Court Opinion

ID: 9381554
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-23 15:01:15.453827+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:32.815401
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                            For the Eighth Circuit
                        ___________________________

                                No. 21-2363
                        ___________________________

                             Justin Thomas Morales

                                     Plaintiff - Appellant

                                        v.

                            United States of America

                                   Respondent - Appellee
                                 ____________

                    Appeal from United States District Court
                   for the District of South Dakota - Southern
                                  ____________

                          Submitted: October 21, 2022
                             Filed: March 23, 2023
                                 [Unpublished]
                                  ____________

Before KELLY, WOLLMAN, and KOBES, Circuit Judges.
                                  ____________

PER CURIAM.

       Justin Morales moved under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to vacate his sentence based on
ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court denied Morales’s motion
because he had not suffered prejudice. We reverse and remand because Morales
may have been prejudiced by his term of supervised release.
      Morales was convicted for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine in
2018. The Government sought a sentencing enhancement under 21 U.S.C. § 851
because Morales had a 2003 felony drug conviction. Without the § 851
enhancement, Morales faced a statutory minimum of ten years in prison and five
years of supervised release. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A). With the § 851
enhancement, Morales’s minimums doubled to twenty years in prison and ten years
of supervised release. See id. §§ 841(b)(1)(A), 851. The district court applied the
enhancement and sentenced Morales to thirty years in prison and ten years of
supervised release.

      Morales then filed a § 2255 motion for ineffective assistance of counsel. To
succeed, Morales had to demonstrate that (1) he received deficient representation
from his counsel and (2) the deficient representation was prejudicial. See Strickland
v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). Morales argued that his counsel should
have challenged the § 851 enhancement because his 2003 felony drug conviction
was an impermissible predicate offense. 1 Since his counsel did not make this
argument, Morales argued that he received ineffective assistance.

      The district court denied the motion. The court found that, regardless of his
counsel’s possible deficient performance,2 Morales had not been prejudiced. The
sentencing court imposed a prison sentence above the mandatory minimum with the
enhancement. So even without the enhancement, it was likely that Morales would
have received the same prison sentence. Because of this, the district court found that
any possible deficient performance had not been prejudicial.

      1
        Morales claimed that his 2003 conviction was based on a Kansas statute that
was broader than the federal statute, so the 2003 conviction could not qualify as a
predicate offense. See Mathis v. United States, 579 U.S. 500, 509 (2016).
      2
        The district court did not directly rule on whether the 2003 conviction was a
predicate offense.
                                           -2-
       Whether or not the district court was right about Morales’s term of
imprisonment, it appeared to overlook supervised release. A term of supervised
release is not a post-sentence penalty, but part of the sentence. United States v.
Perrin, 926 F.3d 1044, 1049 (8th Cir. 2019). And, as previously noted, the § 851
enhancement increased both the statutory minimum and the Guidelines range for
supervised release to ten years.

       Since the sentencing court imposed the shortest term of supervised release
possible under the statute, “there is a reasonable probability that the outcome would
have been different but for counsel’s deficient performance.” Theus v. United
States, 611 F.3d 441, 447 (8th Cir. 2010). If the statutory minimum and the
Guidelines recommendation were five years, there is a reasonable probability
“sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome” that the sentencing court would
have imposed a lesser sentence of supervised release. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.

      Because Morales may have been prejudiced by the application of the § 851
enhancement, at least on the supervised release part of his sentence, we reverse the
decision of the district court and remand for further consideration, including the
threshold determination of whether counsel was deficient.
                        ______________________________

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