I hope everyone is staying cool with the heat of the summer. Also, the World Cup has been absolutely fascinating even if you are not a soccer fan.
This week’s blog entry explores Hunter v. United States , here, decided by the United States Supreme Court on June 18, 2026. It doesn’t really have anything to do with disabilities per se except that the plaintiff had a disability whose treatment of it was very much an issue. Also, many people with disabilities, both mental and physical, are in the prison system. As usual, the blog entry is divided into categories and they are: the situation; Justice Kagan (majority opinion), on why plea deals can be appealed when a miscarriage of justice can be shown; Justice Gorsuch concurring opinion exploring history of plea bargaining, appeal waivers, and an exploration of the miscarriage of justice standard; and thoughts/takeaways. It was an 8-1 decision with only Justice Thomas dissenting (he would have avoided the policy considerations and believed the law led to a contrary conclusion). There was also a concurrence by Justice Kavanagh with whom Justice Alito and Justice Barrett joined. Their concern was Justice Gorsuch’s concurrence, discussed below, sets a lower bar for the miscarriage of justice standard than what the majority opinion does. Finally, Justice Barrett’s concurring opinion talks about how the miscarriage of justice standard is one that applies only in rare circumstances and belongs to a body of procedural common-law doctrines courts have long developed.
I
The Situation
Petitioner Munson Hunter III entered into a written plea agreement with the Government after he was charged with ten counts of bank and wire fraud for a years-long scheme costing various financial institutions about half a million dollars. Under the agreement, Hunter pleaded guilty to one count of aiding and abetting wire fraud. In exchange, the Government agreed to dismiss the other nine charges and to refrain from prosecuting Hunter in the future for the conduct they described.
The agreement also included an appeal waiver, applying to both Hunter’s conviction and his still-to-be-decided sentence. Under that provision, Hunter “knowingly and voluntarily waive[d] the right to appeal” his conviction and sentence, except that he did “not waive the right to raise a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.” and with specific reference to his sentence, Hunter acknowledged his “aware[ness]” of certain facts: that the sentence had “not yet been determined” by the District Court; that the Government had made no “promise or representation” about that sentence; and that the “sentence to be imposed [was] within the sole discretion of the sentencing judge.”
At that hearing, much of the discussion focused on a condition of the supervised release the Probation Office recommended go into effect once Hunter completed his prison sentence. According to the Office’s presentence report, Hunter “suffers from symptoms of anxiety and depression” and “has refused medication to treat his symptoms.” The report thus proposed that, while on supervised release, Hunter be required to “participate in a mentalhealth treatment program” and to “take all mental-health medications that are prescribed by [his] treating physician.” Id., at 24. Hunter objected to the mandatory-medication part of that condition, saying that he should not “be forced to medicate.” The judge responded that if “the treatment provider prescribes drugs, you should take them,” while also telling Hunter that he could “address” any future dispute about medication “to the probation officer” or, if needed, “to me.”
Hunter promptly appealed, challenging the mandatory medication condition. That condition, he argued, “infringe[d] on [his] fundamental due process liberty interest in being free of unwanted mental health medication.” The Government sought dismissal, citing the appeal waiver in Hunter’s plea agreement. Hunter acknowledged that he had knowingly and voluntarily signed on to that provision but urged two reasons for still permitting the appeal to proceed. Most broadly, he contended that an appeal waiver is unenforceable when the disputed aspect of a sentence “violates a fundamental constitutional right.” In the alternative, he asserted that the District Court’s representation at sentencing that he had a right to appeal, along with the prosecutor’s failure to object, voided the appeal waiver he had made.
II
Justice Kagan (Majority Opinion), On Why Plea Deals Can Be Appealed When a Miscarriage Of Justice Can Be Shown
- An appeal waiver is not knowing and voluntary if it is the product of ineffective assistance of counsel.
- The acceptance or rejection of a plea agreement is left to the discretion of the individual trial judge. If approved, an appeal waiver next falls into the lap of a Court of Appeals, which has exclusive control over its operation. Nothing literally prevents a defendant signing such a waiver from filing an appeal.
- The real world effect of the waiver provision turns only on whether the appeals court decides to enforce it. The consequences of that decision have everything to do with courts and the judgments they render.
- The standard for enforcing appeal waivers implicates the interests not only of the agreement’s parties, but also of the judiciary.
- If a court always carries out appeal waivers no matter the kind or degree of error in the sentence, then the judicial system’s integrity may come into question.
- The majority of U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals view that an appeal waiver is unenforceable when it results in a miscarriage of justice makes the most sense. It also sets a high bar by allowing the setting aside of appeal waivers only where the sentence contains an egregious error that would bring the judicial system into disrepute. That error must be obvious and not one a judge could reasonably make. It also must be of the type that undermines public confidence in the judiciary.
- The miscarriage of justice standard offers a safety belt for extreme cases, i.e. a way out of the waiver when the justice system’s basic integrity is at stake.
- It is impossible to list all situations where an appeal waiver will be set aside, but a few of those situations are obvious (the examples are not exclusive): 1) a defendant may appeal the sentence exceeding what the relevant statute allows, which is most commonly a term of years about the maximum prescribed; 2) a defendant may appeal a sentence infected with blatent constitutional error, such as when a judge takes account of a constitutionally impermissible factor (like race), or imposes a constitutionally infirm condition of supervised release (like preventing a defendant from becoming pregnant); 3) a defendant may appeal a sentence imposed without some minimum of civilized procedure, such as when a judge refuses to hold a hearing in accordance with basic principles of law.
- The floodgates argument against the miscarriage of justice standard simply doesn’t hold up in light of what has happened in the U.S. Court of Appeals to date.
- The Court declined to decide in the first instance how the dispute should come out involving the petitioner when the miscarriage of justice standard is applied.
III
Justice Gorsuch Concurring Opinion Exploring History of Plea Bargaining, Appeal Waivers, And an Exploration of The Miscarriage Of Justice Standard
- The criminal justice system is no longer dominated by trials and sentences based on them, instead, it’s plea bargains worked out in ways not unlike the facts of this case.
- The domination of the plea bargaining system was not always the case in American history and certainly not at the founding. In fact, the founding generation took care to secure the right to jury trial in criminal cases twice (the Constitution and the Bill of Rights).
- Plea bargains didn’t begin to emerge as an alternative to trial in serious criminal cases until the mid-19th Even then, the practice was usually met with intense judicial skepticism. That skepticism continued well into the 20th century.
- In 1971, the Supreme Court declared plea bargaining highly desirable, something to be encouraged, and an essential component of the administration of justice.
- Since the 1970s, the number of federal criminal laws has grown rapidly. The prison terms attached to federal crimes have also grown. Some now say there is not an adult American who is not committed one felony or another.
- Federal sentencing guidelines currently recommend higher sentences for most defendants exercising their constitutional right to trial.
- 95% of convictions now come by way of plea bargains. Plea bargaining is now the criminal justice system.
- Appeal waivers are even a more recent of the development then plea bargaining is. Forty years ago, appeal waivers were rare or nonexistent. Like plea bargaining it was also met initially with judicial skepticism, but over time came to be accepted by the courts.
- In an appeal waiver situation, a defendant is waiving his right to appeal even though he does not yet know what that sentence will be, and even when the government retains its right to appeal any decision it doesn’t like.
- Since a defendant confronted with an appeal waiver during plea bargaining does not know what sentence a court will issue, the defendant must negotiate in the dark.
- The majority opinion listing some examples as to what might be a miscarriage of justice, is a welcome first step but doesn’t go far enough with respect to fleshing out the standard so that it can be applied by the lower courts. Fortunately, the Courts of Appeals have already fleshed out the rule.
- Miscarriage of justice includes: A) a sentence not authorized by law. This category embraces sentences exceeding the maximum prescribed by statute. It also should include sentences imposing penalties the law reserves for offenses different from those from which the defendant stands convicted, sentences ordering remedies the law does not permit, and perhaps minimum sentences which the defendant does not qualify; B) blatant constitutional error includes: 1) sentences based on constitutionally impermissible factors such as race, religion, or sex; 2) constitutionally infirm conditions of supervised release, such as sentences imposing a condition of release violating a defendant’s right to be free from forced medication, or condition violating his right to speak or worship freely, or any other condition violating one of his recognized constitutional rights. In short, a miscarriage of justice is all but certain to arise whenever a sentence infringes upon a constitutional right firmly established at the time of sentencing; C) sentences marred by serious procedural errors includes: 1) sentences chosen by an orangutan (completely random); 2) sentences reflecting a marked departure from mandatory sentencing procedures; 3) sentences where a district court departs from rules requiring it to give reasons for a chosen sentence or fails to address a defendant’s nonfrivolous argument or a different one; D) some sentences requiring a degree of judicial discretion, such as a failure to correct a plain and non-harmless error in calculating an advisory guidelines range; E) where a district court deals out punishment that is so substantively unreasonable, it would fail under the deferential abuse of discretion standard used by appellate courts in considering sentencing challenges; and F) egregious harm resulting from any supervised release condition, or any other component of a sentence wholly unrelated to legitimate sentencing purposes or lacking in rationality.
- Appeal waivers just might violate the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment because such a waiver cannot possibly be voluntary and knowing because it is never made with a full understanding of the consequences since the appeal waiver is signed before anyone actually knows what the sentence will be.
- A legal system branded with a disclaimer that judges might violate the law would be no legal system at all.
- The Supreme Court has found prospective waivers of many other statutory rights invalid and unenforceable. For example, employee’s rights under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 are not susceptible to prospective waivers. Same goes for the Fair Labor Standards Act and §1983 claims. Further, the Court has suggested on multiple occasions that a private agreement may not be enforced where it operates as a perspective waiver of a party’s right to pursue various other statutory remedies.
IV
Thoughts/Takeaways
- One can expect that criminal defense attorneys and judges are going to be very mindful of the few examples listed in the majority opinion.
- I expect all the litigation going forward to emanate from Justice Gorsuch’s opinion. Certainly, look for attorneys representing defendants on appeal to use every single one of the examples Justice Gorsuch gives in his opinion. If none of those examples apply, look for criminal defense appellate attorneys to make the constitutional claim Justice Gorsuch alludes to in his opinion that appeal waivers are flat out unconstitutional.
- What will be interesting to see is how the Supreme Court deals with cases that will percolate up to it involving Justice Gorsuch’s interpretation of the limited examples given in the majority opinion (even if those examples are not exclusive).
- The Court clearly was bothered by the forced medication aspect of the sentencing decision. One wonders if they would not also be bothered by a situation demanding that a prisoner be mandated to go off medicine that a prisoner was taking successfully in order to compensate for their disability.
- 8-1 decision. However, it might be better to think a bit as a 7-1-1 decision.
- Much of Justice Gorsuch’s concurrence echoes his book, “Overruled: the Human Toll of Too Much Law,” which is a fascinating read regardless of whether you agree with his premise.
- A statement made by Justice Gorsuch in his concurring opinion has wide implications for persons with disabilities. In particular, he says: “a legal system branded with a disclaimer that its judges might violate the law would be no legal system at all.” We might see this particular statement coming up quite a bit whenever a person with a disability challenges a state court judge or a federal executive agency’s judge for practices that discriminate against persons with disabilities. Certainly, plaintiff lawyers dealing with discrimination in state courts or in courts of federal executive agencies should strongly consider using this statement as part of their efforts to get around immunity issues that will be undoubtedly raised.