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United States v. Elijah Silver
685 F. App'x 254
4th Cir.
2017
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Background

  • Elijah Silver was convicted in 2007 of distributing >5 grams of cocaine base and sentenced to 138 months plus five years supervised release; supervised release began July 15, 2016.
  • Probation officer petitioned to modify Silver’s supervised release to require a psychosexual evaluation.
  • Silver objected: argued the evaluation was unrelated to his narcotics conviction, unnecessary given no sex-offense convictions for 16 years and compliance on release, and an undue liberty deprivation.
  • District court imposed the psychosexual evaluation condition, noting Silver’s 22-year-old sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old, a prior guilty plea to felony indecent liberties, probation violations on that offense, and that the order was limited to an evaluation (not mandatory treatment).
  • Fourth Circuit reviewed for abuse of discretion and affirmed the district court’s modification.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether a psychosexual evaluation may be imposed as a supervised-release condition Silver: condition unrelated to narcotics conviction, unnecessary, excessive liberty deprivation Government: condition reasonably related to defendant history/characteristics and public protection; evaluation is limited and nonintrusive Affirmed — district court did not abuse discretion; condition reasonably related and limited to evaluation
Whether supervised-release conditions require offense-specific nexus Silver: implied requirement of nexus to underlying offense Government: no offense-specific nexus required if court explains reasons Court: No offense-specific nexus required; court must explain its reasons
Whether the condition violated Sentencing Commission policy/was greater than necessary Silver: evaluation is greater deprivation than necessary Government: evaluation is minimally intrusive and tailored; no immediate treatment required Court: evaluation meets "no greater deprivation than reasonably necessary" standard
Whether stay of order pending appeal was warranted Silver: requested stay again Government: opposed; court previously denied Court: declined to revisit previous denial of stay

Key Cases Cited

  • United States v. Douglas, 850 F.3d 660 (4th Cir. 2017) (upholding requirement to submit to sex-offender evaluation as reasonably related and not overly burdensome)
  • United States v. Armel, 585 F.3d 182 (4th Cir. 2009) (district courts have broad latitude to impose supervised-release conditions; they must be reasonably related and not more onerous than necessary)
  • United States v. Lynn, 592 F.3d 572 (4th Cir. 2010) (district court must show it considered parties’ arguments and give a reasoned basis for supervised-release conditions)
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Case Details

Case Name: United States v. Elijah Silver
Court Name: Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Date Published: Apr 20, 2017
Citation: 685 F. App'x 254
Docket Number: 16-4653
Court Abbreviation: 4th Cir.