UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus GERONIMO AYALA-GOMEZ, a.k.a. Momo, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 00-13456
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
JULY 05, 2001
D. C. Docket No. 00-00003-CR-01-WCO-2
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia
(July 5, 2001)
Before CARNES, COX and NOONAN*, Circuit Judges.
*Honorable John T. Noonan, Jr., U.S. Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
Geronimo Ayala-Gomez appeals his sentence for being found in the United States without permission aftеr removal, in violation of
Ayala was convicted in a superior court in Hall County, Georgia of first-degree forgery and entering an automobile with intent to commit theft. The superior court sentenced him for each offense to time served (eight months), to be followed by four years and four months’ probation, but it imposed a nominal five-year term of imprisonment, too1:
WHEREUPON, it is ordered and adjudged by the Court that: The said defendant is hereby sentenced to confinement for a period of 5 years and 0 months in the State Penal System or such other institution as the Commissioner of the State Department of Offender Rehabilitation may direct, to be computed as provided by lаw, HOWEVER, it is further ordered by the Court,
THAT upon service of 0 years and 8 months of the above sentence, the remainder of 4 years and 4 months may be served on probation PROVIDED that the said defendant complies with the following general and special conditions herein imposed by the Court as a part of this sentenсe.
A handwritten notation followed: “Credit for time served — all incarceration time served prior to sentencing.” Following these convictions, Ayala was deported to Mexico. He came back to Georgia the following year, where local police familiar with him spotted him on his way to visit his mother in Gainesville. He pleaded guilty to violating
The default Sentencing Guidelines offense level for
In this appeal of that ruling, Ayala does not dispute that forgery and entering an auto fit into the categories of offenses described in
Both arguments have some force because suspension is not defined in
In Georgia, by contrast, suspension and probation are twin animals, similar but distinct. Both are mechanisms by which a sentencing court mаy excuse a defendant
The core inquiry, therefore, is whether suspension in
Both the ordinary starting point of statutory construction and the typical second step fail us here. The word “suspension” alone gives us no clues as to which meaning it carries, and no explanatory legislative history has accompanied the addition or the refinement of the prison-term test found in the dеfinition of aggravated felony. See Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-208, div. C, §§ 321(a)(3), (10) and 322(a)(1), 110 Stat. 3009-546, 3009-627 to -628 (amending aggravated-felony tests for theft and forgery offenses to provide one-year prison-term test and adding definition of term of imprisonment that includes suspended sentences); Immigration and Natiоnality Technical Corrections Act of 1994, Pub. L. 103-416, § 222(a), 108 Stat. 4305, 4321 (making theft offenses aggravated felonies if “the term of imprisonment imposed (regardless of any suspension of imprisonment) is at least 5 years“).
We accordingly hold that the terms of imprisonment impоsed on Ayala include the parts of Ayala‘s sentence that the Hall County court probated under Georgia law. Those terms of imprisonment were thus five years each, well above the one-year floor, and the district court correctly determined that the offenses were aggravated felonies. The court thus properly assessed Ayala‘s base offense level at 24 and reached the proper guidelines range.
AFFIRMED.
As the opinion of the court observes, Ayala-Gomez was actually sentenced to eight months’ imprisonment, a term coinciding with the time he had already been in custody. Geоrgia did not treat his crime as deserving another four years and four months in jail. Ayala-Gomez was put on probation and deported. For a federal court to hold now that Ayala-Gomez had committed an aggravated felony in Georgia for which Georgia imposed a term of imprisonment of five years is to put a federal spin on a matter left to the States as well as to be draconian in a criminal case where venerable precedent tells us it is better to be mild.
The court correctly begins with
The reference to the law of a State in
The opinion of the court says that the ordinary сanons of interpretation fail us. My reading of the statute is that it is clear: it defers, as to the definition here, to the States. But if I am wrong as to the clarity, and the meaning favored by the court is there, the statute is at the very least ambiguous. When a statute is ambiguous, there is a canon of impeccable authority: the rule of lenity. United States v. Trout, 68 F.3d 1276, 1280 (11th Cir. 1995). Not out of a sentimental sympathy for criminals, but out of a desire to ensure every individual that the power of the government will be used only to enforce clearly prescribed norms, criminal statutes are read with a requirement that both the crime and its penalty be plainly defined and if “the issue is subject to some doubt,” the doubts “are resolved in favor of the defendant.” Adamo Wrecking Co. v. United States, 434 U.S. 275, 284-85 (1978).
I respectfully dissent.
