UNITED STATES of America, Appellee v. Vincent ANDREWS, Appellant.
No. 03-3030.
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Feb. 6, 2007. Decided March 23, 2007.
482 F.3d 894
GRIFFITH, Circuit Judge.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.11
So ordered.
Lisa B. Wright, Assistant Federal Public Defender, was on the brief for appellant. With her on the briefs was A.J. Kramer, Federal Public Defender. Neil H. Jaffee, Assistant Federal Public Defender, entered an appearance.
Katherine M. Kelly, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the cause for appellee. With her on the brief were Jeffrey A. Taylor, U.S. Attorney, and Roy W. McLeese, III, David B. Goodhand, and Matthew P. Cohen, Assistant U.S. Attorneys.
Before: GRIFFITH and KAVANAUGH, Circuit Judges, and WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GRIFFITH.
Concurring opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
GRIFFITH, Circuit Judge:
tronic device that can store, retrieve, and process data“); compare Jury Instructions, supra n. 7, at 32 (“loss” is “any reasonable cost to any victim, including the cost of responding to an offense, conducting a damage assessment, and restoring the data, program, system, or information to its condition prior to the offense, and any revenue lost, cost incurred, or other consequential damages incurred because of interruption of service,”
I.
While a police officer with the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD“) in September 1998, appellant Vincent Andrews booked a woman who had been arrested for prostitution. With the woman in his sole custody, Andrews drove her a short distance away from the police station and stopped the car where she performed oral sex on him in the backseat. After returning to the police station, Andrews realized that the woman had kept the condom used during the sexual encounter. When she refused to give him the used condom, he tackled her, held her down, and groped her, ultimately recovering the condom from her person. The woman immediately reported the incident to other police officers at the station, and Andrews was arrested. After a jury trial, he was convicted in November 1999 in the District of Columbia Superior Court of first-degree sexual abuse of a ward, tampering with physical evidence, obstruction of justice, and simple assault. Andrews was sentenced to two to six years imprisonment, with all but one year suspended. He was also fired from the MPD.
In January 2002, Andrews visited a law enforcement equipment store and, allegedly holding himself out as a police officer, attempted to purchase police equipment. The owner refused to make the sale and notified the police. The police executed a
The presentence investigation report (“PSR“) prepared by the Probation Office relied on the federal Sentencing Guidelines and reported a base offense level of 20 for Andrews‘s firearm conviction because it determined that his prior conviction for first-degree sexual abuse of a ward was a “crime of violence.” See
II.
Because Andrews failed to argue to the district court that his conviction for first-degree sexual abuse of a ward was not a crime of violence, we review his sentence only for plain error. See, e.g., United States v. (Adrian) Williams, 358 F.3d 956, 966 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (citing
To determine whether the district court committed an “obvious” error by categorizing Andrews‘s prior conviction for first-degree sexual abuse of a ward as a crime of violence, we start with the definition of crime of violence in the Guidelines:
(a) The term “crime of violence” means any offense under federal or state law, punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year, that--
(1) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another, or
(2) is burglary of a dwelling, arson, or extortion, involves use of explosives, or otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.
Under D.C. law, first-degree sexual abuse of a ward is defined as “a sexual act with another person ... when that other person [i]s in official custody, or is a ward or resident, on a permanent or temporary basis, of a hospital, treatment facility, or other institution.”
The jury instructions make clear the conduct for which Andrews was convicted. The jury was charged to find whether Andrews engaged in a “sexual act” with the victim “[t]hat is contact between his penis and her mouth.” Trial Transcript at 35, United States v. Andrews, No. 6601-98 (D.C. Super. Ct. Sept. 21, 1999). Our determination is therefore limited to the question of whether oral sex with a ward, as a categorical determination, “presents a serious potential risk of
Andrews‘s argument to the contrary fails to the extent that it relies on consent not constituting a defense to first-degree sexual abuse of a ward. Although the unavailability of a consent defense could conceivably criminalize behavior that might not involve violent behavior, this court “cannot accept the defendant[‘]s contention that an offense is not categorically a crime of violence unless every such offense is.” Thomas, 361 F.3d at 659 n. 11 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Just because Andrews “can hypothesize circumstances in which [first-degree sexual abuse of a ward] can be committed without either force or risk or injury cannot be dispositive under
III.
Because the district court did not plainly err when it considered first-degree sexual
So ordered.
WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge, concurring:
I join the majority opinion, but write separately to discuss some principles that I believe underlie our decision. I particularly want to address the relation between: (1) Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S. 575 (1990), which prescribes how a sentencing court should assess whether a prior conviction was for a “crime of violence“; (2) Almendarez-Torres v. United States, 523 U.S. 224 (1998), which excepts prior convictions from the requirement of Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000), that factors increasing a sentence beyond the statutory maximum be found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt; and (3) conventional principles of issue preclusion.
In Taylor the Supreme Court held that a court sentencing under the Armed Career Criminal Act could look to statutory elements, charging documents, and jury instructions to determine whether an earlier conviction after trial was a “crime of violence.”1 The Court affirmed this narrow exception to Congress‘s “categorical approach” in Shepard v. United States, 544 U.S. 13 (2005), but strictly curtailed recourse to a larger set of sources, such as police reports.
The rationale and scope of Taylor‘s exception pose difficult methodological questions. Why are we limited to the indictment, information, and jury instructions? And are we limited as to which facts we may draw from those sources? In the present case, the happenstance that our review is only for plain error has largely mooted these questions; future courts will often lack that advantage.
In Shepard at least four members of the Court suggested that Taylor reflects Sixth Amendment concerns subsequently voiced in cases such as Jones v. United States, 526 U.S. 227 (1999), and Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490. See Shepard, 544 U.S. at 24; but see id. at 37 (O‘Connor, J., dissenting) (“[T]oday‘s decision reads Apprendi to cast a shadow possibly implicating recidivism determinations, which until now had been safe from such formalism.“). And, indeed, Taylor does mesh nicely with the Almendarez-Torres exception from Apprendi. Taylor directs courts to look to the fact of prior conviction, and Almendarez-Torres allows them to rely on that fact without meeting Apprendi‘s requirement of a jury finding beyond a reasonable doubt.
Resting Taylor‘s exception on the rationale of Almendarez-Torres may raise more questions than it answers, however. Almendarez-Torres itself relied on an arguably formalistic distinction between elements and sentencing factors, see 523 U.S. at 229-35, a distinction that has since been heavily eroded by the Apprendi line. See Shepard, 544 U.S. at 27 (Thomas, J., concurring)
Fortunately, I believe Taylor‘s readiness to rely on charging documents and jury instructions can be sustained independently of Almendarez-Torres‘s historical treatment of recidivism as a sentencing factor, namely, by reliance on an entirely non-formalistic principle of litigation: issue preclusion.
The standard application of issue preclusion requires that a party be estopped from relitigating an identical issue previously decided if three conditions are satisfied:
- The issue must have been actually litigated, that is contested by the parties and submitted for determination by the court.
- The issue must have been actually and necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction in the first trial.
- Preclusion in the second trial must not work an unfairness.
Milton S. Kronheim & Co. v. District of Columbia, 91 F.3d 193, 197 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (internal punctuation omitted).
Though most applications of issue preclusion occur in civil litigation, the “principle is as applicable to the decisions of criminal courts as to those of civil jurisdiction.” Frank v. Mangum, 237 U.S. 309, 334 (1915). Most invocations in the criminal arena are by the defendant, on the basis of either the Double Jeopardy Clause, Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 447 (1970), or due process more generally, see Akhil Reed Amar & Jonathan L. Marcus, Double Jeopardy Law After Rodney King, 95 Colum. L. Rev. 1, 31 (1995) (“[T]he Ashe idea must be rooted outside the strict text of the Double Jeopardy Clause, in the more spacious--but also more flexible, less absolute--language of due process.“). See, e.g., Green v. United States, 426 F.2d 661 (D.C. Cir. 1970) (per curiam) (precluding the Government from relitigating a question of fact determined in defendants’ favor in a previous partial verdict). Offensive uses in criminal suits are extremely rare, see Richard B. Kennelly, Jr., Precluding the Accused: Offensive Collateral Estoppel in Criminal Cases, 80 Va. L. Rev. 1379 (1994) (collecting cases), despite judicial acknowledgements of the theoretical appropriateness, as in Frank v. Mangum. One reason may be that issue preclusion is inapt for the superficially most inviting use--cases where a prior conviction is an element of the new crime; there, the only necessary “fact” is the existence of the prior conviction itself. Id. at 1381-82 n. 12.
Moreover, reliance on the principles of preclusion provides contour to the holdings of Taylor and Shepard, while at the same time providing support for Almendarez-Torres‘s outcome without the formalism of its analysis. First, by focusing on precluded issues, it becomes clear why Taylor and Shepard limited inquiry to charging documents and jury instructions: The latter are proof of what a jury found beyond a reasonable doubt, and the former by law must include the specific elements that must be so found for conviction.2 Accord United States v. Thompson, 421 F.3d 278, 282 (4th Cir. 2005) (“The common denominator of the approved sources is their prior validation by process comporting with the Sixth Amendment.“). Recourse to charging documents and jury instructions thus ensures that a defendant‘s prior conviction is labeled a “crime of violence” only when the requisite elements were actually and necessarily decided beyond a reasonable doubt as part of the conviction.
Likewise, issue preclusion provides coherent justification for a “categorical approach” that bypasses facts or determinations elicited at trial but not found in the charging documents or jury instructions. In the instant case, for example, Andrews invokes observations of the trial judge in his prior case to the effect that the “victim” may have consented. See Appellant‘s Br. at 17-19. The observations are of no help to him. Under the law governing the prior conviction neither consent nor its absence was relevant; accordingly, no finding one way or the other could have been necessary to the conviction. Here the Taylor requirements themselves exclude fact statements that would not meet the criteria for issue preclusion.
Second, a focus on preclusion also helps clarify which facts may appropriately be drawn from the charging documents and jury instructions. Reflecting congressional desire for a “categorical approach,” Taylor and Shepard permit inquiry beyond the statutory text for the limited purpose of determining the necessary elements of a defendant‘s crime when the statute in question prohibits offenses both covered and not-covered by the definition of a “crime of violence.” This exercise is akin to a court‘s determination of which elements would be precluded as “necessarily decided” and therefore conclusively resolved by prior litigation. The analogy reminds us that not every fact which happens to be decided is actually necessary to the prior judgment or conviction, a point that Taylor and Shepard treated as central. See Shepard, 544 U.S. at 21.
Consider then the Seventh Circuit‘s en banc decision in United States v. Shannon, 110 F.3d 382 (7th Cir. 1997). There the court‘s appraisal of whether the statutory rape of which defendant had previously been convicted posed a “serious potential risk of physical injury” turned in signifi-
The question whether a particular finding was necessary for conviction might have been critical in a quite plausible variation on today‘s case. As the court‘s opinion makes clear, judicial readiness to include statutory rape as a crime of violence has turned in material part on the dangerous diseases associated with sexual contact--dangers of which a minor is unlikely to have been adequately aware when giving consent. Yet while the transmittal rates from oral sex may be difficult to determine with accuracy, they are universally regarded as significantly lower than for conventional sex. See, e.g., Primary HIV Infection Associated with Oral Transmission, http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/resources/factsheets/oralsexqa.htm; see also Oral Sex, http://www.stanford.edu/group/SHPRC/ch4_ora.html. Suppose (1) the record suggested that the transmittal rates for oral sex were lower than for conventional sex by a margin sufficient to preclude a finding that it generated a serious risk of physical injury; (2) the prosecution in the initial case claimed that defendant had engaged in both forms of sexual conduct; but (3) the statute and jury instructions did not differentiate between the two acts and the jury found the defendant guilty simply of the basis of the generic element of “sexual conduct.” In this hypothetical, we could not say that facts sufficient to show a “serious risk of physical injury” had been actually and necessarily decided in reaching the conviction. Cf. Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 27 cmt. i (1982) (“If a judgment of a court of first instance is based on determinations of two issues, either of which standing independently would be sufficient to support the result, the judgment is not conclusive with respect to either issue standing alone.“). Thus, under the assumptions
Two remaining complexities: First, prior convictions triggering sentence enhancements will commonly be from a different jurisdiction, and in such cases there will be a want of mutuality. But the Supreme Court has found that a lack of mutuality is not so troubling as to require an across-the-board ban on the offensive use of issue preclusion in civil cases where mutuality is missing. Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 439 U.S. 322 (1979). Although the circumstance should alert courts to exercise special care in assuring themselves there would be no unfairness in applying issue preclusion, it seems as weak a basis for a categorical rule here as in the civil context.
Second, courts may be tempted to rely on facts admitted by the defendant in a prior proceeding, or which otherwise seem indisputable. This reflects a natural resistance to the lumpiness of a truly categorical approach, which forces courts to treat what may seem large and somewhat diverse swaths of conduct as “crimes of violence” (or not). See supra n. 3. But sentence enhancements for prior convictions are just that--for convictions. Conviction-based enhancements should not rest on collateral evidence of the defendant‘s bad character. Those facts can flow into the sentencing decision independently, as a basis for the sentencing judge‘s exercise of discretion.
GRIFFITH
Circuit Judge
