Tag Archives: Padilla

2255 Hair-Splitting and the Power of Advertising – Update for August 15, 2023

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

A 2255 PAIR

Two federal appellate court decisions last week of interest on motions for post-conviction relief under 28 USC § 2255:

Denaturalization is Too Collateral for Padilla, Circuit Says: In 2006, Abe Farhane – a naturalized American citizen – pled guilty to lying to the government and conspiring to commit money laundering. After Abe was released in 2017, the government started denaturalization proceedings to strip him of his citizenship under 8 USC § 1451(a) for having become a citizen by “concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation.”

deport170113Abe was still on supervised release after his prison sentence, which entitled him to file a 28 USC § 2255 motion for post-conviction relief. Abe filed a § 2255 motion claiming he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his lawyer never told him he might lose his citizenship and be deported due to his guilty plea. Had he known that, Abe argued, he never would have entered a guilty plea.

His § 2255 was denied, and last week, the 2nd Circuit upheld the decision.

splithair170727The Supreme Court held in the 2009 Padilla v. Kentucky decision that a lawyer has a duty to “inform her client whether his plea carries a risk of deportation,” noting that there was no “distinction between direct and collateral consequences” of a guilty plea when measuring the effectiveness of counsel. But the 2nd Circuit said that Padilla had no role in this case, because “civil denaturalization is a separate proceeding that may or may not occur following the plea. The government exercises considerable discretion in bringing denaturalization cases, as does the district court in evaluating the evidence… indeed, the government could seek to denaturalize Farhane without relying on his guilty plea. Instead, it turns on the defendant’s actual conduct.”

The Court’s hair-splitting seems to be a distinction without a difference, as the dissenting judge in the 2-1 decision pointed out.

Farhane v. United States, Case No. 20-1666, 2023 U.S.App. LEXIS 20960 (2d Cir. Aug. 11, 2023)

Advertising Makes Illinois Drug Statute Overbroad: After Otis Elion pled guilty to distributing meth, and he was sentenced as a career offender under USSG § 4B1.1. That Guideline increases sentencing exposure dramatically for someone with two prior convictions for crimes of violence or serious drug felonies.

Otis’s attorney did not challenge that designation, and the court imposed a 167-month prison term.

In a § 2255 motion, Otis argued his attorney’s failure to object amounted to ineffective assistance because two of the three predicates were convictions under Illinois law for “look-alike” drugs, and those offenses did not fit within the statute’s definition of serious drug felonies.

Otis’s district court denied relief.

Last week, the 7th Circuit reversed, concluding that Otis was properly sentenced as a career offender and, therefore, did not suffer prejudice from counsel’s performance.

A “serious drug felony” is a federal drug trafficking offense or a state offense that matches the Guidelines definition of controlled substance offense. If the elements of the state crime are the same as, or narrower than, the elements of the Guidelines offense, “the crime of conviction qualifies as a predicate offense.”

advertising230815Otis’s Illinois offense made it “unlawful for any person knowingly to manufacture, distribute, advertise, or possess with intent to manufacture or distribute a lookalike substance,” and defines advertise as “the attempt, by publication, dissemination, solicitation or circulation, to induce directly or indirectly any person to acquire, or enter into an obligation to acquire” a controlled substance.

The 7th said the Illinois statute is broader than 21 USC § 841 and thus could not be a predicate for Guidelines “career offender” status. “Advertise is an independent word in the statute, and its definition uses the term induce, not sell or distribute. Given this, we decline to read ‘advertise’ as merely restating, in narrower terms, what other statutory language already covers. For these reasons, the look-alike statute’s inclusion of ‘advertise’ means it punishes a broader range of conduct than the Guidelines controlled substance offense.”

The Circuit reversed the denial of his § 2255 motion and remanded the case “for an evaluation of counsel’s performance.”

Elion v. United States, Case No. 20-1725, 2023 U.S.App. LEXIS 20286 (7th Cir. Aug. 7, 2023)

– Thomas L. Root

Senators Consider Sexual Assault (And How to Stop It) – Update for February 7, 2023

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

GRASSLEY, DURBIN, PADILLA MEET WITH BOP DIRECTOR PETERS TO FURTHER INVESTIGATE SEXUAL MISCONDUCT

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Senators Charles Grassley (R-IA) and Alex Padilla (D-CA) met with Bureau of Prisons Director Colette Peters last Wednesday to discuss sexual misconduct by BOP personnel and the Dept of Justice’s efforts to root it out.

sexualassault211014The meeting followed letters that Grassley, Durbin, Padilla, and Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) sent to DOJ last year seeking information about sexual misconduct allegations against BOP staffers.

“I appreciate that DOJ convened a Working Group to address sexual misconduct by BOP employees and that BOP has begun implementing reforms to enhance prevention, reporting, investigation, prosecution, and discipline related to staff sexual misconduct,” Durbin said. “DOJ’s report in November was evidence of the desperate need for reform and improved oversight. I will continue pushing BOP and DOJ to ensure that BOP operates federal prisons safely, securely, and effectively.”

The meeting comes as a new report released by the DOJ’s Bureau of Justice Statistics reported that prison and jail staff rarely face legal consequences for sexual assault.

BJS released data on more than 2,500 documented incidents of sexual assault in federal and state prisons and jails between 2016 and 2018. Despite federal laws intended to create zero-tolerance policies for prison sexual abuse, most notably the Prison Rape Elimination Act, the report found that staff sexual misconduct perpetrators were convicted in only 20% of jailhouse incidents and only a 6% of substantiated prison incidents. Fewer than half of the perps lost their jobs.

“Staff sexual misconduct led to the perpetrator’s discharge, termination or employment contract not being renewed in 44 percent of incidents,” the report states. “Staff perpetrators were reprimanded or disciplined following 43% of sexual harassment incidents.”

rape230207Not everyone is sanguine about BOP efforts, nor – according to the report’s findings – should they be. In a recent release, the advocacy group FAMM said, “The Department of Justice (DOJ) is stepping up prosecutions of prison sexual assault. While commendable, jailing the abusers is not enough. It won’t heal survivors’ trauma or stop this from happening in the future. We need independent oversight to make real change. The BOP has shown that it cannot be trusted to mind its own foxes in its own hen houses.”

Sen. Charles Grassley, Grassley, Durbin, Padilla Meet With BOP Director Peters to Further Investigate Sexual Misconduct (February 2, 2023)

DOJ Bureau of Justice Statistics, Substantiated Incidents of Sexual Victimization Reported by Adult Correctional Authorities, 2016–2018 (February 2, 2023)

Reason, New Data Show Prison Staff Are Rarely Held Accountable for Sexual Misconduct (February 3, 2023)

FAMM, How the Department of Justice is Failing Victims of Sexual Assault in Prison (January 24, 2023)

– Thomas L. Root

Peters Due to be Sworn In This Morning, Honeymoon’s Due to End This Afternoon – Update for August 2, 2022

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

change220802Incoming BOP Director Colette Peters will have her choice of fires to put out after today’s swearing in. What she will not have is much of a honeymoon in which to do so.

At last week’s hearings, Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) said that with Carvajal departing, and a new director coming in, change at the Bureau of Prison needs to happen and it needs to happen now.

With a fall COVID surge anticipated, she might want to look first at the BOP’s COVID management. Others certainly are. At last week’s Subcommittee hearings, Sen Alex Padilla (D-CA) said his office has received reports that FCI Mendota had not been following COVID-19 protocols, leading to frequent outbreaks at the facility.

Padilla and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) sent the Dept of Justice a letter in April asking about the lack of COVID-19 safety precautions, but did not receive an adequate response. In response to Carvajal’s assurance that the BOP “takes these allegations seriously,” Padilla said, “We sent you a letter saying that we’re hearing that protocols are not being followed. We communicated to you months ago that we understand they aren’t being followed.”

Fourteen other senators last week demanded that the BOP explain its scant use of Covid-19 therapeutics.

The letter is based on press reports that the BOP used just a fraction of the COVID-19 drugs allotted by the federal government. It urges Bureau leadership to revamp its approach toward Covid-19 testing to catch more infections that could benefit from these drugs (which need to be given early in a person’s illness).

Druck“The experience of the pandemic for the federally incarcerated population remains starkly worse than for non-incarcerated individuals,” the letter said. “This discrepancy can only be addressed through affirmative, comprehensive changes from the Bureau of Prisons … to improve the availability of COVID-19 vaccines, testing, and therapeutics. We write to urge you to make those improvements as soon as possible.”

The Dept of Health and Human Services has reported that BOP consistently declines additional COVID-19 drugs. “We have… reached out multiple times to BOP asking them why they do not want their allocations offered by HHS. They consistently say they have enough to meet demand/their demand is low,” DHHS wrote in a May 4 email to Congress. Last week’s letter demands information from the BOP by Sep 9, including data on the turnaround time for Covid-19 tests and the policies governing when incarcerated people are tested.

numbers180327As of yesterday, BOP COVID numbers – which are stunningly untrustworthy most of the time – reported 479 inmates and 509 staff with COVID, with COVID in 115 facilities (the most since March 1st). The total number of COVID tests performed on inmates fluctuates inexplicably but suggests no testing being done since January 25th. Peters might want to start by requiring BOP COVID stats to be meaningful.

Florida Phoenix, ‘Stunning, long-term failures’ found in probe of Atlanta penitentiary (July 26, 2022)

Stat, Senators demand answers about federal prisons’ scant use of Covid therapeutics (July 26, 2022)

Letter to Michael Carvajal from Sen Benjamin Cardin (July 25, 2022)

– Thomas L. Root