Joseph Perrone v. United States

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 14, 2018
Docket16-2437
StatusPublished

This text of Joseph Perrone v. United States (Joseph Perrone v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Perrone v. United States, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 16-2437 JOSEPH PERRONE, Petitioner-Appellant,

v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Respondent-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 3:14-cv-00281-DRH — David R. Herndon, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED JANUARY 4, 2018 — DECIDED MAY 14, 2018 ____________________

Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and HAMILTON and BARRETT, Circuit Judges. BARRETT, Circuit Judge. Terry Learn died after Joseph Per- rone injected her with 7.5 grams of cocaine. Perrone pleaded guilty to a single count of unlawful drug distribution and stipulated that his distribution of the cocaine had caused Learn’s death. In accordance with Perrone’s plea agreement, the district court applied a statutory sentencing enhance- ment that mandates a twenty-year minimum term of impris- 2 No. 16-2437

onment if unlawful drug distribution results in death. The Supreme Court has since clarified that this provision re- quires a defendant’s drugs to be a but-for cause of the death, not merely a contributing cause. Perrone filed a petition for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 on the ground that the Court’s narrowed interpretation of the enhancement reveals that he is actually innocent of causing Learn’s death. In addition, he asserts that his counsel was ineffective for failing to advise him of a Seventh Circuit case decided on the day before his sentencing that interpreted the “death results” enhancement the same way that the Court ultimately did. He claims that if he had known that the enhancement required the govern- ment to show that his cocaine was the but-for cause of Learn’s death, he would have sought to withdraw his plea. The district court denied Perrone’s petition, and we affirm its judgment. I. At approximately 4 a.m. on April 17, 2008, Terry Learn and her coworker Madonna Narog went to Narog’s hotel room, where they did heroin and cocaine for several hours. They left the hotel around 8 a.m. to purchase more cocaine, about fifty dollars’ worth for Learn and twenty-five dollars’ worth for Narog. They returned to the hotel and did cocaine until close to noon, when Learn left for her shift at Roxy’s Night Club. Narog saw Learn again around 2 p.m., when Narog went to the club to pick up some money, and again at 8 p.m., when Narog was beginning her shift and Learn was ending hers. After her shift, Learn met her boyfriend, Joseph Perrone, and went back to his home. According to Perrone, the two made a suicide pact. After watching Learn inject herself with No. 16-2437 3

a mixture of cocaine and water, Perrone told her that she had not taken enough to kill herself. He then prepared and in- jected 7.5 grams of cocaine into Learn. Perrone later told the police that Learn convulsed, fell to the floor, and died im- mediately after he injected her for the last time. He did not specify the time at which he administered the final injection, but he said that it happened on April 18th. It was therefore at least four hours after Narog saw Learn at the shift change and at least twelve hours after Narog last saw her do any drugs not distributed by Perrone. Perrone moved Learn’s body to her apartment. He wiped his fingerprints off the syringe and put it into Learn’s hand. As he stipulated in his plea agreement, he aimed “to create the false impression that Terry Learn had died alone in her own residence.” The body was not discovered until April 26th, when a concerned neighbor flagged down police to re- port that she had not seen Learn in several days. Police offic- ers discovered Learn’s body in her apartment. According to the coroner’s report, the cause of death was “[c]ombined tox- icity with cocaine, ethanol and opiates.” Several months later, Perrone was arrested on an unrelat- ed firearms charge. He chose that time to confess to police that he had killed Learn, describing what he had done as “premeditated murder.” During this interview, he told the police that he gave Learn one injection of an unspecified amount of cocaine; during a second interview a few weeks later, he said that he injected Learn with 7.5 grams of cocaine in three separate injections of 2.5 grams each. The government obtained an indictment against Perrone for distributing a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C). The indictment specified 4 No. 16-2437

that Learn died as a result of Perrone’s distribution, which, if proved, would enhance his statutory sentencing range under § 841(b)(1)(C). That provision mandates a twenty-year min- imum sentence if “death or serious bodily injury results from the use” of the unlawfully distributed substance. Perrone pleaded guilty. In his plea agreement, he admit- ted that his conduct had violated the “death results” provi- sion—namely, he stipulated that “the ingestion of the con- trolled substance distributed by the Defendant caused the death of another person.” He also signed a stipulation of facts admitting that he “injected Terry Learn with a syringe containing cocaine” and that she “died immediately after receiving the injection.” At his plea hearing a few weeks lat- er, Perrone stated that he had read the documents, that he understood them, and that they were accurate. On the day before Perrone was sentenced, the Seventh Circuit decided United States v. Hatfield, 591 F.3d 945 (7th Cir. 2010), which held that the “death results” enhancement re- quires the government to prove that “ingestion of the de- fendants’ drugs was a ‘but for’ cause of the death[].” Id. at 948. Hatfield rejected jury instructions that used vaguer, less demanding language to describe the necessary causal rela- tionship; it said that the district court could not summarize the “death results” enhancement as requiring the jury to find only that the illegal drugs “played a part” in the victim’s death. Id. at 949. At sentencing the next day, the district court applied the “death results” enhancement and sentenced Perrone to 240 months’ imprisonment. Before imposing the sentence, the district judge said that he had reviewed Perrone’s Stipulation of Facts to see “what impact, if any, the Rex Hatfield case No. 16-2437 5

was going to have on this case.” Perrone’s attorney did not engage this point with the judge, nor did he inform Perrone about Hatfield. Instead, he once again agreed that the sen- tencing enhancement applied. Perrone did not appeal his sentence. He eventually received an 80-month reduction of his sentence for assistance to the government, a possibility contemplated by the plea agreement and that Perrone and the district court had discussed at his sentencing hearing. Four years later, the Supreme Court decided Burrage v. United States, 134 S. Ct. 881 (2014), which effectively ratified Hatfield’s standard of causation. The Court held that the “death results” enhancement ordinarily requires the gov- ernment to prove that the victim would have lived but for the unlawfully distributed drugs. Id. at 888. In Burrage, the victim died with multiple drugs in his bloodstream, includ- ing metabolites from heroin that had been distributed by the defendant. Although morphine, a heroin metabolite, was the only drug present at a level above the therapeutic range, the government’s experts could not say whether the victim would have lived if he had not taken the heroin.

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