Convicted of conspiring to distribute marijuana, Jeffrey Curtis and Martin Sax were sentenced to 262 months’ imprisonment apiece. See
United States v. Curtis,
Relying on the one-year statute of limitations added to § 2255 ¶ 6 in 1996, the district court dismissed the petitions as untimely. The court recognized that a fresh year is available to take advantage of a “right ... initially recognized by the Supreme Court, if that right has been newly recognized by the Supreme Court and made retroactively applicable to cases on collateral review” (§ 2255 ¶ 6(3)) but concluded that this applies only if the Supreme Court itself has declared its new decision to be retroactive — and that Court has not deemed
Apprendi
retroactive. Shortly after the district court dismissed these petitions, we held in
Ashley v. United States,
To date, five courts of appeals have held that
Apprendi
is not retroactive on collateral review. See
In re Turner,
Curtis and Sax offer two principal arguments why, in their view,
Apprendi
should be applied retroactively on collateral attack under the principles of
Teague v. Lane,
Bousley
and
Davis
hold that a person convicted of an act that the law does not make criminal may obtain collateral relief.
Bousley
adds that
Teague’s,
retroactivity standard applies only to changes in procedural rules. Curtis and Sax contend that
Apprendi
is substantive rather than procedural. Yet
Apprendi
is about nothing but procedure — who decides a given question (judge versus jury) and under what standard (preponderance versus reasonable doubt).
Apprendi
does not alter which facts have what legal significance, let alone suggest that conspiring to distribute marijuana is no longer a federal crime unless the jury finds that some particular quantity has been sold. Cf.
United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Cooperative,
Thus we must ask whether the rights identified in Apprendi are so fundamental that any system of ordered liberty is obliged to include them. The Supreme Court considered a related argument in Cotton, where the defendant insisted that failing to name the drug quantity in the indictment and obtain a resolution (beyond a reasonable doubt) by the jury is so vital that it should be deemed a “structural error” that always leads to reversal on direct appeal. The Court’s answer was that even if the error is “structural” and even if the point is raised on direct appeal, the error may not necessarily justify reversal under the plain-error standard that applies to litigants who did not present their argument to the district court. Whether it does (assuming that (1) there is error, (2) that is “plain,” and (3) affects substantial rights) will depend on the evidence in the particular case. That is to say, Cotton held that a decision about drug quantity made by a judge (on the preponderance standard) rather than a jury (on the reasonable-doubt standard) is not the sort of error that necessarily undermines the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings. To the contrary, the Court continued,
the fairness and integrity of the criminal justice system depends on meting out to those inflicting the greatest harm on *844 society the most severe punishments. The real threat then to the “fairness, integrity, and public reputation of judicial proceedings” would be if [criminal defendants], despite the overwhelming and uncontroverted evidence that they were involved in a vast drug conspiracy, were to receive a sentence prescribed for those committing less substantial drug offenses because of an error that was never objected to at trial.
AFFIRMED
