Supreme Court sides with criminal appeal rights
The U.S. Supreme Court, in an 8-1 decision on Thursday, upheld a man’s right to appeal a prison sentence that also prescribed him mental health medications.
The case, Hunter v. U.S., focused on Munson Hunter III, who was charged with 10 counts of bank and wire fraud. Hunter pleaded guiilty to one of the charges in exchange for dismissal of the nine other charges.
His plea deal included an appeal waiver where he dismissed the right to appeal his conviction and sentence. However, during his sentencing, a probation officer recommended Hunter take mental health medications and undergo certain mental health treatments.
Hunter objected to taking mental health treatment or medication and appealed the sentence. A lower court held that Hunter would not be able to appeal the sentence because he agreed not to appeal as part of his plea deal.
However, justices on the high court did not agree. Justice Elena Kagan wrote the agreement not to appeal is “unenforceable” because it would result in a “miscarriage of justice.”
Kagan said preventing an individual to appeal could place a significant amount of power into the hands of a judge, without proper checks and balances on said power.
“Suppose a judge sentences a misdemeanant to life in prison, when the applicable law caps a prison term at one year; if an appellate court had to dismiss the resulting appeal, it would call into doubt the judicial system’s very attachment to law,” Kagan wrote in the court’s majority opinion.
Justice Clarence Thomas provided the lone dissenting opinion in the case. He expressed skepticism about Hunter’s ability to take issue with his appeal waiver. Thomas argued the history of the judicial system in the United States has not allowed individuals to challenge appeal waivers.
“The Court appears to rest on its policy concern that holding defendants to their waivers may sometimes lead to unfair results or make federal courts look bad,” Thomas wrote. “But, policy concerns are not rules of decision in courts of law.”
Thomas said Hunter’s appeal was an attempt to reduce his sentence, when it was already significantly reduced due to his plea deal. He said the appeal waiver could not stand.
“Hunter’s knowing and voluntary waiver of his statutory appeal rights in his valid plea agreement required dismissal of his appeal,” Thomas wrote.
Latest News Stories
Pritzker touts EV plant in Normal, Bailey says taxpayers bear the burden
State Supreme Court hears arguments over Uber forced arbitration
Vance defends DOJ’s nearly $1.8B ‘weaponization’ fund
Vance highlights ‘progress’ in Iran negotiations, floats additional fighting
Experts: Republican bills offer little data privacy protection, override state laws
NAACP asks Black university athletes in 7 states to boycott
Tillis to Hegseth: Choose meritocracy over your mediocre yes-men
Chicago committee approves $5M for public school project
Group files federal lawsuit against Illinois’ gun owner ID law
Feds push back on Minnesota prosecution of ICE agent
Minnesota mobile voting push stalls as session ends
Taxpayers fund factories Pentagon says contractors should build