United States v. Keita Jerrod Hayden

102 F.4th 368
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 2024
Docket23-5571
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 F.4th 368 (United States v. Keita Jerrod Hayden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Keita Jerrod Hayden, 102 F.4th 368 (6th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 24a0114p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, │ Plaintiff-Appellee, │ > No. 23-5571 │ v. │ │ KEITA JERROD HAYDEN, │ Defendant-Appellant. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky at Lexington. No. 5:06-cr-00187-1—Danny C. Reeves, Chief District Judge.

Decided and Filed: May 20, 2024

Before: BATCHELDER, THAPAR, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ON BRIEF: Valarie Linnen, Chippewa Lake, Michigan, for Appellant. Charles P. Wisdom, Jr., John Patrick Grant, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Lexington, Kentucky, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. For violating the terms of his supervised release a second time, the district court imposed upon Keita Jerrod Hayden a seven-month term of incarceration followed by an eight-year term of supervised release. The district court imposed mandatory and standard supervised-release conditions by reference and imposed special conditions by orally pronouncing them at Hayden’s sentencing. Hayden challenges his supervised-release term on two grounds: first, that it is longer than his statute of conviction allows, and second, that the district court violated his right to be present at sentencing by No. 23-5571 United States v. Hayden Page 2

imposing the mandatory and standard conditions by reference. Because the district court did not exceed the statutory-maximum term of supervised release and because it did provide Hayden with sufficient notice of the conditions to satisfy due process, we affirm the judgment.

I.

Seventeen years ago, Hayden pleaded guilty to violating 21 U.S.C. § 841, which in relevant part criminalizes knowingly and intentionally possessing with the intent to distribute five grams or more of a mixture containing cocaine base. Hayden possessed thirty-nine grams. Because he possessed more than twenty-eight grams of a mixture containing cocaine base—and because he had a prior felony conviction for his possessing a controlled substance (cocaine base)—federal law subjected him to the enhanced penalties listed in 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B) for second-time offenders: a ten-year mandatory-minimum prison sentence and a supervised-release term of at least eight years. The district court sentenced him to the minimum sentence of ten years of imprisonment followed by eight years of supervised release. Its judgment imposed thirteen standard supervised-release conditions and two special conditions that prohibited Hayden from consuming alcohol and subjected him to periodic drug and alcohol testing. Hayden served his ten-year prison term and began his supervised release in 2017.

Hayden first violated the terms of his supervised release that same year. Kentucky police arrested him for driving while under the influence of alcohol, a crime for which he was convicted. The district court sentenced Hayden to seven months of imprisonment, to be followed by an eight-year supervised-release term with the same conditions as before. Hayden was released to begin his term of supervised release in August of 2018.

Not quite three years later, Hayden’s probation officer learned from Hayden that he was arrested and charged with being intoxicated in a public place. Hayden was present outside a gentleman’s club at a fight to which local police responded. After breaking up the fight, the local police saw Hayden fall out of the driver’s seat of his parked car. The officers noticed Hayden’s bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, and the strong odor of alcohol on his breath. His arrest led his probation officer to submit a report listing the two ways in which Hayden violated his No. 23-5571 United States v. Hayden Page 3

supervised-release conditions: he committed a state crime (alcohol intoxication in a public place) and he failed to abstain from alcohol.

The district court held a hearing to determine whether Hayden violated the conditions of his supervised release. It determined that the police report describing Hayden’s conduct was sufficiently reliable to establish that he violated his supervised-release conditions by committing another state crime and by consuming alcohol. Even if that evidence were not enough, Hayden’s admitting to his probation officer that he consumed alcohol would be enough for the district court to find that he violated his supervised-release terms.

The district court then considered the appropriate sentence. It noted that it would base Hayden’s sentence on treating his violations as a breach of the district court’s trust. See U.S.S.G. ch. 7, pt. A, 3(b) (describing choice between punishing supervised-release violation as breach of trust or punishing it as violative conduct itself). It observed that even though Hayden’s conduct did not involve violence, theft, or controlled substance use, his falling out of his vehicle indicated that he could have driven away from the scene while intoxicated. And so the need to deter Hayden from future violations—and to provide him effective treatment options—counseled for a sentence of twenty-one months’ imprisonment, consecutive to any state-court sentence Hayden may serve arising from his violation conduct, followed by eight years’ supervised release.

In its explanation of Hayden’s supervised-release term, the district court reimposed the mandatory and standard conditions by reference. It also imposed several special conditions, which it announced orally, on the record, at the hearing. These conditions include that Hayden: abstain from the use of alcohol; participate in a substance-abuse-treatment program; participate in urinalysis testing; and submit to searches conducted by the United States Probation Office to ensure that Hayden is complying with the conditions of his supervised release. The district court then asked whether the government or defense counsel had any objections to its sentence or wanted to ask it to make additional factual findings. Both counsel stated that they had no objections and needed no additional findings.

Hayden appeals the district court’s judgment, contesting the length and conditions of his supervised-release term. No. 23-5571 United States v. Hayden Page 4

II.

A criminal defendant has the right—rooted in the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause—to be present at his sentencing. See United States v. Gagnon, 470 U.S. 522, 526 (1985) (per curiam). Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 43(a)(3) protects this right by providing that “the defendant must be present at . . . sentencing.” Our precedent requiring oral sentencing recognizes that “[b]ecause criminal punishment affects the most fundamental human rights[,] sentencing should be conducted with the judge and defendant facing one another and not in secret.” United States v. Booker, 994 F.3d 591, 600 (6th Cir. 2021) (quoting United States v. Denny, 653 F.3d 415, 421 (6th Cir. 2011)). This is why, if an oral sentence and a written sentence ever conflict, the oral sentence controls. See id.

Hayden alleges that, by incorporating the standard supervised-release conditions by reference, the district court violated his due-process right.

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Bluebook (online)
102 F.4th 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-keita-jerrod-hayden-ca6-2024.