We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
SUPREME COURT HAS PRISONER-FRIENDLY WEEK…
The Supremes heard oral arguments in two cases last week, and while it is always perilous to predict the outcome from what happens in oral argument, the signs favor two pro-prisoner decisions.
In the closely-watched United States v. Hemani case, the government sought review of a 5th Circuit holding that 18 USC § 922(g)(3) – which prohibits drug abusers from possessing guns – could be applied to a gun owner who smoked pot a few times a week consistent with the 2nd Amendment.
Attorneys for the government compared § 922(g)(3) to colonial-era laws that disarmed “habitual drunkards.” However, Justice Neil Gorsuch wondered whether Hemani even qualified as a “habitual user” of marijuana. Gorsuch observed that the term “habitual drunkard” carried a very different meaning in early American history, because people generally drank alcohol in great quantity. “John Adams,” Gorsuch said, “took a tankard of hard cider with his breakfast every day,” while “James Madison reportedly drank a pint of whiskey every day.”
And if those Founding Fathers were not “habitual drunkards,” Gorsuch asked, “then what do we know about Mr. Hemani? We know he uses marijuana … about every other day… [W]e don’t even know the quantity of how much he uses every other day.” And the federal government, Gorsuch said, “has not been able to define what a user is.”
A majority of the justices seemed to agree that § 922(g)(3) may be overbroad, lumping together occasional drug users with people addicted to drugs who threaten public safety. “Is it the government’s position that if I unlawfully use Ambien or I unlawfully use Xanax, then I become dangerous?” Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked the government’s attorney. “What is the government’s evidence that using marijuana a couple times a week makes someone dangerous?” she added.
If the Hemani opinion focuses on “dangerousness,” it may advance arguments that nonviolent felons should not be subject to § 922(g)(1). Politico, however, warned that it is “unclear whether the justices will use the case against Ali Hemani to issue another major ruling on when the government can intrude on the 2nd Amendment right to bear arms.”
A case that has drawn lesser interest (but is maybe more consequential for defendants) is Hunter v. United States. Hunter asks what exceptions exist to federal defendants’ waivers of their right to appeal, language that appears in virtually every one of the 94% of federal cases that end with a guilty plea every year.
SCOTUSBlog reported that “[t]he justices seemed poised to endorse more exceptions than just the two the government endorsed – ones for ineffective assistance of counsel in entering into a plea agreement and for sentences above the statutory maximum. A number of justices also expressed misgivings about relying on contract law to define exceptions to appellate waivers… and a majority seemed likely to hold, at a minimum, that a defendant could escape from an appellate waiver when enforcing it would result in a “miscarriage of justice…”
The National Law Journal observed that DOJ’s “hard line on enforcing plea bargained waivers of appeal took U.S. Supreme Court justices aback,” even suggesting that if a district court were avowedly racist at sentencing, an appeal waiver would prevent the defendant from getting any relief.
Writing last week in his Sentencing Law and Policy blog, Ohio State University law prof Doug Berman argued that broad sentencing appeal waivers “insulate all sorts of sentencing errors from scrutiny and review, and they seem fundamentally inconsistent with the decision by Congress in the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 to provide both defendants and the government with the right… to seek appellate ‘review of an otherwise final sentence’.”
Berman wrote that he “was pleased to discover at least one Justice (Justice Jackson) seemed drawn to the idea that broad sentencing appeal waivers were void as against public policy, and I was even more pleased that it was not clear that any Justice was eager to embrace the government’s suggestion that broad sentencing appeal waivers were subject to almost no exceptions. I predict the majority of the Court will end up between these extremes, and I am already looking forward to seeing what the middle ground will be.”
United States v. Hemani, Case No. 24-1234 (oral argument March 2, 2026)
Politico, Supreme Court wrestles with gun ban for drug users (March 2, 2026)
SCOTUSBlog, Supreme Court skeptical of law banning drug users from possessing firearms (March 2, 2026)
New York Times, Supreme Court Appears Skeptical of Law Banning Drug Users From Owning Guns (March 2, 2026)
Hunter v. United States, Case No. 24-1063 (oral argument March 3, 2026)
SCOTUSBlog, Justices poised to adopt exceptions to federal criminal defendants’ appellate waivers (March 6, 2026)
National Law Journal, ‘Racist Sentencing Judge?’: DOJ Stuns Supreme Court With Stance on Appeal Waivers (March 4, 2026)
Sentencing Law and Policy, Broad array of Justices express broad concerns about broad appeal waivers in Hunter oral argument (March 3, 2026)
~ Thomas L. Root




















