DWAYNE STONE, Pеtitioner-Appellant, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 20-1778
United States Court of Appeals For the Second Circuit
DECIDED: JUNE 21, 2022
AUGUST TERM 2021 ARGUED: SEPTEMBER 13, 2021
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York.
Before: WALKER, NARDINI, and MENASHI, Circuit Judges.
Following a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Dwayne Stone was convicted of (1) conspiracy to commit second-degree murder in aid of racketeering, (2) second-degree murder in aid of racketeering, and (3) using a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violencе, in violation of 18
DANIEL HABIB, Federal Defenders of New York, Inc., Appeals Bureau, New York, NY, for Petitioner-Appellant Dwayne Stone
NICHOLAS AXELROD (Amy Busa, Ellen H. Sise, on the brief), Assistant United States Attorneys, for Mark J. Lesko, Acting United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Brooklyn, NY, for Respondent-Appellee United States of America
Following a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern Distriсt of New York, Dwayne Stone was convicted of (1) conspiracy to commit second-degree murder in aid of racketeering, (2) second-degree murder in aid of racketeering, and (3) using a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence, in violation of
BACKGROUND
In 2007, Stone was indicted for multiple offenses stemming from his affiliation with the “Folk Nation” gang operating in Brooklyn, New York.1 As relevant here, the indictment charged Stone, under
At trial, the jury heard evidence that Stone and another Folk Nation member approached Washington, a rival gang member, who was in the vicinity of Folk Nation territory. Stone then asked for and received a firearm from his Folk Natiоn associate, and shot Washington multiple times in the head and back, killing him.
At the close of the trial, the district court instructed the jury that the crimes charged in Counts 11 and 12—conspiracy to commit second-degree murder in aid of racketeering and second-degree murder in aid of racketeering—were both “crimes of violence” as related to the Count 13 firearm charge.4 The district court, however, did not give a specific instruction requiring the jury to unanimously agree on which crime—Count 11, Count 12, or both—served as the predicate for the Count 13 conviction. The jury found Stone guilty of Counts 1, 11, 12, and 13 of the indictment, and found all the racketeering acts alleged in the indictment proven, including Act Seven, which charged Stone with conspiracy to murder Washington and the murder of Washington.5 On the Count 13 firearm charge, the jury returned only a general verdict of guilty. The district court sentenced Stone to, in relevant part, a prison term of 292 months on Count 1, concurrent terms of mandatory life imprisonment on Counts 11 and 12, and to a term of 300 months’ imprisonment on Count 13, to run consecutively to the other sentences.
In 2013 Stone filed a petition for habeas corpus under
In 2016, Stone filed a second
DISCUSSION
Under
On appeal, Stone argues that the jury was impermissibly allowed to convict him of the Count 13
I. Section 924(c) Conviction Predicated on Either Conspiracy to Murder or Substantive Murder or Both
Section
Count 13 charged Stone with “knowingly and intentionally us[ing] and carry[ing] a firearm during and relation to crimes of violence, to wit, the crimes charged in Counts Eleven [conspiracy to murder in aid of racketeering] and Twelve [murder in aid of racketeering],” and “knowingly and intentionally possess[ing] a firearm in furtherance of such crimes of violence” in violation of
We recently held that conspiracy tо commit murder in aid of racketeering does not categorically qualify as a crime of violence.14 As described infra in Section II, however, murder in aid of racketeering remains a categorical crime of violence.15
The Supreme Court has held that “[a] conviction based on a general verdict is subject to challenge if the jury was instructed on alternative theories of guilt and may have relied on an invalid one.”16 However, the Court has also held that “habeas petitioners are not entitled to habeas relief based on trial error unless they can establish that it resultеd in actual prejudice.”17 To determine whether a habeas petitioner was actually prejudiced or the error was harmless, “a reviewing court finding such [instructional] error should ask whether the flaw in the instructions ‘had substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury‘s verdict.‘‘’18 There has been “considerable debate about the exact contours of harmless-error analysis in the collateral context—specifiсally, ‘how convinced,’ on collateral review, ‘a reviewing court must be before it can declare a federal constitutional error harmless.‘”19 But one thing is clear: “[w]ithout prejudicial error, there is no basis for collateral relief.”20
We must therefore determine whether Stone was prejudiced by the district court‘s incorrect instruction to the jury that conspiracy to commit murder qualified as a crime of violencе. “The usual methodology for determining whether the harmlessness of a constitutional trial error is established with the requisite degree of certainty is to examine the record as a whole to determine if a rational jury, absent the error, would have arrived at the same verdict . . . .”21 Stone, however, asks the court to forego this method, and argues that the court should instead apply the so-called “categorical approach” to determine whether a Yates22 error in the
Under the categorical approach, courts identify the minimum conduct necessary for conviction under a particular statute, looking only to the statutory elements of the offense and not to the partiсular underlying facts in a defendant‘s case, and determine whether the offense fits within a generic federal standard.24 For example, the categorical approach is used to determine such questions as whether a defendant‘s
Stone urges this court to use the categorical approach here. Specifically, he contends that we must look at the minimum criminal сonduct identified in the offense to which the
Stone‘s argument misses the fundamental distinction between the reasons why courts employ the categorical approach in some circumstances, and a harmlessness or prejudice inquiry in others. The categorical approach, first articulated by the Supreme Court in Taylor v. United States,30 guides how a court may permissibly consider a defendant‘s previous or other convictions for the purpose of either determining whether the defendant committed a separate offense (e.g., a
The distinction between the two inquiries is critical and necessarily guides our decision as to the appropriate method for evaluating Stone‘s challenge in the circumstances presented in this case. Under
Accordingly, in the context of a
Here, the error of instructing the jury on the now-invalid predicate was harmless to Stone because the jury found facts “satisfying the essential elements of guilt” on the valid predicate of substantive murder in aid of racketeering “that would [have] sustain[ed] a lаwful conviction” on the firearm offense.43 Because Count 13 directed the jury to look to Count 12 (the substantive murder in aid of racketeering charge) as a predicate crime of violence, in returning a guilty verdict on Count 13 the jury could have actually found that he used a firearm in relation to that crime. Even without that possibility, however, there is ample evidence in the record that a properly instructed jury would have found that to be the case beyond a reasonable doubt. First, the jury convicted Stone of the substantive murder of Jamel Washington.44 Second, the uncontroverted evidence at trial was that Stone killed Washington with a gun that he had borrowed for that purpose.45 We are convinced that the jury, if properly instructed as to Count 13, would have found beyond a reasonable doubt that Stone “committed the crime of violence in the murder of [Washington], and that the crime was committed by the use of a firearm.”46
Stone was therefore not prejudiced by the invalid jury instruction that conspiracy to murder in aid of racketeering qualified as a crime of violence, given his conviction of murder in aid of racketeering and uncontroverted evidence that he used a gun to commit that crime.
II. Section 924(c) Conviction Predicated on Substantive Murder
Stone alternatively argues that his
This Court, sitting en banc in United States v. Scott, rejected this very argument.47 We held that first-degree manslaughter under
As Stonе concedes, the elements of first-degree manslaughter and second-degree murder differ only with respect to the intent element—whether the defendant had the intent either to cause serious physical injury (manslaughter) or to cause death (second-degree murder).50 Because the intent element played no part in the Scott court‘s analysis of whether first-degree manslaughter is a violent felony, its reasoning binds us with respect to whether second-degree murder is a crime of violenсe. Thus, second-degree murder is categorically a crime of violence under
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
