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    <transcribed minutes="61">2012-11-28T10:02</transcribed>
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    <speaker id="Samuel_Alito" type="justice" gender="male" path="justices/samuel_alito_jr" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/samuel_alito_jr">Samuel Alito</speaker>
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  <episode startTime="0.000" stopTime="3692.806">
    <title>Henderson v. United States</title>
    <section startTime="0.000" stopTime="1823.200">
      <heading>ORAL ARGUMENT OF PATRICIA A. GILLEY APPOINTED BY THIS COURT</heading>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="0.000" stopTime="7.804">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="0.000">We'll hear argument this morning in Case 11-9307, Henderson v. United States.</text>
        <text syncTime="6.920">Ms. Gilley.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="7.804" stopTime="50.599">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="7.804">Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:</text>
        <text syncTime="11.891">There are three primary points I would like to focus on this morning during my argument.</text>
        <text syncTime="17.443">First, the question presented by Mr. Henderson involves a very small subset of cases which are -- which come before the Court under Rule 55 -- 52(b) each year.</text>
        <text syncTime="29.417">These are the cases that were referred to as the special case in the Olano decision.</text>
        <text syncTime="35.321">They have errors which, at the time of trial, were unsettled or unclear; but, by the time they made it to the appellate court, they had become clear by a clarifying rule or a decision.</text>
        <text syncTime="49.414">Second--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="50.599" stopTime="57.087">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="50.599">What -- what about the time they come up here?</text>
        <text syncTime="54.135">52(b) applies to every court, does it not?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="57.087" stopTime="58.003">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="57.087">--Yes, Your Honor.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="58.003" stopTime="88.558">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="58.003">So suppose there's been -- been no objection to a uncertain question of -- on an uncertain question of law until the case gets here.</text>
        <text syncTime="72.929">Can -- can counsel argue that this Court should nonetheless review the case because, if we agree with counsel, thereupon, the law would be clear?</text>
        <text syncTime="85.337">When we issued our decision, the law would be clear.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="88.558" stopTime="105.583">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="88.558">I believe that the Court would have the authority to do that because it says if it is on direct appeal or not yet final.</text>
        <text syncTime="97.997">So it would not yet be final unless the time had expired for the petitioner to get to the Supreme Court.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="105.583" stopTime="137.455">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="105.583">I -- I wonder how we would go about deciding whether we would take such a case or not.</text>
        <text syncTime="112.256">We'd take all -- all those cases where counsel says, I didn't -- we didn't raise any of these objections, neither in the court of appeals nor in the district court; but, if you agree -- if you agree with me, Your Honors, that the law is thus and so, once you say that, that will make the decisions below clear error, and, therefore, you should be able to reverse it.</text>
        <text syncTime="135.520">Makes sense, right?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="137.455" stopTime="151.631">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="137.455">Well, I believe the Supreme Court has, under its own special rules, the -- the ability to take an argument in -- a petition that has not been raised before, but on its own could accept it if it is clear at the time--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="151.631" stopTime="173.045">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="151.631">But then what your -- your first answer was that this is a very small set of cases that you're dealing with.</text>
        <text syncTime="157.416">If your answer to Justice Scalia is yes, this Court could take a case that's unsettled and, by settling it, make the error plain.</text>
        <text syncTime="167.724">That would open the door to a huge number of cases, wouldn't it?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="173.045" stopTime="201.578">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="173.045">--I don't believe so, Your Honor.</text>
        <text syncTime="175.145">I believe that the provisions to get to the Supreme Court -- frankly, I don't know the answer as to if you had skipped the -- the appellate court, and -- and we're still in that window of time, that transition period after the appellate court had ruled, and only then the clarifying error came, I think you could still come to the Supreme Court.</text>
        <text syncTime="198.945">But the very narrow -- the very narrow--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="201.578" stopTime="232.683">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="201.578">Well, it would be narrow in the sense that substantial rights would have to be affected and the other conditions of Olano on that.</text>
        <text syncTime="210.670">But I think, consequent on Justice Scalia's question is, that itself would be another issue in every case.</text>
        <text syncTime="221.026">Is this one of those cases: Number one, it was wrong; number two, it's new; number three, is it clear under all the Olano criteria.</text>
        <text syncTime="230.397">And that would have to be decided in every case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="232.683" stopTime="233.983">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="232.683">--Well, Your Honor, I think--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="233.983" stopTime="244.974">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="233.983">So at the end of the day, it could be a small subset of cases, but the number that would be presented, both to this Court and the court of appeals, would be quite substantial.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="244.974" stopTime="277.278">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="244.974">--Well, I think there would be very few that would come directly to the Supreme Court.</text>
        <text syncTime="248.759">The vast majority of the cases obviously would come through the circuits.</text>
        <text syncTime="252.247">And what I was referring to as a very small subset would be those cases where there is actually an unsettled error -- an unsettled claimed error at the trial.</text>
        <text syncTime="264.388">There are very few cases that would come out of the Supreme Court during the period of time of appeal that would allow for the petitioner to -- to say, well, now it's clear.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="277.278" stopTime="285.634">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="277.278">Well, this is a -- I mean, the time from the district court decision in this case to today is how long?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="285.634" stopTime="294.490">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="285.634">It's -- well, this case started in 2009.</text>
        <text syncTime="290.622">My client pled guilty in June of 2010.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="294.490" stopTime="301.728">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="294.490">So it's 2 years -- in any case in which -- in a typical case in which this happens, you've got 2 years of cases, right?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="301.728" stopTime="361.634">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="301.728">I think that my -- this case, Mr. Henderson's case, is unusually long.</text>
        <text syncTime="306.132">In fact, it was a year between the time he was sentenced in June of 2010 until June of 2011, when Tapia was decided.</text>
        <text syncTime="316.939">So he was actually waiting between the period of the trial stage to -- into the Fifth Circuit for over a year before Tapia was even decided, and then several months after that before the Fifth Circuit ruled on the issue.</text>
        <text syncTime="333.782">So this is an unusually long period of time.</text>
        <text syncTime="337.484">I don't think that that's common.</text>
        <text syncTime="339.786">I think the vast majority of the cases do not come within that transitional period.</text>
        <text syncTime="344.590">As -- as the Fifth Circuit noticed after Mr. Henderson's case in Escalante-Reyes, they sua sponte had their own -- they called for an en banc in Escalante-Reyes and changed the position that they had in Mr. Henderson's case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="361.634" stopTime="387.717">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="361.634">May I ask you what you think is the purpose of the Plain-Error Rule?</text>
        <text syncTime="365.420">Suppose that it was proposed to amend Rule 52(b) to take out the word “ plain ”, so that the rule would read simply,</text>
        <text syncTime="375.459">"an error that affects substantial rights may be considered even though it was not brought to the Court's attention. "</text>
        <text syncTime="381.363">So what does -- in your judgment, what does the word “ plain ” add?</text>
        <text syncTime="385.767">What -- what purposes does it serve?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="387.717" stopTime="418.721">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="387.717">Your Honor, it serves a very important purpose.</text>
        <text syncTime="391.253">And I must say that my understanding of that has evolved considerably since I started researching this issue.</text>
        <text syncTime="396.439">I think it's very important.</text>
        <text syncTime="398.724">And it certainly is helpful to -- to the practitioner because when you come to the appellate court, and you say, now, I have a -- a decision, it is now plain, or I have a rule, a statute, that now makes this plain, it -- it is a very important prong in the Olano--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="418.721" stopTime="440.234">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="418.721">But what purpose does it serve?</text>
        <text syncTime="421.173">Why should the rule not be that if -- if some -- if there was an error, and it was a really -- it was an error that really badly hurt the defendant, then it can be considered, even though it wasn't raised at whatever time it had to have been -- it wasn't raised, there wasn't an objection?</text>
        <text syncTime="438.718">What purpose does that serve?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="440.234" stopTime="450.692">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="440.234">--The purpose of -- of 52(b) is -- is a safety belt for the very extreme measures of Rule 51, which says if you -- if you fail to raise contemporaneously--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="450.692" stopTime="474.391">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="450.692">Well, but I'm not asking why we have -- why we permit plain errors to be raised.</text>
        <text syncTime="457.180">I'm asking why do we require that the error be plain in order for it to be considered?</text>
        <text syncTime="463.434">Well, let me suggest two purposes it serves.</text>
        <text syncTime="467.136">It follows from the adversary system, and it serves judicial efficiency.</text>
        <text syncTime="471.522">Would you agree with that; those are the purposes of it?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="474.391" stopTime="475.741">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="474.391">--I absolutely would.</text>
        <text syncTime="474.774">Yes.</text>
        <text syncTime="475.224">Yes, Your Honor.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="475.741" stopTime="481.378">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="475.741">All right.</text>
        <text syncTime="476.057">Does it serve those purposes better as applied at the time of trial or at the time of appeal?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="481.378" stopTime="487.282">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="481.378">The finding, the assessment of plain error; is that the question you're--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="487.282" stopTime="487.699">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="487.282">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="487.699" stopTime="502.292">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="487.699">--I think that it very much helps to assess and evaluate the plainness of the error at the time of appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="495.971">That -- that is where it can really be helpful.</text>
        <text syncTime="499.007">And that, in fact, is what the Court did in both Olano and--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="502.292" stopTime="509.731">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="502.292">Does it serve -- does it serve judicial efficiency better to say that we apply the Plain-Error Rule at the time of trial or at the time of appeal?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="509.731" stopTime="535.263">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="509.731">--I think that it serves judicial efficiency very much better, as amicus very well stated in his brief, the example of the Ninth Circuit, where, if you don't have plain error, and then the appellate court must go back to the trial level, the trial stage, and determine was this, was this clear at the time of trial?</text>
        <text syncTime="532.061">Was it clearly against the defendant?</text>
        <text syncTime="534.446">Was it clearly--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="535.263" stopTime="567.584">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="535.263">Well, if you apply it at the time of trial, it may eliminate the need for an appellate court, under some circumstances, to get to the ultimate question of whether there was error; or, it could say, there might have been error, but it wasn't -- it's not plain to us, I suppose.</text>
        <text syncTime="554.843">So you have that efficiency.</text>
        <text syncTime="556.378">But if you apply it at the time of trial, you avoid retrials.</text>
        <text syncTime="559.830">So which is -- which of those two is more consistent with the purpose of serving judicial efficiency?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="567.584" stopTime="590.683">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="567.584">--Well, I'm not sure that that would be a correct assessment.</text>
        <text syncTime="573.555">I think that the judicial efficiency would be more at the time of appeal because, as many of the circuits have noticed, that's what they are going -- they agree.</text>
        <text syncTime="586.565">I think it's, you know, 8 to -- 8 to 2 that they find--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="590.683" stopTime="693.417">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="590.683">But when, as is the situation in this case, the law is uncertain at the time of trial, and there are some circuits that have gone one way, some circuits that have gone the other way, surely it greatly serves efficiency to bring that situation to the attention of the judge.</text>
        <text syncTime="611.680">He has a 50 percent chance of getting it right.</text>
        <text syncTime="616.000">And if he gets it right, then the case is done.</text>
        <text syncTime="620.302">Instead, your -- your client did not raise any objection, and the judge just went ahead.</text>
        <text syncTime="629.575">Now, if -- if the error was plain, you can say, well, he didn't need an objection, any -- any dumb judge would have -- would have known this.</text>
        <text syncTime="640.199">Okay.</text>
        <text syncTime="641.215">So you make that kind of an exception.</text>
        <text syncTime="643.751">But I don't see the reason for making that exception where you could have brought this to the judge's attention, and he could have solved the problem; or, if he didn't solve it, maybe the prosecutor could have by making some alteration in what he was demanding as a -- as a punishment or whatever.</text>
        <text syncTime="662.581">That -- that seems to me such a -- such a clear efficiency in the system.</text>
        <text syncTime="670.735">I don't know what the efficiency is when you do it at the court of appeals level.</text>
        <text syncTime="675.622">All you tell me is that, well, it saves you the trouble of going back and figuring out what -- what the situation was at the trial -- at the time of trial, right?</text>
        <text syncTime="686.596">But you've got to go back to the time of trial anyway to decide whether -- whether substantial rights have been affected, don't you?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="693.417" stopTime="737.510">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="693.417">--Well, I think, Your Honor, multiple parts to that question.</text>
        <text syncTime="698.238">First of all, I think there -- I think that the cases -- the solicitors, the responders -- Respondents have conflated the idea of why we have 52(b).</text>
        <text syncTime="711.379">It's not primarily for the efficiency of the judicial system.</text>
        <text syncTime="714.996">It's to -- it's to correct a very serious wrong, an injustice that was incurred by the defendant.</text>
        <text syncTime="722.900">That's the primary purpose of 52(b).</text>
        <text syncTime="725.786">And then, if you look at it the way the court would -- the solicitors would have -- have the court decide at time of trial, there would be no remedy for--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="737.510" stopTime="786.510">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="737.510">But -- but there's -- this brings you back to Justice Alito's question.</text>
        <text syncTime="739.962">There's always an injustice when the district court has gotten it wrong.</text>
        <text syncTime="744.266">The district court got it wrong, applied the wrong rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="747.985">Justice has not been served.</text>
        <text syncTime="750.170">But we don't say, we want to do justice.</text>
        <text syncTime="753.206">We say, we're only going to do justice if it was clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="757.907">Now, why -- why would you -- why would you have that limitation on it?</text>
        <text syncTime="761.644">The only -- the only reason that limitation makes sense to me is -- is because when it is clear, it doesn't have to be raised below.</text>
        <text syncTime="771.583">The judge ought to know better, anyway, and so you're not sacrificing any efficiency.</text>
        <text syncTime="777.487">But if the whole purpose of it is just to do justice, I don't understand the reason for the clear limitation.</text>
        <text syncTime="784.575">Why should it be only when it's clear?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="786.510" stopTime="836.942">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="786.510">--Well, we have the rules going back to the Atkinson case.</text>
        <text syncTime="792.747">And the question was what happens when we have the very serious Rule 51, if you don't have contemporaneous objection, you're out of luck?</text>
        <text syncTime="800.686">Fortunately, we have the safety belt with 52(b).</text>
        <text syncTime="804.054">And then this Court, looking at the -- what -- what was codified from Atkinson, has the four-prong test.</text>
        <text syncTime="813.094">First, we have an error.</text>
        <text syncTime="814.610">It must be clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="815.679">The -- the reason for having it clear, first of all, it -- it creates efficiency in the -- in the appellate level court.</text>
        <text syncTime="822.433">The practitioner can now come and say, my client has a clear error.</text>
        <text syncTime="828.170">Tapia has now been decided, and it is clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="832.372">It was only unclear and unsettled at the time we were in court.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="836.942" stopTime="864.193">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="836.942">I suppose one answer to Justice Scalia's question is that, well, if you require an objection, and you have to have a laundry list of everything that might change, the -- the answer to that, in turn, is, if -- if you use that rationale, then we're just asking the attorney to conceal from the judge every -- everything that's important.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="864.193" stopTime="865.879">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="864.193">Well--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="865.879" stopTime="882.923">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="865.879">It would seem to me the laundry list, even though that's perhaps an initial objection to Justice Scalia's concern, is, frankly, preferable to a system where we just don't -- don't talk about what might be clear error.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="882.923" stopTime="919.946">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="882.923">--Well, I think we must talk about clear error.</text>
        <text syncTime="885.808">And -- and I think that in my -- my briefing, in my -- in my beginning to the closing brief, and certainly in the amicus brief, which is an excellent source on this point, when the Court looked at both -- 52(b) in both Olano and Johnson, they looked to the text, that this Court looked to the text of 52(b).</text>
        <text syncTime="909.056">And the clear error that they looked at was they decided those cases on the basis that the error was clear at the time of trial.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="919.946" stopTime="934.606">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="919.946">Where in Johnson did they -- I'm looking at the two paragraphs the Court spent on this in Johnson.</text>
        <text syncTime="925.500">Where did they look at the text?</text>
        <text syncTime="927.202">I mean, obviously, they quoted the text, but the analysis seems to me to be based solely on judicial efficiency.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="934.606" stopTime="960.356">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="934.606">I think -- and -- and I would like to refer to Judge Owens' concurring and dissenting opinion in Escalante-Reyes in the Fifth Circuit.</text>
        <text syncTime="944.747">She addressed this quite well in three pages of her -- of her opinion, where the Justice did, in a unanimous opinion, state in -- let's see, I think footnote 5--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="960.356" stopTime="967.160">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="960.356">No.</text>
        <text syncTime="961.640">I'm looking at where they talked about this particular question, the second prong, as they -- they put it.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="967.160" stopTime="978.552">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="967.160">--Well, I believe that what Justice Rehnquist looked to was the text of--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="978.552" stopTime="979.952">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="978.552">He was the Chief Justice, by the way.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="979.952" stopTime="982.687">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="979.952">--I'm sorry.</text>
        <text syncTime="980.304">Chief Justice Rehnquist.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="982.687" stopTime="984.772">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="982.687">It matters to one of us.</text>
        <text syncTime="984.122">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="984.772" stopTime="987.038">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="984.772">Yes, Your Honor.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="987.038" stopTime="993.309">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="987.038">That's okay.</text>
        <text syncTime="990.490">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="993.309" stopTime="1054.166">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="993.309">And -- and I noticed in my record that I, in fact, had promoted Justice Clark in my brief, which the errata shows, and so I'm -- I'm not perfect.</text>
        <text syncTime="1004.417">But the -- Justice Rehnquist looked -- and he talked specifically about looking at -- at 52(b) and saying,</text>
        <text syncTime="1014.541">"We're not going to expand on it. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1016.324">"We're not going to cut it out of new cloth. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1018.159">"We're not going to make new exceptions. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1020.445">"We looked for it as -- as it is. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1023.563">And I think that was just a couple of lines after acknowledging the fact that the petitioner said, well, it would have been a laundry list, and that's inconvenient, and it's futile, and it's a waste of time.</text>
        <text syncTime="1036.205">But that, I think, was more of an argument that went along with what the Chief Justice wrote, that we're looking at the text, and it just doesn't make any sense.</text>
        <text syncTime="1046.762">We've got Olano that says, at the very minimum, the error must be clear at the time of appeal.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="1054.166" stopTime="1155.398">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="1054.166">I want to go back to Justice Alito's question for a moment because I thought -- and Justice Scalia.</text>
        <text syncTime="1061.772">I thought, in your brief, you -- you said that their point's a good point.</text>
        <text syncTime="1066.807">Their point is that the system works in a way that requires the lawyer to object at the trial.</text>
        <text syncTime="1074.496">All right.</text>
        <text syncTime="1075.746">And that is an efficiency because the trial judge has to -- has to correct -- he has to -- has an opportunity to correct mistakes.</text>
        <text syncTime="1083.619">He can't be sandbagged.</text>
        <text syncTime="1084.652">But, you said, that's theoretically always true, but, in your case, as a practical matter, it's really never true because no lawyer is ever going to think, oh, I would object, but I'm not going to object because maybe the law will become clarified by the Supreme Court, and I'll be able to get a plain error thing on appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="1105.099">The lawyer who thought that is like the unicorn, he doesn't really exist.</text>
        <text syncTime="1108.919">Okay.</text>
        <text syncTime="1109.636">And you then said, on the other hand, is an efficiency on the other side.</text>
        <text syncTime="1113.955">The efficiency on the other side is if you don't take your rule, when you get to the court of appeals, you're going to have to decide in real cases whether the law was so clear that the plain error doctrine still does apply at the trial level before.</text>
        <text syncTime="1131.082">Either it was clear that the judge was wrong, or it was clear the judge was right, and there is no point to objecting.</text>
        <text syncTime="1140.205">So now we have to decide, was he clearly wrong, was he clearly right, or was it a middle case.</text>
        <text syncTime="1145.176">And when you get to real legal cases that have tough issues, you discover that that's a hard question to answer case by case, court by court.</text>
        <text syncTime="1153.698">Now, didn't you say all that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1155.398" stopTime="1156.317">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1155.398">Yes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="1156.317" stopTime="1159.102">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="1156.317">Okay.</text>
        <text syncTime="1156.884">Well, then why didn't I hear you say it again.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="1159.102" stopTime="1190.838">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="1159.102">Then let me ask you this question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1160.169">Counsel, then let me ask you this related question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1163.554">Something happens at trial.</text>
        <text syncTime="1165.423">There isn't an objection.</text>
        <text syncTime="1166.423">And it goes up on appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="1168.041">And the -- the appellate court, there is an argument about whether it's a plain error or not.</text>
        <text syncTime="1174.278">And the appellate court says, first of all, we think it was an error, but it's a -- it was a close question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1182.099">We had trouble with this.</text>
        <text syncTime="1183.384">So it wasn't plain, and, therefore, this defendant is out of luck.</text>
        <text syncTime="1188.871">What's the justification for that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1190.838" stopTime="1197.311">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1190.838">I think that the four prongs of Olano are the justification.</text>
        <text syncTime="1196.109">That's where I would have been--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="1197.311" stopTime="1219.774">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="1197.311">No, I mean in real world terms.</text>
        <text syncTime="1198.611">What -- what purpose is served by that?</text>
        <text syncTime="1201.029">If the court has concluded that there was an error, and it affected substantial rights, but it wasn't plain, what -- what justification is there for saying, that's too bad?</text>
        <text syncTime="1210.451">You know, you really got hurt, but it wasn't clear until -- you know, it wasn't plain until we decided this case, so go back to prison.</text>
        <text syncTime="1217.772">What's the purpose for that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1219.774" stopTime="1223.026">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1219.774">--Well, there -- there is no purpose for that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1221.926">And -- and the--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="1223.026" stopTime="1225.811">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="1223.026">Then why should it have to be plain at the time of appeal?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1225.811" stopTime="1277.679">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1225.811">--But the appellate court has the responsibilities of applying the law as it is current.</text>
        <text syncTime="1230.782">That's what the appellate court is directed to do.</text>
        <text syncTime="1234.067">That's what Atkinson -- that's what -- even what Atkinson said.</text>
        <text syncTime="1237.952">You apply the law at -- as it is current.</text>
        <text syncTime="1240.971">And so what you're doing by interpreting time of trial as a point of determining the clarity of -- of the error, you are completely eliminating the ability for the appellate court to even rule on that question because there will never, ever be a plain error if you apply the time of trial as the point of determining whether it was clear or not.</text>
        <text syncTime="1269.590">People like Armarcion Henderson would never have an opportunity to -- to have plain error because it would never be clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="1276.311">We have to have--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="1277.679" stopTime="1321.458">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="1277.679">You could promote efficiency at the appellate stage by having a rule like the rule that we have in qualified immunity cases, which gives a court the discretion to decide whether something was clear or go to the -- to the merits of the argument.</text>
        <text syncTime="1298.676">You could -- that's -- you can serve efficiency by having that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1301.628">But the Plain-Error Rule doesn't do that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1303.580">In the situation I gave you, the court would say there was an error, it really affected your substantial rights, but we can't say it was plain to us until we decided this case, and, therefore, you get no relief.</text>
        <text syncTime="1316.888">And -- and maybe there's a reason for that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1319.090">I'm waiting for you to tell me what the reason for it is.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1321.458" stopTime="1370.239">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1321.458">--Well, the -- the reason would be similar to what Mr. Henderson faced in the three-judge panel.</text>
        <text syncTime="1329.962">The -- the judge -- the panel said that the error was -- was clear, as far as they -- they know it happened.</text>
        <text syncTime="1338.384">Tapia said it happened, and -- and there was no question about that; but, the fact that it was not clear at the time of trial defeated Mr. Henderson's ability to get relief.</text>
        <text syncTime="1350.977">So even though the -- the Congress said, you shouldn't put these people in jail for the purpose of rehabilitation, it was clear -- everybody agreed it was wrong, but my client, instead of having the recommended 33 to 41 months, received a 60-month sentence.</text>
        <text syncTime="1369.789">That's unjust.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="1370.239" stopTime="1372.807">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1370.239">Was there a reason -- I think you represented your client at the trial.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1372.807" stopTime="1373.674">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1372.807">Yes, Your Honor.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="1373.674" stopTime="1394.471">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1373.674">Is there a reason why you didn't bring this up when the judge imposed that sentence?</text>
        <text syncTime="1378.378">I mean, there was -- one thing is Tapia; but, before that, there was a statute that says, judge, don't lengthen sentences for purposes of rehabilitation.</text>
        <text syncTime="1389.519">And you didn't call that statute to the attention of the -- of the judge, did you?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1394.471" stopTime="1417.519">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1394.471">I did not, Your Honor.</text>
        <text syncTime="1395.506">And that was a -- I knew that there was -- certainly, I was concerned, and I was -- that the -- the sentence was so much beyond what the sentencing guidelines had -- had recommended.</text>
        <text syncTime="1407.981">There was -- the situation was I knew that at that point the guidelines were advisory.</text>
        <text syncTime="1414.301">I couldn't figure -- at that point--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="1417.519" stopTime="1419.455">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1417.519">Were you -- were you aware of the statute at the time?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1419.455" stopTime="1454.878">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1419.455">--I was not.</text>
        <text syncTime="1419.988">In fact, I was not aware of that statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="1422.823">And when I -- I did file a Rule 35(a) motion eight days later.</text>
        <text syncTime="1428.144">After I went and did my research, I realized there was only one case that I could find, In re Sealed out of the District of Columbia circuit, which had addressed that particular statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="1439.969">And so I did file a Rule 35(a) motion timely, eight days after, and asked the trial court, based on 35(b)(2)(a) to please correct that error in the sentencing.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="1454.878" stopTime="1477.125">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1454.878">And let me ask you, I don't wish to sidetrack the discussion on the metaphysics of the Plain-Error Rule, because it's important and it's the -- part of the case, but in this case, there wasn't going to be a new trial.</text>
        <text syncTime="1465.917">There wasn't going to be a new jury.</text>
        <text syncTime="1467.169">It's just the sentence.</text>
        <text syncTime="1468.386">Has any argument been made that we should have a different rule for sentences than for errors that would require a new -- a complete new trial?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1477.125" stopTime="1489.350">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1477.125">Your Honor, certainly Petitioner has not made that; but, there are so many law review articles out there right now on ways of changing plain-error review, it might--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="1489.350" stopTime="1493.336">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="1489.350">Some circuits have even said that.</text>
        <text syncTime="1490.718">Some circuits have even said that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1493.336" stopTime="1494.570">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1493.336">--Yes.</text>
        <text syncTime="1494.120">That is--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="1494.569" stopTime="1507.946">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="1494.569">The Second Circuit says that if it's a sentencing error, that the amount of substantial rights and the integrity of fairness of the preceding question is a different balance.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1507.946" stopTime="1509.029">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1507.946">--That is correct.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="1509.029" stopTime="1528.927">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="1509.029">So you can -- if you lose, you can't get through the door.</text>
        <text syncTime="1512.481">If you win, you then have to go on to the next part of it, which says, did the error affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.</text>
        <text syncTime="1521.337">So if all that's at stake is a resentencing, not much harm is done, and you're more likely to satisfy the fourth.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1528.927" stopTime="1530.210">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1528.927">And the third.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="1530.210" stopTime="1541.648">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="1530.210">If what's at stake is a whole new trial and everything, it's probably a little bit harder to satisfy that prong.</text>
        <text syncTime="1534.745">So it's possible to build what Justice Kennedy was referring to into the present rule, isn't it?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1541.648" stopTime="1544.850">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1541.648">It could -- it could be possible, and it could be--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="1544.850" stopTime="1563.714">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1544.850">Why -- why is that so?</text>
        <text syncTime="1545.619">Why is that so?</text>
        <text syncTime="1546.919">Why does -- does the effect upon the fairness of the proceedings change when it's sentencing or when it's the merits?</text>
        <text syncTime="1562.681">I don't understand that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1563.714" stopTime="1565.633">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1563.714">--Well, I think that whenever -- and I--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="1565.633" stopTime="1570.085">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1565.633">You're -- you're here complaining about sentencing.</text>
        <text syncTime="1568.199">That's a substantial issue, isn't it?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1570.085" stopTime="1728.822">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1570.085">--It is very substantial.</text>
        <text syncTime="1571.703">And there's a recent case out of the Eleventh Circuit that I was going to call to the Court's attention, Judge Gorsuch.</text>
        <text syncTime="1580.975">And his -- his comment was,</text>
        <text syncTime="1585.444">"This is such a serious, serious situation when we sentence a man or a woman to a time in prison when Congress says he should not be there. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1596.835">"That is one of the ultimate injustices that we should look at. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1601.972">And -- and I think that's looking at it from the -- having a separate -- separate review system for sentencing certainly might be helpful.</text>
        <text syncTime="1611.995">It could certainly be more speedy, although, frankly, in my case it would not have helped Mr. Henderson because it took Tapia a year after my client was sentenced before Tapia was decided.</text>
        <text syncTime="1627.021">Of course, I think the argument could have been made and I certainly would have made it at the Fifth Circuit if Tapia had not been decided by the time we made it to the Fifth Circuit, I would have argued that it was clear error regardless.</text>
        <text syncTime="1640.181">The statute was very clear and that it was, it was certainly -- when the Court eventually did look at Tapia, they used the straightforward -- you used the straightforward language of it.</text>
        <text syncTime="1656.291">But I think that, that the main, the main point -- another point that I did want to make is that by deciding that plainness should be determined at the time of appeal, this Court would be consistent with its holdings in Olano and in Johnson, because in Olano, the Court said it would be, in this case, it is adequate that the error is plain at the time of appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="1690.864">In Johnson, the Court said there was, in fact, no error at the time of trial but it is clear at the time of appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="1702.504">And so in both of those cases, the text of 52(b), which is on page 1 in my brief, the text of the brief is what the Court relied on and the Court, the Court said that based on that test, it's adequate that the court find the appeal -- find the error plain at the time of appeal.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="1728.822" stopTime="1731.857">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1728.822">How many months are left for the defendant's sentence?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1731.857" stopTime="1743.414">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1731.857">He is scheduled to be released in May of 2013.</text>
        <text syncTime="1738.261">He never did get the, the in-depth treatment program.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="1743.414" stopTime="1744.448">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1743.414">He didn't?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1744.448" stopTime="1773.018">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1744.448">He did not, and it's unlikely he would have ever gotten it because of the fact that he had a gun charge.</text>
        <text syncTime="1750.402">He pled guilty to a felon in possession of a firearm, which puts the -- the individual at a very low eligibility for getting into the program.</text>
        <text syncTime="1761.876">The RDAP program is very highly coveted because if completed successfully, it reduces the time that you are going to be incarcerated.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="1773.018" stopTime="1776.553">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="1773.018">But the judge was not aware of those impediments?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Patricia_A_Gilley" startTime="1776.553" stopTime="1815.845">
        <label> Patricia A. Gilley</label>
        <text syncTime="1776.553">The judge was very well aware, and that was part of the problem that we had.</text>
        <text syncTime="1782.206">I was arguing at the time of sentencing for mitigating circumstances that, that my client really hadn't done it and he had possessed this gun for about 10 minutes.</text>
        <text syncTime="1793.181">The facts are not important to this Court, but he had done nothing seriously wrong with this.</text>
        <text syncTime="1800.101">He did, in fact, commit the crime and he was ready to take the punishment.</text>
        <text syncTime="1805.322">The sentencing guideline range was 33 to 41.</text>
        <text syncTime="1808.607">I did not object, the Government did not object, and so I assumed it would be in that range.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="1815.845" stopTime="1823.200">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1815.845">Thank you, counsel.</text>
        <text syncTime="1817.213">Mr. Wall.</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
    <section startTime="1823.200" stopTime="3691.806">
      <heading>ORAL ARGUMENT OF JEFFREY B. WALL ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT</heading>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="1823.200" stopTime="1827.902">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="1823.200">Mr. Chief Justice, may it please the Court:</text>
        <text syncTime="1825.700">The contemporaneous--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="1827.902" stopTime="1880.787">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="1827.902">Was Justice Breyer essentially correct that in most of the cases where an error is not plain at the time of trial that the third and fourth prong of Olano almost always take care of the issue?</text>
        <text syncTime="1846.197">I mean, I've been looking for a case in this Court in which more substantial errors than the one that occurred here -- we are going to put aside the fact that I don't see how this Defendant on the third or fourth could ever win, given that he was begging for drug treatment during his sentencing, so how a resentence would affect the fairness or integrity of this proceeding is beyond my understanding.</text>
        <text syncTime="1878.501">But isn't Justice Breyer right?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="1880.787" stopTime="1909.489">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="1880.787">--No.</text>
        <text syncTime="1881.787">Not in the Government's view.</text>
        <text syncTime="1882.755">I think it's a question for another day how much work the fourth prong is doing in the lower courts, but I would say in all of these cases, the defendant is claiming that his sentence is lengthened.</text>
        <text syncTime="1891.761">I think in all of them he will be able to meet the third prong to show that his substantial rights were affected.</text>
        <text syncTime="1896.213">It becomes a fourth prong question then.</text>
        <text syncTime="1898.415">And in the Escalante-Reyes case, one of the dissenting opinions attached an appendix in which the Fifth Circuit, in 181 cases, had found that fourth prong met and had found plain error satisfied.</text>
        <text syncTime="1908.354">But I would think it--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="1909.489" stopTime="1926.934">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="1909.489">Well, I would say to you that that's more in keeping with the attitude that Justice Kennedy asked about, which is I think most circuit courts believe the fourth prong is more easily met in sentencing than in trial cases.</text>
        <text syncTime="1923.280">Whether they are right about that, that's not an issue we are facing today.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="1926.934" stopTime="1949.781">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="1926.934">--The Second Circuit has adopted that rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="1929.251">I don't know that other courts have but it's really -- the prongs of the plain-error review test are meant to serve different purposes.</text>
        <text syncTime="1935.874">The third and fourth prongs are looking at harm to the defendant and to the judicial -- the integrity of the judicial proceedings.</text>
        <text syncTime="1942.694">The second prong is really designed to do something different.</text>
        <text syncTime="1944.312">It's designed to enforce the contemporaneous objection requirement by isolating errors--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="1949.781" stopTime="1970.261">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="1949.781">But why?</text>
        <text syncTime="1950.549">The very essence of 52(b) is when you don't make an objection.</text>
        <text syncTime="1955.101">I mean, it's treating two -- it's addressing two different situations; A says when you've made an objection, you just have to prove prejudice; and B says you have to prove that substantial rights are affected.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="1970.261" stopTime="2004.732">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="1970.261">--Oh, no question.</text>
        <text syncTime="1971.213">The purpose of that prong is to isolate out one set of errors, obvious errors, from all of the other trial errors that happen every day that are not correctable under Rule 52, debatable errors that even reasonably experienced district court judges and prosecutors might have overlooked in the hustle and bustle of a trial.</text>
        <text syncTime="1987.222">That second prong is designed to say, “ We want ”, as the Court said in Frady,</text>
        <text syncTime="1990.757">"obvious egregious errors that the trial court and the prosecutor were derelict in countenancing. "</text>
        <text syncTime="1995.559">Because there we are not as worried about incentivizing the defendant to make a contemporaneous objection, because every party in the courtroom should have known and applied the law.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="2004.732" stopTime="2033.084">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2004.732">Mr. Wall, why doesn't that describe this case?</text>
        <text syncTime="2008.136">In here is a statute, never mind Tapia, the statute says to the judge, don't lengthen the defendant's sentences for purposes of some cure.</text>
        <text syncTime="2019.694">And if the judge was not aware of that statute, he surely should have been, the prosecutor -- wasn't it incumbent on the prosecutor to tell the judge, Judge, sorry, you can't do that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2033.084" stopTime="2062.771">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2033.084">Justice Ginsburg, I think it cuts actually exactly the opposite way.</text>
        <text syncTime="2037.405">There was a long-standing circuit split that the Court resolved in Tapia.</text>
        <text syncTime="2040.773">Courts have reached different conclusions on this.</text>
        <text syncTime="2042.573">And if the Defendant here had said, look, district court, you shouldn't lengthen my sentence based on rehabilitative purposes.</text>
        <text syncTime="2049.796">Some courts have found that is impermissible and you should follow those courts, not the courts that have permitted it, I think a fair reading of the sentencing transcript is that the district court was genuinely on the fence here about what to do with this particular defendant and whether to lengthen his sentence.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="2062.771" stopTime="2067.857">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2062.771">But he was not aware of the statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="2065.639">No one called it to his attention.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2067.857" stopTime="2085.219">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2067.857">No.</text>
        <text syncTime="2068.357">It is then exactly the kind of debatable, open, unsettled legal question that our adversarial system counts on parties to raise every day.</text>
        <text syncTime="2077.280">And what we do in Rule 52 is we have a narrow safety valve for obvious errors that everyone in the courtroom should have caught.</text>
        <text syncTime="2083.267">But I don't think that we can say that--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2085.219" stopTime="2192.005">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2085.219">Well, what about the -- I mean, that's the question.</text>
        <text syncTime="2087.136">The word “ plain ” of course refers by and large to an error that the lower court judge should have caught, so you should have objected.</text>
        <text syncTime="2097.694">But why limit it exclusively to that; that is, you have -- you know, they quote the Schooner, Peggy and Chief Justice Marshall and back to the history of Hammurabi, as far as we know, that sometimes there is a case where just simple fairness, plus the fact that the law is now plain, means that the appellate court should treat this person the same as a thousand others who now will be treated according to the new law.</text>
        <text syncTime="2126.713">And indeed, you're complicating it even further for the reason that I really meant my question to be aimed at you, you know.</text>
        <text syncTime="2133.367">I mean, in fact, the reason that I said that you're going to create distinctions, there will be a case, the fellow is going to go to jail for 50 extra years, the law is plain that he shouldn't, that didn't come about until the appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="2150.578">And here we have six identical people in the circuit where the law was clear one way and they get the new rule's advantage, and six identical people in another circuit where the law was clear the other way and they get the advantage.</text>
        <text syncTime="2163.719">But in the one circuit where the law wasn't clear, he doesn't get the advantage of the new rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="2168.873">Now, that seems pretty unfair, and I could at least make up some cases where it's just a horror.</text>
        <text syncTime="2175.210">And if that's so, why don't we leave plain with enough wiggle room so that where it's fair, the judge on the Court of Appeals can say, it is now plain and the other things are satisfied so we apply it to the defendant.</text>
        <text syncTime="2188.953">That's the whole long question that I've got every part of it in there.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2192.005" stopTime="2211.819">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2192.005">--And I'll see if I can get them all in.</text>
        <text syncTime="2194.273">So all I can say to you, Justice Breyer, is the same thing the Court has said in Puckett, Dominguez, Benitez, Young, the Rule 52 has an interest in error correction, egregious error correction, no question.</text>
        <text syncTime="2204.129">But it is balanced against a very important systemic interest in judicial efficiency.</text>
        <text syncTime="2208.098">And far from being a horror, that's a necessary corollary of our system--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="2211.819" stopTime="2262.335">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="2211.819">But, Mr. Wall, your whole argument about judicial efficiency is an incentives argument, and it depends upon the notion that a lawyer is going to change their behavior, a lawyer is going to make an objection that he otherwise wouldn't have made if the rule that Ms. Gilley proposes is accepted.</text>
        <text syncTime="2229.179">And this goes back to what Justice Breyer said earlier.</text>
        <text syncTime="2232.565">I don't know of a lawyer who would say the following to himself: I'm not going to make this objection because I'm just going to assume that sometime between now and my direct appeal the law is going to change, and it's going to change in my favor, and when it changes, I'm going to be able to make this objection and get over not only prong two but prong three and four of the test, and life will be grand for my client.</text>
        <text syncTime="2260.716">Now, who is going to say that?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2262.335" stopTime="2303.762">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2262.335">--Justice Kagan, it's not just about incentives.</text>
        <text syncTime="2264.954">Even if I granted that the incentives of defendants would be entirely unchanged no matter what rule this Court adopted, and I don't grant that for all the reasons in our brief.</text>
        <text syncTime="2273.440">But even if I thought that were right, every time a Court of Appeals or this Court issued an intervening decision of criminal law or criminal procedure, a set of defendants who had not raised a claim of that error at trial would come in to the Court of Appeals or this Court with a claim of plain error.</text>
        <text syncTime="2288.652">And what we would see is a significant shift of judicial resources to plain-error cases, to do fact-intensive third and fourth prong review to consider a set of errors that were never meant to be put on the table under Rule 52(b).</text>
        <text syncTime="2301.127">That's not what this safety valve was designed to do.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="2303.762" stopTime="2346.322">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2303.762">I can -- I can also not imagine a lawyer who intentionally makes that decision.</text>
        <text syncTime="2309.482">That -- that lawyer is a unicorn, I suppose.</text>
        <text syncTime="2312.350">But I think there are a lot of lawyers who will not be as careful about finding all of the issues that they should bring to the court's attention, perhaps be unaware of a statute that they should have been aware of.</text>
        <text syncTime="2327.360">If -- if we -- if we adopt the rule that's being urged by the Petitioner here, it does affect attorney behavior for the attorney to know that stuff that he -- he ought to know but doesn't know will -- will not be able to be patched up on appeal.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2346.322" stopTime="2349.874">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2346.322">The Government agrees with that, Justice Scalia.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="2349.874" stopTime="2380.745">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="2349.874">Well, should the Government agree with that really?</text>
        <text syncTime="2351.975">Should some -- can you imagine -- isn't it just as much of a unicorn for an attorney to say, I'm not going to take great care because I think that the law is going to change between now and the appeal, and because I think I'm going to win on prongs two and three -- three and four.</text>
        <text syncTime="2367.402">I mean, nobody can think that those circumstances would arise.</text>
        <text syncTime="2370.854">They're flukes when they arise.</text>
        <text syncTime="2372.639">And so it -- it doesn't affect either the attorney's intentional conduct or his level of preparation and care.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2380.745" stopTime="2412.966">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2380.745">Justice Kagan, I'm not here saying that I think lawyers are sitting in -- in trial courts intentionally going through the kind of thought processes that you describe.</text>
        <text syncTime="2389.684">But I think the effect that Justice Scalia is talking about is real.</text>
        <text syncTime="2392.969">I think, at the margins, which is what we're talking about when we're talking about these incentives, I do think that in cases like this one -- I mean, this is the heartland, where the district court says, I'm going to give you an above-guideline sentence in order for you to take a drug treatment class.</text>
        <text syncTime="2405.360">Now, defendants all around the country at the time of Petitioner's trial were raising Tapia claims.</text>
        <text syncTime="2410.181">This was not some novel legal claim unknown.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="2412.966" stopTime="2434.713">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="2412.966">Why -- why was it a Tapia claim?</text>
        <text syncTime="2414.483">Why wasn't it simply, trial -- trial judge, the statute says imprisonment is not an appropriate means of promoting correction and rehabilitation?</text>
        <text syncTime="2427.476">Why weren't those -- why wasn't it really incumbent on the prosecutor to tell the judge, just read those words?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2434.713" stopTime="2455.210">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2434.713">So, Justice Ginsburg, I didn't mean by Tapia claim, depending on -- because this Court hadn't issued Tapia.</text>
        <text syncTime="2439.015">I mean a claim like the one in Tapia, where defendants were saying, Section 3582, the statute to which you're pointing, does not permit you, district court judge, to do this.</text>
        <text syncTime="2448.389">Lots of Defendants were making those claims.</text>
        <text syncTime="2450.925">They were percolating up through the circuits.</text>
        <text syncTime="2452.641">Even defendants in the Fifth Circuit were making that claim.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="2455.210" stopTime="2512.214">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="2455.210">Mr. Wall, why is this whole test, as you're proposing it, dependent on the smartness or not smartness of a particular circuit and the speed with which a particular circuit reaches an issue or doesn't?</text>
        <text syncTime="2469.220">I mean, this -- basically, what you're saying is we reward the circuits and the judges who don't reach issues, because if the law is unsettled, then if a substantial right is affected, that's so serious that it affects the fairness and integrity of a proceeding, that is not going to result in a reversal.</text>
        <text syncTime="2498.656">It seems to me that if I'm a district court judge or a circuit court judge or anyone else or a circuit court, I would try to avoid as many issues as I could because there's going to be as little set of reversals as possible.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2512.214" stopTime="2513.998">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2512.214">Justice Sotomayor--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="2513.998" stopTime="2542.249">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="2513.998">And going back to what Justice Ginsburg said, we take cases where the split is 8 to 1, okay, or 8 to 0, because a particular circuit hasn't gotten to -- to an issue.</text>
        <text syncTime="2528.073">Does this mean, as Justice Breyer said, that the eight circuits who got it right, the defendants have a Johnson plain-error rule, and the one circuit who just didn't get to it doesn't?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2542.249" stopTime="2560.812">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2542.249">--It's -- it's not about rewarding or faulting district courts.</text>
        <text syncTime="2546.303">It's the way our system works.</text>
        <text syncTime="2548.137">Where a court of appeals or this Court issues a decision that governs a district court, that's the law.</text>
        <text syncTime="2553.557">And the Court said in Frady, we count on the trial court and the prosecutor to bring those kinds of egregious errors to the Court's attention.</text>
        <text syncTime="2559.610">But where it's an open question--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="2560.812" stopTime="2564.931">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="2560.812">But why isn't the focus of the system on the nature of error?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2564.931" stopTime="2571.768">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2564.931">--I think the focus of the system is on the contemporaneous objection requirement in Rule 51, which is what Rule 52 is designed to enforce.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="2571.768" stopTime="2576.906">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="2571.768">But 52(b) is about not making the objection.</text>
        <text syncTime="2574.054">That's -- that's sort of going around in a circle.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2576.906" stopTime="2596.069">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2576.906">Well, only in the sense that what Rule 52(b) does is it says okay, you didn't object.</text>
        <text syncTime="2582.810">We will let you get a narrow form of relief, but only in the cases where your objection should have been unnecessary because there was governing law which everyone in the courtroom should have been able to point to, or where it would have been futile--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2596.069" stopTime="2596.469">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2596.069">Whoa, whoa.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2596.469" stopTime="2597.402">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2596.469">--because there's a governing precedent the other way.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2597.402" stopTime="2669.582">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2597.402">Here, that's -- it's the second part.</text>
        <text syncTime="2598.319">I mean, I think you'd have a stronger argument were it not for Johnson.</text>
        <text syncTime="2602.639">But Johnson is saying, look, if you're in a circuit where the law turns out to be absolutely clearly wrong, then you don't have to make an objection.</text>
        <text syncTime="2614.197">And then what we do is we consider whether the matter was clear at the time of appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="2620.268">Now, once I see that, it's like both bookends.</text>
        <text syncTime="2624.637">You don't have to make the objection, and the only time you do is when the law is unclear; and, that being so, we're going to have everybody doing research about how clear the law is one way or the other, which is going to be tough.</text>
        <text syncTime="2636.544">But, more importantly, it seems to me what's happening is that 52 is being also used in part to isolate those Peggy Schooner type cases where it is just basically unfair not to apply new law.</text>
        <text syncTime="2654.739">And in the words of Justice Marshall, he says that should apply, and sometimes it's unfair not to apply it on the appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="2664.714">And -- and so I don't see how you explain Johnson on your theory.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2669.582" stopTime="2679.889">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2669.582">I think Johnson -- as the Chief Justice pointed out earlier, the analysis in Johnson, it's fairly brief.</text>
        <text syncTime="2675.670">The Court did not discuss the text, history of the rule or this Court's previous cases.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="2679.889" stopTime="2714.730">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2679.889">Well, more than that, Johnson stood on its head, did it not, not to decide the case the easy way, which was simply to say if it's clear on appeal, the rule applies.</text>
        <text syncTime="2690.531">It could have said that.</text>
        <text syncTime="2692.131">The case would have been very easy.</text>
        <text syncTime="2693.297">It -- it instead avoided that by saying, oh, well, this is a very special case.</text>
        <text syncTime="2698.601">Well, it wouldn't be a special case if -- if the argument presented by the Petitioner here were accepted.</text>
        <text syncTime="2704.855">I don't -- far from -- far from appearing that Johnson supports Petitioner's case, I think Johnson tends to undermine it.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2714.730" stopTime="2726.720">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2714.730">Well, in danger of running afoul of Justice Kagan, I'm going to agree again.</text>
        <text syncTime="2720.050">That's exactly the Government's argument.</text>
        <text syncTime="2721.883">If Johnson had resolved the broader question, it could not have set aside the -- the question here.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="2726.720" stopTime="2749.284">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="2726.720">Well, the Government had a different argument before.</text>
        <text syncTime="2728.754">In Johnson, the Government called this distinction an amorphous one.</text>
        <text syncTime="2732.608">And it says,</text>
        <text syncTime="2733.374">"Nothing in the text of Rule 52(b) contemplates or permits any such distinction. "</text>
        <text syncTime="2738.326">"An error is either plain, or it is not. "</text>
        <text syncTime="2740.762">"It is more faithful to the text of 52(b) and simpler for the courts of appeals to obviate that distinction altogether. "</text>
        <text syncTime="2748.451">said the Government.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2749.284" stopTime="2753.855">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2749.284">And this Court disagreed, but studiously avoided placing its decision on the text--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="2753.855" stopTime="2778.237">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="2753.855">This Court did not disagree.</text>
        <text syncTime="2754.505">This Court took a half step.</text>
        <text syncTime="2757.140">And the question before us is still the question that was before you when you wrote this passage, you being the Government, which is should we distinguish between the Johnson case and this one.</text>
        <text syncTime="2768.864">And you very clearly stated, both as to a matter of text and to a matter of what's simpler for the courts of appeals, that there should be no such distinction.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2778.237" stopTime="2838.358">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2778.237">--Justice Kagan, there is no question that in the briefs and in argument, the Government in Johnson asked this Court not to draw a futility exception to Rule 52 for cases in which an objection would have been pointless at trial in light of governing precedent, and the Court disagreed with us on that.</text>
        <text syncTime="2791.128">And the question here is, is the Johnson tail going to wag the plain-error dog?</text>
        <text syncTime="2794.397">Johnson rested on a policy consideration.</text>
        <text syncTime="2796.699">They're just flatly inapplicable here.</text>
        <text syncTime="2798.466">This is the heartland of cases in which a contemporaneous objection could have been quite helpful.</text>
        <text syncTime="2803.252">This is not, as the Court said in Johnson, a case in which the defendant was being asked to make an objection that the district court was powerless to grant.</text>
        <text syncTime="2810.691">The district court here, I think, was genuinely on the fence about what to do, and an objection could have been quite helpful.</text>
        <text syncTime="2816.095">So to take -- I mean, either the holding in Johnson, which was limited and could not have been if the court had decided on a broader ground, or the rationale.</text>
        <text syncTime="2822.999">Even taking just the rationale, that doesn't apply here.</text>
        <text syncTime="2825.967">I think the only way you could read Johnson that would help Petitioner is to say it resolved the broader question of what the text of the rule requires regardless of context.</text>
        <text syncTime="2834.723">And that's the one reading of Johnson that's just not persuasive on the face of the opinion.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2838.358" stopTime="2903.283">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2838.358">Yes, but the -- the -- well, this -- I mean, the trouble is you've run into, like, four different interpretations of what Johnson really means.</text>
        <text syncTime="2846.530">And mine, which is, perhaps, no better or worse than the competing ones, is -- is you go back to the Schooner Peggy, and you see the Chief Justice, and he says, in a case the law has changed, the court must decide according to existing law, the appellate court; and, if it be necessary to set aside a judgment rightful when rendered, but which cannot be affirmed but in violation of the law, that judgment must be set aside.</text>
        <text syncTime="2875.763">So there, we seem to be, and Johnson seemed to me to bear this out; but, sometimes you do forgive the need to object because the overriding principle is the principle of deciding the law as it is at the time of appeal, and to do the contrary is just too unfair.</text>
        <text syncTime="2897.796">Now, that -- reading Johnson that way, I'd say, well, that rule applies here too sometimes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2903.283" stopTime="2903.616">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2903.283">Justice Breyer--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2903.616" stopTime="2903.999">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2903.616">--sometimes.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2903.999" stopTime="2912.989">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2903.999">--there is no question that that concern animated this Court's decision -- retroactivity decision in Griffith, and there is no question that that is one of the concerns underneath the rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="2911.603">But if it were the only concern--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2912.989" stopTime="2913.305">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2912.989">No, it's not.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2913.305" stopTime="2915.841">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2913.305">--The rule wouldn't say plain.</text>
        <text syncTime="2914.622">As Justice Scalia pointed out--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="2915.841" stopTime="2923.161">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="2915.841">Absolutely.</text>
        <text syncTime="2916.507">I mean, that -- that argument applies to whether the error was plain or not.</text>
        <text syncTime="2921.226">Apply the law as it is.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="2923.161" stopTime="2983.382">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="2923.161">Yes.</text>
        <text syncTime="2923.678">Yes.</text>
        <text syncTime="2924.045">And that's why you make a balance.</text>
        <text syncTime="2925.697">And the balance goes -- brings back the first question that I put.</text>
        <text syncTime="2930.165">Because in this kind of a case where the law is unsettled, we have what we'll call the uniform or the -- problem, and that's the problem of it doesn't really make that much difference to the basic policy of objecting.</text>
        <text syncTime="2945.340">And on the other side, you have the administrative potential mess of having to figure out how clear was the law in the court -- the district court.</text>
        <text syncTime="2958.148">Is it a circuit where you'd say the law was absolutely -- is pretty clear that they were right?</text>
        <text syncTime="2963.719">Or was it a circuit where it's pretty clear that the law was the opposite, in which case we waive the need?</text>
        <text syncTime="2970.290">Or is it actually mixed up and you don't know, in that circuit, in which case you're arguing, don't waive the need.</text>
        <text syncTime="2977.646">So I see the unicorn on one side versus an administrative problem on the other.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="2983.382" stopTime="3041.302">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="2983.382">--So I -- I want to suggest that the administerability problem is very small because it has not been difficult for the lower courts to apply this test.</text>
        <text syncTime="2991.119">And I want to suggest that there is a really significant cost on the other side, which is you're putting on the table an entire set of errors that Rule 52 was not designed to remedy, and you are diverting the resources of the judicial system toward those plain-error cases, and you will see a set of such claims every time a court of appeals or this Court issues a decision of criminal law or criminal procedure.</text>
        <text syncTime="3011.867">In just this circuit alone, it has issued five opinions in the last year considering just Tapia plain-error claims.</text>
        <text syncTime="3017.937">And that's just Tapia.</text>
        <text syncTime="3018.889">And that's just one circuit.</text>
        <text syncTime="3020.289">And I think the question is, what's the obvious prong designed to do?</text>
        <text syncTime="3023.774">What's it there for?</text>
        <text syncTime="3025.459">And it's got to be there to catch something.</text>
        <text syncTime="3027.342">And what it is there to screen out are errors that were debatable, that even reasonable district court judges and prosecutors might have missed and catch errors that everyone in the courtroom should have recognized because they why egregious under the law as it stood at the time.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="3041.302" stopTime="3075.059">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="3041.302">Counsel, I -- it strikes me that we are having a very usual discussion in that we are competing policy considerations that have been raised.</text>
        <text syncTime="3050.342">This is a -- a rule with particular language, and I don't think we'd be having this type of a discussion if we were dealing with a statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="3060.650">I think there would be a different focus.</text>
        <text syncTime="3062.150">Obviously, the policy concerns would be raised but in a different context.</text>
        <text syncTime="3066.286">Do you have authority for the proposition that we have more flexibility in interpreting the Federal rules than we would in interpreting the statute?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3075.059" stopTime="3076.859">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3075.059">I -- not in general--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="3076.859" stopTime="3092.854">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="3076.859">I mean, it highlight -- it -- just to take a moment -- it was highlighted for me in your brief when you said, Well, Johnson, there was a special circumstance, so they read this rule, then, this way.</text>
        <text syncTime="3085.748">This is not a special circumstance, so we are going to read the rule a different way.</text>
        <text syncTime="3088.967">Is it because these are rules as opposed to statutes?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3092.854" stopTime="3105.494">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3092.854">--No.</text>
        <text syncTime="3093.404">It's because we have Johnson.</text>
        <text syncTime="3095.137">I mean, I -- Mr. Dreeben stood here in Johnson and said, We've got the most natural reading of the rule, and you shouldn't carve out a futility exception to it.</text>
        <text syncTime="3102.377">And then, in our view, that is what the Court did without discussing the tax.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="3105.494" stopTime="3174.823">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="3105.494">And what about what the rules -- what the rules advisory committee?</text>
        <text syncTime="3107.530">I mean, is it -- when 52(b) was put in the statute, they -- they cited a case you cite in your brief, the Wiborg -- or Wiborg case.</text>
        <text syncTime="3120.421">That wasn't, at the time, error.</text>
        <text syncTime="3123.556">It was a sufficiency-of-the-evidence error, the kind of thing you would expect the counsel to bring to the attention of the Court.</text>
        <text syncTime="3132.646">And nonetheless, the -- the advisory committee put it in as an example of how 52(b) should operate.</text>
        <text syncTime="3140.085">And why?</text>
        <text syncTime="3140.918">They said they put it in there because it was a matter vital to the defendant.</text>
        <text syncTime="3147.671">So the objection wasn't made, so the contemporaneous objection rule was -- was not observed and nonetheless, the Court said, We are going to take -- we are going to consider it on appeal because the matter is vital to the defendant.</text>
        <text syncTime="3168.752">I can't imagine anything more vital than being deprived of 19 to 27 months of freedom.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3174.823" stopTime="3228.475">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3174.823">Well, I -- but Wiborg falls squarely within what we all believe is the core of the rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="3179.727">There wasn't sufficient evidence at trial.</text>
        <text syncTime="3181.412">That would have been obvious to everyone in the courtroom that the prosecution hadn't satisfied some element of the offense.</text>
        <text syncTime="3186.546">There is no change in intervening law like what we are dealing with here.</text>
        <text syncTime="3189.648">And I take your point, Mr. Chief Justice.</text>
        <text syncTime="3191.517">We think that we've got by far the most natural reading of the text.</text>
        <text syncTime="3194.302">It's backed up by the history.</text>
        <text syncTime="3195.436">It's backed up by this Court's understanding in cases like Frady, that is designed to cure errors so egregious that the trial court and prosecutor were derelict in countenancing them, as this Court said in Frady.</text>
        <text syncTime="3206.110">And I -- I don't see Petitioner or the amicus really taking issue with the Government on that text or history or cases like Frady.</text>
        <text syncTime="3214.216">I think they are resting it on Johnson, and for the reasons I tried to explain to Justice Kagan, I don't think any persuasive reading of Johnson gets them home.</text>
        <text syncTime="3221.804">It could not have set aside this question if it had thought it was resolving what the text of the rule Mr. Chief Justice meant, or general--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Samuel_Alito" startTime="3228.475" stopTime="3260.012">
        <label>Justice Samuel Alito</label>
        <text syncTime="3228.475">What about Mr. Henderson sitting in prison, serving a sentence that we now know was imposed for a reason that is not permitted under Federal sentencing law?</text>
        <text syncTime="3242.133">Is there anything that can be done for him?</text>
        <text syncTime="3244.402">If -- if it was very clear at the time that the statute prohibited this, would it have been -- was it, in effect, the inassistance of counsel for his attorney not to have made an objection?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3260.012" stopTime="3269.300">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3260.012">--I think he could certainly raise that claim in habeas and attempt to -- to get relief, but I don't think there is any relief for him under Rule 52.</text>
        <text syncTime="3268.200">And I don't--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="3269.300" stopTime="3276.104">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="3269.300">And is there any relief for him in the -- in the regulations of Bureau of Prisons or the Government -- other than a pardon, I suppose, of defendants?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3276.104" stopTime="3284.293">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3276.104">--Well, he -- he been a -- not specifically aimed at this, Justice Kennedy.</text>
        <text syncTime="3279.906">I will say he has been eligible for the RDAP in the time that he has been in prison, and he has never--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Anthony_Kennedy" startTime="3284.293" stopTime="3284.993">
        <label>Justice Anthony Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="3284.293">Eligible for?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3284.993" stopTime="3292.066">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3284.993">--For the -- the -- for the residential drug abuse treatment program that the district court wanted him to participate in.</text>
        <text syncTime="3290.530">He never applied to--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="3292.066" stopTime="3336.178">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="3292.066">Counsel, I guess, I -- I continue to be confused about what makes error plain or clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="3299.053">I don't know why the pronouncement of a circuit court accomplishes that.</text>
        <text syncTime="3305.207">Meaning, so we said in Tapia that the statute is perfectly plain, perfectly clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="3312.812">And so why shouldn't it have been clear to those circuits or to that district court judge at the time of trial?</text>
        <text syncTime="3324.720">You're equating the plainness of error with what the outcome is to -- in circuit courts, and I'm having trouble with that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3336.178" stopTime="3381.374">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3336.178">--I -- not invariably, Justice Sotomayor.</text>
        <text syncTime="3337.778">I -- it's possible to imagine a case in which a district court judge was not foreclosed from reaching some legal conclusion that nevertheless no reasonable judge would reach.</text>
        <text syncTime="3347.301">I just think it's impossible to say that that's what Tapia was.</text>
        <text syncTime="3350.668">You had courts that had reached different conclusions, and you had a sentencing practice that had been in existence for decades.</text>
        <text syncTime="3355.722">Now, this Court ultimately found and agreed, the Government confessed to her, and the Court agreed that that was an impermissible sentencing practice.</text>
        <text syncTime="3361.960">But it was still an open, debatable, legal question on which courts have reached different conclusions for many, many years.</text>
        <text syncTime="3367.464">And I think to say to a district court judge in a circuit that has decided the question against the defendant, Well, that's not clear law.</text>
        <text syncTime="3374.970">I think a district court would look at you like, What are you talking about?</text>
        <text syncTime="3377.422">I have an on-point Court of Appeals decision that tells me to do X or Y.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="3381.374" stopTime="3416.130">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="3381.374">Mr. Wall, can -- can I ask you about footnote 4 of your brief?</text>
        <text syncTime="3384.992">This is the footnote in which you say that this case involves only a claim of sentencing error, and it doesn't involve a claim of actual innocence based on an intervening decision.</text>
        <text syncTime="3396.216">Is that footnote meant to suggest that you think, or at least that you contemplate the possibility that where there is an intervening decision making clear the conduct that a person had been convicted of was in fact not criminal, that you would think a different rule should apply?</text>
        <text syncTime="3414.678">That the Johnson rule should apply?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3416.130" stopTime="3438.460">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3416.130">We are leaving open, if the Court says that there is an actual innocence exception in habeas to procedural default rules, that whatever it covers, acts that are no longer criminal, sentences beyond the statutory maximum, that whatever that exception covers, we leave open the possibility that you could also get relief for that under Rule 52.</text>
        <text syncTime="3434.008">That -- that those cases could -- those exceptions could trap each other.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="3438.460" stopTime="3468.230">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="3438.460">Because then that creates yet another complication in this interpretation of Rule 52.</text>
        <text syncTime="3443.380">And one might say, We just want a uniform rule, that it should all be at one time, and having said which time it should be at in Johnson, and having suggested that it should also be in the time of appeal for actual innocence claims, that it would be strange to carve out this single set of cases involving intervening changes of the law, and say those should be at the time of trial.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3468.230" stopTime="3473.049">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3468.230">Justice Kagan, I think far stranger than letting the Johnson tail wag the plain-error dog would be letting the--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="3473.049" stopTime="3478.037">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3473.049">I agree that that was a bad footnote.</text>
        <text syncTime="3474.416">I think you're, you know.</text>
        <text syncTime="3476.518">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3478.037" stopTime="3480.287">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3478.037">--Now, I'm going to go the other way.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="3480.287" stopTime="3490.845">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="3480.287">But -- an honest footnote, an honest footnote in that you're saying there is this other category of cases that's lurking out there, and that category seems as though we should have the Johnson rule.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3490.845" stopTime="3502.653">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3490.845">But actual innocence isn't the tail, it's like the nub or the tip of the tail.</text>
        <text syncTime="3494.730">And whatever the Court decides to do with actual innocence, it shouldn't dictate the interpretation of procedural rules more generally.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Elena_Kagan" startTime="3502.653" stopTime="3508.057">
        <label>Justice Elena Kagan</label>
        <text syncTime="3502.653">But now we have two tails.</text>
        <text syncTime="3503.519">But, you know, the one tail is Johnson and one tail is actual innocence, but this is just a tail, too.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3508.057" stopTime="3523.149">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3508.057">One tail, one nub.</text>
        <text syncTime="3509.573">But the -- the--</text>
        <text syncTime="3510.508">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="3511.224">Justice Kagan, this has not been difficult to apply the lower courts doing this have not found it difficult to determine because the vast majority of cases, frankly, in the real world, are like this one.</text>
        <text syncTime="3520.030">Courts have reached different conclusions on a legal question, and this Court--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="3523.149" stopTime="3565.409">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="3523.149">Then what harm does it do, in the interest of simplicity, in reading a word to mean what it says?</text>
        <text syncTime="3529.136">The word is “ plain error ”.</text>
        <text syncTime="3531.255">It doesn't say whether they mean plain error at the time of trial, or plain at the time of appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="3537.409">Olano says it means plain at the time of appeal.</text>
        <text syncTime="3540.778">If we say that's what it means, then that's what it means always.</text>
        <text syncTime="3544.913">And what harm will that do, given the fact -- but, still, there's a plenty of a good reason, and appellate judges know their job, not to send things back, where it's some technical matter, where he's trying to sandbag the judge, where, in fact -- now we have all the Rule 4, the fourth prong consideration.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3565.409" stopTime="3566.076">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3565.409">--Justice Breyer--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="3566.076" stopTime="3566.928">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="3566.076">The words mean what they say.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3566.928" stopTime="3568.228">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3566.928">--I agree.</text>
        <text syncTime="3567.461">And the rule--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="3568.228" stopTime="3568.995">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="3568.228">Well, if you agree, then--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3568.995" stopTime="3582.605">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3568.995">--No.</text>
        <text syncTime="3569.380">The rule suggests -- by far, the most natural reading, is that the plain error could have been brought to the court's attention, the district court, the one that committed the egregious error, and neither Petitioner nor Amicus has advanced any other textual interpretation.</text>
        <text syncTime="3581.188">I mean, if we're deciding about that--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Sonia_Sotomayor" startTime="3582.605" stopTime="3591.544">
        <label>Justice Sonia Sotomayor</label>
        <text syncTime="3582.605">I don't understand how you get that from the rule.</text>
        <text syncTime="3583.738">The rule says any plain error that affects substantial rights, even if it wasn't brought to the judge's attention.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3591.544" stopTime="3605.570">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3591.544">--That's right.</text>
        <text syncTime="3591.844">Even -- so that that's the first clause.</text>
        <text syncTime="3592.794">And the second clause is, even if not brought to the court's attention, which suggests that that plain error, that egregious, obvious error, could have been brought to the district court's attention; not that it was debatable at the time, and it became clearer later because an appellate judge opined.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Stephen_G_Breyer" startTime="3605.570" stopTime="3612.057">
        <label>Justice Stephen G. Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="3605.570">--That is Mr. Dreeben's excellent argument.</text>
        <text syncTime="3607.755">And then Olano -- rather, Johnson says the contrary.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3612.057" stopTime="3625.634">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3612.057">Again, Justice Breyer, Johnson did nothing, either as a matter of its holding or its rationale, to say what the rule requires more generally in cases like this one, where a contemporaneous objection could have been quote helpful to the district court.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="3625.634" stopTime="3632.538">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3625.634">I joined Johnson, and maybe I have to repudiate it if it leads -- leads to that conclusion.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3632.538" stopTime="3635.572">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3632.538">Justice Scalia, you did not join the relevant portion of Johnson.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="3635.572" stopTime="3638.357">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3635.572">Oh, I didn't?</text>
        <text syncTime="3636.122">Oh, thank God.</text>
        <text syncTime="3637.607">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="3638.357" stopTime="3640.523">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="3638.357">Counsel--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Antonin_Scalia" startTime="3640.523" stopTime="3645.927">
        <label>Justice Antonin Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="3640.523">It didn't sound like me.</text>
        <text syncTime="3641.392">I believe in the slippery slope.</text>
        <text syncTime="3642.859">And we're proving that today, aren't we?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3645.927" stopTime="3648.046">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3645.927">It's fully open to you to agree with the Government here.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Ruth_Bader_Ginsburg" startTime="3648.046" stopTime="3682.636">
        <label>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="3648.046">Mr. Wall, your time is up, but we have a rule -- the Supreme Court has a rule -- and I would like to know how the Government reads it.</text>
        <text syncTime="3656.069">It's our Rule 24, that says we, this Court, may consider plain error not covered in the questions presented but evident from the record.</text>
        <text syncTime="3667.190">Is our rule -- in your view, must the error be plain at the trial court stage, or is it enough that the error was plain at the court of appeals stage for us to apply our rule?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="Jeffrey_B_Wall" startTime="3682.636" stopTime="3690.140">
        <label> Jeffrey B Wall</label>
        <text syncTime="3682.636">I don't think there's anything about the text or history or the way that rule has been used that suggests it should be interpreted differently from Rule 52.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="John_G_Roberts" startTime="3690.140" stopTime="3692.806">
        <label>Chief Justice John G. Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="3690.140">--Thank you, counsel.</text>
        <text syncTime="3691.806">The case is submitted.</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
  </episode>
</transcript>
