United States v. Brown, Carnell ( 2001 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Nos. 00-3521 & 00-3847
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    CARNELL BROWN,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    Cross-Appellee.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Western Division.
    No. 00-CR-50005--Philip G. Reinhard, Judge.
    Argued September 13, 2001--Decided December 7, 2001
    Before RIPPLE, ROVNER, and EVANS, Circuit
    Judges.
    EVANS, Circuit Judge. A few years ago,
    we observed that defendants who receive
    favorable calls under the federal
    sentencing guidelines should think twice
    (actually we said more than twice) about
    appealing their cases when they have
    little likelihood of success. United
    States v. Bradley, 
    165 F.3d 594
    (1999).
    That caution was appropriate, we thought,
    because a defendant’s appeal often draws
    a cross-appeal by the government of the
    sentence imposed where it otherwise might
    not be inclined to appeal. This case
    comes to us in precisely the same fashion
    as did Bradley, where we issued our
    cautionary advice. Carnell Brown appeals
    his conviction on a charge of being a
    felon in possession of a firearm (18
    U.S.C. sec. 922(g)), but his appeal has
    little merit. On the other hand, the
    government’s cross-appeal on a sentencing
    issue, which may or may not have been
    filed if Brown hadn’t appealed (we’ll
    never know for sure), has some bite. For
    the reasons we are about to state, we
    affirm Brown’s conviction but vacate his
    sentence and remand for further
    proceedings.
    Brown’s appeal can be quickly resolved.
    Here are the only facts we really have to
    know.
    A police officer stopped a car Brown was
    driving around midnight on a December
    evening in an area of Rockford, Illinois,
    where considerable criminal activity--
    including the shooting of a police
    officer a few months before--takes place.
    Brown’s car was stopped because its
    license plate, which was lying down in
    the area of the rear window, was not
    visible. When the car was stopped, the
    officer said Brown appeared to be
    nervous, repeatedly glanced backwards,
    and seemed to be moving his hands around
    his lap area. When Brown could not
    produce a driver’s license (apparently it
    was suspended) and had no other
    identification, he was told to step out
    of the car. Brown complied with the
    request but made a quick move, which
    caused the officer to decide to pat him
    down. The pat-down revealed a loaded .38
    caliber Smith & Wesson revolver to be
    lurking in the right front pocket of the
    jacket Brown was wearing.
    A nighttime traffic stop, especially in
    an area where crime is not a stranger, is
    more fraught with potential danger to an
    officer than would be a stop during the
    light of day. And a stop by a lone
    officer at night is even more dangerous.
    Add to this Brown’s movements in the car,
    his failure to produce a license, and his
    quick movement, and we have, from the
    officer’s perspective, more than what is
    necessary to conclude that a limited pat-
    down for weapons was a permissible and
    prudent course for the officer to take to
    better ensure his safety. As Terry v.
    Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , holds, if the facts
    demonstrate that "a reasonably prudent
    man in the circumstances would be
    warranted in the belief that his safety .
    . . was in danger," a limited search for
    a weapon is permissible. It was
    permissible here. All this means that the
    district judge did not err, as the
    defendant now argues, when he denied a
    motion to suppress the revolver from the
    evidence presented at the trial which
    resulted in Brown’s conviction.
    Brown also makes a half-hearted attack
    on the sufficiency of the evidence
    against him, but once the gun was
    received, any attempt to claim--as Brown
    did to the jury--that he didn’t
    "knowingly" possess it was feeble. The
    evidence was clearly sufficient.
    Brown’s final argument also comes up
    dry. When he was sentenced, his guideline
    range was increased by 2 levels for
    obstructing justice under U.S.S.G.
    sec.3C1.1 because the judge determined
    that Brown lied when he testified that he
    told the officer "I don’t know where that
    gun come (came) from" as it was removed
    from his jacket. The arresting officer
    gave contrary testimony during the trial,
    noting that Brown said nothing and
    expressed no surprise when the gun was
    discovered. The judge’s determination
    that Brown lied, a finding of fact
    reviewable only for clear error, will not
    be disturbed.
    Which brings us to the government’s
    cross-appeal. The federal sentencing
    guideline scheme calls for more severe
    sentences when defendants have criminal
    records. In addition to the general
    ratcheting up of a sentence based on a
    defendant’s criminal history under the
    guideline grid, substantially increased
    penalties are called for under several
    laws, including the Armed Career Criminal
    Act, 18 U.S.C. sec. 924(e), which is
    involved in this case. Under that Act, a
    third conviction for a "violent felony"
    triggers a greater sentence, and the
    issue presented by the government’s
    cross-appeal is whether Brown had three
    qualifying convictions. Brown concedes
    that he has two qualifying "violent
    felony" prior convictions,/1 but he
    denies that a third conviction, one
    recorded in 1984, qualifies as a violent
    felony under sec. 924(e). The district
    court agreed with Brown on this issue and
    declined to impose sentence under the
    Armed Career Criminal Act.
    The Armed Career Criminal Act defines a
    "violent felony" as including any crime
    that "otherwise involves conduct that
    presents a serious potential risk of
    physical injury to another." 18 U.S.C.
    sec. 924(e)(2)(B)(ii). Brown’s third
    felony involved a violation of the
    Illinois pandering statute, 720 ILCS sec.
    5/11-16.
    Everyone pretty much knows what a
    panderer is--quaint language in a 70-
    year-old Kentucky case colorfully tells
    us that he is someone "who procures for
    another the gratification for his lusts.
    He is a panderer who solicits trade for a
    prostitute, or lewd woman." Lutes v.
    Commonwealth, 
    33 S.W.2d 620
    (Court of
    Appeals of Kentucky, 1930). The Illinois
    statute under which Brown was convicted
    describes two kinds of panderers, one
    being someone who merely "arranges" a
    situation in which a person may practice
    prostitution and the other being someone
    who "compels" a person to become a
    prostitute. Although both types of
    panderers must act "for money" and both
    are guilty of Class 4 felonies in
    Illinois if they do so, it is obvious
    that the "compeller" is a more serious
    violator of the law than a mere
    "arranger." Brown was charged and
    convicted under the "compelling" prong of
    the statute.
    The very able district court in this
    case concluded that Brown’s pandering-by-
    compulsion conviction was not a violent
    felony because "the potential risk of
    physical injury to another is not always
    present in this type of offense." The
    judge’s conclusion was reached after
    comparing Brown’s conviction to the prior
    convictions at issue in United States v.
    Shannon, 
    110 F.3d 382
    (7th Cir. 1997) (en
    banc) (holding that statutory rape of 13-
    year-old girl is violent felony), and
    United States v. Thomas, 
    159 F.3d 296
    (7th Cir. 1998) (holding that statutory
    rape where age of victim did not appear
    on charging document was not a violent
    felony). Focusing on the age of the
    victim in the two cases, the judge held
    that Brown’s conviction "falls closer to"
    the conviction in Thomas.
    We respectfully disagree with the
    district judge’s conclusion because we
    think it ignores the compelled,
    nonconsensual nature of the prostitute’s
    acts under the compelling prong of the
    Illinois pandering law. We think forced
    nonconsensual sex with strangers is
    "conduct that presents a serious
    potential risk of physical injury to
    another" as proscribed under the
    "otherwise" clause of the Armed Career
    Criminal Act.
    We have broadly interpreted the
    "otherwise" clause of sec. 924(e) to
    include certain types of even nonforcible
    consensual sex, such as certain
    variations of statutory rape. 
    Shannon, 110 F.3d at 387
    . In Thomas, we observed
    that compelled, "unconsented-to sex" with
    strangers is, "at the least, 
    battery." 159 F.3d at 299
    . It really is more than
    that in our case because the prostitute,
    acting under compulsion, is not capable
    of giving "meaningful consent" to paid
    sexual acts. As we have explained, "[a]ll
    forcible sex offenses are crimes of
    violence," but "it does not follow that
    no nonforcible ones are." 
    Shannon, 110 F.3d at 387
    . Pandering by compulsion may
    not always involve actual force, but it
    is always a coerced sex offense,
    tantamount, we think, to a form of rape.
    It is thus a "violent felony" under sec.
    924(e)(2)(B)(ii) because the compelled
    sex act itself causes a "physical injury"
    to the prostitute acting, at least in
    part, not on her own volition.
    We recently held that a sexual assault
    of a minor, though not involving
    intercourse, was nevertheless a "crime of
    violence" under U.S.S.G. sec.2L1.2,
    comment. (n.5). United States v.
    Martinez-Carillo, 
    250 F.3d 1101
    , 1105
    (7th Cir. 2001). A crime of violence
    under the guidelines includes a felony
    that "presents a serious potential risk
    of physical injury to another," U.S.S.G.
    sec.4B1.2(a), a definition similar to the
    one for violent felonies under sec.
    924(e)(2)(B)(ii). The defendant in
    Martinez-Carillo, pointing to Shannon,
    argued that his offense was not a "crime
    of violence" because "inserting a finger
    into a vagina, could not possibly lead to
    the pregnancy of the child." Martinez-
    
    Carillo, 250 F.3d at 1105
    . We rejected
    that argument and distinguished Shannon
    on the ground that the prior conviction
    in that case was classified as statutory
    rape while the prior conviction then
    under consideration "punishes more than
    sexual intercourse with a minor [and] is
    concerned with the nature of the
    relationship between the defendant and
    the child-victim." 
    Id. We explained
    that
    "[d]espite the general similarities
    between" the charges in Martinez-Carillo
    and Shannon, the "statute creates a
    critical difference in our analysis
    because each case ’must be considered one
    by one to see whether the conduct
    punished by the particular law under
    which the defendant was convicted
    involves a serious risk of physical injury.’"
    
    Id. at 1105-06.
      The Illinois statute prohibiting
    pandering by compulsion punishes more
    than unlawful sexual intercourse. It is
    concerned with the nature of the
    relationship between a panderer and a
    prostitute--a situation where one person,
    for money, compels another to submit to
    nonconsensual sex with a third person.
    That situation, unlike many cases of
    statutory rape as discussed in Shannon
    and Thomas, necessarily involves
    unconsented-to activity that is, by
    itself, a type of physical injury.
    Collateral injuries, such as sexually
    transmitted diseases, only make it more
    clear that the offense of pandering by
    compulsion involves "a serious potential
    risk of physical injury."
    Finally, the judge’s conclusion that
    "the potential risk of physical injury to
    another is not always present in this
    type of offense" ignores the plain
    language of the statute, which only
    requires a "potential risk." Actual
    physical injury need not be present. But
    in a case of pandering by compulsion, the
    "risk" of physical injury is always
    present, and that satisfies the
    requirement of sec. 924(e).
    There may be other reasons--like the
    risk of contracting sexually transmitted
    diseases--for finding that pandering by
    compulsion qualifies as a violent felony
    under sec. 924(e)’s "otherwise" clause,
    but we need not consider them here. With
    what we have said, Brown qualified for
    treatment as an armed career criminal,
    and he should have been sentenced as
    such.
    One final matter before the book on this
    case is closed. On May 21, 2001, we
    issued an order to Brown’s attorney, Mark
    A. Byrd, directing him to show cause "why
    disciplinary action should not be taken
    against him pursuant to Circuit Rule
    31(c)(1) and Fed. R. App. P. 46(c)." We
    need not repeat here what was said in
    that order.
    Byrd responded to our order. To his
    credit, he acknowledges that his actions
    in this case are not defensible, and he
    has, to use his words, refused to "insult
    this Court with outlandish and
    unbelievable excuses or explanations" for
    his conduct. He "apologizes to this Court
    for his misconduct" and promises that "if
    given an opportunity, he can and will
    conform his conduct to the requisites of
    Circuit Rule 26, as well as all other
    rules of this Court."
    Based on the entire record, we believe
    a reprimand is appropriate. Attorney
    Byrd, accordingly, is reprimanded. As to
    Brown’s appeal and the government’s
    cross-appeal, the judgment of conviction
    is AFFIRMED, Brown’s sentence is VACATED,
    and the case is REMANDED for resentencing.
    FOOTNOTE
    /1 Brown’s criminal record, reproduced in the pre-
    sentence report, is horrid. In addition to an
    attempted murder conviction in 1991 and an Illi-
    nois "armed violence" conviction in 1993, his rap
    sheet is peppered with multiple convictions for
    things like theft and battery dating back to his
    days as a teenager.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 00-3521

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 12/7/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/24/2015