We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
924(c) AND HOBBS ACT ROBBERY GETS EVEN MORE CONFUSING
We have reported over the past few weeks that a number of Circuits have held, in the wake of Sessions v. Dimaya, that determining whether the crime underlying an 18 USC 924(c) conviction for using or carrying a gun during a crime of violence had to be conduct-specific or case-specific, as opposed to a hypothetical ordinary-case categorical approach.
The 5th Circuit reminded us last week that, curiously enough, it is the outlier. In United States v. Lewis, the Circuit repeated its holding last summer in United States v. Davis that conspiracy to commit a Hobbs Act robbery cannot support a conviction for using or carrying a gun under 18 USC 924(c).
How long the 5th Circuit’s position lasts is anyone’s guess. The government filed a petition for writ of certiorari in Davis last month, arguing that the 5th Circuit’s use of the ordinary-case categorical approach in 924(c) cases is at odds with everyone else, and is just plain wrong. Given the stark circuit split and the importance of the issue, we think the government’s chance to win certiorari on the issue is better than even.
United States v. Lewis, Case No. 17-50526 (5th Cir. Nov. 1, 2018)
United States v. Davis, Supreme Court Case No. 18-431 (petition for certiorari filed Oct. 3, 2018)
– Thomas L. Root