Author Topic: No new grants, but a rebuke for the 5th Circuit  (Read 511 times)

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Offline Elderberry

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No new grants, but a rebuke for the 5th Circuit
« on: March 24, 2020, 07:30:31 pm »
SCOTUSblog by Amy Howe 3/23/2020

Last Friday, the justices had their regularly scheduled private conference. According to the court’s Public Information Office, the meeting was a departure from their normal format: Following Center for Disease Control guidelines to combat the spread of the coronavirus, only Chief Justice John Roberts was actually in the justices’ conference room, with the rest of the justices joining the meeting by phone. Today the justices issued orders from that conference, but they did not add any new cases to their docket for next term.

The justices summarily vacated a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in the case of Charles Davis, who in 2016 pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm and possessing drugs with the intent to distribute them. Davis was sentenced to 40 months in federal prison, with his sentence to start after time in prison for state offenses in 2015 for which he had not yet been sentenced.

Davis did not object to his sentence at the time, but when he appealed to the 5th Circuit he argued that his federal sentence should run concurrently with, rather than consecutively to, his state sentences because they were part of the “same course of conduct.” However, the 5th Circuit refused to consider his argument at all. Although an appellate court normally reviews an argument that a criminal defendant did not raise in the district court for “plain error,” the 5th Circuit ruled that Davis’ argument involved a question of fact. And in the 5th Circuit, questions of fact that the district court could have resolved if the defendant had objected cannot be plain error.

More: https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/03/no-new-grants-but-a-rebuke-for-the-5th-circuit/