United States v. Keith Matthews (AMENDED)

CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 2022
Docket22-3021
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Keith Matthews (AMENDED) (United States v. Keith Matthews (AMENDED)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. 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. Keith Matthews (AMENDED), (D.C. Cir. 2022).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Argued August 25, 2022 Decided September 6, 2022 Reissued November 29, 2022

No. 22-3021

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, APPELLEE

v.

KEITH MATTHEWS, ALSO KNOWN AS BANG, ALSO KNOWN AS BAIN, ALSO KNOWN AS BANE, APPELLANT

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (No. 1:13-cr-00203-6)

Celia Goetzl, Assistant Federal Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant. With her on the appellant’s Memorandum of Law and Fact was A.J. Kramer, Federal Public Defender.

Daniel J. Lenerz, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the cause for appellee. With him on the appellee’s Memorandum of Law and Fact were Chrisellen R. Kolb, Elizabeth H. Danello, and George P. Eliopoulos, Assistant U.S. Attorneys. 2 Before: WILKINS, KATSAS, and RAO, Circuit Judges.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge KATSAS.

KATSAS, Circuit Judge: After Keith Matthews violated his supervised release conditions, the district court placed him in home detention and later imposed a revocation sentence of imprisonment and a new term of supervised release. Matthews contends that the court lacked authority to impose both home detention and imprisonment for the same violations, but he waived this argument below. Matthews also contends that the court’s written judgment improperly contains various discretionary conditions of supervised release that were not orally pronounced at sentencing. We agree.

I

Matthews was convicted of unlawfully possessing a firearm as a felon. The district court sentenced him to imprisonment followed by a term of supervised release. As conditions for his release, the court prohibited Matthews from using illegal drugs and required him to undergo drug testing. Soon after his release, Matthews failed three drug tests and skipped several more.

At a revocation hearing in November 2021, Matthews conceded the accuracy of the failed tests. He denied missing any other tests and sought information about them from the Probation Office. Based on Matthews’s admitted drug use, the district court proposed putting him in home detention temporarily, while the parties tried to resolve their dispute about the number of missed tests. The court further stated that it would sentence Matthews only later, after determining the full extent of his violations. The court asked whether proceeding in this way was acceptable to the defense. Matthews’s counsel answered that it was. The parties 3 eventually stipulated that Matthews had failed three drug tests and skipped others scheduled over the course of two months.

At sentencing, Matthews changed his tune. He argued that because the district court had already imposed home detention for violating release conditions, it could not impose a term of imprisonment for the same violations. The court disagreed. It orally sentenced Matthews to four months of imprisonment followed by 32 months of supervised release. The court stated that the supervised release would include drug testing but specified no other conditions. In contrast, the court’s written judgment imposed 21 conditions of supervised release—four specifically required by statute, 13 recommended in a Sentencing Commission policy statement, one about drug testing, and three others.

II

Matthews first contends that the district court erred by revoking supervised release and imprisoning him after it had already imposed home confinement. His argument turns on 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e), which governs the modification or revocation of supervised release. As relevant here, section 3583(e) gives a district court three options for responding to a violation of release conditions. First, the court may “modify” the conditions that it previously imposed. Id. § 3583(e)(2). Second, the court may “revoke” the term of supervised release and require the defendant to “serve in prison” all or part of that term, subject to statutory maxima depending on the seriousness of the underlying offense. Id. § 3583(e)(3). Third, the court may order the defendant “to remain at his place of residence during nonworking hours,” but “only as an alternative to incarceration.” Id. § 3583(e)(4). Matthews contends that section 3583(e)(4) requires the district court to make a unitary choice between incarceration and home detention: The court 4 may impose a term of incarceration or a term of home detention, but not both. The government reads section 3583(e)(4) differently. On its view, the statute simply prohibits the combined term of any imprisonment and any home detention from exceeding the maximum term of imprisonment authorized by section 3583(e)(3). Here, it concludes, the district court’s orders were lawful because Matthews received only seven months of home detention followed by four months of imprisonment—far less than the maximum authorized revocation sentence of two years.

We need not decide who is correct, because Matthews waived below the argument that he seeks to press here. At the November 2021 hearing, the district court made crystal clear its intent to impose home detention only “temporarily,” as a “stop-gap measure” while the parties tried to reach agreement on how many drug tests Matthews had missed. J.A. 98–99. Likewise, the court twice made clear that it would “sentence” Matthews only later, after resolving that question. J.A. 99–100. In its motion to revoke supervised release, the Probation Office argued that Matthews’s acknowledged drug use required the court to impose some term of imprisonment, regardless of whether Matthews had skipped any tests. And the district court, more than a month before the November 2021 hearing, ordered defense counsel to tell Matthews that it viewed a further “prison sentence” to be “mandatory” given “his track record of prior criminal activity.” J.A. 79. At the November 2021 hearing, after proposing to impose home detention and then a later final sentence, the district court asked point-blank whether proceeding in this way was “acceptable to the defense.” J.A. 100. Matthews’s counsel answered succinctly: “Yes. Thank you.” Id. Having agreed to this structured proceeding of home detention followed by a revocation sentence that would include some term of imprisonment, Matthews cannot now complain that the district court gave him 5 exactly that. See United States v. Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 732– 33 (1993). 1

III

The supervised release statute draws a basic distinction between mandatory and discretionary conditions. It enumerates certain mandatory conditions that a district court “shall” order, such as not committing any further crimes and not unlawfully possessing a controlled substance. 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d). Then, it provides that a district court “may” order any other condition that is reasonably related to several of the sentencing factors in section 3553(a), involves no greater deprivation of liberty than reasonably necessary, and is consistent with any pertinent Sentencing Commission policy statements. Id. § 3583(d)(1)–(3). Matthews contends that all such discretionary conditions must be orally pronounced at the defendant’s sentencing. We agree.

Criminal defendants have a right to be physically present at sentencing, which is grounded in the Fifth Amendment and codified in Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 43(a)(3). See

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United States v. Keith Matthews (AMENDED), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-keith-matthews-amended-cadc-2022.