UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Derrick Lamont WALKER, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 12-40748.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Feb. 7, 2014.
742 F.3d 614
We need not reach Siwe‘s request for reconsideration by a three-member panel in light of our decision to grant his petition and remand for further proceedings regarding Section 209(b).
III. CONCLUSION
We hold that Section 209(b)65 is not ambiguous and that its plain wording does not require an alien to maintain his asylum status to apply for adjustment of status under the statute. We therefore grant Siwe‘s petition for review as to this issue and vacate the BIA‘s decision ordering Siwe‘s removal. As we lack jurisdiction to consider Siwe‘s request for relief under the CAT, his petition for review as to that issue is dismissed.
DISMISSED IN PART, and VACATED IN PART and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Carlo D‘Angelo, Tyler, TX, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before DAVIS, BARKSDALE, and ELROD, Circuit Judges.
W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
Derrick Lamont Walker appeals from his sentence of 24 months imprisonment followed by 24 months of supervised release for violating conditions of an earlier sentence of supervised release. We affirm.
I.
Walker pleaded guilty in July 2010 to one count of possession of material involving the sexual exploitation of minors and was sentenced to time served and seven years of supervised release. The district court revoked Walker‘s supervised release in March 2011 based upon his admission that he had been terminated from sex offender treatment due to his disruptive behavior. The district court sentenced him to three months in prison and an additional five years of supervised release. Among the conditions of his supervised release were that he (1) not associate with any convicted felons, (2) participate in a drug testing and treatment program, (3) not have contact with children under the age of 18 unless supervised by an adult approved by the probation officer, (4) not possess or view any images depicting sexually explicit conduct, and (5) abstain from the use of alcohol.
In July 2012, Walker admitted to violating each of the foregoing conditions. In exchange, the Government agreed to recommend that he be imprisoned for nine months, which constituted the top of the three to nine month Guidelines range, with no period of supervised release to follow. In accordance with the agreement of the parties, the magistrate judge recommended that Walker be sentenced to nine months of imprisonment with no subsequent period of supervised release.
The district court, however, advised Walker at the beginning of the revocation hearing that it was not inclined to follow the recommendation. The district court explained at length that it had been lenient in Walker‘s prior sentences and that Walker had violated his supervised release conditions repeatedly since January 2011. The district court stated that, in light of its previous leniency, “if you mess up, there is [sic] going to be consequences for it.... [I]t would be my intention to give you a somewhat longer sentence.”
After Walker, through counsel, indicated that he still wished to proceed with his plea, the district court sentenced him to the statutory maximum of 24 months in prison. In so doing, the district court explained:
I want to tell you I am doing this trying to help you. I think if you have a longer period of time in prison to think about [sic] and perhaps get some counseling, that when you get out, that you will realize that these are very serious matters; that you have to comply with them; and you don‘t have the choice of complying with them.
Although the district court initially sentenced Walker to an additional five-year period of supervised release, it ultimately
II.
Revocation sentences generally are reviewed under
The district court may impose any sentence that falls within the statutory maximum term of imprisonment allowed for the revocation sentence.
A sentencing court is not precluded from referencing the rehabilitative opportunities available to a defendant during incarceration.8 Post-Tapia, this court has concluded that if consideration of the need for rehabilitation is a “‘secondary concern’ or ‘additional justification‘” for a sentence, it is permissible.9 Conversely, a sentencing court errs if a defendant‘s rehabilitative needs are “a ‘dominant factor’ ... [that] inform[s] the district court‘s [sentencing] decision.”10
Walker argues that the district court committed clear or obvious error as evidenced by its statements that it was “trying to help” Walker by giving him “a longer period of time in prison to think ... and perhaps get some counseling.” He further contends that the error affected his substantial rights and seriously affected the
We disagree. This case is distinguishable from Garza, in which the district court focused almost exclusively on rehabilitation in crafting a sentence. There, the court stated that the defendant “should be required [or] at least be given an opportunity to participate in that residential institution drug treatment program,” had a discussion on the record about the various treatment programs available under different sentences, and sentenced the defendant to 24 months imprisonment for purposes of entering an appropriate treatment program.11 As the Garza court noted, “The court offered no additional justifications for the sentence it imposed.”12
In this case, although the district court certainly took rehabilitation into account (“I think if you have a longer period of time in prison to think about [sic] and perhaps get some counseling....“), it was at most a secondary concern or additional justification for the sentence, not a dominant factor.13 The district court referred to rehabilitation only after detailing Walker‘s multiple violations of his conditions of supervised release after he had been given a relatively lenient sentence on the underlying crime. The district court concluded:
I sentenced you in the first case. You are under my custody. And I think I told you then—I normally do when I give somebody the kind of break I gave you—that if you come back in front of me, you know, if you mess up, there is [sic] going to be consequences for it. And so I am not inclined to sentence you to what has been worked out by your attorney.
And I will be glad to hear anything you have to say, but it would be my intention to give you a somewhat longer sentence and a longer period of supervised release.
Thus, before the district court even mentioned rehabilitation, it had essentially addressed factors under
III.
Accordingly, we affirm.
W. EUGENE DAVIS
CIRCUIT JUDGE
