King v. US, No. 17-10006 (6-4-18)(Mueller w/Wallace
& Berzon).
What makes a supervised
release appeal moot? Here, the 9th held that the unconditional release from
custody mooted the appeal from the revocation of SR and term of
imprisonment. King argued it was not
moot because of collateral consequences. In revoking, the district court found
he committed statutory rape. As such, King feared he could be forced to
register as a sex offender, or that visitation with his children could be
affected.
The 9th recognizes the
novel aspects. What are collateral
consequences, and how certain must they be?
In Spencer v. Kemna, 523 US 1
(1998), the Supremes found release from parole and sentence mooted the alleged
appeal to an erroneous revocation. The
9th extends Spencer to SR, as does
the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th. For
there to be collateral consequences, there must be continuous and continuing
injury. The future possibility of registration being extended to a finding made
by preponderance of evidence is just a possibility: there is nothing on the
horizon and no threat at present. It is not a continuous or continuing
injury. The possibility, now, is mere
speculation.
Well fought appeal by AFPDs Carmen
Smarandoiu and Dan Blank of FPD Cal N (San Francisco).
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2018/06/04/17-10006.pdf
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