After being charged by an information, Ronald Colt pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor offense of submitting false unemployment claims with the United States Railroad Retirement Board, in violation of 45 U.S.C. § 359(a). Colt was sentenced to seven months in prison and one year of supervised release. Colt served his time in prison, but he subsequently committed five violations of his supervised release conditions, including motor vehicle offenses and drug use. A magistrate judge therefore revoked the supervised release and sentenced Colt to another nine months in prison.
On appeal, Colt raises two arguments^ — one statutory and one constitutional. The statutory argument merits only brief consideration. Under 45 U.S.C. § 359(a), anyone convicted of making a false claim “shall be punished by a fine of not more than $10,000 or by imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both.” Colt argues this statute allows no more than one year of incarceration for his offense. Colt, however, will have served a total of 16 months in prison after the nine-month sentence imposed for violating his supervised release. This additional sentence, Colt argues, violates the one-year limit expressed in § 359(a).
What Colt’s argument ignores is that his supervised release was authorized by a sepa *983 rate statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3583. Section 3583(a) provides in relevant part:
The court, in imposing a sentence to a term of imprisonment for a felony or a misdemeanor, may include as a part of the sentence a requirement that the defendant be placed on a term of supervised release after imprisonment____
The term of supervised release that a court may impose depends on the underlying offense. Because the maximum term of imprisonment for Colt’s offense was one year, it is classified as a Class A misdemeanor. See 18 U.S.C. § 3559(a). And under § 3583(b)(3), a court may order one year or less of supervised release for misdemeanors. If, however, a defendant violates a condition of supervised release, § 3583(e)(3) authorizes the court to revoke the release and order the defendant to serve in prison all or part of the term of supervised release authorized by statute “without credit for time previously served on postrelease supervision.”
Colt’s supervised release, therefore, was authorized by a statute separate from the substantive statute under which Colt was convicted. Colt would have us read the substantive statute as a ceiling on the combined punishment he may receive under all statutes, but we think it more natural to read § 3583 as authorizing punishment in addition to the punishment authorized under substantive statutes. It is quite reasonable that Congress would enact a general, all-purpose supervised release statute to supplement the specific punishments authorized by the numerous criminal statutes.
Colt, however, highlights the language of § 3583(a) stating that supervised release may be ordered “as part of the sentence.” Colt argues that this language permits supervised release as a
component of
the sentence authorized by the underlying statute, so long as the defendant is incarcerated no longer than the underlying statute’s maximum term. Based on the legislative history and purpose of § 3583, however, our sister circuits have persuasively rejected both this argument and the closely-related argument that supervised release alone (regardless of revocation and subsequent imprisonment) may not be imposed in addition to a maximum sentence.
See, e.g., United States v. Robinson,
Our rejection of Colt’s statutory argument, however, leads us right into his more novel constitutional argument. Colt argues that if § 3583 does allow him to be imprisoned for longer than one year, then he should have been indicted by a grand jury rather than charged by an information. Colt constructs a simple syllogism based on the
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Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment. That clause, according to Colt, requires that offenses punishable by imprisonment for more than one year be prosecuted by indictment. Our interpretation of § 3583 makes Colt subject to imprisonment for more than one year. Thus, Colt concludes, his prosecution by information violated the Grand Jury Clause. Furthermore, says Colt, we cannot escape this syllogism by arguing that the imprisonment after revocation was a separate sentence
(i.e.,
based on additional wrongdoing and after a separate sentencing proceeding). Traditional constitutional protections ordinarily do not apply to revocations of supervised release, according to Colt, because a revocation is considered a modification of the original sentencing where the constitutional protections did apply.
See, e.g., United States v. Wyatt,
Our options are not so few, however, because of a basic flaw in the major premise of Colt’s syllogism. Colt cites Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 7(a) as the codification of the Grand Jury Clause’s requirements. According to Rule 7(a), “An offense which may be punished by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year or at hard labor shall be prosecuted by indictment....” Although the Advisory Committee Note states that Rule 7(a) “gives effect to” the Grand Jury Clause, Colt presses the text of the rule too far and thus bases his argument on a skewed version of constitutional doctrine.
The starting point for our analysis is, of course, the text of the Constitution itself.
See Printz v. United States,
— U.S.-, -,
Submitting false unemployment claims is certainly not a capital crime, so the question is whether Colt’s offense is an “otherwise infamous” crime. The Supreme Court began to elaborate upon the meaning of this phrase in a series of cases during the late nineteenth century. In
Ex parte Wilson,
The extent of Wilson’s holding, however, soon came into dispute. The Court’s opinion, for example, had emphasized that imprisonment in a state prison or penitentiary is more onerous than imprisonment in a house of correction. The Court quoted at length from Massachusetts Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw’s description of state prisons:
The convict is placed in a public place of punishment, common to the whole state, subject to solitary imprisonment, to have his hair cropped, to be clothed in conspicuous prison dress, subjected to hard labor without pay, to hard fare, coarse and meager food, and to severe discipline. Some of these a convict in the house of correction is subject to; but the house of correction, under that and the various names of workhouse and bridewell, has not the same character of infamy attached to it.
Id.
at 428,
The distinction between penitentiaries and other places of imprisonment survives in today’s federal' prison system. Under 18 U.S.C. § 4083, “[a] sentence for an offense punishable for one year or less shall not be served in a penitentiary without the consent of the defendant.”
See also United States v.
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Hanyard,
To be entitled to a grand jury, therefore, Colt needed to be subject to imprisonment in a penitentiary. Colt, however, was never at risk of going to the penitentiary. As noted above, 18 U.S.C. § 4083 authorizes penitentiary imprisonment only for offenses punishable by imprisonment exceeding one year. Although Colt was ultimately sentenced to a total of 16 months of imprisonment, that punishment comprised two discrete terms of imprisonment of less than one year. We interpret § 4083 to apply to each term of the sentence separately. When Colt was sentenced to his initial seven months of imprisonment, § 4083 did not allow the Government to put Colt in a penitentiary simply on the mere chance that a later revocation of supervised release would raise his total incarceration to greater than one year. Similarly, when Colt was sentenced to nine months of imprisonment upon revocation, § 4083 did not authorize sending Colt to Leavenworth based on the total time in prison. Section 4083 was in place long before Congress enacted the supervised release provisions, and that statute allowed penitentiary imprisonment based on the imprisonment authorized by' substantive criminal statutes. After the creation of supervised release, § 4083 should continue to be interpreted as dividing offenses based on definite terms of imprisonment (such as those authorized by substantive statutes), not on conditional possibilities of imprisonment (such as those based on supervised release revocation). Indeed, any other reading would render half of § 4083 virtually nugatory because under 18 U.S.C. § 3583, even misdemeanants face a possible one year of imprisonment after revocation of supervised release. We doubt that Congress, when enacting the supervised release provisions, also intended to make every criminal defendant subject to penitentiary confinement. Because Colt was therefore never exposed to imprisonment in a penitentiary, the Grand Jury Clause did not require that he be indicted. We further note that the other circuits that have considered this question have rejected Colt’s argument as well.
See United States v.
Smith,
Finally, the fact that Colt received two terms of imprisonment does not mean that his Petit Jury Clause claim is meritorious. Colt, remember, tried to argue that if the Grand Jury Clause did not protect him when he received his initial term of imprisonment, then the revocation of his supervised release was a separate punishment that invoked constitutional protections such as the Petit Jury Clause. Colt, however, was sentenced only once, and the revocation of his supervised release was but a modification of that sentence. The Grand Jury Clause applied at the sentencing; the clause simply did not help Colt because, under § 4083, he never faced the possibility of penitentiary imprisonment and thus no indictment was necessary.
The judgment of the District Court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has stated that "[w]hat punishments shall be considered as infamous may be affected by the changes of public opinion from one age to another.”
Ex parte Wilson,
