Case summaries and analysis from Federal Defender Offices located in the Fourth Circuit (WV, VA, MD, NC, SC)
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Sentences Taintied by Perjury and Government Misconduct Upheld
While the case was on appeal to the Fourth Circuit (10 days before oral argument, as a matter of fact), the Government disclosed that Rader had been involved in a sexual relationship with William Hart, a police officer investigating the case, The affair began after the initial indictment in the case and continued through sentencing. As part of the relationship, Hart had allowed Rader to retain more than $20,000 in drug proceeds that should have been turned over to investigators. Further investigation showed that Rader, with Hart's help, had perjured herself at the sentencing hearing. The case was remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Calvin, Spencer, and Orange filed motions asking for an evidentiary hearing regarding Hart & Rader's conduct, dismissal of the indictment due to outrageous Government conduct, withdrawal of their guilty pleas, and resentencing. Prior to the district court holding a hearing, Calvin sought to have three other co-defendants who testified against him at the original sentencing hearing to file affidavits indicating that they, too, had perjured themselves. One of those witnesses refused and reported the scheme to his probation officer.
After holding a hearing, the district court (a different judge from the original sentencing) concluded that Rader's testimony was unreliable and should be disregarded. However, the other testimony at sentencing was sufficient to sustain the Guideline calculations made at that hearing. Therefore, the district court denied any other relief, including resentencing. The district court noted that, if it did resentence Calvin, Spencer, and Orange in the post-Booker advisory Guideline system it would impose the same sentences again.
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit affirmed both the convictions and sentences (2-1) of the defendants.
First, the defendants argued that the indictments against them should be dismissed due to outrageous Government conduct. The court rejected that argument, affirming the district court's conclusion that Hart's motivations in becoming involved with Rader were personal in nature, not professional, and not part of a Government plan to aid the prosecution. In addition, the court held that dismissal was not required when the relationship at issue occurred after the events covered by the indictment took place.
Second, Calvin and Orange argued that they should have been allowed to withdraw their guilty pleas due to ineffective assistance of counsel for allowing them to plead guilty to an offense with a possible life sentence (Calvin) and when he did not understand the elements of the offense (Orange). The court rejected those arguments as well.
Third, all three defendants argued that their sentencing violated Booker because their sentences were increased based on judicially found facts. The court rejected this argument, holding that while the initial sentencing in 1999 would have violated Booker, and harm was obliterated when the district court on remand said that it would resentence the defendants to the same sentences under a post-Booker system.
Fourth, the defendants argued that their sentences were not supported by sufficient evidence, a claim the court rejected based on the district court's findings that there was sufficient evidence outside of Rader's perjurious testimony to support the original sentences.
Finally, Calvin argued that the district court failed to properly group his drug and money laundering convictions under the Guidelines. The court rejected that argument, largely because both parties appeared to concede that the drug sentence was so high (life in prison) that the failure to group was harmless.
Judge Gregory dissented from the court's holding on the sentencing issues. Gregory argued that the district court's proceedings on remand were insufficient to provide both the new district court judge and the appellate court a sufficient record from which it could determine whether the sentences imposed violated Booker or were unreasonable.
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Upward Departure Vacated for Lack of Sufficient Explanation of Scope
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit reversed. Surveying the PSR, the court concluded that the district court properly concluded that an upward departure was appropriate based on Dalton's extensive criminal history, including many prior fraud convictions. In fact, many convictions were for fraudulent schemes that Dalton began just after release from prison (a few even began in prison). However, the court concluded that the district court did not adequately explain the scope of the departure. Specifically, the court failed to failed to employ the incremental departure analysis required by USSG 4A1.3(a)(4)(B) and calculated the departure range by moving horizontally on the sentencing table (i.e., to a higher hypothetical Criminal History Category) rather than vertically (to the next higher offense level).
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Warrantless Search of Probationer Upheld
Midgette filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized in his home and car, arguing that the warrantless searches violated the Fourth Amendment. Midgette's motion was referred to a magistrate judge, who made findings of fact and recommended that the motion be denied. Midgette filed objections to the magistrate judge's recommendations, specifically arguing that (1) the magistrate improperly assumed he was on probation, (2) the magistrate incorrectly concluded that the meeting that triggered the searches was regularly scheduled, and (3) that the searches were conducted in violation of North Carolina law, which allows probation officers, not police officers, to make such warrantless searches. The district court overruled Midgette's objections and denied the motion to suppress. Midgette pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 46 months in prison.
On appeal, Midgette made three arguments: (1) North Carolina's probation statute violates the Fourth Amendment because it allows warrantless searches without individualized suspicion, (2) the probation officer lacked reasonable suspicion to conduct the search, and (3) that the searches by police officers, rather than probation officers, violated North Carolina law. The Fourth Circuit rejected all those arguments. As to the first two, the court agreed with the Government that Midgette had waived those arguments by failing to present them in the objections to the magistrate judge's recommendations. Specific objections are required to preserve issues in such situations. Regardless, the court went on to note in dicta that those two arguments were not persuasive at any rate, relying on Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868 (1987), and US v. Knights, 534 U.S. 112 (2001). As to Midgette's third argument, the court held that the searches were conducted in accordance with North Carolina law because they were instigated and directed by the probation officer, even though the police officers did the actual searching.
Monday, February 26, 2007
Trial on 924(c) Charge Doesn't Preclude Acceptance on Related Drug Counts
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit reversed, narrowly, 2-1. The court first concluded that the "offense of conviction" to which the acceptance reduction would apply was the grouped drug counts, not the 924(c) charge (which, of course, exists outside the Guidelines anyway). Therefore, the district court had the legal ability to award Hargrove acceptance of responsibility because of his guilty pleas on the drug counts. However, the court went out of its way to make clear that Hargrove was not necessarily entitled to the reduction, only that the district court had the power to award it. The message seems clear - the district court has the legal authority, but it probably shouldn't exercise it on remand. Judge Wilkins dissented, arguing that denying the facts of any charged offense, regardless of grouping, precludes a defendant from receiving credit for acceptance of responsibility.
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
"When the mother's talk . . ." Miranda Doesn't Apply
Kimbrough moved to suppress his statements made in response to his mother's questioning in the basement. The district court granted the motion, holding that the Miranda warnings that were given were ineffective and that the officers used Ms. Kimbrough as a proxy to question her son. The district court concluded, "Detective Himes . . . quite candidly in his testimony, [said that] she did his questioning for him, that is, Miss Kimbrough did the question that [O]fficer Himes otherwise would have done. So this was official interrogation." The court ordered Kimbrough's statements, but not the actual gun, suppressed. The Government appealed.
The Fourth Circuit reversed the district court and held that Kimbrough's statements could be used against him. Relying on Rhode Island v. Innis, 446 U.S. 291 (1980), and Arizona v. Mauro, 481 U.S. 520 (1987), the court held that Miranda was not implicated by questioning of a suspect by a family member, absent some indication that she was used as an interrogator for the police. There was no evidence to support that claim, the court held, noting that Ms. Kimbrough has non-law enforcement motives for confronting her son. Because the confrontation in the basement was not a custodial interrogation, Miranda was not implicated and any insufficiency of the warnings given was irrelevant.
Thursday, February 08, 2007
No Resentencing Hearing Needed After 2255 Proceeding
Hadden appealed, arguing that the district court erred by not having a hearing prior to imposing the new sentence and that the sentence violated Booker (Hadden's trial, appeal, and 2255 proceedings were ongoing during the Blakely/Hammoud/Booker proceedings). The Fourth Circuit rejected those arguments and affirmed Hadden's sentence.
Before reaching the merits, the court analyzed whether it had jurisdiction to hear the appeal, which turned on whether Hadden's appeal was part of the 2255 proceeding or the underlying criminal case. If the former, the court lacked jurisdiction because neither it nor the district court issued a Certificate of Appealability. If the latter, the court had jurisdiction to review the new sentence as a direct appeal of a newly entered final order. After reviewing precedent and parsing the language of 2255, the court concluded that in this case the sentence that was being appealed was part of the underlying criminal case and it therefore had jurisdiction.
On the merits, however, the court ruled against Hadden. First, it concluded that the district court's imposition of a 168-month sentence was not really a resentencing, but rather a "correction" of sentence under 2255 because it removed the 924(c) sentence and left the rest intact. While the district court could have held a resentencing hearing, nothing in the statute or case law required it to do so. Second, the court rejected Hadden's Booker arguments, holding that there was no Booker statutory error and refusing to take notice of the Booker Sixth Amendment plain error that occurred.
Monday, February 05, 2007
Court Clarifies Duties to Conflicting Clients
Nicholson filed to vacate his sentence, under 28 U.S.C. 2255, based on ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing due to his defense counsel's conflict of interest. Specifically, at the time he represented Nicholson, Nicholson's counsel also represented Butts in an unrelated case. Nicholson argued that in order to argue for a downward departure at sentencing based on his fear of Butts because to do so would undermine his attorney's simultaneous representation of Butts. The district court denied Nicholson's petition, holding that Nicholson's attorney suffered from no actual conflict because the simultaneous representation of the two men was in unrelated cases.
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit reversed and remanded the case for further proceedings. The court held that Nicholson's counsel did have an actual conflict of interest because the interests of Nichols and Butts were "in total opposition to each other" during the simultaneous representation. The court remanded for a determination of whether the conflict prejudiced Nichols, given that he received a sentence only 9 months higher than the mandatory minimum under the Armed Career Criminal Act.
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Variance 480% Greater than Guidelines Unreasonable
The Melloul-Blamey Construction Company in Greenville, South Carolina hired Tucker as office manager in October 2000. She began embezzling funds beginning in June 2002, by setting up a company called Hummingbird Marketing, of which she was sole proprietor, and using it as a "dummy vendor." (J.A. at 56.) She would request that a company official at Melloul-Blamey write checks to Bank of America for the purpose of purchasing cashier checks to pay vendors. She then took the company checks to Bank of America, where she exchanged them for certified checks made out to her, to cash, or to Hummingbird Marketing and not to legitimate vendors. Tucker then used the money to pay her personal credit card bills and to make restitution payments to the United States Clerk of Court for two previous fraud convictions.(emphasis added). Tucker's Guideline range was 24 to 30 months. At sentencing, she argued for a sentence within that range, noting a history of depression that was reflected in the PSR. However, the district court concluded that a sentence in the Guideline range was insufficient to protect the public from further crimes by Tucker because she was a "dedicated embezzler and thief." The court calculated, without showing its work, an underrepresenation of criminal history departure to achieve a Guideline sentence of 60 months, but concluded that was insufficient. The district court finally imposed an upward variance of 144 months in prison.
Tucker appealed the scope of the district court's variance, but did not contest that some variance in her case was appropriate. The Fourth Circuit agreed, and vacated Tucker's sentence. The court initially rejected Tucker's argument that the district court focussed on one of the 18 USC 2553(a) factors - the need to protect the public - to the exclusion of all others, noting that giving one factor greater weight does not necessarily entail disregarding the others. The court then concluded that the district court failed to adequately supports its basis for a 144-month sentence. The court noted that the variance in this case was greater in length and in terms of deviation from the Guidelines than in Davenport and that the district court failed to adequately explain why such a great variance was required (it provided no reason why, for instance, the 60-month sentence it mentioned was not sufficient). Finally, several of the factors noted by the district court were already taken into account by the Guidelines.
Tucker's sentence was vacated and the case remanded for resentencing.
Congrats to the South Carolina FPD office on the win!
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Apparent Authority Saves Search of Password-Protected Files
Buckner moved to suppress the evidence recovered during the search of the computer's hard drive. He argued that because his files were password protected and his wife could not access them, she could not consent to a search of those files. The Government argued that none of the officers performing the hard drive search knew of the password and there was no need to bypass/defeat it to access the files. The district court denied Buckner's motion and Buckner entered a conditional guilty plea.
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit affirmed Buckner's conviction. The court did hold that the wife lacked actual authority to consent to a search of Buckner's password protected files. However, the court concluded that she had apparent authority, particularly because the computer was leased in the wife's name only and the initial reports of fraud contained her name, not Buckner's.
Gang Affiliation Merits Upward Variance
Hernandez-Villaneuva appealed his sentence, which the Fourth Circuit affirmed. The court held that both the need for a variance and the scope of the variance was reasonable, due to the failure of the Guidelines to adequately consider Hernandez-Villaneuva's gang ties.
Highway Star
whether the stretch of Nider Boulevard between Shore Drive and Gate 4 of the United States Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek, located in Virginia Beach, Virginia, constituted a "highway" under Virginia law on August 10, 2004, the date of the charged conduct in this case.It is, which required the court to affirm Hill's traffic offense under the Assimilative Crimes Act. The court based its conclusion on the fact that the roadway in question was open to the public and not limited to Naval personnel.
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
3553(a) Doesn't Require Low End of Guideline Sentence; Court Can't Order Sentence to Run Consecutively to Future Sentences
Smith's first objection was that he should have been sentenced to the bottom of the Guideline range - 151 months - because it was "sufficient, but not greater than necessary" to achieve the goals of sentencing. Smith argued that if sentences within the Guideline range are presumptively mandatory because the Guidelines incorporate the 3553(a) factors and 3553(a) requires the court to impose the least harsh sentence possible to achieve those goals, than the harshest sentence that can be imposed is the low end of the Guideline range. The court, while noted that this argument was "clever, [but] has no merit." The Fourth explained that:
rests on a logical fallacy: the fact that a sentence at the lowest end of the guidelines range could be reasonable if the sentencing judge concluded it was sufficient does not mean that the sentencing judge must conclude that it is sufficient. It is the sentencing judge who must initially determine what is sufficient. To hold that the lowest sentence in an applicable guidelines range is always sufficient would rob § 3553(a) of its force.Smith's second objection was that the district court exceeded its authority by ordering his sentence to be served consecutively to future sentences not yet imposed. Reviewing 18 USC 3584, the Fourth agreed, noting that the statutory language clearly allowed the district court to impose consecutive sentences only where it was imposing multiple sentences at the same time or where the defendant was already subject to an incomplete term of incarceration. The court rejected the Government's argument that the 3584(a) presumption that sentences imposed at different times run consecutively trumps the rest of the statute, holding that such a reading would ignore the limitations already noted and would effectively abrogate the sentencing authority of one federal judge (the one imposing a sentence in the future) in favor of another.
Smith's sentence was vacated and his case remanded for resentencing.
Friday, December 22, 2006
2423(a) Conviction Does Not Require Defendant's Knowledge of Victim's Age
The Fourth Circuit upheld Jones's convictions against two attacks. First, Jones argued that the Government was required to prove that he knew the girl involved was under 18, arguing that the "knowingly" requirement in section 2423(a) applies to the age of the victim, not (or in addition to) the transportation. The Fourth rejected this argument, noting that the other Circuits were unanimous in not adopting Jones's reading. Second, the court rejected Jones's argument that statements made by the AUSA during closing arguments prejudiced his case. One statement - "if [the defense] had real evidence, don't you think they would have presented it to you?" - was not an impermissible comment on Jones's exercise of his Fifth Amendment rights, because during closing argument Jones had suggested an "alternate scenario" of events that was not supported by defense witnesses (7 of whom testified) or cross-examination of Government witnesses. The other statement - "[Y]ou can be confident that [a witness] is telling the truth about this conspiracy. You know why? Because he pled to it." - was not improper vouching because it did not convey any indication of the AUSA's personal belief in the witnesses veracity.
Monday, December 18, 2006
Updward Departure Based on Criminal History Violates Booker
The Fourth Circuit vacated Guyon's sentence, holding that it violated Booker. Most notably, the court shot down the Government's argument that because the departure dealt with criminal history, it was covered by the Almendarez-Torres exception to the Apprendi/Blakely/Booker rule.
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
Pain-Management Related Convictions Upheld
In an opinion that covers similar ground to Alerre from this time last year, the Fourth Circuit affirmed McIver's convictions. First, the court rejects McIver's argument that the district court's jury instructions, fueled by the Government's expert witness testimony about whether McIver's actions were "outside the parameters of legitimate medical practice," lowered the burden of proof for the Government to a negligence standard. Second, the court rejected the argument that the Government's expert improperly offered inadmissible legal conclusions during his testimony. Finally, the court upholds McIver's convictions as being supported by sufficient evidence.
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
18 USC 3553(b)(2) Violates Booker
On appeal, the Fourth easily concludes that 3553(b)(2)'s mandatory Guideline sentence provision violates the Sixth Amendment as explained in Booker (thanks to the Government's concession, in part). The court recognized that all other Circuits to deal with the issue have reached the same conclusion. Furthermore, the court concluded that vacation of Hecht's sentence was required because be properly objected to being sentenced under a mandatory Guideline scheme and the record was not sufficiently clear to show lack of prejudice. Hecht also challenged the two-level distribution enhancement, arguing that his act of using a web camera to transmit images of child pornography displayed on his computer did not meet the definition of "distribution." The Fourth Circuit disagreed and concluded that the enhancement applied in this case.
Thursday, November 30, 2006
Court Upholds Conviction in Police Beating of Motorist
At trial, several officers testified about Perkins's actions and whether they were reasonable acts for a police officer to take given the situation. two of the officers who were present for the beating, but who did not participate, testified based on their first-hand knowledge of the events. Others testified based on statements made by Perkins and others. One officer, who taught courses in defensive tactics, testified as a "force expert" for the Government. Perkins moved for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to determine whether his blows, as opposed to the ones visited upon the motorist (who ended up in a coma, but responsive to pain) before he arrived. The district court (obviously) denied that motion. Perkins was sentenced to 51 months in prison.*
On appeal, Perkins made several arguments, all of which were rejected by the Fourth Circuit. First, he argued that the testimony from several of the officers regarding the appropriateness of his actions was improperly admitted expert testimony. Because Perkins failed to specifically object to that, the Fourth reviewed for plain error. The court concluded that the testimony of the two officers who were eyewitnesses to Perkins's actions was properly admitted, while the testimony based on second-hand knowledge was not. However, the improper introduction of that evidence did not affect the outcome of the trial. Second, Perkins argued that officers (including the properly utilized expert) testifying about the "reasonableness" of his actions were improperly offering legal conclusions in their testimony. The Fourth disagreed, concluding that such testimony was admissible under FRE 704(a). Finally, the court upheld the district court's rejection of Perkins's motion for a judgment of acquittal, holding that the evidence was sufficient to show that Perkins's actions caused "bodily injury" to the motorist.
* The cop who started the beating pleaded guilty to the same charge and got 108 months in prison.
Monday, November 06, 2006
Presumption of Reasonableness Goes to the Supremes
Congrats to the MWDNC PD's office for having their petition granted.The defendant in the first case, from North Carolina, is a 57-year-old retired marine named Victor A. Rita Jr., who was convicted of making false statements in connection with a federal investigation into the sale of kits for making machine guns.
While Mr. RitaÂs sentence, 33 months, was within the range provided by the sentencing guidelines, he argued on appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit that the sentence was unreasonably long, given his poor health and unblemished record of federal service, both as a marine and in two civilian agencies.
But the Fourth Circuit, which is based in Richmond, Va., and includes North Carolina, is one of the federal circuits that have adopted a presumption of reasonableness for sentences within the guidelines range. The appeals court consequently rejected his appeal in a brief unpublished opinion.
The other case granted on Friday was from the Eighth Circuit, Claiborne v. US, involves what a district court must do to justify a below-the-Guidelines sentence:
Mr. ClaiborneÂs Supreme Court appeal, Claiborne v. United States, No. 06-5618, thus presents the other side of the coin: not whether it is presumptively reasonable to issue a sentence within the guidelines range, but whether it is presumptively unreasonable not to do so.No indication on when the Court is scheduled to hear these cases.
UPDATE: The cert petition and other docs in the Rita case can be found here.
Edited to fix a link ancongratulatete the correct office.
Thursday, October 26, 2006
Court Upholds Government's Failure to Move for Third-Point Reduction Under 3E1.1
At sentencing, the Government refused to move for the third point because the special assessment was not paid and Chase was not completely forthcoming about his offense (for instance, he could only name his source as "a white guy named Steve"). Chase recognized that the district court could not sua sponte award the third point, but asked for a sentence which "nonetheless reflects the additional one level." The district court sentenced Chase to 210 months in prison, the bottom of the Guideline range.
On appeal, Chase argued that the Government breached the plea agreement by refusing to move for the third point. The Fourth rejected that argument, noting that Chase failed to pay the assessment (protestations of inability to pay notwithstanding) and that successful cooperation was determined by the Government, which concluded that Chase was not fully forthcoming about his dealings. The court also rejected Chase's contention that the district court could award the third point without a motion from the Government.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
New Rules
Criminal Procedure
- Rules 5(c), 32.1, and 41 have been amended to allow for the filing of certain documents (warrants and orders related to out-of-district arrests) with a magistrate judge by "reliable electronic means"
- Rule 6 has been amended stylistically, only to conform with the conventions adopted during the recent overhaul of the Rules
- Rule 40 has been amended to allow a magistrate judge to set bond for a person arrested for violating bond conditions set in another district (the current rule precluded release except, oddly, if the violation was for failing to appear)
- Rule 41 has been amended, setting forth procedural guidance for the issuance of tracking device warrants
- Rule 58 has been amended to clarify that a defendant's right to a preliminary hearing is governed by Rule 5.1 and is not limited to those in custody
- Rule 25 has been amended to allow the Circuits to allow filing by electronic means
- Rule 32.1 has been added dealing with citation to "unpublished" decisions. Prohibitions on citation to such opinions will no longer be valid for opinions handed down after January 1, 2007. However, the rule does not require the Circuits to give such opinions any precidential weight (or prohibit them from doing so).
- Rule 404 has been amended to clarify the use of character evidence in civil cases
- Rule 408 has been amended to resolve several conflicts among the Circuits. Of relevance to criminal practice (perhaps), the amended rule prohibits statements made by a party during settlement negotiations from being used to impeach a witness as a prior inconsistent statement.
- Rule 606 has been amended to provide that testimony from jurors regarding their verdict is proper only when there is an allegation of "mistake in entering the verdict onto the verdict form."
- Rule 609 has been amended to provide that automatic impeachment of a witness via prior convictions is proper only "if it is readily can be determined that establishing the elements of the crime required proof or admission of an act of dishonesty or false statement by the witness."