All posts by lisa-legalinfo

Ain’t Over Till It’s Over, DC Circuit Rules on 2255 – Update for October 27, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

WAS IT OVER WHEN THE GERMANS BOMBED PEARL HARBOR?

“Hell, no!” Animal House’s Bluto Blutarsky shouted. He could have been arguing about the mess a district court made of deciding only part of Floyd Clark’s  motion.

bluto201027Floyd was convicted of kidnapping and beating a man. After hewas convicted, the victim recanted his testimony identifying Floyd as his assailant. Floyd filed a 28 USC § 2255 motion claiming ineffective assistance of counsel at trial, denial of his due process rights (based on the recantation) and a claim that his 18 USC § 924(c) use-of-a-gun conviction should be thrown out, based on Johnson v. United States.

The district court denied all of Floyd’s issues except for the § 924(c) claim. The district judge deferred judgment on the gun argument, saying his opinion “resolves three of Mr. Clark’s claims but leaves the § 2255 motion open until the Court is able to resolve his fourth claim,” because United States v. Davis was pending in the Supreme Court. Floyd appealed the denied claims.

Last week, the DC Circuit held that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal because Floyd’s district court denial was not final. “Because it leaves Clark’s 924(c) claim pending,” the Circuit ruled, “the district court’s order appears nonfinal on its face. A judgment is typically final only when the whole case is complete… We consider an order ‘final’ if it ‘terminates’ the case and leaves nothing for the court but [to] execute the judgment. This final-judgment rule — derived from the common law and codified since the First Congress — has long promoted efficient judicial administration by avoiding the delay and expense of piecemeal appeals.”

It isn’t uncommon for district court § 2255 denials to omit deciding a claim, especially where the inmate’s petition raises a lot of grounds. This decision suggests prisoners should be assertive when a district court opinion purports to resolve a § 2255 petition without deciding every issues raised.

United States v Clark, Case No 19-3040, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 32644 (DC Cir Oct 16, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root

ACLU Sues to Get the Real COVID Story from BOP – Update for October 26, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

ACLU SUES BOP OVER COVID RECORDS

The American Civil Liberties Union sued the Federal Bureau of Prisons and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week in District of Columbia federal court, demanding information about the government’s response to the risk of COVID-19 in detention facilities it has been seeking since last April.

OPRFOIA180814The ACLU said it “seeks to uncover critical information about the federal government’s response — and lack thereof — to the coronavirus in detention facilities across the country. Based on the limited data available, it appears that the BOP has failed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus in its facilities.” It first sought BOP records relating to COVID-19 in April and sought DOJ and CDC records in July, according to the lawsuit. While the agencies acknowledged the requests, they have yet to provide the ACLU with the documents.

“Although the BOP, HHS, and other offices granted the ACLU’s request for expedited processing, that was a dead letter,” the complaint alleges, “Defendants have failed to produce any records. Meanwhile, the pandemic continues to threaten the people in federal prisons and the communities where they operate.”

That is hardly surprising. Anyone with experience seeking records under the Freedom of Information Act knows that, primarily because the Act exacts scant penalties from federal agencies that violate it. If the choice is between dedicating resources to complying with FOIA and finally turning documents over on the courthouse steps months later, guess which option the agencies will select?

Complaint, ACLU v BOP, Case No 1:20cv3031 (D.D.C., filed Oct 21, 2020)

Vice News, The Trump Administration Is Getting Sued Over COVID Exploding in Prisons (Oct 21)

Indiana Public Media, ACLU Sues Bureau of Prisons Over COVID-19 Record Keeping (Oct 22)

– Thomas L. Root

Adding Family Insult to Injury, BOP-style – Update for October 22, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

COVID NUMBER NOT REASSURING… NEITHER ARE BOP DEATH NOTIFICATION PROTOCOLS

As of yesterday, the BOP was reporting 1,750 federal inmate COVID-19 cases in BOP and private prisons (up 6% from last week), 802 staff cases (up 9%), COVID still present in 118 out of 122 facilities, and one more death, for a total of 136. With 44% of all inmates tested, one out of four tests is still coming back positive.

covid19-201022

Just as Wisconsin is now spiking in new COVID cases, FCI Oxford led BOP facilities as of Oct 16th with 409 inmate cases, followed by El Reno (108 cases), Petersburg Medium (89), Tallahassee (88), Big Spring (79), Pekin (74), Leavenworth (73) and Oklahoma City (61). Sixteen more BOP joints have between 10 and 48 cases.

Three days before, the BOP announced the death of a Big Springs inmate, and noted that the facility had 398 inmate COVID cases. Over 300 inmates apparently recovered in merely three days.

The family of Tommy Sisk, the Petersburg inmate who died of COVID October 4, blasted the BOP last week for not notifying them of his death. They found out that their loved one had died when a family friend called them last Tuesday to say he had seen the death reported in a newspaper. That was a full week after the BOP issued a press release about Tommy’s passing.

tears201022Tommy’s brother Wayne Sisk said a representative from FCI Petersburg told him his sister was listed and tried to call her. “What freed up that information,” he asked about the Oct 6 BOP press release, “but they couldn’t free up the information to tell his family and notify them before the newspaper. During the times that we live in now, with COVID and injustices and everything… tell me how much injustice is that?”

As of last weekend, the BOP still had not told the family the location of the body. “They should’ve contacted our family and showed us some respect. We don’t have our brother. We don’t have anything,” Sisk said. “We don’t have our family member.” Perhaps the BOP intends to have Mr. Sisk’s body serve the remainder of his sentence before burial.

The BOP told a Richmond TV station, ““While for privacy reasons we cannot speak about specific circumstances surrounding a particular inmate, we can tell you protocols were followed in the case you reference.”

Of that I have no doubt. Perhaps the protocols should be leavened with a little human decency.

San Angelo Live, Nearly Half of Big Spring Prison Inmates Have COVID-19 (Oct 13)

WFXR-TV, Brother of inmate who died of COVID-19 demands answers: ‘We found out from a news article’ (October 17, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root

3rd Circuit Says Nothing Extraordinary in Supervised Release Early Termination – Update for October 20, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

WE MAY HAVE MISREAD THAT, THE COURT SAYS…

supervisedrelease180713Supervised release is a period after a federal inmate completes his or her prison sentence – a lot like parole and kind of like probation – during he or she is subject to a series of reporting conditions and limitations imposed by the court. A U.S. Probation Officer supervises the former inmate, and holds the power to seek revocation of supervised release and return to prison under evidentiary and procedural standards that are rather lax, to say the least.

Fortunately for the former inmate, under 18 USC § 3583(e), someone on supervised release can get that supervision term ended early. The statute requires the court, in deciding whether to terminate early, to apply the 18 USC § 3553(a) sentencing factors. No surprise there, but many courts have been buying into the government’s argument that just being good while on supervision isn’t enough: the movant has to show something extraordinary or exceptional justifying saving the government money and the former inmate aggravation.

supervisedleash181107Aggravation? Well, yes. The former inmate must make monthly filings detailing his or her finances, purchases and employment. He or she cannot leave the federal district without permission of the Probation Officer. Often, he or she cannot change jobs without the Probation Officer’s OK, and woe betide anyone who has an unreported contact with someone who has a criminal record (that would be one out of three adult Americans). Oh, yes, the Probation Officer can search the former inmate’s home at any time without a warrant.

supervisedrevoked181106Nationally, the rate of violations that result in a hearing before the judge (where return to prison is a possibility) is about 17%.  The prevalence of supervision violations, however, varies considerably among the federal judicial districts. In a July 2020 U.S. Sentencing Commission study, more than a third of individuals on supervision risked reimprisonment in violation hearings in the Southern District of California (42.1%), District of Minnesota (37.4%), Western District of Missouri (34.3%), District of Arizona (33.7%), and District of New Mexico (33.4%). In contrast, violations accounted for less than five percent of individuals on supervision in the Districts of Connecticut (4.5%) and Maryland (4.7%).

No wonder people on supervised release want to “get off paper,” as they put it. But few can meet the “extraordinary or exceptional reason” for early termination standard many courts impose.

Last week, the 3rd Circuit traced the twisted history of this “extraordinary or exceptional reason” requirement, and found no support for the standard.

The 3rd acknowledged that its prior non-precedential decisions had required “something exceptional or extraordinary” to warrant early termination, relying on the Second Circuit’s United States v. Lussier decision. “But this was a misreading of Lussier,” the 3rd Circuit said, in a rare acknowledgement that it had previously been wrong:

As the Second Circuit explained more recently, ‘Lussier does not require new or in order to modify conditions of release, but simply recognizes that changed circumstances may in some instances justify a modification’. In other words, extraordinary circumstances may be sufficient to justify early termination of a term of supervised release, but they are not necessary for such termination. We think that generally, early termination of supervised release under § 3583(e)(1) will be proper only when the sentencing judge is satisfied that new or unforeseen circumstances warrant it. That is because, if a sentence was ‘sufficient, but not greater than necessary’ when first pronounced, we would expect that something will have changed in the interim that would justify an early end to a term of supervised release. But we disavow any suggestion that new or unforeseen circumstances must be shown.”

Got that? “Extraordinary or exceptional reasons” no longer necessarily apply, except when they generally do.

money160118Each person being supervised costs the government about $4,400.00, according to the Administrative Office of United States Courts. You’d think that saving that money might be a factor for more courts, especially where there is no discernible benefit to the supervisor or supervisee by continued oversight.  

But then, what’s $4,400 a year, even when multiplied by the 133,000 people under supervision?  Answer: a half billion a year, a mere flyspeck to Uncle Sam.

United States v. Melvin, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 32683 (3rd Cir. October 16, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root

Conflicting Signals on Recalling CARES Act Home Confinees – Update for October 19, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

THIS IS KIND OF TROUBLING

comeback201019At a hearing on an inmate’s motion for compassionate release last August, Dept of Justice attorney Michael P. McCarthy made a chilling statement about the Bureau of Prisons’ CARES Act home confinement program: “The defendant is being re-evaluated once he crosses that (50%) threshold and at that point potentially transferred to home confinement. Now, I want to be clear that in the BOP’s program, it’s a transfer until the end of the pandemic and then a return to prison if the pandemic is declared over…”

Writing in Forbes magazine last week, Walter Pavlo said, “While everyone wants an end to the pandemic, those on home confinement may be told that they will be returning to prison … or they could be asked to be immunized in order to return …. or the inmate could refuse immunization …. or the inmate may have only a few months remaining by the end of the pandemic and might file an appeal.”

trumplie201019Pavlo noted that FAMM president Kevin Ring told him a White House source said a return of home confinement people to prison after the pandemic ends – whenever that is – “will NOT be happening.” But White House assertions (remember President Trump’s promised 3,000 clemencies?) have a way of being wrong. The risk of reincarceration seemed real enough that the House of Representatives included a provision in last May’s HEROES Act that no one “granted placement in community supervision, termination of supervision, placement on administrative supervision, or pre-trial release shall be re-incarcerated, placed on supervision or active supervision, or ordered detained pre-trial only as a result of the expiration of the national emergency relating to a communicable disease.”

The HEROES Act stands no chance of passage in the Senate.

Ohio State University law professor Doug Berman, writing in his Sentencing Law and Policy blog, said last week, “Because of the opaque nature of BOP work and data, it is difficult to tell just how many persons have been transferred into home confinement and what percentage of these persons might have long enough still remain on their original sentences to perhaps prompt DOJ to seek their return to prison whenever the pandemic if over.”

Forbes, US Attorney States Federal Inmates On Home Confinement Will Return To Prison Once “Pandemic Is Declared Over” (Oct 15)

Sec 191102(f), HEROES Act, HR 6800

Sentencing Law and Policy, Will some (most? all?) federal prisoners transferred to home confinement be returned to prison after the pandemic ends? (Oct 16)

– Thomas L. Root

Hobbs Act “Attempt” Not Crime of Violence, 4th Says – Update for October 16, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

4TH CIRCUIT CHIPS AWAY AT HOBBS ACT

Ever since the Supreme Court’s United States v. Davis decision a year ago – indeed, even before Davis with Mathis, Descamps and the line of Johnson cases – commentators have been asking “whither violence?”

chip201016OK, maybe nothing that fancy. But appellate courts have traditionally and dismissively held that if a crime is a crime of violence (and here we’re talking about crimes of violence for purposes of apply the 18 USC § 924(c) offense of using or carrying a gun during and in relation to a crime of violence), then any conspiracy or attempt to commit such a crime is necessarily a crime of violence as well.

(A “crime of violence,” for those of you joining us late, is defined in 18 USC § 924(c)(3)(A) as being one that “has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person or property of another.” Read Davis, and then report back here).

The appellate courts’ formula that an attempt to commit a crime of violence is violent as well has the virtue of being easy to apply, if a little formulaic. And so what if defendants find themselves serving additional mandatory sentences of five, seven, ten or 25 years?

The Supreme Court made it clear in Davis (if not before) that the formula is wrong, at least where conspiracy is concerned. If people possess guns while conspiring to commit a violent crime – say, for example, while practicing to kidnap, try and shoot the governor of Michigan – the conspiracy certainly is punishable, but they cannot get a mandatory additional sentence under § 924(c) while maturing their felonious little plans.

That has left unanswered the question of whether an attempt to commit a crime of violence remains violent itself, even after Davis. Clearly, attempts to commit crimes of violence can carried out without force or threat of force. A carload of armed would-be bank robbers drive up to a bank, but before they can even get out of the car, they are surrounded by the police. Another bank robber approaches the bank’s front door, but an alert employee sees him coming and hits the button that automatically locks the door. The law says that’s an attempted bank robbery: the bad guy intended to rob the bank and carried out at least one significant step toward accomplishing it. But he at no time used force or attempted to do so.

I have written before about how a few district courts have rejected attempts to commit Hobbs Act robberies (18 USC § 1951) as crimes of violence. This week, the 4th Circuit did so, too, a necessary and bold step (in the face of three other circuits – the 7th, the 9th and the 11th – who have gone the other way).

robbery160321The facts were ugly. Justin Taylor – known to his friends as “Mookie” – and a buddy set up a drug buy. Their plan was not to buy weed from the hapless victim, Sylvester, but instead to rob him of his pot. Mookie’s friend brought a gun to the caper, and mishanded it somehow, shooting Sylvester dead. Mookie and his friend ran without taking the marijuana, thus making the Hobbs Act robbery an “attempt” instead of a completed act.

Justin got 20 years for the attempted robbery, and another 10 for firing a gun during the crime. (His friend fired the gun, but Justin was equally liable for that, a legal doctrine we won’t get into now).

After Johnson was decided in 2015, Justin brought a post-conviction motion under 28 USC § 2255, arguing that an attempted Hobbs Act robbery is not a crime of violence that will support a § 924(c) conviction. He wanted the court to take back the extra 10 years on his sentence.

Earlier this week, the 4th Circuit agreed in a most significant holding.

A Hobbs Act robbery may be accomplished by use of force (I hit you over the head and steal your pot) or a threat of force (I threaten to hit you over the head to make you hand over your pot). The Circuit found this alternative crucial:

[U]nlike substantive Hobbs Act robbery, attempted Hobbs Act robbery does not invariably require the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force. The Government may obtain a conviction for attempted Hobbs Act robbery by proving that: (1) the defendant specifically intended to commit robbery by means of a threat to use physical force; and (2) the defendant took a substantial step corroborating that intent. The substantial step need not be violent. See United States v. McFadden… (concluding that defendants took a substantial step toward bank robbery where they “discussed their plans,” “reconnoitered the banks in question,” “assembled weapons and disguises,” and “proceeded to the area of the bank”). Where a defendant takes a nonviolent substantial step toward threatening to use physical force — conduct that undoubtedly satisfies the elements of attempted Hobbs Act robbery — the defendant has not used, attempted to use, or threatened to use physical force. Rather, the defendant has merely attempted to threaten to use physical force. The plain text of § 924(c)(3)(A) does not cover such conduct.

violence181008The government argued that the 4th’s approach would mean that no attempt to commit a crime of violence would support a § 924(c) conviction. The Circuit responded that “this simply is not so. Rather, as we have repeatedly held, certain crimes of violence — like Hobbs Act robbery, federal bank robbery, and carjacking — may be committed without the use or attempted use of physical force because they may be committed merely by means of threats,” such as “Hobbs Act robbery, when committed by means of causing fear of injury,” bank robbery and carjacking. “But where a crime of violence requires the use of physical force — as is usually the case — the categorical approach produces the opposite outcome: because the substantive crime of violence invariably involves the use of force, the corresponding attempt to commit that crime necessarily involves the attempted use of force. Such an attempt constitutes a “crime of violence” within the meaning of the force clause in § 924(c)(3).” The appeals court cited murder as such an offense.

This decision could very well set up a Supreme Court challenge, given the split between the 4th Circuit and the 7th, 9th and 11th.

United States v. Taylor, Case No. 19-7616, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 32393 (4th Cir. Oct. 14, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root

BOP Bans – Then Unbans – Newsletters – Update for October 15, 2020 (Revised October 19, 2020)

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

BOP TELLS NEWSLETTERS TO HIT THE BRICKS

Last Thursday, the Federal Bureau of Prisons blocked email access to at least three legal newsletters sent to inmates, including the one I have written every week for 58 months.

A little before 6 am, LISA began receiving – one email at a time – 10,219 notices that its newsletter had been banned:
ban201015

Brandon Sample, a well-known attorney whose practice focuses on federal criminal, post-conviction and prison matters, told LISA that he had received notices as well that his newsletter to federal inmates had been banned. Several inmates have reported that additional newsletters had been blocked as well.

Brandon filed suit against the BOP the same day. Because Brandon was seeking a temporary restraining order, he was obligated to first confer with the AUSA assigned to the case. Late Friday afternoon (October 16), the AUSA told Brandon his newsletter had been blocked by mistake – part of an “unrelated investigation” – and it had been restored.

LISA’s newsletter site was unblocked at the same time.

pyrrhicv201019The AUSA reported the BOP was not technically able to restore all of the contacts in the newsletter email lists. Brandon reported that he had lost all of the subscribers in his newsletter email account. LISA lost 10,971 subscribers from a list that had been built over nearly five years.

– Thomas L. Root

BOP Fiddles, COVID Burns – Update for October 14, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

HEY, FATSO! YOU’VE GOT COVID-19!

livebutonce201014The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cranked up its warning about obesity and COVID-19 last week. Last spring, if you had a BMI over 40 (6 feet tall and 295 lbs), you were at risk. At the end of June, that dropped to a BMI of 30+. That made a 6-feet tall guy weighing 221 lbs at risk.

Last week, the link between extra pounds and severe Covid-19 grew stronger as the CDC said that people who are merely overweight, not just the obese, may be at high risk of serious disease from the infection. Now, the risk starts with a BMI of 25. Besides the merely overweight (62% of America), smoking has been added to the risk-factor list.

The BOP, which has provided daily COVID-19 numbers since March 2020, dropped weekend reports a few weeks ago. Last Friday, the agency didn’t bother to update its numbers from the day before. Yesterday.s report had 1,745 sick inmates, 736 sick staff, COVID-19 in 119 institutions (98% of all facilities) and 135 inmate deaths.

The latest to die was Robert Pierce, a 52-year old Big Spring inmate, who fell ill September 18 and died last Friday. Meanwhile, the news media reported COVID-19 increases at USP Allenwood, Petersburg Medium, Raybrook and McDowell.

In a pair of letters to Attorney General William P. Barr and BOP Director Michael Carvajal, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) and Richard Durbin (D-Illinois) suggest that the agency’s response to coronavirus outbreaks in federal prisons is failing, and they question the BOP’s reliance on solitary confinement to isolate sick prisoners rather than granting compassionate release.

The Washington Post reported last week that “Federal prisoners, corrections staff, government inspectors and civil rights advocates have complained for months that the BOP’s strategies, when useful, are inconsistently applied. The overall inadequate response is leaving a vulnerable population at risk of infection and creating major vectors for transmission more than seven months into the pandemic.”

The BOP’s COVID death toll “is mounting evidence that efforts to contain the virus within BOP facilities are failing,” Durbin Warren wrote to Barr and Carvajal in one of the Oct. 2 letters, which were viewed by The Washington Post.

plague200406The Post previously reported that prison staff have raised concerns about a lack of personal protective equipment and unsafe workplace conditions — issues that have prompted federal employees to sue the government. According to reports by the DOJ Office of the Inspector General on federal corrections facilities nationwide, persistent staffing shortage has triggered regular lockdowns during the pandemic in which prisoners aren’t allowed out of their cells, are often unable to shower and face more restrictions than if they were in solitary confinement.

Bloomberg, CDC Expands COVID Risk Warning to Include Overweight People (October 8, 2020)

CDC, People with Certain Medical Conditions (October 6, 2020)

BOP, Inmate Death at FCI Big Spring (October 13, 2020)

Harrisburg Patriot, Another big increase in COVID-19 cases at the Allenwood medium-security prison (October 5, 2020)

Roanoke Times, Inmate at federal prison in Petersburg dies of COVID-19; 21 others are infected (October 7, 2020)

Washington Post, Warren, Durbin slam government’s ‘failing’ efforts to contain coronavirus in federal prisons (October 5, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root

BOP Compassionate Release Approval – Vegas Without Comp’d Drinks – Update for October 13, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

THE DEFINITION OF FUTILITY

futile201012People seeking compassionate release know that 18 USC § 3582(c)(1)(A) requires that they exhaust administrative remedies first, that is, ask the warden of their facility to recommend that the BOP bring the motion on their behalf and then wait 30 days before filing.

Many prisoners have asked courts to waive the exhaustion requirement as being futile. Courts have uniformly refused, ruling – like the 6th Circuit did last June in United States v. Alam, that the exhaustion requirement “ensures that the prison administrators can prioritize the most urgent claims. And it ensures that they can investigate the gravity of the conditions supporting compassionate release and the likelihood that the conditions will persist. These are not interests we should lightly dismiss or re-prioritize.”

The courts’ confidence in the Bureau of Prisons would be laughable if the stakes were not so high. And a report last week from NBC and The Marshall Project underscores what attorneys, inmates, advocates and experts have long suspected: since March 1, wardens have denied or ignored over 98% of all compassionate release requests.

Of the 10,940 federal prisoners who applied for compassionate release in just the first two months of the pandemic, from March through May, wardens approved 1.4%, or 156. Some wardens, including those at Seagoville and Oakdale, did not respond to any request during those two months, while others deny every request presented to them. Of the 156 approved by wardens, only 11 were approved by the Central Office. Overall approval rate? One-tenth of one percent.

Here’s the breakdown: 84.8% of the requests were denied by wardens. Another 13.7% were not even answered.

Lose200615In other words, you have literally a one-in-a-thousand chance that the BOP will approve a compassionate release request. This is about the same as an inmate’s chance of dying from COVID-19 (0.09%). On the other hand, 16,000 people have received compassionate release (slightly more than 1% of the BOP population).

Notable pullouts from the data: At Elkton, an early COVID hot spot (with more than 900 cases and nine deaths), the warden denied 866 out of 867 requests for compassionate release. At FCI Terminal Island, 694 prisoners had tested positive by the end of May, the warden approved five of the 256 compassionate release requests filed between March and May.

A BOP spokesman told The Marshall Project that “we can share that the BOP has continued to process compassionate release requests as directed by the First Step Act and agency policy.”

United States v. Alam, 960 F.3d 831 (6th Cir. 2020)

NBC News/The Marshall Project, Thousands of Sick Federal Prisoners Sought Compassionate Release. 98 Percent Were Denied. (October 7, 2020)

Rochester, Minnesota, Post-Bulletin, Cases Continue in Federal Prison, Compassionate Release Hard to Get (Oct 9)

– Thomas L. Root

Something My Wife Never Says… – Update for October 8, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

IRS WAS WRONG, I WAS RIGHT

b1fI think I will savor those few words. “I was right.” It is something my bride of 41 years has never told me. Really, it happens as often as this month’s blue moon. But I can crow about this: When I advised federal inmates last April that the CARES Act had been so shoddily and quickly written that it qualified them for the $1,200 stimulus payment, I was right. Right. Right. Bloody well right.

There were plenty of doubters. In early May, the IRS posted guidance that inmates were not eligible for stimulus payments. Arguments went back and forth about this all summer.  The Senate even proposed a change in the law that would deny prisoners stimulus checks, and making it retroactive to March’s CARES Act. (It’s a shame the Senate isn’t as handy with the “retroactive” bit when it comes to criminal justice legislation, but that’s another story).

The problem was this: Nothing in the CARES Act authorized the IRS to write inmates out of the stimulus payment. The best excuse the IRS could come up with was that prisoners cannot get social security benefits Out in California, a couple of incarcerated people did something about it. They sued the IRS, and a few weeks ago, U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton issued a 45-page preliminary injunction against the IRS, preventing it from deny stimulus payments to people because they were locked up.

nothing170127A preliminary injunction does not mean the plaintiffs won, but it does mean that the Court believes that the plaintiffs are likely to prevail on the merits. Although much of the Order relates to procedural and collateral issues, such as standing, ripeness and sovereign immunity, the meat of the holding – the strength of the IRS’s position – was pretty straightforward:

The… inquiry is whether incarcerated persons are eligible individuals.  On this question, the statute is brief and to the point.  Section 6428(d) states:

For purposes of this section, the term “eligible individual” means any individual other than (1) any nonresident alien individual, (2) any individual with respect to whom a deduction under section 151 is allowable to another taxpayer for a taxable year beginning in the calendar year in which the individual’s taxable year begins, and (3) an estate or trust.

§ 6428(d).  There is no indication that Congress left the definition of “eligible individual” open-ended or otherwise up to the Secretary’s discretion to change.  See Jimenez v. Quarterman, 555 U.S. 113, 118 (2009) (“It is well established that, when the statutory language is plain, we must enforce it according to its terms.”).

The court also finds persuasive the fact that the IRS has asserted three different interpretations of the term “eligible individual” since the enactment of the Act, barely six months ago. Initially, the IRS disbursed nearly 85,000 EIPs to incarcerated persons and, when the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (“TIGTA”) questioned IRS management about this decision, the IRS “noted that payments to these populations were allowed because the CARES Act does not prohibit them from receiving a payment.” Then, as reflected in the FAQ, the IRS’s internal procedure manual, and the TIGTA report, the IRS decided that incarcerated individuals are not eligible. Now, the IRS takes the position in this litigation that, subject to generally applicable administrative and judicial rules, the IRS plans to allow otherwise eligible individuals who were only incarcerated for a portion of tax year 2020 to claim a CARES Act tax credit. The shifting interpretation demonstrates that the IRS “went well beyond the ‘bounds of its statutory authority.’”

shocked180619What? The IRS just made stuff up to stick it to inmates? I’m sure we’re all shocked.

The biggest immediate problem facing the Court was to get all of the eligible inmates who were either denied, had payments returned by prison staff who believed the IRS malarkey, or were deterred from filing by the claptrap on the IRS website, signed up. The deadline for filing the IRS non-filer statement – which can be done from the website or on a Form 1040 – had been October 15. The Court concluded it lacked the power to force the agency to move the date, but it strongly urged the parties to agree to something later.

Yesterday, the agency caved, and announced that the deadline for filing non-filer statements is now November 21, 2020.

It appears that the non-filer tool on the Web does nothing more than complete a Form 1040 reporting filing status and lack of income. For inmates without Internet access (which would be close to 100%), the standard 1040 can be completed and mailed.

money160818Meanwhile, the IRS has filed a “protective appeal” to the Ninth Circuit — which appears to be a placeholder of sorts designed to give officials time to decide if the agency will fight the ruling. “The decision whether to proceed with the appeal will be made by the acting solicitor general, who has not yet made a decision,” the IRS said in a court filing on Monday.

Order Granting Motion for Prliminary Injunction and Motion for Class Certification, Scholl v. Mnuchin, Case No. 20-cv-05309, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 176870 (N.D.Cal. September 24, 2020)

IRS.gov, Economic Impact Payment Information Center — Topic A: EIP Eligibility and General Information (June 5, 2020)

KPIX-TV, IRS Tries To Claw Back COVID-19 Stimulus Checks Sent To Prison Inmates (June 24, 2020)

Forbes, IRS Must Pay $100 Million Worth Of $1,200 Stimulus Checks, Judge Orders In Prisoners’ Lawsuit (October 6, 2020)

CBS News, IRS extends deadline for 9 million people to register to get a stimulus check (October 7, 2020)

The Independent, US judge: IRS can’t keep coronavirus money from inmates (October 7, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root