ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
This case is before this Court for the third time. We previously affirmed Levy’s sentences in
United States v. Levy,
Having now considered Levy’s case in light of Booker, we affirm Levy’s sentences not only for the reasons stated in our prior opinions but also for those explained below.
I. BACKGROUND
After this Court affirmed Levy’s sentences in
United States v. Levy,
After
Blakely,
but before
Booker,
Levy filed a petition for rehearing in this Court
On August 3, 2004, this Court denied Levy’s petition for rehearing based on this Court’s long-standing prudential rule of declining to entertain issues not raised in an appellant’s initial brief on appeal but raised for the first time in a petition for rehearing.
See, e.g., Levy,
Levy then filed a petition for certiorari in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court granted certiorari, vacated our judgment, and remanded Levy’s case for consideration in light of Booker, stating as follows:
Motion of petitioner for leave to proceed in forma pauperis and petition for writ of certiorari granted. Judgment vacated and case remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit for further consideration in light of United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. —,125 S.Ct. 738 (2005).
Levy v. United States,
— U.S. —,
II. THIS COURT’S PRUDENTIAL RULE
In Nealy, this Court summarized our prudential rule of declining to consider issues not timely raised in a party’s initial brief, as follows:
Parties must submit all issues on appeal in their initial briefs. When new authority arises after a brief is filed, this circuit permits parties to submit supplemental authority on “intervening decisions or new developments” regarding issues already properly raised in the initial briefs. Also, parties can seek permission of the court to file supplemental briefs on this new authority. But parties cannot properly, raise new issues at supplemental briefing, even if the issues arise based on the intervening decisions or new developments cited in the supplemental authority.
Nealy,
To allow a new issue to be raised in a petition for rehearing circumvents Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(5), which requires that an appellant’s initial brief must contain “a statement of the issues presented for review.”
4
Further, the rule requiring that issues be raised in opening briefs “serves valuable purposes, as do all of the procedural default rules, which is why we regularly apply them.
See generally Presnell v. Kemp,
Accordingly, based on our prudential rule, this Court denied Levy’s petition for rehearing, based on his failure to raise any
Apprendi-type
issue in his initial brief on appeal.
Levy,
III. CONSIDERATION IN LIGHT OF BOOKER
Because of the Supreme Court remand, we now farther consider Levy’s sentences
•Moreover, this principle recognized in
Booker
— that retroactivity is subject to ordinary prudential doctrines — is also explicitly recognized in two other Supreme Court cases.
See Shea v. Louisiana,
For example, in
Shea v. Louisiana,
the Supreme Court concluded that “if a case was pending on direct review at the time
Edwards [v. Arizona,
Further, in
Pasquantino,
the Supreme Court applied its own prudential rules to foreclose the ability of defendants to raise untimely
Blakely
claims. In
Pasquantino,
issued after
Booker,
the petitioners argued “in a footnote that their sentences should be vacated in light of
Blakely
.... ”
Pas-quantino,
It seems relatively obvious that if the Supreme Court may apply its prudential rules to foreclose a defendant’s untimely Blakely, now Booker, claim, there is no reason why this Court should be powerless to apply its prudential rule to foreclose defendant Levy’s untimely Blakely, now Booker, claim.
We also point out why
Griffith v. Kentucky,
Thus, there are two distinct and independent rules: (1) retroactivity; and (2) this Court’s prudential rule that issues not raised in the opening brief are abandoned. Although each rule plays an equally important role in the orderly administration of justice, they answer different questions. As explained by Judge Carnes in Ardley,
[rjetroactivity doctrine answers the question of which cases a new decision applies to, assuming that the issue involving that new decision has been timely raised and preserved. Procedural bar doctrine answers the question of whether an issue was timely raised and preserved, and if not, whether it should be decided anyway.
Ardley,
Requiring all parties to raise issues in their initial briefs is not unduly harsh or overly burdensome. This is particularly true about constitutional challenges to the federal sentencing guidelines, which have continued to be raised for many years despite adverse precedent. Moreover, when
Apprendi
was decided in 2000, criminal defense attorneys were well aware of Apprendi’s potential impact on the sentencing guidelines well before the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Blakely
and
Booker.
For example, in numerous cases before our Court, defense counsel, after
Apprendi
and before
Blakely,
asserted that their clients’ rights to a jury trial were violated when the district court enhanced their sentences with extra-verdict enhancements not proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
See, e.g., United States v. Reese,
Although it may be true that most attorneys could not have predicted the Supreme Court’s precise resolution of the sentenc
Moreover, although this Court does not consider
Blakely,
now
Booker,
issues not raised in any way in a party’s initial brief, we have liberally construed what it means to raise a Blakely-type or
Booker-type.
issue.
See United States v. Dowling,
IV. THE EFFECT OF SUPREME COURT REMANDS ON THE APPLICATION OF THIS COURT’S PRUDENTIAL RULES
Finally, we discuss the specific remand order in Levy’s case. Since
Booker,
the Supreme Court has remanded over a hundred of our Circuit’s cases with this standard order or something similar: “The motion of petitioner for leave to proceed
in forma pauperis
and the petition for writ of certiorari is granted. The judgment is vacated and the case is remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit for further consideration in light of
United States v. Booker,
543 U.S. —,
Further, in a concurring opinion in Ardley, Judge Carnes explained another reason why this type of general remand does not necessarily impinge on this Court’s application of its prudential rules, as follows:
Whenever the Supreme Court decides an important issue of law, it routinely takes every case in which the court of appeals decision came out before the new decision was announced and in which the certiorari petitioner claims that new decision might apply, and treats all of those cases the same. The uniform treatment given all such cases is to vacate the court of appeals judgment and remand the case for further consideration in light of the new decision. Those boilerplate orders come out in bushel baskets full. There is no implication in the standard language of those orders that the court of appeals is to do anything except reconsider the case now that there is a new Supreme Court decision that may, or may not, affect the result. We have never felt constrained to read anything into such routine remands other than the direction that we take another look at the case because of the. new decision.
Ardley,
Instead, what is required is that we take another look at this case and consider it in light of
Booker.
We have done so, and, consistent with
Booker
and our case law, we affirm Levy’s sentences for the reasons outlined herein and in our prior opinions. We also reinstate our prior panel opinion affirming Levy’s sentences in
United States v. Levy,
AFFIRMED and PRIOR OPINIONS REINSTATED.
Notes
. On December 3, 2004, this Court also denied Levy’s petition for en banc rehearing.
United States v. Levy,
. Subsequently, this Court has applied this prudential rule in other cases where defendants untimely raised
Blakely,
now
Booker,
claims.
See, e.g., United States v. Pipkins,
.In addition, before a decision on the merits of a direct appeal, this Court repeatedly has denied motions to file supplemental briefs that seek to raise new issues not covered in an appellant's initial brief on appeal.
See, e.g., Wilkerson v. Grinnell Corp.,
As for reply briefs, this Court also declines to consider issues raised for the first time in an appellant’s reply brief.
See, e.g., KMS Rest. Corp. v. Wendy's Int'l, Inc.,
. In
Nealy,
this Court noted that "[p]arties must submit all issues on appeal in their initial briefs.”
. Importantly, this rule applies with equal force, regardless of whether it is the government, criminal defendant, or any other party to litigation who has failed to raise an issue in their opening brief.
. The
Griffith
Court did not require that a dissimilarly situated defendant — one who did not preserve his objection below or on appeal — would necessarily benefit from the new constitutional rule. Instead, the
Griffith
holding is necessary to "treat[ ] similarly situated defendants the same.”
Griffith,
. For example, Reese's initial brief was filed on January 20, 2004, before
Blakely
was decided on June 24, 2004. In his initial brief on appeal, Reese made an Apprendi-based argument about a sentencing enhancement he received.
Reese,
. There is a good example of the continued availability of previously foreclosed arguments in the
Apprendi
line of cases.
Compare Walton v. Arizona,
. In other cases where a defendant timely raised a Sixth Amendment or
Apprendi
or
Blakely
issue in the opening brief, as many defendants did prior to
Booker,
this Court has considered the merits of those claims.
See, e.g., United States v. Burge,
