McNeill v. United States
Docket No. | Op. Below | Argument | Opinion | Vote | Author | Term |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10-5258 | 4th Cir. | Apr 25, 2011 | Jun 6, 2011 | 9-0 | Thomas | OT 2010 |
Holding: A federal sentencing court must determine whether an offense under state law is a serious drug offense by consulting the maximum term of imprisonment applicable to a defendant's prior state drug offense at the time of the defendant's conviction for that offense, rather than looking to state law at the time of the defendant's federal sentencing.
Plain English Holding: A federal statute imposes higher sentences for federal defendants who have previously been convicted of a serious drug offense. Whether a prior offense counts as a serious drug offense is determined by looking at the longest sentence that the defendant could have received when he was convicted, even if the defendant would have received a lower sentence later.
Judgment: Affirmed. on June 6, 2011.
SCOTUSblog Coverage
- Opinion analysis: Law at time of past conviction dispositive for ACCA (Amy Burns, June 7, 2011)
- Argument recap: Present, past, or sometime in between? (Rose Leda Ehler, April 28, 2011)
- Argument preview: What counts as a serious drug offense? (Harker Rhodes, April 25, 2011)
- Argument preview: What counts as a serious drug offense? (Harker Rhodes, April 25, 2011)
- Argument preview: What counts as a serious drug offense? (Harker Rhodes, April 25, 2011)
Briefs and Documents
Merits Briefs
- Brief for Petitioner Clifton Terelle McNeill
- Brief for Respondent United States
- Reply Brief for Petitioner Clifton Terelle McNeill
Amicus Briefs
Certiorari-stage documents
Merits Briefs
- Brief for Petitioner Clifton Terelle McNeill
- Brief for Respondent United States
- Reply Brief for Petitioner Clifton Terelle McNeill
Amicus Briefs
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