In 1974, appellant David Tokoph, then-defendant in a criminal action in the District of New Mexico, was sentenced under 18 U.S.C. § 5021, the Federal Youth Corrections Act (repealed in 1984). In 2012, Tokoph filed a motion to seal and expunge records of that conviction. The district court concluded that it had no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed in the motion and dismissed. For the reasons set forth below, we agree and affirm.
BACKGROUND
In 1972, at the age of 21, appellant Tokoph engaged in a series of fraudulent loan transactions resulting in a multi-count indictment on which he was convicted in 1973. The details of his offenses are not
Thus the case proceeded. That is, Tok-oph received a probationary sentence under the FYCA. In 1982, he was unconditionally discharged, the sentence was set aside, and the court issued him a certificate to that effect. Thus stood the relationship between Tokoph and his history for approximately the next thirty years. Tokoph then filed in the District of New Mexico a “motion to seal and expunge records of conviction under Federal Youth Corrections - Act pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 5021.” The United States opposed. The district court received briefing on the motion, considered the authorities and the arguments of the parties, and concluded that under governing precedent of this circuit, the FYCA did not provide any statutory authority to order expungement. After considering appellant’s alternate theory that expungement could be ordered under the inherent equitable powers of the court, the court determined that it had no authority under that theory to grant the relief prayed and denied the motion. Tok-oph brought the present appeal.
ANALYSIS
On appeal Tokoph contends that the district judge misinterpreted and misapplied the law of the Tenth Circuit. He contends that two decisions of this circuit, United States v. Bronson,
In Bronson, as the district court noted, “the sole issue before the Court was whether a magistrate judge had misinformed the defendant as to the consequences of a sentence under the FYCA by suggesting that a defendant held for the entire term of his sentence would be eligible to have his conviction set aside.” United States v. Tokoph, No. 13-35, slip op. at 3 (D.N.M. June 24, 2013) (sealed). The Bronson court concluded that the magistrate judge’s statement of the law was incorrect, but “not of sufficient gravity to justify invalidating the plea.”
In Watts, as the district court again correctly observed, “the Tenth Circuit decided whether persons sentenced under the FYCA were being held unlawfully because the Bureau of Prisons and the United States Parole Commission had failed to follow the requirements of the FYCA.” Tokoph, No. 13-35, slip op. at 3. In a section of the Watts opinion not determinative of the issue before the court, but providing background information on the statute, this court in a footnote cited Bronson as having “recognized, by implication, that such ‘setting aside’ of the conviction means that the conviction will be expunged from the defendant’s records.”
To reiterate the message of the Bates decision, we are bound by holdings, not dicta. Each of the two decisions relied upon by appellant provide dicta, not holdings. The expungement question was not germane to the issue before either the Bronson or Watts court, and neither decision rested upon it. The greater problem for appellant, as recognized by the district court, is not only that the cases upon which he relied presented dicta, but that we have in a later decision entered a holding adverse to appellant’s position.
In United States v. Wacker,
In accepting the distinction drawn by the Sentencing Commission, we reiterated a definition of “expunge” previously adopted by this court in a different context: “The word expunge generally means the physical destruction of information.” United States v. Johnson,
Before finally determining that the district court correctly construed binding precedent, we note that appellant further argues that “the Supreme Court of the United States has indicated that 18 U.S.C. § 5021 provides authority to seal records.” Appellant’s Br. 15. In support of this proposition, appellant offers Tuten v. United States,
The Tuten Court considered whether a conviction under the FYCA was automatically set aside at the conclusion of probation. It concluded that this was not the case. While recognizing that Congress intended to permit the successful FYCA probationer who met the statutory requirements to avoid numerous disabilities resulting from a conviction, it never actually considered whether this was equivalent to or even similar to expungement. The only use of the word “expungement” by the Tuten Court was to compare the advantage gained by successful completion of FYCA probation and the setting aside of the conviction to the results from “various state expungement statutes.”
The Dickerson Court considered whether a firearms dealer could escape revocation of its license on the ground that one of its officers had been convicted of a felony when the conviction had been expunged under a state procedure. The Court held that the disabilities imposed by the Gun Control Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. § 922, were not removed by that expungement of a defendant’s record. Before us, appellant relies on a sentence fragment from the Dickerson opinion that “Congress itself provided for expunction in certain circumstances, see 18 U.S.C. § 5021.”
The rest of appellant’s argument consists largely of ambiguous legislative history. The government counters with other interpretations of the same history and with the fact that a majority of circuits are in agreement with Wacker. None of this changes our conclusion. Wacker controls. The FYCA empowers the court to “set aside” convictions and furnish the defendant with a certificate to that effect. This is beneficial to the defendant as it absolves him of some consequence of the prior conviction. It does not expunge it.
In this case, appellant’s reliance on Pinto illustrates just how weak is his support for the theory of inherent equitable jurisdiction. In Pinto, as in the present action, we considered the prayer of a litigant for expungement of a criminal conviction. As in this case, we concluded on the merits that the district court had rightly held that it was without power to grant the petition, and that “there was no statutory authority for the district court’s expunction order.” Pinto,
Granted, Tokoph relies on the FYCA, not considered in Pinto, but now that we have ruled that it is unavailable as a jurisdictional grant of authority to expunge a conviction, he stands in exactly the same shoes as the convicted party in Pinto. It is clearly illustrative of just how weak is the reed of inherent equitable authority that Tokoph must resort to relying on a case that ruled against a claimant on exactly the same theory he advances. We follow Pinto. There is no applicable inherent equitable authority to grant expunction of a valid conviction.
We therefore affirm the decision of the district court that the FYCA does not empower courts to expunge convictions, and that there is no inherent equitable authority to grant the relief prayed in this case. We note that proceedings below were sealed at the request of appellant, who at the time still believed in the propriety of sealing his conviction record. Having determined that he is entitled to no such relief, we further determine that there is
So ordered.
Notes
. Appellant’s motion to expand the record on appeal is denied.
