ORDER OF COURT
The Memorandum and Order of August 18, 1992 is hereby withdrawn. The following Memorandum and Order is issued in lieu thereof.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The Government, in two separate rehearing petitions, asks us to reconsider our decision permitting an offender, during sentencing proceedings, to attack collaterally (with suggested limitations and qualifications) the constitutionality of predicate offenses used potentially to enhance a sentence imposed under the Armed Career Criminal Act sentence-enhancement statute, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). The Government gives three sorts of reasons.
1. The Government, after repeatedly characterizing our decision as a holding that
the Constitution
requires courts to permit such collateral attacks, offers a set of arguments to the contrary. The problem with this set of arguments, however, is that we did not rest our holding upon the Constitution, nor did the other circuits whose cases we followed,
United States v. Gallman,
2. The Government (in its second rehearing petition) says that our last statement is
*989
incorrect. It says that a statutory basis for our decision would be inconsistent with
Lewis v. United States,
We reject this argument for two independent reasons. First, it comes too late. It is both new and contrary to the Government’s concession in its initial brief that prior felony' convictions obtained when the defendant
had no lawyer
did
not
count as sentencing predicates under § 924(e), a concession that it rested upon pre-Lewis Supreme Court decisions.
United States v. Tucker,
Second, we do not believe the argument is correct on the merits. The Supreme Court, in Lewis, recognized that it was interpreting a particular substantive criminal statute with a special purpose, 18 U.S.C. § 1202(a)(1). It said that
Use of an uncounseled felony conviction as the basis for imposing a civil firearms disability, enforceable by a criminal sanction, is not inconsistent with Burgett, Tucker, and Loper [v. Beto,405 U.S. 473 ,92 S.Ct. 1014 ,31 L.Ed.2d 374 (1972), because, in those cases] ... the subsequent conviction or sentence ... depended upon the reliability of a past uncounseled conviction.... The federal gun laws, however, focus not on reliability, but on the mere fact of conviction, or even indictment ...
Lewis,
We can find no such purpose, however, prominent in the sentence enhancement statute. Moreover, the reliability of the prior sentence enhancement predicate convictions would seem closely related to the likely congressional reasons for enhancing a present sentence in light of those prior convictions (as the Government initially conceded in respect to uncounseled felony convictions).
Thus, despite
Lewis,
we do not believe the sentence enhancement statute requires a court to consider unconstitutionally obtained (but not yet set aside) convictions as sentencing predicates. And, that being so, we believe the courts have adequate power to determine how allegedly unconstitutional convictions should be treated.
See Mistretta v. United States,
3. The Government cites several cases, dealing with the Sentencing Guidelines, which it believes are contrary to our conclusion.
United States v. Hewitt,
The petitions for rehearing are Denied.
