UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. WINSTON C. GRAHAM a/k/a Vincent Graham, a/k/a Michael Diamond a/k/a Tyrone L. Simmons Winston C. Graham, Appellant
NO. 98-1556
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
March 5, 1999
“USA v. Graham” (1999). 1999 Decisions. Paper 58.
On Appeal From the United States District Court For the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Crim. No. 97-cr-00642). District Judge: Honorable Eduardo C. Robreno. Argued: January 27, 1999.
Counsel for Appellant
MICHAEL R. STILES, ESQUIRE United States Attorney WALTER S. BATTY, JR., ESQUIRE Assistant United States Attorney Chief of Appeals JUDY GOLDSTEIN SMITH, ESQUIRE ROBERT A. ZAUZMER, ESQUIRE (ARGUED) Assistant United States Attorneys Suite 1250 615 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19106
Counsel for Appellee
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Chief Judge.
This case requires us to determine whether a misdemeanor can be an “aggravated felony” under a provision of federal law even if it is not, technically speaking, a felony at all. The particular question before us is whether petit larceny, a class A misdemeanor under New York law that carries a maximum sentence of one year, can subject a federal defendant to the extreme sanctions imposed by the “aggravated felon” classification. Despite
I. Facts & Procedural History
Graham was deported in 1996 after serving a previous sentence for reentering the country after his deportation in 1990. He returned to the United States without permission from the Attorney General and was arrested by the Immigration and Naturalization Service in 1997. He again pled guilty to reentry into the US following deportation, a violation of
Graham has three state convictions: In February 1986, he was convicted of unlawful possession of marijuana, a violation with a maximum fine of $100, stemming from a November 1985 arrest. In May 1986, he was convicted of attempted possession of marijuana, a Class B misdemeanor with a maximum of three months’ imprisonment, stemming from a November 1984 arrest. Finally, in May 1990, he was convicted of petit larceny, a Class A misdemeanor with a maximum of a year‘s imprisonment under New York law. See
Congress has classified certain crimes as “aggravated felonies” for purposes of immigration and deportation. See
The District Court reasoned that, because Graham had a prior drug possession conviction, his second conviction would have been a federal felony. However, because the conduct underlying Graham‘s second possession conviction did not occur after his first possession conviction had become final, as the applicable statute requires in order to convert a second possession offense into a felony, see
We may still uphold Graham‘s sentence in its entirety, however, because if even one of Graham‘s prior convictions qualifies as an aggravated felony, the full sixteen-level increase applies. The District Court reasoned that the petit larceny offense was also an aggravated theft felony because it carried a maximum sentence of at least one year. Graham argues that
II. Minimum Sentence Versus Sentence Imposed
Graham claims that the rule of lenity mandates his interpretation--courts should not interpret a statute to increase a penalty when the interpretation can be based on “no more than a guess as to what Congress intended.” Ladner v. United States, 358 U.S. 169, 178 (1958).
Graham‘s statutory construction is flawed. Before its amendment in 1996,
The statute, however, never suggests that the proper referent is a crime‘s statutory minimum. As part of the 1996 amendments, Congress added a definitional provision at
It is true, as Graham contends, that other language in
However, there is still no indication that Congress wished to make the statutory minimum for a crime relevant to the definition of “aggravated felony.” The fact that some provisions of
We conclude that when Congress amended the law it did not intend to establish a minimum penalty threshold. Instead, it lowered the maximum penalty required to make a theft violation an aggravated felony. Cf. United States v. Cordova-Beraud, 90 F.3d 215 (7th Cir. 1996) (“imposed”
III. Can Misdemeanors Be Felonies?
Graham‘s best argument for lenity is as follows:
This is an issue of first impression in the federal courts. In the cases cited by the government, courts interpolated “is” or “was” as the verb in the aggravated felony statute, so that it applies to crimes “for which the term of imprisonment [is] at least one year.”3 But that does not
The line between felonies and misdemeanors is an ancient one. The line has not always been drawn between one year and one year and a day, since it used to be that felonies were all punishable by death. With the rise of the penitentiary and the disappearance of the death penalty for most felonies, however, the felony-misdemeanor distinction solidified at the one-year line. The distinction was intertwined with the definition of “infamous crimes,” which came to be defined as crimes punishable by more than one year of confinement. The one-year mark was used by Congress as early as 1865. See United States v. Ramirez, 556 F.2d 909, 913-21 (9th Cir. 1976) (discussing, in extensive detail, the evolution of “infamous crimes” to mean crimes punishable by more than a year‘s confinement); see also Thorm v. United States, 59 F.2d 419, 419 (3d Cir. 1932) (linking “infamous crimes” with felonies and noting the consistent more-than-one-year line in federal law); cf. In re Mills, 135 U.S. 263 (1890) (using the more-than-one year
Furthermore, under federal law, a felony is defined as a crime that has a maximum term of more than one year. See
The government responds that Congress made its intent crystal clear by amending (G) to include crimes with a maximum one-year penalty. Yet Congress was, obviously, less than painstaking in amendment, and the amendment was designed to decrease the range from five years (fairly arbitrary) to one (a term with an historic meaning, as it has been used to distinguish misdemeanors from felonies for a very long time). The legislative history is not particularly helpful. The Senate Report on the amendment stated in relevant part that it “[l]owers fine and imprisonment thresholds in the definition (from 5 years to 1 year . . .), thereby broadening the coverage of . . . theft . . ..” S. Rep. No. 249, 104th Cong., 1996 WL 180026. An intent to broaden the coverage of the aggravated felony classification, however, is not necessarily an intent to include misdemeanors in that category. There is no evidence that Congress noticed that it was breaking the time-honored line between felonies and misdemeanors.
Because, as the government contends, the amended statute‘s definition of an aggravated theft felony refers to sentences actually imposed and not to potential sentences, it is still possible for a felon to avoid being an aggravated felon if he or she receives a six-month sentence for a theft crime with a maximum possible sentence over one year. Therefore, though Congress evidenced an intent to increase the scope of the statute, it did put some limit on the punitiveness of the change. Moreover, Graham‘s interpretation would not render the literal wording of the statute meaningless. Some one-year sentences would still
If we accepted Graham‘s argument, the affected set of defendants would be those sentenced to a full year for a misdemeanor covered by
Congress has the power to define the punishment for the crime of reentering the country after deportation, and we conclude that Congress was defining a term of art, “aggravated felony,” which in this case includes certain misdemeanants who receive a sentence of one year. Our decision would be much simpler if Congress had used the term “aggravated offense.” However, rather than making the underlying offense conform to the label Congress erroneously used to describe
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