Lead Opinion
Darius Moss appeals from the district court’s
I.
Moss was convicted in September 1996 of one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute crack cocaine and one count of possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. At Moss’s sentencing hearing in July 1997, the district court found by a preponderance of the evidence that Moss was responsible for 1,644.3 grams of crack cocaine, which supported a combined base offense level of 38. The district court added two levels for obstruction of justice, see USSG § 3C1.1 (1995), and two levels for recklessly creating a substantial risk of death or serious bodily injury to another in the course of fleeing from a law enforcement officer, see id. § 3C1.2. Moss’s combined adjusted offense level of 42 and a criminal history category III resulted in a sentencing range of 360 months to life. The district court sentenced Moss at the bottom end of the range, imposing concurrent terms of 360 months on the conspiracy count and 240 months on the distribution count.
Moss’s conviction and sentence was affirmed on direct appeal, see United States v. Moss,
Moss’s opening brief focuses on the validity of the district court’s two-level enhancement for reckless endangerment during flight. He argues that after Jones the
Following Apprendi and Aguayo-Delga-do, Moss now raises the issue of whether his sentence is improper because the district court’s drug quantity finding increased his sentence beyond § 841(b)(l)(C)’s 20-year maximum sentence. Although the certificate of appeala-bility was issued prior to Apprendi, that decision is a natural outgrowth of, and closely related to, the Jones issue on which the certificate was granted. We therefore believe we have the authority to decide the Apprendi question raised, and neither party suggests otherwise.
II.
We find no merit to Moss’s initial argument that the district court’s imposition of the reckless endangerment during flight enhancement is constitutionally unsound after Jones or Apprendi. Moss contends the district court’s finding that he recklessly created a substantial risk of death and serious bodily injury increased his sentence beyond § 841(b)(l)(C)’s 20-year maximum sentence. His argument, however, confuses the Guidelines enhancement with § 841(b)(l)(C)’s statutory enhancement when “death or serious bodily injury results from the use” of a controlled substance, which exposes a defendant to a maximum statutory penalty of life imprisonment. The district court’s finding related solely to whether Moss’s relevant conduct, his flight from law enforcement officers, was a sufficient basis to enhance his Guideline sentence and played no part in exposing Moss to the higher statutory sentencing range. A district court may always find relevant conduct under the Guidelines by a preponderance of the evidence because the Guidelines themselves prohibit a sentence in excess of the statutory maximum sentence authorized for the offense of conviction. See USSG §§ 5G1.1, 5G1.2 (2000); see also United States v. Jones,
Moss is correct, however, in his assertion that the district court’s drug quantity finding increased his sentence beyond the 20-year maximum, thereby resulting in a violation of the rule announced in Appren-di. The government concedes the constitutional violation but argues Moss is not entitled to relief because (1) Apprendi is a new rule of constitutional law inapplicable to cases on collateral review, see Teague v. Lane,
In Teague, the Supreme Court held that new constitutional rules of criminal procedure cannot be applied retroactively to cases on collateral review unless they fall within an exception to the general rule.
The Supreme Court’s Teague inquiry is implicated because Apprendi is obviously a “new rule” subject to the general rule of nonretroactivity. A “new rule” is one that “breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government.... To put it differently, a case announces a new rule if the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became fi
Prior to Apprendi, every federal circuit to have considered the question had held that drug quantity was a sentencing factor rather than an element of the crime defined in 21 U.S.C. § 841. See United States v. Thomas,
The second step in our analysis is to ascertain whether the new constitutional principle announced in Apprendi is a watershed rule of criminal procedure, defined as a rule which implicates both the accuracy and fundamental fairness of criminal proceedings. Teague,
One might conclude at first blush that Apprendi improves the accuracy of the fact-finding process, the first element of a watershed rale, because it increases the prosecution’s burden to establish the factual issues which in turn drive the length of a defendant’s sentence. To the extent the decision prevents the government from seeking a punishment in excess of one authorized by the jury’s verdict, we would agree the accuracy of a criminal proceeding is improved. As Justice O’Connor explained in Teague, however, the accuracy element within the watershed exception derives from one of the principal functions of habeas corpus, which is to “assure that no man has been incarcerated under a procedure which creates an impermissibly large risk that the innocent will
We find it unnecessary to delve further into whether Apprendi increases the accuracy of the trial because a new rule must do more than just improve accuracy, worthy as that goal may be. To fall within the exception, the rule must impart a fundamental procedural right that, like Gideon, is a necessary component of a fair trial. See Sawyer v. Smith,
Permitting a judge-found fact to affect the sentence imposed after a valid conviction, even if it is found under a more lenient standard, cannot be said to have resulted in a fundamentally unfair criminal proceeding. As the Fifth Circuit has noted, “one can easily envision a system of ‘ordered liberty’ in which certain elements of a crime can or must be proved to a judge, not to the jury,” United States v. Shunk,
What strikes us as particularly indicative that Apprendi is not on a par with Gideon is that the new rule announced floats and flows with the tide of legislative pronouncements. Similar to the scenario Justice O’Connor presents in her Apprendi dissent, see
Our holding that the rule is not of watershed magnitude is consistent with and supported by our court’s previous recognition that an Apprendi violation is not a structural error requiring per se reversal. See United States v. Anderson,
B.
Even assuming an Apprendi challenge is not Teague barred, we nonetheless conclude that Moss cannot challenge his sentence on Apprendi grounds because he failed to raise the argument in his direct appeal.
Moss contends that cause exists to excuse his default because an Apprendi claim falls within the category of those “novel” claims which justifiably may be raised for the first time in a collateral proceeding.
As far back as 1987, our circuit addressed the exact argument Moss now raises as a basis for relief, see United States v. Wood,
A barrage of similar arguments raged throughout the circuits in the late 1980s and early 1990s. See, e.g., United States v. Mergerson,
Procedural default also cannot be overcome because the issue was settled in the lower courts. The Supreme Court has rejected the argument that default can be excused when existing lower court precedent would have rendered a claim unsuccessful. Bousley,
In a somewhat analogous point, the dissent suggests, based on dictum in Reed v. Ross,
Reed suggests that a legal argument may be “unavailable” to counsel where contrary lower federal court authority has endured the test of time and there appears to be no discord among the courts on the
Finally, our conclusion that an Apprendi-type argument was reasonably available does not hold defense counsel to an unattainable or impractical standard of legal competence and sophistication. As we noted, defense counsel often challenged judge-found drug quantity determinations, and several commentators, and courts, had adequately set forth the legal basis supporting the proposition that drug quantity is an element of the offense. See, e.g., Susan N. Herman, The Tail That Wagged the Dog: Bifurcated Fact-Finding under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines and the Limits of Due Process, 66 S. Cal. L.Rev. 289 (1992); Judy Clarke, The Need for a Higher Burden of Proof for Factfinding under the Guidelines, 4 Fed. Sent. Rep. 300 (1992); Rigsby,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable William G. Cambridge, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
. The government also argues that the Ap-prendi violation is not cognizable under plain error review, but because we conclude other grounds prevent Moss from attacking his sentence in this collateral proceeding, we decline to reach this argument.
. The other exception permits a rule to be raised collaterally if it prevents lawmaking authority from criminalizing certain kinds of conduct, Teague,
. See United States v. Sanders,
. Since Teague was announced, the Supreme Court has found no new rule that falls within the watershed exception. Brian Hoffstadt, How Congress Might Redesign a Leaner, Cleaner Writ of Habeas Corpus, 49 Duke L.J. 947, 976-77 (2000). This fact appears consistent with the Supreme Court's cautionary statement that it is unlikely many rules falling within the second exception have yet to emerge. See, e.g., Graham v. Collins,
. "[I]t [the Apprendi rule] does not protect the blameless from punishment, but instead protects the unquestionably blameworthy from unauthorized amounts of punishment.” Nancy J. King & Susan R. Klein, Developments Apres Apprendi, 12 Fed. Sentencing Rep. 331, 333 (2000).
. Apprendi also requires that drug quantity be charged in an indictment if the government intends to seek an enhanced sentence. Aguayo-Delgado,
. The dissent suggests that "no case has ever held that the omission of an element of a crime from an indictment can be harmless error.” Post at 18. Our own circuit, however, has explicitly held that the failure to charge drug quantity in the indictment is subject to plain error review and has refused to recognize such an error when it was not raised initially before the district court. See United States v. Poulack,
. Moss’s counsel conceded during oral argument that no Apprendi-type argument was raised on direct appeal.
. Moss has not raised a gateway claim of actual innocence.
. In Reed, the Court recognized two other situations where a new rule may not be reasonably available to counsel: 1) where the Supreme Court explicitly overrules its own prior precedent and, 2) where the Court disapproves a practice arguably sanctioned by the Court in prior cases.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The defendant in this case, Darius Moss, is now serving a sentence of 360 months (30 years) for conspiring to possess crack cocaine with the intent to distribute it, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. In fact, the statutory maximum for this offense, in Mr. Moss’s circumstances, is 20 years. The United States has conceded, see ante at 996, that the sentence imposed violates the Constitution. This Court agrees. See ibid. Yet, the sentence is left in place, and Mr. Moss will serve ten years more than the Constitution allows. I cannot accept this state of affairs, and I therefore respectfully dissent.
I.
In my view, the new rule of law announced in Apprendi v. New Jersey,
The language used by the Supreme Court itself in Apprendi is telling. The Court stated: “At stake in this case are constitutional protections of surpassing importance: the proscription of any deprivation of liberty without ‘due process of law,’ Arndt. 14, and the guarantee that ‘[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury.’ Arndt. 6.”
To me, this signals the Supreme Court’s own understanding that Apprendi recognizes bedrock procedures that are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty and that touch on the fundamental fairness of the trial. Indeed, four Justices almost explicitly endorsed a Teague exception for Ap-prendi claims by stating, “[tjoday, in what will surely be remembered as a watershed change in constitutional law, the Court imposes as a constitutional rule the principle it first identified in Jones.”
The Court makes the point that the “new rule announced [in Apprendi ] floats and flows with the tide of legislative pronouncements.” Ante, at 1000. There is a sense in which this is true. It is certainly the case that legislatures, in this instance Congress, define the elements of crimes, and that these definitions are, at least to some degree, subject to change. This principle, however, is not without limits. Mullaney v. Wilbur,
In addition, I question the Court’s statement that an Apprendi violation is not a structural error requiring per se reversal. The Supreme Court, in Neder v. United States,
II.
The Court also holds that Mr. Moss faces a procedural hurdle because he did not raise his Apprendi claim on direct appeal. The government relies on the rule stated in Bousley v. United States,
is an extraordinary remedy and ‘will not be allowed to do service for an appeal.’ ... Where a defendant has procedurally defaulted a claim by failing to raise it on direct review, the claim may be raised in habeas only if the defendant can first demonstrate either ‘cause’ and actual ‘prejudice,’ or that he is ‘actually innocent.’
I believe that this is an instance where a claim’s legal basis was “not reasonably available to counsel,” thereby establishing cause for failing to raise it on direct appeal. Reed v. Ross,
The rule announced in Apprendi was a departure from long accepted procedures. The dissenting opinion characterizes the holding as follows:
In its opinion, the Court marshals virtually no authority to support its extraordinary rule. Indeed, it is remarkable that the Court cannot identify a single instance, in the over 200 years since the ratification of the Bill of Rights, that our Court has applied, as a constitutional requirement, the rule it announces today.
