United States v. Roger Sweet

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 18, 2021
Docket21-1477
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Roger Sweet (United States v. Roger Sweet) 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. Roger Sweet, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0527n.06

Case No. 21-1477

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Nov 18, 2021 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT v. ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ROGER JUNIOR SWEET, ) Defendant-Appellee. ) OPINION )

BEFORE: COLE, KETHLEDGE, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.

COLE, Circuit Judge. The government appeals the district court’s grant of Roger Sweet’s

motion for compassionate release after he had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. At the

time of his release, the 73-year-old Sweet had served 168 months of his 262-month federal

sentence for four counts of sexual exploitation of children and one count of attempted receipt of

child pornography, having received credit for the approximately 12 years he served in state custody

for a related charge of criminal sexual conduct and his first wife’s murder. Because Sweet’s

vaccination status underlies the “extraordinary and compelling reasons” meriting his release and

the district court abused its discretion when it failed to properly weigh Section 3553(a)’s factors,

we reverse. Case No. 21-1477, United States v. Sweet

I.

Sweet’s crimes came to light in January 2007, after a fire consumed his home in Michigan.

After the Brownstown Fire Department extinguished the blaze, responders found a camera,

computers, and computer hardware with cut cables stacked up in a burned-out hallway. When

investigators sought to interview Sweet and his then-wife, Lizzie Mae Collier-Sweet, about the

fire, they learned Lizzie Mae had disappeared. When asked about his wife’s disappearance, Sweet

told law enforcement that Lizzie Mae probably set the fire and “then went out in the woods and

killed herself.” (PSR, R. 25, PageID 98.) He claimed she did not like the amount of time he spent

on the computer and said he was sure she cut the devices’ cables, even though he admitted that he

alone had access to them.

Lizzie Mae’s diary suggested something quite different had happened. Before her

disappearance, Lizzie Mae wrote that she was afraid of her husband—so much so that she slept on

the couch next to a hammer and a shotgun. Lizzie Mae’s best friend told investigators the same,

explaining that Lizzie Mae was afraid of her husband and the two were divorcing. She also noted

that Sweet had long been sexually assaulting a developmentally disabled teenage girl in his

neighborhood. Though 19-years-old at the time, the neighborhood girl told law enforcement that

Sweet had sexually abused her for several years.

The arson, coupled with the sexual abuse allegations and Lizzie Mae’s disappearance,

prompted law enforcement to obtain a search warrant to search what remained of the Sweet home

and the contents of the computers.1 A forensic search of the computers revealed more than half a

million images of child pornography, including over 2,500 images of children in bondage.

1 About seven years into Sweet’s sentence, authorities found Lizzie Mae’s body in a shallow grave about a mile from Sweet’s home. The autopsy was indeterminate as to cause of death.

-2- Case No. 21-1477, United States v. Sweet

The computers also contained over 1,000 images Sweet had made of his repeated rapes of the

neighborhood girl while she was 16- and 17-years old.

In light of Lizzie Mae’s disappearance, authorities in nearby Oakland County, Michigan,

decided to reexamine the untimely death of Sweet’s first wife, Marlene. Marlene died in 1990

from head injuries, which Sweet claimed were the result of an accidental fall. After reviewing

Marlene’s autopsy, the medical examiner concluded the bruising on her body could not have been

caused by an accident and ruled her death a homicide. Marlene and Roger Sweet’s son testified

that his father abused his mother frequently, and Marlene’s brother confirmed the same.

In 2007, local and federal officials charged Sweet with several crimes. Oakland County

officials charged him with second-degree murder for Marlene’s death. Wayne County charged

him with criminal sexual conduct for his many assaults on the neighborhood girl. And federal

officials indicted him on four counts of sexual exploitation of children for producing pornographic

images of her, as well as one count each of receiving and possessing child pornography.

Pursuant to a plea agreement, Sweet pleaded guilty to the murder of his first wife, criminal

sexual conduct, four counts of sexual exploitation of children, and one count of attempted receipt

of child pornography. The Oakland County court sentenced him to 15–30 years for the murder of

his first wife, and the Wayne County court sentenced him to 10–17 years for criminal sexual

conduct. United States v. Sweet, No. 07-20369, 2021 WL 1430836, at *1 (E.D. Mich. Apr. 15,

2021). For his federal crimes, the district court imposed concurrent sentences of 262 months for

the sexual exploitation charges and 240 months for attempted receipt of child pornography. All

the sentences were to be served concurrently.

After serving about 12 years in state custody, Sweet arrived in federal custody in May

2019. In April 2020, he was briefly hospitalized after contracting COVID-19. Sweet, proceeding

-3- Case No. 21-1477, United States v. Sweet

pro se, moved for his release under 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(1)(A) in December 2020. The district

court appointed a public defender to represent Sweet shortly thereafter. Although Sweet received

the first dose of the Moderna vaccine in January 2021, he continued to press for his release with

the assistance of counsel. In April 2021, the district court granted his motion for compassionate

release.

In its order, the district court concluded Sweet’s age and chronic kidney disease provided

extraordinary and compelling reasons for his release. Sweet, 2021 WL 1430836, at *2. Relying

on guidance from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the district court noted that

Sweet, at 73-years-old, was “at increased risk” for “severe illness or death from COVID-19[.]” Id.

Additionally, the district court observed that the CDC had added “chronic kidney disease” “of any

stage” to the list of conditions that create an increased risk of severe illness from COVID. Id.

(citation omitted). Though it “agree[d] with the government that recovering from COVID-19 and

being fully vaccinated decrease[d] [Sweet’s] likelihood of severe COVID symptoms,” the district

court stressed the potential for Sweet’s reinfection because of the prison’s congregate setting. Id.

at *3.

Concluding that Sweet’s health conditions and advanced age satisfied the statute’s

“extraordinary and compelling reasons” requirement, the district court then considered whether

the Section 3553(a) factors weighed against Sweet’s release. Id. at *3–4. The court first

acknowledged that Sweet’s crimes were “abhorrent” and quickly noted that “the nature and the

circumstances of [his] underlying offense[s] weigh[ed] heavily against [him].” Id. at *3. It

ultimately found, however, that Sweet’s spotless disciplinary record while incarcerated

“demonstrate[d] a respect for the law” and suggested Sweet’s age “could reduce the likelihood that

he will recidivate.” Id. (citation omitted). In the court’s view, releasing Sweet would not create

-4- Case No.

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