PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 09-7933
KIMBERLY WHITE,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of North Carolina, at Raleigh.
James C. Dever III, District Judge.
(5:08-cr-00081-D-1)
Argued: May 12, 2010
Decided: September 22, 2010
Before NIEMEYER, DAVIS, and KEENAN, Circuit Judges.
Reversed by published opinion. Judge Davis wrote the major-
ity opinion, in which Judge Keenan joined. Judge Keenan
wrote a separate concurring opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote a
dissenting opinion.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Joseph Bart Gilbert, OFFICE OF THE FED-
ERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Raleigh, North Carolina, for
Appellant. Tobin Webb Lathan, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
2 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
STATES ATTORNEY, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appel-
lee. ON BRIEF: Thomas P. McNamara, Federal Public
Defender, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellant. George E.
B. Holding, United States Attorney, Anne M. Hayes, Assis-
tant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
STATES ATTORNEY, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appel-
lee.
OPINION
DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
Kimberly White ("White"), who suffers from Delusional
Disorder, Grandiose Type, was indicted in the Eastern District
of North Carolina on six counts of conspiracy, credit card
fraud and identity theft. She filed an unopposed motion for
determination of her mental competency to stand trial under
18 U.S.C. § 4241. The examining experts unanimously
agreed, and it is undisputed, that White is not competent to
stand trial. When White rebuffed all efforts to treat her disor-
der, on the government’s motion, the district court held an
evidentiary hearing pursuant to Sell v. United States, 539 U.S.
166 (2003), to determine whether the government would be
permitted to forcibly medicate White for the purpose of ren-
dering her competent to stand trial. See id. at 183 (stating that
"the ultimate constitutionally required judgment" in such a
case is whether "the Government [under prescribed criteria,
has] shown a need for [forcible medication] sufficiently
important to overcome the individual’s protected interest in
refusing it") (alterations added). Over White’s objection, the
district court granted the government’s motion. White filed
this timely interlocutory appeal, as permitted by Sell. Id. at
175-77.
We agree with the district court’s finding that, as Sell
requires, "important governmental interests are at stake" in
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 3
the prosecution of White. Id. at 180. Nevertheless, we are
equally mindful that Sell commands us to "consider the facts
of the individual case in evaluating the Government’s interest
in prosecution[,]" and to take account of whether "[s]pecial
circumstances . . . lessen the importance of that interest." Id.
For the reasons set forth herein, upon our de novo review of
the asserted governmental interests and the "special circum-
stances" relevant to this case, we are persuaded that the order
under review does not pass constitutional muster. The
Supreme Court made clear in Sell that forced medication of
an accused person in an effort to restore competency for trial
is constitutionally permissible in "limited circumstances." Id.
at 169. Because we are persuaded that the district court’s
order in this case comes perilously close to a forcible medica-
tion regime best described not as "limited," but as "routine,"
we reverse.
I.
A.
On March 19, 2008, White was indicted on six counts for
the following crimes: (1) Conspiracy to Commit Credit Card
Fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count I); (2) Credit
Card Fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1029(a)(2) and 2
(Counts II, III, and IV); and (3) Aggravated Identity Theft, in
violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1028A(a)(1) and 2 (Counts V and
VI).1 On June 6, 2007, the district court had appointed counsel
1
The government summarized the factual underpinnings of the case to
the district court as follows:
The defendant and a co-conspirator were arrested on March 14,
2007, in Raleigh, North Carolina for offenses involving Obtain-
ing Property by False Pretenses and other property related
charges. In the defendant’s vehicle were found the following
items: fourteen (14) gift cards from various retailers, eleven (11)
credit cards; six (6) Sam’s Club identification cards with different
names but all bearing the defendant’s picture; and four (4) driv-
4 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
to represent White and, after the return of the indictment, that
is, on April 2, 2008, the court ordered White detained until trial.2
White’s counsel subsequently filed, and the district court
granted, an unopposed motion to determine her competency.
Thereafter, on or about April 29, 2008, White arrived at the
Federal Medical Center at Carswell, Texas ("FMCC") where
she underwent a preliminary psychological evaluation. In a
June 23, 2008 report, doctors diagnosed her with Delusional
Disorder, Grandiose Type, and found her not competent to
stand trial. In light of the competency evaluation findings, the
district court, on July 22, 2008, ordered White committed to
determine the probability of restoring her competency pursu-
ant to 18 U.S.C. § 4241(d).
B.
While White was committed to FMCC, she was evaluated
by Drs. Robert Gregg and Leslie Powers. The doctors
reported the following to the district court in their submission
of December 5, 2008:
White was consistently uncooperative with the efforts of
FMCC’s clinical staff to evaluate her. Upon arrival, clinical
staff attempted to admit her into the mental inpatient unit, the
er’s licenses with different names but all bearing the defendant’s
picture. The names on the documentation were for actual people
who had no idea their names were being used in this fraudulent
scheme.
See Memorandum in Support by USA as to Kimberly White re: Motion
to Schedule Sell Hearing (Unopposed) at 1-2, No. 5:08-CR-00081
(E.D.N.C. May 29, 2009).
2
In fact, White had been detained in state custody on parallel state
charges since her March 14, 2007 arrest. The federal district court’s
appointment of counsel to represent White on June 6, 2007, more than
nine months before she was indicted federally, apparently is explained by
the fact that her case drew both state and federal interest not long after her
arrest.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 5
M1 unit, which is used for defendants undergoing forensic
evaluations. White refused to sign admission papers or to par-
ticipate in an interview to collect her psychological and medi-
cal history. In light of her behavior, White was moved to unit
M3, the psychiatric observation unit. While there, White cre-
ated a concoction from her food that she insisted was the cure
for AIDS, and therefore, she refused to return some of her
food after meals, causing the stench of rotten food to perme-
ate the unit. Because she was afraid that someone would steal
her "antidote" for AIDS if she left her cell, White generally
refused to leave her cell to take showers or to permit staff to
clean her cell. White wrote notes all over her cell regarding
her alleged cure for AIDS and her desire to obtain a patent for
her invention. When FMCC staff took away her writing
implements, White began writing notes on her walls with the
same content in blood. Due to her actions and the stench of
her unit, the staff at FMCC assembled a team to forcibly
remove her from her cell; however, just before the team went
into her cell, she voluntarily agreed to leave.
On September 10, 2008, the staff at FMCC made a second
attempt to admit White to Unit M1 but, due to her disruptive
behavior, they quickly returned her to the psychiatric observa-
tion unit. She remained there for the duration of her observa-
tion period, refusing to submit to an evaluation, refusing to
answer questions regarding auditory or visual hallucinations,
and refusing to consider taking any psychotropic medications.
Despite the lack of a thorough medical examination, the
staff confirmed White’s diagnosis of Delusional Disorder,
Grandiose Type. In short, White believes that she has found
a cure for AIDS and breast cancer. Drs. Gregg and Powers
noted in their report that White’s symptomology is atypical
because she has no history of psychotic symptoms, she pos-
sesses an ability to modulate her symptoms in different situa-
tions, and her behavior is often contrived and volitional,
particularly with regards to her defiance and aggression
towards authority.
6 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
The evaluators concluded that White’s mental illness ren-
dered her incompetent to stand trial. Believing psychotropic
medication to be the only method by which White could be
restored to competency, the evaluators concluded that "forci-
bly medicating Ms. White [was the] only viable treatment
option." J.A. 156. In addressing the criteria for forced medica-
tion under Sell, they further opined that: (1) "psychotropic
medication is a medically appropriate treatment for White’s
illness"; (2) "medication can be prescribed which will be sub-
stantially unlikely to have side-effects which would under-
mine the trial’s fairness"; and (3) "no less-intrusive
alternatives exist which will effectively treat White’s mental
illness." Id.
C.
On January 2, 2009, the government moved for an evidenti-
ary hearing in order to elicit further information as to White’s
mental condition and the appropriateness of forced medica-
tion in light of Sell. The district court held a Sell hearing on
May 21, 2009 to determine whether the government could
forcibly medicate White in order to restore her competency.
Dr. Powers and Dr. Kempke testified in support of the gov-
ernment’s motion.3
Dr. Powers testified that she first "examined" White in
April 2008 when White was admitted to FMCC. She testified
that although she observed White, she did not personally
administer any tests to White, so her study was based solely
on her observations, staff observations, and collateral data.
She opined that White suffers from Delusional Disorder,
Grandiose Type and that her disorder rendered her incompe-
tent to stand trial. She also opined that White does not meet
the statutory requirements for civil commitment.
3
The district court accepted Dr. Powers as an expert in clinical and
forensic psychology and Dr. Kempke as an expert in psychiatry.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 7
As to treatment, Dr. Powers testified that she had recom-
mended a non-medical course of action for White, namely,
competency restoration classes, but that White refused to par-
ticipate in the classes. Dr. Powers then found that efforts to
treat White’s disorder and render her competent through non-
medical treatment were exhausted. She also explained that
White refuses voluntarily to take medication for her disorder
and reiterated that because White presents no danger to her-
self or to others, forcible medication is not justified on such
grounds.
Dr. Powers testified that she was uncertain how White
would react to forcible medication. She explained that few
studies exist about restoring individuals with delusional disor-
der to competency for the purposes of trial, and that the prin-
cipal study, the Herbel study, provided her with insufficient
insight as to what would happen to White. She further testi-
fied that if White were forcibly medicated, side effects could
potentially occur during trial and could interfere with her
attorney’s ability to present White to her jury.
Dr. Kempke, White’s treating psychiatrist, who also testi-
fied, agreed with Dr. Powers’ diagnosis of White. In making
her diagnosis, Dr. Kempke, like Dr. Powers, did not physi-
cally examine White. Nor did she review White’s medical
records or contact her family to obtain her family’s medical
records. Instead, Dr. Kempke relied on Dr. Powers’ review of
White’s records. J.A. 62-64.
Dr. Kempke concluded that forcible medication was appro-
priate and the bulk of her testimony focused on explaining the
various medications. She testified that White could be treated
with antipsychotic medications, either first-generation or so-
called typical drugs, or second-generation or so-called atypi-
cal drugs. Because White refused to take antipsychotic medi-
cation orally, Dr. Kempke would be limited to using
injectable medications, namely Haldol Deconoate and
Prolixin Decanoate or Enanthate (first-generation medica-
8 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
tions), and Rispirdal Consta (a second-generation medica-
tion).
Dr. Kempke explained the administrative procedure that
would be followed for medicating White. First, staff would
request White to voluntarily accept the medication by backing
up to and receiving the injection through the "bean slot." If
White refused, the staff would attempt to persuade her to
cooperate. If such efforts failed, White would be forcibly
medicated. Upon the warden’s approval and under videocam-
era, a crew of five staff members would don protective gear
consisting of a cover-all, a vest, and a helmet, and immobilize
White. After the force team secured White’s arms and legs in
restraints, the treatment team would enter and collect labs (if
necessary), medicate White, and then evaluate her for injuries.
This process would then be repeated as necessary, likely in
two-week intervals leading up to and throughout trial.
Dr. Kempke explained the dosage regimen and potential
side effects of the anti-psychotics that she would recommend
for White. The first-generation antipsychotics have a substan-
tial risk of tardive dyskinesia, a disorder that involves invol-
untary movements, especially of the lower face, and that can
result in irreversible trembling effects that resemble what can
be seen in patients with Parkinson’s disease. Tardive dyskine-
sia "is felt to occur at an accumulative rate of 5% . . . per year,
getting to a maximum of 60% of individuals . . . after approxi-
mately 20 years of delivering them." J.A. 50. Shorter-acting
symptoms include shuffling gait, and muscle twitches or
spasms; such symptoms may be controlled by an anticholiner-
gic drug such as Benztropine or Benadryl. The first-
generation medications also include a risk of neuroleptic
malignant syndrome, a "very rare and potentially fatal loss of
control of the body’s ability to maintain thermal homeostasis
due to excessive dopamine stimulation." J.A. 51, 158. Insta-
bility in movement is also a potential side effect, as is
agranulocytis, which is "quite rare" but can be fatal. J.A. 158.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 9
According to Dr. Kempke, second-generation medications
also harbor the potential side effects of tardive dyskinesia and
extrapyramidal symptoms, although the risk is diminished.
Second-generation drugs, however, impose an additional risk
of Metabolic Syndrome. Metabolic Syndrome "can be charac-
terized by elevated body weight, increased risk of diabetes,
increased risk of hyper-lipimedia, which is elevated triglyce-
rides and cholesterol, and therefore increasing the risk of car-
diovascular diseases due to the diabetes, weight gain, and
lipid problems associated with that." J.A. 53-54. In a letter
submitted to the district court, Dr. Kempke also identified
some less serious effects of antipsychotics such as muscle
stiffness, weight gain, lowering of seizure threshold, and ele-
vated prolactin, which could cause enlarged breasts or inap-
propriate lactation.
Dr. Kempke testified that some of the side effects of
second-generation drugs cannot be treated with other medica-
tion. Instead, medical professionals cease administering the
drug to decrease the risk of lipids and elevated blood sugars.
She noted that this has become a "significant difficulty in psy-
chiatry" because medical professionals are forced to choose
between the risk of tardive dyskinesia, which is irreversible,
unpleasant, and disfiguring, on one hand, and, on the other
hand, an increased risk of cardiac disease and diabetes.
Overall, Dr. Kempke testified that the required anti-
psychotic drugs are considered relatively safe and have been
used to treat millions of schizophrenic and psychotic individu-
als with major benefits and relatively minor risks of serious
side effects.4 She described most of the side effects as rare,
and in her experience, Dr. Kempke has "never encountered a
4
Only .03% of psychotic individuals suffer from Delusional Disorder,
Grandiose Type. Dr. Kempke has never personally treated any patient with
that type of disease with antipsychotic medicines. Her opinion is based on
the treatment of patients with other types of psychotic disorders, mostly
schizophrenia.
10 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
side effect that endangered the fairness of a trial." J.A. 159.
Thus, she opined that forcibly medicating White would be
substantially likely to render her competent to stand trial and
substantially unlikely to have side effects that would interfere
significantly with White’s ability to assist counsel in conduct-
ing a trial defense. She estimated that White would be
restored to competency a couple of weeks after receiving her
first long-acting injection of a first-generation drug and within
four weeks if given a second-generation drug. She acknowl-
edged, however, that it could take as long as five months for
White’s competence to be restored, and that it is possible that
she would never be restored to competence.
D.
On October 9, 2009, the district court granted the govern-
ment’s motion to medicate White forcibly. The court found
that the government satisfied its burden, by clear and convinc-
ing evidence, as to each of the Sell factors. The district court
ordered FMC Carswell to forcibly medicate White pursuant to
its proposed plan with the additional requirement that all med-
ical personnel treating White first request that she voluntarily
take the medication.
The district court stayed its order, anticipating an appeal by
White. White filed a timely notice of appeal and before us,
she challenges the district court’s findings and conclusions as
to the first, second, and fourth prongs of the Sell analysis.
This court has jurisdiction to review the order authorizing
forced medication pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and the col-
lateral order exception. Sell, 529 U.S. at 175-77.
II.
Individuals have a "‘significant’ constitutionally protected
‘liberty interest’ in ‘avoiding the unwanted administration of
antipsychotic drugs[,]’" id. at 178 (quoting Washington v.
Harper, 494 U.S. 210, 221 (1990)) which may only be over-
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 11
come by an "essential" or "overriding" state interest. Id. at
179 (quoting Riggins v. Nevada, 504 U.S. 127, 134, 135
(1992)). "[W]hen the purpose or effect of forced drugging is
to alter the will and the mind of the subject, it constitutes a
deprivation of liberty in the most literal and fundamental
sense." United States v. Bush, 585 F.3d 806, 813 (4th Cir.
2009) (applying Sell and vacating district court’s order per-
mitting forced medication of defendant charged with threaten-
ing a federal judge and remanding for further proceedings)
(quoting Harper, 494 U.S. at 237-38 (Stevens, J., dissenting));
see also United States v. Evans, 404 F.3d 227, 235 (4th Cir.
2005) (applying Sell, vacating district court’s order permitting
forcible medication of defendant charged with threatening to
kill a federal judge, and remanding for further proceedings),
op. on remand, 427 F. Supp. 2d 696 (W.D. Va. 2006) (order-
ing involuntary medication), aff’d, No. 06-4480, 2006 WL
2604843 at *1 (4th Cir. Sept. 12, 2006), cert. denied, 549 U.S.
1186 (2007). We have observed that "the government’s ability
to enforce the criminal laws in accordance with due process
is the foundation on which social order rests and from which
individual liberties emanate." Bush, 585 F.3d at 813. Conse-
quently, when an individual is alleged to have committed a
serious crime and the criteria mandated by Sell are satisfied,
she forfeits her liberty interest to be free from forced medica-
tion to the extent necessary for the government to bring her
to trial.5 Id.
The Supreme Court has recognized the tension between the
government’s interests and the special deprivation of liberty
sometimes imposed on individuals with mental illness, and it
5
In Bush, we stated that, "when an individual commits a crime, he for-
feits his liberty interests to the extent necessary for the government to
bring him to trial." 585 F.3d at 813. It is obvious, however, as Evans,
Bush, and this case all demonstrate, that since the very purpose of a trial
is to determine whether "an individual [has committed] a crime," it is not
the commission of a crime that works a forfeiture of the individual’s lib-
erty interest in the context of forcible medication to restore competency,
but rather, a formal allegation that an individual has committed a crime.
12 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
has held that, in what it seemingly contemplated would be
"rare" instances, Sell, 539 U.S. at 180, a federal court may
constitutionally authorize the government to administer anti-
psychotic medication involuntarily and by force for the pur-
pose of rendering a defendant competent to stand trial.6 Id. To
establish the propriety of so doing, the government must
establish each element of a four-factor test by clear and con-
vincing evidence. Bush, 585 F.3d at 814. First, the govern-
ment must show that "important governmental interests are at
stake" and that special circumstances do not sufficiently miti-
gate those interests. Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. Second, involuntary
medication must significantly further the government’s inter-
ests by making it "substantially likely to render the defendant
competent to stand trial" and "substantially unlikely to have
side effects that will interfere significantly with the defen-
dant’s ability to assist counsel" at trial. Id. at 181. Third, the
involuntary medication must be necessary to further the gov-
ernment’s interests, and less intrusive means must be unlikely
to achieve substantially the same results. Id. And last, the
court must conclude that the administration of drugs is medi-
cally appropriate and in the patient’s best medical interests in
light of her medical condition. Id.
The first factor involves a legal determination and thus we
review the district court’s determination of that factor de
novo. Evans, 404 F.3d at 236 (citing United States v. Gomes,
387 F.3d 157, 160 (2d Cir. 2004)). We review any factual
findings relevant to this legal determination for clear error. Id.
The remaining three factors present factual questions subject
to clear error review. Id. (citing United States v. Holmes, 376
F.3d 270, 273 (4th Cir. 2004)).
6
The proper test to determine whether the government may involuntar-
ily medicate an individual depends on the governmental purpose for the
medication. See Evans, 404 F.3d at 235 n.3. Here, it is undisputed that Sell
provides the appropriate legal framework.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 13
III.
The crux of this case is whether the government has a suffi-
ciently important interest in prosecuting White such that inter-
ference by forced medication with her constitutionally
protected liberty interest is justified, as measured against the
presence of any special circumstances militating against rec-
ognition of asserted important governmental interests in
bringing her to trial. Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. We conclude that
the special circumstances present in this case reduce the gov-
ernment’s interest in prosecuting White to the point that
infringement on her constitutionally protected liberty interest
in freedom from forcible medication cannot be sustained.
A.
The crimes here, though nonviolent, are serious. Without
establishing a hard and fast rule, we have held that a crime is
"serious" for involuntary medication purposes where the
defendant faced a ten-year maximum sentence for the charges
against him.7 Evans, 404 F.3d at 238 (concluding that a
7
In contrast to our preference of looking to the statutorily-authorized
maximum sentence in determining whether a crime is "serious," see
Evans, 404 F.3d at 237-38, other circuits have not expressed such a prefer-
ence but have recognized that the federal sentencing guidelines also pro-
vide a reasonable metric by which the seriousness determination may be
made. See United States v. Valenzuela-Puentes, 479 F.3d 1220, 1226 (10th
Cir. 2007) (reasoning that "[w]hether a crime is ‘serious’ relates to the
possible penalty the defendant faces if convicted, as well as the nature or
effect of the underlying conduct for which he was charged," and analyzing
seriousness in light of the statutory maximum as well as the likely guide-
line sentence); Gomes, 387 F.3d at 160 (describing "the seriousness of the
crime and [the defendant’s] perceived dangerousness to society [as] evi-
dent from the substantial sentence [the defendant] faces if convicted"), see
also Developments in the Law—The Law of Mental Illness: Sell v. United
States: Forcibly Medicating the Mentally Ill to Stand Trial, 121 Harv. L.
Rev. 1121, 1127 (2008) [hereinafter Developments in Mental Illness Law]
("While the sentence length is a reasonable consideration for determining
whether a defendant-protective right should apply, it is a less useful signal
14 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
charge of "threatening to murder a federal judge under
§ 115(a)(1)(B), a felony whose maximum term of imprison-
ment is 10 years-is ‘serious’ under any reasonable standard");
see also Bush, 585 F.3d at 814 (citing Evans, 404 F.3d at 238
and concluding the same). Here, White was charged with
crimes that involve a maximum statutory penalty of over ten
years. If convicted, she faces a maximum penalty of five years
imprisonment on Count I, 18 U.S.C. § 371; ten years each for
Counts II, III, and IV, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1029(a)(2), (c)(1)(A)(i);
and two years for Counts V and VI. 18 U.S.C.
§§ 1028A(b)(2) & (b)(4). Accordingly, under our precedent,
White is charged with "serious" crimes.
B.
But the government’s interest in prosecuting those charged
with serious crimes can be mitigated by special circum-
stances. Sell, 539 U.S. at 180 (providing an illustrative list of
special circumstances that potentially lessen the government’s
interest in prosecuting an otherwise serious crime).8 We
of whether there is a serious state interest in seeing a defendant brought
to trial. Even when the defendant faces little or no jail time, the state may
still have an important interest in bringing him to trial, for instance in sym-
bolic prosecutions of high-profile defendants.").
In any event, we have not flatly rejected consideration of the likely
guideline sentence in an appropriate case. E.g., Bush, 585 F.3d at 814
("First, even though each count of the indictment charging her with a
crime carries a maximum 10-year sentence, the Sentencing Guidelines, the
government’s concessions, and the district court’s observations indicate
that if Bush were found guilty, she would likely be sentenced to only time
served.").
8
As summarized in Bush:
Special circumstances include (1) the possibility that the defen-
dant might be confined to an institution for the mentally ill, thus
"diminish[-ing] the risks that ordinarily attach to freeing without
punishment one who has committed a serious crime"; (2) the
potential for future confinement should the defendant regain
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 15
examined the issue of "lessened interest" arising from "special
circumstances" in both Evans and Bush. In Evans, we agreed
with the district court that even though the defendant had been
in custody for more than two years, and even though there
existed a possibility of a civil commitment, the government’s
interests were not significantly lessened. Evans, 404 F.3d at
239-40. Similarly, in Bush, we considered but rejected as
unpersuasive under the circumstances of that case, Bush’s
arguments that (1) her lengthy period of pretrial detention (a
substantial portion of which was on home confinement rather
than in an institution) exceeded her likely sentence upon con-
viction and (2) the likelihood (based on a mens rea type
defense) that the government would be unable to prove her
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Bush, 585 F.3d at 814-15.
Both of those cases, each involving a defendant who had
allegedly threatened the life of a federal judge (and in Evans,
one who had also allegedly assaulted a federal employee),
provide guidance to us here but do not control the outcome of
our fact-intensive inquiry into the special circumstances of
this case.
C.
In finding the absence of any special circumstances, the
district court’s order was quite brief. The court stated:
As for whether any special circumstances under-
mine the government’s interest, White has been in
custody for approximately eighteen months. The par-
competence; and (3) the fact that "the defendant has already been
confined for a significant amount of time (for which he would
receive credit toward any sentence ultimately imposed)." Id. at
180, 123 S.Ct. 2174 (citation omitted).
Bush, 585 F.3d at 815 (citing Sell). As we discuss in text, we can discern
no basis for believing that in fashioning this short list, the Sell Court
intended that lower courts treat it as having exhausted all possible "special
circumstances."
16 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
ties agree that she would not be an appropriate can-
didate for civil commitment. Thus, if White is not
rendered competent to stand trial, she likely would
be released, and the government would surrender its
opportunity to prosecute her. Accordingly, no special
circumstances undermine the government’s interest,
and the court finds that the government meets the
first prong under Sell.
J.A. 141-42. It should be noted that, although the district court
stated that White had been in custody "approximately eigh-
teen months," at the time of the court’s October 2009 order,
White had actually been in custody for more than 29 months,
i.e., since March 2007. This is undisputed, as the government
conceded at oral argument before us that White will be enti-
tled to credit against any federal sentence for all the time she
spent in state custody before her custody was assumed by the
federal authorities.
The government argues that special circumstances do not
undermine its important interest in prosecuting White. It
focuses on two factors: "(1) the potential for a lengthy con-
finement in the future if a mentally ill defendant is subject to
civil commitment, and (2) the possibility that a mentally ill
defendant has been confined for a significant period of time."
Appellee’s Br. at 22 (citing Sell, 539 U.S. at 180). The gov-
ernment argues that these factors are inapplicable here as mit-
igating circumstances: the former is inapt because White
undisputedly does not qualify for civil commitment, and the
latter because the time White has already served, even if it is
equivalent to the sentence she may reasonably anticipate to
receive if convicted, is alone insufficient to defeat the govern-
ment’s interest.
D.
We reject the government’s implied assertion that our spe-
cial circumstances analysis is limited to considering whether
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 17
White is subject to civil commitment and whether she has
been confined for a significant period of time. In Sell, the
Supreme Court clearly stated that the inquiry is a fact-specific
one: "[c]ourts, however, must consider the facts of the indi-
vidual case in evaluating the Government’s interest in prose-
cution. Special circumstances may lessen the importance of
that interest." Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. The Court then provided
a non-exclusive list, as evidenced by its use of the term "for
example" in the sentence immediately following its announce-
ment that special circumstances may lessen the government’s
interest. Id. Further, we have already recognized the flexible
nature of our special circumstances inquiry in Evans, where
we explicitly stated that length of incarceration is not neces-
sarily the only factor relevant to whether special circum-
stances undermine the government’s interest. We reasoned as
follows:
By focusing on the amount of time with which
Evans would be credited under [18 U.S.C. §]
3585(b), we do not imply that time is the only con-
sideration relevant to whether special circumstances
undermine the government’s interest. There may be
purposes of criminal punishment unrelated to the
actual length of incarceration that would continue to
give the government an important interest in trying
a defendant accused of a serious crime even if the
time he spends in pre-trail [sic] detention approaches
the statutory maximum penalty for the crime with
which he is charged. See Sell, 123 S. Ct. at 2184
(noting that the defendant’s pre-trial confinement
"affects, but does not totally undermine, the strength
of the need for prosecution."). Because we conclude
that the Government continues to have an important
interest in trying Evans based on the potential length
of his incarceration alone, we need not consider this
more difficult issue here.
18 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
Evans, 404 F.3d at 240 n.9. Thus, as we acknowledged in
Evans, the flexibility of the special circumstances determina-
tion may identify factors militating in favor of the govern-
ment’s interest in going forward with a prosecution even
where there has been prolonged pretrial detention, and the
analysis may also identify factors further undermining the
government’s interest. We continued this analysis in Bush,
585 F.3d at 815,9 where we mentioned the possibility that, if
a conviction were obtained, the district court would have the
option of imposing a period of supervised release as a factor
bolstering the government’s interest.10
E.
Upon our mature consideration of the case before us, we
are persuaded that special circumstances so undermine the
government’s interests in this case that governmental depriva-
tion of White’s constitutionally protected liberty interest in
refusing medications cannot be justified. We consider, first,
the amount of time that the defendant has spent (and will
likely spend) in confinement before her trial could even begin,
as the length of time could undermine the government’s inter-
ests in protecting the public, in general and specific deter-
9
In Bush, we also explained that "the very fact that the government is
prosecuting Bush for this conduct conveys a message about its seriousness
and its consequences." 585 F.3d at 815. Although this is true, it is not a
unique characteristic in this case, nor could it ever be a unique characteris-
tic of any case of this type. It is instead a truism, applicable to any case
where the government seeks forcible medication: without a prosecution,
there would be no case.
10
Cf. Developments in Mental Illness Law, 121 Harv. L. Rev. at 1128
(criticizing the special circumstances inquiry used by lower federal courts
and urging courts to better fulfill the mandate of Sell by evaluating the
"harm the indictment alleges a defendant caused or could have caused[,]"
"the potential Guidelines sentencing range a defendant would face[,]" and
"other benefits of prosecution besides the potential incapacitation of the
defendant, including the retributive, deterrent, communicative, and inves-
tigative functions of the criminal justice system.") (internal citations omit-
ted).
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 19
rence, and in obtaining just punishment. Sell, 539 U.S. at 180.
Second, the nature of the crime deserves consideration; unlike
the circumstances in Evans and in Bush, White’s alleged
crimes, though certainly serious, are entirely non-violent.
Third, we note that the district court’s order committing
White to a Bureau of Prisons mental hospital precludes her
from certain activities, such as her ability to obtain and own
firearms, and so a conviction is unnecessary insofar as it
would safeguard the public from any possible acts of gun vio-
lence from her. Fourth, we must review White’s unique medi-
cal condition because the drugs proposed by the government
have rarely, if ever, been tested on individuals with White’s
condition and this ambiguity might undermine the govern-
ment’s interest in a fair trial. Fifth and finally, we should
ensure that this case is sufficiently exceptional to warrant the
extraordinary measure of forcible medication.
1.
The government’s interest in prosecution is lessened when
"the defendant has already been confined for a significant
amount of time (for which he would receive credit toward any
sentence ultimately imposed, see 18 U.S.C. § 3585(b))." Sell,
539 U.S. at 180. The operative word here is "significant." To
determine if White has been in custody "a significant amount
of time" as compared to her likely sentence, we must calculate
White’s time served, her likely sentence, and then ask
whether the former is significant in light of the latter. See
Evans, 404 F.3d at 239-40. Because White will likely be enti-
tled to credit for having served a period of approximately 57.7
months by the time she is tried, and if convicted, will be
unlikely to be sentenced to more than 42-51 months, we find
that White has been confined for "a significant amount of
time" in light of her likely sentence.
a.
A defendant shall be given credit toward the service of a
term of imprisonment for any time she has spent in official
20 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
detention prior to the date the sentence commences, as long
as it was served for the same offense and has not already been
credited. 18 U.S.C. § 3585(b)(2). White was arrested on
March 14, 2007, and has been detained at FMCC since April
2008. Thus, as of August 2010, White will have been incar-
cerated for approximately 41 months.
Assuming that we affirm the decision of the district court,
however, White will still be required to serve time beyond the
41 months for medical reasons. Her doctors estimate that
White could require up to five months to become competent
to stand trial. The district court recognized that White would
need several months to become competent to stand trial, per-
mitting White’s commitment "for a period of four months, or
a lesser period if reasonably sufficient to restore her to com-
petency." J.A. 144. Based on this finding, we estimate that the
authorities would detain White for approximately four addi-
tional months for the purposes of establishing her compe-
tency.
White will be also required to endure additional detention
for legal reasons if she wishes to exhaust her appellate rights.11
The district court contemplated at least some of these appeals
when it stayed its order. Again, assuming that we affirm the
decision of the district court, White would be entitled to move
for en banc rehearing by this court and to file a petition for
certiorari to the Supreme Court. These proceedings could
persist for many months, however, and even assuming quick
and consistent denials, such proceedings would cause White
11
The record before us reflects that White is not communicating with
her attorney; indeed, she refused to attend or to participate in the Sell hear-
ing conducted by the district court through the use of video conferencing
technology. Although her attorney was in Texas at the prison hospital, she
refused to meet with him. Consequently, just as counsel has vigorously
pursued the appeal to this court on behalf of his mentally ill client, we
would expect his vigorous representation to continue through further
appellate review.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 21
to remain detained for at least an additional six months.12
Adding these additional 10 months to White’s 41 yields a
total of 51 months.
Moreover, if White were ultimately tried and convicted,
and then sentenced to a term of imprisonment, she would be
entitled to good time credits for each year that she has served,
shortening her overall time actually served. "Federal sentenc-
ing law permits . . . authorities to award prisoners credit
against prison time as a reward for good behavior." Barber v.
Thomas, 130 S. Ct. 2499, 2502 (2010) (citing 18 U.S.C.
§ 3624(b)). The Bureau of Prisons determines good time cred-
its based on each year that a defendant actually serves. Id. at
2502-03 (holding lawful the Bureau of Prisons’ method for
calculating good time credit based on time served instead of
the length of the sentence imposed). Under Barber, White
would be entitled to approximately 201 days of good time
credits, or 6.7 months.13 This increases White’s time served
from 51 months to a total of 57.7 months of time (deemed)
served.
b.
Next, we must consider White’s likely prison sentence. The
district court, using the statutory mandatory minimum (as to
12
Our en banc petitioning process would require approximately 24 days.
Fed. R. App. P. 40; Loc. R. 26(a). Then White could file her petition for
certiorari anytime within 90 days of the final ruling on the Fourth Circuit,
and if the Government wanted to file a reply, the process would take an
additional 30 days. Sup. Ct. R. 13(1), 15(3). Thus, if the Supreme Court
denied her petition in less than five weeks, White’s legal remedies would
be entirely exhausted in approximately six months.
13
In Barber, 130 S. Ct. at 2502-03, the Supreme Court used a mathemat-
ical calculation that reached "approximately the same results as, and [is]
essentially the mathematical equivalent of" the system used by the Bureau
of Prisons. Applying that calculation to White’s 51 months (or 1550 days)
of "time served" indicates that White would have earned 205 days or 6.7
months of good time credits if she had served that time in prison.
22 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
the aggravated identify theft charges) and statutory maxi-
mums for each crime, found that White could receive a sen-
tence between four and 39 years if convicted. The court did
not explicitly determine White’s likely sentence, however,
instead concluding, without explanation, that White’s eigh-
teen months of custody, which was actually 29 months of cus-
tody, see supra Part III.C, did not comprise a special
circumstance. We require more.
In the exercise of our duty to conduct a de novo review in
this case, we think it is appropriate to undertake a more com-
prehensive analysis. We may reliably consider White’s likely
sentence, either by taking judicial notice of the average sen-
tences imposed for the charged crimes on a national or local
level, by reviewing the sentences of co-defendants charged
with substantially similar crimes, or by actually calculating
the defendant’s likely sentence vis-a-vis the advisory sentenc-
ing guidelines. This is what we impliedly stated in Bush when
we considered the defendant’s likely sentencing guidelines:
Thus, even though each count of the indictment
charging [defendant Bush] with a crime carries a
maximum 10-year sentence, the Sentencing Guide-
lines, the government’s concessions, and the district
court’s observations indicate that if Bush were found
guilty, she would likely be sentenced to only time
served. Without recognizing Bush’s possible accep-
tance of responsibility, the Sentencing Guidelines
call for a sentence of 24 to 30 months’ imprison-
ment.
Bush, 585 F.3d at 814. If the court is unable to determine the
appropriate sentencing guidelines, as we did in Bush, then it
may consider relevant national and local data and similarly
situated defendants to promote uniformity in sentencing. 18
U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6) ("The court, in determining the particular
sentence to be imposed, shall consider . . . (6) the need to
avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 23
with similar records who have been found guilty of similar
conduct.").
In undertaking our analysis, we first turn to the sentence
imposed on White’s co-defendant, Vonda Machelle Baker.14
Baker waived indictment and pled guilty on or about Decem-
ber 3, 2007 to a three-count criminal information in the
United States District Court in the Eastern District of North
Carolina. Memorandum of Plea Agreement, at 1, 5:07-cr-321-
1-D (E.D.N.C. Dec. 3, 2007). She pled guilty to one count of
conspiracy to commit identity fraud under 18 U.S.C.
§ 1028(f) and two counts of aggravated identity theft under 18
U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(1). Baker’s advisory guidelines sentencing
range was projected to be 39 to 45 months (15 to 21 months
on the conspiracy count and 24 months consecutive on the
aggravated identity counts). See Government’s Motion for
Downward Departure due to Substantial Assistance, at 2,
5:07-cr-321-1-D (E.D.N.C. June 3, 2008). In consideration of
her substantial assistance to the government (against White,
among others) the government filed a motion on June 3, 2008,
for a sentencing departure pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1, rec-
ommending a sentence of 27 months.15 Id. On June 11, 2008,
14
In our consideration of the proceedings against White’s co-defendant,
Vonda Baker, we take judicial notice of the contents of the record in
United States v. Baker, No. 5:07-cr-321-1-D (E.D.N.C. 2007). See Colo-
nial Penn Ins. Co. v. Coil, 887 F.2d 1236, 1239 (4th Cir. 1989) (citing
cases for the premise that federal courts may take notice of proceedings
in other courts if those proceedings have a direct relation to matters at
issue).
15
Counsel for Baker stated the following in his memorandum in aid of
sentencing filed on Baker’s behalf:
Upon their arrival in North Carolina [from Atlanta, Georgia], Ms.
Baker and Ms. White met with Ms. White’s acquaintances. At
various times, Ms. Baker and Ms. White would go out with other
individuals and Ms. White would make fraudulent transactions.
Upon information and belief, the other individuals would take
custody of the majority of the property and Ms. White would
receive some lesser payment for her participation. Ms. Baker did
24 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
the district court sentenced Baker to serve 36 months in prison
(12 months on the conspiracy count and 24 months, to be
served concurrently to each other and consecutively to the
count one sentence, for each of the two counts of aggravated
identity theft) for substantially the same relevant conduct in
which White is alleged to have engaged. She was released
from the Bureau of Prisons on October 29, 2009. See
Bureau of Prisons Locator, http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/
LocateInmate.jsp (search "Vonda Machelle Baker"). Baker’s
three-year sentence provides a useful data point for our analy-
sis.16
We next review the median and mean sentences imposed
for White’s charged crimes on a local and national level.
These data are appropriate for judicial notice as they are "ca-
pable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources
whose accuracy cannot be reasonably questioned." Fed. R.
Ev. 201 (b), see also id. (c) & (f). The dataset is simply a
compilation of information available in the public record.
E.g., Hall v. Virginia, 385 F.3d 421, 424 n.3 (4th Cir. 2004)
(taking judicial notice of public records).17 This analysis will
focus on Counts I-IV, the fraud offenses, as it is undisputed
that White would receive a sentence of 24 months for each
Count if she was convicted of Counts V and VI, the aggra-
vated identity theft offenses.
not directly receive any of the proceeds from the fraudulent pur-
chases. However, Ms. Baker did stay in hotel rooms and did use
cocaine that was presumably paid for with the fraudulent activi-
ties.
See Sentencing Memorandum, at 1-2, 5:07-cr-321-1-D (E.D.N.C. Dec. 3,
2007) (emphasis added).
16
Of course, the analogy is imperfect; Baker pled guilty to only three
counts (White is charged in six) and, unlike White, Baker provided sub-
stantial assistance to law enforcement.
17
See also supra note 14.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 25
The statistics on fraud offenses suggest that White has a
genuine chance of avoiding any prison sentence on the fraud
counts, even if convicted. Nationally and within the Fourth
Circuit, many defendants convicted of fraud offenses receive
no prison time. Nationally, in 2009, of the 7,583 defendants
sentenced for fraud crimes, over 20% received a sentence of
either probation and confinement or of only probation.18 And
of those defendants eligible for non-prison alternatives, 46.4%
received a non-prison sentence.19 In the Fourth Circuit, the
statistics tilt towards non-prison sentences even more. Of the
768 defendants convicted of fraud crimes, nearly 25%
received a sentence of only probation or of probation and con-
finement,20 and defendants eligible for non-prison sentences
receive them a majority of the time.21 Thus, even if convicted
of Counts I-IV, there is a 20-25% probability, between a 1-in-
4 and 1-in-5 chance, that White would receive little or no sen-
tence for the fraud counts.
Assuming that White is convicted and sentenced for the
fraud counts, she would likely receive a relatively short sen-
tence for each count. Data compiled by the United States Sen-
tencing Commission is instructive on this point. On the
national level, defendants convicted of fraud charges receive
a mean sentence of 28.5 months and a median sentence of 18
18
To be precise, 77.8% received a prison sentence or a sentence split
between prison and community, while 22.2% received a sentence of either
probation and confinement only or only probation. U.S. Sentencing Com-
mission, Statistical Information Packet for Fiscal Year 2009 for the
Fourth Circuit [hereinafter Sentencing Commission Statistics], http://
www.ussc.gov/judpack/2009/4c09.pdf at 7.
19
Id. at 9.
20
In the Fourth Circuit, 24.5% of defendants convicted of fraud received
a sentence of only probation or of probation and confinement while 75.5%
received a sentence that included a prison term. Id. at 8.
21
Id. at 9 (providing the statistic that in the Fourth Circuit, 58% of
defendants convicted of fraud crimes eligible for non-prison sentences
received non-prison sentences).
26 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
months.22 In the Fourth Circuit, such defendants receive a
mean sentence of 37.4 months and a median sentence of 25
months.23 In the Eastern District of North Carolina, the mean
sentence for fraud charges is 35.8 months and the median is
27 months.24
At first blush, the most compelling data points are those
from the Eastern District of North Carolina, as that is where
White would be sentenced, if convicted. But the sample size
from the Eastern District is also very small and contains only
61 defendants, a sample size in which a tiny number of defen-
dants could dramatically skew the results. Accordingly, we
find it wise to also consider data from the circuit and national
level. We further find the median sentencing data more appli-
cable than the mean, as the mean sentence factors in individu-
als with far higher criminal history categories than is
warranted for White because it will include recidivists, and
the government has not suggested, as one would expect were
it true, that White is a recidivist, whereas the median provides
some buffer from that distortion. Thus, although we cannot
determine White’s likely sentence with certainty, a number
within the range created by the medians, 18-27 months, is
most appropriate.
Assuming that White received a sentence of between 18-27
months for her fraud counts, the government has suggested no
22
Id. at 10. Other U.S. Sentencing Commission Data offers slightly dif-
ferent statistics. See U.S. Sentencing Commission, 2009 Datafile, Average
Length of Imprisonment for Offenders in Each Criminal History Category
by Primary Offense Category, http://www.ussc.gov/annrpt/2009/
table14.pdf (providing data that defendants with criminal history category
I receive a mean sentence of 30.4 months and a median sentence of 20
months and that defendants of all criminal history categories receive a
mean sentence of 33.2 months, and a median sentence of 24 months).
23
See Sentencing Commission Statistics, supra note 18, at 10.
24
U.S. Sentencing Commission, Eastern District of North Carolina Fis-
cal Year 2009 Guideline Sentences, Sentencing Information by Primary
Offense, http://www.ussc.gov/annrpt/2009/nce09.pdf.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 27
reasons why the sentences for these first four counts would
not likely run concurrently. Further, as mentioned above, if
convicted of Counts V and VI, White would likely receive
concurrent sentences of 24 months imprisonment for each
count, the statutory minimum sentences for aggravated iden-
tity theft. Her sentence for Counts V and VI would run con-
secutively to her sentence for Counts I-IV, 18 U.S.C.
§§ 1028A(b)(2) & (b)(4), for a total sentence of approxi-
mately 42-51 months.
Likely sentence aside, we note that our entire analysis pre-
sumes that White will be found guilty. Of course, this
assumption belies our judicial system’s fundamental and criti-
cal presumption of innocence. Flouting such a seminal aspect
of our law is particularly troubling considering that the gov-
ernment must show that important government interests are at
stake in prosecuting White, and they must show it via clear
and convincing evidence. Our assumption, although necessary
to proceed with this analysis, is particularly unsettling in light
of our recent precedent in Evans, where we permitted the
forcible medication of Evans, a schizophrenic, for the purpose
of standing trial, United States v. Evans, No. 06-4480, 2006
WL 2604843 at *1 (4th Cir. Sept. 12, 2006), and separate
juries of Evans’s peers found him not guilty of threatening to
kill a federal judge and of assault on a federal employee.
Judgment of Acquittal, at 1, United States v. Evans, No.
1:07CR00043 (W.D. Va. Nov. 15, 2007). Thus, although we
have estimated White’s likely sentence to be 42-51 months,
there is some possibility that she would be found not guilty
and that the entirety of her pre-trial detention will remain
uncredited time.
c.
Because White, if convicted, is highly unlikely to be sen-
tenced to more than approximately 42-51 months, and
because she will be deemed to have served 57.7 months
before the government could even begin to prosecute her,
28 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
White has certainly "already been confined for a significant
amount of time (for which [s]he would receive credit toward
any sentence ultimately imposed, see 18 U.S.C. § 3585(b))."
Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. By the time the government would actu-
ally begin prosecuting White, her pretrial detention (taking
account of likely good time credits) will have extended con-
siderably longer than her likely sentence. Although we have
not yet defined that amount or percentage of time served that
we require for a defendant to satisfy the "significant" standard
discussed in Sell, it is self-evident that White’s case would
meet any standard. She will have been in pre-trial detention
for the entirety of her likely sentence, a period that clearly
exceeds "significant amount."25
25
Of course, White could also face supervised release, if convicted. 18
U.S.C. § 3583(a) ("The court, in imposing a sentence to a term of impris-
onment for a felony or a misdemeanor, may include as a part of the sen-
tence a requirement that the defendant be placed on a term of supervised
release after imprisonment"). Courts determine the authorized terms of
supervised release based on the maximum sentence for each crime. For
example, for Class C or D felony, a term of supervised release is "at least
two years but not more than three years[.]" Id. § 3583(b)(2). Here, White
faces a maximum statutory penalty of five years imprisonment on Count
I, ten years each for Counts II, III, and IV, and two years for Counts V
and VI. Thus, Counts I, V and VI are Class D felonies, and Counts II, III,
and IV are Class C felonies, 18 U.S.C. § 3559(A). Both Class C and Class
D felonies subject White, if she is convicted, to a sentence of between 24
and 36 months of supervised release. 18 U.S.C. § 3583(b)(2).
In Bush, we noted that the government’s interest in prosecuting a men-
tally incompetent individual was not defeated when the defendant spent
sufficient time in pretrial custody to significantly cover any reasonably
anticipated prison sentence because "a conviction may subject Bush to a
period of supervised release, see 18 U.S.C. § 3583, which would help
ensure that she is not released into the public without appropriate monitor-
ing." 585 F.3d at 815. We do not discern that the possibility of supervised
release is sufficient to trump the special circumstances in this case. As we
have mentioned, in both Evans and in Bush, the defendants were charged
with threatening to kill a federal judge. Although the crimes in this case
are certainly serious, they are not of the sort at issue in our precedents.
Obviously, if White should commit an offense in the future, she may be
prosecuted, whether or not she is on supervised release. White’s family
and friends, and the wide array of governmental and private human ser-
vices agencies, not only the criminal justice agencies of government, can
and ought to be counted on to address her needs.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 29
In sum, White has clearly served more than a "significant"
amount of time in light of her likely sentence. And although
"this fact alone ‘does not defeat [the government’s interest]’"
Bush, 585 F.3d at 815 (citing Evans, 404 F.3d at 239), it sub-
stantially lessens the significance of the government’s interest
in prosecuting White. The government’s interest is even fur-
ther decreased by the nature of White’s crime, the lack of
public safety concerns, and the lack of information available
about White’s medical condition, each of which we now con-
sider.
2.
Not every serious crime is equally serious. The nature of
White’s crimes lessens the government’s interest in prosecut-
ing her because her alleged crimes were non-violent offenses.
Assuming her guilt, White’s crimes did not physically harm
any individuals. Further, there is absolutely no evidence in the
record that White is capable of or likely to commit future
crimes of physical violence. Her doctors at FMCC testified
that White is not a danger to herself or to others and does not
meet the requirements for civil commitment.
Prosecuting White for her alleged crimes would also fail to
provide her alleged victims with any conceivable benefit. The
action would not make whole the victims of her alleged con-
spiracy to commit credit card fraud, credit card fraud, and
aggravated identity theft. These alleged victims, Costco,
Home Depot, and Zales Jewelers, will not likely receive any
restitution from White regardless of whether she is prosecuted.26
Further, the alleged victims would not receive assurances that
White will be detained for any length of time from a possible
prosecution, since even if White is tried and convicted, she
will likely be released on time served.
26
White’s co-defendant was ordered to pay restitution in full.
30 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
The non-violent nature of White’s crimes principally distin-
guishes this case from Bush and Evans. Both Evans and Bush
were charged with violent crimes: Evans for allegedly assault-
ing a United States agricultural employee and allegedly
threatening to murder a federal judge, Evans, 404 F.3d at 232,
and Bush for allegedly threatening a federal judge. Bush, 585
F.3d at 806. Moreover, in Evans and Bush, there was a com-
pelling safety concern inherent in the prosecution since it
could help safeguard the defendant’s alleged victims. Neither
concern exists here, and therefore, the government’s interest
in prosecuting White is further diminished.
3.
Public safety concerns in this case are significantly dimin-
ished and also mitigate the government’s interest in prosecut-
ing White. Not only were White’s alleged activities non-
violent, as discussed above, but her commitment in the prison
mental hospital forever limits her from certain activities, such
as her ability to obtain and own firearms. See 18 U.S.C.
§ 922(g)(4) ("It shall be unlawful for any person— . . . (4)
who has been adjudicated as a mental defective or who has
been committed to a mental institution; . . . . [to] possess in
or affecting commerce, any firearm or ammunition . . .").27
Thus a conviction is unnecessary insofar as it would safe-
guard the public from any possible acts of gun violence from
her. White will never be permitted lawfully to purchase a gun,
regardless of whether she is convicted.
27
The phrase "adjudicated as a mental defective" is satisfied by a court
determination that an individual lacks the mental capacity to contract or
manage her own affairs. 27 C.F.R. § 478.11. White meets the standard
because the district court found her "mentally incompetent to the extent
that she is unable to understand the nature and consequences of the pro-
ceeding against her or to assist properly in her defense" pursuant to 18
U.S.C. § 4241(d)(1). Order at 1, No. 5:08-CR-00081 (E.D.N.C. June 22,
2009).
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 31
White’s inability lawfully to obtain a firearm is notable
because that very issue weighed heavily on this court in Bush.
There, the court found that government prosecution was justi-
fied in order to limit some of Bush’s subsequent activities,
and the only activity explicitly mentioned by the court was
"her ability to obtain and own firearms." Bush, 585 F.3d at
806, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4). The court’s exclusive focus
on gun ownership indicates its intense concern about that
issue. The concern was well-founded in that case, of course,
as Bush was charged with threatening a federal judge. But
those concerns are inapposite here, as White lacks both vio-
lent tendencies and, due to her commitment, the ability to
lawfully purchase or possess a gun. Thus, unlike in Bush, the
public safety issue does not factor heavily into the govern-
ment’s interest in prosecuting White.
4.
White’s unique medical condition lessens the government’s
interest in prosecution because the proposed medical treat-
ment has rarely, if ever, been tested on individuals with
White’s condition and thus may not rehabilitate White such
that she enjoys the benefit of a fair trial.28 Sell, 539 U.S. at
180 ("[T]he Government has a concomitant interest in assur-
ing a defendant a fair trial."). As this court explained in Bush,
"the common wisdom in the psychiatric community is that
delusional disorders rarely respond to medication." Bush, 585
F.3d at 812. And the facts here impose an additional layer of
complication over those presented in Bush because White has
the grandiose type of delusional disorder, a rare and little-
studied derivation of the disease.
28
We need not disturb the district court’s factual findings with respect
to the other Sell factors. Sell, 539 U.S. at 181. The unique circumstances
presented by this case justify our notice of the open questions surrounding
the proposed treatment plan for a woman with White’s unique diagnosis,
as those questions bear on the issue whether the government has proved
that important governmental interests are at stake notwithstanding the
existing special circumstances of White’s case.
32 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
During the Sell hearing, Drs. Kempke and Powers both
acknowledged that few scientific studies exist of individuals
with White’s disorder. The only medical research discussed
by either doctor was the Herbel Study. Bryon Herbel & Hans
Stelmach, Involuntary Medication Treatment for Competency
Restoration of 22 Defendants With Delusional Disorder, J.
Am. Acad. Psychiatry L. (2007). The Herbel study was con-
ducted on 22 male subjects with delusional disorders, all of
whom received involuntary treatment for their disorders. Of
the 22 subjects, 17 of them, or 77%, were restored to some
level of competency through the use of antipsychotic medica-
tion. Id.
Both doctors, however, testified that the Herbel study did
not entirely convince them of the effectiveness of antipsycho-
tic drugs on individuals with delusional disorder. We find this
testimony revealing. One notable problem with the Herbel
study is that only one of its subjects suffered from the same
disorder that afflicts White. Of the 22 subjects in the study,
21 had Delusional Disorder, Persecutory Type, while only one
subject had White’s variety of the disease: Delusional Disor-
der, Grandiose Type. Also, of the 22 subjects, none of them
were female. As men and women often react differently to
medications, e.g., Deborah Gesensway, Reasons for Sex-
Specific and Gender-Specific Study of Health Topics, 135
Annals of Int’l Med. 935-38 (2001), we cannot necessarily
assume that the results of this study, inconclusive as they
might be, apply to women. Thus, the Herbel study is of lim-
ited assistance in determining whether White could reliably be
made competent for trial.
Dr. Kempke also relied on her professional experience and
expertise when she testified to the effectiveness of forcibly
medicating White. But Dr. Kempke’s area of expertise is
schizophrenia, not delusional disorders. In fact, she has never
treated a patient with White’s disorder. She even conceded in
her testimony that she really did not know how White would
respond to antipsychotic medications. Thus, although Dr.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 33
Kempke testified that antipsychotic medication would likely
be effective with White because it was effective with schizo-
phrenics, there is some ambiguity as to whether a successful
treatment for schizophrenia can be imputed to an individual
with a delusional disorder.
There is also ambiguity inherent in Dr. Kempke’s testi-
mony regarding the potential side effects of the proposed
antipsychotic medication. Dr. Kempke testified that the medi-
cation was substantially unlikely to cause White to exhibit
side effects that would interfere with her ability to assist coun-
sel. But Dr. Kempke’s testimony seems to lack important data
points because she has never examined White and has little
knowledge of White’s medical history and thus may not be
able to properly anticipate possible side effects of the medica-
tion.29 Without specific and particularized information about
how these medications will affect White, there is some risk
that side effects could prevent White from benefiting from a
fair trial. Sell, 539 U.S. at 180.
Overall, there is little evidence about the effectiveness of
antipsychotic medication on individuals with Delusional Dis-
order, Grandiose Type, and even less information about the
possible side effects that White might suffer. Thus, the gov-
ernment’s interest in assuring a fair trial for White is undercut
by the ambiguity involved in medicating an individual with
White’s particular medical condition.
5.
Finally, we are satisfied that the circumstances presented in
this case are not sufficiently exceptional to warrant forcible
29
For example, the prescribed medications can adversely affect meta-
bolic rates, leading to an increased risk of diabetes and elevated glucose
or lipids. But without information about White’s personal or family medi-
cal history, it is unclear how Dr. Kempke might discern whether White is
predisposed to diabetes and other related diseases.
34 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
medication. See Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. White is a non-violent
detainee who has served more than the entirety of her likely
sentence in pre-trial detention, and in onerous conditions at
that. The alleged victims of her crimes, which were solely
property crimes, would not likely benefit or be made whole
in any way by her prosecution. She is neither a danger to her-
self nor to the public, nor will she ever be able to purchase a
gun. She has a rare form of delusional disorder, and there is
a dearth of data regarding whether antipsychotic medications,
which rarely work on individuals with delusional disorder,
would work on a patient like her.
IV.
If we authorize the government to forcibly medicate White,
an all-too-common, non-violent, long-detained defendant, in
a case in which several factors strongly militate against forced
medication, it would risk making "routine" the kind of drastic
resort to forced medication for restoring competency that the
Supreme Court gave no hint of approving in Sell. To the con-
trary, we think the Supreme Court intended to pay more than
lip service to the imperative of individual liberty in its admon-
ishment that forced medication is constitutionally permissible
in "limited circumstances." Id. at 169. We decline to start
down a path that would essentially permit the government to
forcibly medicate any and every defendant deemed incompe-
tent to stand trial, no matter how little public good or benefit
will be achieved in doing so.
Accordingly, the order of the district court is
REVERSED.
KEENAN, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I write separately to emphasize the constitutional liberty
interest at stake and the high proof burden that the govern-
ment bears when attempting to forcibly medicate a person
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 35
accused of serious crimes. In conducting the constitutional
analysis mandated by United States v. Sell, 539 U.S. 166
(2003), these fundamental considerations are paramount.
Because of the physical violence inherent in forcible medi-
cation, the Supreme Court has held that the government bears
the burden of demonstrating an "overriding" or "essential"
interest to justify such treatment of an accused. See Riggins
v. Nevada, 504 U.S. 127, 134, 135 (1992). In my view, the
government has fallen far short of meeting this burden of
proof. I reach this conclusion without attempting to ascertain
the sentence that White may receive if eventually convicted
of these crimes.
As the majority opinion states, White possesses a "signifi-
cant liberty interest" in avoiding the unwanted administration
of antipsychotic drugs. That liberty interest protects her men-
tal, as well as physical, integrity. See Washington v. Harper,
494 U.S. 210, 229 (1990). Antipsychotic drugs, however,
expressly are designed to alter the mind. See id. at 228. Such
drugs reset the brain’s chemical balance, and affect the way
a person perceives and interacts with the world. Id. at 229.
Although the intended effect is therapeutic, these drugs can
cause serious and sometimes irreversible side effects. Id.
In addition, the forcible administration of drugs necessarily
requires a substantial and degrading intrusion of the body.
Here, the government proposes to have five medical person-
nel immobilize the defendant, inject her with a drug that she
has not consented to take, and then repeat this procedure
about every two weeks, from the time that her appeals in this
case conclude through the end of her trial.
I accept the district court’s finding that this forced regimen
is the least intrusive way to restore White to competence.
However, the district court’s finding is of no moment unless
fully supported by the Sell analysis.
36 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
Addressing the first factor in the Sell analysis, I agree that
this court’s decision in Evans mandates a conclusion that the
government has charged White with "serious" crimes. See
United States v. Evans, 404 F.3d 227, 238 (4th Cir. 2005).
Thus, under Sell, the government has demonstrated an "im-
portant interest" in restoring White to competence to face trial
on those charges. See Sell, 539 U.S. at 180.
The prospect of a 10-year sentence, however, is not a de
facto license to forcibly medicate a defendant in the manner
described above, and neither the Supreme Court nor this court
has held otherwise. Here, although the government has shown
an "important interest" in prosecuting White, the government
also must demonstrate that "special circumstances" do not so
diminish this interest, rendering forced medication impermis-
sible. See Sell, 538 U.S. at 180; Evans, 404 F.3d at 235. I con-
clude that the government has failed to satisfy this aspect of
its proof burden.
In Sell, the Supreme Court articulated a nonexclusive list of
"special circumstances," including the need for timely prose-
cution and the possibility that a defendant has "already been
confined for a significant amount of time for which [s]he
would receive credit toward any sentence ultimately
imposed." 539 U.S. at 180 (parentheses omitted). The stated
considerations guide but do not constrain the assessment of
"special circumstances" in a particular case. See id.; Evans,
404 F.3d at 239.
There is no precise formula to predict the sentence that
White might receive if she is convicted of all or some of the
crimes charged. The treatment of her codefendant, Vonda
Baker, is informative on this point, but is not dispositive of
White’s potential sentence as recognized by both the majority
and the dissenting opinions. However, as of August 2010,
White had been in custody for a significant period of time,
about 41 months, and it is undisputed that she would receive
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 37
credit in calculating her sentence for this period of incarcera-
tion and for "good time."
Additionally, our conclusion that the conduct alleged here
is "serious" does not preclude us from considering the nature
of the offenses in assessing whether "special circumstances"
diminish the government’s interest in prosecuting White. In
fact, the dissenting opinion highlights the extensive range of
property crimes that would be considered "serious" under our
precedent, from conduct like that alleged here to multi-
billion-dollar ponzi schemes. Over this spectrum of "serious"
crimes against property, a multitude of offenses would more
strongly justify forcible medication than the offenses at issue
here.
As the Supreme Court indicated in Sell, forcible medication
is justified only in exceptional cases. 539 U.S. at 180. I agree
with the majority that this is not an exceptional case, but
rather comes "perilously close to a forcible medication regime
best described . . . as routine." White has already been
detained for more than three years even though she is pre-
sumed innocent of the charged offenses. The alleged crimes
are serious, but entirely nonviolent, and the parties agree that
White is not a danger to herself or to others. Thus, the govern-
ment has failed to prove that its interests are not diminished
conclusively by these and the other "special circumstances"
discussed above. For these reasons, I join in the majority
opinion that forcible medication is impermissible in this case,
and that White’s constitutional interest in remaining free from
the involuntary administration of antipsychotic drugs must be
honored.
NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Kimberly White stands charged with six felonies involving
credit card fraud and aggravated identity theft. After evaluat-
ing her mental competence, federal medical experts diagnosed
her with Delusional Disorder, Grandiose Type, and deter-
38 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
mined that she was incompetent to stand trial. But they also
concluded that with medication, White could be restored to
competence. Nonetheless, White refused to cooperate and to
take any medication.
On the government’s motion to medicate White involuntar-
ily, the district court, in an especially careful and thorough
review of the circumstances, concluded that White should be
involuntarily medicated to restore her competence to stand
trial. Faithfully applying the criteria outlined in Sell v. United
States, 539 U.S. 166, 180-83 (2003), the court found that the
government had, by clear and convincing evidence, proved
facts satisfying each of Sell’s four factors.
If the majority were ever inclined to allow an order for
involuntary medication to enable the government to try a
defendant, this would be the paradigmatic case. Yet, the
majority finds facts based on rank speculation that White will
be detained before sentencing longer than she is likely to be
sentenced and that she does not threaten the public safety.
And then, relying on those facts, it concludes that the govern-
ment’s interest in prosecuting White is so diminished that, as
a matter of law, she must now be set free, without facing a
trial or the consequences of a potential conviction. The major-
ity also commits errors of law in reaching that conclusion. For
example, for purposes of applying Sell, it holds erroneously
that crimes against property are less serious than crimes
against the person and that therefore the government’s interest
in prosecuting crimes against property is diminished. Yet Sell
rejects the notion. See Sell, 539 U.S. at 180 (noting that gov-
ernment’s interest in prosecuting serious crimes applies
equally to serious crimes against property and serious crimes
against the person); see also United States v. Evans, 404 F.3d
227, 237 (4th Cir. 2005) (holding that the seriousness of a
crime for purposes of applying Sell is determined by "the
maximum penalty authorized by statute").
I conclude that the strong public interest in trying White in
the circumstances of this case should incline us to defer to the
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 39
district court’s careful factfinding and considered judgment.
Accordingly, I would affirm.
I
Kimberly White was charged in March 2008 in a six-count
indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit credit card
fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (carrying a maximum
sentence of five years’ imprisonment); three counts of credit
card fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1029(a)(2) (each carry-
ing a maximum sentence of ten years’ imprisonment); and
two counts of aggravated identity theft, in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1028A (each carrying a mandatory penalty of two
years’ imprisonment, to run consecutively to any other term
of imprisonment imposed).
On White’s motion, the district court ordered that White be
evaluated to determine her competence to stand trial, and for
that purpose, she was committed to the Federal Medical Cen-
ter in Carswell, Texas ("FMC Carswell") and evaluated by the
medical staff. In a report dated June 23, 2008, the staff stated
that they had diagnosed White with Delusional Disorder,
Grandiose Type, and concluded that she was not competent to
stand trial. In light of this report, the district court ordered that
White be evaluated to determine whether there was a substan-
tial probability that she would regain competence, pursuant to
18 U.S.C. § 4241(d).
After evaluating White, the medical staff at FMC Carswell
submitted a second report, dated December 5, 2008, that sum-
marized the forensic evaluation of the medical staff, particu-
larly that of Dr. Leslie Powers, a forensic psychologist, and
Dr. Robert Gregg, the chief psychologist, and concluded that
there was a substantial probability that White could be
restored to competence with antipsychotic medication. The
report stated that White had consistently refused to cooperate
with the staff conducting the evaluation—she refused to
answer questions regarding her auditory or visual hallucina-
40 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
tions and refused to consider taking any antipsychotic medica-
tions. The report noted that White’s delusional disorder was
characterized by her belief that she had discovered the cure
for AIDS and breast cancer and that she could create this cure
from her food and drink. This belief caused her to hoard her
food in her cell and to refuse to leave her cell for fear that
someone would steal her formula. As a result, White went
without bathing for weeks at a time. She was observed writing
notes on the walls of her cell regarding her delusions, and,
when the staff took away writing implements, she even began
to write these notes in her own blood.
Even so, White tended to express her delusions most vigor-
ously when she was being asked to participate in a forensic
evaluation or was being questioned about her medical and
mental health history. Similarly, her aggressive behavior was
most apparent when interacting with authority. The report
noted:
Although a diagnosis of Delusional Disorder, Gran-
diose Type, has been given in this case, it should be
noted that her symptomology is atypical, as she has
no history of psychotic symptoms before her arrest
and she possesses a remarkable ability to modulate
her symptoms in different situations. It is also
believed that much of her behavior is contrived and
volitional, particularly with regards to her defiance
and aggression towards authority.
J.A. 156. In fact, the report described one instance where
White had refused to bathe for 21 days, until officials assem-
bled to enter her cell to remove her forcibly, pursuant to a
Bureau of Prisons’ policy. Just before the team entered her
cell, however, she agreed to participate voluntarily and
allowed an officer to apply handcuffs so she could be taken
to the shower room. According to the report, as White passed
her forensic evaluator, she grinned and said, "Good times."
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 41
The report concluded that White was not a danger to herself
or to others and that the only basis for involuntarily medicat-
ing her would be to restore her competence to stand trial, pur-
suant to Sell, 539 U.S. 166. The report rendered the staff’s
opinion that medication could be prescribed that would
restore White to competence and that would be substantially
unlikely to have side-effects that would undermine the trial’s
fairness. The report also concluded that there were no less
intrusive alternatives that would successfully treat White’s ill-
ness.
In response to this report, the government filed a motion to
medicate White involuntarily to restore her competence to
stand trial and requested a hearing to enable it to present evi-
dence satisfying the Sell factors. The court scheduled a hear-
ing to consider the government’s motion, and at the hearing
the government presented the testimony of Dr. Leslie Powers,
a staff forensic psychologist at FMC Carswell who had evalu-
ated White, and Dr. Camille Kempke, the psychiatrist at FMC
Carswell treating White. White presented no witnesses at the
hearing. Indeed, she elected not to attend it.
Dr. Powers testified to White’s diagnosis and the nature of
her delusional disorder, indicating that she had observed and
evaluated White for over a year. She testified that after diag-
nosing White with Delusional Disorder, she pursued non-
medical treatment options to address the disorder by
attempting to get White to participate in competency-
restoration counseling classes. White, however, refused to
leave her cell to attend the classes. Dr. Powers also testified
that she sought to have White voluntarily take medication to
treat her disorder but that White also refused to do that.
Dr. Powers indicated that White exhibited no suicidal or
homicidal behavior and that she presented no risk to herself
or to others. She also indicated that White’s health would not
be at grave risk without such medication.
42 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
Dr. Kempke testified that she agreed with Dr. Powers’
diagnosis and assessment that White could not be civilly com-
mitted or involuntarily medicated on grounds other than to
stand trial, in accordance with Sell. Dr. Kempke also stated
that White’s condition could be successfully treated with
antipsychotic medication and explained the treatment plan she
would adopt.
She indicated that there were three medications to consider:
Haldol Decanoate, Prolixin Decanoate, and Risperdal Consta.
Haldol Decanoate and Prolixin Decanoate, she explained,
were first-generation drugs, while Risperdal Consta was a
second-generation drug. For each of the drugs, Dr. Kempke
provided a detailed dosage regimen that she would prescribe
for White.
Because Risperdal, which was Dr. Kempke’s preferred
method of treatment, was not available in short-acting inject-
able form, Dr. Kempke’s first attempt at treatment would be
to try to get White voluntarily to take a Risperdal tablet orally
to check for allergic reactions. If White consented and had no
allergic reaction, an injection of 25 milligrams would be given
to White every two weeks. If White refused to take the
Risperdal tablet, Dr. Kempke testified that she would use Hal-
dol, beginning with a short-acting dose of 10 milligrams to
check for allergy. As long as White showed no allergic reac-
tion, Dr. Kempke would administer Haldol via "a 50 milli-
gram IM every two to four weeks, attempting to go up to four
weeks, up to a maximum of 100 milligrams every four
weeks." If White had any negative reaction to Haldol, Dr.
Kempke would use Prolixin by giving a short-acting injection
to check for allergy, followed by an injection of 25 to 50 mil-
ligrams every two weeks.
Dr. Kempke also described the possible side effects from
the use of each of the medications. Haldol and Prolixin, she
pointed out, would carry a risk of muscular problems, includ-
ing tardive dyskinesia, extrapyramidal symptoms, neuroleptic
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 43
malignant syndrome, instability in movement, and agranulo-
cytosis. She explained that the second-generation medica-
tions, such as Risperdal, have a lower risk of tardive
dyskinesia and extrapyramidal symptoms, but present a
greater risk of elevated glucose and cholesterol, increasing the
risk of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. But ultimately,
Dr. Kempke noted that Risperdal, Haldol, and Prolixin were
all considered relatively safe and that they have been used to
treat millions of people with major benefits and relatively
minor risks of serious side effects.
Dr. Kempke also testified to her proposed management of
side effects, stating that they could be "effectively dealt with
by treatment strategies or by changing the medication." White
would be monitored monthly for abnormal, involuntary move-
ments, and other signs of tardive dyskinesia, and daily for
other serious symptoms, and she would have her glucose and
cholesterol checked against a baseline every three months. If
side effects were to occur, Dr. Kempke explained that they
could be counteracted by administering an anticholinergic
drug, such as benztropine, or by changing medication or dos-
age.
Finally, Dr. Kempke gave her opinion that the involuntary
medication protocol would be substantially likely to render
White competent to stand trial and would be substantially
unlikely to give rise to side effects that would interfere signif-
icantly with her ability to assist counsel in conducting a trial
defense. She testified that there were no less intrusive meth-
ods of treating White and that it was in White’s best medical
interest to be treated with these medications. Dr. Kempke
expected that White would be restored to competence within
a couple of weeks after receiving her first long-acting injec-
tion of a first-generation drug and within four weeks of her
first long-acting injection of a second-generation drug, but
that it could take as many as five months for White’s compe-
tence to be fully restored.
44 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
After considering the evidence and the arguments of coun-
sel, the district court granted the government’s motion to
involuntarily medicate White, finding that the government
had proved each of the Sell factors by clear and convincing
evidence. The court directed, in addition, that all medical per-
sonnel treating White first request that she voluntarily take the
medication before they administered it involuntarily.
From the district court’s order, dated October 9, 2009,
White filed this interlocutory appeal.
II
The governing factors for determining whether the govern-
ment can involuntarily medicate a defendant to restore her
competence to stand trial are not disputed. Under Sell, 539
U.S. at 180-81, the government must prove (1) that it has at
stake important governmental interests; (2) that involuntary
medication will significantly further those interests; (3) that
involuntary medication is necessary to further those interests;
and (4) that administration of the drugs is medically appropri-
ate. And we have held that the government must satisfy these
requirements by clear and convincing evidence. United States
v. Bush, 585 F.3d 806, 814 (4th Cir. 2009).
With respect to the first factor—whether important govern-
mental interests are at stake—the Sell Court has observed that
"[t]he Government’s interest in bringing to trial an individual
accused of a serious crime is important." Sell, 539 U.S. at
180. And to determine what constitutes a serious crime, we
have concluded that a court should "focus on the maximum
penalty authorized by statute." Evans, 404 F.3d at 237.
Even when a defendant is charged with a "serious crime,"
creating an "important governmental interest," "[s]pecial cir-
cumstances" may lessen the importance of that interest. See
Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. These "[s]pecial circumstances include
(1) the possibility that the defendant might be confined to an
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 45
institution for the mentally ill, thus ‘diminish[ing] the risks
that ordinarily attach to freeing without punishment one who
has committed a serious crime’; (2) the potential for future
confinement should the defendant regain competence; and (3)
the fact that ‘the defendant has already been confined for a
significant amount of time (for which he would receive credit
toward any sentence ultimately imposed).’" Bush, 585 F.3d at
815 (alteration in original) (quoting Sell, 539 U.S. at 180).
The mere fact that a defendant has already spent a signifi-
cant amount of time in custody, however, does not alone
defeat the government’s interest, as other aspects of a trial and
conviction may be sufficient to keep the government’s interest
in the prosecution high. These interests include the message
a prosecution sends to the public about the seriousness of an
offense, the potential for a period of supervised release fol-
lowing conviction, and the restrictions on firearm ownership
and other civil rights that follow from a conviction. Bush, 585
F.3d at 815.
The majority has relied on the first Sell factor, particularly
the circumstances that mitigate it, effectively to order White
released without a trial. The majority gives virtually determi-
native weight to its findings that White, upon completion of
litigation, will have been detained for 57.7 months and that
the sentence White will likely receive, if convicted, is the
"relatively light sentence" of 42-51 months’ imprisonment. It
thus concludes that White’s "pretrial detention (taking
account of likely good time credits) will have extended con-
siderably longer than her likely sentence," ante at 28, which
"substantially lessens the significance of the government’s
interest in prosecuting White," ante at 29. But the majority’s
findings to support these conclusions bubble with speculation
of the grandest type.
Beginning with the majority’s speculation about White’s
potential sentence if White were convicted, the majority con-
ducts its own sentencing proceeding, but without the benefit
46 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
of a presentence report and the facts necessary to conduct
such a proceeding. In a proper sentencing proceeding, the sen-
tencing judge would be required to consider a presentence
report which would define the relevant conduct and reveal
White’s criminal history, which is unknown to the majority.
The report would also provide for consideration by the sen-
tencing court the particulars of White’s role in the offense and
the losses she caused her victims. The government could then
introduce evidence that would justify an enhancement of
White’s sentence, such as egregiousness and aggressiveness
in the offense conduct. And the government could even intro-
duce evidence of criminal conduct not charged in the indict-
ment as a basis for enhancing White’s sentence within the
statutory maximum. See United States v. Grubbs, 585 F.3d
793, 798-99 (4th Cir. 2009). Not only does the majority not
have access to these factual matters necessary for sentencing,
it does not even purport to apply the Sentencing Guidelines or
the factors required for consideration by 18 U.S.C. § 3553.
Rather, to predict White’s sentence, it looks to the sentence of
White’s differently situated co-conspirator, Vonda Machelle
Baker, and to national statistics issued about fraud convictions
generally. This approach is unprecedented and unsupportable.
First, Baker’s circumstances are so dissimilar from White’s
as to provide little or no support for the majority’s use of
them. Baker was only charged with two counts (including
only one count of aggravated identity theft with a mandatory
consecutive two-year sentence), whereas White was charged
with six (including two counts with mandatory consecutive
two-year sentences).* In addition, Baker was repentant, vol-
untarily entered into a guilty plea, and provided substantial
assistance to the government, for which she obtained a down-
ward adjustment in the Sentencing Guidelines’ calculation.
There is also no basis from which to conclude that White and
*The majority misstates the record in assuming that Baker pleaded
guilty to three counts, including two counts of aggravated identity theft,
and that her relevant conduct was substantially the same as White’s.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 47
Baker have similar criminal histories. And, in considering
Baker’s sentence, the majority overlooks significant aspects
of Baker’s sentence other than her time of detention. In addi-
tion to serving a term in prison, Baker was sentenced to three
years’ supervised release and ordered to pay over $36,000 in
restitution to her victims. Under the majority’s outcome, how-
ever, White would be relieved of both of these consequences.
The majority also relied on statistics for fraud convictions
obtained across the country for all types of fraud crimes,
which it then intuitively adjusted. Based on unexamined and
general data, it observes that there is "between a 1-in-4 and
1-in-5 chance that White would receive little or no sentence
for the fraud counts"—a conclusion that is undermined by
consideration of even Baker’s lenient sentence for the types
of fraud charged in this case. Ante at 25. The majority thus
concludes that White "would likely receive a relatively short
sentence for each count." Ante at 25. The majority then takes
the national median sentence for fraud generally to assume
that White would receive a sentence of 18 to 27 months’
imprisonment—"although we cannot determine White’s likely
sentence with certainty, a number within the range created by
the medians, 18-27 months, is most appropriate." Ante at 26.
It then concludes that the sentences for White’s four counts of
fraud should run concurrently, again without any support.
Ante at 26-27.
With respect to White’s two counts of aggravated identity
theft, each of which requires a mandatory 24-month consecu-
tive sentence, see 18 U.S.C. § 1028A, the majority adds to
White’s predicted sentence only one consecutive sentence for
one count of aggravated identity theft, ignoring the other
count. With this one consecutive sentence it reaches its pre-
diction of 42-51 months’ imprisonment.
The majority’s process for predicting White’s sentence is
not only unsupportable, it is totally without legal support.
Courts of Appeals cannot conduct sentencings, and a sentenc-
48 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
ing by any court cannot be based on national averages for the
broad class of fraud convictions. The governing statutes set
forth specific sentences and sentencing ranges, and cases
applying them provide precise rubrics that are the subject of
thousands of our opinions, none of which the majority has fol-
lowed.
The majority then concludes that the predicted sentence of
42-51 months is exceeded by White’s detention, finding that
she will be detained 57.7 months. In making this finding, the
majority gives White credit for (1) time detained pursuant to
state charges; (2) time that White will be litigating this case,
including proceedings in the Supreme Court; and (3) good
time credits that the majority assumes White will earn. Again,
these findings are based on speculation.
In short, the majority creates new standards and a new pro-
cess without legal support and relies on gross speculation to
find that the government’s interest in prosecuting White is
overcome by the length of White’s assumed detention.
In addition to its reliance on White’s time of detention, the
majority assumes that White poses no risk to the public safety
and that, for that reason also, the government’s interest is
diminished. The majority gives two reasons. First, because
White was committed to a mental institution for evaluation in
this case, she has been "adjudged" a "mental defective" as
used in 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4) and, therefore, will never be
entitled to possess a firearm. And second, because the crimes
of which White is charged are nonviolent, they are less seri-
ous and therefore are, by implication, less of a threat to public
safety. Neither reason is valid.
While one "adjudged" a "mental defective" may not pos-
sess a firearm under § 922(g)(4), neither party has asserted or
claimed that the district court’s orders that White be evaluated
for her competency to stand trial amount to such adjudication,
and that point remains to be demonstrated.
UNITED STATES v. WHITE 49
But the majority relies more heavily on its assertion that
White’s crimes were nonviolent, and therefore the public’s
safety is not at risk if she is not prosecuted. As the majority
explains, "Not every serious crime is equally serious. The
nature of White’s crimes lessens the government’s interest in
prosecuting her because her alleged crimes were nonviolent
offenses." Ante at 29. The majority’s statement inappropri-
ately assumes, without legal support, that crimes against the
person are more serious than crimes against property for
applying the Sell factors. A given crime against property,
however, can be serious or even more serious than a given
crime against the person. Enormous harm and distress can be
caused by fraud and Ponzi schemes, as can be witnessed on
a grand scale in the case of Bernard Madoff in New York.
More importantly, Sell itself refused to recognize such a dis-
tinction. See Sell, 539 U.S. at 180. Moreover, the seriousness
of a crime for determining the government’s interest is deter-
mined not by judges’ intuitive evaluations but by the maxi-
mum sentence established by Congress for the crime. See
Evans, 404 F.3d at 237.
In its analysis, the majority has not only misapplied the
weight and relevance of White’s detention, but it has also
undervalued the government’s interests by failing to recog-
nize the other important ways in which a trial could serve
governmental interests. A trial would serve the dual purposes
of publicly confronting White with the serious charges against
her, thus enabling the government to seek a conviction that
would label White as a felon and her conduct as wrongful,
and it would serve as a deterrent to others. Also, if the govern-
ment were able to secure a conviction, White would lose the
right to carry firearms as well as other civil rights. A convic-
tion would, moreover, subject White to a period of supervised
release, which might be especially important in circumstances
such as those presented here, where White’s failure to recog-
nize the seriousness of her conduct suggests that she may pose
a substantial threat of reoffending if set free. Finally, because
of the nature of White’s crimes, there are numerous victims
50 UNITED STATES v. WHITE
who individually sustained substantial losses. Any conviction
of White would mandatorily result in an order of restitution,
requiring White to repay the losses she caused. See 18 U.S.C.
§§ 3556, 3663A(c)(1)(A)(ii).
These circumstances indicate that the majority’s reliance on
White’s period of detention, even if it were possible to pre-
dict, is simply too meager a basis on which to rest an order
effectively releasing her without a trial. Such a decision
leaves the public with substantial risks, not taken into account
by the majority, that the criminal justice system would
address, inasmuch as a trial and conviction would go a long
way toward incapacitating White and preventing her from
reoffending, and it allows White to avoid the full punishment
for her crimes. Also, if White is released now and it turns out
that she has manufactured many of her symptoms of mental
incompetence, the public would face yet a higher risk of reof-
fense because White would not be subject to any supervision.
In short, I respectfully submit that this case presents the
paradigmatic case that Sell anticipated would appropriately
justify involuntary medication to enable a defendant to stand
trial. For these reasons, I would affirm the district court’s con-
sidered judgment.