United States v. Adrian Weems ( 2023 )


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  •                 6United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 22-2610
    No. 23-1245
    ___________________________
    United States of America
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Adrian Lamar Weems
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Iowa - Eastern
    ____________
    Submitted: January 13, 2023 and July 31, 2023
    Filed: August 11, 2023
    ____________
    Before SMITH, Chief Judge, WOLLMAN and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
    In 2016, Adrian Lamar Weems pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute
    methamphetamine in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), and 846. He
    was sentenced to 120 months’ imprisonment followed by five years of supervised
    release. One special condition of supervised release required him to participate in a
    sex offender treatment program. At sentencing, the district court1 overruled Weems’s
    objection to this special condition because the government advised that he “had just
    been released from prison in 2014 for violating the terms of his Sex Offender
    Registry.”2 Weems appealed. We affirmed, declining to consider Weems’s pro se
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, enforcing his partial appeal waiver, and
    rejecting his claim that the district court “abuse[d] its discretion in imposing the
    special conditions of supervised release.” United States v. Weems, 683 Fed. App’x.
    544, 544-45 (8th Cir. 2017).
    Weems began his term of supervised release on May 17, 2022. The next day,
    he told his probation officer that he would not participate in sex offender treatment
    as it did not pertain to his drug offense. At the ensuing revocation hearing, Weems
    stated:
    I’m here on a drug case, and for the courts to say that I have to
    participate in something that’s not related, then that goes against my
    rights. . . . I am not going to do something that ain’t got nothing to do
    with my case.
    Noting that this was a special condition upheld on appeal, the district court3 stated:
    1
    The Honorable John A. Jarvey, then Chief Judge of the United States District
    Court for the Southern District of Iowa, imposed the original sentence.
    2
    In 2008, Weems pleaded guilty in Illinois state court to aggravated criminal
    sexual abuse of a victim under thirteen years old. In 2010, after serving this
    sentence, Weems pleaded guilty to providing false information in his sex offender
    registration. This seven-year Illinois sentence was discharged in June 2014.
    3
    The Honorable Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger, United States District Judge for
    the Southern District of Iowa.
    -2-
    Defendants do not get to choose which of their conditions they
    want to and do not want to follow. It is an order of the Court that must
    be followed. . . . [T]hat is not a violation of his rights . . . and [his refusal
    to comply] simply cannot stand.
    The court imposed a revocation sentence of six months’ imprisonment followed by
    five years of supervised release, reimposing all prior special conditions, including
    requirements that Weems participate in sex offender treatment programming and
    spend 180 days in a residential reentry center upon his release from custody. Weems
    objected to the sex offender treatment special condition and appealed. That is
    Docket No. 22-2610. He argued the district court abused its discretion by imposing
    a condition that does not reasonably relate to the relevant sentencing factors.
    While that appeal was pending, Weems was released from custody and again
    began supervised release on December 23, 2022. He immediately failed to abide by
    the rules of the residential reentry center by refusing to sign three required intake
    forms, a mental health release, a drug abuse program release, and a generalized
    information release, releases used by treatment providers to obtain various records.
    Probation then commenced a second revocation proceeding. At the January 2023
    revocation hearing, Weems stated that he refused to comply with the intake process
    because “it doesn’t have nothing to do with my case. I’m on a drug case. . . . I just
    want to do my time for the drug case.” The district court4 sentenced Weems to eight
    months’ imprisonment, followed by sixty months’ supervised release “on the same
    conditions that were previously imposed.” The court explained:
    I’m not ready yet to give up on supervised release for you. . . . I
    sincerely hope, Mr. Weems, that you give thought to whether those
    supervised release conditions are things that you’re willing to live with
    4
    The Honorable Stephen H. Locher, United States District Judge for the
    Southern District of Iowa.
    -3-
    after all because, again, they are designed in substantial part to help you,
    if you’ll let them.
    Weems appealed this second revocation sentence. That is our Docket No. 23-1245.
    We consolidate the two appeals and address both in this opinion.
    In No. 23-1245, Weems’s counsel filed a brief and moved to withdraw under
    Anders v. California, 
    386 U.S. 738
     (1967), arguing the district court abused its
    discretion by imposing a substantively unreasonable revocation sentence. We granted
    counsel’s motion to withdraw and granted Weems leave to file a pro se supplemental
    brief. He timely filed a supplemental brief.
    The issue in the first revocation proceeding -- Weems’s refusal to attend sex
    offender treatment -- is behavior “capable of repetition” while “evading review.”
    United States v. Melton, 
    666 F.3d 513
    , 515 n.3 (8th Cir. 2012). Therefore, when the
    appeal in No. 23-1245 was filed, we delayed ruling on the mootness issue,
    anticipating Weems might challenge reimposition of this special condition in the
    second revocation sentence. Cf. United States v. Griffin, 832 Fed. App’x. 462 (8th
    Cir. 2020). But he has not done so. Neither brief in No. 23-1245 challenges the
    special conditions of supervised release reimposed in the second revocation sentence,
    including the sex offender treatment condition. The condition challenged in No. 22-
    2610 was reimposed in the second revocation sentence and not challenged in the
    appeal of that sentence. Therefore, we dismiss the appeal in No. 22-2610 as moot.
    That neither Weems nor his counsel again raised the sex offender treatment
    condition in No. 23-1245 is understandable. As the district court noted in response
    to Weems’s argument at the first revocation hearing, we have “upheld special
    conditions of supervised release not directly related to the offense for which the
    defendant is being sentenced where the special conditions are related to another
    offense that the defendant previously committed.” United States v. Stelmacher, 891
    -4-
    F.3d 730, 733 (8th Cir. 2018) (quotation omitted). And this condition was upheld on
    direct appeal. Weems, 683 Fed. App’x at 545.
    Turning to the appeal in No. 23-1245, Weems’s counsel argues the second
    revocation sentence is substantively unreasonable because the district court did not
    give adequate weight to “the mitigation evidence surrounding the circumstances of
    Weems’ violation that was submitted by proffer and by Weems.” However, the
    district court did consider mitigating circumstances and carefully explained, in the
    context of the § 3553(a) sentencing factors, why it imposed a term of imprisonment.
    The court noted that Weems’s unwillingness to sign reentry documents and go
    through needed evaluation and treatment affects whether a term of imprisonment is
    needed to afford adequate deterrence, protect public safety, and provide Weems with
    training, medical care, and correctional treatment he needs. The court sentenced
    Weems to eight months’ imprisonment, the middle of his revocation guidelines range,
    five to eleven months. A within-range sentence is afforded a presumption of
    reasonableness. See, e.g., United States v. Jones, 
    49 F.4th 1144
    , 1145 (8th Cir.
    2022). Reviewing for abuse of the district court’s substantial revocation sentencing
    discretion, we conclude the sentence is not substantively unreasonable. See United
    States v. Hobbs, 
    710 F.3d 850
    , 852 (8th Cir. 2013) (standard of review).
    As we understand Weems’s supplemental pro se brief, he argues that the state
    and federal statutes requiring a sex offender to register where he resides, which were
    the basis for his second Illinois sex offender conviction, are unconstitutional, and a
    ruling to that effect “would necessarily imply the invalidity of [his] current
    conviction.” He acknowledges that “[m]any of these constitutional challenges have
    already been rejected,” but he argues that his counsel provided ineffective assistance
    in failing to raise these issues. It is unclear how and in what proceeding Weems is
    asserting that counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge his sex offender
    registration obligations. But in any event, like the claim of ineffective assistance
    Weems raised in his prior appeal, we decline to consider the claim on this direct
    -5-
    appeal of his revocation sentence. Weems, 683 F. App’x at 454; see United States
    v. Sanchez-Gonzalez, 
    643 F.3d 626
    , 628-29 (8th Cir. 2011).
    Weems further argues that his second revocation sentence is contrary to the
    decision in United States v. Haymond, 
    139 S. Ct. 2369 (2019)
    . This contention is
    without merit. Haymond held that 
    18 U.S.C. § 3583
    (k), which required imposing a
    mandatory revocation sentence when a defendant required to register under SORNA
    committed certain offenses, violates the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to jury
    trial. Section 3583(k) was not at issue in Weems’s revocation sentencings.
    Consistent with the Supreme Court opinions in Haymond, we have limited that
    decision “to § 3583(k), not to all cases under § 3583.” United States v. Childs, 
    17 F.4th 790
    , 792 (8th Cir. 2021).
    In No. 22-2610, we dismiss the appeal as moot. In No. 23-1245, we affirm the
    judgment of the district court.
    ______________________________
    -6-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 22-2610

Filed Date: 8/11/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/11/2023