United States v. Jackson
Opinion of the Court
*200Gwendolyn Jackson was convicted in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on charges arising out of a scheme to defraud mortgage lenders. Specifically, a jury found her guilty of two counts of wire fraud, in violation of
Ms. Jackson appealed her conviction and her sentence. We affirmed the conviction but vacated the sentence. United States v. Jackson ,
Ms. Jackson appealed the terms of her supervised release. She, along with the Government, brought a motion for summary reversal and remand for resentencing. The parties agreed that certain conditions of the supervised release were impermissibly vague and ambiguous in light of our decisions in United States v. Thompson ,
At her third sentencing hearing, Ms. Jackson received a sentence of seventy-six months' imprisonment. The district court again imposed a $300 special assessment and $8,515,570 in restitution, along with concurrent three-year terms of supervised release that complied with Thompson and Poulin . The district court orally announced the conditions of Ms. Jackson's supervised release and explained why each condition was imposed. It did not orally announce any condition requiring that Ms. Jackson notify a probation officer within seventy-two hours of being arrested or questioned by a law enforcement officer. The district court's written judgment, however, included a discretionary supervised release condition that Ms. Jackson "shall notify a probation officer promptly, within 72 hours, if arrested or questioned by a law enforcement officer."
*201We review allegations of procedural error in a district court's imposition of supervised release conditions de novo. United States v. Moore ,
We have held that when "an inconsistency exists between an oral and the later written sentence, the sentence pronounced from the bench controls." United States v. Alburay ,
Ms. Jackson asks for a limited remand so that the district court may enter a corrected judgment without the notification condition. She submits that there is no need for an additional sentencing hearing because she will be released to a halfway house shortly and the logistics of her appearance at such a hearing could disrupt her transition. The Government agrees with Ms. Jackson. We have said that, in instances such as this, "[t]he cleanest way to end the matter is to remand with a corrective instruction. An additional hearing is not required." Alburay ,
Therefore, Ms. Jackson's sentence is VACATED, and we REMAND to the district court so that it may enter a corrected judgment without the supervised release condition that Ms. Jackson notify a probation officer within seventy-two hours of being arrested or questioned by a law enforcement officer.
It is so ordered.
R.1349 at 4.
The district court had jurisdiction under
Reference
- Full Case Name
- United States v. Gwendolyn JACKSON
- Status
- Published