Case Information
*1 Before: GUY, MOORE, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges .
KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge
. Petitioner-Appellee Eugene Robert Anderson
filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of
Ohio, arguing that the sentences he received pursuant to a criminal conviction in Ohio state court
violated
Blakely v. Washington
,
I. BACKGROUND
A. Ohio’s Prior and Current Sentencing Regimes
Prior to July 1, 1996, Ohio had an indeterminate sentencing regime under which trial judges
would set a minimum and maximum prison sentence, and a parole board would determine the actual
release date.
See State v. Foster
,
In 1996, Ohio opted instead for a determinate sentencing regime which worked as follows. The sentence the trial court imposed depended upon the “degree” of the felony. For each degree, the sentencing range from which a trial judge could select was determined by statute. For instance, if a defendant was convicted of a third-degree felony, the trial judge could sentence that defendant to a term of “one, two, three, four, or five years.” Ohio Rev. Code § 2929.14(A)(3) (2003). The trial judge’s discretion was limited, however, even within the prescribed sentencing range. In particular, if the defendant was not serving and had never served a term of imprisonment, the trial judge was required to impose “the shortest prison term authorized for the offense” (a minimum sentence), id. at § 2929.14(B), unless it found “on the record that the shortest prison term [would] demean the seriousness of the offender’s conduct or [would] not adequately protect the public from future crime by the offender or others.” Id. § 2929.14(B)(2). Furthermore, if the trial judge wished to “impose the longest prison term authorized for the offense,” (a maximum sentence), it generally had to find that the defendant “committed the worst form[] of the offense,” or “pose[d] the greatest likelihood of committing future crimes.” Id. § 2929.14(C). Finally, a trial judge was also required to make certain findings in order to impose consecutive sentences. Id. § 2929.14(E)(4).
In 2006, however, the Supreme Court of Ohio found § 2929.14(B), § 2929.14(C), and
§ 2929.14(E)(4) to be in violation of .
See Foster
,
B. Facts with Respect to Anderson
1. Conviction and Sentencing
In 2002, Anderson was convicted of three counts of pandering obscenity involving a minor, thirty-six counts of pandering sexually oriented matter involving a minor, twenty counts of complicity in pandering sexually oriented matter involving a minor, fourteen counts of illegally using a minor in nudity-oriented materials, twenty-eight counts of complicity in illegally using a minor in nudity-oriented material, one count of using property without authorization, one count of corrupting a minor, and five counts of promoting prostitution. At the sentencing hearing, the trial judge imposed a sentence for each of the individual counts. The post-1996 sentencing regime governed all of Anderson’s convictions except for the corrupting-a-minor conviction and one of the promoting-prostitution convictions, both of which fell under the pre-1996 framework. Anderson’s combined prison sentence was seventy-five years and four months along with a consecutive indeterminate sentence of two to ten years (for the corrupting-a-minor conviction) and another consecutive indeterminate sentence of two to fifteen years (for the promoting-prostitution conviction).
It is unnecessary here to detail the specific sentence that the trial court assigned to each of Anderson’s convictions. There are a few key points to note, however. First, every individual sentence imposed under the post-1996 sentencing regime exceeded the minimum prescribed under § 2929.14(A) and several constituted the maximum allowed. Furthermore, numerous sentences were imposed consecutive to one another. Finally, the corrupting-a-minor offense for which Anderson was convicted was a third-degree felony, meaning the two-to-ten-year sentence he received under the pre-1996 sentencing regime exceeded the presumptive range.
Therefore, the trial court was required to make certain factual findings, which it proceeded to do after announcing the sentence. First, the trial judge determined that, with respect to all the convictions in the record, minimum sentences “would not be adequate to protect the public nor to punish this offender.” Dist. Ct. Dkt. (“Doc.”) 6-6 at 40 (Sent. Order at 17). This finding was based upon the number of victims, the characteristics of those victims, the duration of Anderson’s conduct, the methods Anderson employed to lure his victims, the size and nature of Anderson’s pornography collection, the physical and psychological harm the victims suffered, and the fact that Anderson knew he was supporting the pornography industry.
With respect to the counts for which the trial court imposed a maximum sentence, the trial court found that Anderson committed the “worst forms of the offense.” Id. at 42-44 (Sent. Order at 19-21). The court further determined that Anderson “pose[d] the greatest likelihood of recidivism” given his “long term interest in juvenile pornography” and his “long-term involvement with multiple victims in the crimes involving sexual contact with victims.” Id. at 44 (Sent. Order at 21). In making its “likelihood of recidivism” finding, the court also incorporated by reference the findings it made in its earlier determination that Anderson was a “Sexual Predator.” The sexual-predator determination was itself based upon a variety of factors, one of which was Anderson’s prior conviction for contributing to the delinquency of a minor in 1971.
Finally, the trial court proceeded to render the findings necessary to impose consecutive sentences (the specifics of which are not relevant here). At no point, however, did the court make any findings with respect to the two-to-ten-year sentence for the conviction for corrupting a minor.
2. State Appeals and Habeas Proceedings
Anderson subsequently appealed his sentence to the Ohio Court of Appeals, raising a variety of arguments not relevant to the instant case. The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed Anderson’s conviction. Anderson then appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court, and while that appeal was pending, the U.S. Supreme Court decided . The Ohio Supreme Court, however, denied leave to appeal, and the U.S. Supreme Court denied Anderson’s petition for certiorari. Anderson also moved to reopen his appeal based, in part, upon his appellate counsel’s failure to raise a Blakely objection, but the Ohio Court of Appeals denied this motion.
Anderson then raised a Blakely claim in a post-conviction petition for relief in state court. While that action was pending, he filed this petition for habeas relief in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, again raising a Blakely claim in addition to other claims not relevant to this appeal. The Ohio Court of Common Pleas subsequently dismissed Anderson’s petition for post-conviction relief, finding that it was untimely. The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed this decision, and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to exercise jurisdiction over Anderson’s appeal. Afterwards, the magistrate judge in the federal habeas proceeding recommended that Anderson’s petition be dismissed. The magistrate judge determined that Anderson’s Blakely claim was procedurally defaulted. Anderson objected to the magistrate judge’s findings with respect to the Blakely claim, and the district court sustained Anderson’s objection. In particular, the district court found that Anderson’s Blakely claim was not procedurally defaulted and that the state “trial court justified imposition of maximum, consecutive, and non-minimum terms of incarceration based upon judicial fact finding prohibited under .” Doc. 48 (Dist. Ct. Amend. Order (3/06/09) at 16). As a result, the district court granted Anderson a conditional writ of habeas corpus pursuant to which Anderson’s sentence was vacated. The State subsequently filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment, and the district court denied this motion. The State appealed, and on September 8, 2009, a panel of this court granted the State’s motion to stay the district court’s judgment pending our decision.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
“In a habeas corpus proceeding, this Court reviews a district court’s legal conclusions
de
novo
and its factual findings for clear error.”
Goff v. Bagley
,
B. Apprendi and Blakely
In
Apprendi v. New Jersey
,
C. Non-Minimum, Non-Maximum Sentences
The State challenges the district court’s finding that Anderson’s non-minimum, non- maximum sentences were unconstitutional. The State does not dispute that the state trial court made factual findings that were required for it to impose Anderson’s non-minimum sentences—namely, its determination that non-minimum sentences “would not be adequate to protect the public nor to punish this offender.” Doc. 6-6 at 40 (Sent. Order at 17). Nonetheless, the State advances two arguments as to why habeas relief is nonetheless improper.
First, the State argues that Anderson’s non-minimum sentences did not violate
Blakely
because “‘[c]onsideration of the egregiousness of a particular offender’s misconduct and a
determination of whether the length of a sentence will adequately protect the public are inquires that
have traditionally been reserved for a sentencing judge.’” Appellant Br. at 42 (quoting
Davis v.
Eberlin
, No. 5:06-CV-398,
The State also argues that, even if Anderson’s non-minimum sentences violate , any
error was harmless. “Failure to submit a sentencing factor to the jury . . . is not structural error,” and
therefore such errors actually must prejudice a defendant in order to warrant reversal.
Washington
v. Recuenco
,
The State appears to argue that any error here was harmless because the state trial court’s findings with respect to the severity of the offense and the need to “protect the public” were essentially “based upon the numerous facts found by the jury.” Appellant Br. at 41. This is irrelevant, however. Even if the trial court drew upon jury-made factual findings, as Anderson correctly argues, the ultimate question of whether non-minimum sentences were needed “to protect the public [and to] to punish” Anderson, Doc. 6-6 at 40 (Sent. Order at 17), was never submitted to the jury, and the State has made no effort at explaining why the jury likely would have reached the same conclusion as did the trial court. Therefore, we fail to see how any Blakely error with respect [4]
to Anderson’s non-minimum sentences was harmless.
D. Non-minimum, maximum sentences
The State also argues that Anderson’s non-minimum, maximum sentences do not violate Blakely . In justifying its decision to impose maximum sentences, the state trial court found that Anderson committed the “worst form” of certain offenses, Doc. 6-6 at 42-44 (Sent. Order at 19-21), and that he “pose[d] the greatest likelihood of recidivism.” at 44 (Sent. Order at 21). The State argues that the “likelihood of recidivism” finding alone was sufficient to impose a maximum sentence and that such a finding does not implicate . Even assuming that the “likelihood of recidivism” finding was sufficient, however, we still conclude that this question should have been submitted to a jury.
The State first argues that the “likelihood of recidivism” finding did not violate Blakely because it was based upon jury-found facts. As discussed above, however, even if the state trial court’s recidivism finding were based upon jury-found facts, the question that is relevant here —whether there is a likelihood of recidivism—was never submitted to the jury. [5]
The State also argues that the trial court’s “likelihood of recidivism” finding falls within
Apprendi
’s “prior conviction” exception. In
Apprendi
, the Court acknowledged that findings with
respect to prior convictions did not implicate the Sixth Amendment.
Apprendi
,
Despite its narrow scope, however, the “prior conviction” exception includes not just the fact
that a conviction occurred but also “subsidiary findings,”
United States v. Burgin
,
The question then becomes when (if ever) do recidivism findings fall under the prior-
conviction exception. Anderson argues that the prior-conviction exception never encompasses
recidivism findings because recidivism findings go beyond the mere fact of a conviction. This is too
broad an assertion, however. Although Anderson cites out-of-circuit case law to the contrary, the
Sixth Circuit has held that the question of whether there is a “likelihood that the defendant will
commit other crimes” for purposes of § 4A1.3 of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines need not, at least
in all cases, be submitted to a jury, even if the sentencing occurred while the Guidelines were still
mandatory.
See United States v. Smith
,
Nonetheless, just because a recidivism finding may
sometimes
fall within the prior-conviction
exception does not mean that it
always
will. The key inquiry, rather, is whether a recidivism finding
is actually based upon a prior conviction. In this regard, it is important to note that U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3
differs from Ohio Revised Code § 2929.14(C), and, as a result, the
Smith
case is distinguishable.
Under § 4A1.3, the focus is largely upon the defendant’s criminal history and prior adjudications.
See
U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3(a)(2). Indeed, in
Smith
, the district court’s finding that there was a likelihood
of recidivism was based primarily upon its determination that the defendant’s criminal history was
“extensive and egregious.”
Smith
,
Ohio Revised Code § 2929.14(C), by contrast, does not focus upon a defendant’s criminal history or prior adjudications. Indeed, as Anderson points out, in the present case, the state trial court devoted barely any attention to Anderson’s 1971 conviction in determining that Anderson was a sexual predator, and when it found that Anderson “pose[d] the greatest likelihood of recidivism” for purposes of § 2929.14(C), the trial court only indirectly referenced that conviction by incorporating its previous sexual-predator findings. Doc. 6-6 at 44 (Sent. Order at 21). In other words, the 1971 conviction appears to have played little role in the trial court’s analysis, the bulk of which rested upon Anderson’s “long term interest in juvenile pornography” and his “long-term involvement with multiple victims in the crimes involving sexual contact with victims.” Thus, the trial court relied primarily upon facts unrelated to any prior conviction and more associated with the conduct for which Anderson was convicted. For us to expand the Supreme Court’s “narrow” exception for prior convictions to include findings such as these would require us to completely unmoor the exception from its original foundation.
Therefore, the district court did not err in finding that Anderson’s non-minimum, maximum sentences violated Blakely .
E. Indeterminate Sentences
The federal district court never addressed explicitly either of Anderson’s indeterminate
sentences. Nonetheless, the district court did vacate Anderson’s sentence in its entirety, presumably
determining that both indeterminate sentences were improper. Because the State’s principal brief
does not address the indeterminate sentences, the State has waived any argument in this regard.
See
Madden v. Chattanooga City Wide Serv. Dep’t
,
F. Anderson’s Consecutive Sentences
The State also challenges the federal district court’s determination that Anderson’s
consecutive sentences violated
Blakely
. In order to impose consecutive sentences, the trial court at
the time of Anderson’s sentencing was required to make factual findings similar to those required
to impose non-minimum and maximum sentences. The district court concluded that these findings
violated
Blakely
. In
Oregon v. Ice
,
The State suggests that the district court’s writ should be modified such that the consecutive
nature of the sentences remains in place. As Anderson correctly points out, however, because the
district court vacated all of Anderson’s sentences, the State is essentially requesting an order to the
state courts to impose future sentences consecutively. The State cites no authority for imposing such
an order, and we think it wiser to permit the state courts to make a fresh determination as to whether
consecutive sentences are appropriate. As a result, the state trial court will have the opportunity to
consider any new developments under Ohio state law. In particular, we note that the Ohio Supreme
Court recently has accepted review in a case addressing the effect that
Ice
has upon
Foster
’s
invalidation of Ohio Revised Code § 2929.14 (E)(4).
See State v. Hodge
,
G. Motion to Stay District Court’s Judgment
Finally, the State requests that we amend our earlier stay of the district court’s judgment in order to provide the State with additional time to arrange for Anderson’s resentencing. Although circuit courts regularly grant stays pending an appeal , the State’s appeal has come to an end; any further issues concerning the State’s ability to comply with the conditional writ are best left to the district court to address in the first instance. We therefore deny the State’s motion, without prejudice to the State’s presentation of the issue to the district court.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment. Furthermore, we DENY the State’s motion to amend our previous order granting a temporary stay of the district court’s judgment.
Notes
[1] On appeal, the State has expressly waived the procedural default defense it raised below. See Appellant Br. at 19-20 n.5.
[2] We note, however, that the State’s analysis in this regard consists of nothing more than a block quote of an unpublished district court decision.
[3] The State argues in its response to the citation that Anderson filed pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(j) that Villagarcia has no effect upon this case because Villagarcia did not deal with maximum sentences under Ohio law. Nonetheless, the State’s brief also challenges Anderson’s non-minimum, non-maximum sentences, with respect to which Villagarcia is dispositive.
[4] At oral argument, the State explicitly stated that it was not arguing that the jury would have found that there was a likelihood of recidivism had the issue been submitted to it.
[5] To the degree that the State argues that Anderson’s maximum sentences were harmless, we reject this argument for the reason stated in Section II.C.
[6] It should be noted, however, that
Smith
was a post-
Booker
case that involved the application
of the
advisory
Guidelines, meaning the panel was not required to address the scope of the prior
conviction exception, a fact observed by the concurrence.
See Smith
,
[7] In a previous portion of its opinion, the trial court also made a passing reference to “the defendants’ [sic] record” in listing reasons for a likelihood of recidivism. See Doc. 6-6 at 32 (Sent. Order at 9). This finding, however, did not deal with § 2929.14(C) specifically.
[8] In this respect, this case differs from
State v. Lowery
,
[9] To the degree that the State is arguing that the district court erred in not giving it additional time, the State did not present such an argument in its briefs, thereby waiving the argument.
