UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff - Appellee, v. ISIAH BERNARD ADAMS, Defendant - Appellant.
No. 17-5048
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
April 26, 2018
HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
PUBLISH. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma (D.C. No. 4:13-CR-00132-GKF-1). Submitted on the briefs.* FILED April 26, 2018. Elisabeth A. Shumaker, Clerk of Court.
Barry L. Derryberry and William Patrick Widell, Jr., Assistant Federal Public Defenders, Tulsa, Oklahoma for Defendant-Appellant.
Kevin C. Leitch, Assistant United States Attorney, (R. Trent Shores, United States Attorney with him on the brief) Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before HARTZ, SEYMOUR, and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges.
HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
One of the conditions of supervised release for Defendant Isiah Bernard Adams was that he comply with the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA),
I. BACKGROUND
Defendant pleaded guilty in 2014 for failing to register as a sex offender. He was sentenced to 21 months in prison, followed by a five-year term of supervised release, which eventually began in November 2015. One condition of his supervised release was that he “comply with the requirements of [SORNA].” R., Vol. I at 10.
In January 2017, Sharla Belluomo, a Tulsa-based probation officer supervising Defendant, filed a petition (the Petition) alleging five violations of the terms of his supervised release. The district court held a revocation hearing on April 5, 2017. Defendant stipulated to four of the alleged violations but denied the allegation that he had violated SORNA by “fail[ing] to update his registration status when he
The district court determined that Belluomo was credible and Defendant was not. It thus found that Defendant had failed to comply with SORNA. The court sentenced Defendant (based on all five violations alleged in the Petition) to 18 months in prison and an 18-month term of supervised release. Apparently believing that his sentence would be lower if there were no finding of a SORNA violation, Defendant appeals the finding.
II. ANALYSIS
Defendant argues in this court that there was no evidence that he changed his residence to Tulsa for SORNA purposes. He concedes that he did not raise this argument below, so we review only for plain error. See United States v. Rios-Morales, 878 F.3d 978, 987 (10th Cir. 2017). He must therefore show “(1) error, (2) that is plain, which (3) affects [his] substantial rights, and which (4) seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). In our view, he has failed even to show error.
To assess Defendant’s argument, we begin with a review of his legal obligations. Under SORNA, “[a] sex offender shall register, and keep the registration current, in each jurisdiction where the offender resides . . . .”
As authorized by SORNA, see
[SORNA § 20911(13)] accordingly defines “resides” to mean “the location of the individual’s home or other place where the individual habitually lives.” This entails that a sex offender must register . . . [i]n any jurisdiction in which he has his home; and [i]n any jurisdiction in which he habitually lives (even if he has no home or fixed address in the jurisdiction, or no home anywhere).
Id.
Section VIII also addresses the meaning of habitually lives. It observes that the term is not defined in the statute and “[a]n overly narrow definition would undermine the objectives of sex offender registration and notification under SORNA.” Id.2 The term therefore “should be understood to include places in which the sex offender lives with some regularity, and with reference to where the sex offender actually lives, not just in terms of what he would choose to characterize as his home address or place of residence
for self-interested reasons.” Id. at 38,062. The Guidelines then adopt the interpretation that “a sex offender habitually lives in the relevant sense in any place in which the sex offender lives for at least 30 days.” Id. This Section also sets forth the timely-reporting requirement of the statute, saying that “a sex offender who changes his place of residence within a jurisdiction must be required to report the change within three business days.” Id.
Section VI describes the sort of location information that transient sex offenders must provide. Although they have no residential address, “some more or less specific description should normally be obtainable concerning the place or places where such a sex offender habitually lives.” Id. at 38,055. For example, the sex offender could provide “information about a certain part of a city that is the sex offender’s habitual locale, a park or spot on the street (or a number of such places) where the sex offender stations himself during the day or sleeps at night, shelters among which the sex offender circulates, or places in public buildings, restaurants, libraries, or other establishments that the sex offender frequents.” Id. at 38,055–56. Such information “serves the same public safety purposes as knowing the whereabouts of sex offenders with definite residence addresses.” Id. at 38,056.
Defendant relies on our opinion in United States v. Alexander, 817 F.3d 1205 (10th Cir. 2016), in which we reversed a conviction because the jury was not instructed regarding the 30-day element of “habitually lives,” see id. at 1213–15. We recommended the following jury-instruction language: “An offender ‘habitually lives’ in any place in which he intends to live with some regularity, or lives for at least 30 days, even if the person has no home or fixed address or is homeless.” Id. at 1215. Defendant’s contention, as we understand
The government’s burden of persuasion in a revocation hearing is proof by a preponderance of the evidence. See
Defendant also argues that “the record does not support a finding that [Defendant] failed to update his registration within three business days after he supposedly changed his residence.” Aplt. Br. at 12 (capitalization omitted). But he is not disputing that he failed to register in Tulsa. He appears to be saying only that because he did not change his residence, he did not need to update his registration. This argument adds nothing to the prior argument and it is no more successful the second time around.
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
SORNA Guidelines at 38,061–62.[C]onsider the case of a sex offender who nominally has his home in one jurisdiction—e.g., he maintains a mail drop there, or identifies his place of residence for legal purposes as his parents’ home, where he visits occasionally—but he lives most of the time with his girlfriend in an adjacent jurisdiction. Registration in the nominal home jurisdiction alone in such a case would mean that the registration information is not informative as to where the sex offender is actually residing, and hence would not fulfill the public safety objectives of tracking sex offenders’ whereabouts following their release into the community.
