Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Good News for Federal Defendants with Massachusetts Assault and Battery Convictions


Following Assistant Federal Defender Syrie Fried's win in US v. Holloway, the probation office will no longer score all Massachusetts A & B's a "crime of violence" predicates for Armed Career Criminal OR for Career Offender purposes. This is sure make a significant reduction in career offender sentences (usually starting at 151+ or 262+ months).


US Probation has released the following communique:

QUOTE
Subject A&B - Holloway Decision
On 1/21/11, the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals issued its ruling in U.S. v. Holloway, which raised the issue of whether the boilerplate "did assault and beat" language was sufficient to categorize a conviction for Assault and Battery as a violent felony for ACCA purposes. A long line of cases,starting with U.S. v. Mangos (1998), had held that this language was sufficent to identify the offense as "harmful battery," as opposed to "offensive" or "reckless" battery. In light of the Supreme Court's
decision in Johnson v. U.S. (2010)(dealing with a FL battery statute), the 1st Circuit revisited its prior holdings.

In sum, the Court has now ruled in Holloway that the boilerplate "did assault and beat" language is not sufficient to categorize the conviction as a violent felony, and that Shepard approved evidence (i.e., indictment, plea colloquy, jury instructions) would need to be submitted in order to establish that it was "harmful battery" (the only one of the three types of battery covered by the MA statute that the 1st Circuit has determined to be a violent felony). This decision does not specifically address whether A&B as currently charged meets the definition of "crime of violence" in USSG 4B1.2, though the Court has held that the violent felony and crime of violence definitions are nearly identical in meaning and that because of
this, "decisions construing one term inform the construction of the other."

In line with this ruling, the Probation Office will no longer consider simple A&B (absent Shepard approved evidence) a violent felony for ACC purposes or a crime violence per USSG 4B1.2. This will not only impact the Career Offender guideline, but other guidelines that incorporate the crime of violence definition therein, including 2L1.2 (Illegal Re-Entry), 2K2.1 (Firearms), and 4A1.1(e) (multiple crimes of violence).

Officers are currently reviewing all pending cases and will be reaching out to counsel as necessary to discuss any modifications that will be made to the Presentence Report as a result of the Holloway decision.

Please feel free to share this e-mail with your colleagues.
END QUOTE

Huge congratulations are in order for Syrie Fried. This kind breakthrough rarely happens in the 1st Circuit.
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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Lee County Murder Lawyer David A. Brener and Partner Thomas DeMine To Try Strangulation Murder Case In February

Lee County Murder Lawyer Attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100 and his Partner Thomas E. DeMine will be trying a Fort Myers strangulation homicide at the Lee County Justice Center in February 2011. The case is expected to last between one and two weeks. The state is not seeking the death penalty.
Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl. 33907
239-332-1100
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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Fort Myers Florida Homicide Attorney David A. Brener To Speak At "Death Is Different" Seminar

Fort Myers Florida Homicide Attorney Lawyer David A. Brener 239-332-1100 has been invited to speak at the annual Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers death penalty seminar "Death is Different" in March 2011. Brener's topic will be jury selection in capital cases - "Re-thinking Change of Venue in High Profile Capital Cases: Staying Put and Using Morgan v. Illinois and Pre-trial Publicity To Remove Pro-Death Jurors." This method of jury selection - a modified "Colorado Method" approach addressing the removal of mitigation-impaired and publicity-exposed prospective jurors, has been used by capital counsel, including Brener in a 2010 aggravated capital murder case, to seat juries which can recommend life in prison, rather than the death penalty, in spite of the death-biased death qualification process.
Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers,Fl. 33901
239-332-1100
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Wednesday, January 19, 2011


The United States Supreme Court has handed down a series of decisions limiting the application of the Armed Career Criminal Statute and the Career Offender. This new law should stop the long-term trend of sentencing minor predicate offenders under statutes originally intended to lock away only the most violent career criminals. With more than 2.3 million Americans in jail or prison and 214,000 of them in federal prisons, a halt to ever longer sentences is much overdue.


For over twenty years, the Justice Department and US Courts of Appeals have been broadening the classification of a "crime of violence" (under the ACCA statute and the Career Offender Guideline) to apply to predicate convictions that have never previously been classified as violent crime. Courts now routinely sentence defendants as violent offenders for more minor crime like third offense drunk driving, for failing to stop for blue lights or for state-law misdemeanors in jurisdictions where misdemeanors have a potential two and a half-year maximum.


Armed Career Criminal statute usually applies an "enhanced" Guidelines range of 262-327 months and special mandatory minimum sentences to repeat offenders charged with certain armed conduct. The Career Offender Guideline USSG Sec. 4B1.2 typically does the same in drug charges and other crimes of violence applying sentencing ranges of 151+, 210+, 262+ months and even a 360-month to life range.




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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Florida Murder Lawyer Attorney David A. Brener To Be Guest Speaker

Florida Murder Lawyer Attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100 has been invited to give a presentation on jury selection in capital murder cases at "Loosening the Death Belt", a death penalty seminar sponsored by the Alabama Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. The seminar runs from January 28th to 30th 2011, in Birmingham, Alabama.

David A. Brener
Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl.33907
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