision by Judge Hurwitz, joined by Judge Bea.
Dissent by Judge Ikuta. Hard-fought win for ND Cal CJA Attorney Ethan Balogh.
Hon. Judge Sandra Ikuta |
Facts: Lee was convicted of distributing crack. Id. at 3. One drug prior counted as a Career
Offender predicate. Id. at 4. Lee
also had prior convictions under Cal. Penal Code Sections 69 (resisting executive
officer), and 243.1 (battery against custodial officer). The court found both priors
to be “crimes of violence” under USSG § 4B1.1(a)(3), and found Lee to be a
Career Offender. Id. While on direct appeal, the Supreme
Court decided Johnson (2015). The
Ninth asked for supplemental briefing. Id.
at 6.
Issue(s): “Lee contends that he is not a ‘career offender’
because he does not have ‘at least two prior felony convictions of either a
crime of violence or a controlled substance offense.’ U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a). . .
. [T]he issue for decision is whether either of Lee’s convictions under
California Penal Code § 243.1 or § 69(a) are ‘crimes of violence’ under
Guidelines § 4B1.1(a). The government does not contend that either § 243.1 or §
69 is a controlled substance offense, ‘has as an element the use, attempted
use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another,”
U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2(a)(1), or corresponds to an enumerated crime in § 4B1.2(a)(2).
The only question, then, is whether, under the residual clause, either crime ‘otherwise
involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to
another.’ U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2(a)(2).” Id.
at *6.
Held: “Because we find
that neither of Lee’s convictions would qualify as a ‘crime of violence’ under
our pre-Johnson caselaw, we need not address this constitutional question.” Id. at 7.
“We decline to decide whether Johnson’s reasoning extends to the Sentencing
Guidelines, because even if it does not, we are left with the same result in
this case: We must vacate and remand for resentencing because Lee’s crimes are
not categorical crimes of violence . . . [W]e decline the dissent’s invitation
to answer a constitutional question unnecessary to the disposition of this case.”
Id. at 8 & n.2.
Of Note: Judge Ikuta agrees that Lee should win and there should be a remand, but disagrees with
the majority’s reasoning. Id. at 13
& n. 5. Seems like a concurrence, but Judge Ikuta styles her opinion a “dissent.”
Id. at 14 (Ikuta, J., dissenting).
Whatever it is, it is worth a very close read.
Judge Ikuta would hold that the Guideline
residual clause is so “inscrutable” that a district court can’t get it right:
it is per se Guideline procedural error
just to use the thing. Id. at 25-26.
[Ed. note: Consider that under this theory, the district judge in the Lee case -- Sentencing Commissioner Charles R. Breyer -- would be deemed incapable of divining the meaning of the inscrutable guideline on remand].
Before
she gets to the "procedural error" theory, however, Judge Ikuta opines that there is no due
process (Johnson) violation when the
residual clause is used, under the
advisory guidelines. Id. at
14-25.
What’s the difference between Judge Ikuta's theory of guideline inscrutability, and a holding that Johnson controls the advisory guidelines? None, for Lee – he is on direct appeal and would get a remand either way. But query
whether Johnson would be retroactive to
advisory guideline cases for Section 2255 motions, if the residual clause is mere sentencing “procedural
error” due to “inscrutability?” (Versus running afoul of Johnson and its due process protections?)
This dissent, if ever adopted, would conceivably
doom many Johnson § 2255 motions for advisory guideline cases. DOJ is
scrambling for theories to distinguish Welch
and limit its retroactivity holding solely to ACCA cases: Judge Ikuta offers one
troubling approach.
How to Use:
Lee uses pre-Johnson cases to first
ask whether a prior would qualify as a COV. So give that a shot, as well as
running the normal Johnson claims –
what’s to lose? If the priors don’t
qualify, you win. If they do qualify
under old COV law, Johnson is still
available for a due process attack. Another arrow for the quiver.
For Further
Reading: We wrongly guessed that Lee would be the Ninth Circuit case to decide whether Johnson applies to the guidelines.
With the issue avoided in Lee, what panel is now
the lead on this question? Probably United States v. Jimmy
Torres, submitted before Judges
Wardlaw, Fletcher, and Murgia on Dec. 8. ‘15.
(Left to right): Hon. Judges W. Fletcher, Wardlaw, and Murgia - Jimmy Torres argument |
For a video of the very interesting Torres argument, see the Ninth's You Tube site here.
(By the way, what was the Feds position in Torres? “The
government agrees that the . . . holding in Johnson
regarding ACCA’s residual clause applies to the identically worded clause of
the career offender guideline, § 4B1.2(a)(2), and to other guidelines that use
the career offender guideline’s definition of ‘crime of violence,’ including
Guideline § 2K2.1.”)
Image of
the panel from United States v. Torres from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T--n7G6PrZU
Image of
the Honorable Judge Ikuta from United States Courts -
http://news.uscourts.gov/new-chairs-named-judicial-conference-committees,
Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=36109912
Steven Kalar, Federal Public Defender
N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
.
Labels: Constitutional Avoidance, Guidelines, Habeas, Johnson, Procedural Error, Section 2255
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