Mejia-Velez v. United States

320 F. Supp. 3d 496
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedApril 16, 2018
Docket13-CV-3372 (ERK)
StatusPublished

This text of 320 F. Supp. 3d 496 (Mejia-Velez v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mejia-Velez v. United States, 320 F. Supp. 3d 496 (E.D.N.Y. 2018).

Opinion

KORMAN, District Judge.:

On March 11, 1992, Manuel de Dios Unanue, a journalist and former editor of New York's largest Spanish daily, was having a drink at a restaurant in Queens when he was shot twice in the head. United States v. Mejia-Velez , 855 F.Supp. 607 (E.D.N.Y. 1994). De Dios was murdered at the direction of the Cali cartel, an association of drug-dealing families based in Cali, Colombia. Because of his scathing exposés on the cartel, de Dios was singled out for execution by the head of one of the families, who issued a contract offering $50,000 for de Dios's death.

Ultimately, the assassination was assigned to Jose James Benitez and Elkin Farley Salazar. Although Benitez and Salazar were willing to conspire, the two sought a third man to pull the trigger.

*498Salazar suggested (and Benitez agreed on) a seventeen-year-old acquaintance of Salazar's, Wilson Alejandro Mejia-Velez. Benitez and Salazar enlisted Mejia because Mejia wanted to do criminal work and because he had boasted that he had already participated in homicides in Colombia.

The day of the murder, the three men-Benitez, Salazar, and Mejia-were given the details of the hit, shown a photograph of de Dios, and taken to a restaurant in Queens called Meson Asturias, where de Dios was a frequent patron. Benitez and Mejia went inside to get a view of their target, and, satisfied that they had seen de Dios at the bar, the men left to prepare.

Salazar procured the weapon, a nine-millimeter Beretta. Mejia cleaned the gun, covered his fingers with tape, and donned a grey hooded sweatshirt. The three then returned to Meson Asturias and parked nearby. While Salazar and Benitez stayed in the car, Mejia went in with the gun. When Mejia returned, he announced that it was "done," and the three men drove off. Id. at 608-10.

Benitez and Salazar pleaded guilty. Mejia was convicted at trial, and I gave him a Guidelines sentence of life in prison because I believed a downward departure was unwarranted. About two decades later, the Supreme Court in Miller v. Alabama struck down a statute mandating that juveniles be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. 567 U.S. 460, 132 S.Ct. 2455, 183 L.Ed.2d 407 (2012). Mejia was seventeen when he murdered de Dios, had been sentenced to life, and had no possibility of parole because Congress had abolished it at the federal level. Mejia thus petitioned for resentencing under Miller , see 28 U.S.C. § 2255, arguing that the life sentence I had imposed was mandated by the Guidelines-"mandated" even though judges had regularly departed from Guidelines sentences using discretion that the Guidelines themselves granted. A few years later, in Montgomery v. Louisiana , the Court made Miller retroactive on collateral review. --- U.S. ----, 136 S.Ct. 718, 193 L.Ed.2d 599 (2016). In doing so, Montgomery reframed Miller , holding not only that Miller prohibited mandatory life sentences that forbid consideration of youth, but also that Miller actively required sentencers to consider youth. Now, in light of Miller and Montgomery , I consider whether Mejia is entitled to resentencing.

I. MEJIA'S PROSECUTION AND SENTENCING

The Transfer Hearing

Because the United States Attorney moved to try Mejia as an adult, I held a hearing that primarily comprised the testimony of a psychologist, hired by the defense, who had examined Mejia over about seven hours. See generally Tr. of Crim. Cause for Transf. Hr'g, Dkt. 17. The psychologist also submitted written reports, in which he diagnosed Mejia (IQ: 79) with ADHD, a developmental reading disorder, an adjustment disorder, and borderline intellectual functioning. Transf. Hr'g Ex. at 4, 9, Dkt. 18. In short, "both intellectually [and] emotionally," Mejia was "not where you would expect your typical 17 year old to be." Transf. Tr. 25-26. During the hearing, I asked the psychologist whether it was fair to treat Mejia as an adult:

[O]ne of the underlying strains that goes through the law is whether it's fair to treat him as an adult ... arguably it would be different if he were 11 years old-he was 17-because we might say people at that age don't develop the kind of ability to reason and make moral judgments for which they should be arguably held accountable as an adult....
*499[S]o there's that strain that may run through all of this about the ultimate fairness of all of this. I mean, but he's 17 years old, he was when he allegedly committed this crime, and he was bordering on the age that Congress thought separated adults from juveniles.
I mean, do any of these factors that you've identified in your mind, given his age, go to the fairness of holding him accountable as an adult?

See Transf. Tr. 21-22. The psychologist responded that if Mejia had committed murder for hire, "then some of these [developmental] issues [had] very little do to with [what was] fair." Id. at 23. Certainly Mejia's disorders did not themselves cause him to kill. Id. at 29-32. Rather, in the psychologist's opinion, "the generally accepted idea" was that a person who would murder solely for money and without remorse had not "develop[ed] an empathic capacity for other individuals": there is "nothing to be remorseful about because [they] can't put [themselves] in somebody else's shoes." Id. at 32.

The defense psychologist also testified that when "the individual's sole motivation was financial, and the individual is in fact remorseless about that ... the prospects for rehabilitation are quite dim." Id. at 19-20. The point came through more than once:

And isn't it also a fact that in terms of persons that demonstrate an ability to engage in remorseless acts of violence without the ability to really have a reaction as to whether it is something that's incorrect, aren't the rehabilitative prospects for those person[s] especially dim?

Id. at 36. "They are dim," the psychologist conceded. Id.

Ultimately, I considered Mejia's "age and the nature of the offense, [his] social background and the extent of his ... intellectual and psychological maturity." Id.

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320 F. Supp. 3d 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mejia-velez-v-united-states-nyed-2018.