FILED: September 15, 2003
PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
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No. 01-22
(CR-97-329-L)
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
versus
DONALD LEE FEREBE,
Defendant - Appellant.
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On Petition for Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
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The government’s petition for rehearing and rehearing en
banc and the appellant’s response to the petition were submitted
to this Court. As no member of this Court or the panel requested
a poll on the petition for rehearing en banc, and
As the panel considered the petition for rehearing and is of
the opinion that it should be denied,
IT IS ORDERED that the petition for rehearing and rehearing
en banc is denied.
Entered at the direction of Judge Luttig for the Court.
For the Court
/s/ Patricia S. Connor
Clerk
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NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, in explanation of not requesting a poll
on the petition for rehearing en banc:
The issue presented in this case -- whether 18 U.S.C.
§ 3593(a) creates an immediately appealable substantive right not
to stand trial in a capital case -- is an important one that
already is changing pretrial proceedings in capital cases in a
significant way. See, e.g., United States v. Hatten, No. 3:02-
00232, 2003 WL 21946458 (S.D. W. Va. Aug. 14, 2003) (granting
before trial defendant's motion to bar the government from
seeking the death penalty, based on the holding of this case).
Even when a defendant's motion to bar the government from seeking
the death penalty is denied because the notice was timely given,
see United States v. Breeden, No. 3:02-00013, 2003 WL 22019060
(W.D. Va. Aug. 22, 2003), the proceedings are at risk of
substantial delay because the ruling is subject to an immediate
appeal by virtue of our holding. In my judgment, the issue
raised by this case readily satisfies our requirements for en
banc review.
But the history of this case suggests that immediate review
by the Supreme Court would be a more efficient resolution of the
debate. Six judges of this court have now heard argument and
reviewed this case. The first panel split in such a manner that
it could not resolve the case. Two judges voted that the court
had jurisdiction and the third concluded otherwise, declining to
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review the merits. This left only two judges to decide the
merits, and they split. This panel has likewise split, but with
a different grouping. The prospect that this court's
indecisiveness would continue en banc on a grander scale is
accordingly very real, and the cost in judicial resources would
hardly seem to justify the process.
For this reason, I do not request a poll of the court to
rehear this case en banc, nor do I vote for rehearing.
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LUTTIG, Circuit Judge, concurring in the denial of rehearing and
denial of rehearing en banc:
I concur, of course, in the denial of panel rehearing, and
in the full court’s decision not to grant rehearing en banc. To
be sure, our resolution of the deceptively and exceedingly
difficult issue presented by this case may change the way in
which the plea negotiations between the government and the
defendant in some capital cases, and even the pretrial
proceedings in those cases, will unfold. For example, as Judge
Niemeyer implies, it may well be that the government will no
longer be able to hold the prospect of prosecutorial pursuit of
the death penalty over the defendant during plea negotiations
(which is not a concern of the statute) and, then, when plea
efforts fail, force the defendant to trial for capital murder in
a shorter time than would reasonably be required to prepare for
such a trial (which is the concern of the statute). Rather, the
government simply may have to serve notice earlier and then
negotiate from that posture of what I would think would be
relatively greater strength, even if such does require more of
the government and does confer more entitlement upon the
defendant, pretrial.
I suspect that the instances in which the United States
deliberately and for strategic advantage structures negotiations
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so as to deprive the defendant of reasonable preparation time
before his capital trial are few in number. But to the extent
that I am mistaken as to the frequency of this occurrence (or to
the extent that defendants are denied a reasonable time between
notice and trial by no design of the prosecution whatsoever), I
am untroubled by the consequences of the court’s opinion, for
they are nothing more than the inescapable ones that follow upon
faithful application of the statute that the Congress of the
United States enacted.
Nor do I agree with the further implication that might be
drawn from Judge Niemeyer’s opinion today, that our decision will
otherwise significantly disrupt capital prosecutions. Beyond
what I suspect are the relatively few cases (if any) predating
issuance of our opinion in which unreasonably short notice had
already been provided, I doubt that our court’s opinion will have
much effect at all. That it will not, I believe, is already
beginning to be borne out by the two cases that have been decided
under our opinion. See United States v. Breeden, No. 3:03-00013,
2003 WL 22019060 (W.D. Va. Aug. 22, 2003)(denying before trial
defendant’s motion to bar the government from seeking the death
penalty, based on the holding of this case, where defendant was
given six to seven months in which to prepare for capital trial);
United States v. Hatten, No. 3:02-00232, 2003 WL 21946458 (S.D.
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W. Va. Aug. 14, 2003)(granting before trial defendant’s motion to
bar the government from seeking the death penalty, based on the
holding of this case, where defendant was given thirty-six days
in which to prepare for capital trial).
Not only are these two cases excellent examples, in and of
themselves, of the relative clarity and workability of the rule
embodied in the statute Congress enacted; but, with these
examples of the application of the rule now extant, it should be
apparent that the appeals that might be taken from these and like
cases can be disposed of easily and on an expedited basis, if not
also without oral argument, thereby necessitating little delay.
But, as is true with respect to the changes that may be worked in
the plea negotiation process, to the extent that more complicated
questions arise and delay does become unavoidable on occasion,
such must be accepted (or at least indulged) as a cost of our
more important insistence upon the rule of law. It is not ours
to assess the consequences of various interpretations of a
statute and then select that interpretation that we deem to yield
the most palatable results, even if it is increasingly common, if
not commonplace, to so proceed. Rather, we interpret the statute
as enacted by the legislature and, if the results of that
interpretation prove unpalatable, then the legislature may amend
the statute accordingly.
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