VICTOR H. LAWS, III, United States Magistrate Judge.
This motion to expunge a federal misdemeanor conviction requires the Court to answer a key question of federal court jurisdiction: Does federal "ancillary jurisdiction" extend to a claim for expungement of a criminal conviction — not on grounds of any illegality of the arrest or conviction, or any constitutional infirmity of the statute on which the Defendant was convicted — but solely on equitable grounds? The federal Circuits are split on this issue, and even within this District the decisions, taken as a whole, are ambiguous on the point. Because I conclude, for the reasons set forth below, that jurisdiction to order expungement on purely equitable grounds is lacking, the Defendant's motion will be denied.
On January 14, 2004, the Defendant, Shawn W. Harris, pled guilty to a single count of possession of a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844. The offense took place on May 23, 2003, when the Defendant drove onto the property of the National Naval Medical Center, a federal
On September 27, 2011, Defendant wrote a letter to the Court seeking to have his federal misdemeanor record expunged. The Defendant maintained that the cocaine conviction had served as a wake-up call, that he had turned his life around, and that he was now "the sort of person the expungement process was designed for". In a letter dated October 5, 2011, Defendant wrote to the Court again, amplifying his claim for expungement. In his second letter Defendant asked for the Court's "forgiveness and consideration of how I have conducted myself as an upstanding citizen and quality person to this day". He included some details concerning his work history and indicated that he had run into problems obtaining a security clearance in connection with certain federal employment. He attached some photographs and a resume detailing his work experience, education and skills.
Treating Defendant's letters as a motion for expungement, this Court then asked for, and received, briefs from both the U.S. Attorney's Office and the Federal Public Defender's Office (which had represented Defendant originally) on the expungement question. The memorandum from the Assistant Federal Public Defender maintained that, to properly evaluate the Defendant's request, the Court should hold a hearing and receive evidence as to the adverse consequences suffered by the Defendant as a result of his drug conviction. Accordingly, an evidentiary hearing on the Defendant's motion for expungement was held on March 9, 2012.
The key factual issue to be determined is the nature and extent of the impact of the Defendant's drug conviction on his job opportunities and specifically the impact thereof on his ability to obtain a work-related security clearance. The Court finds as follows: In addition to maintaining his own self-employed tax preparation business, since college graduation Defendant has worked as a contract employee for two federal agencies (HHS and the Department of Agriculture) and also at least three private employers (General Dynamics, Ulst Accounting Service, and most recently Nobilis where he is involved in managing a large government contract involving deployment of a satellite). Despite his 2004 criminal conviction, Defendant appears to have maintained continuous employment.
The evidence as to the impact of the criminal conviction on Defendant's ability to obtain a security clearance is murkier. Defendant testified that he is unable to obtain a top-secret security clearance and that the lack of such a clearance poses problems for his career advancement — preventing him from certain work regarding international contracts at USDA, imperiling his work on the satellite contract with Nobilis, and preventing him from taking a position with the Agency for International Development (USAID) which was contingent on obtaining a security clearance. Where I find the evidence murky is in the Defendant's testimony about the "glass ceiling" that he feels he is bumping up against by not having the security clearance, his comments that he must constantly "dumb down his resume", and that he is "90% sure" that he will be unable to continue working on the satellite project without obtaining the clearance. Such testimony leaves the Court unsure whether
There is no applicable statute providing for expungement in a case like this.
Ancillary jurisdiction, or as it is sometimes called, "ancillary enforcement jurisdiction," is the concept under which federal courts maintain jurisdiction over related proceedings that are technically separate from the claims or causes of action in the initial case that invoked federal subject matter jurisdiction. As explained in the leading treatise on federal practice and procedure:
13 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Edward H. Cooper and Richard D. Freer, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE, § 3523.2 at 213 (3d Ed. 2008) (footnote omitted).
Typical examples of such ancillary jurisdiction are the power reserved to the court to enjoin actions that would interfere with the court's orders, to enter restraining orders to preserve the status quo while claims are adjudicated, to enjoin actions elsewhere, to impose sanctions, and to order garnishment or other incidental proceeding. Id., § 3523.2 at 214-17.
With respect to expungement, the treatise continues:
Id., § 3523.2 at 217-18 (footnotes omitted). In the 2011 supplement, the authors of the treatise make clear that the Sixth Circuit has joined the mentioned circuits in rejecting ancillary jurisdiction over expungement proceeding, and they cite United States v. Mitchell, 683 F.Supp.2d 427, 430 (E.D.Va.2010) as conclusively distinguishing the Fourth Circuit decision mentioned in the main volume
In Mitchell the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia found that the Circuits were split on whether federal courts have the power to expunge criminal records and convictions solely on equitable grounds. Id., at 430-31. The court in Mitchell found, however, that many of the decisions upholding the exercise of such ancillary jurisdiction predated the Supreme Court's decision in Kokkonen. In Kokkonen, the Supreme Court concluded that federal courts were permitted to invoke the doctrine of ancillary jurisdiction only in two limited circumstance: (1) where necessary to permit disposition by a single court of claims that are factually interdependent; and (2) to enable a court to function successfully, that is, to manage its proceeding, vindicate its authority, and effectuate its decrees. Id., at 379-80, 114 S.Ct. 1673, as explained in Mitchell, supra, at 429.
The defendant in Mitchell had been convicted of bank fraud but had been law-abiding for about seven years when he sought expungement. He stood to lose an employment offer with the Architect of the Capitol if his felony conviction were not expunged. Id., at 428. Applying the Kokkonen factors, the court first concluded that ancillary jurisdiction was not proper because there was no factual interdependency between the claim over which the district court properly had jurisdiction, namely defendant's criminal conviction, and defendant's later ancillary claim to expungement relief. The facts relating to the defendant's conviction for bank fraud were completely separate and distinct from the equitable circumstances that the defendant claimed justified the expungement of that conviction. Id., at 432-33. Second, expungement of the criminal conviction would not facilitate the functioning of the federal court, i.e., to manage its proceeding, vindicate its authority, and effectuate its decrees. To the contrary, the court found that it was important that a readily accessible record of the defendant's
In applying Kokkonen to reach this narrower view of ancillary jurisdiction in expungement cases, Judge Ellis's opinion in Mitchell distinguished the Fourth Circuit's Allen case, supra note 3, on several grounds. Allen did not directly address the jurisdictional question, was a case involving administrative exhaustion, and was factually distinguishable, involving a criminal arrest and acquittal record, not a conviction. Mitchell, supra, at 430.
Two North Carolina cases have followed the reasoning of Mitchell in holding that the power to expunge federal criminal convictions solely on equitable grounds is not authorized by the Constitution or by statute. Sambou v. United States, 2010 WL 3363034 (E.D.N.C. Aug. 24, 2010); Bethel v. United States, 2010 WL 3063231 (E.D.N.C. Aug. 3, 2010).
Expungement cases from this District have not applied Kokkonen in this context, and have not been uniformly explicit about the jurisdictional question. The cases have, however, uniformly rejected requests for expungement. See, Martin-el v. Maryland, 2011 WL 5513241 (D.Md. Nov. 9, 2011) (movant was not entitled to an extraordinary writ or to invoke the court's limited authority to expunge, despite the fact that the movant was only 15 at the time of his 1959 conviction under a state juvenile justice statute later found unconstitutional, and despite his inability to find work with the area's larger employers or to secure a passport); Stoute v. United States, 2011 WL 2037672 (D.Md. May 24, 2011) (defendant's conviction for possession of cocaine could not be expunged where the conviction had caused no major adverse consequences over a 26-year period); United States v. Chester, 2009 WL 943633 (D.Md. Apr. 6, 2009) (movant not entitled to expunge 1987 conviction for conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute; exceptional or extraordinary circumstances were not present where defendant claimed he needed expungement for employment and educational purposes); Gary, supra, (defendant not entitled to expungement despite acquittal, where she sought to enhance her employment opportunities and attain her dream of becoming a police officer); Steelwright, supra (defendant not entitled to have a drug paraphernalia conviction expunged where defendant did not allege denial of a security clearance or loss of specific job opportunities); United States v. Stromick, 710 F.Supp. 613 (D.Md.1989) (defendant not
Of these cases, only Gary explicitly held that the court lacks ancillary jurisdiction to expunge based solely on equitable considerations such as harm to employment opportunities. Id., at 741. In Steelwright, decided the same year, the court found that federal courts, exercising ancillary jurisdiction, have "inherent equitable powers" to order expungement, albeit a "narrow" power to be exercised only in unusual or extreme cases. Id., at 572-73 & nn. 11-12. "Although a nebulous concept", there must be "extreme or exceptional circumstance" presented before a court may impose the equitable remedy of expungement. Id., at 573-74. Later cases quote liberally from both Gary and Steelwright without resolving the tension between them. See, Martin-el, supra, at *2-3; and Chester, supra, at *1-2.
Importantly for our purposes, the opinions in Steelwright and Stromick both stated in dicta that equitable relief might be appropriate if a defendant were to show that he had been denied a security clearance or specific job opportunities or he was otherwise materially harmed by the criminal records. While the scenario was hypothetical in those cases, the record presents that factual predicate here. The question thus is posed squarely: Does the law still permit, after Kokkonen, this kind of balancing of the equities? Defendant maintains it does, asking the Court to weigh the adverse consequences stemming from his drug conviction against the Government's interest in maintaining a record of Defendant's misdemeanor conviction. Memorandum of Susan Bauer, AFPD, at 2-3.
This Court concludes that, in the absence of any controlling statute that guides expungement application,
For the foregoing reasons, this Court concludes that federal ancillary jurisdiction is unavailable here. The Defendant's claim for expungement of his misdemeanor conviction relies on purely equitable grounds — the impact of the conviction on his employment opportunities, and the likelihood that an employment-related security clearance will be unavailable. In the absence of acquittal, or even any claim that his conviction was in any way unlawful or unconstitutional, that his arrest or conviction flowed from any sort of official misconduct, or that the statute on which he was convicted has been found unconstitutional, I find that this Court is not empowered to grant the expungement relief sought. The Defendant is to be commended for turning his life around in the near decade since the events that gave rise to his prosecution, but, in a federal system with no generally applicable statutory process for expungement, that is not enough to warrant this extraordinary remedy.
For these reasons, Defendant's motion must be denied. IT IS SO ORDERED.