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United States v. Maclaren, Case No. 97-cr-144-1-SM
The defendant seeks somewhat unusual relief in this criminal case and, while the government is in agreement with the defendant, the Probation Office in this district takes an opposing position. On its face, defendant's petition presents a straightforward question, but one upon which those courts that have considered it are not in complete agreement. The question is this: when does the period of supervised release begin to run with respect to a defendant who remains in federal custody after his prison term has expired due to a stay of release, or, here, a detention order under the Adam Walsh Act's civil commitment procedures?
The government and defendant say the supervised release term begins to run when he is released from custody imposed in the civil commitment proceeding. The Probation Office disagrees, contending that defendant's supervised release term began to run when the period of imprisonment imposed by his criminal sentence expired. Consequently, the Probation Office asserts that the defendant's supervised release term has already fully run.
The weight of precedent falls heavily in favor of the government and defendant. For reasons thoroughly and persuasively explained in United States v. Maranda, 761 F.3d 689 (7th Cir. 2014), the better view appears to be that civil detention and commitment under the Adam Walsh Act precludes finding that defendant was "released from imprisonment" such that his term of supervised release began to run upon expiration of his criminal sentence to a term of imprisonment. See also United States v. Neuhauser, 745 F.3d 125 (4th Cir. 2014); United States v. Mosby, 719 F.3d 925 (8th Cir. 2013); United States v. Seger, 993 F. Supp. 2d 30 (D. Me. 2014). The Ninth Circuit has taken a different view (over the dissent of Judge M. Smith), in United States v. Turner, 689 F.3d 1117 (9th Cir. 2012). There is no controlling precedent in this circuit.
While the petition here raises complicated and nuanced issues, the specific question presented need not be decided on the merits — in the sense that the applicable law need not be construed — because in this case the principal parties, the government and the defendant, agree that the rule followed by the majority of circuit courts of appeals that have confronted the question should prevail. That position is reasonable and supported...
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