Darryl Paul DUNCAN, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Respondent-Appellee.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
*443 ON BRIEF: David W. Camp, Law Office of David Camp, Jackson, Tennessee, for Appellant. R. Leigh Grinalds, Assistant United States Attorney, Jackson, Tennessee, for Appellee.
Before: MARTIN, BATCHELDER, and DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judges.
MARTIN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAUGHTREY, J., joined. BATCHELDER, J. (p. 447), delivered a separate opinion concurring in the result.
OPINION
BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge.
This case presents the question whether the Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Booker,
In 2002, Duncan was stopped by an officer who knew of Duncan's outstanding warrants. The officer approached Duncan, determined he had a gun, and arrested him. In 2004, Duncan pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm. In calculating the appropriate Sentencing Guidelines range, the sentencing judge cited Duncan's criminal history and stated that "since armed career criminal applies, I'm stuck with a guideline range of 188 to 235 months." The judge gave Duncan 188 months, the lowest available sentence under the Guidelines, "because the only reason [he] got up into that range was because [he was an] armed career criminal." The judge observed that without the armed career criminal guideline Duncan "would have been in the 70-87 month range" and that 188 months was the "minimum that [was] available." In September 2005, Duncan moved pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 2255 for the district court to vacate his sentence; the court denied the motion. This Court then granted Duncan a "certificate of appealability with respect to the issue of whether [he] is entitled to be resentenced in the wake of Booker." We thus address whether Booker applies retroactively to sentences imposed after the Supreme Court decided Blakely.
This question's resolution matters to Duncan because if Booker applies retroactively he is entitled to resentencing. Duncan preserved his Sixth Amendment challenge, and it is not dispositive that he *444 suffered no direct constitutional violation because his Guidelines range would have been the same absent any judge-found facts. This is because the Supreme Court in Booker consolidated the cases of Booker and Fanfan and ultimately invalidated both their sentences. While Booker's sentence was improper because it had been increased on the basis of judge-found facts not submitted to a jury, Booker,
In other words, a defendant "has both constitutional and statutory rights under Booker," Hochschild,
So, we must determine whether Booker is retroactive back to Blakely. In Teague v. Lane,
The first question is whether Booker, in light of Blakely, applied an old rule or announced a new one. A case announces a new rule when "it breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government." *445 Teague,
We have previously held that Booker is not retroactive back to the time that the Supreme Court decided Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Duncan is right that the argument that Blakely dictated Booker is considerably stronger than the argument that Apprendi did. Although the Supreme Court ignited the Apprendi revolution with the rule announced there "Other than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt," Apprendi,
Nevertheless, before Booker was handed down (but after certiorari had been granted) a majority of this Court held that Blakely did not require us to strike down the federal Sentencing Guidelines. United States v. Koch,
Of course, in Booker, the Supreme Court stated that Edwards's holding was not germane to deciding whether or not the Guidelines were unconstitutional, Booker,
And, there are pragmatic reasons to believe that Blakely dictated Booker. Justice O'Connor, whose Blakely dissent prophesized the Guidelines's demise, described the Blakely decision at the Ninth Circuit judicial conference as a "number ten earthquake."[4] This was not hyperbole. Within a month of Blakely, thousands of criminal appeals challenging the federal Sentencing Guidelines were filed, several federal courts had struck down some or all of the Guidelines, and the Acting Solicitor General sought expedited review in the Supreme Court of two decisions questioning the Guidelines's constitutionality. See, e.g., Douglas A. Berman, Reconceptualizing Sentencing, 2005 U. CHI. LEGAL F. 1, 34-36 (2005). Blakely's significance for the mandatory Guidelines's future viability could not be missed: the "entire federal criminal justice system came to a standstill in anticipation of the Court's decision in Booker." United States v. Paladino,
Yet this case does not arise in a vacuum. Our holding in Koch that Blakely did not require us to strike the Guidelines down, though ultimately proven incorrect, nevertheless gives us great pause in considering Duncan's argument. And though they were decided in different postures than this case and thus do not directly control our decision today, the sweeping language of Humphress v. United States,
Summerlin forecloses Duncan's remaining avenues for retroactivity: that either the Booker rule is "substantive" or that it announced a "watershed rule of criminal procedure." In Summerlin, the Supreme Court held that Ring one of the many cases following Apprendi is not retroactive on collateral review. Ring held that defendants are entitled to a jury trial on all aggravating factors possibly leading to the imposition of the death penalty.
Second, Summerlin held that Ring did not announce a "watershed rule of criminal procedure" because the Court could not determine whether juries were so much more accurate than judges such that the change brought about by Ring "implicat[ed] the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding"; indeed, the Summerlin Court found that it could not say either way: the evidence was simply "too equivocal." Id. at 355,
Finally, informing our decision today is the recognition that to accept Duncan's argument that Booker operates retroactively back to Blakely would create a split with our sister circuits where one did not exist before, see e.g., McReynolds v. United States,
ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge, concurring.
Because I believe that Duncan's claim is entirely governed by our decisions in Humphress v. United States,
NOTES
Notes
[1] See also Gall v. United States, ___ U.S. ___,
[2] It is not entirely clear that Teague's framework is appropriate for federal habeas petitions under 18 U.S.C. § 2255 because many of the comity and federalism concerns animating Teague are lacking. See Valentine v. United States,
[3] Although we ask whether "reasonable jurists could differ as to whether precedent compel[led] the sought-for rule," Beard v. Banks,
[4] Lyle Denniston, Justices Agree to Consider Sentencing, N.Y. TIMES, Aug. 3, 2004, at A14.
