UNITED STATES, Appellee, v. SHELLEY M. RICHMOND JOSEPH, Defendant, Appellant. UNITED STATES, Appellee, v. WESLEY MACGREGOR, Defendant, Appellant.
No. 20-1787, No. 20-1794
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
February 28, 2022
Before Lynch, Thompson, and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. Leo T. Sorokin, U.S. District Judge]
Rosemary C. Scapicchio for appellant Wesley MacGregor.
Maura Healey, Attorney General of Massachusetts, Robert E. Toone, Anne Sterman, and Amanda Hainsworth, Assistant Attorneys General, on brief for The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, amicus curiae.
Matthew R. Segal, Daniel L. McFadden, Krista Oehlke, and American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Massachusetts, Inc. on brief for The Ad Hoc Committee for Judicial Independence, amicus curiae.
Sabin Willett, Vanessa M. Brown, and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP on brief for Legal Scholars, amici curiae.
Howard M. Cooper, Benjamin J. Wish, Maria T. Davis, and Todd & Weld LLP on brief for The Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, amicus curiae.
Donald C. Lockhart, Assistant U.S. Attorney, with whom Andrew E. Lelling, U.S. Attorney, was on brief, for appellee.
We must reject the defendants’ request for pre-trial review of the denial of their motions to dismiss because their appeals are premature. Our explanation follows.
I.
For the purposes of this appeal, the defendants say that they accept as true the government‘s allegations as contained in the indictment. Those allegations outline the following version of events.
On April 2, 2018, Judge Joseph presided over the arraignment of an undocumented immigrant referred to by the parties as A.S.1 A.S. had been fingerprinted upon his arrest by police in
On April 2, a plainclothes ICE officer entered the Newton District Court to take A.S. into federal custody should he be released from state custody. The ICE officer originally sat in Judge Joseph‘s courtroom, but Judge Joseph later directed the clerk to tell the officer to leave. The government alleges that this directive violated state policy governing the treatment of ICE officials in Massachusetts courthouses. The clerk did as instructed, and also told the ICE officer that if released, A.S. would exit the courtroom into the courthouse lobby.
Ultimately, however, that is not what transpired. A.S. was released from state custody, but he exited the courthouse without passing through the lobby where the ICE official waited. The government alleges that Judge Joseph purposefully helped A.S.
The United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts apparently decided that the foregoing events were best addressed with a criminal indictment rather than a shot-over-the-bow visit to the courthouse. The indictment charged Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor with conspiring to obstruct justice in violation of
The district court rejected the motions to dismiss. Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor timely appealed. For the following reasons, we find that these appeals are premature, and we have no jurisdiction to review the merits of the district court‘s rulings at this stage of the proceedings.
II.
As a general rule, federal courts of appeal may exercise appellate jurisdiction only over final decisions. See
There are, however, several exceptions to this general rule. As relevant here, those exceptions include the so-called collateral order doctrine. That doctrine permits an appeals court to review orders that, without ending the litigation below, “finally determine claims of right separate from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate jurisdiction be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.” Midland Asphalt Corp. v. United States, 489 U.S. 794, 798 (1989) (quoting Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 546 (1949)).
The collateral order doctrine is a narrow exception, which the Supreme Court “ha[s] interpreted . . . ‘with the utmost strictness’ in criminal cases.” Id. at 799 (quoting Flanagan v. United States, 465 U.S. 259, 265 (1984)). To qualify as a collateral order, the order at issue “must (1) ‘conclusively determine the disputed question,’ (2) ‘resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action,’ and (3) ‘be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.‘” Id. (quoting Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U.S. 463, 468 (1978)).
For our purposes, we need only train our attention on the third requirement -- that the order in question cannot
In each of these instances, Midland Asphalt‘s third requirement was satisfied because the protected right (freedom from excessive bail, a guarantee not to stand trial, and protection against forced medication) would have been effectively lost if not vindicated before final judgment entered. Consequently, a post-judgment appeal would come too late.
So in this case, we ask whether either defendant asserts a right that would effectively be lost by proceeding to trial. To answer this question, we consider the rights that the defendants claim are at stake.
A.
Judge Joseph‘s primary argument for challenging the indictment rests on her claim that, as a state district court
The flaw in this argument is that judicial immunity -- even assuming that it applies in this criminal case -- does not provide a right not to be tried that can serve as a basis for interlocutory review. To explain why this is so, we begin with a rule of construction applicable when a criminal defendant asserts a right not to stand trial. Midland Asphalt teaches that such a right must “rest[] upon an explicit statutory or constitutional guarantee that trial will not occur -- as in the Double Jeopardy Clause (‘nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb‘), or the Speech or Debate Clause (‘[F]or any Speech or Debate in either House, [the Senators and Representatives] shall not be questioned in any other Place‘).” 489 U.S. at 801 (second and third alterations in original) (internal citations omitted). In adopting this rule for interlocutory appeals in criminal cases, the Court recognized that, absent such a strict construction, very many legal defenses might be said to confer a right not to be tried. Id. (“[A]ny legal rule can be said to give rise to a ‘right not to be tried’
Judge Joseph argues that we should overlook Midland Asphalt‘s pronouncement that a right not to be tried must be explicitly rooted in a statute or the Constitution. In support of this argument, she points to Sell, 539 U.S. 166. Sell, though, did not suggest that Midland Asphalt was no longer good law. Sell did not even involve a claimed right not to be tried. Rather, the defendant in that case invoked a right not to be involuntarily medicated. 539 U.S. at 169, 177. So the fact that the Supreme Court did not seek to locate that particular right in an explicit statutory or constitutional guarantee provides no basis for concluding that Sell silently reversed Midland Asphalt‘s insistence that, in a criminal case, “[a] right not to be tried” must “rest[] upon an explicit statutory or constitutional guarantee that trial will not occur.” 489 U.S. at 801 (emphasis
Judge Joseph also invokes the Supreme Court‘s holding in Mitchell v. Forsyth that “the denial of a substantial claim of absolute immunity is an order appealable before final judgment.” 472 U.S. 511, 525 (1985). But Mitchell was a civil case to which the more stringent rules applicable to criminal proceedings did not apply. Midland Asphalt, decided four years after Mitchell, governs this criminal case. So Judge Joseph cannot obtain interlocutory review of her judicial immunity defense unless she can show that her claimed right not to be tried is explicitly grounded in a statute or the Constitution. Because she concededly can point to no such grounding, and relies instead solely on the common law, she necessarily fails to satisfy Midland Asphalt‘s strictures.
The bottom line, then, is that we have no jurisdiction to review the district court‘s decision denying Judge Joseph‘s motion to dismiss based on her asserted common-law defense of judicial immunity.
B.
The defendants’ claim that the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution bars their prosecution fares no better as a support for interlocutory review.
The Tenth Amendment provides: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”
The defendants claim that their prosecution is a tool of “impermissible commandeering -- an attempt to require state officers to help enforce federal immigration law.” As an initial matter, this argument seems to undercut the defendants’ claim that a court can adjudicate their defenses without considering facts contrary to those alleged in the indictment. The indictment does not allege that Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor merely declined to enforce federal immigration law. Instead, it alleges that they affirmatively interfered with federal officials’ attempts to enforce federal law. So we are not convinced that the defendants’ Tenth Amendment theory is “completely separate from the merits” of
In any event, the defendants’ Tenth Amendment theory does not satisfy Midland Asphalt‘s third prong. Citing an unpublished civil decision of the Tenth Circuit, Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor maintain that the Tenth Amendment should be understood as conferring a right not to stand trial. See Robertson v. Morgan County, 166 F.3d 1222 (10th Cir. 1999) (per curiam) (unpublished table opinion). But that theory fails because we do not glean in the Tenth Amendment‘s text any “guarantee that trial will not occur.” Midland Asphalt, 489 U.S. at 801.4
Nor does the defendants’ Tenth Amendment defense implicate some other right that would be lost by proceeding to trial, at least in this context. At base, the defendants argue that they had a right to do what they did because federal immigration officials could not have required them to help enforce
True, Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor will confront the costs of trial and the very significant anxiety of being defendants in a federal prosecution. Without minimizing those adverse consequences, we must recognize that they are visited on all criminal defendants. So they cannot justify an interlocutory appeal unless we are to allow such appeals of most motions to dismiss in criminal cases.
We also acknowledge the related twist on the commandeering argument emphasized by amici: that this prosecution will chill other judges from refusing to assist federal officials. But the facts alleged here -- affirmative acts of deception and violations of several state policies -- are largely sui generis. Moreover, every overreaching or overly broad indictment arguably chills others who see themselves as similarly situated to the defendants. So if that chilling were sufficient to justify interlocutory review, very many motions to dismiss of all sorts would be appealable. Such a result would run directly counter to Midland Asphalt‘s insistence that the collateral order exception be strictly interpreted in criminal cases.
For all of these reasons, the pretrial denial of the defendants’ motions to dismiss based on this Tenth Amendment, anti-
C.
We turn our attention next to the defendants’ claim that the indictment contravenes principles of federalism and due process because it “rests on unconstitutionally broad readings of the obstruction of justice statutes.” Citing no authority on this point, the defendants contend that their prosecution implicates “constitutional interests” that “cannot be adequately protected if this case proceeds to trial.”
We do not read this claim as asserting that principles of federalism and/or due process confer a right not to be tried at all. But to the extent the defendants intended to argue as much, that argument fails for lack of “an explicit statutory or constitutional guarantee that trial will not occur.” Midland Asphalt, 489 U.S. at 801.
And with respect to the defendants’ due-process claims, we have concluded in the civil context that if a party‘s “due-process rights were violated, there is no reason to assume they cannot be fully vindicated on final appeal.” United States v. Kouri-Perez, 187 F.3d 1, 14 (1st Cir. 1999). The defendants have failed to convince us that the result ought to differ in their criminal case, where the collateral order exception is even more limited.
D.
Finally, to the extent that Judge Joseph and Deputy MacGregor merely allege that the indictment fails to state an offense, this theory is not amenable to interlocutory appeal. As the Supreme Court has explained, “an order denying a motion to dismiss an indictment for failure to state an offense . . . may be reviewed effectively, and, if necessary, corrected if and when a final judgment results.” Abney, 431 U.S. at 663.5
III.
Given the strictures of the collateral order doctrine as applied in criminal cases, we find ourselves without jurisdiction to review before final judgment the district court‘s order denying the defendants’ motions to dismiss the indictments. We therefore dismiss their appeals without expressing any views on the merits of any charges or defenses in this apparently unprecedented prosecution.
