United States of America v. Scott L. Rendelman

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 7, 2025
Docket8:25-cv-00600
StatusUnknown

This text of United States of America v. Scott L. Rendelman (United States of America v. Scott L. Rendelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America v. Scott L. Rendelman, (D. Md. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA * oOW, * CRIMINAL NO. JKB-07-0331 SCOTT L. RENDELMAN, *

Defendant. * . * * * * * * * x * * *

Defendant Scott Rendelman was convicted in 2008 of mailing threatening communications under 18 U.S.C. § 876(c). (ECF No. 165-1 at 2.) The sole contested issue left for the jury to decide was whether the letters Rendelman sent constituted “threats.” (ECF No. 68 at 39.) Following then-applicable law, the trial judge instructed the jury that a communication was a threat if a “reasonable person” would believe it to be so. (ECF No. 165-1 at 4.) The jury did nothaveto find that Rendelman subjectively believed that his communications could be viewed as threatening violence. Because Rendelman’s subjective intent was irrelevant, the trial court also precluded Rendelman from testifying or presenting evidence about his subjective understanding of the communications he sent. (ECF Nos. 76 at 37; 77 at 24-26; 67 at 42.) The jury returned a guilty verdict. (ECF No. 165-1 at 4.)

In 2023, the Supreme Court held in Counterman v. Colorado that the First Amendment “requires proof that the defendant had some subj ective understanding of the threatening nature of his statements” and that “a mental state of recklessness is sufficient.” 600 U.S. 66, 69 (2023). Rendelman timely sought authorization from the Fourth Circuit to file a successive motion to

vacate his convictions under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The Fourth Circuit found that Rendelman had

made a prima facie case that Counterman announced a new rule of constitutional law that was retroactively applicable on collateral review, so it authorized Rendelman to file a successive motion to vacate his convictions in this Court. (ECF No. 165-1 at 9.) Rendelman now contends’ that, under Counterman, the trial court erroneously instructed the jury and wrongly precluded his defense. Rendelman asserts that these errors were not harmless. The Court agrees, so it will rant Rendelman’s Motion to Vacate Convictions (ECF No. 166) and order a new trial. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND ‘The relevant facts underpinning this case reach back nearly forty years. In □□□□□ □ Rendelman began serving a short prison sentence for embezzlement from his former employer.

_ (ECF Nos. 104 at 7; 60 at 9.) Less than two months into his sentence, he contends he was raped by his celimate. (ECF No. 104 at 8.) Rendelman reports that the attack had a profound effect on him. (/2.) Soon after the alleged attack, he wrote letters to his former employer and the judges □ and prosecutor in his embezzlement case, in which he threatened to kill them. (Id) Rendelman

_ Was sentenced to an additional five years in prison. (ECF No. 60 at 9.) He says that he was then raped several more times; his letters continued. (ECF No. 104 at 8.) Throughout the 1990s, Rendelman continued to accrue convictions for writing threatening letters. (ECF No. 60 at 10.) Rendelman explains that he began writing his letters as a form of protest. (ECF No. 104 at 10.) He claims awareness that if he merely stopped writing letters, he could get out of prison. (id.) But he says that if he stopped writing his letters, that would indicate to the government that its “correctional programming, which included the brutal rapes . .+ achieved the government’s goal of rehabilitating [Rendelman] to a crime free life.” (Uad.) And this was something Rendelman “swore to himself that he would not allow.” (Id.) Eventually, in 2001, Rendelman was released from prison. (ECF No. 165-1 at3.) He then

served three years on supervised release without incident. (ECF No. 104 at 22.) He also did not write any threatening letters during these three years. (/d.) But the day after his supervised release ended (meaning he had no restrictions on whom he could contact), Rendelman sent a letter to the former employer from whom he had embezzled. (id. at 23.) This letter was different from the others in that it did not threaten violence, State v. Rendelman, 404 Md. 500, 505-07 (Md. 2008). Rather, Rendelman threatened only to sue the employer for money Rendelman felt he was owed. I. Nevertheless, Rendelman was charged in Maryland state court with extortion. /d. at 508. He was convicted and sentenced to prison. Id.; (ECF No. 104 at 25.) However, his conviction was reversed on appeal because the Court of Appeals of Maryland (now, the Supreme Court of Maryland) found that a threat to take legal action against someone could not constitute extortion. Rendéiman, 404 Md. at 503.

Before Rendelman’s extortion conviction was reversed, he wrote the letters that give rise

to this case. (ECF No. 104 at 26.) These letters seemed to threaten violence against several people involved in the extortion case: the state court trial judge, the prosecutor, and the former employer who was the alleged victim of the extortion. (ECF No. 165-1 at 3.) Rendelman also sent letters to the President of the United States and to White House employees. (/d.) The letters contained highly graphic statements. For instance, Rendelman told the judge: “I will kill all your family members” and “(when I am released, you will die.” (ECF No. 181-4 at 1-2.) ‘He also said he □ would commit sexual violence against the judge’s corpse. (/d. at 2.) Ina letter to the prosecutor, Rendelman used much of the same language. (ECF No. 181-6.) In another letter, he stated that he was going to “suicide bomb” the White House and “take as many government scumbags with __

me as I possibly can.” (ECF No. 181-3.) The letters also contained other elements. For instance, several of them repeated the phrase “I’m rehabilitated” or similar messages at the end. (ECF Nos.

181-3; 181-4; 181-6; 181-8.) Rendelman also launched many profane insults at the letter recipients. (See, ¢.g., ECF Nos. 181-4 at 1; 181-5 at 1.) Rendelman proceeded to trial on six counts, each alleging violation of 18 U.S.C. § 876(c), which prohibits the mailing of threatening communications. (ECF No. 165-1 at 3.) Rendelman represented himself with the assistance of standby counsel. Cid.) Rendelman’s planned defense -

was to assert that the letters were protests, not true threats punishable by § 876(c). (Ud. at 3-4; ECF No. 77 at.23-26.) However, the trial judge, the Honorable Roger W. Titus, seemingly applying then good law, responded that Rendelman could not offer this defense. That was because “[i]t is not what is in Mr, Rendelman’s mind that is relevant.” (Jd. at 26.) Rather, all that was relevant was “what a reasonable person receiving [the] communication would believe it to be.” (id) Judge Titus then said, “and that’s how I intend to instruct the jury on the question.” (/d.) During opening statements, Rendelman sought to bring up psychological evaluations indicating he was nonviolent. (ECF No. 77 at 59.) He claimed that the recipients of his letters were aware of these reports. (/d. at 59-60.) He wanted to introduce them in the evidentiary phase

_ to show that the letter recipietits could not have interpreted his letters as true threats. (ECF No. ‘175 at 7.) However, the trial court did not allow Rendelman to discuss this topic. (ECF No. 77 at

60.) He instructed Rendelman to bring the issue up in the evidentiary phase but stated that it is “doubtful” that the evaluations were admissible. (/d.) Later in his statement, Rendelman briefly stated that he wrote the letters to show the recipients “how they were rehabilitating” him. (/d. at 65.) He then devoted a significant portion of his opening statement to discussing the reasonable person standard. (/d.

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