JEFFREY BERNARD BEEMAN v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
No. 16-16710
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
08/14/2018
D.C. Docket No. 4:16-cv-00143-HLM
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia
Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT, MARCUS, WILSON, WILLIAM PRYOR, MARTIN, JORDAN, ROSENBAUM, JULIE CARNES*, JILL PRYOR, NEWSOM and BRANCH, Circuit Judges.
*En banc polls are conducted of the “circuit judges of the circuit who are in regular active service” who are not disqualified.
BY THE COURT:
A petition for rehearing having been filed and a member of this Court in active service having requested a poll on whether this case should be reheard by the Court sitting en banc, and a majority of the judges in active service on this Court having voted against granting a rehearing en banc, it is ORDERED that this case will not be reheard еn banc.
JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judge, respecting the denial of rehearing en banc:
A majority of the Court has voted not to rehear en banc our decision in Beeman v. United States, 871 F.3d 1215 (11th Cir. 2017), in which the panel held that Beeman had failed to make the showing necessary to prevail on his
Dissenting as to the denial of en banc review of Beeman, Judge Martin, however, disagrees that a
I. Background
Following a search of his residence that uncovered, among other things, the presence of illegal drugs, drug paraphernalia, a rifle and pistol, and 31 rounds of ammunition, Jeffrey Beeman was convicted by a jury of cocaine possession with the intent to distribute and of being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition. The district court considered whether Beeman‘s sentence as to the firearm and ammunition charges should be enhanced pursuant to the ACCA: a statute that calls for a sentence of at least fifteen years for a defendant convicted of an applicable firearms offense who has at least three prior qualifying felony convictions for drug trafficking offenses and/or violent felonies. Beeman potentially had three such convictions: two prior drug trafficking convictions and a prior violent felony conviction. The latter was a conviction for aggravated assault under Georgia law after Beeman, armed with a shotgun, shot a person named Parrish Mitchell. The district court concluded that this aggravated assault conviction constituted a violent felony and that the prior drug trafficking convictions likewise qualified as ACCA-predicate crimes. The court therefore sentenced Beeman pursuant to the ACCA. Beeman offerеd no objection.
Beeman likewise did not appeal his sentence, which had been imposed in 2009, albeit he unsuccessfully appealed his conviction, which became final in 2010. Nevertheless, almost six years later, in 2016, he filed a
The ACCA provides three ways by which a prior conviction can qualify as a violent felony, only two of which are relevant here: the elements clause and the residual clause. The elements clause defines as a violent felony a crime that has as an element the use, attempted use, or thrеatened use of physical force against the person of another.
II. Beeman‘s Descamps Claim is Untimely
As noted, only two of the three clauses defining a violent felony were potentially applicable to Beeman‘s aggravated assault conviction: the elements clause and the residual clause. Accordingly, in his
Unfortunately for Beeman, his Descamps claim could not make it out of the starting gate because it was untimely. Holding that Beeman‘s claim for relief under
In short, Beeman‘s Descamps claim being untimely, he cannot challenge in a
III. Beeman Failed to Prove His Johnson Claim
Without a timely Descamps claim, the only route to relief for Beeman was a successful Johnson claim. The panel opinion concluded that Beeman had asserted a timely Johnson claim by alleging that the residual clause was an improper basis for determining whether a putative predicate conviction constitutes a violent felony and by filing his
Although Beeman properly asserted a Johnson claim, the panel opinion concludеd that he ultimately failed to prove the central allegation of this claim: that the residual clause adversely impacted his sentence, which is an essential element of this particular
In the context of a Johnson claim, meeting the burden of proof necessary to warrant relief under
Beeman provided no evidence to meet his burden. He offered no reason why one should infer that the district court based its conclusion that the Georgia aggravated assault conviction qualified as a violent felony on the residual clause. Certainly, nothing in the sentencing record indicates that the district court, addressing an aggravated assault conviction arising out of Beeman‘s shooting of another person, rejected—or even questioned—what would have appeared to be the obvious clause to use in first determining whether that conviction was a violent felony: the elements clause, which clause requires that the underlying crime have as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against another person.1
Nor has Beeman shown that there is anything in the legal landscape in 2009 to suggest that the district court would have had any reason to doubt that the elements clause provided a sound basis for characterizing the aggravated assault conviction as a violent felony. See United States v. Washington, 890 F.3d 891, 896 (10th Cir. 2018) (holding that a
As to the legal landscape concerning a Georgia aggravated assault conviction at the time of Beeman‘s 2009 sentencing under the ACCA, if the law was clear at the time of Beeman‘s sentencing that only the residual clause would authorize a finding that his aggravated аssault conviction was a violent felony, that circumstance would strongly indicate that an ACCA sentence based on such a conviction depended on the residual clause. Yet, Beeman has not cited, and the panel did not find, any caselaw in 2009 holding, otherwise making obvious, or even hinting that a Georgia aggravated assault conviction could qualify as
In short, having offered no basis upon which to conclude that the district court counted the aggravated assault conviction as a violent felony based solely on the residual clause, Beeman clearly failed to shoulder his burden of proving that his sentence was adversely impacted by the residual clause. Having failed to carry his burden of proof on that claim, Beeman‘s Johnson claim necessarily had to be dismissed. See Romine v. Head, 253 F.3d 1349, 1357 (11th Cir. 2001) (“Where, as hеre, the evidence does not clearly explain what happened . . . the party with the burden loses.“); see also Schaffer ex rel. Schaffer v. Weast, 546 U.S. 49, 56 (2005) (explaining that the term “burden of persuasion” means that the party with the burden “loses if the evidence is closely balanced“).
IV. Dissenting Colleague‘s Concerns
Our dissenting colleague focuses on what she views as the unfairness of the result generated by the Beeman decision. Yet, she does not explain why the legal principles applied by the Beeman panel opinion are incorrect, nor does she engage the panel opinion‘s legal analysis.
Contrary to our dissenting colleague‘s characterization, the burden of proof and persuasion that governs a
Nor does the Beeman panel‘s decision improperly create too “narrow” a “path” for obtaining relief under Johnson, as our colleague suggests. See Judge Martin Dissent at 23. For sure, the panel decision requires a
In determining whether a district court based its sentencing decision solely on the residual clause, our colleague would widen the path for a movant seeking Johnson relief by considering only whether a particular conviction would qualify today as an ACCA predicate under the enumerated offenses or the elements clause, given developments in the caselaw such as Descamps. See Judge Martin Dissent at 24. If current law would forbid the use of the enumerated offenses or the elements clause, according to our colleague‘s reasoning, one would have to infer that the sentencing court necessarily relied only on the residual clause when it applied the ACCA enhancement. See id.
But more fundamentally, our dissenting colleague‘s approach would let Beeman‘s untimely claim for relief under Descamps in through the backdoor, thereby entirely neutering a ruling that any such claim is clearly barred by AEDPA‘s statute of limitations. Our colleague suggests that the panel somehow “ignored” Descamps by adhering to this statute of limitations ruling.3 Judge
Martin Dissent at 24. To the contrary, the panel acknowledged Descamps, as well as its retroactive application to cases on collateral review. See Beeman, 871 F.3d at 1219. But the fact that a particular legal principle is to be given retroactive effect does not necessarily mean that a claim based on that legal principle will be timely under AEDPA. As the panel opinion explained, Descamps does not reset AEDPA‘s statute of limitations pursuant to
Essentially, what our colleague is advocating for in her dissent is that the burden of proof and persuasion that ordinarily applies to a
Even accepting Judge Martin‘s factual premise about what sentencing records typically show or do not show, our panel opinion rejected her legal premise that the burden of proof should be overhauled for
For all of the above reasons, I remain convinced that the Beeman panel got the law right. To obtain relief on a Johnson claim, a
MARTIN, Circuit Judge, with whom JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge joins, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc:
Jeffrey Bernard Beeman is serving a seventeen and one-half year term of imprisonment. His sentence was made longer because he was sentenced under the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA“), a statute intended to impose harsher sentences on criminal defendants who committed violent felonies in the past. Since he was sentenced, the law defining what constitutes a “violent felony” has changed. Indeed, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated part of the statute that had been the basis for his longer sentence, Johnson v. United States, 576 U.S. ___, 135 S. Ct. 2551 (2015). As а result, Mr. Beeman filed this action seeking to have his sentence vacated. He points out that a person with a background identical to his would get a significantly shorter sentence if sentenced today. However, the panel of this court that ruled on Mr. Beeman‘s appeal imposed administrative impediments, such that he can get no review of his sentence. Those impediments are not derived from the statute or Eleventh Circuit or Supreme Court precedent, and they bar relief for prisoners serving sentences that could not properly be imposed under current law. I hoped the majority of this Court would vacate the Beeman panel opinion, and I dissent from their decision to let it stand.
The panel opinion in Mr. Beeman‘s case allows him no relief unless he can point to something from the transcript of his 2009 sentencing hearing that proves his longer sentence was based on the part of the statute, the residual clause, which was invalidated by the Supreme Court. Of course, at the time of Mr. Beeman‘s sentencing hearing, no one who was there had any idea that the Armed Career Criminal Act would, six years later, be partly invalidated by the Supreme Court. Thus, the question presented by Mr. Beeman‘s case is what opportunity, if any, do we give him (and many others like him) to have his sentence reevaluated now that the Supreme Court has recognized his sentence was imposed under a statute that was, in part, unconstitutional.
In her opinion respecting the denial of en banc review, Judge Julie Carnes says I
Mr. Beeman came forward with proof that his sentence must have been based on the residual clause. That is, it can‘t possibly be based on the other clauses in ACCA‘s definition of “violent felony.” This Court has previously relied on precisely this type of process of elimination. See In re Chance, 831 F.3d 1335, 1339–41 (11th Cir. 2016); In re Rogers, 825 F.3d 1335, 1339 (11th Cir. 2016) (per curiam). Other circuits have as well. See United States v. Geozos, 870 F.3d 890, 896 (9th Cir. 2017); United States v. Winston, 850 F.3d 677, 682 (4th Cir. 2017). And Mr. Beeman is right when he tells us that his 1990 conviction in Georgia for aggravated assault is not an ACCA predicate offense under the enumerated offenses clause, one of the two surviving definitions of violent felony. Beyond that, and although this Court has not yet decided the issue, Mr. Beeman еxplains why his 1990 Georgia aggravated assault conviction cannot qualify as a violent felony under the last remaining definition either. This means the now defunct residual clause provided the only basis for designating Mr. Beeman‘s aggravated assault conviction as a violent felony.
U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams, sitting by designation with this court, dissented from the Beeman panel opinion, and explained well the reasons why the panel opinion was wrongly decided. I agree with what she said, and add my thoughts here.
I. BACKGROUND
A.
In 2009 Mr. Beeman was sentenced to a 210-month term of imprisonment after he was convicted for being a felon in possession of a firearm. Beeman v. United States, 871 F.3d 1215, 1217 (11th Cir. 2017). His ACCA sentence is based on two Georgia convictions for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and one Georgia convictiоn for aggravated assault. Id. at 1218.
A felon-in-possession conviction carries a sentence of no more than ten years.
On June 26, 2015, the Supreme Court ruled the residual clause of ACCA was so vague that it could not serve as a constitutional basis for making a person‘s sentence longer. Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2563. The Supreme Court later held that Johnson‘s ruling should be given effect in cases where defendants were sentenced under the residual clause before Johnson was decided. Welch v United States, 518 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. 1257, 1268 (2016). That being so, on June 7, 2016, Mr. Beeman filed a motion to vacate his sentence
The District Court found Mr. Beeman‘s motion was not based on Johnson, but actually relied on Descamps v United States, 570 U.S. 254, 133 S. Ct. 2276 (2013). Beeman v. United States, No. 4:08-CR-038-01-HLM-WEJ, No. 4:16-CV-00143-HLM, 2016 WL 10571891, at *2 (N.D. Ga. Oct. 12, 2016). With this reasoning, it denied the
B.
The panel characterized Mr. Beeman‘s motion as raising both a “Johnson claim and a Descamps claim.”1 Beeman, 871 F.3d at 1220. The panel said because Descamps did not state a new rule, a Descamps claim would not trigger the one-year limitations provision of
that the defendant was incorrectly sentenced . . . under [the other] clause[s].” Id. at 1220. The panel recognized that Mr. Beeman raised a timely Johnson clаim because he argued that his offense “historically qualified as an ACCA predicate under the ACCA‘s residual clause,” and because he filed his motion just before the one-year anniversary of the Johnson decision. Id. at 1220-21 (quotation omitted and alteration adopted).
Having decided Mr. Beeman‘s motion was timely, the panel then considered the merits of his “Johnson claim.” Id. at 1221. But the panel rejected Mr. Beeman‘s effort to show that his aggravated assault conviction did not qualify as a violent felony under either ACCA‘s elements clause or its enumerated offenses clause. Instead the panel said he was entitled to no relief because he could not affirmatively prove that the sentencing court relied “solely on the residual clause” when it imposed sentence on Mr. Beeman in 2009. Id. In creating this standard, the panel rеquired Mr. Beeman to prove this “historical fact,” using only his 2009 sentencing record and legal precedent that predated that sentence. Id. at 1224 n.5. The panel said this test—the “historical-fact test“—was necessary to preserve the appropriate burden placed on
II. DISCUSSION
A.
How does a prisoner in the Eleventh Circuit get the benefit of a claim based on Johnson? The Beeman panel opinion created a very narrow path. Now a petitioner must show through affirmative record evidence—or precedent that was binding at the time of his sentencing—that the sentencing court gave him a longer sentence
Here, the opinion respecting the denial of en banc review suggests that accepting this type of proof about how a particular sentence was imposed equals relieving a litigant of the burden of proving he‘s entitled to relief. Judge Carnes Op. at 14-15. But again, I have merely articulated the method by which Mr. Beeman has carried his burden. Certainly, the only other circuits to have considered this question at the time Beeman was decided accepted this same method of proof relied on by Mr. Beeman. See Geozos, 870 F.3d at 896; Winston, 850 F.3d at 682.2
This approach is reliable because our method for analyzing whether a conviction qualifies as a “violent felony” under the enumerated offenses and elements clauses has remained unchanged. Descamps reiterated that courts must apply the categorical approach to analyzing ACCA predicates, or, in certain limited circumstances, use a modified-categorical approach. Descamps, 570 U.S. at 257, 133 S. Ct. at 2281; see also Mays v. United States, 817 F.3d 728, 734 (11th Cir. 2016) (per curiam) (”Descamps did not announce a new rule—its holding merely clarified existing precedent.“). So if you can show that a conviction does not meet the definition of a “violent felony” under the elements or enumerated offenses clauses, this is affirmative proоf that the sentence was based on the now-defunct residual clause.
The panel rejected this approach, and in doing so ignored Descamps.3 The panel recognized that Descamps must be applied retroactively on collateral review,
Beeman, 871 F.3d at 1219-20, but then refused to apply it as a part of the merits analysis, saying Mr. Beeman was “untimely” in asserting it, id. at 1220. But again, the Supreme Court opinion in Descamps instructed courts on how to analyze a person‘s prior convictions to determine whether they meet the definition of a “violent felony”To the extent the panel‘s designation of Mr. Beeman‘s Descamps claim as “untimely” indicates a worry about a flood of untimely petitions, Mr. Beeman‘s claim was timely. His claim is that Johnson means he no longer qualifies for an ACCA sentence, and AEDPA gives him one year from the date of thаt decision to make that claim. See
It is important to examine what exactly is being rejected when this Court refuses to apply Descamps to a
We also know that Beeman‘s historical-fact test raises very real practical concerns. Most pre-Johnson sentencing records don‘t specify reliance on the residual clause because “[n]othing in the law requires a judge to specify which clause of [ACCA] . . . it relied upon in imposing a sentence.” Chance, 831 F.3d at 1340. A
In short, Mr. Beeman‘s method of proving his claim—showing that his sentence could not possibly be based on the elements clause or enumerated offenses clause—is rational, supported in law, embraced by this circuit and others, and a proper allocation of the burden for a
B.
Under a proper analysis, Mr. Beeman has a good argument that he should not have received an ACCA sentence, even at the time his sentence was imposed.
At the time of his 1990 conviction, a person could be convicted of aggravated assault in Georgia for using a dangerous object to put another person in “reasonable apprehension” of an immediate violent injury. See
Generally, offenses must require knowing or intentional conduct to qualify as a violent felony. See Begay v. United States, 553 U.S. 137, 144-45, 128 S. Ct. 1581, 1586 (2008) (holding that strict liability or negligence crimes only qualify as ACCA predicates when they involve “purposeful, violent, and aggressive” conduct), abrogated on other grounds by Johnson, 135 S. Ct. at 2563; Leocal v. Ashcroft, 543 U.S. 1, 5, 9-10, 125 S. Ct. 377, 380, 382 (2004) (holding that a DUI offense did not have “as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another” under the “crime of violence” definition of
Mr. Beeman has a good argument that a Georgia conviction for aggravated assault did not require the type of intent necessary for it to serve as an ACCA predicate offense. He should have been given an opportunity to present that argument in court.
III. CONCLUSION
The Supreme Court recently reminded us of our crucial duty to “exhibit regard for fundamental rights and respect for prisoners as people.” Rosales-Mireles v. United States, 585 U.S. ___, 138 S. Ct. 1897, 1907 (2018) (quotation omitted). This duty encompasses thorough review of sentences we now know are longer than the law permitted, because “[t]o a prisoner, th[e] prospect of additional time behind bars is not some theorеtical or mathematical concept[;] . . . [it] has exceptionally severe consequences for the incarcerated individual and for society which bears the direct and indirect costs of incarceration.” Id. (quotations omitted and alterations adopted). When considering claims like Mr. Beeman‘s, “what reasonable citizen wouldn‘t bear a rightly diminished view of the judicial process and its integrity if courts refused to correct obvious errors of their own devise that threaten to require individuals to linger longer in federal prison than the law demands?” Id. at 1908 (quotation omitted).
Mr. Beeman was sentenced in 2009. With a ten-year maximum sentence, he could be nearing his release date. Instead, he will spend another seven-and-a-half more years behind bars. And not only does this Court sanction his unconstitutional sentence, we will prevent him—and many other prisoners like him—from arguing the full merits of his case in court. Our Court is now daily presented with pleadings from prisoners who are barred from our Court because of the rule created in the Beeman panel opinion. In my view, it is the role of the courts to hear these claims. I therefore register my dissent about this court‘s failure to do so.
