1. US v. Reinhart, No. 16-10409 (6-18-18)(Murguia w/Gould &
Freudenthal).
The 9th affirms – it’s
a good thing -- the district court's finding that a defendant was not subject
to a mandatory ten year sentence for possession of child porn. The defendant had prior state misdemeanor
convictions for possession of child porn and sexual exploitation of a
child. Cal Penal Code 311.11(a) and
3(a). Applying the categorical approach,
the 9th held that California's state convictions were overbroad and did not
categorically match the federal convictions.
They were also indivisible. The 9th rejected the government's argument that
the statute's language of "relating to" for priors overrode the
categorical approach. The 9th affirmed
the 78 month sentence.
Congrats to AFPD Ned
Smock of Cal Northern (Oakland).
The decision is here:
2. US v. Espino, No. 16-50344 (6-18-18)(Bataillon w/Callahan &
Nguyen).
The defendant was
charged with lying to a grand jury. The
defendant supposedly made two false statements as a tax preparer. The jury
verdict form, after much discussion to simplify, read that the jury had to find
the defendant not guilty beyond a reasonable doubt to acquit. There was no objection. On appeal, the 9th held that of course this
was error. However, the error was harmless.
The jury instructions as a whole made clear the government had the
burden.
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/06/18/16-50344.pdf
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