United States v. Erick Gibbs
United States v. Erick Gibbs
Opinion
WYNN, Circuit Judge, voting to redesignate the panel opinion as unpublished or vacate it as moot:
On July 16, 2018, a divided panel of this Court ruled that a district court did not err in sentencing Defendant Erick Gibbs ("Defendant") to 24 months' imprisonment for violating the terms of his supervised release, notwithstanding that the district court did not address several of Defendant's nonfrivolous arguments in favor of a downward variance.
United States v. Gibbs
,
But Defendant can get no meaningful relief from his petition to rehear because Defendant is now released from prison. Accordingly, Defendant's case is now moot, and the panel opinion should be vacated "so as to prevent a decision, 'unreviewable because of mootness, from spawning any legal consequences.' "
Int'l Refugee Assist. Proj. v. Trump
,
In deciding to expedite the filing of the denial of Defendant's petition to rehear en banc, this Court took the unusual, but in my opinion welcomed, step of entering that order before opinions supporting and dissenting from the order were prepared for filing. This procedural change is especially needed in criminal cases in which the delay of this Court in waiting for separate concurring and dissenting opinions can result in gross injustice and unfairness to a defendant. That is precisely what happened in
United States v. Surratt
("
Surratt II
"),
Recall from
Surratt
, the inescapable conclusion that this Court's failure to timely issue opinions in an en banc proceeding led to, what this Court deemed, was the mooting of a habeas petitioner's appeal, thereby forcing the petitioner-and other similarly situated prisoners-to unnecessarily spend several more years in prison. Surratt pled guilty to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute more than 50 grams, but less than 150 grams, of crack cocaine.
Surratt then petitioned this Court for en banc rehearing, which we granted on December 2, 2015.
Surratt II
,
Subsequently, a panel of this Court
agreed
with the position Surratt advanced in his en banc rehearing petition.
See
United States v. Wheeler
,
Surratt 's procedural history reinforces the extraordinary efforts this Court has taken to keep the panel opinion in this case on the books. Put simply, in Surratt this Court waited until the completion of all separate and dissenting opinions and thereby materially disadvantaged both the prisoner in that case and other wrongly sentenced prisoners. By contrast, here this Court eschews what has been, to date, the standard approach and denies Defendant relief without waiting until all opinions are ready for filing. This Court does so, apparently, for the sole reason of keeping in place the panel majority's opinion, which Chief Judge Gregory's dissent asserts contradicts this Court's precedent in a manner that prejudices the interests of criminal defendants. Accordingly, the common thread running through this Court's starkly different approaches to resolving Surratt and Defendant's appeals is that both efforts had the effect of prejudicing the interests of criminal defendants. A legal system constitutionally structured to err in favor of criminal defendants should not operate in such a fashion.
To be sure, the panel opinion in this matter is inconsequential. If, as the panel majority maintains,
Gibbs
,
When a court-on its own initiative and without the request of either party-diverges from its usual practice and takes action that disfavors certain litigants and favors others, the public reasonably perceives that court as abandoning its proper role as independent, neutral arbiter. But here, this Court's decision to abandon its usual practice and rule on Defendant's petition without awaiting filing of concurring, separate, and dissenting opinions, establishes the practice and opportunity to avoid the injustice that befell Raymond Surratt and so many others. At the least, this Court now establishes a means to prohibit concurring, separate, and dissenting opinions from exercising a "pocket veto" to delay or deny fairness and justice.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff - Appellee, v. Erick Jemonta GIBBS, Defendant - Appellant.
- Status
- Published