USA V. ARNOLD TAYLOR, No. 22-10203 (9th Cir. 2023)
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Defendant challenged the sentence he received after violating several conditions of his supervised release. Defendant first argued that the district court unlawfully delegated its judicial authority to his probation officer to determine the duration of his inpatient substance abuse treatment. His second argument is that the court erred because one year of inpatient treatment, plus the prison time he was sentenced to serve, exceeds the maximum recommended sentence for his offense, and the district court failed to explain what Defendant considers an upward variance.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the special conditions of supervised release. The panel held that the district court, which ordered a specific time range for Defendant’s inpatient substance treatment with a hard upper limit of one year, did not unconstitutionally delegate its judicial authority by ordering the probation officer to supervise Defendant’s progress in inpatient treatment, and allowing the probation officer the discretion to reduce—but not increase—the duration of his inpatient treatment in consultation with Defendant’s care provider. The panel held that the district court’s imposition of Special Condition 2 in addition to a high-end Guidelines sentence did not constitute an upward variance.
Court Description: Criminal Law. The panel affirmed the special conditions of supervised release imposed by the district court in a case in which Arnold Ray Taylor argued that the district court (1) unconstitutionally delegated its judicial authority to Taylor’s probation officer to determine the duration of the substance abuse treatment required in Special Condition 2, and (2) erred because it imposed an above-Guidelines sentence and failed to specifically explain its reasons for doing so.
The panel held that the district court, which ordered a specific time range for Taylor’s inpatient substance treatment with a hard upper limit of one year, did not unconstitutionally delegate its judicial authority by ordering the probation officer to supervise Taylor’s progress in inpatient treatment, and allowing the probation officer the discretion to reduce—but not increase—the duration of his inpatient treatment in consultation with Taylor’s care provider.
The panel held that the district court’s imposition of Special Condition 2 in addition to a high-end Guidelines sentence did not constitute an upward variance. The panel explained that the Sentencing Guidelines permit community confinement to be imposed for longer than six months when, as here, intended to achieve successful drug rehabilitation (U.S.S.G. § 5F1.1 cmt. nt. 2); and that inpatient treatment does not fit within the Guidelines definition of home detention, which may only be imposed as a substitute for imprisonment (U.S.S.G. § 5F1.2).
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