Lead Opinion
Opinion concurring in part, dissenting in part, and dissenting from the judgment filed by Circuit Judge MILLETT.
Anthony T. Ross was convicted in 1999 of misdemeanor sexual assault. In 2009 he moved from Washington D.C. to Ohio, and on October 7, 2010 he was indicted for failing to register with local authorities pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”). See 120 Stat. 587, 590 (2006), 42 U.S.C. § 16901 et seq.; 18 U.S.C. § 2250(a). The act, passed by Congress in 2006, “seeks ... to make more uniform and effective” the “patchwork of federal and 50 individual state [sex offender] registration systems,” Reynolds v. United States,
Ross moved to dismiss the indictment, claiming a number of flaws in its legal basis, two of which he presses before us. His sexual assault conviction had preceded SORNA’s 2006 enactment, and the Supreme Court has established that SORNA did not apply to such persons on its own but could be made applicable only if the Attorney Generаl so “specified].” Reynolds v. United States,
All the other geographic circuits have addressed the non-delegation claim and have rejected it. United States v. Nichols,
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SORNA requires sex offenders to maintain rеgistrations “where the offender resides, where the offender is an employee, and where the offender is a student.” 42 U.S.C. § 16913; see United States v. Kebodeaux, — U.S. -,
For persons convicted before SORNA’s enactment, however, the act provides that the “Attorney General shall have the authority to specify the applicability of [SOR-NA’s] requirements,” § 16913(d), and the Supreme Court has read the act not to make its registration requirements applicable “to pre-Act offenders until the Attorney General so specifies,” Reynolds,
The most obvious candidate for this specification is a rule the Attorney General issued in December 2010 after a rulemak-ing whose APA compliance is not contest
The government contends that two earlier actions sufficed: an interim rule issued in 2007 and “guidelines” proposed in 2007 and finalized in 2008. We find them inadequate.
In 2007 the Attorney General adopted an interim rule declaring SORNA applicable to pre-enactment offenders. Applicability of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, 72 Fed. Reg. 8894, 8897/3 (Feb. 28, 2007) (the “Interim Rule”). In the preamble, the Attorney General expressed his view — later rejected by Reynolds — that the requirements for pre-SOR-NA offenders automatically “took effect when SORNA was enacted on July 27, 2006.” Id. at 8895/3. He also hedged, stating that he was “exercising] his authority ... to specify this scope of application for SORNA, regardless of whether SORNA would apply with such scope absent this rule.” Id. 8896/2 (emphasis added). But he issued the rule without providing for advance notice or inviting comment, as required by the APA, see 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)-(d), instead making the rule effective immediately, with provision for comments thereafter. To justify that shortcut, he invoked the “good cause” exceptions of § 553(b), (d), specifically the allowance for instances where providing notice and comment would be “contrary to the public interest.” Interim Rule,
We’ve said that the “ ‘good cause’ exception ... is to be ‘narrowly construed and only reluctantly countenanced.’ ” Jifry v. F.A.A.,
Far from seeking “immediate effectiveness,” Congress built in at least some delay with its provision for the Attorney General to “specify” the act’s application to pre-SORNA offenders, thereby allowing him, as the Reynolds Court observed, to work out a wide range of “complexities, lacunae, and difficulties” that application to pre-SORNA offenders would entail. Reynolds,
Because the Interim Rule “utterly] failfed] to comply with notice and comment,” this error “cannot be considered harmless if there is any uncertainty at all as to the effect of that failure.” Sprint Corp. v. F.C.C.,
The government next points to the “guidelines” that the Attorney General finalized in 2008. The Attorney General is tasked with determining which states have updated their sex offender registries to comply with SORNA; a state’s failure to do so entails a federal funding haircut. 42 U.S.C. § 16925(a). Accordingly, the Attorney General developed guidelines to “asr sist[ ] ... the states and other jurisdictions in incorporating the SORNA requirements into their sex offender registration and notification programs.” The National Guidelines for Sex Offender Registration and Notification, 73 Fed. Reg. 38030, 38030/1-2 (July 2, 2008) (the “Final Guidelines”). The Final Guidelines might be taken to satisfy 42 U.S.C. § 16913(d)’s requirement that the Attorney General “specify” SORNA’s retroactive effect. At the head of a section in the Introduction captioned “Retroactivity,” they explain that the guidelines “require the application by a jurisdiction of SORNA’s requirements to sex offenders convicted prior to the
The Final Guidelines, however, do not appear to represent an effort to “specify” retroactive application to offenders as required by Reynolds. The Guidelines’ ret-roactivity language, quoted above, merely sets the stage for the document’s real purpose: spelling out what the states and other governmental bodies must do to handle the new registration mandates, including those the Interim Rule arguably “specified.” See
But even if we were to resolve that issue in favor of the government, the Final Guidelines would still suffer a fatal flaw: the Attorney General disclaimed any.authority to decide for himself whether SOR-NA applied to pre-enactment offenders. Acting before the Reynolds decision, he took the view that SORNA had applied to pre-SORNA offenders ever since its enactment.
Where a statute grants an agency discretion but the agency erroneously believes it is bound to a specific decision, we can’t uphоld the result as an exercise of the discretion that the agency disavows. Prill v. NLRB,
The government insists that the Attorney General exercised his discretion to specify SORNA’s pre-Act reach despite his “view” that Congress had settled the matter. Appellee Br. at 21. Agencies can certainly rely on alternative rationales, provided that they make those alternatives explicit, as the Attorney General did in the Final Rule. See Nat’l Fuel Gas Supply Corp. v. FERC,
The dissent disagrees on this final point and reads the Attorney General’s decisions defining the states’ obligations to track pre-SORNA offenders as simultaneously creating retroactive criminal responsibility for pre-Act sex offenders. Dissent at 1141-43. The dissent’s logic seems to be that a non-registering sex offender violates SOR-NA only to the extent that a SORNA-compliant state program required him to register. This linkage of state duties with sex offender obligations, if it were correct, would tend to fill the pre-Final Rule gap in the Attorney General’s exercise of discretion: were SORNA-compliant state registration programs necessary for sex offender liability, it would not be a great leap to regard guidelines for how those programs must register pre-SORNA offenders as a sufficient exercise of the Attorney General’s authority to specify retro-activity.
But any such linkage is belied by the Reynolds decision and the government’s conduct. Reynolds emphasized that SOR-NA empowered. the Attorney General to adopt a rule applying SORNA to “all preimplementation offenders.... quickly, well before a jurisdiction implements the Act’s requirements.”
Moreover, pace our dissenting colleague, the Attorney General has acted accordingly, continuously insisting on a separation between the imposition of criminal liability and the establishment of SORNA-compli-ant registration systems. For example, the government has maintained in this litigation that sex offender liability is quite independent of a jurisdiction’s SORNA compliance. Though acknowledging- that the District had no SORNA-compliant system in place at the relevant time, the government argued (successfully) that Ross had a federal duty to register as long as his place of residency had a registration “procedure in place,” regardless of whether it was compliant.
There are additional grounds for rejecting the idea that the Attorney General intended to make sex offenders’ criminal liability under 18 U.S.C. § 2250 track states’ adoption of SORNA-compliant registration systems. The Attorney General’s Interim Rule, for example, provides: “In contrast to SORNA’s provision of a three-year grace period for jurisdictions to implement its requirements, SORNA’s direct federal law registration requirements for sex offenders are not subject to any deferral of effectiveness. They took effect when SORNA was enacted on July 27, 2006, and currently apрly to all offenders in the categories for which SORNA requires registration.”
The dissent argues that the Attorney General left states some slack in how they structure their registration systems and that these concessions necessarily eased SORNA’s requirements on offenders as well. Dissent at 1141-43. The Attorney General did say that aspects of his retroac-tivity guidelines “may” indirectly “limit their effect on” pre-SORNA offenders.
In short, the Attorney General, from his first official pass on the meaning and effect
Apropos the dissent, its suggestion that our holding will have “potentially severe and far-reaching” consequences rests on the idea that even in the Final Rule the Attorney General failed to “exercise[ ] his discretion to make a policy judgment about SORNA’s retroactive application vel non.” Dissent at 1144 (first quote), 1146 (second). But as we already noted, that rule did recognize his authority, albeit reluctantly and contingently: “Congress at the very least placed it within the Attorney General’s discretion to apply SOR-NA’s requirements to [pre-SORNA offenders] if he determines (as he has) that the public benefits of doing so outweigh any adverse effects.” Final Rule,
A number of other circuits have found that the Final Guidelines properly specified SORNA’s application to pre-enactment offenders. But in those cases the principle we adopted in Prill was not invoked, and their opinions accordingly focused on other purported deficiencies in the Final Guidelines. See United States v. Manning,
Aside from the Interim Rule and the Final Guidelines, the government points to no other administrative act that would have timely created an obligation on Ross’s part to comply with SORNA’s mandate. This gap defeats the indictment.
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The ruling of the district court is reversed, and the judgment of conviction is vacated.
So ordered.
Notes
. Ohio had already implemented SORNA. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, SORNA Implementation
. An additional purported reduction, the allowance of credit to pre-SORNA offenders for time elapsed since release from prison, involved no discretion at all: the Attorney General properly described it as a simple mathematical outcome of SORNA's time "limits on the required duration of registration.” Id. at 38046/3.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part, dissenting in part, and dissenting from the judgment:
I join in full that portion of the opinion holding that the Attorney General lacked good cause to forgo notice and comment when issuing the Interim Rule, particularly given that he waited 217 days after the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”), 42 U.S.C. § 16901 et seq., took effect to put that rule out. See Applicability of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, 72 Fed. Reg. 8894-01 (Feb. 28, 2007) (codified at 28 C.F.R. pt. 72). I also agree that the error does not meet our high standard for harmlessness in this particular Administrative Procedure Act context. I accordingly agree that the Attorney General’s Interim Rule did not lawfully “specify” how the provisions of SORNA apply to offenders like appellant Anthony Ross, whose offense preceded that law’s enactment.
That is where my agreement with the majority opinion ends. Unlike the majority opinion, I would join every other circuit that has addressed the question and hold that the Attorney General’s Final Guidelines adequately specified how and when SORNA would apply to pre-Act offenders, see The National Guidelines for Sex Offender Registration and Notification, 73 Fed. Reg. 38030 (July 2, 2008). See also United States v. Manning,
In my view, the Final Guidelines suffice because they (i) explicitly announce SOR-NA’s retroactive application, (ii) afford affected individuals clear notice of their retroactive registration obligations, (iii) spell out in detail how and when retroactivity will operate across divergent state systems, (iv) limit the requirements for participating jurisdictions to register pre-Act offenders in specific circumstances determined by the Attorney General, and (v) express the Attorney General’s independent response to and judgment about comments advocating against retroactivity. Any way you look at it, that constitutes “specifying” SORNA’s retroactive reach. I accordingly would affirm the judgment of conviction in this ease.
A
Congress was explicit that SORNA is meant to apply retroactively to pre-Act offenders. The Act definеs a “sex offender” as “an individual who was convicted of a sex offense,” 42 U.S.C. § 16911(1) (emphasis added), and thus “defines the term ‘sex offender’ as including these pre-Act offenders.” Reynolds v. United States,
Indeed, the statute’s avowed purpose is to establish “a comprehensive national system for the registration of [sex] offenders[.]” 42 U.S.C. § 16901 (emphasis added). The Supreme Court has “recognized that purpose,” emphasizing that, “in general, the Act’s criminal provisions apply to any pre-Act offender required to register under the Act who later travels interstate and fails to register.” Reynolds,
However, Congress also recognized that retroactive implementation of SORNA’s registration requirements was easier said than done, and thus that the Act could not practicably be retroactive immediately upon enactment. Indeed, the Supreme Court confirmed in Reynolds that Congress did not intend for SORNA to be instantaneously retroactive of its own force. Reynolds,
Delegating that job to the Attorney General made sense. SORNA’s goal, after all, was to replace a patchwork of state and federal registration systems with uniform registration requirements and to enforce through federal criminal law* the registration obligations of federal sex offenders and non-federal sex offenders who move across state lines. See Reynolds,
Given that state- and federal-law conglomeration and the inevitably varying dates by which jurisdictions would be able to conform their registration systems with SORNA, Congress tasked the Attorney
The Attorney General’s assignment also comported with SORNA’s statutory design as a program of cooperative federalism. In the Act, Congress encouraged States, backed up by the offer of federal funding, to bring their own registration systems up to federally identified standards and to integrate their systems into a uniform national program that Congress concluded would more effectively monitor sex offenders once released. As a consequence of that statutory structure, attaining retroactive registration is heavily dependent on the type of records and registration obligations that each State has in place. That, in fact, is why SORNA’s criminal prohibition for non-federal offenders like Ross is defined in terms of a knowing failure to register under a state system. See 18 U.S.C. § 2250(a) (making it a crime to “knowingly fail[] to register or update a registration” within a state system); 42 U.S.C. § 16913(a) (“A sex offender shall register, and keep the registration-current, in each jurisdiction where the offender resides[.]”).
While SORNA thus gives the Attorney General latitude to configure the statute’s intended retroactive reach, the Reynolds Court was unanimous in conсluding that the Attorney General’s specification judgments were to be ones of timing, scope, and logistical implementation: it would be entirely “unrealistic,” the Court held, for the Attorney General to make a policy call against retroactive operation or to otherwise “refuse to apply the new requirements to pre-Act offenders” given the statute’s explicitly retroactive text. Reynolds,
To be clear, describing the Attorney General’s job as one of timing, scope, and logistical implementation is not meant to understate the import of that assignment. As Reynolds held, Congress’s delegation to the Attorney General meant that SOR-NA’s registration requirements could not be applied to pre-Act offenders at all “until the Attorney General so specifies.”
B
In my view, the Final Guidelines accomplish that distinct task of “specify[ing]” when and how SORNA applies to which pre-Act offenders through more than fifty state and local registration systems.
First, as the Supreme Court has already observed, the Final Guidelines themselves — separate and apart from the statute — say explicitly that “the Aсt’s requirements apply to ‘all sex offenders,’ including all preimplementation offenders.” Reynolds,
Second, the Attorney General made the independent decision in the Final Guidelines to narrow the States’ obligations to register certain categories of pre-enactment offenders, stating that, “[w]hile SORNA’s requirements apply to all sex offenders, regardless of when they were convicted,” States could choose to forgo registering those sex offenders “who have fully left the system and merged into the general population at the time the jurisdiction implements SORNA, if they do not reoffend,” without having their federal funding reduced. 73 Fed. Reg.- at 38036. The Attorney General also determined that a State could, consistently with SOR-NA, “credit a sex offender with a pre-SORNA conviction with the time elapsed from his release (or the time elapsed from sentencing, in case of a nonincarcerative sentence) in determining what, if any, remaining registration time is required.” Id. Consequently, “[i]n such cases, a jurisdiction * * * does not have to require the sex offender to register on the basis of the conviction, even if the criteria for retroactive application of the SORNA standards * * * are otherwise satisfied.” Id. at 38047.
By narrowing the States’ requirements to register pre-Act offenders, the Attorney General expressly acknowledged that “specific provisions of the guidelines relating to ‘retroactivity’ incorporate some features that may limit their effect on sex offenders with older convictions.”
The majority opinion highlights convictions for failing to register prior to a jurisdiction’s implementation of SORNA in which SORNA’s mens rea requirement nevertheless was met. Op. 1136. I do not disagree with the view that a sex offender’s duty to register and a jurisdiction’s implementation of SORNA are not always coextensive. But whether sex offenders generally have a legal duty to register prior to SORNA’s implementation in a particular jurisdiction is of little relevance to the inquiry into whether the Attorney General, while making explicit the general retroactive reach of SORNA to pre-Act offenders in the Final Guidelines, also intended to specify potential limitations on those retroactive consequences. The Attorney General plainly stated that his Guidelines “may limit their effect” on certain pre-Act offenders.
C
In holding that no valid specification occurred, the majority opinion relies on Prill v. NLRB,
But the Attorney General was certainly correct that Congress itself had decided that SORNA should be retroactively applicable to pre-enactment offenders to the extent feasible. See Reynolds,
The Attorney General plainly recognized his authority in that specific respect. The “guidelines require the application by a jurisdiction of SORNA’s requirements to sex offenders convicted prior to the enactment of SORNA or its implementation in the jurisdiction!.]”
On top of that, the Attorney General invited and then specifically addressed public comments on retroactivity, independently rejecting the argument that retroactive application “adversely affectfs] sex offenders!.]”
Further, after acknowledging the overarching “legislative judgment” that the burdens of registration and notification requirements “are justified by the resulting benefits in promoting public safety!,]” the Attorney General added that “in any event” his “objective [was] to ‘interpret and implement’ SORNA’s standards, see SORNA § 112(b), not to second-guess the legislative policies they embody.”
Beyond that, it was eminently reasonable for the Attorney General to take Congress’s retroаctivity direction as his guidepost, for “court and agency alike are bound to respect and obey Congress’s intent.” Continental Air Lines, Inc. v. Department of Transportation,
For those reasons, the more relevant case here, in my view, is Chemical Waste Management, Inc., v. United States Environmental Protection Agency,
So too here. Notwithstanding the Attorney General’s understanding of Congress’s retroactivity command, he “received numerous comments” on retroactivity, “discussed” those comments, and “cogently explained” his reasons for concluding that SORNA’s registration requirements should apply to pre-Act offenders, as well as his reasons for narrowing SORNA’s retroactive obligations in certain respects. See, e.g., 73 Fed Reg. at 38035-38036.
D
The difference in views between the majority opinion and me on this thorny question is understandable. SORNA retroactivity is a unique construct: Congress wrote the law in plainly retroactive terms that (as the Supreme Court acknowledged) the Attorney General could not realistically alter. But then Congress also charged the Attorney General with putting its purpose into practice — with figuring out how retro-activity could work for which offenders and when across myriad registration systems.
While I thus understand the genesis of the majority’s disposition, I cannot join it. I feаr the majority opinion overreads the Attorney General’s duty to “specify,” treating it as a policy judgment of the type at issue in Prill, even though the Supreme Court eschewed such an understanding of the Attorney General’s role in Reynolds,
The consequences of the majority opinion’s disposition, moreover, are potentially severe and far-reaching. If SORNA and our precedent demand that the Attorney General must go beyond the Final Guidelines and explicitly acknowledge and exercise an independent power “to decide for himself whether SORNA appliefe] to pre-
To the contrary, as the majority opinion admits, the open and announced position of the Attorney General and the United States government was, until the Reynolds decision in 2012, that SORNA was retroactive upon enactment. See Op. 1134 (“Acting before the Reynolds decision, he took the view that SORNA had applied to pre-SORNA offenders ever since its enactment.”); Reynolds,
The Final Rule bears that view out. The Attorney General was explicit that “federal registration obligations on sex offenders have been in force since the enactment of SORNA.”
To be sure, as the majority opinion notes, the Attorney General later said that “Congress at the very least placed it within the Attorney General’s discretion to apply SORNA’s requirements to sex offenders with pre-SORNA convictions if he determines (as he has) that the public benefits of doing so outweigh any adverse effects.”
But if that parenthetical “as he has” is all the discretionary reasoning that Prill requires, the government should win this case. That is because the Attorney General undertook that same independent weighing of the costs and benefits of registration in the Final Guidelines, albeit without parentheses! In responding to commenters in the Final Guidelines, the Attorney General reasoned thаt “the effects of SORNA’s registration and notification requirements on sex offenders are much the same regardless of whether their sex offense convictions occurred before or after SORNA’s enactment or its implementation in a particular jurisdiction,” and “the public safety concerns presented by sex offenders are much the same, regardless of when they were convicted.”
The Attorney General’s “at the very least” likewise seems far too agnostic and fleeting an aside to reflect any genuine recognition of and exercise by the Attorney General of discretion ala Prill. That is particularly true given the Attorney General’s official statements bookending that language that emphatically declared that SORNA took the retroactivity decision out of his hands because it was fully retroactive of its own force upon enactment. Indeed, the Attorney General reiterated in the Final Rule, much as he did in the Final Guidelines, that any discretion he had was hemmed in by Congress’s “legislative judgment” that SORNA should apply to all sex offenders. See
In addition, the Attorney General’s announced position on behalf of the United States in the Reynolds litigation was explicit that retroactivity was not his call. See Brief for the United States, Reynolds v. United States,
Given all that, it would be passing strange to say that the Attorney General somehow consciously exercised his discretion to make a policy judgment about SORNA’s retroactive application vel non in the 2010 Final Rule. The logical consequence of the majority opinion’s requirement that the Attorney General must go beyond specifying how and when retroac-tivity can come into effect, and must instead decide for himself whether SORNA applied to pre-enactment offenders at all, is that the Attorney General had to believe he had some choice in that policy matter. And as the Attorney General was not disabused of his belief that SORNA was retroactive upon enactment until the Supreme Court told him so in 2012, such recognition could not have occurred at the time he promulgated the 2010 Final Rule.
In any event, the at-least two year delay in retroactivity that the majority opinion would impose by itself could call into question hundreds of convictions.
. Highlighting the problem, both Amie Zyla's and Pam Lychner’s assailants reoffended upon release. Amie Zyla’s perpetrator was convicted of two counts of second-degree sexual assault of a child. State v. Wade,
. SORNA appliés to all fifty States, the District of Columbia, Guam, American Samoa, Puerto Rico, the Northern Marianas Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and federally recognized Indian tribes. 42 U.S.C. § 16911(10). I use the term "State” to refer collectively to all of those covered jurisdictions.
. This more calibrated understanding of the Attorney General's specification task as working out congressionally intended retroactivity over time also ameliorates to some extent the constitutional concerns that some have recognized might arise if SORNA were read to afford the Attorney General unfettered discretion to determine whether a criminal law applies at all to half a million people. See Reynolds,
. In this case, while the District of Columbia had not yet implemented SORNA at the time of Ross's arrest for failing to register, the District had informed and obtained written acknowledgment that Ross understood his registration requirements under D.C. law when Ross was convicted of a sex offense in 1999. See United States v. Ross,
. See also The New Oxford American Dictionary 1629 (2005) ("specify” means to "identify clearly and definitely” and “state a fact or requirement clearly and precisely”); Cambridge English Dictionary Online (to "specify” is "to state or describe something clearly and exactly”), http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/ dictionaiy/english/specify (last accessed Feb. 15, 2017).
. Between 2008 and 2010, nearly six hundred sex offenders were convicted for failing to register under SORNA. See Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act: Jurisdictions Face Challenges to Implementing the Act, and Stakeholders Report Positive and Negative Effects, U.S. Gov't Accountability Office, GAO-13-211, 54 (Feb. 7, 2013), http://www.gao. gov/assets/660/652032.pdf (last accessed Feb. 15, 2017). Given the time it generally takes to investigate, arrest, prosecute, incarcerate, and release a sex offender and commence his registration obligation, it stands to reason that a substantial number of those offenses predated SORNA’s enactment.
