GREGORY D. SHARPS AND LANDRELL L. JORDAN, JR., APPELLANTS, v. UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
Nos. 20-CO-554 & 20-CO-608
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
March 11, 2021
Appeals from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CF3-12783-19 & CF1-4480-20)
(Hon. Neal E. Kravitz, motion judge in No. 20-CO-554; Hon. Ronna L. Beck, motion judge in No. 20-CO-608)
(Argued December 15, 2020)
Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.
Carrie Weletz for appellant Sharps.
Mikel-Meredith Weidman, Public Defender Service, with whom Samia Fam and Jaclyn Frankfurt, Public Defender Service, were on the briefs, for appellant Jordan and for Public Defender Service, amicus curiae, in support of appellant Sharps.
Mark Hobel, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Michael R. Sherwin, Acting United States Attorney, and Elizabeth Trosman, Elizabeth H. Danello, Felice Roggen, John P. Mannarino, Amy Zubrensky, and Kathleen Kern, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the briefs, for appellee.
Before GLICKMAN and BECKWITH Associate Judges, and NEBEKER Senior Judge.
Opinion for the court by Associate Judge GLICKMAN.
Dissenting opinion by Associate Judge BECKWITH at page 41.
Appellants were detained pending trial in accordance with the requirements of
Appellants seek relief from this court on either statutory or constitutional grounds. They argue that the emergency deadline-tolling authority granted by
We reject appellants’ arguments and affirm the denials of their motions for release.
I.
The COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted the Superior Court‘s normal operations since March 2020, when Mayor Bowser first declared a public health emergency.4 That emergency remains in effect at the time of this writing. The highly contagious nature of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 has forced the suspension of in-person jury trials in courts across the country, as well as in the District,5 due to the risk of transmission that accompanies these proceedings.6
In 2011, the District of Columbia Courts foresaw the need for express legal authority to toll or delay judicial deadlines in the event a terrorist attack or other emergency prevented the courts from conducting trials and other court proceedings. Congress responded to this concern the following year by adding
Subsection (a)(2) describes the “scope” of the emergency tolling authority vested in the S.C.C.J. as follows:
(A) The chief judge may enter such order or orders as may be appropriate to delay, toll, or otherwise grant relief from the time deadlines imposed by otherwise applicable laws or rules for such period as may be appropriate for any class of cases pending or thereafter filed in the Superior Court.
(B) The authority conferred by this section extends to all laws and rules affecting criminal and juvenile proceedings (including, pre-arrest, post-arrest, pretrial, trial, and post-trial procedures) and civil, family, domestic violence, probate and tax proceedings.9
The only explicit statutory limitation on the scope of the S.C.C.J.‘s emergency authority is the proviso that “[n]othing in this section shall be construed to authorize suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.”10
To ensure that the “emergency authority [is] used sparingly and only in extraordinary circumstances,”11
With the Joint Committee‘s consent, the S.C.C.J. has exercised the emergency authority granted by
The Superior Court‘s Criminal Division has announced plans to schedule trials for pretrial detainees after that date. On January 15, 2021, the Criminal Division published a notice of its intent to resume jury trials in non-violent felony cases in which the defendant is detained pursuant to
II.
Appellants are being held for trial pursuant to a pretrial detention statute originally enacted by Congress in 1970.20 Its current provisions governing the time limits on detention date back to 2001,21 and so
Appellants Jordan and Sharps are detained pending trial pursuant to
Mr. Sharps is charged along with two co-defendants with armed kidnapping, armed robbery, armed burglary, armed assaults, and other offenses arising from a robbery of a marijuana dispensary. He and his alleged accomplices were caught by police officers who pursued the perpetrators as they fled from the scene. Other evidence against Mr. Sharps and his co-defendants allegedly includes the dispensary‘s surveillance video footage, in which Mr. Sharps is identifiable, and DNA evidence from firearms recovered by police in the robbers’ flight path. Considering, as well, Mr. Sharps‘s prior convictions for burglary, robbery, assault and other crimes, the trial court ordered his pretrial detention in October 2019.29 Mr. Sharps filed his motion for release in September 2020.30 Like Mr. Jordan, Mr. Sharps objected to the extension of his detention by the emergency tolling orders. The trial court (Kravitz, J.) denied the motion, and Mr. Sharps took this appeal.
III.
We begin by addressing appellants’ non-constitutional claim that
The United States responds that the plain language of
We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo.33 In doing so, “[o]ur aim is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature‘s intent[.]”34 The “primary and general rule” we follow is that “the intent of the lawmaker is to be found in the language that [it] has used.”35 In examining that language, “it is axiomatic that the words of the statute should be construed according to their ordinary sense and with the meaning commonly attributed to them.”36 “We will give effect to the plain meaning of a statute when the language is unambiguous and does not produce an absurd result. We may also look to the legislative history to ensure that our interpretation is consistent with legislative intent.”37
This appeal is the first time our court has had occasion to interpret
There
We likewise are not persuaded by appellants’ claim that the 100-day limitation on pretrial detention in
The 100-day mark is a date by which something must be done—it is the date by which the court must try a detained defendant or else set conditions for the defendant‘s release; it therefore is a deadline, and it is no less so merely because the failure to meet it does not bar the government from proceeding to trial thereafter.44 As the Supreme Court has explained, “a deadline [can] seek speed by creating a time-related directive that is legally enforceable but does not deprive a judge or other public official of the power to take the action to which the deadline applies if the deadline is missed.”45 Thus, contrary to appellants’ argument, the fact that the government still may prosecute a defendant who was detained under
And (turning to appellants’ alternative characterization) if the 100-day mark is the date the court‘s authority to detain a defendant expires—which is true only if the government does not meet the deadline (as we would say) of bringing the defendant to trial by that date—then for that reason too it is the date by which the court must do something, namely, provide for the detained defendant‘s release. So to put it
This court previously used the word “deadline,” appropriately and in its ordinary sense, when it referred in 2009 to the “100-day trial deadline” in
As the language of
same holds true for “expressio unius est exclusio alterius,” a secondary canon of statutory construction that appellants invoke.49 In
To the extent appellants rely on the canon that when two statutes are in irreconcilable conflict, the more specific statute governs the more general one “unless it appears that the legislature intended to make the general act controlling,”52 they fare no better. For the reasons we already have given, we are convinced that Congress did intend to make
That we construe pretrial detention statutes strictly “to ensure that defendants are not detained without bond ‘unless the lawmaker has clearly said they should be‘”53 would not warrant rejecting what we take to be the plain language and meaning of
IV.
We turn to appellants’ constitutional arguments, starting with their substantive due process claims, and specifically with the facial challenge they present.
A.
The Fifth Amendment‘s Due Process Clause guarantees that “[n]o person shall . . . be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law[.]”55 “The Due Process Clause ensures more than fair process in the deprivation of liberty, however, for it also contains a substantive component that provides heightened protection against government interference with . . . those fundamental rights and liberties which are . . . implicit in the concept of ordered liberty[.]”56 The Supreme Court has held that substantive due process shields detainees from “punish[ment] prior to an adjudication of guilt.”57
Appellants contend that if
A facial constitutional challenge to a law must overcome significant hurdles, for the challenger “can only succeed by establishing that no set of circumstances exist under which the [statute] would be valid, i.e. that the law is unconstitutional in all of its applications.”61 In Salerno, the Supreme Court rejected a facial substantive due process challenge to preventive pretrial detention under the federal Bail Reform Act of 1984 (BRA), a statute modeled on the District‘s pretrial detention statute.62 Recognizing the compelling governmental interests in ensuring the safety of the community and a defendant‘s appearance at trial, the Court upheld temporary preventive detention of dangerous defendants under the BRA as being regulatory rather than punitive in nature, and hence not facially invalid. In so doing, the Court reasoned that the law provided adequate substantive and procedural safeguards to ensure that the detention was not punitive:
[The BRA] carefully limits the circumstances under which detention may be sought to the most serious of crimes. The arrestee is entitled to a prompt detention hearing . . . and the maximum length of pretrial detention is limited by the stringent time limitations of the Speedy Trial Act. Moreover . . . the conditions of confinement envisioned by the Act appear to reflect the regulatory purposes relied upon by the Government.63
Picking up on the italicized language in the foregoing passage, appellants argue that emergency tolling of the 100-day trial deadline in
In making this claim, however, appellants essentially reprise an argument that a post-Salerno decision of this court already has rejected. In McPherson v. United States, the appellant, Ms. McPherson, challenged the constitutionality of
Like appellants, Ms. McPherson relied for support of her due process claim on the Supreme Court‘s decision in Foucha v. Louisiana, which struck down a state law permitting indefinite and possibly permanent confinement in a mental facility of a person found not guilty by reason of insanity “until he is able to demonstrate that he is not dangerous to himself and others, even though he does not suffer from any mental illness.”67 Several years later, in Zadvydas v. Davis, the Court avoided a somewhat similar problem of indefinite and possibly permanent confinement by construing a federal statute authorizing detention of a removable alien beyond ninety days “to contain an implicit ‘reasonable time’ limitation [six months], the application of which is subject to federal court review.”68 The Court‘s decisions in these cases turned on its recognition that petitioners’ indefinite detentions could be “permanent” because they were terminable only by a contingent event that might never occur.69
Pretrial detention under
Appellants’ facial challenge also overlooks key features of the statutory scheme at issue in Salerno. The BRA itself does not constrain the duration of preventive detention.73 Instead, “Congress relied on the [federal] Speedy Trial Act . . . to limit the period of pretrial incarceration.”74 While the Speedy Trial Act sets a ninety-day deadline for commencing the trial of a detained person,75 this deadline is not a firm one. The Act also provides a number of ways in which that deadline may be extended and the period of detention prolonged, including by allowing the trial court to grant a continuance based on “findings that the ends of justice served by taking such an action outweigh the best interest of the public and the defendant in a speedy trial.”76
When the Supreme Court referred in Salerno to the “stringent time limitations” of the Speedy Trial Act, it doubtless was fully aware of this and other exceptions in that Act and their applicability to preventive detention under the BRA.77 Thus, the Court must have been satisfied that the continuance-for-the-ends-of-justice option, which could prolong pretrial detention well beyond the prescribed ninety days, did not render the federal scheme impermissibly punitive.78 Placed in this context, it is apparent that Salerno‘s reference to “stringent time limitations” does not mean a pretrial detention statute must be inflexible in order to satisfy substantive due process. The flexibility supplied by the emergency tolling provisions of
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that, on its face, pretrial detention under
B.
We do not foreclose as-applied due process challenges to the emergency extension of pretrial detention. In Salerno, the Court acknowledged that there is a “point at which detention in a particular case might become excessively prolonged, and therefore punitive, in relation to Congress’ regulatory goal.”85 Mr. Sharps claims his continuing detention is “excessive” and constitutes an as-applied violation of his right to substantive due process. “In determining whether [Mr. Sharps‘s] pretrial detention violated his due process rights, we review the [Superior Court‘s] factual determinations for clear error. The constitutional significance of those findings, including the ultimate determination of whether due process has been violated, is reviewed de novo.”86 Mr. Sharps and the government agree on evaluating his due process claim under a three-factor test articulated by the Second Circuit, which looks to (1) the length of detention and non-speculative future detention, (2) the extent to which the government bears responsibility for the delay in starting trial, and (3) the strength of the evidence supporting the conclusion that no combination of conditions of release can ensure the safety of the community or return to court.87
This court has not adopted the balancing test Mr. Sharps proposes,88 but for present purposes we assume it is appropriate
The second factor does not weigh in Mr. Sharps‘s favor. He contends the government is responsible for the delay in starting his trial because it could have charged him in February 2019, when he was first stopped and questioned about the robbery of the marijuana dispensary, instead of waiting until October 2019 to do so. This argument is misguided because it pertains to the eight months before Mr. Sharps was preventively detained under
Turning to the third factor—the strength of the evidence that Mr. Sharps is dangerous and that no combination of release conditions can ensure the safety of the community—the trial court‘s initial detention order relies on both the evidence supporting the current charges against Mr. Sharps (relating to the armed robbery of the marijuana dispensary and the assaults on and kidnapping of its employees) and his criminal record. As to his involvement in the dispensary incident, the detention order cites the following facts: (1) the police discovered Mr. Sharps hiding under a stairwell after fleeing the scene, in close proximity to a distinctively patterned coat that is prominent in surveillance video of the robbery, zip ties similar to those used to restrain the dispensary employees, and cash consistent with what was in the dispensary‘s register; (2) the surveillance video is “of high quality” and Mr. Sharps‘s face is readily identifiable on it; (3) forensic evidence links Mr. Sharps to the firearms used in the robbery; and (4) a witness
Considering all three factors, we conclude that he has not established that his continued pretrial detention for the protection of the community is unconstitutionally punitive.
C.
In addition to their substantive due process claims, appellants assert that the emergency extension of their pretrial detention violated their rights to procedural due process because the existing statutory procedures are inadequate to account for extended detention. We do not address appellants’ procedural due process claims on the merits because they are not properly before us. Neither appellant raised procedural due process issues in the motions for release they made in Superior Court,91 and it is well-established that “[n]ormally, a claim that was not raised or passed on in the trial court will be ‘spurned’ on appeal.”92 Moreover, even on appeal, appellants have not identified any specific procedures to which they were entitled but were denied.93 We will not rule on a claim of
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the denials of appellants’ motions for release from pretrial detention.
So ordered.
BECKWITH, Associate Judge, dissenting: Under this court‘s case law, a judge cannot detain a person prior to trial unless there is express statutory authority for that detention, meaning “the lawmaker has clearly said they should be” detained.1 The trial court‘s orders detaining Mr. Jordan and Mr. Sharps are unlawful because neither
As an initial matter,
The problem with relying on
and each day that goes by without an indictment, a trial date, or discovery disclosures may be detrimental to parties in myriad ways. Each additional day of pretrial incarceration, however, could mean the difference between a job and no job, or absence from the birth of one‘s child, or the risk of being physically assaulted or contracting a deadly virus. This court cannot credibly conclude that the legislators who passed a relatively straightforward statute tolling deadlines in emergencies must necessarily have also intended an unprecedented expansion of detention authority.
The majority concludes that even though
Even if Congress did intend such an expansion, it did not say so clearly, and it easily could have. It is “unlikely that the [legislature] would have enacted a major expansion of the availability of pretrial detention . . . without any debate or explicit consideration whatever.” Covington v. United States, 698 A.2d 1033, 1036 n.6 (D.C. 1997) (strictly construing a statute authorizing preventive detention based on a risk of witness intimidation). In the majority‘s view, extending the pretrial detention of people like Mr. Jordan and Mr. Sharps under
While I would reverse the detention orders in this case on the ground that they lack statutory authority, I agree with Mr. Jordan and Mr. Sharps that their detention under
Without even accounting for new variants of the COVID-19 virus that could derail the country‘s vaccination campaign aimed at herd immunity,7 we have no grounds for confidence in the accuracy of the Superior Court‘s timeline and do not ourselves, as judges, possess the scientific expertise to endorse or reject such optimism. If past postponements are any indication, March 22 may not be the magic date this time around—the Superior Court‘s notice regarding intent to resume jury trials that day cautions that “[a]ny trial date as well as the number of trials to be set per week” will be contingent upon the mayor imposing “no further restrictions on governmental operations” in the District, the approval of the Department of Health, and the “ability to summon jurors and conduct trials in a manner consistent with public health and the safety of all participants and the due process rights of the defendant.”8 As far as we know, a return to life as it was—and trials as they were—before the COVID-19 pandemic is itself a “contingent event that might never occur.”9 See ante at 29. And if it is not, the repeated proffering of dates that lack any assurance of an end in sight is not the sort of definiteness due process requires. See Foucha v. Louisiana, 504 U.S. 71, 81–82 (1992) (noting that the Salerno Court found the Bail Reform Act “constitutionally permissible” because it “was strictly limited in duration“); id. at 83 (“In our society liberty is the norm, and detention prior to trial or without trial is the carefully limited exception.” (quoting Salerno, 481 U.S. at 755)).
“It is during our most challenging and uncertain moments that our Nation‘s commitment to due process is most severely tested.” Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 507, 532 (2004). Unquestionably the pandemic has
Notes
The emergency tolling authority granted the S.C.C.J. by
