20-3437
Villiers v. Decker
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 ------
4 August Term, 2021
5 (Argued: October 28, 2021 Decided: April 25, 2022)
6 Docket No. 20-3437
7 ____________________________________________________________
8 ROLANDO OSHANE VILLIERS,
9 Petitioner-Appellee,
10 HENRY FERREYRA, JEFFERSON DENIZARD, ANGEL
11 PERDOMO PERDOMO, REMIGIO TAPIA VILCHIS,
12 Petitioners,
13 - v. -
14 THOMAS DECKER, in his official capacity as Director of the New York
15 Field Office of U.S. Immigrations & Customs Enforcement,
16 Respondent-Appellant,
1 ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS, in his official capacity as Secretary, U.S.
2 Department of Homeland Security,*
3 Respondent.
4 ____________________________________________________________
5 Before: KEARSE, LOHIER, and BIANCO, Circuit Judges.
6 In this habeas corpus proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in which the
7 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Analisa Torres,
8 Judge, in May 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 public health crisis, issued a
9 preliminary injunction principally requiring the United States Immigration &
10 Customs Enforcement ("ICE") to release petitioner Rolando Oshane Villiers and three
11 other petitioners from immigration detention, the government appeals from an
12 August 2020 order denying its motion to vacate or modify so much of the May 2020
13 injunction as forbade ICE to resume detention of Villiers without court permission.
14 The government sought permission to re-detain Villiers on the ground that since his
15 release he has been arrested and charged with crimes, thereby violating the court-
16 imposed condition that he not commit a crime while on release. The district court
17 denied the motion, ruling, inter alia, that the release condition is not violated unless
* Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(c)(2), Secretary
Alejandro Mayorkas is automatically substituted for former Acting
Secretary Peter T. Gaynor as a respondent in this case.
2
1 and until, on the new charges, Villiers is actually convicted. The government
2 principally challenges that ruling on appeal. We conclude that the court erred in
3 ruling that a release condition prohibiting commission of a crime is not violated
4 unless there has been a criminal conviction. We thus vacate the August 2020 order
5 and remand for further proceedings.
6 Vacated and remanded.
7 BROOKE MENSCHEL, Brooklyn, New York (S. Lucas
8 Marquez, Brooklyn Defender Services, Brooklyn,
9 New York; Eamon P. Joyce, Michael McGuinnes,
10 Sidley Austin, New York, New York, on the brief), for
11 Petitioner-Appellee.
12 BENJAMIN H. TORRANCE, Assistant United States
13 Attorney, New York, New York (Audrey Strauss,
14 United States Attorney for the Southern District of
15 New York, Talia Kraemer, Assistant United States
16 Attorney, New York, New York, on the brief), for
17 Respondent-Appellant.
18 KEARSE, Circuit Judge:
19 In this habeas corpus proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in which the
20 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Analisa Torres,
21 Judge, in May 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 public health crisis, issued a
3
1 preliminary injunction principally requiring Respondent Thomas Decker, Director of
2 the New York Office of the United States Immigration & Customs Enforcement
3 (collectively "ICE") to release petitioner Rolando Oshane Villiers and three other
4 petitioners from immigration detention, the government appeals from an August
5 2020 order denying its motion to modify or vacate so much of the May 2020
6 injunction as prohibits ICE from resuming detention of Villiers without court
7 permission. The government sought permission for ICE to re-detain Villiers on the
8 ground that during his release pursuant to the preliminary injunction he has been
9 arrested and charged with several crimes, thereby violating the court-imposed
10 condition that he not commit a crime while on release. The court denied the motion,
11 ruling, inter alia, that that release condition was not violated unless and until, on the
12 new charges, Villiers was actually convicted. The government principally challenges
13 that ruling on appeal. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the district court
14 erred in ruling that a release condition prohibiting commission of a crime is not
15 violated unless there has been a criminal conviction. We thus vacate the August 2020
16 order and remand for further proceedings.
4
1 I. BACKGROUND
2 Villiers, a native and citizen of Jamaica, was admitted to the United States
3 in November 2017 on a six-month nonimmigrant visa that authorized him to be in the
4 United States until May 27, 2018. He did not depart after that date and has remained
5 in the United States without authorization. In the two years after his arrival, Villiers
6 was arrested by New York City Police Department ("NYPD") officers three times. In
7 November 2019, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B), ICE initiated removal
8 proceedings against him for remaining in the United State longer than permitted by
9 United States law, and detained him pending the outcome of the proceedings.
10 Villiers conceded removability and applied for relief from removal.
11 A. The Habeas Petition and the Order for Villiers's Release
12 Villiers was initially detained by ICE at the Essex County Correctional
13 Facility in Newark, New Jersey ("Essex facility"), and was subsequently transferred
14 to the Bergen County Jail in Hackensack, New Jersey ("Bergen facility"). In April
15 2020, as COVID-19 developed into a global pandemic and spread rapidly in prisons
16 and jails, Villiers, along with four others who were being detained by ICE at the Essex
5
1 or Bergen facilities, or at the Orange County Jail in Goshen, New York ("Orange
2 facility"), filed a petition for release pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. They asserted that
3 conditions at those facilities posed such unreasonable risks to their health as to violate
4 their rights to substantive due process.
5 The petition alleged, inter alia, that staff and inmates at the Essex, Bergen,
6 and Orange facilities had tested positive for the COVID-19 virus ("COVID"); that the
7 five petitioners, including Villiers, had medical conditions that placed them at high
8 risk of contracting COVID and at high risk of severe complications or death if they
9 did contract COVID; and that ICE was unprepared and unable to protect the health
10 of detainees in its custody. Two days after the petition was filed, ICE agreed to
11 release one petitioner, Remigio Tapia Vilchis. The remaining four (hereinafter the
12 "Petitioners") moved for a temporary restraining order ("TRO") and a preliminary
13 injunction, seeking principally (1) their release from detention during their respective
14 immigration proceedings, and (2) an order prohibiting ICE from resuming their
15 detention during the pendency of those immigration proceedings.
16 In response to Petitioners' request for a TRO, the government submitted,
17 inter alia, the declaration of an ICE Deportation Officer recounting the circumstances
18 of ICE's arrest and detention of Villiers, and the pending removal proceeding against
6
1 him (see Declaration of Dare Aniyikaiye submitted April 24, 2020 ("Deportation
2 Officer Decl." or "Declaration"), ¶¶ 2-5, 10-16), and describing a total of 19 charges
3 against Villiers from his three arrests by NYPD in August and October 2018 (id.
4 ¶¶ 6-9). All but one of the final dispositions of those charges were unknown to the
5 Deportation Officer. (See id. ¶¶ 7-9.) The one known disposition was that in
6 November 2019, "Villiers pled guilty in the Kings County Supreme Court to one count
7 of Assault in the Second Degree with Intent to Cause Physical Injury with
8 Weapon/Instrument in violation of NYPL section 120.05(2)," for which he was
9 "sentenced to 364 days of imprisonment and an Order of Protection was entered
10 against him." (Id. ¶ 7.)
11 The Declaration stated that in his removal proceeding, Villiers conceded
12 the charge of removability and applied for relief from removal, and that his
13 immigration case remains pending. (See id. ¶¶ 12-16.) The Declaration said that, with
14 regard to the present habeas corpus petition, ICE declined to exercise its discretion
15 to release Villiers from detention, having considered all of the circumstances,
16 including "whether [he] could pose a danger to society if released." (Id. ¶ 19.)
17 Based on the parties' submissions and a telephonic hearing, the district
18 court entered a TRO that (1) ordered ICE and the Essex, Bergen, and Orange facilities
7
1 to release Petitioners, on conditions to be imposed by the court, and (2) restrained ICE
2 from rearresting them for immigration detention without court permission. See
3 District Court Order dated April 27, 2020 ("2020 TRO"), at 28. The court found that
4 Petitioners had made a sufficient showing that the conditions of confinement at their
5 respective detention facilities posed an unreasonable risk of serious damage to their
6 future health; that they were likely to succeed on the merits of their substantive due
7 process claims that ICE knew or should have known that their medical issues placed
8 them at a higher risk of severe illness or death from COVID-19; and that public health
9 and safety would be best served by rapidly decreasing the number of persons
10 confined in unsafe conditions. See 2020 TRO at 25-27. The court also stated that even
11 if Petitioners had not shown a likelihood of success on the merits of their habeas due
12 process claims, those claims were sufficiently substantial--and the circumstances
13 sufficiently extraordinary--that the court would have exercised its "'inherent
14 authority'" to "release them on bail pending final resolution of their habeas claims."
15 Id. at 27 (quoting Mapp v. Reno, 241 F.3d 221, 226 (2d Cir. 2001)).
16 The court ordered ICE to show cause why the TRO should not become
17 a preliminary injunction. See 2020 TRO at 29. Following additional proceedings, the
18 court converted the TRO to a preliminary injunction. See District Court Order dated
8
1 May 22, 2020 ("Preliminary Injunction"). The court reiterated that "even if Petitioners
2 had not met the requirements for a TRO, the Court would release them on bail . . . ."
3 Id. at 27.
4 To the extent material to this appeal, the district court's post-TRO order
5 granting Villiers release from the Bergen facility imposed on him several conditions.
6 Among them, it required him to wear a GPS ankle bracelet allowing electronic
7 monitoring by ICE, and it ordered that while on release he "shall not commit a
8 federal, state, or local crime." District Court Order dated April 27, 2020 ("Villiers
9 Release Order"), at 1. In subsequently granting the Preliminary Injunction, the court
10 ordered that the Petitioners "remain released on the conditions set by the Court" in
11 their respective release orders. Preliminary Injunction at 2; id. at 28 ("Petitioners shall
12 remain released, subject to the conditions already set by the Court"). The court
13 rejected the government's request that ICE not be restrained from a re-detaining
14 petitioner in the event that he commits another crime, stating that "[p]erhaps those
15 occurrences would warrant an application to the Court for a modification of [the]
16 order," but that the court would not otherwise "pass on the hypothetical
17 circumstances that might allow redetention." Id. at 28 n.13.
9
1 B. ICE's Request for Permission to Re-Detain Villiers
2 The May 2020 Preliminary Injunction, like the TRO, provided that ICE
3 "is RESTRAINED from arresting Petitioners for civil immigration detention purposes
4 unless [it] first obtains the Court's permission." Preliminary Injunction at 2, 28. On
5 July 28, 2020, the government informed the district court that Villiers had been
6 arrested by NYPD on July 27, 2020, in connection with what appeared to be a July 19
7 domestic violence incident. (See Letter from Assistant United States Attorney
8 ("AUSA") Michael J. Byars to Judge Torres dated July 28, 2020 ("Government Letter").)
9 The government stated that Villiers had been charged with second-degree robbery,
10 assault on a police officer, resisting arrest, and second-degree obstruction of
11 governmental administration. (See id. at 1-2.)
12 Submitting and quoting copies of the July 2020 NYPD complaints and
13 arrest reports, the government described the details as follows:
14 [O]n Sunday, July 19, 2020, Villiers was at his girlfriend's
15 residence when he took her "phone from her hand while striking
16 her with a closed fist due to [her] telling [Villiers] that he could
17 not stay there. [Villiers] then choked [her] when she attempted to
18 retrieve [her] phone from [Villiers]." The cell phone does not
19 appear to have been recovered. As a result, it appears that Villiers
20 has been charged with one count of second-degree robbery.
10
1 On Monday, July 27, 2020, the NYPD arrested Villiers in
2 relation to the above incident. According to the documents,
3 Villiers resisted arrest. Specifically, "[Villiers] did attempt to take
4 a Taser from [one of the officers'] hand, in which during the
5 ensuing struggle caused the Taser to fire and hit another [officer]
6 in his left foot. [Villiers] also bit [an officer] in the left elbow and
7 punched him in the head," causing a "deep laceration to his left
8 elbow, swelling, redness to [the] left knee."
9 (Government Letter at 1-2 (quoting and citing NYPD Complaint No. 2020-067-005592,
10 and NYPD Arrest Report Nos. K20623349H and K20623359Y (internal citations
11 omitted).)
12 The government "request[ed] that the Court either modify or vacate the
13 portion of its May 22 Order enjoining ICE from arresting and re-detaining petitioner
14 Rolando Oshane Villiers ('Villiers') due to his non-compliance with the Court's
15 conditions" (Government Letter at 1), "request[ing] that the Court permit ICE to
16 re-detain Villiers pending resolution of his removal proceedings" (id. at 2). The letter
17 stated that if resumption of Villiers's immigration detention were permitted, ICE
18 planned to place him in the Orange facility rather than the Bergen facility.
19 Villiers opposed the government's motion. His counsel, while
20 acknowledging the "serious nature of the allegations," argued that the charges had not
21 been accepted by a grand jury, much less proven at a trial; that Villiers "remain[ed]
11
1 entitled to a presumption of innocence"; and that "[a]bsent a conviction, Mr. Villiers
2 has not commit[ed] a . . . crime in violation of the Court's order of release." (Letter
3 from Brooklyn Defender Services Attorney Sonia Marquez to Judge Torres dated July
4 30, 2020, at 2 (internal quotation marks omitted).) Counsel added that Villiers had
5 been granted bail; and she argued that the combination of "the ability of the district
6 attorney to seek a bail increase or remand upon a change in circumstances--and this
7 Court's conditions of release that are still in place, should . . . be adequate in the civil
8 immigration context to mitigate the risks of flight or danger." (Id. (footnotes
9 omitted).)
10 The government replied to Villiers's letter principally by arguing that the
11 court's conditions of release "do[] not require that Villiers be convicted of a crime
12 before a violation occurs." (Letter from AUSA Brandon M. Waterman to Judge Torres
13 dated August 6, 2020 ("Government Reply Letter"), at 2; see, e.g., id. n.2 ("The use of
14 the word 'commit' instead of 'convicted' is important. Commit means 'To perpetrate
15 (a crime),' whereas convict means 'To prove or officially announce (a criminal
16 defendant) to be guilty of a crime after proceedings in a law court; specif., to find (a
17 person) guilty of a criminal offense upon a criminal trial, a plea of guilty, or a plea of
18 nolo contendere (no contest).' Black's Law Dictionary 11th ed. 2019.").)
12
1 The parties also debated the COVID-related health conditions at ICE
2 detention facilities, citing August 2020 facts and statistics. However, as both sides
3 have recognized on this appeal that evidence on the health and safety issues would
4 by now need to be updated, we omit description of their 2020 presentations, as well
5 as the district court's findings as to the then-existing circumstances.
6 C. The Decision of the District Court
7 In an order dated August 7, 2020 ("August 2020 Order"), the district court
8 denied the government's motion. Acknowledging that Villiers had been "released
9 subject to specific conditions, including the requirement that he not 'commit a federal,
10 state, or local crime,'" August 2020 Order at 2 (quoting Villiers Release Order at 1),
11 and accepting the facts that while on release Villiers has been arrested, arraigned, and
12 released on bail, the court declined to give ICE permission to re-detain him, stating
13 principally as follows:
14 Respondent has not presented evidence that Petitioner has
15 violated the conditions of release set by the Court. That Petitioner
16 was arrested is not proof that Petitioner has "committed" a crime.
17 Nor would it be appropriate for the Court to predetermine that
18 issue--the proper venue for determining whether [Villiers] has
19 broken the law is the New York state court where his charges are
13
1 currently pending. The presumption of innocence remains with
2 a Defendant unless and until he is found guilty of a crime.
3 August 2020 Order at 2.
4 This appeal followed.
5 II. DISCUSSION
6 On appeal, the government contends principally that the district court
7 erred in ruling that a release condition prohibiting commission of a crime is not
8 violated unless there has been a criminal conviction. Villiers, retreating from the
9 position taken in the district court, has conceded in his brief and oral argument on
10 appeal that the court may properly revoke his release for violation of the do-not-
11 commit-a-crime condition and "detain [him] because he committed a crime even
12 though he hasn't been convicted of a crime" (Oral Argument Recording at 9:52-9:57;
13 see Villiers brief on appeal at 37-40). Instead, Villiers now argues that the district
14 court did not rule that a conviction was a prerequisite, but instead merely evaluated
15 the police reports and arrest records and "was simply unpersuaded by the evidence"
16 (Villiers brief on appeal at 39) that Villiers committed a crime.
14
1 For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the court based its decision
2 not on an assessment of the evidence as to Villiers's conduct but rather on its view as
3 a matter of law that a release condition prohibiting the commission of a crime is not
4 violated unless and until there is a conviction. Reviewing that legal ruling de novo,
5 we conclude that it was erroneous. Accordingly, we vacate and remand for further
6 proceedings.
7 A. The Terms of the Preliminary Injunction
8 We review a district court's denial of a motion to modify a preliminary
9 injunction for abuse of discretion. Weight Watchers International, Inc. v. Luigino's, Inc.,
10 423 F.3d 137, 141 (2d Cir. 2005). "A district court abuses its discretion if it (1) bases its
11 decision on an error of law or uses the wrong legal standard; (2) bases its decision on
12 a clearly erroneous factual finding; or (3) reaches a conclusion that, though not
13 necessarily the product of a legal error or a clearly erroneous factual finding, cannot
14 be located within the range of permissible decisions." Klipsch Group, Inc. v. ePRO
15 E-Commerce Ltd., 880 F.3d 620, 627 (2d Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted).
16 In the present case, it is possible to view the preliminary injunction as not
17 technically requiring modification, given that it prohibits ICE from re-detaining a
15
1 petitioner without court permission, and the government did not request elimination
2 of the permission condition but rather requested that such permission be granted
3 with regard to Villiers. However, we view the government as having properly moved
4 to vacate or modify the injunction to the extent it applied to Villiers, since ICE sought
5 permission to re-detain Villiers, which, if granted, would plainly have altered the
6 current status quo.
7 The principal issue on appeal concerns the district court's conclusion that
8 as a matter of law it could not find that Villiers had violated the
9 do-not-commit-a-crime condition of the preliminary injunction order. We turn
10 therefore to the merits of the government's challenge that this was an error of law
11 warranting vacatur of the denial of its motion to vacate or modify so much of the
12 injunction as prohibited it from re-detaining Villiers.
13 B. Conditional Release of Individuals Detained
14 Most of the reported decisions dealing with requests for the revocation
15 of bail or of other forms of release from detention have concerned individuals who
16 were detained because they had been convicted of crimes. Villiers, however, was
17 detained by the United States for civil immigration proceedings because he violated
16
1 federal law, albeit not federal criminal law. His detention or release on bond would
2 normally be controlled by the United States Attorney General, whose exercise of
3 discretion would not be judicially reviewable. See 8 U.S.C. §§ 1226(a) and (e). In this
4 case, however, unrelated to the merits of his immigration status, Villiers raised--to the
5 satisfaction of the district court, and not appealed by the government--a substantial
6 constitutional claim that the conditions of his detention at the Bergen facility in the
7 Spring of 2020, at the height of the COVID pandemic, posed an unreasonable risk to
8 his health; and in this habeas proceeding he has been granted the equivalent of bail.
9 The present case thus comes to us via a different route than those arising through the
10 criminal justice system. However, as to the merits of a claim that conditions of release
11 have been violated, the government's motion implicates the same principal concerns
12 that shape decisions to grant or revoke the release of individuals who were or had
13 been in custody because they were accused or convicted of crime. We thus look to
14 those decisions for guidance in considering the district court's ruling in this case.
15 Individuals detained by the government, whether after an established
16 violation of federal law or in anticipation of the resolution of charges of such
17 violations, are usually sentenced to, or eligible for, a period of release from such
18 detention on conditions established by statute or court order. See, e.g., Johnson v.
17
1 United States, 529 U.S. 694, 696-97 (2000) (supervised release following service of
2 prison term imposed for conviction of federal crime, see 18 U.S.C. § 3583); United
3 States v. Edwards, 834 F.3d 180, 183 (2d Cir. 2016) ("Edwards") (same); United States v.
4 Chatelain, 360 F.3d 114, 115-16 (2d Cir. 2004) ("Chatelain") (same); United States v.
5 Colasuonno, 697 F.3d 164, 169 (2d Cir. 2012) ("Colasuonno") (release on probation
6 following service of prison term imposed for conviction of federal crime, see 18 U.S.C.
7 § 3561); United States v. Nagelberg, 413 F.2d 708, 709-10 (2d Cir. 1969) ("Nagelberg")
8 (release on probation following suspension of an imposed prison term for conviction
9 of federal crime, see 18 U.S.C. § 3651 (1964), repealed by Sentencing Reform Act of 1984,
10 Pub. L. No. 98-473, Tit. II, §§ 212(a)(1) and (2), 98 Stat. 1837, 1987), cert. denied, 396 U.S.
11 1010 (1970); see also United States v. Davis, 845 F.2d 412, 414-15 (2d Cir. 1988) ("Davis")
12 (release on bail prior to trial, see 18 U.S.C. §§ 3142 and 3148).
13 In all such circumstances, conditions are imposed that highlight two
14 primary goals: (a) to assure that the individual will appear at the required venue at
15 the required time (e.g., for trial or for supervision by a monitoring officer), and (b) not
16 to endanger the safety of any other person or the public. As to the latter for example,
17 § 3583, titled "Conditions of supervised release" provides, inter alia, that "[t]he court
18 shall order, as an explicit condition of supervised release, that the defendant not commit
18
1 another Federal, State, or local crime during the term of supervision." 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d)
2 (emphases added). Similarly with respect to the former federal system of parole,
3 which was abolished when the United States Sentencing Guidelines ("Guidelines")
4 became effective, the parole commission was instructed that "[i]n every case, the
5 Commission shall impose as a condition of parole that the parolee not commit another
6 Federal, State, or local crime." 18 U.S.C. § 4209(a) (1982) (emphases added), repealed by
7 Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, Pub. L. No. 98-473, Tit. II, § 218(a)(5), 98 Stat 1837,
8 2027. And with respect to a defendant detained pending trial, 18 U.S.C. § 3142
9 contains the same command. It provides, inter alia, that if a judicial officer determines
10 that the defendant will be "reasonably assure[d]"--either by means of fiscal and/or
11 physical security, see id. § 3142(c), or without a need for such security, see id. § 3142(b)-
12 -to be present "as required," and does not find that the defendant's release will
13 "endanger the safety of any other person or the community," the judicial officer "shall"
14 order the defendant's pretrial release "subject to the condition that the person not
15 commit a Federal, State, or local crime during the period of release," id. §§ 3142(b) and (c)
16 (emphasis added).
17 With respect to all of these grants of release, the condition that the
18 individual not commit a crime while on release is a "mandatory" condition of his
19
1 release. E.g., Johnson, 529 U.S. at 697; Edwards, 834 F.3d at 183; United States v. Reyes,
2 283 F.3d 446, 459 (2d Cir. 2002) (federal parole).
3 C. Proceedings Following Alleged Violations of Release Conditions
4 Proceedings to revoke an individual's release on probation, parole, or
5 supervised release are not stages in a criminal prosecution; and they are governed by
6 standards less stringent than those governing criminal trials. See, e.g., Gagnon v.
7 Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778, 782 (1973) (revocation of state-law probation); Morrissey v.
8 Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 480 (1972) (revocation of state-law parole); Johnson, 529 U.S.
9 at 700 (revocation of supervised release); United States v. Jones, 299 F.3d 103, 109 (2d
10 Cir. 2002) ("Jones") (noting that the constitutional guarantees governing revocation of
11 parole or probation are identical to those applicable to revocation of supervised
12 release). While an individual whose release is sought to be revoked is entitled to due
13 process such as notice of the alleged grounds for revocation, a hearing, and the right
14 to testify at such a hearing, due process does not entitle him to the full range of rights
15 he would have in a criminal prosecution. See, e.g., Morrissey, 408 U.S. at 487-89. In a
16 revocation proceeding, he does not have, for example, a constitutional right to
20
1 counsel, see, e.g., Gagnon, 411 U.S. at 790, or to trial by jury, see, e.g., Johnson, 529 U.S.
2 at 700.
3 Nor does an individual in a revocation proceeding have the right to have
4 that proceeding delayed until disposition of the criminal charges against him. See,
5 e.g., Jones, 299 F.3d at 111; United States v. Alvarez, 878 F.3d 640, 641 (8th Cir. 2017).
6 Indeed, the Supreme Court suggests that revocation proceedings should be conducted
7 expeditiously: "[D]ue process would seem to require that some minimal inquiry"--"in
8 the nature of a preliminary hearing to determine whether there is probable cause or
9 reasonable ground to believe that the arrested parolee has committed acts that would
10 constitute a violation of parole conditions"--should be conducted "as promptly as
11 convenient after arrest while information is fresh and sources are available,"
12 Morrissey, 408 U.S. at 485 (internal quotation marks omitted); and a final hearing for
13 a determination of more than probable cause should be held "within a reasonable
14 time after the parolee is taken into custody," id. at 488 (noting that "[a] lapse of two
15 months . . . would not appear to be unreasonable").
16 Finally, although "violation[s] of the conditions of supervised release . . . .
17 often lead to reimprisonment, the violative conduct need not be criminal and need
18 only be found by a judge under a preponderance of the evidence standard, not by a
21
1 jury beyond a reasonable doubt," Johnson, 529 U.S. at 700, in part because, even as to
2 violative acts that "are criminal in their own right," revocation of release is not
3 "punishment for" those new offenses, id. Instead, the penalty imposed for violating
4 a condition of release is generally viewed as "relat[ing] to the original offense." Id.
5 at 701; id. at 700 ("most courts" treat "sanctions for violating the conditions of
6 supervised release a[s] part of the original sentence"). And as recommended by the
7 federal Guidelines, this Court has generally viewed the revocation of supervised
8 release as a sanction for the defendant's abuse of the court's trust in his agreeing to
9 abide by the imposed conditions in order to be granted release instead of remaining
10 incarcerated. See, e.g., Edwards, 834 F.3d at 194-95; United States v. Aspinall, 389 F.3d
11 332, 350 (2d Cir. 2004) ("Aspinall"); Guidelines ch. 7, pt. A intro. cmt. 3(b) (Policy
12 Statement recommending that upon finding that a defendant "fail[ed] to follow the
13 court-imposed conditions of probation or supervised release," the court should take
14 into account the seriousness of the defendant's noncompliance and criminal history
15 to a limited degree, and "should sanction primarily the defendant's breach of trust").
16 This approach is consistent with our traditional view of the conditions
17 of probation and the appropriate judicial responses to violations of those conditions.
18 A defendant's "acceptance of probation when execution of sentence has been
22
1 suspended constitutes an acceptance of the[ probation] conditions," one of those
2 conditions being "that the probationer 'shall not violate any State or Federal Penal
3 Law,'" United States v. Markovich, 348 F.2d 238, 239 (2d Cir. 1965); and the "act of grace
4 extended to one convicted of a crime through a suspension of the execution of the
5 sentence imposed after that conviction can be withdrawn in the discretion of the
6 sentencing court when the court is satisfied that the recipient of its grace is unworthy
7 of it," id. at 241. See also Colasuonno, 697 F.3d at 178 (probation revocation was "to
8 address the breach of trust placed in Colasuonno when the court initially decided to
9 sentence him to a term of probation rather than incarceration"); United States v. Brown,
10 899 F.2d 189, 192 (2d Cir. 1990) ("Brown") (revocation of release was a sanction for
11 probationer who "abused the opportunity granted him not to be incarcerated"
12 (internal quotation marks omitted)); Nagelberg, 413 F.3d at 709 (same).
13 As indicated above, given that a revocation proceeding for violation of
14 the do-not-commit-a-crime condition of release is not part of a criminal prosecution
15 for that crime, the question of whether the individual in fact committed the alleged
16 criminal conduct need not, in the revocation proceeding, be decided beyond a
17 reasonable doubt. Section 3583, which authorizes revocation of supervised release if
18 the court finds that the defendant violated a release condition, see id. § 3583(e),
23
1 provides explicitly that such a finding is to be made "by a preponderance of the
2 evidence," id. § 3583(e)(3). Thus,
3 [t]o revoke supervised release and impose a term of
4 imprisonment, a district court must find by a preponderance of
5 the evidence that the defendant violated a condition of his
6 supervision. See 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(3). The preponderance
7 standard requires proof that the defendant's violation of
8 supervision was "more likely than not." United States v. Hertular,
9 562 F.3d 433, 447 (2d Cir. 2009); see United States v. Glenn, 744 F.3d
10 845, 848 (2d Cir. 2014) (recognizing that standard of proof
11 applicable to revocation proceedings is lower than that required
12 to establish guilt at trial).
13 Edwards, 834 F.3d at 199. See, e.g., Johnson, 529 U.S. at 700 (while "violations [of the
14 conditions of supervised release] often lead to reimprisonment, the violative conduct
15 . . . need only be found by a judge under a preponderance of the evidence standard"
16 (emphases added)); United States v. Carlton, 442 F.3d 802, 811 (2d Cir. 2006)
17 ("accusations proved by a preponderance of evidence do not violate the Fifth or Sixth
18 Amendments in the context of [revocation of] supervised release"); United States v.
19 Ojudun, 915 F.3d 875, 888 (2d Cir. 2019) (after finding an evidentiary error, remanding
20 for a new revocation hearing for the court to "determine whether the [violation of
21 supervised release] charges" were "established by a preponderance of the evidence").
24
1 With respect to revocation of forms of release other than supervised
2 release, even lower standards of proof may be permissible. As to probation, see
3 18 U.S.C. §§ 3563 and 3565, there is no provision, such as § 3583(e)(3) with respect to
4 supervised release, that conduct in violation of the probation condition is to be found
5 by a preponderance of the evidence; and some opinions have suggested that the
6 standard may be lower. Thus, in Colasuonno, we noted that
7 a district court need only be "reasonably satisfied" that a probationer
8 has failed to comply with the conditions of probation to revoke
9 sentence. United States v. Lettieri, 910 F.2d 1067, 1068 (2d Cir.1990);
10 see also United States v. Hooker, 993 F.2d 898, 900 (D.C.Cir.1993)
11 (suggesting "reasonably satisfied" standard may require less than
12 preponderance of evidence).
13 Colasuonno, 697 F.3d at 181 (emphases ours). See also Brown, 899 F.2d at 192
14 ("revocation requires only proof to satisfy the court that the probationer has abused the
15 opportunity granted him not to be incarcerated" (internal quotation marks omitted
16 (emphasis ours))); Nagelberg, 413 F.3d at 709 ("[o]n a hearing to revoke probation, all
17 that is required is that the court be satisfied that [the probationer] had abused the
18 opportunity granted him not to be incarcerated" (internal quotation marks omitted
19 (emphasis ours))).
25
1 And with respect to pretrial bail under 18 U.S.C. § 3148(b), revocation
2 expressly provides for a lower standard:
3 In relevant part, § 3148(b) provides that a "judicial officer shall
4 enter an order of revocation and detention if, after a hearing, the
5 judicial officer--(1) finds that there is--(A) probable cause to believe
6 that the person has committed a Federal, State, or local crime while on
7 release. . . . If there is probable cause to believe that, while on release,
8 the person committed a Federal, State, or local felony, a rebuttable
9 presumption arises that no condition or combination of conditions will
10 assure that the person will not pose a danger to the safety of any other
11 person or the community" . . . .
12 Davis, 845 F.2d at 414 (emphases ours) (original emphases omitted).
13 In sum, when considering a motion for revocation of release from
14 detention, the court should not await resolution of the charges against the individual
15 in the criminal proceeding but should proceed expeditiously to determine whether
16 the individual engaged in conduct prohibited (or failed to perform acts required) by
17 the release condition; and the revocation court need not make its factual findings by
18 any more stringent standard than a preponderance of the evidence.
19 Finally, the do-not-commit-a-crime condition common to the release
20 regimes discussed above is a mandatory condition designed to dissuade the released
21 individual from endangering the safety of another person or the community. It is the
22 commission of crimes that cause injury. An eventual conviction for the crime, while
26
1 providing some solace, does not undo the injury, and conviction is thus not the
2 impetus for that mandatory condition of release. It is significant--and not surprising--
3 that the district court in its August 2020 Order did not cite any authority for its view
4 that a conviction is a necessary prerequisite for the revocation court to find that the
5 individual who committed a crime while on release violated that condition of release.
6 Villiers in his arguments on appeal likewise cites no such authority. Nor have we
7 found any.
8 To the contrary, in Chatelain we not only noted that findings in revocation
9 proceedings are to be made under the preponderance standard, we also expressly
10 ruled that the defendant's violation of the do-not-commit-a-crime condition of his
11 release warranted revocation of his supervised release without his having been
12 convicted of the alleged crimes:
13 The pertinent supervised-release condition provided that
14 Chatelain "shall not commit another federal, state, or local crime."
15 (Judgment of Conviction October 18, 1999, at 3 (emphasis added).)
16 . . . [T]he applicability of this condition is not dependent on the
17 defendant's being convicted, so long as the court in the revocation
18 proceeding finds that the defendant "committed" such a crime . . . . a
19 finding [that] . . . need only be made "by a preponderance of the
20 evidence" . . . .
27
1 Chatelain, 360 F.3d at 124 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(3) (second and third emphases
2 ours)).
3 D. The District Court's Requirement of a Conviction
4 As set out in Part I.C. above (and repeated here for convenience) the
5 district court denied the government's request for permission to re-detain Villiers,
6 ruling--notwithstanding the NYPD complaints and records of Villiers's arrest in July
7 2020 submitted by the government--that the government
8 has not presented evidence that [Villiers] has violated the
9 conditions of release set by the Court. That Petitioner was
10 arrested is not proof that Petitioner has "committed" a crime. Nor
11 would it be appropriate for the Court to predetermine that
12 issue--the proper venue for determining whether Respondent [sic]
13 has broken the law is the New York state court where his charges
14 are currently pending. The presumption of innocence remains
15 with a Defendant unless and until he is found guilty of a crime.
16 August 2020 Order at 2. This was the court's entire discussion as to whether Villiers's
17 conduct violated a condition of his release. We thus see no merit in Villiers's
18 contention that the district court "was simply unpersuaded by the evidence" (Villiers
19 brief on appeal at 39), for nothing in the August 2020 Order suggests that the court
20 made any assessment of the evidence.
28
1 Instead, when the court stated (A) that it would not "be appropriate for
2 the [District] Court to predetermine th[e] issue" of whether Villiers "committed a
3 crime," (B) that a decision by the district court on revocation would deprive Villiers
4 of his "presumption of innocence," and (C) that the court could not properly find that
5 Villiers had violated the condition that he not "commit[]" a crime "unless and until he
6 is found guilty of a crime," the court plainly ruled as a matter of law that a conviction
7 was a necessary prerequisite for a finding that Villiers violated his do-not-commit-a-
8 crime condition of release. We have several difficulties with this ruling.
9 The court's principal error is found in its statement that, if it were to
10 decide whether Villiers had "committed" a crime, its decision would "predetermine
11 th[e] issue" that is to be decided in Villiers's criminal proceeding: That rationale
12 assumes that the issue in the two proceedings is the same. But while both
13 proceedings concern the same conduct, the issues are not the same because the
14 standards of proof are different. As discussed in Part II.C. above, the issue for the
15 revocation court is whether the individual more likely than not engaged in conduct
16 that was criminal. The issue in the criminal proceeding is whether he engaged in that
17 conduct beyond a reasonable doubt. A finding by the district court that he more
18 likely than not committed the acts alleged does not answer the question of whether
29
1 he did so beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, the district court's view that its own
2 revocation determination would "predetermine" Villiers's guilt was error.
3 Relatedly, the district court assumed that an unfavorable revocation
4 decision prior to a trial in the criminal case would deprive Villiers of the presumption
5 of innocence. But that assumption too founders principally on the difference between
6 the applicable standards of proof. A person is presumed to be innocent until, after
7 a fair trial, he has been found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See, e.g., Herrera v.
8 Collins, 506 U.S. 390, 398-99 (1993); Ross v. Moffitt, 417 U.S. 600, 610 (1974).
9 In considering the revocation motion, the district court was of course
10 correct in stating that the mere fact that Villiers was arrested did not prove that he
11 had committed the crimes charged. Yet, given that the existence of probable cause to
12 believe he committed crimes was a constitutional prerequisite for his arrests, the
13 arrest records provide an indication that the government's charge that Villiers
14 violated the do-not-commit-a-crime condition--whether or not eventually proven to
15 the district court's satisfaction--was not baseless. Villiers is entitled, if he requests, to
16 an evidentiary hearing and an opportunity to be heard on the charge that his acts
17 violated the that condition. As to the conduct of such a hearing, it is noteworthy that
18 "[t]he Federal Rules of Evidence, . . . other than those governing privileges, do not
30
1 apply to proceedings 'revoking probation,' Fed.R.Evid. 1101(d)(3))," Aspinall, 389 F.3d
2 at 344, and that the court for good cause may limit the right of confrontation, see id.;
3 see also Morrissey, 408 U.S. at 489 (as "there is no thought to equate [a revocation
4 hearing] to a criminal prosecution in any sense," the court has "flexib[ility]" with
5 respect to the receipt of "material that would not be admissible in an adversary
6 criminal trial").
7 We remand for the district court to reconsider the government's motion,
8 taking into account whether it was more likely than not that Villiers committed a
9 crime while on release.
10 E. Other Issues
11 A finding that the individual violated a release condition does not, of
12 course, fully resolve a request for revocation. If the court makes such a finding, it
13 must then decide what remedy for the violation is appropriate. With respect to that
14 issue in the present case, the court should take into account, inter alia, evidence in the
15 record as to Villiers's past criminal history (see Deportation Officer Decl. ¶ 7
16 (describing Villiers's 2019 conviction of assault with intent to cause physical injury
17 with a weapon or instrument)). In addition, we note that on appeal the government,
31
1 without permission from the Court, included in its appendix evidence of additional
2 NYPD arrests of Villiers after the district court's August 2020 Order denied the
3 government's request to re-detain him. Villiers moved to strike that new material as
4 impermissible. We have not considered that evidence on this appeal, and we deny
5 the motion to strike it as moot. On remand, however, the parties are free to offer new
6 or previously unpresented evidence to the district court as to Villiers's conduct while
7 on release.
8 If the district court finds that Villiers committed a crime while on release,
9 its determination of an appropriate remedy should also take into account, inter alia,
10 public safety interests, as well as such updated information as the parties will provide
11 with respect to Villiers's health condition and the current COVID-related conditions
12 at whatever facility the government would now propose to send Villiers for re-
13 detention. Such hearings as are required on remand should be pursued
14 expeditiously.
32
1 CONCLUSION
2 We have considered all of Villiers's contentions in support of the district
3 court's ruling that an individual cannot be found to have violated a condition that he
4 not commit a crime while on release unless he has been convicted of the crime, and
5 have found them to be without merit. The order of the district court denying the
6 government's motion to vacate or modify the preliminary injunction, in order to allow
7 ICE to re-detain Villiers, is vacated, and the matter is remanded for proceedings not
8 inconsistent with this opinion.
33