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United States v. Davis
David J. Sheldon, Douglas P. Morabito, U.S. Attorney's Office, New Haven, CT, Marc Harris Silverman, DOJ-USAO, New Haven, CT, for United States of America.
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO DISMISS
Defendant Aliyah Theresa Juliate Davis moves to dismiss the petition charging her with violation of her supervised release because a warrant or summons failed to issue before her supervised release term ended on March 5, 2023, meaning the Court lacks jurisdiction over the violation petition under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(i). [Doc. # 77]. The Government opposes, arguing that the Court's docketed notice of the hearing [Doc. # 67] served as a summons that extended its jurisdiction to adjudicate the alleged violation. [Doc. # 78]. For the reasons stated below, the Defendant's motion is GRANTED.
Defendant pled guilty to wire fraud, passport fraud, making a false statement, and aggravated identity theft on December 12, 2016. (Gov't's Opp'n to Def.'s Mot to Dismiss [Doc. # 78] at 1.) Defendant's term of supervised release began on March 6, 2020, and was set to terminate on March 5, 2023. (Id. at 2.) The Probation Office submitted a petition for the Court to issue a summons requiring Davis to appear for a violation hearing, and on March 2, 2023, the Court signed the petition and ordered that a summons be issued for a violation hearing to be held on March 6, 2023 at 1pm in Courtroom 2. (Id.) The signed petition was entered on the docket on March 3, 2023, along with a calendar docket entry that read: [Doc. # 67.]
That same day, Defendant's counsel contacted the Court, Probation, and the Government via email asking if the hearing could be rescheduled so that Defendant's new counsel could appear, but also stating that "if the Court's preference is to keep this supervised release hearing scheduled for 1 PM on Monday, I will make sure either I or someone else in my office is present and prepared to handle it." (Id.) The Court's courtroom deputy sent a follow-up email proposing March 9, and the date was confirmed with counsel for both sides and Probation. (Id.) A docket entry appeared that day resetting the hearing. (Id.) A summons was issued on March 8, 2023 for the defendant to appear at the March 9, 2023 hearing. (Id.) The hearing was continued until March 24, 2023, and Defendant filed her motion to dismiss on March 16, 2023; oral argument on the motion was held on March 24, 2023.
The Court's jurisdiction is governed by 18 U.S.C. § 3583(i), which states that "[t]he power of the court to revoke a term of supervised release for violation of a condition of supervised release . . . extends beyond the expiration of the term of supervised release for any period reasonably necessary for the adjudication of matters arising before its expiration if, before its expiration, a warrant or summons has been issued on the basis of an allegation of such a violation." (emphasis added.)
Before addressing the merits of the parties' arguments, some background on 18 U.S.C. § 3583(i) is appropriate. Prior to the enactment of the statute, district courts "took different approaches to balancing the interests of former releasees in repose and those of the government in punishing timely-detected late-term violations," and generally "identified either the filing of a petition for revocation with the court or the provision of notice to a releasee that the government would seek to revoke the term of release as the event that would trigger an extension of jurisdiction." United States v. Janvier, 599 F.3d 264 (2d Cir. 2010). Congress resolved the uncertainty surrounding the question with the enactment of 18 U.S.C. § 3583(i) in 1994. The Second Circuit in Janvier, 599 F.3d at 264, found that Congress' choice to make the issuance of a warrant or summons the triggering event for the extension of jurisdiction should be interpreted as a "rejection" of the idea that any other triggering event would suffice, making the issuance of a warrant or summons the "exclusive" means of extending the court's jurisdiction over probation violations. Id. at 268.
The question had come before the Second Circuit based on a petition filed in the district court alleging violations of the defendant's supervised release that was submitted on July 21, 2008; the term of his supervised release ended the next day, on July 22, 2008. Id. at 269. The district court "checked the box" on the form accompanying the petition ordering the issuance of a warrant, and signed it, on July 21, 2008; however, the warrant did not issue until July 23, 2008. Id. Janvier held that "[b]ecause no warrant issued here during the term of supervised release, under the plain terms of the governing statute the district court lacked power to revoke the supervised release term after its expiration based on [defendant's] last-minute violation of the conditions of his release." Id. While the Second Circuit acknowledged that from "a policy standpoint, it might well make more sense to trigger the retention of jurisdiction by the action of a judicial officer . . . directing that a warrant issue, rather than by the purely ministerial action of the clerk of the court in actually issuing the warrant, which follows inevitably from the court's action," id. at 268, it explained that to take that position "would be to rewrite the statute to say something that it does not say," because the plain language of the statute required that a warrant or summons to be "issued" in order to extend jurisdiction, thus "clearly referencing the issuance of a warrant as an action that has been perfected." Id. (emphasis added.)
Although Janvier appeared to establish a bright-line rule, a unanimous panel of the Second Circuit subsequently added a new dimension to the analysis with the issuance of its summary order in United States v. Bunn, 542 F. App'x 50, 53 (2d Cir. 2013). There, the district court had issued an order on April 6, 2012, for a supervised release violation hearing on April 9, 2012; the defendant's term of supervision was set to expire on May 10, 2012. Id. at 52. Although no formal summons was issued, the district court issued an order which was based on detailed allegations of a violation of supervision, "signed by Judge Barbara Jones," ordering "[t]he issuance of a summons," and stating that "Bunn is directed to appear" on "April 9, 2012," at "2:30" in "Courtroom 17C" of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Id. The panel held that "[f]rom these facts, as well as the relevant law specifying minimal requirements for the issuance of a summons to answer supervised release violation charges, we easily conclude that a summons was issued[.]" Bunn distinguished itself from Janvier by explaining that there, "no supplemental information was added" to the form on which the box was checked ordering the issuance of a warrant "that allowed it to be construed as a warrant, in sharp contrast to this case where it was the additional information that effectively transformed the form into a summons." Id.
Defendant argues that because no formal summons issued until March 8, and her supervised release term expired on March 5, the Court has no jurisdiction to adjudicate her alleged violations because the order directing the issuance of a summons was insufficient to preserve jurisdiction based on Janvier. (Def.'s Mot. to Dismiss. [Doc. # 77] at 1.) The Government disagrees, and argues that the order meets the requirements set forth in Bunn. What those requirements might be, however, is less than clear. Relying on Black's Law Dictionary, 1450 (7th ed. 1999), Bunn found that a "summons" is "generally understood to be the process for requiring a defendant to appear and answer in an action." Bunn, 542 Fed. App'x at 51. Beyond that, however, the summary order provided little guidance on what the necessary indicia of a summons might be; it rejected the idea that a summons needed to meet the requirements of Fed. R. Crim. P. 4(b)(2), which states that a summons must require the defendant to appear before a magistrate judge at a stated time and place, and include the defendant's name, a description of the offense charged, and the judge's signature, but nevertheless made a point of confirming that the district court's order would have met those requirements, and that the order specifically stated "Bunn is directed to appear." Id. at 51-52. Bunn also relied on the inclusion of "supplemental information" in the district court's order to distinguish it from Janvier, but was silent as to which pieces or how much of that information were necessary or sufficient predicates for the issuance of a summons. Id. at 52.
In resolving the questions Bunn and Janvier left open, the Court looks to the Third Circuit's opinion in United States v. Merlino, 785 F.3d 79 (3d Cir. 2015)1 for guidance. When considering whether a district court order "directing the issuance of a summons, taken in combination with notice to [defendant's] counsel," satisfied the statutory requirement that a "summons" be issued, Merlino relied heavily on Fed. R. Crim. P. 4(b)(2) for guidance, and also looked to Black's Law Dictionary 1665 (10th ed. 2014), which defined summons as a "writ or process commencing the plaintiff's action and requiring the defendant to appear and answer", and Ballentine's Law Dictionary 1238 (3d ed. 1969), which defined summons as the "original process...
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