OPINION AND ORDER
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was tried on a thirty-count indictment arising out of the bombings at the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013. Jury selection for his trial began January 5, 2015. On April 8, 2015, the jury returned a verdict in the first phase of his capital trial finding him guilty under all counts. The maximum penalty for seventeen of the crimes was death. On May 15, 2015, the jury returned its verdict in the second phase of the trial, deciding that the death penalty should be imposed on six of the seventeen capital counts, but not on the other eleven. On June 24, 2015, the Court sentenced the defendant to death on those six counts in accordance with the jury’s verdict and to various terms of imprisonment on the remaining counts.
On July 6, 2015, the defendant moved for a new trial in the interests of justice pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33 and, in the alternative, for judgment of acquittal pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29. In his motion, he reiterates some grounds for such relief that he had previously raised before or during trial. As to those grounds that are repeated from prior written or oral motions, both aspects of the present motion are denied for the same reasons the prior motions were denied. As to most of them, no further discussion is necessary; the issues are preserved for the defendant on appeal.
He repeats his objection to trial in this District, and the reasons for denying his renewed attack on venue are discussed below.
Lastly, he argues that all of his convictions under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) for carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence must be vacated. His argument is based first on issues he claims arise from the Supreme Court’s decision, issued days after he was formally sentenced, declaring a portion of the Armed Career Criminal Act unconstitutionally vague. See Johnson v. United States, — U.S. —,
The Court permitted an extended briefing schedule and, after oral argument on a portion of the defendant’s motion, allowed
I. Venue
The issue of venue has been previously litigated in this case and extensively addressed in opinions of this Court and of the Court of Appeals. The defendant now again renews his venue argument, contending generally that local media coverage, local events, and information or postings on social networks during the course of the trial should raise a presumption of prejudice
In Skilling v. United States, the Supreme Court identified four factors generally relevant to a determination whether a presumption of prejudice should be indulged: (1) the size and characteristics of the community in which the crime occurred; (2) the nature of the publicity surrounding the case; (3) the time between the crime and the trial; and (4) whether the jury’s decision indicated bias.
A. Size and Characteristics of the Community
As has been previously described, see In re Tsarnaev,
B. Nature of the Publicity
The main basis for the defendant’s motion appears to be the extent and nature of the publicity concerning the case itself and the events at issue in it. In his post-trial motion, he focuses largely on media coverage concerning observances of the anniversary of the bombings, the 2015 Boston Marathon itself, and publicity about victims; coverage of foreign family witnesses; physical surroundings of the courthouse; and social media.
i Marathon-related media coverage
The defendant relies heavily on local marathon-related media coverage. It is certainly true that the local media gave substantial coverage to the anniversary of the bombings, its victims, and the 2015 marathon. What the defendant disregards, however, is the national — and international — interest in those same events and people. This was not a crime that was unknown outside of Boston. To the contrary, media coverage of the bombings when they occurred was broadcast live around the world over the Internet and on television. Contrast Casellas-Toro,
Nor did the crime affect an event about which only Bostonians are concerned. Although the Boston Marathon is an important event in the city and region, it is also an iconic event known worldwide. According to testimony by the executive director of the Boston Athletic Association, the organization which hosts the Boston Marathon, the race was originally known as “America’s Marathon.” (Mar. 4, 2015 Tr. of Jury Trial — Day Twenty-Seven at 69 (dkt. no. 1528),) Because “it is the only marathon outside of the Olympic Games and the world championships for which one needs to qualify in order to run, ,.. it’s an aspiration for a great many people.” (Id. at 68.) It “attracts some of the finest competitors in the world.” (Id. at 70.) The approximately 27,000 registered runners come from all 50 states and many countries. (Id. at 68, 75.) At least 40% of them are from “outside Massachusetts and New England.” (Id. at 75.) Similarly, spectators include not only people from the Boston area but also many visitors from elsewhere, coming to watch Mends and family members participating in the race. (Id. at 73.) Like the Olympic Games, the event receives worldwide media coverage. In recent years, approximately 1,000 media credentials have been issued to. representatives of about 80 registered news organizations. (Id. at 80.) The marathon is broadcast' live locally, nationally,' and internationally to about 20 countries, and it is also live-streamed over the Internet. (Id. at 80-81.)
Not surprisingly, then, the pretrial and trial proceedings were covered not only locally but also nationally and internationally. National and: international news outlets comprised approximately two-thirds of the media organizations that requested one of the thirty seats reserved for media in the trial courtroom and more than one-half of the media organizations that were ultimately assigned a seat or rotating seat there. Many others followed the proceedings from overflow rooms in the courthouse. Newspapers around the world closely followed the trial as it unfolded, both in their print editions and' on the Internet, focusing not just on the more significant trial events like opening statements and closing arguments, but even on the more particular aspects of the legal process.
Moreover, there is no reason to think that if the trial had been moved to another district, the local media in that district would not also have given it attentive coverage. What' was first a 'national story would have become a local story in that venue. It surely is not plausible to believe that if the trial had been moved to the District of Columbia, as .the defendant sought, the Washington Post, which covered the trial as a national .story, would have ignored it as a local one, and residents of the vicinage from which jurors would have been drawn would have been exposed to that-local, as well as national, reporting. In this, case, that would likely
I also disagree with the defendant’s implicit assertion that the local coverage of the trial was prejudicial to him simply because there was coverage. Not only was the coverage generally factual in nature, rather than inflammatory, but with regard to the appropriate punishment for his crimes much of it skewed in the defendant’s favor.
Both local and national media reported on statements of victims’ family members, elected officials, religious leaders, and other organizations opposing the imposition of the death penalty for the defendant’s crimes. For example, during the penalty phase of the trial, the parents of Martin Richard, the eight-year old boy killed by the bomb placed by the defendant, urged the prosecution not to pursue imposition of the death penalty in a letter published on the front page of the Boston Globe. Bill and Denise Richard, To End the Anguish, Drop the Death Penalty, Bos. Globe, Apr. 17, 2015, at A. The media also reported statements by two amputee victims and a social media post by the sister of Sean Collier, the police officer killed in the aftermath of the bombings, conveying their opposition to the imposition of the death penalty in this case. Eric Moskowitz, 2 More Oppose Death for Tsarnaev, Bos. Globe, Apr, 20, 2015, at B; John R. Ellement, Victim’s Sister Still Against Death Penalty, Bos. Globe, Apr. 14, 2015, at B. There were published reports of similar statements by the Massachusetts Attorney General, both United States Senators, a local bar association, area Catholic leaders, veterans, and others. See, e.g., David Scharfenberg, Most Top Lawmakers Oppose Execution in Bombing Case, Bos. Globe, Apr. 10, 2015, at A; Associated Press, AG Healey: Marathon Bomber Should Spend Rest of Life in Jail, Bos. Herald, Apr. 8, 2015, http://www. bostonherald.com/news_opinion/local_
In sum, the extensive coverage of the trial was not limited to this District. Contrast Casellas-Toro,
ii. “Media ’Circus” over Foreign Witnesses
The defendant complains about media coverage of the arrival and lodging of several witnesses who traveled from overseas to the United States with the government’s assistance and pursuant in part to a court order. It is unclear how the circumstances of the travel and lodging of the foreign witnesses contribute to the defendant’s venue arguments. The defendant describes a “media circus” surrounding the witnesses, but he does not suggest either that the jurors were at all aware of the so-called “circus” — there is no information suggesting that they were — or that it disrupted the court proceedings in any way.
As to court proceedings more broadly, it is an obvious fact but it bears emphasizing that throughout the trial, the atmosphere within the trial courtroom itself was quite solemn and essentially undisturbed by interruption throughout the trial proceedings. Prior to trial, I issued a Decorum Order governing trial conduct and prohibiting observers from any contact with jurors or depictions of them or reports of their names. (Decorum Order at 1-5 (dkt. no. 879).) The defendant does not contend that the Order was violated either by the media or general public.
For those who were not present, a brief description of the courtroom may be help
Outside the courthouse, reporters and cameras were organized in an orderly way so that they could report on the comings and goings of various trial participants, including the foreign witnesses. On most days, a small number of people demonstrated against the death penalty and, on occasion, individuals demonstrated in general support of the defendant. Except that a relatively large number of people were positioned outside the entrance to the courthouse, there was to my knowledge nothing approaching a “circus” atmosphere.
In any event, the jurors did not enter the courthouse through the main entonce. Rather, they assembled at a remote location and travelled together by van directly into the garage of the building, bypassing the front and side doors to the courthouse. So even if there were some legitimate concern about the number of people at the front entrance, which I do not share, the jurors were not exposed to it in any significant way. Similarly, when they were not in the trial courtroom, jurors were in limited access space behind the courtroom where the media and other members of the general public are not permitted. (See Jury Management and Transportation Order at 1-3 (dkt. no. 1113) (under seal).) After they were seated and sworn, the jurors were never in the public spaces of the courthouse where they might have observed either media representatives or members of the public.
I am fully satisfied that the Decorum Order was effectively implemented and observed. Within and around the courthouse,
Hi Physical Surroundings of Courthouse
The defendant next argues that jurors could not have avoided exposure to various events and publicity about the marathon and related issues, including such things as “Boston Strong” signs arid parapherriália both in the vicinity of the courthouse and in other public places.
Between .the verdict in. the .guilt phase and the commencement of the penalty phase, there was significant publicity about the 2015 running of the marathon, as well as various events commemorating the second anniversary of the bombings. By that time, the jurors had been advised recurrently to avoid all media accounts of the subject matter of the cáse, as well as publicity about events concerning. the 2015 marathon. (See, e.g., Jan. 5, 2015 Tr. of Jury Trial—Day One—A.M. Session at 11-12 (dkt. no. 1512); Mar. 4, 2015 Tr. of Jury Trial—Day Twenty-Seven at 12-13, 189 (dkt. no. 1528); Apr. 6, 2015 Tr. of Lobby Conference at 3-21 (dkt. no. 1541) (under seal); Apr. 14, 2015 Tr. of Jury Trial—Day Forty-Six at 3-7 (dkt. no. 1287); Apr. 21, 2015 Tr. of Jury Trial—Day Forty-Seven at 5, 137 (dkt. no. 1603); May 13, 2015 Tr. of Jury Tria—Day Fifty-Nine at 4, 183-84 (dkt. no. 1418).) Not only are jurors presumed to follow a court’s instructions, but the jurors in this case continually affirmed their adherence to my repeated instructions. Specifically, before the guilt phase case was submitted to them, I interviewed each juror .individually in camera to inquire whether he or she had faithfully abided by my instructions to avoid media coverage and private conversations concerning the case. They all .assured me that they had. (Apr. 6, 2015 Tr. of Lobby Conference at 3-21.) Between their verdict in the guilt phase and the commencement of
Moreover, in addition to sights and images which may have been sympathetic to victims or associated with the marathon, there were also sights and images with messages friendly to the defendant’s interests, including the presence and signs of death penalty opponents who peacefully protested every day of trial near the front entrance to the courthouse and occasionally distributed leaflets. Their signs included messages such as, “Death penalty is murder,” “Capital punishment dehumanizes us all,” “Blessed are the merciful,” “Mercy, not sacrifice,” and “Why do we kill people to show that killing people is wrong?” See, e.g., Shira Schoenberg, Anti-Death Penalty Advocates Maintain Presence Outside Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Trial, Masslive.com, Apr. 30, 2015, http://www.masslive.com/ news/boston/index.ssf/2015/04/antideath_ penalty_advocates_maintaiiL_presence_ dzhokhar_tsarnaev_trial.html; Philip Marcelo, Death Penalty Protest Resumes, N.H. Gazette, Apr. 21, 2015, http://www. gazettenet.com/home/16604387-95/death-penalty-protest-resumes. Again, of course, because the jurors did not pass through the front entrance, any exposure to the signs would have been minimal at most, if it occurred at all.
iv. Social Media
The defendant also argues that the jurors should be presumed to have been prejudiced because of social media activity, primarily by uninvolved third-parties.
In any event, the defendant’s claims regarding social media “saturation” are overblown. The defendant describes social media activity during the trial to argue that the jurors’ accounts were “saturated” by social media activity he labels “inflammatory.” But much of the activity is not “inflammatory” in any sense of the word, and the defendant provides no context by which to measure the “saturation.” The government’s analysis, which assumes that the jury’s “friends”
C. Time Between Crime and Trial
Nearly two years passed in between the marathon bombings and the presentation of evidence in the trial. The trial did not swiftly follow the crimes or contemporaneous reports about them, permitting the overall level of any community passions to diminish. See In re Tsarnaev,
D. Jury Verdict
Prior to trial, the Court noted that recent experience with high profile trials in this District reflected local jurors’ capacity to carefully evaluate trial evidence despite widespread media coverage. United States v. Tsarnaev, Cr. No. 13-10200-GAO,
It is now possible to evaluate the jury’s verdicts in 'this case in hindsight for possible signs of improper prejudice, on the one hand, or expected impartiality, on the other. In the guilt phase of the trial, the jury found the defendant' guilty on all counts in the indictment. In some cases, such an outcome might possibly be a sign of abdication of duty and simple submission to the government’s theory and authority. That concern is absent in this case. Here, the guilty findings were hardly surprising in light of the defendant’s strategy and the overwhelming evidence against him. After all, in her opening remarks, defense counsel essentially conceded that the defendant was guilty of the crimes with which he was charged:
The government and the defense will agree about many 'things that happened during the Week of April 15th, 2013. On Marathon Monday, ... Jahar Tsarnaev walked down Boylston Street with a backpack on his back carrying a pressure cooker bomb and placed it next to a tree in front of the Forum restaurant.
After their pictures were on television and on the Internet, Tamerlan and Ja-har went on a path of devastation the night of April the 18th, leaving dead in their path a young MIT police officer and a community in fear and sheltering in place. Tamerlan held an unsuspecting driver, Dun Meng, at gunpoint, demanded his money and compelled him, commanded him, to drive while Jahar followed behind.
The evening ended in a shootout. You’ve heard about it. Tamerlan walked straight into a barrage of gunfire, shooting at the police, throwing his gun, determined not to be taken alive. Jahar fled, abandoned a ear, and was found hiding in a boat.
There’s little that occurred the week of April the 15th — the bombings, the murder of Officer Collier, the carjacking, the shootout in Watertown — that we dispute. If the only question was whether or not that was Jahar Tsarnaev in the video that you will see walking down Boylston Street, or if that was Jahar Tsarnaev who dropped the backpack on the ground, or if that was Jahar Tsarnaev ... captured in the boat, it would be very easy for you: It was him. ,
(Mar. 4, 2015 Tr. Excerpt: Jury Trial—Day Twenty-Seven at 3-5 (dkt. no. 1117);
Jahar Tsarnaev followed his brother down Boylston Street carrying a backpack with a pressure cooker bomb in it and put it down in front of the Forum restaurant, knowing that within minutes it would explode. Three days later, Tam-erlan Tsarnaev murdered Officer Collier, and Jahar was right there with him. Within a half an hour or so, ... Tamer-lan Tsarnaev held a gun to Dun Meng’s head, demanded him to drive, and Jahar followed in the Honda. He took the ATM card, he took the code, and he stole $800 from Dun Meng’s ATM account. Jahar was part of a shootout in Watertown. We know that his brother had the Ruger , P95 because he was shooting at the police. We know that Jahar had a BB gun. Still, he hurled explosives at the police, and when he saw-his brother walk into a hail of gunfire shooting, clearly determined to go out in a blaze of glory, he ran to the Mercedes and escaped as police riddled the. Mercedes with bullets. And he ran over his older brother, the brother that he loved, and the brother that he followed.
When I talked with you - almost — just over a month ago, I said to you the evidence would bear out all of the events that I just talked about and that they just talked about. And it has. I said to you that we would not disagree with this evidence or dispute it, challenge it, and we haven’t. I said to you that it was inexcusable, and it is. And Jahar Tsar-naev. stands ready, by your verdict, to be held responsible for his actions.
And now when you go back to the jury room, we are not asking you to go easy on Jahar. We are not asking you to not hold him accountable and responsible for what he did. The horrific acts that we’ve heard abdut, the death, destruction and devastation that we’ve heard about deserve to be condemned, and the time is now. I know, and we know, that by your verdict, you will do what is right and what'is just, and your verdict will speak the truth.
(Apr. 6, 2015 Tr. Excerpt: Jury Trial—Day Forty-Three at 4-5, 27 (dkt. no. 1244).) Consistent with these concessions, during the guilt phase the. defendant often chose to not cross-examine witnesses or to challenge the prosecution’s version of “who, what, where and when'.”
Yet, despite the defendant’s strategy and defense counsel’s wholesale. concessions, it appears that the jury nevertheless thoughtfully deliberated the defendant’s guilt of the crimes charged. At the end of their second day of deliberations, the jury asked two questions. The questions indicated that, notwithstanding counsel’s concessions, the jury was measuring the evidence against the applicable legal principles as to the various charges in the indictment; For example, the jury asked, “Can a conspiracy pertain to a sequence of events over multiple days or a distinct event?” (Apr. 8, 2015 Tr. Excerpt: Jury Trial—Day Forty-Five at 3 (dkt. no. 1250).) The jury later asked, ‘What is the difference between aiding and abetting? Is there a differentiation between the two? If
Similarly, in the penalty phase of the trial, the jury did not simply blindly accept the government’s case. Again, during their deliberations, the jury asked several questions. (See, e.g., May 14, 2015 10:20 a.m. Note from the Jury (requesting additional copies of the verdict form and jury charge because it “would be helpful” for some jurors to have a “visual to use”) (dkt. no. 1433); May 14, 2015 11:08 a.m. Note from the Jury (posing multiple questions related to the consideration of aiding and abetting and conspiracy in determining whether the government had proved the gateway intent factors); May 14, 2015 12:43 p.m. Note from the Jury (asking additional question on whether to consider aiding and abetting when determining gateway intent factor).) The questions reflect serious thought and consideration of the issues they were required to resolve.
Second, their ultimate verdict in the penalty phase appears to be the product of careful, nuanced decision-making. For example, despite the government’s focus on the defendant’s boat writings and social media posts, the jury entirely rejected the government’s alleged aggravating factor regarding whether the defendant made statements suggesting that others would be justified in committing additional acts of violence and terrorism against the United States. They also declined to find some of the government’s proposed statutory aggravating factors, such as whether the defendant knowingly creating a grave risk of death to the victim in the commission of a crime or his subsequent flight and whether the defendant committed the offense in an especially heinous, cruel, and depraved manner. The jury also appeared to carefully consider, as individuals, mitigating factors about the defendant, answering the mitigation questions with varying degrees of approval. And perhaps most notably, the jury ultimately distinguished the defendant from his brother, and overt conduct from conspiracy, determining that death was the appropriate sentence only for the harms caused directly by the defendant and his bomb: the deaths of Lingzi Lu and Martin Richard. The discriminating nature of the verdict itself is convincing evidence that this was not a jury impelled by gross prejudice or even reductive simplicity, but rather a group of intelligent, conscientious citizens doing their solemn duty, however reluctantly.
“The jury’s ability to discern a failure of proof’ in the government’s ease and to carefully evaluate as individuals mitigating factors about the defendant “indicates a fair minded consideration of the issues and reinforces [the Court’s] belief and conclusion that the media coverage did not lead to the deprivation of [the] right to an impartial trial.” See Skilling,
For all the foregoing reasons, I find and conclude that the defendant has failed to demonstrate that this is one of the rare and extreme cases where prejudice must be presumed so as to override the constitutional norms requiring criminal trials to be held in the State where the crimes were committed. See U.S. Const, art. III, § 2, cl. 3 (“Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed .... ”); id. amend. VI (“[T]he accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed_”); see also Fed. R. Crim. P. 18 (“[T]he government must prosecute an offense in a district where the offense was committed.”). The defendant’s renewed attack on venue is again rejected.
II. Convictions under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)
A. The “Residual” Clause — Section 924(c)(3)(B)
In Johnson v. United States (Samuel Johnson),
Section 924(c) of Title 18 of the United States Code punishes a person who carries a “firearm,” a defined term, “during.and in relation to” a “crime of violence.” The defendant was charged with and convicted of fifteen separate § 924(c) offenses, each related to an underlying “crime of violence” that was specifically identified in the indictment, including use of a weapon of mass destruction in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2332a, bombing a place of public use in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2332f, malicious destruction of property by fire or explosive in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 844(i), carjacking in violation of 18 U.S.C.. § 2119, robbery affecting interstate commerce (“Hobbs Act robbery”) in violation of 18 U.S.'C. § 1951, as well as conspiracies to commit some of those crimes. The punishment imposed on § 924(c) “carrying” charges, which have statutory mandatory minimum terms of imprisonment, is additional to any punishment imposed on the underlying crime of violence; any sentence for a “carrying” conviction must run consecutively to any sentence imposed on the underlying offense. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A).
As used in § 924(c), a “crime of violence” that can serve as a predicate offense for the enhanced “carrying” conviction and punishment is defined as a felony that
(A) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another, or
(B) that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another maybe- used in the course of committing the offense..
Id. § 924(c)(3).
Samuel Johnson examined a different term in another part of the statute, § 924(e), which provides for enhanced punishment for certain recidivist criminals who unlawfully possess a firearm.
(i) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another; or (ii) is burglary, arson, or extortion, involves use of explosives, or otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another ....
Id. § 924(e)(2)(B).
As can be seen from a comparison of the two definitions, the first clauses in both provisions are quite similar, but the second clauses are organized differently and use different terms. In shorthand, the first clause in each definition has come to be known as the “force” clause, and the second in each as the “residual” clause.
In Samuel Johnson, the Supreme Court held that the residual “or otherwise involves conduct” clause of § 924(e) is too vague to give fair notice- of what conduct can be punished by enhanced criminal sentences and thus violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.
The defendant’s argument rather is that the Court’s opinion in Samuel Johnson should be understood as condemning not only the residual clause in § 924(e) but also any. provision that calls for the categorical assessment of “risk,” and that since § 924(c)(3)(B) requires assessing whether a particular offense “by its nature, involves a substantial risk .that physical force against the person or property of another may be used,” it must, given the Court’s reasoning in Samuel Johnson, also be held to be too vague to be valid'. (See Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for J. Notwithstanding Verdict and for New Trial at 31-32 (dkt. no. 1506).)
That is a very — and I think unduly— expansive reading of the Court’s opinion. In fact, the Court itself cautioned against that very expansion of its ruling:
The Government and the dissent next point out that dozens of federal and state criminal laws use terms like “substantial risk,” “grave risk,” and “unreasonable risk,” suggesting that to hold the residual clause unconstitutional is to place these provisions in. constitutional doubt. Not at all. ... As a general matter, we do not doubt the constitutionalityof laws that call for the application of a qualitative standard 'such as “substantial risk” to real-world conduct; “the law is full of instances where a man’s fate, depends on his estimating rightly ... some matter of degree.”
Samuel Johnson,
There will not always and necessarily be difficulty or ambiguity in making a categorical assessment whether' a particular offense “by its nature” involves a “substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used in the course of committing the offense.” For example, it is simply common sense to conclude that using the mails to execute a scheme to defraud does not as a categorical matter involve a substantial risk that physical force will be used against the person or property of another, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, but that using the mails in furtherance of the use of a weapon of mass destruction, id. § 2332a(a)(2)(A), does. There may be debatable cases, but that possibility only counsels for making case-specific judgments. Although the Court in Samuel Johnson held that § 924(e)’s residual clause was facially void, rejecting an “as applied” approach, the reasons seem to be the Court’s overarching conclusion that the clause’s “or otherwise involves conduct” standard had been demonstrated in practice to be hopelessly inconducive to coherent and consistent application on a case-by-casé basis. See
The Court in Samuel Johnson also thought that an attempt to understand the risk involved in the “ordinary case” of a crime that might fall within the residual clause of § 924(e), as required under its prior precedents, compounded the problem.
It should also be noted that the reasons that the Court identified in Taylor as warranting a categorical approach are absent in the § 924(c) context. The statutory language indicates that it is the fact of a prior conviction, not the historical facts concerning what the offender had done, that serves the basis for sentence enhancement under § 924(e)(1). For identified crimes such as burglary, what matters are the elements of the crime in the generic case, which the categorical approach is suited to identify. Taylor,
The Court in Taylor also concluded that use of a categorical approach to classifying an offender’s prior history of criminal convictions avoided anomalies that might arise from variations in state law definitions of similarly named crimes, raising the prospect that persons could face enhancement of the federal sentence, or not, depending on which State’s law controlled the prior conviction. Id. at 590-91,
For these reasons, I conclude that the Supreme Court’s opinion in Samuel Johnson neither requires nor counsels the conclusion that § 924(c)’s residual clause is unconstitutionally vague. I understand that some courts have taken a different view. It is sufficient here to say that, for the foregoing reasons, I respectfully disagree with their reasoning.
Under § 924(c)(3)(A), the “force” clause, an offense is a “crime of violence” if it “has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another.” Citing Johnson v. United States (Curtis Johnson),
To begin with, the defendant overreads what was decided in Curtis Johnson. The question' presented in that ’case was “whether the Florida felony offense of battery by ‘[actually and intentionally touching]’ another person ‘has as an element the use ... of physical force against the person of another,’ and thus constitutes a ‘violen! felony’ under the Armed Career Criminal Act.”
The defendant argues that while the § 924(c) underlying offenses in this case certainly can be committed in á violent way and thus under Curtis Johnson could be considered “crime[s] of violence,” it is also possible to imagine non-violent methods of commission of the offenses, so using only a categorical analysis, it cannot be determined that they qualify as “crime[s] of violence.” The argument is a mix of ingenuity and sophistry. For example, the defendant argues that the definition of a “weapon of mass destruction” in 18 U.S.C. § 2332a(c)(2) includes not only “destructive device[s]” such as explosive bombs '(which concededly involve violence), but also poisons, toxins, and radiation. (Def.’s Mem. in.Supp. of Mot. for J. Notwithstanding Verdict and for New Trial at 33-34.) These latter agents, he says, can be deployed passively — as by non-explosive release — so they do not necessarily involve the use of “violent force,” as he says Curtis Johnson requires. This argument rests heavily on an. understanding of. “violent force” that is strictly limited to the specific factual context of that case, which involved an ambiguous battery conviction under the Florida law described above, and it also requires swallowing the proposition that killing a person by poison or radiation does not necessarily have as’an element the use of violent' physical force against that person. Under the defendant’s proposed theory, .the destruction of internal organs by poison (or toxins or radiation) should not be considered “violent physical force” but may be deemed non-violent. There is no support in Curtis Johnson for such an artificial and cramped construction.
The defendant’s argument that the crimes of use of a weapon of mass destruction, bombing of a place of public use, and malicious destruction of property by fire or explosive are not by .their nature “violent” enough to be considered “crime[s] of vio
In the first place, Hobbs Act robbery is regarded as a crime of violence under § 924(c)(2)(A) under First Circuit precedent. United States v. Morales-Machuca,
The First Circuit has not explicitly held carjacking to be a crime of violence, although several other circuits have- done so.
Even if either question were an open one, the defendant’s argument, relying on Descamps v. United States, — U.S. —,
In Descamps, the issue was whether the so-called “modified categorical approach” could be used to determine whether the defendant’s prior conviction for burglary under California law was for “generic” burglary, and thus a “violent felony” under § 924(e). Id. at 2281-82. The state statute
The Court, however, continued to sanction the use of the modified categorical approach in the case of a so-called “divisible” statute, one that “sets out one or more elements of the offense in the alternative — for example, stating that burglary involves entry into a building or an automobile.” Id. at 2281 (emphasis in original). “[W]hen a statute lists multiple, alternative elements, and so effectively creates ‘several different ... crimes,’ ” the modified categorical approach permits comparing the elements of the generic crime to the elements, not the facts, of the crime of the defendant’s prior conviction. Id. at 2285 (quoting Nijhawan v. Holder,
The defendant’s argument regarding the carjacking and Hobbs Act robbery counts is a case of trying to have one’s cake and eat it too. On the one hand, he maintains that the statutes should be regarded as “indivisible” under the Descamps taxonomy, so that as a categorical matter it cannot be determined whether those crimes were committed by the use or threat of force or by some kind of non-forceful “intimidation,” in the case of carjacking, or “extortion,” in the case of Hobbs Act robbery. On the other hand, in positing that those crimes can be committed by nonviolent intimidation or extortion rather than by violent threats or actions, he necessarily emphasizes that the statutes by their texts authorize alternate proofs, else there is no conundrum, which seems to put them squarely in the “divisible” category under Descamps. Id. at 2284 (noting that a statute is “divisible” if it “comprises multiple, alternative versions of the crime”). His way out of the dilemma is to argue that “intimidation” and “extortion” do not establish alternate elements of the offenses but only refer to different means of committing them. Fortunately, we are saved from the search for a reliable method of distinguishing the elements of a crime from the means of committing it, see Richardson v. United States,
Whatever a statute lists (whether elements or means), the documents we approved in Taylor and Shepard — i.e., indictment, jury instructions, plea colloquy, and plea agreement — would reflect the crime’s elements. ... When a ... law is drafted in the alternative, the court merely resorts to the approved documents and compares the elements revealed there to those of the generic offense.
It should be observed that it is far from clear that Congress’ inclusion of “intimidation” in the carjacking statute or “extor
In sum, either the carjacking and Hobbs Act robbery statutes each define an indivisible offense that has as an element the actual, threatened, or attempted use of physical force against the person or property of another, or each defines divisible alternatives, whether of elements or means, and the Shepard-approved documents, notably the indictment and jury instructions, establish that in each case the defendant was necessarily convicted of the alternative that had such an element. The defendant’s argument addressed to the “force” clause is without merit.
III. Death Penalty
The defendant also renews his previously rejected challenge to the constitutionality of the federal death penalty. He relies on a dissenting opinion in Glossip v. Gross, — U.S. —,
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant’s Motion for New Trial Pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 33 and for Judgment Notwithstanding Verdict Pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 29 (dkt. no. 1490) is DENIED.
It is SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Notably, he does not argue that there was actual prejudice. (See Reply to Gov't’s Opp’n to Mot. for J. Notwithstanding Verdict and for New Trial at 1-2 (dkt. no. 1589).)
. Some case law suggests that the number or percentage of jurors excused could be relevant to the inquiry. See, e.g., Casellas-Toro,
.The residences of the empaneled jury reflect this geographic diversity.
. The defendant submitted two compact discs containing voluminous materials purportedly in support of his post-trial motion. In the Scheduling Order regarding post-trial motions, the parties were directed to include in their post-trial briefs "specific and detailed citations to the record and appropriate legal authority.” (May 28, 2015 Scheduling Order at 2 (dkt. no. 1449).) To the extent there is material on the compact discs that is not expressly referred to by the defendant in his briefing, I decline to comb through uncited materials in order to locate what I might conclude the defendant would regard as relevant portions and then try to connect them to his legal arguments; that is a party’s responsibility, (See, e.g., Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for J. Notwithstanding Verdict and for New Trial at 3 (dkt. no. 1506) (“A sample of ... additional information is summarized ....”); id. ("Supporting materials — including those expressly mentioned in this [m]emorandum as well as many others — have been compiled.....”).) Therefore, I generally limit discussion and consideration of the exhibits that were actually referenced by the defendant in his post-trial motion, as required by the Scheduling Order.
. Similarly, 86.1% of Washington D.C. survey respondents in the defendant's pretrial poll indicated that "[biased on what [they had] read, seen or heard about the case,” they "believe[d] Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was” either "definitely” or "probably" guilty. (Reply to Gov’t’s Opp’n to Def.'s Mot. for Change of Venue and Submission of Supplemental Material in Supp. Ex. 4F at 5) (dkt. no. 461-23).)
. For example, a graphics editor from the Washington Post, the most widely circulated newspaper published in the defendant's preferred venue, chronicled the end of the guilt phase and the entirety of the penalty phase of the trial in blogs and courtroom sketches. Richard Johnson, The Tsarnaev Trial: Drawing a Line, Washington Post, http://wapo.st Tsarnaev (last updated May 15, 2015).
. Although it was not evident at the time the pretrial motions to change venue were briefed and decided, in the trial itself the potential for unfair prejudice from media coverage was as a practical matter confined to the question of punishment, not guilt. Any possibility of unfair prejudice with respect to whether the defendant was guilty of the crimes charged was effectively and dramatically overborne by his counsel's opening statement in the guilt phase, acknowledging, “It was him.” See infra at 68.
. The defendant’s present motion focuses on the media attention during trial. Of course, in denying the previous motions for a change of venue, I made the same conclusions about pretrial publicity that came after the flurry of initial news reports — that is, while extensive, it subsided somewhat in the time period between the crimes and trial, was largely sober and factual, and was not in any substantial degree inflammatory.
. The Decorum Order also prohibited observers in the trial courtroom and overflow locations from “wearing] or carrying] any clothing, buttons, or other items that carry any message or symbol addressing the issues related to this case that may be or become visible to the jury,” including law enforcement uniforms and badges. (Decorum Order at 2-3.)
. The United States Marshals Service and other officers kept me informed about any issues possibly touching on security or public order. I am aware that over the whole length of the trial from January through mid-May, there were only a few occasions when a member of the general public present in the public spaces of the courthouse (not the courtroom itself) had to be reprimanded and warned by security personnel to observe proper decorum. To the best of my information, that is the full extent of anything that could remotely be called "disruption” in the courthouse. The jury was not exposed to any of those minor incidents.
. The Boston Strong theme is (or was) “about civic resilience and recovery. It is not about whether [the defendant] is guilty or not of the crimes charged" or about what kind of sentence he should receive if he were found guilty. In re Tsarnaev,
. For example, a banner hanging at a hotel across from the. courthouse would not have been visible at the entrance used by the jurors or from their jury room, which faced only a large commercial building on the opposite side of the courthouse. Similarly, the cement truck referenced by the defendant in his brief was within a construction site bordered by a tall enclosure (See Fourth Mot. for Change of Venue Ex. A at 2 (dkt. no. 1108-1) (photograph taken from above on February 12, 2015, a day on which no empaneled juror attended court).)
. It is also significant that by the time of the anniversary of the bombings, the jurors had been immersed in the trial evidence for weeks, and had heard testimony from almost 100 witnesses and seen over 1,000 exhibits. The jurors themselves were so "saturated” with the actual evidence at trial by that point that passing glimpses of media reports or other physical images would have been inconsequential. As one alternate juror observed when asked about his compliance with the Court's instructions to avoid media: "[I]f there's anything on, I just walk away. There’s nothing — I didn't see any point. There's nothing that I could absolutely hear about this. I mean, what’s the point? ... I'm an eyewitness.” (Apr. 6, 2015 Tr. of Lobby Conference at 19.)
. In support of his claim of presumptive prejudice, the defendant also cites some limited social media activity by the jurors, but he does not contend that the jurors were actually prejudiced, nor that they engaged in any misconduct. (See Reply to Gov't's Opp’n to Mot. for J. Notwithstanding Verdict and for New Trial at 2).) The defendant utilizes the jury’s social networks as his sample, but he appears to dismiss as irrelevant whether any jurors actually saw any of the cited material. (See id. at 5-7.)
. Indeed, the data in the file "Name” and "Date Modified” fields for many of the submitted files suggest that files were created during the trial. The same is true for Face-book's timestamps of some of the posts included as exhibits.
. The parties uses the term “friend" to describe a connection on Facebook. Of course, the term does not actually suggest a real-world relationship. Over a billion people use Facebook and connect with other users as "friends.” Some may be friends in the traditional sense, but others are no more than acquaintances or contacts or in some cases may even be complete strangers.
.A "stoiy” might include a post with a status update or other textual remark, photo, video, or hyperlink; app activity; "likes" from other people and groups with whom a user may be connected; and other social networking activity. When a Facebook user takes one of these actions, Facebook generates a "story” which then may appear on the constantly-updating "news feeds" of their "friends.” (See Opp’n to Def.'s Mot. for J. Notwithstanding the Verdict and for New Trial at 8-11 (dkt. no. 1542); see id. Ex. A at 1-22 (dkt. no. 1542-1).)
. Indeed, it was the defendant who introduced photographs documenting his capture from the boat in Watertown and who successfully moved for a jury view of the boat and the message the defendant wrote in it prior to his capture. (Ex. Def-3060G ("Boat photos_DT arrest on ground”); Mot. to Bar Spoliation of So-Called “Boat Writings” and to Make Boat Available for View by Jury at Trial (dkt. no. 923) (under seal).)
. In this Opinion and Order, the short-form citation includes the petitioner’s first name because there is a second case relied on by the defendant in which the petitioner was a Curtis Johnson. That case, Johnson v. United States,
. Strictly speaking, the residual clause in § 924(e) is the last part of clause (ii), beginning “or otherwise involves conduct.” The first part of clause (ii) identifies specific criminal offenses and was not held to be unconstitutionally vague. See Samuel Johnson,
. There is a structural reason why this is so. Whereas § 924(e) mandates a sentencing enhancement in the event of a particular prior criminal history, § 924(c) defines a separate crime from the underlying “crime of violence.” See United States v. Felton,
. As the defendant notes, (see Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for J. Notwithstanding Verdict and for New Trial at 28 n.2), whether a crime qualifies as a “crime of violence” under § 924(c) is a matter of law for the court to decide. United States v. Weston,
Alternately, the omission to object to the instruction that the predicate offenses each qualified as a "crime of violence” could be considered to have been a forfeiture, rather than a waiver. In the'latter circumstance, the Court of Appeals could review the point for plain error. See United States v. Olano,
. The Court was interpreting § 924(e), but the relevant language of § 924(c) — "has as an element the use ... of physical force against the person ... of another” — is the same.
. Cf. United States v. Castleman, — U.S. —,
. Under existing First Circuit precedent, conspiracy to commit a crime of violence is also a crime of violence for purposes of § 924(c). United States v. Turner,
. In United States v. Quinones,
. Congress expressly classified' extortion as a "violent felony” in § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii).
