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Taking the Fifth-A Criminal Law Blog
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  • THE US SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS MANDATORY CAREER CRIMINAL SENTENCE

    Posted on June 7th, 2011 zshapiro No comments

    The Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA) provides for a minimum sentence of fifteen years for anyone who has three prior serious drug offenses or violent felonies. It defines a serious drug offense as any drug offense for which the maximum punishment is ten years or more in prison, according to state law.

    The question in McNeill v. United States, decided yesterday, was whether a drug conviction is an ACCA prior based based upon the penalty at the time of conviction in state court or based upon the penalty at the time of the Federal Court trial.

    Clifton Terelle McNeill had two two violent felonies on his record at the time he was convicted of possession of a gun and possession of cocaine for sale in Federal Court. He also had six drug offenses. At the time of his conviction on the drug offenses the maximum penalty in North Carolina was ten years. But in 1994, the North Carolina law changed providing a maximum sentence of 38 months. The trial judge ruled that he had three or more serious felonies under the ACCA and sentenced him to 300 months.

    The Supreme Court reviewed the language of the ACCA and agreed with the trial court that the determination of whether a crime is a prior under the ACCA is made at time of the original sentencing, not at the time of the conviction of a subsequent crime. As a result the Supreme Court found that the fifteen year minimum applied to McNeill.

    Section 18 USC 924(e)(1) states in pertinent part:

    In the case of a person who violates section 922(g) of this title and has three previous convictions by any court referred to in section 922(g)(1) of this title for a violent felony or a serious drug offense, or both, committed on occasions different from one another, such person shall be fined under this title and imprisoned not less than fifteen years

    Justice Thomas, for a unanimous Court, held that despite the present tense language of the section the statute should be interpreted as it was written at the time of the original state conviction, not at the time of the subsequent Federal conviction. Since the statute talks about a prior conviction it is necessary to look at the conviction at the time of the original sentencing. Otherwise it is possible that the statute applicable to the prior conviction may have been revoked. Furthermore under North Carolina law the maximum punishment for drug crimes committed prior to 1994 remains ten years.

    While this is all good and well certain incongruities appear. If a crime happened the day before the revised North Carolina statute was passed the defendant is facing an ACCA prior while the defendant who was convicted one day later is not. Furthermore by basing the statute on state law a defendant who committed the same offense but lives across the border in South Carolina may not be facing an ACCA mandatory minimum.

    In any case, I’m not sure why the Supreme Court granted certiorari in this case. In sentencing McNeill the judge pointed to McNeill’s “long and unrelenting history of serious criminal conduct” in upwardly departing from the Sentencing Guidelines to sentence him to 300 months. Thus it is unlikely that even if the Supreme Court had decided that the mandatory minimum did not apply and remanded the case for resentencing that the trial court would have sentenced McNeill to less than 300 months.

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