United States v. Gibson

60 F.4th 720
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 21, 2023
Docket20-3049
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 60 F.4th 720 (United States v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Gibson, 60 F.4th 720 (2d Cir. 2023).

Opinion

20-3049 USA v. Gibson

1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

3 ------

4 August Term, 2021

5 (Argued: November 23, 2021 Rehearing Decided: February 21, 2023)

6 Docket No. 20-3049

7 _________________________________________________________

8 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

9 Appellant, 10 11 - v. -

12 VINCENT GIBSON,

13 Defendant-Appellee. 14 _________________________________________________________

15 Before: KEARSE, LOHIER, and LEE, Circuit Judges.

16 Petition by the United States for a panel rehearing of this Court's decision

17 in United States v. Gibson, 55 F.4th 153 (2d Cir. 2022), and for an amended opinion

18 stating that the ruling that the 2015 removal of naloxegol from the federal controlled 1 substances schedules rendered those schedules categorically narrower than the

2 relevant New York drug schedules was nonprecedential. The petition for a panel

3 rehearing is granted; the request for an amended opinion is denied.

4 Tiffany H. Lee, Assistant United States Attorney, 5 Attorney, for Trini E. Ross, United States 6 Attorney for the Western District of New York, 7 Buffalo, New York.

8 PER CURIAM:

9 The government petitions for a panel rehearing of so much of our

10 decision in United States v. Gibson, 55 F.4th 153 (2d Cir. 2022), as ruled that the 2015

11 removal of naloxegol from the federal controlled substances schedules promulgated

12 under the Controlled Substances Act ("CSA"), 21 U.S.C. §§ 801-971, rendered those

13 schedules categorically narrower than the New York drug schedules applicable to

14 Gibson's 2002 state-law conviction. The government's petition suggests that that

15 ruling in our opinion ("Opinion") was dictum rather than a holding, and asks that we

16 issue an amended opinion so stating. We grant rehearing in order to note the

17 government's various positions on the comparability of the state and federal drug

2 1 schedules, and to flag some defects in the petition's characterizations of the record;

2 we deny the request for an amended opinion.

3 To begin with, we note that the government's petition repeatedly

4 confuses this appeal with the case as a whole. It states, for example, that our Opinion

5 "explained that the disparity issue was not presented at all in this case." (Government

6 Petition (or "Petition") at 10 (emphases added).) Our Opinion instead stated that "this

7 appeal presents fewer issues than might have been raised." Gibson, 55 F.4th at 158

8 (emphasis added). The Opinion proceeded to note, inter alia, that the government had

9 "not argue[d] that the New York law was not broader than the current federal

10 schedules" "in response to Gibson's contention" in the district court that New York law

11 was broader than federal law. Id. at 158-59 (emphasis added). And while the

12 government characterizes the Opinion as saying that "the Government was bound in

13 this case not to contest the disparity issue" (Petition at 9 (emphasis added)), the

14 Opinion instead noted that "[t]he government is correct that it 'is constrained from

15 arguing on appeal that the drug schedules are comparable even after the 2015

16 amendment removing naloxegol,' having made no such argument in the district

17 court." Gibson, 55 F.4th at 160 (quoting Government's reply brief on appeal at 12

18 (emphasis ours)). As we stated, "[t]he issue raised by Gibson's central contention--

3 1 that the state and federal schedules diverged--did not remain unresolved by the

2 government's refusal to address it." Gibson, 55 F.4th at 160. We did not indicate that

3 any prior holding of this Court--or anything in the record of this case--could warrant

4 the government's claiming to have been "bound" or "constrained" from contesting--in

5 light of the federal delisting of naloxegol--the comparability issue in the district court.

6 Nor can we credit the government's notions that "th[e] argument" "that

7 'federal law [is] categorically narrower than the state-law counterpart' based on the

8 [federal-law] descheduling of naloxegol" "was . . . no[t] before the district court"

9 (Government Petition at 4 (emphasis added)), and that the "issue"--i.e., whether "state

10 law at the time of [Gibson's 2002 drug] offense" was broader than current federal law-

11 -"was not briefed [on appeal] by either party" (id. at 3 (emphasis added)). In Gibson's

12 appellate brief, pages 10-14 discussed that issue. (See, e.g., Gibson brief on appeal

13 at 12 (under "the categorical approach in the present case, the district court properly

14 determined that [New York Penal Law] § 220.39(1) reaches conduct that would not

15 be criminalized federally"); id. ("New York's definition of 'narcotic drug' is broader

16 than the federal schedules."); id. at 13 ("Simply put, federal law controls 'any . . .

17 derivative . . . of opium or opiate,' subject to certain exceptions, among them

18 naloxegol. New York has no such exception. Naloxegol is an opiate derivative.").)

4 1 And in the district court, Gibson had made these points in opposing the government's

2 contention that his sentence should be enhanced pursuant to Guidelines § 4B1.1 on

3 the basis of his two prior New York convictions, one of which was his 2002 drug

4 offense. Gibson had immediately pointed out that New York law governing that

5 offense was broader than current federal law; he argued that while two predicate

6 offenses are required for application of § 4B1.1, the court should find one of his two

7 prior convictions relied on by the government--his prior drug conviction--is not a

8 proper predicate because the current federal schedules of controlled substances are

9 narrower than New York's 2002 drug schedules. See, e.g., Gibson, 55 F.4th at 156-57.

10 The government argued that Gibson's "argument is without merit" because the court

11 should look at the federal schedules only as they existed at the time of Gibson's prior

12 New York drug offense in 2002, not as they exist currently. (Government's Response

13 in Opposition to Defendant's Memorandum of Law, dated December 2, 2019

14 ("Government's December 2 Mem."), at 4.)

15 The implicit premise of the government's timing argument was that the

16 New York schedules under which Gibson was convicted in 2002 were broader than

17 the current federal schedules. Although the government suggests in its petition that

18 it has some question as to whether naloxegol was within the New York controlled

5 1 substance schedules (see Petition at 13-14), it did not contest during the proceedings

2 in the district court (see, e.g., Government's December 2 Mem. at 4), that naloxegol was

3 a federally controlled substance in 2002 but after January 2015 was no longer federally

4 controlled, see Schedules of Controlled Substances: Removal of Naloxegol From

5 Control, 80 Fed. Reg. 3468, 3468 (Jan. 23, 2015). And knowing that the federal

6 schedules in 2002 included naloxegol, the government repeatedly represented to the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F.4th 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gibson-ca2-2023.