Case o' The Week: The Ninth Giveth and SCOTUS Taketh Away (then the Ninth Giveth Again!) - Baldon and California Carjacking
Hon. Judge Mark Bennett |
Lost a win, then won again!
United States v. Baldon, 2020 WL 1921963 (9th Cir. April 21, 2020), decision
available here.
Players: Decision by Judge Bennett, joined by Judge Lee and D.J.
Piersol.
Facts:
Baldon pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute meth, in violation
of 21 USC § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(C). Id. at *1. Using a “modified
categorial approach,” the district court looked at charging documents for
Baldon’s prior California carjacking convictions, to determine whether they
were crimes of violence under USSG § 4A1.1(e). Id. at *2. (The carjacking
statute is California Penal Code Section 215).
After finding the prior convictions were crimes of violence, the
district court imposed a two-point increase to Baldon’s criminal history, and sentenced
Baldon to 184 months. Id.
A previous Ninth Circuit decision, Solorio-Ruiz, had held that California
carjacking is not a crime of violence under a different statute. See Solorio-Ruiz
v. Sessions, 881 F.3d 733 (9th Cir. 2018). See id. at *2. After
sentencing, the Supreme Court decided Stokeling v. United States, –––U.S. ––––, 139 S. Ct. 544, 202 L.Ed.2d 512 (2019). On appeal, the government
argued Stokeling undermined the rational of Solario-Ruiz.
Issue(s): “[W]hether
Baldon’s prior convictions for carjacking under section 215 1 of the California
Penal Code qualify as crimes of violence under U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(e) . . . .” Id.
at *1. “Can a section 215 conviction be based on fear of injury to property
alone?” Id. at *5.
Held: The
Supreme Court’s clarification of ‘violence force” in Stokeling as “any
force sufficient to overcome a victim’s physical resistance) is “clearly irreconcilable” with our reasoning in Solorio-Ruiz.
Our opinion rested on the analytical
distinction between substantial and minimal force. This distinction no longer exists. See Ward v. United States,
936 F.3d 914, 919 (9th Cir. 2019). As a result, Solorio-Ruiz’s holding
is no longer good law.” Id. at *3.
But
. . .
“We hold that section 215 is not a categorical
crime of violence, and thus the district court erred in calculating Baldon’s
sentence.” Id. “Baldon argues that section 215 may be violated through
fear of injury to property alone, without any fear of injury to a person, and
therefore, the statute “criminalizes a broader range of conduct than the
federal definition captures.” Edling, 895 F.3d at 1155. We agree.” Id. at
*5.
Of Note: The Ninth giveth, the Ninth taketh away. While Baldon
won the “crime of violence” issue, he lost a challenge to a two-level enhancement
for possessing a gun during the offense. See id. at *8 (citing
USSG § 2D1.1(b)(1)). The gun was in a backpack that contained drugs, found in a
storage unit tied to Baldon. Id.
Distinguishing some (good) Ninth
law, Judge Bennet finds that Baldon has “constructive possession” of the gun, and
upholds the two-level bump. Id. at *9. The gun-increase under Section
2D1.1 is a fuzzy, fact-specific spectrum: for better or worse, Baldon is
another entry in that continuum.
How to Use:
The government beefs about the Ninth’s carjacking decision, complaining there
have been no published California decisions citing the statutory
definition of fear (that is, no decisions permitting a carjacking conviction
when there was fear of injury to property). Id. at *6. Judge Bennett is
unimpressed. As he explains, “[W]e can rely, and have previously relied, on
unpublished California cases to show that the state has applied the statute in
a non-generic manner. . . . And, importantly, the jury instructions routinely
used by California courts include fear of injury to property. It would be one
thing if the fear of injury to property element were simply invented by creative
defense lawyers. It is quite another when that element is part of the standard
California jury instructions that are perhaps given in every case.” Id. at
*8 (citations omitted).
Use Baldon to brush back on the
government’s unduly restrictive view of the state law, used to show a “realistic
probability” that a state offense is broader than the generic definition of a
crime.
For Further
Reading: “As district attorneys around the Bay
Area are breaking character and releasing hundreds of pretrial detainees to
prevent the spread of COVID-19 in jails, the local wing of the U.S. Department
of Justice has taken a strikingly different tack. Amid the global pandemic —
and as cases of the novel coronavirus mount across California and the United
States — the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California has
refused to release almost any of the more than 400 federal inmates held in the
Santa Rita Jail, most of whom have been charged with crimes but not yet
convicted.” Nate Gatrell, Santa Rita Jail houses hundreds of federal
detainees. Despite COVID-19 outbreak, U.S. Dept. of Justice has opposed releasing
all but one, San Jose Mercury News, Apr. 24, 2020.
For a thoughtful piece
on a deeply troubling policy from the NorCal USAO, see Mr. Gatrell’s
article here.
Image of the Hon. Judge Mark
Bennett from http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/dailypix/2008/Nov/21/hawaii81121049V3_b.jpg
Steven Kalar, Federal Public Defender N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
Labels: Bennett, Carjacking, Categorical analysis, Crime of Violence, Guidelines, Section 4A1.1, Sentencing, Taylor Analysis
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