Margarito Murguia-Oliveros appeals the district court judgment revoking his supervised release and sentencing him to eight months in prison. Murguia-Oliveros claims that the district court lacked jurisdiction to revoke his supervised release because the supervised release term expired before his arrest and revocation hearing. He was arrested pursuant to a warrant based on facts that were not sworn. We have held that under these circumstances, a revocation of supervised release must occur during the term of supervised release.
See United States v. Vargas-Amaya,
BACKGROUND
The facts are important. Murguia-Ol-iveros was originally convicted of illegal reentry after deportation in 1996. He was sentenced to a term of imprisonment followed by deportation and three years of supervised release. On September 14, 2001, after serving the term of imprisonment, he was released from custody and deported from the United States. His three-year term of supervised release thus began on that date and was set to expire on September 14, 2004. Under the terms of his supervised release, he was prohibited from reentering the United States illegally after he was deported, and he was required to report to the United States Probation Office within 72 hours of any reentry.
Murguia-Oliveros did reenter the United States during his term of supervised release, for he was arrested on unrelated charges in San Diego in October of 2003. When his probation officer subsequently learned of that arrest, he sent Murguia-Oliveros a letter via certified mail to his last known address, instructing him to report. Murguia-Oliveros failed to report and did not make any contact with the probation officer. The district court issued a bench warrant in January of 2004 for Murguia-Oliveros’s arrest for violation of his supervised release. The warrant was not based on any affidavit or sworn facts.
Under the terms of the applicable statute, a released defendant can be arrested without a warrant during the period of supervised release for violating the terms of that supervised release. 18 U.S.C. § 3606. The statute provides that:
If there is probable cause to believe that a ... person on supervised release hasviolated a condition of his ... release, he may be arrested, and, upon arrest, shall be taken without unnecessary delay before the court having jurisdiction over him. A probation officer may make such an arrest whenever the ... releas-ee is found, and may make the arrest without a warrant.
Id. During the period of supervised release, the district court has jurisdiction to revoke the period of supervised release if the district court finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant violated the terms of that supervised release. 18 U.S.C. § 3588(e)(3).
After the period of supervised release has expired, however, the district court can revoke the term of supervised release only if a warrant based on sworn facts was issued within the supervised release period. 18 U.S.C. § 3583(f);
Vargas-Amaya,
Murguia-Oliveros was actually arrested in November of 2004, nearly two months after the term of supervised release was originally set to expire. The district court revoked Murguia-Oliveros’s term of supervised release and sentenced him to a term of imprisonment in December of 2004.
The issue in this case therefore is whether Murguia-Oliveros’s term of supervised release was still running at the time of his arrest and revocation hearing. The district court held that it was. The district court concluded that Murguia-Ol-iveros was in violation of the conditions of supervised release for a period of time that tolled the running of the term of supervised release, because his status was equivalent to that of a fugitive. Murguia-Oliveros appeals.
DISCUSSION
The statutory provisions regarding supervised release do not expressly provide for tolling during fugitive status.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3624. In
United States v. Crane,
We publish this opinion to clarify what constitutes “fugitive status” for purposes of tolling a term of supervised release. Murguia-Oliveros argues that he could not become a fugitive merely by failing to comply with the terms of his supervised release. We disagree.
The leading case is
Crane,
where the defendant had been sentenced to one year in custody, followed by one year of supervised release at a community treatment center.
Murguia-Oliveros engaged in similar conduct. He departed the place he was
In arguing he was not a fugitive from his supervised release, Murguia-Oliveros relies on authority dealing with the fugitive disentitlement doctrine that applies to criminal appeals. That principle of fugitive disentitlement authorizes the dismissal of a criminal defendant’s appeal from a conviction when the defendant becomes a fugitive during the appellate process. We have held in that context that the defendant does not become a fugitive, and the dismissal sanction therefore does not apply, when the convicted defendant fails to comply with the conditions of probation in failing to report to the probation office.
United States v. Gonzalez,
Murguia-Oliveros thus argues that failure to comply with the terms of his release should not result in the tolling, or extension, of his release period because tolling is a similarly severe sanction. It is not.
We deal here with a far less severe sanction, and one that is necessary to the purpose of supervised release. This is because, as we recognized in
Crane,
we should not reward those who violate the terms of their supervised release and avoid arrest until after the original term expires.
For similar reasons, Murguia-Oliveros’s reliance on criminal statute of limitations cases is misplaced. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3290, “[n]o statute of limitation shall extend to any person fleeing from justice.” We have held that, for this statute to apply, the government must bear the burden of showing that a defendant concealed himself or herself with an intent to avoid prosecution.
See United States v. Gonsalves,
AFFIRMED.
