OPINION
In State v. Her,
Respondent Brian William Meger was required to register as a predatory offender because of a conviction of attempted first-degree criminal sexual ■ conduct in 1995. See Minn. Stat. § 243.166, subd. lb (2016). In 2006, the State charged Meger with failing to register as a-predatory offender,. Minn. Stat. ,§ 243.166, subds. 3(b), 5 (2016). A person, convicted of failing to register as a predatory offender is subject to a 10-year period of conditional release if the offender was a risk-level-III offender at the time of the offense.
Following a plea agreement, Meger pleaded guilty to failure to register as a predatory offender in exchange for a 20-month sentence, a downward durational departure. On September 7, 2006, the district court accepted Meger’s guilty plea and sentenced.him to 20 months in prison. In January 2007, the court received a letter from the Minnesota Department of Corrections (DOC) inquiring whether the court intended to add a 10-year conditional-release term to Meger’s sentence based on Meger’s risk-level-III status, Minn. Stat. § 243.166, subd; 5a. In an order' signed on January 29, 2007, the district court amended Meger’s sentence by adding a 10-year conditional-release term.
Meger served his 20-month prison sentence, and then remained in prison for approximately 6 additional years because the State could not find appropriate housing for him on conditional release. In June 2014, Meger fíled a motion to correct his sentence under Minn. R. Crim. P. 27.03, subd. 9, requesting that his conditional-release term be vacated because a jury had not found that he was a risk-level-III offender at the time he failed to register. The district court denied the motion. Two weeks later, we held in State v. Her,
The district court granted Meger’s motion to reconsider and his motion to correct his sentence. The court applied Her retroactively, and determined that the conditional-release term was unlawful under Her because Meger’s risk-level status was based solely on “unestablished, extra-judicial facts” contained in a DOC letter provided after he had been sentenced. The court did not impanel a sentencing jury given the “far from ideal” procedural practices in Meger’s case, the substantial time Meger had already served in prison during his conditional-release term, and concerns of complications caused by double jeopardy. The district court vacated Meger’s conditional-release term and imposed his original 20-month sentence, the maximum sentence contemplated at the time of the plea agreement. Because Meger had already served that sentence, the district court ordered his immediate release from custody.
The court of appeals affirmed, holding that Her applies retroactively because it
Relying on Reynolds v. State,
The State filed a petition for review. We granted review and stayed our consideration of this appeal, then lifted the stay after deciding Reynolds v. State,
ANALYSIS
At issue is whether Her applies retroactively to Meger’s amended sentence, which was final' when Her was decided.
Whether a rule of federal constitutional law applies retroactively to criminal convictions that were final when the rule was announced is a legal question that we review de novo. Campos v. State,
Under' Teague, “we first ask whether the rule of federal constitutional criminal procedure is new, or whether it is merely a predictable extension of a preexisting doctrine.” Campos,
“A Supreme Court ‘holding constitutes a new rule within the meaning of Teague if it breaks new ground, imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government, or was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.’ ” Campos,
A holding, however, does not pronounce a new rule under Teague if it is “merely an application of the principle that governed a prior decision to a different set of facts.” Chaidez,
The State argues that Her is not retroactive because it created a new rule that does not apply to cases on collateral review. Citing three decisions by the court of appeals addressing whether a defendant is entitled to jury findings on his or her risk-level status, the State contends that “on the issue presented in this case, the unanimous decision of every appellate judge to consider this issue ... demonstrates that this [cjourt’s decision in Her was not compelled by precedent.”
In response, Meger contends that the court of appeals correctly concluded that Her is retroactive because it is an old rule that is “nothing more than an application of [the Supreme Court’s decision in Blakely v. Washington,
In Her, we held that the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires that, to impose a 10-year conditional-release term under Minn. Stat. § 243.166, subd. 5a, a predatory offender’s risk level be either admitted by the offender or found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
In Apprendi, the Supreme Court held that “[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty
But the Supreme Court did not decide Descamps until 2013, six years after Meg-er’s amended sentence became final. Thus, at the time Meger’s amended sentence became final in 2007, the landscape of the Sixth-Amendment jury-trial-right jurisprudence in Minnesota was unlike the one today, and the scope of the prior-convic,tion exception was not as clear as it is today. On two previous occasions before Descamps, we had extended the prior-conviction exception to include facts beyond the mere recognition of a prior conviction; b.ut we had also declined to do so in a third case. See Her,
Given the fact-specific analysis in Allen, Henderson, and McFee, the question of whether the risk level assigned to an offender under Minn. Stat. § 244,052, subd. 3(e) (2016), falls within the prior-conviction exception was susceptible to debate among reasonable minds when Meger’s case became final in 2007. Additionally, we had not addressed this question until we decided Her. See
“[F]or a sentence to be eligible for correction under Rule 27.03, subdivision 9, the sentence must have been illegal at the time it was imposed.” Reynolds v. State,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand the case to the district court to reinstate Meger’s 'conditional-release term and for such further proceedings consistent with this opinion as necessary.
Reversed.
Notes
. When a predatory offender is released from confinement, a Department of Corrections End-of-Confinement Review Committee assesses the public risk to reoffend and assigns a risk level to each offender ranging from I to III. See Minn. Stat. § 244.052, subd. 3 (2016).
. In Reynolds, we held that a sentence that violates Blakely v. Washington,
. Meger concedes that his case was final because it was not pending on direct review when we decided Her in 2015. In prior decisions involving the retroactive application of Blakely, we have referred to the date the defendant’s conviction became final in our retroactivity analysis. See State v. Hughes,
Here, Meger could not have challenged the period of conditional release in an appeal of his conviction because the district court added the period of conditional release nearly 5 months after entering the judgment of conviction. Because Meger’s case was final when Her was decided, regardless of whether we use the date that his conviction was final or the date that his amended sentence adding the conditional-release term was final, we as-sumé without deciding that the finality of the sentence is the touchstone for determining the retroactive effect in this case and that Meger’s amended sentence became final on April 29, 2007, when the time to file an appeal of his amended sentence would have expired. See Campos v. State,
. In Danforth v. State, we adopted Teague as the framework for considering whether to retroactively apply a new rule of federal constitutional criminal procedure to cases that became final before the announcement of the rule.
. The analysis of the court of appeals in this case is incomplete. In Her, we held that a jury must determine the offender’s risk level in order for a district court to impose a term of conditional release.
. At the time Meger’s amended sentence became final, we had applied these principles to mean that "for felonies other than first-degree murder, the presumptive sentence prescribed by the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines is 'the maximum sentence a judge may impose solely on the basis of [the] facts reflected in the jury verdict or admitted by the defendant.’” State v. Shattuck,
. Because we conclude that Her does not apply retroactively to Meger’s amended sentence, we need not address the State’s arguments regarding the remedy to which Meger would be entitled if Her did apply retroactively to Meger’s case.
