The defendant, whose appeal to this court from his conviction of being a felon in possession of a firearm, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), is pending, renews in this court, as he is entitled to do, Fed. R.App. P. 9(b), his motion for release on bail pending the decision of his appeal. The district judge denied the motion, which had been filed pro se, because she thought that the defendant had no substantial ground for appeal. The attorney appointed for him on appeal has come up with a ground that may be substantial, though that is for the district court to consider in the first instance, see
United States v. Swanquist,
A person who has been convicted of committing a felony (and not been pardoned) is no doubt more likely to make an illegal use of a firearm than a nonfelon, and the illegal use is likely to involve violence. Otherwise it would be a little difficult to see why being a felon in possession of a firearm is a crime. But is the risk
substantial?
And for
all
felonies other than those (just antitrust and related offenses) excepted from the reach of section 922(g)(1) by section 921(a)(20)(A)? We are pointed to no evidence that it is. Most felonies after all are not violent (it appears that the defendant’s felony was a nonviolent drug offense), and ex-felons have the same motives as lawful possessors of firearms to possess a firearm — self-defense, hunting, gun collecting, and target practice. The courts have held, uniformly so far as our research has disclosed, that being a felon in possession is not a crime
Some firearms, it is true — for example sawed-off shotguns — have no significant lawful use, and so their possession by felons may well constitute a crime of violence, as held in reference to the sentencing guidelines in
United States v. Brazeau,
But it can be argued that while most
felonies
(even after antitrust and related offenses are netted out) are nonviolent, most
felons
are dangerous when armed. The largest class of felons nowadays are dealers in illegal drugs, a violence-prone business. The Second Circuit in
Dillard
asked whether felons do a lot of violence with the weapons they possess illegally, and answered “yes,” leading to the conclusion that the risk of violence created by being a felon in possession of a firearm is substantial. But the statute asks whether there is a “substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used
in the course of committing the offense,”
and the offense is possession of a firearm. People who commit that offense may end up committing another, and violent, offense, such as robbing a bank at gunpoint, but that doesn’t make the possession offense violent. Otherwise we would have to say that the offense of driving a car without a license is a crime of violence because people who commit that offense are likely to drive when drunk, or to speed, or drive recklessly, or attempt to evade arrest. For that matter, the illegal sale of a gun, or perhaps of a knife or burglar tools, would on that analysis be a crime of violence. A crime that increases the likelihood of a crime of violence need not itself be a crime of violence.
Bailey v. United States,
Dillard
made a distinct argument for its interpretation based on the provisions of the Bail Reform Act concerning bail pending trial, as distinct from pending appeal, the latter being the issue in this case. See
The motion for release is denied without prejudice to the defendant’s refiling it in the district court.
