Order Vacating Sentence under Johnson v. U.S,
When Daniel Carrion was sentenced for being a felon in possession of a firearm after his 2004 guilty plea, the district judge found that he qualified for an enhanced 15-year sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA).
Having exhausted his appeals, Carrion moves to vacate his sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
Background
Title 18, section 922(g) of the United States Code makes it a federal felony for certain categories of people to possess firearms. The ACCA’s violent-felony provision requires judges to impose a mandatory, 15-year minimum sentence for § 922(g) offenses when a defendant has three or more prior convictions for violent felonies.
Figuring out whether a defendant’s pri- or convictions qualify as violent felonies under the ACCA has proven difficult. This area of the law is infamously confusing, and courts have described it as a “hopeless tangle”
Recent Supreme Court cases have made it increasingly difficult for the government to prove that a defendant’s prior conviction qualifies as a violent felony. In several watershed cases, the Supreme Court announced significant changes so that many convictions that had previously qualified no longer do, particularly under the enumerated-offenses and force clauses.
But when Carrion pled guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of § 922(g) back in 2004, it was much easier to qualify a prior conviction as a violent felony under the ACCA.
Carrion now moves to vacate his ACCA-enhanced, 15-year sentence under Johnson.
Discussion
Carrion would normally be foreclosed from challenging his sentence because he exhausted his direct and collateral appeals. But he contends that his motion falls under 28 U.S.C. § 2255’s narrow exception that allows a defendant to bring a successive petition when the Supreme Court announces a new, retroactive rule of constitutional law that.impacts his sentence. Here, that rule is Johnson’s invalidation of the ACCA’s residual clause.
But whether Carrion can benefit from Johnson it is not readily apparent. The record does not reflect whether he was actually sentenced under the residual clause because the judge did not articulate which ACCA provision he was relying on to qualify Carrion’s priors as violent felonies, so it is not clear whether Carrion’s
The parties offer diverging views about what I should do when the record is unclear on this point. The government argues that Carrion must prove, based on the state of the law at the time of his sentencing, that the judge could not have applied the ACCA’s enhancement under the enumerated-offenses or force clauses — both left untouched by Johnson. If so, Johnson is not truly implicated and Carrion has no new constitutional rule to unlock § 2255’s door. Carrion agrees that whether Johnson is implicated depends on whether his priors qualify under the ACCA’s still-valid clauses. But he argues that I must make that determination using the cases decided since his sentencing, under which it does not appear that he qualifies for ACCA enhancement. So I first tackle the question of which law I use to determine whether Johnson impacts Carrion’s sentence and may serve- as a basis for this successive§ 2255 motion: the law as it was when Carrion was sentenced — or as it stands today?
A. The threshold question: can Carrion raise a Johnson challenge under § 2255 when the sentencing judge did not expressly state that he relied on the residual clause?
Section 2255 permits a defendant to file a successive petition based on “a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court,”
1. Some courts conclude that if a defendant needs to rely on intervening, non-retroactive case law to advance his Johnson claim, then he has not met the requirements of § 2255.
A number of district and appellate courts have held that a court cannot look
For example, in Ziglar v. United States, a District of Alabama court explained that it does not matter whether, “if sentenced today, [the defendant] would not be ACCA eligible based upon the combined holdings of Johnson and” other recent case law; all that matters is whether the defendant was ACCA-eligible based on the case law in existence at the time of the defendant’s sentencing.
Some of' these cases go so far as' 'to suggest that even if the state of the law at the time of sentencing strongly indicated that the sentencing judge could not properly use one of the other clauses, that is still not enough without some affirmative evidence that the sentencing judge actually meant to use the -residual-clause in his sentencing decision.
2. Other courts find that Johnson is implicated if its holding, combined with intervening case law, would afford the defendant relief.
Another sizeable group of courts has taken the opposite approach, allowing defendants to rely on Johnson in combination with recent, intervening case law to challenge their sentences under § 2255.
The Ninth Circuit has applied this possible-reliance-plus-current-case-law approach — albeit in an unpublished decision — squarely holding that the mere possibility that the residual clause played a role in a defendant’s sentencing is enough to qualify for relief under § 2255 and that intervening case law plays into this determination. In United States v. Christian, the district court was faced with the same situation I now face. Christian challenged his sentence under § 2255 and Johnson, and it was unclear whether the sentencing judge had relied on the residual clause.
On appeal, the Ninth Circuit panel reversed, finding that it was enough that Christian established that his sentencing judge may have relied in part on the residual clause.
3. I join the group of courts that allow defendants to use intervening cases to show that the residual clause is implicated in their sentence when the record is unclear about whether the sentencing judge relied on it.
Looking to the state of the law at Carrion’s sentencing makes some sense. It aligns with well-settled principles of finality and collateral review. And isn’t the right question to ask on habeas review whether Johnson’s invalidation of the residual clause would have mattered to Carrion’s sentencing judge? On the other hand, a rule that requires judges to take a research trip back in time and recreate the then-existing state of the law — particularly in an area of law as muddy as this one— creates its own problems in terms of fairness and justiciability. And I cannot ignore the fact that fundamental rights of due process and liberty are implicated.
The tie breaker for me is the fact that the Ninth Circuit has already weighed in on this issue. I am aware that it did so in an unpublished decision and that I am thus not bound to follow it. Still, it is some indication of how the Ninth Circuit would approach and resolve this threshold issue. The Christian opinion is also persuasive— and it is squarely on point with this case. The government makes the same argument here that the Ninth Circuit rejected. I therefore adopt the approach used by the Ninth Circuit panel in Christian and by a growing number of other courts, and I conclude that a defendant merely needs to show that the sentencing judge may have relied on the residual clause; once that showing is made, he may rely on intervening case law to show that his prior convictions do not qualify as violent offenses under the ACCA’s remaining clauses.
Carrion has made that threshold showing. The record does not reveal whether the sentencing judge relied on the residual clause to qualify Carrion’s priors as violent felonies under the ACCA. The government does not dispute that it is perfectly plausible (perhaps even likely) that the sentencing judge could have relied on the residual clause when he sentenced
B. Carrion’s prior convictions no longer qualify as violent felonies under the ACCA.
The government does not deny that Carrion’s prior convictions no longer qualify as violent felonies under the ACCA today — and understandably so.
Conclusion
Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that Carrion’s motion to vacate or set aside his sentence [ECF-No. 72] is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Carrion is resenteuced to a term of imprisonment of ten years.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the terms of supervised release imposed by the sentencing judge are re-imposed.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the United States has seven days to submit a brief showing cause why Carrion should not be immediately released, and either party has seven days to show cause why the court should hold a sentencing hearing. If no cause is shown to delay release or hold a sentencing hearing by'this deadline, the court will direct the Federal Bureau of Prisons to release Carrion without further notice.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion ,to Expedite Scheduling Order [ECF No. 79] is DENIED as moot.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 924(e).
. Johnson v. U.S., — U.S. -,
. Welch v. U.S., — U.S. -,
. ECF No. 72.
. 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B).
. Id.
. Murray v. United States, No. 96-CR-5367-RJB,
. United States v. Ladwig,
. United States v. Aguila-Montes de Oca,
. See, e.g., Descamps,
. Johnson,
. Welch,
. ECF No. 22.
. ECF No. 25.
. ECF Nos. 27, 29.
. In excerpts included in Carrion's 2004 objections to the pre-sentencing report, it appears that the sentencing judge found that Carrion’s convictions fell under one of the . violent-felony clauses, not any single one. See ECF No. 25,
. ECF Nos. 45; 46. Carrion's 2007 motion to vacate his sentence (arguing ineffective assistance of counsel and seeking resentencing under Booker) was denied. ECF No. 61,
. The Ninth Circuit authorized Carrion to bring this second § 2255 motion to raise a Johnson challenge. ECF No. 78.
. Carrion did not provide the pre-sentence investigation report itself. This case was reassigned to me because the sentencing judge has retired.
. It appears from the record that Carrion has been in federal custody since May 2003.
. ECF No. 25.
. It appears that many sentencing courts have enhanced sentences under the ACCA without identifying which clause the defendant's prior convictions fell under. See United States v. Avery, No. 3:02-CR-113-LRH-VPC,
. Id.; see also 28 U.S.C.A. § 2255(h). The statute also allows for successive, petition based on newly discovered evidence under certain circumstances.
. See Kane v. United States, No. 1:16-CV-00146-MR,
. Hires,
. Ziglar, No. 2:16-CV-463-WKW,
. Hires,
. See Traxler, No. 1:16-CV-747,
. King, 202 F.Supp.3d at 1357-59,
. See, e.g., Avery,
. Other courts allow a defendant to use intervening case law to show that he should be given relief under Johnson even if his sentencing judge explicitly stated that he was not sentencing the defendant under the residual clause. See, e.g., Curry,
. Adams,
. United States v. Christian, No. CR-02-56-EFS,
. Id.
. Id.
. United States v. Christian,
. Id.
. Id.
. Adams,
. See ECF No. 81 (government’s response arguing only that Carrion has failed to show that Johnson applies).
. Dixon,
. Because I need not determine whether Carrion's remaining § 245(c) conviction also qualifies as a violent felony, I do not.
