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Full Opinion
(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2015 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE SECOND CIRCUIT
No. 14â8358. Argued November 3, 2015âDecided March 1, 2016
Petitioner Avondale Lockhart pleaded guilty to possessing child por-
nography in violation of 18 U. S. C. §2252(a)(4). Because Lockhart
had a prior state-court conviction for first-degree sexual abuse involv-
ing his adult girlfriend, his presentence report concluded that he was
subject to the 10-year mandatory minimum sentence enhancement
provided in §2252(b)(2), which is triggered by, inter alia, prior state
convictions for crimes ârelating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexual
abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward.â Lock-
hart argued that the limiting phrase âinvolving a minor or wardâ ap-
plied to all three state crimes, so his prior conviction did not trigger
the enhancement. Disagreeing, the District Court applied the man-
datory minimum. The Second Circuit affirmed.
Held: Lockhartâs prior conviction is encompassed by §2252(b)(2). Pp. 2â
15.
(a) A natural reading of the text supports that conclusion. The
ârule of the last antecedent,â a canon of statutory interpretation stat-
ing that âa limiting clause or phrase . . . should ordinarily be read as
modifying only the noun or phrase that it immediately follows,â
Barnhart v. Thomas, 540 U. S. 20, 26, clarifies that the phrase âin-
volving a minor or wardâ modifies only the immediately preceding
noun phrase âabusive sexual conductâ and that the phrases âaggra-
vated sexual abuseâ and âsexual abuseâ are not so restricted. The
rule âcan . . . be overcome by other indicia of meaning,â ibid., but
§2252(b)(2)âs context reinforces its application in this case. Pp. 2â5.
(b) Section 2252(b)(2)âs enhancement can also be triggered by, inter
alia, a prior federal sexual abuse offense enumerated in Chapter
109A of the Federal Criminal Code. Interpreting §2252(b)(2) using
the ârule of the last antecedent,â the headings in Chapter 109A mir-
2 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Syllabus
ror precisely the order, precisely the divisions, and nearly precisely
the words used to describe the state sexual-abuse predicates. Apply-
ing the modifier âinvolving a minor or wardâ to all three items in
§2252(b)(2)âs list, by contrast, would require this Court to interpret
the state predicates in a way that departs from the federal template.
If Congress had intended that result, it is doubtful that Congress
would have followed so closely the structure and language of Chapter
109A. Pp. 5â7.
(c) Lockhartâs counterarguments are rejected. Pp. 7â14.
(1) Porto Rico Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Mor, 253 U. S. 345,
United States v. Bass, 404 U. S. 336, and Jama v. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, 543 U. S. 335, do not require this Court to ap-
ply Lockhartâs countervailing series-qualifier principle. In those cas-
es, the Court simply observed that the last-antecedent rule may be
overcome by contextual indicia of meaning. Lockhartâs attempts to
identify such indicia are unavailing. He claims that the state predi-
cates are so similar that a limiting phrase could apply equally to all
three. But by transforming a list of separate predicates into a set of
near-synonyms, Lockhartâs reading results in too much redundancy
and risks running headlong into the rule against superfluity. Pp. 7â
10.
(2) Lockhart contends that the existence of other disparities be-
tween §2252(b)(2)âs state and federal sexual-abuse predicates indi-
cate that parity was not Congressâ concern. However, this Courtâs
construction relies on contextual cues particular to the sexual-abuse
predicates, not on a general assumption that Congress sought full
parity between all state and federal predicates. Pp. 10â11.
(3) The provisionâs legislative history âhardly speaks with [a]
clarity of purpose,â Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 340 U. S. 474,
483, and does nothing to explain why Congress would have wanted to
structure §2252(b)(2) to treat state and federal predicates differently.
Pp. 11â14.
(4) Finally, Lockhart suggests the rule of lenity is triggered here,
where applying his series-qualifier principle would lead to an alter-
native construction of §2252(b)(2). The rule of lenity is used to re-
solve ambiguity only when the ordinary canons have revealed no sat-
isfactory construction. Here, however, the rule of the last antecedent
is well supported by context, and Lockhartâs alternative is not. P. 14.
749 F. 3d 148, affirmed.
SOTOMAYOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS,
C. J., and KENNEDY, THOMAS, GINSBURG, and ALITO, JJ., joined. KAGAN,
J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BREYER, J., joined.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, WashÂ
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 14â8358
_________________
AVONDALE LOCKHART, PETITIONER v.
UNITED STATES
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
[March 1, 2016]
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
Defendants convicted of possessing child pornography in
violation of 18 U. S. C. §2252(a)(4) are subject to a 10-year
mandatory minimum sentence and an increased maxiÂ
mum sentence if they have âa prior conviction . . . under
the laws of any State relating to aggravated sexual abuse,
sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor
or ward.â §2252(b)(2).
The question before us is whether the phrase âinvolving
a minor or wardâ modifies all items in the list of predicate
crimes (âaggravated sexual abuse,â âsexual abuse,â and
âabusive sexual conductâ) or only the one item that immeÂ
diately precedes it (âabusive sexual conductâ). Below, the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit joined several
other Courts of Appeals in holding that it modifies only
âabusive sexual conduct.â The Eighth Circuit has reached
the contrary result. We granted certiorari to resolve that
split. 575 U. S. ___ (2015). We affirm the Second Circuitâs
holding that the phrase âinvolving a minor or wardâ in
§2252(b)(2) modifies only âabusive sexual conduct.â
2 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
I
In April 2000, Avondale Lockhart was convicted of
sexual abuse in the first degree under N. Y. Penal Law
Ann. §130.65(1) (West Cum. Supp. 2015). The crime
involved his then-53-year-old girlfriend. Presentence
Investigation Report (PSR), in No. 11âCRâ231â01, p. 13,
¶¶47â48. Eleven years later, Lockhart was indicted in the
Eastern District of New York for attempting to receive
child pornography in violation of 18 U. S. C. §2252(a)(2)
and for possessing child pornography in violation of
§2252(a)(4)(b). Lockhart pleaded guilty to the possession
offense and the Government dismissed the receipt offense.
Lockhartâs presentence report calculated a guidelines
range of 78 to 97 months for the possession offense. But
the report also concluded that Lockhart was subject to
§2252(b)(2)âs mandatory minimum because his prior New
York abuse conviction related âto aggravated sexual abuse,
sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor
or ward.â PSR ¶¶87â88.
Lockhart objected, arguing that the statutory phrase
âinvolving a minor or wardâ applies to all three listed
crimes: âaggravated sexual abuse,â âsexual abuse,â and
âabusive sexual conduct.â He therefore contended that his
prior conviction for sexual abuse involving an adult fell
outside the enhancementâs ambit. The District Court
rejected Lockhartâs argument and applied the mandatory
minimum. The Second Circuit affirmed his sentence. 749
F. 3d 148 (CA2 2014).
II
Section 2252(b)(2) reads in full:
âWhoever violates, or attempts or conspires to vioÂ
late [18 U. S. C. §2252(a)(4)] shall be fined under this
title or imprisoned not more than 10 years, or both,
but . . . if such person has a prior conviction under
this chapter, chapter 71, chapter 109A, or chapter
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 3
Opinion of the Court
117, or under section 920 of title 10 (article 120 of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice), or under the laws
of any State relating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexÂ
ual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a miÂ
nor or ward, or the production, possession, receipt,
mailing, sale, distribution, shipment, or transportaÂ
tion of child pornography, such person shall be fined
under this title and imprisoned for not less than 10
years nor more than 20 years.â
This case concerns that provisionâs list of state sexual-
abuse offenses. The issue before us is whether the limitÂ
ing phrase that appears at the end of that listââinvolving
a minor or wardââapplies to all three predicate crimes
preceding it in the list or only the final predicate crime.
We hold that âinvolving a minor or wardâ modifies only
âabusive sexual conduct,â the antecedent immediately
preceding it. Although §2252(b)(2)âs list of state predicates
is awkwardly phrased (to put it charitably), the provisionâs
text and context together reveal a straightforward readÂ
ing. A timeworn textual canon is confirmed by the strucÂ
ture and internal logic of the statutory scheme.
A
Consider the text. When this Court has interpreted
statutes that include a list of terms or phrases followed by
a limiting clause, we have typically applied an interpretive
strategy called the ârule of the last antecedent.â See
Barnhart v. Thomas, 540 U. S. 20, 26 (2003). The rule
provides that âa limiting clause or phrase . . . should ordiÂ
narily be read as modifying only the noun or phrase that it
immediately follows.â Ibid.; see also Blackâs Law DictionÂ
ary 1532â1533 (10th ed. 2014) (â[Q]ualifying words or
phrases modify the words or phrases immediately precedÂ
ing them and not words or phrases more remote, unless
the extension is necessary from the context or the spirit of
the entire writingâ); A. Scalia & B. Garner, Reading Law:
4 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
The Interpretation of Legal Texts 144 (2012).
This Court has applied the rule from our earliest deciÂ
sions to our more recent. See, e.g., Sims Lessee v. Irvine, 3
Dall. 425, 444, n. (1799); FTC v. Mandel Brothers, Inc.,
359 U. S. 385, 389, n. 4 (1959); Barnhart, 540 U. S., at 26.
The rule reflects the basic intuition that when a modifier
appears at the end of a list, it is easier to apply that modiÂ
fier only to the item directly before it. That is particularly
true where it takes more than a little mental energy to
process the individual entries in the list, making it a
heavy lift to carry the modifier across them all. For examÂ
ple, imagine you are the general manager of the Yankees
and you are rounding out your 2016 roster. You tell your
scouts to find a defensive catcher, a quick-footed shortstop,
or a pitcher from last yearâs World Champion Kansas City
Royals. It would be natural for your scouts to confine
their search for a pitcher to last yearâs championship
team, but to look more broadly for catchers and shortstops.
Applied here, the last antecedent principle suggests that
the phrase âinvolving a minor or wardâ modifies only the
phrase that it immediately follows: âabusive sexual conÂ
duct.â As a corollary, it also suggests that the phrases
âaggravated sexual abuseâ and âsexual abuseâ are not so
constrained.
Of course, as with any canon of statutory interpretation,
the rule of the last antecedent âis not an absolute and can
assuredly be overcome by other indicia of meaning.â
Barnhart, 540 U. S., at 26; see also Davis v. Michigan
Dept. of Treasury, 489 U. S. 803, 809 (1989) (âIt is a funÂ
damental canon of statutory construction that the words of
a statute must be read in their context and with a view to
their place in the overall statutory schemeâ). For instance,
take â âthe laws, the treaties, and the constitution of the
United States.â â Post, at 7, n. 1 (KAGAN, J., dissenting). A
reader intuitively applies âof the United Statesâ to âthe
laws,â âthe treatiesâ and âthe constitutionâ because (among
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 5
Opinion of the Court
other things) laws, treaties, and the constitution are often
cited together, because readers are used to seeing âof the
United Statesâ modify each of them, and because the listed
items are simple and parallel without unexpected internal
modifiers or structure. Section 2252(b)(2), by contrast,
does not contain items that readers are used to seeing
listed together or a concluding modifier that readers are
accustomed to applying to each of them. And the varied
syntax of each item in the list makes it hard for the reader
to carry the final modifying clause across all three.
More importantly, here the interpretation urged by the
rule of the last antecedent is not overcome by other indicia
of meaning. To the contrary, §2252(b)(2)âs context fortifies
the meaning that principle commands.
B
Our inquiry into §2252(b)(2)âs context begins with the
internal logic of that provision. Section 2252(b)(2) estabÂ
lishes sentencing minimums and maximums for three
categories of offenders. The first third of the section imÂ
poses a 10-year maximum sentence on offenders with no
prior convictions. The second third imposes a 10-year
minimum and 20-year maximum on offenders who have
previously violated a federal offense listed within various
chapters of the Federal Criminal Code. And the last third
imposes the same minimum and maximum on offenders
who have previously committed state âsexual abuse,
aggravated sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct inÂ
volving a minor or wardâ as well as a number of state
crimes related to the possession and distribution of child
pornography.
Among the chapters of the Federal Criminal Code that
can trigger §2252(b)(2)âs recidivist enhancement are
crimes âunder . . . chapter 109A.â Chapter 109A criminal-
6 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
izes a range of sexual-abuse offenses involving adults or
minors and wards.1 And it places those federal sexual-
abuse crimes under headings that use language nearly
identical to the language §2252(b)(2) uses to enumerate
the three categories of state sexual-abuse predicates. The
first section in Chapter 109A is titled âAggravated sexual
abuse.â 18 U. S. C. §2241. The second is titled âSexual
abuse.â §2242. And the third is titled âSexual abuse of a
minor or ward.â §2243. Applying the rule of the last
antecedent, those sections mirror precisely the order,
precisely the divisions, and nearly precisely the words
used to describe the three state sexual-abuse predicate
crimes in §2252(b)(2): âaggravated sexual abuse,â âsexual
abuse,â and âabusive sexual conduct involving a minor or
ward.â
This similarity appears to be more than a coincidence.
We cannot state with certainty that Congress used ChapÂ
ter 109A as a template for the list of state predicates set
out in §2252(b)(2), but we cannot ignore the parallel,
particularly because the headings in Chapter 109A were
in place when Congress amended the statute to add
§2252(b)(2)âs state sexual-abuse predicates.2
If Congress had intended to limit each of the state predÂ
icates to conduct âinvolving a minor or ward,â we doubt it
would have followed, or thought it needed to follow, so
closely the structure and language of Chapter 109A.3 The
ââââââ
1 For example, §2241(a) of Chapter 109A prohibits forced sexual acts
against âanother personâânot just a person under a certain age.
Section 2241(c) specially criminalizes sexual acts âwith another person
who has not attained the age of 12 years,â and §2243(b) does the same
for sexual acts with wards who are âin official detentionâ or âunder the
custodial, supervisory, or disciplinary authority of the person so engagÂ
ing.â
2 See 18 U. S. C. §2241 (1994 ed.) (âAggravated sexual abuseâ); §2242
(âSexual abuseâ); §2243 (âSexual abuse of a minor or wardâ).
3 The dissent points out that §2252(b)(2) (2012 ed.) did not also borÂ
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 7
Opinion of the Court
conclusion that Congress followed the federal template is
supported by the fact that Congress did nothing to indiÂ
cate that offenders with prior federal sexual-abuse convicÂ
tions are more culpable, harmful, or worthy of enhanced
punishment than offenders with nearly identical state
priors. We therefore see no reason to interpret §2252(b)(2)
so that â[s]exual abuseâ that occurs in the Second Circuit
courthouse triggers the sentence enhancement, but âsexual
abuseâ that occurs next door in the Manhattan munici-
pal building does not.
III
A
Lockhart argues, to the contrary, that the phrase âinÂ
volving a minor or wardâ should be interpreted to modify
all three state sexual-abuse predicates. He first contends,
as does our dissenting colleague, that the so-called series-
qualifier principle supports his reading. This principle,
Lockhart says, requires a modifier to apply to all items in
a series when such an application would represent a natuÂ
ral construction. Brief for Petitioner 12; post, at 4.
This Court has long acknowledged that structural or
contextual evidence may ârebut the last antecedent inferÂ
ence.â Jama v. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
543 U. S. 335, 344, n. 4 (2005). For instance, in Porto Rico
ââââââ
row from the heading of the fourth section in Chapter 109A (or, we
note, from the fifth, sixth, seventh, or eighth sections) in defining its
categories of state sexual-abuse predicates. Post, at 14-15 (KAGAN, J.
dissenting). But the significance of the similarity between the three
state predicates in §2252(b)(2) and the wording, structure, and order of
the first three sections of Chapter 109A is not diminished by the fact
that Congress stopped there (especially when the remaining sections
largely set out derivations from, definitions of, and penalties for the
first three). See, e.g., §2244 (listing offenses derived from §§2241, 2242,
and 2243); §2245 (creating an enhancement for offenses under Chapter
109A resulting in death); §2246 (listing definitions).
8 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Mor, 253 U. S. 345 (1920),
on which Lockhart relies, this Court declined to apply the
rule of the last antecedent where â[n]o reason appears
whyâ a modifying clause is not âapplicable as much to the
first and other words as to the lastâ and where âspecial
reasons exist for so construing the clause in question.â Id.,
at 348. In United States v. Bass, 404 U. S. 336 (1971), this
Court declined to apply the rule of the last antecedent
where âthere is no reason consistent with any discernable
purpose of the statute to applyâ the limiting phrase to the
last antecedent alone. Id., at 341. Likewise, in Jama, the
Court suggested that the rule would not be appropriate
where the âmodifying clause appear[s] . . . at the end of a
single, integrated list.â 543 U. S., at 344, n. 4. And, most
recently, in Paroline v. United States, 572 U. S. ___ (2014),
the Court noted that the rule need not be applied âin a
mechanical way where it would require accepting âunlikely
premises.â â Id., at ___ (slip op., at 9).
But in none of those cases did the Court describe, much
less apply, a countervailing grammatical mandate that
could bear the weight that either Lockhart or the dissent
places on the series qualifier principle. Instead, the Court
simply observed that sometimes context weighs against
the application of the rule of the last antecedent. Barn-
hart, 540 U. S., at 26. Whether a modifier is âapplicable
as much to the first . . . as to the lastâ words in a list,
whether a set of items form a âsingle, integrated list,â and
whether the application of the rule would require acÂ
ceptance of an âunlikely premiseâ are fundamentally
contextual questions.
Lockhart attempts to identify contextual indicia that he
says rebut the rule of the last antecedent, but those indicia
hurt rather than help his prospects. He points out that
the final two state predicates, âsexual abuseâ and âabusive
sexual conduct,â are ânearly synonymous as a matter of
everyday speech.â Brief for Petitioner 17. And, of course,
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 9
Opinion of the Court
anyone who commits âaggravated sexual abuseâ has also
necessarily committed âsexual abuse.â So, he posits, the
items in the list are sufficiently similar that a limiting
phrase could apply equally to all three of them.
But Lockhartâs effort to demonstrate some similarity
among the items in the list of state predicates reveals far
too much similarity. The three state predicate crimes are
not just related on Lockhartâs reading; they are hopelessly
redundant. Any conduct that would qualify as âaggravated
sexual abuse . . . involving a minor or wardâ or âsexual
abuse . . . involving a minor or wardâ would also qualify as
âabusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward.â We
take no position today on the meaning of the terms âagÂ
gravated sexual abuse,â âsexual abuse,â and âabusive
sexual conduct,â including their similarities and differÂ
ences. But it is clear that applying the limiting phrase to
all three items would risk running headlong into the rule
against superfluity by transforming a list of separate
predicates into a set of synonyms describing the same
predicate. See Bailey v. United States, 516 U. S. 137, 146
(1995) (âWe assume that Congress used two terms because
it intended each term to have a particular, nonsuperfluous
meaningâ).
Applying the limiting phrase âinvolving a minor or
wardâ more sparingly, by contrast, preserves some distincÂ
tion between the categories of state predicates by limiting
only the third category to conduct âinvolving a minor or
ward.â We recognize that this interpretation does not
eliminate all superfluity between âaggravated sexual
abuseâ and âsexual abuse.â See United States v. Atlantic
Research Corp., 551 U. S. 128, 137 (2007) (â[O]ur hesitancy
to construe statutes to render language superfluous
does not require us to avoid surplusage at all costs. It is
appropriate to tolerate a degree of surplusageâ). But there
is a ready explanation for the redundancy that remains: It
follows the categories in Chapter 109Aâs federal template.
10 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
See supra, at 6. We see no similar explanation for LockÂ
hartâs complete collapse of the list.
The dissent offers a suggestion rooted in its impressions
about how people ordinarily speak and write. Post, at 1â4.
The problem is that, as even the dissent acknowledges,
§2252(b)(2)âs list of state predicates is hardly intuitive. No
one would mistake its odd repetition and inelegant phrasÂ
ing for a reflection of the accumulated wisdom of everyday
speech patterns. It would be as if a friend asked you to get
her tart lemons, sour lemons, or sour fruit from Mexico. If
you brought back lemons from California, but your friend
insisted that she was using customary speech and obvi-
ously asked for Mexican fruit only, you would be forgiven
for disagreeing on both counts.
Faced with §2252(b)(2)âs inartful drafting, then, do we
interpret the provision by viewing it as a clear, comÂ
monsense list best construed as if conversational English?
Or do we look around to see if there might be some proveÂ
nance to its peculiarity? With Chapter 109A so readily at
hand, we are unpersuaded by our dissenting colleagueâs
invocation of basic examples from day-to-day life. WhatÂ
ever the validity of the dissentâs broader point, this simply
is not a case in which colloquial practice is of much use.
Section 2252(b)(2)âs list is hardly the way an average
person, or even an average lawyer, would set about to
describe the relevant conduct if they had started from
scratch.
B
Lockhart next takes aim at our construction of
§2252(b)(2) to avoid disparity between the state and federal
sexual-abuse predicates. He contends that other dispar-
ities between state and federal predicates in §2252(b)(2)
indicate that parity was not Congressâ concern. For examÂ
ple, §2252(b)(2) imposes the recidivist enhancement on
offenders with prior federal convictions under Chapter 71
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 11
Opinion of the Court
of Title 18, which governs obscenity. See §§1461â1470.
Yet §2252(b)(2) does not impose a similar enhancement
for offenses under state obscenity laws. Similarly,
§2252(b)(2)âs neighbor provision, §2252(b)(1), creates a
mandatory minimum for sex trafficking involving chilÂ
dren, but not sex trafficking involving adults.
However, our construction of §2252(b)(2)âs sexual-abuse
predicates does not rely on a general assumption that
Congress sought full parity between all of the federal and
state predicates in §2252(b)(2). It relies instead on contexÂ
tual cues particular to the sexual-abuse predicates. To
enumerate the state sexual-abuse predicates, Congress
used language similar to that in Chapter 109A of the
Federal Criminal Code, which describes crimes involving
both adults and children. See supra, at 6. We therefore
assume that the same language used to describe the state
sexual-abuse predicates also describes conduct involving
both adults and children.
C
Lockhart, joined by the dissent, see post, at 9â11, next
says that the provisionâs legislative history supports the
view that Congress deliberately structured §2252(b)(2) to
treat state and federal predicates differently. They rely on
two sources. The first is a reference in a Report from the
Senate Judiciary Committee on the Child Pornography
Prevention Act of 1996, 110 Stat. 3009â26. That Act was
the first to add the language at issue hereââaggravated
sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct
involving a minor or wardââto the U. S. Code. (It was
initially added to §2252(b)(1), then added two years later
to §2252(b)(2)).
The Report noted that the enhancement applies to
persons with prior convictions âunder any State child
abuse law or law relating to the production, receipt or
distribution of child pornography.â See S. Rep. No. 104â
12 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
358, p. 9 (1996). But that reference incompletely describes
the state pornography production and distribution prediÂ
cates, which cover not only âproduction, receipt, or distribÂ
uting of child pornography,â as the Report indicates, but
also âproduction, possession, receipt, mailing, sale, distriÂ
bution, shipment, or transportation of child pornography,â
§2252(b)(2). For the reasons discussed, we have no trouble
concluding that the Report also incompletely describes the
state sexual-abuse predicates.
Lockhart and the dissent also rely on a letter sent from
the Department of Justice (DOJ) to the House of RepreÂ
sentativeâs Committee on the Judiciary commenting on the
proposed âChild Protection and Sexual Predator PunishÂ
ment Act of 1998.â H. R. Rep. No. 105â557, pp. 26â34
(1998). In the letter, DOJ provides commentary on the
then-present state of §§2252(b)(1) and 2252(b)(2), noting
that although there is a â5-year mandatory minimum
sentence for individuals charged with receipt or distribuÂ
tion of child pornography and who have prior state convicÂ
tions for child molestationâ pursuant to §2252(b)(1), there
is âno enhanced provision for those individuals charged
with possession of child pornography who have prior
convictions for child abuseâ pursuant to §2252(b)(2). Id.,
at 31. That letter, they say, demonstrates that DOJ unÂ
derstood the language at issue here to impose a sentencing
enhancement only for prior state convictions involving
children.
We doubt that DOJ was trying to describe the full reach
of the language in §2252(b)(1), as the dissent suggests. To
the contrary, there are several clues that the letter was
relaying on just one of the provisionâs many salient feaÂ
tures. For instance, the letterâs references to âchild molesÂ
tationâ and âchild abuseâ do not encompass a large number
of state crimes that are unambiguously covered by âabuÂ
sive sexual conduct involving a minor or wardâânamely,
crimes involving âwards.â Wards can be minors, but they
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 13
Opinion of the Court
can also be adults. See, e.g., §2243(b) (defining âwardsâ as
persons who are âin official detentionâ and âunder . . .
custodial, supervisory, or disciplinary authorityâ). MoreÂ
over, we doubt that DOJ intended to express a belief that
the potentially broad scope of serious crimes encompassed
by âaggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, and abusive
sexual conductâ reaches no further than state crimes that
would traditionally be characterized as âchild molestationâ
or âchild abuse.â
Thus, Congressâ amendment to the provision did give
âDOJ just what it wanted,â post, at 10. But the amendÂ
ment also did more than that. We therefore think it unÂ
necessary to restrict our interpretation of the provision to
the parts of it that DOJ chose to highlight in its letter.
Just as importantly, the terse descriptions of the provision
in the Senate Report and DOJ letter do nothing to explain
why Congress would have wanted to apply the mandatory
minimum to individuals convicted in federal court of sexÂ
ual abuse or aggravated sexual abuse involving an adult,
but not to individuals convicted in state court of the same.
The legislative history, in short, âhardly speaks with [a]
clarity of purposeâ through which we can discern ConÂ
gressâ statutory objective. Universal Camera Corp. v.
NLRB, 340 U. S. 474, 483 (1951).
The best explanation Lockhart can muster is a basic
administrability concern: Congress âknew what conduct it
was capturing under federal law and could be confident
that all covered federal offenses were proper predicates.
But Congress did not have the same familiarity with the
varied and mutable sexual-abuse laws of all fifty states.â
Brief for Petitioner 27. Perhaps Congress worried that
state laws punishing relatively minor offenses like public
lewdness or indecent exposure involving an adult would be
swept into §2252(b)(2). Id., at 28. But the risk Lockhart
identifies is minimal. Whether the terms in §2252(b)(2)
are given their âgenericâ meaning, see Descamps v. United
14 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
Opinion of the Court
States, 570 U. S. ___ (2013); Taylor v. United States, 495
U. S. 575 (1990), or are defined in light of their federal
counterpartsâwhich we do not decideâthey are unlikely
to sweep in the bizarre or unexpected state offenses that
worry Lockhart.
D
Finally, Lockhart asks us to apply the rule of lenity. We
have used the lenity principle to resolve ambiguity in
favor of the defendant only âat the end of the process of
construing what Congress has expressedâ when the ordiÂ
nary canons of statutory construction have revealed no
satisfactory construction. Callanan v. United States, 364
U. S. 587, 596 (1961). That is not the case here. To be
sure, Lockhart contends that if we applied a different
principle of statutory constructionânamely, his âseriesÂ
qualifier principleââwe would arrive at an alternative
construction of §2252(b)(2). But the arguable availability
of multiple, divergent principles of statutory construction
cannot automatically trigger the rule of lenity. Cf. LlewelÂ
lyn, Remarks on the Theory of Appellate Decision and the
Rules or Canons About How Statutes Are To Be ConÂ
strued, 3 Vand. L. Rev. 395, 401 (1950) (â[T]here are two
opposing canons on almost every pointâ). Here, the rule of
the last antecedent is well supported by context and LockÂ
hartâs alternative is not. We will not apply the rule of
lenity to override a sensible grammatical principle butÂ
tressed by the statuteâs text and structure.
* * *
We conclude that the text and structure of §2252(b)(2)
confirm that the provision applies to prior state convicÂ
tions for âsexual abuseâ and âaggravated sexual abuse,â
whether or not the convictions involved a minor or ward.
We therefore hold that Lockhartâs prior conviction for
sexual abuse of an adult is encompassed by §2252(b)(2).
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 15
Opinion of the Court
The judgment of the Court of Appeals, accordingly, is
affirmed.
So ordered.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 1
KAGAN, J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 14â8358
_________________
AVONDALE LOCKHART, PETITIONER v.
UNITED STATES
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
[March 1, 2016]
JUSTICE KAGAN, with whom JUSTICE BREYER joins,
dissenting.
Imagine a friend told you that she hoped to meet âan
actor, director, or producer involved with the new Star
Wars movie.â You would know immediately that she
wanted to meet an actor from the Star Wars castânot an
actor in, for example, the latest Zoolander. Suppose a real
estate agent promised to find a client âa house, condo, or
apartment in New York.â Wouldnât the potential buyer be
annoyed if the agent sent him information about condos in
Maryland or California? And consider a law imposing a
penalty for the âviolation of any statute, rule, or regulation
relating to insider trading.â Surely a person would have
cause to protest if punished under that provision for vio-
lating a traffic statute. The reason in all three cases is the
same: Everyone understands that the modifying phraseâ
âinvolved with the new Star Wars movie,â âin New York,â
ârelating to insider tradingââapplies to each term in the
preceding list, not just the last.
That ordinary understanding of how English works, in
speech and writing alike, should decide this case. Avon-
dale Lockhart is subject to a 10-year mandatory minimum
sentence for possessing child pornography if, but only if,
he has a prior state-law conviction for âaggravated sexual
abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a
2 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
minor or ward.â 18 U. S. C. §2252(b)(2). The Court today,
relying on what is called the ârule of the last antecedent,â
reads the phrase âinvolving a minor or wardâ as modifying
only the final term in that three-item list. But properly
read, the modifier applies to each of the termsâjust as in
the examples above. That normal construction finds
support in uncommonly clear-cut legislative history, which
states in so many words that the three predicate crimes all
involve abuse of children. And if any doubt remained, the
rule of lenity would command the same result: Lockhartâs
prior conviction for sexual abuse of an adult does not
trigger §2252(b)(2)âs mandatory minimum penalty. I
respectfully dissent.
I
Begin where the majority doesâwith the rule of the last
antecedent. See ante, at 3. This Court most fully dis-
cussed that principle in Barnhart v. Thomas, 540 U. S. 20
(2003), which considered a statute providing that an indi-
vidual qualifies as disabled if âhe is not only unable to do
his previous work but cannot, considering his age, educa-
tion, and work experience, engage in any other kind of
substantial gainful work which exists in the national
economy.â Id., at 21â22 (quoting 42 U. S. C. §423(d)(2)(A))
(emphasis added). The Court held, invoking the last-
antecedent rule, that the italicized phrase modifies only
the term âsubstantial gainful work,â and not the term
âprevious workâ occurring earlier in the sentence. Two
points are of especial note. First, Barnhart contained a
significant caveat: The last-antecedent rule âcan assuredly
be overcome by other indicia of meaning.â 540 U. S., at 26;
see, e.g., Nobelman v. American Savings Bank, 508 U. S.
324, 330â331 (1993) (refusing to apply the rule when a
contrary interpretation was âthe more reasonable oneâ).
Second, the grammatical structure of the provision in
Barnhart is nothing like that of the statute in this case:
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 3
KAGAN, J., dissenting
The modifying phrase does not, as here, immediately
follow a list of multiple, parallel terms. That is true as
well in the other instances in which this Court has fol-
lowed the rule. See, e.g., Jama v. Immigration and Cus-
toms Enforcement, 543 U. S. 335 (2005); Batchelor v.
United States, 156 U. S. 426 (1895); Sims Lessee v. Irvine,
3 Dall. 425 (1799).
Indeed, this Court has made clear that the last-
antecedent rule does not generally apply to the grammati-
cal construction present here: when â[t]he modifying
clause appear[s] . . . at the end of a single, integrated list.â
Jama, 543 U. S., at 344, n. 4. Then, the exact opposite is
usually true: As in the examples beginning this opinion,
the modifying phrase refers alike to each of the listâs
terms. A leading treatise puts the point as follows: âWhen
there is a straightforward, parallel construction that
involves all nouns or verbs in a series,â a modifier at the
end of the list ânormally applies to the entire series.â A.
Scalia & B. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of
Legal Texts 147 (2012); compare id., at 152 (âWhen the
syntax involves something other than [such] a parallel
series of nouns or verbs,â the modifier ânormally applies
only to the nearest reasonable referentâ). That interpre-
tive practice of applying the modifier to the whole list
boasts a fancy nameâthe âseries-qualifier canon,â see
Blackâs Law Dictionary 1574 (10th ed. 2014)âbut, as my
opening examples show, it reflects the completely ordinary
way that people speak and listen, write and read.1
ââââââ
1 The majorityâs baseball example, see ante, at 4, reads the other way
only because its three terms are not parallel. The words âcatcherâ and
âshortstop,â but not âpitcher,â are qualified separate and apart from the
modifying clause at the end of the sentence: âPitcherâ thus calls for a
modifier of its own, and the phrase âfrom the Kansas City Royalsâ
answers that call. Imagine the sentence is slightly reworded to refer to
a âdefensive catcher, quick-footed shortstop, or hard-throwing pitcher
from the Kansas City Royals.â Or, alternatively, suppose the sentence
4 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
Even the exception to the series-qualifier principle is
intuitive, emphasizing both its common-sensical basis and
its customary usage. When the nouns in a list are so
disparate that the modifying clause does not make sense
when applied to them all, then the last-antecedent rule
takes over. Suppose your friend told you not that she
wants to meet âan actor, director, or producer involved
with Star Wars,â but instead that she hopes someday to
meet âa President, Supreme Court Justice, or actor in-
volved with Star Wars.â Presumably, you would know
that she wants to meet a President or Justice even if that
person has no connection to the famed film franchise. But
so long as the modifying clause âis applicable as much to
the first and other words as to the last,â this Court has
stated, âthe natural construction of the language demands
that the clause be read as applicable to all.â Paroline v.
United States, 572 U. S. ___, ___ (2014) (slip op., at 9)
(quoting Porto Rico Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Mor,
253 U. S. 345, 348 (1920)). In other words, the modifier
then qualifies not just the last antecedent but the whole
series.
As the majority itself must acknowledge, see ante, at 7â
8, this Court has repeatedly applied the series-qualifier
rule in just that manner. In Paroline, for example, this
Court considered a statute requiring possessors of child
pornography to pay restitution to the individuals whose
abuse is recorded in those materials. The law defines such
a victimâs losses to include âmedical services relating to
physical, psychiatric, or psychological care; physical and
occupational therapy or rehabilitation; necessary trans-
portation, temporary housing, and child care expenses;
ââââââ
referred simply to a âcatcher, shortstop, or pitcher from the Kansas City
Royals.â Either way, all three players must come from the Royalsâ
because the three terms (unlike in the majorityâs sentence) are a
parallel series with a modifying clause at the end.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 5
KAGAN, J., dissenting
lost income; attorneysâ fees, as well as other costs in-
curred; and any other losses suffered by the victim as a
proximate result of the offense.â 18 U. S. C.
§§2259(b)(3)(A)â(F) (lettering omitted). The victim bring-
ing the lawsuit invoked the last-antecedent rule to argue
that the modifier at the end of the provisionââas a proxi-
mate result of the offenseââpertained only to the last item
in the preceding list, and not to any of the others. See 572
U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 9). But the Court rejected that
view: It recited the âcanon[ ] of statutory construction,â
derived from the ânaturalâ use of language, that â[w]hen
several words are followed by a clauseâ that can sensibly
modify them all, it should be understood to do so. Ibid.
Thus, the Court read the proximate-cause requirement to
cover each and every term in the list.
United States v. Bass, 404 U. S. 336 (1971), to take just
one other example, followed the same rule. There, the
Court confronted a statute making it a crime for a convicted
felon to âreceive[ ], possess[ ], or transport[ ] in commerce or
affecting commerce . . . any firearm.â 18 U. S. C. App.
§1202(a) (1970 ed.) (current version at 18 U. S. C. §922(g)).
The Government contended that the modifying clauseâ
âin commerce or affecting commerceââapplied only to
âtransportâ and not to âreceiveâ or âpossess.â But the
Court rebuffed that argument. â[T]he natural construc-
tion of the language,â the Court recognized, âsuggests that
the clause âin commerce or affecting commerceâ qualifies
all three antecedents in the list.â 404 U. S., at 339 (some
internal quotation marks omitted). Relying on longstand-
ing precedents endorsing such a construction, the Court
explained: âSince âin commerce or affecting commerceâ
undeniably applies to at least one antecedent, and since it
makes sense with all three, the more plausible construc-
tion here is that it in fact applies to all three.â Id., at 339â
340 (citing United States v. Standard Brewery, Inc., 251
U. S. 210, 218 (1920); Porto Rico Railway, 253 U. S., at
6 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
348); see also, e.g., Jones v. United States, 529 U. S. 848,
853 (2000) (similarly treating the interstate commerce
element in the phrase âany building, vehicle, or other real
or personal property used in interstate or foreign com-
merceâ as applying to buildings and vehicles).
That analysis holds equally for §2252(b)(2), the sentenc-
ing provision at issue here. The relevant languageâ
âaggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual
conduct involving a minor or wardââcontains a âsingle,
integrated listâ of parallel terms (i.e., sex crimes) followed
by a modifying clause. Jama, 543 U. S., at 344, n. 4.
Given the close relation among the terms in the series, the
modifier makes sense âas much to the first and other
words as to the last.â Paroline, 572 U. S., at ___ (slip op.,
at 9). In other words, the reference to a minor or ward
applies as well to sexual abuse and aggravated sexual
abuse as to abusive sexual conduct. (The case would be
different if, for example, the statute established a manda-
tory minimum for any person previously convicted of
âarson, receipt of stolen property, or abusive sexual con-
duct involving a minor or ward.â) So interpreting the
modifier âas applicable to allâ the preceding terms is what
âthe natural construction of the languageâ requires. Ibid.;
Bass, 404 U. S., at 339.
The majority responds to all this by claiming that the
âinelegant phrasingâ of §2252(b)(2) renders it somehow
exempt from a grammatical rule reflecting âhow people
ordinarilyâ use the English language. Ante, at 10. But to
begin with, the majority is wrong to suggest that the
series-qualifier canon is only about âcolloquialâ or âconver-
sationalâ English. Ibid. In fact, it applies to both speech
and writing, in both their informal and their formal varie-
ties. Here is a way to test my point: Pick up a journal, or a
book, or for that matter a Supreme Court opinionâmost of
which keep âeverydayâ colloquialisms at a far distance.
Ibid. Youâll come across many sentences having the struc-
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 7
KAGAN, J., dissenting
ture of the statutory provision at issue here: a few nouns
followed by a modifying clause. And youâll discover, again
and yet again, that the clause modifies every noun in the
series, not just the lastâin other words, that even (espe-
cially?) in formal writing, the series-qualifier principle
works.2 And the majority is wrong too in suggesting that
the âodd repetitionâ in §2252(b)(2)âs list of state predicates
causes the series-qualifier principle to lose its force. Ibid.
The majorityâs own made-up sentence proves that much.
If a friend asked you âto get her tart lemons, sour lemons,
or sour fruit from Mexico,â you might well think her list of
terms perplexing: You might puzzle over the difference
between tart and sour lemons, and wonder why she had
specifically mentioned lemons when she apparently would
be happy with sour fruit of any kind. But of one thing, you
ââââââ
2 Too busy to carry out this homework assignment? Consider some
examples (there are many more) from just the last few months of this
Courtâs work. In OBB Personenverkehr AG v. Sachs, 577 U. S. ___, ___
(2015) (slip op., at 5â6), this Court described a lawsuit as alleging
âwrongful arrest, imprisonment, and torture by Saudi police.â In
James v. Boise, 577 U. S. ___, ___ (2016) (per curiam) (slip op., at 2)
(quoting Martin v. Hunterâs Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304, 348 (1816)), this
Court affirmed that state courts must follow its interpretations of âthe
laws, the treaties, and the constitution of the United States.â In Musac-
chio v. United States, 577 U. S. ___, ___ (2016) (slip op., at 8) (quoting
Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Muchnick, 559 U. S. 154, 166 (2010)), this Court
noted that in interpreting statutes it looks to the âtext, context, and
relevant historical treatment of the provision at issue.â In FERC v.
Electric Power Supply Assn., 577 U. S. ___, ___ (2016) (slip op., at 15),
this Court applied a statute addressing âany rule, regulation, practice,
or contract affecting [a wholesale] rate [or] charge.â And in Montanile v.
Board of Trustees of Nat. Elevator Industry Health Benefit Plan, 577
U. S. ___, ___ (2016) (slip op., at 2), this Court interpreted an employee
benefits plan requiring reimbursement âfor attorneysâ fees, costs,
expenses or damages claimed by the covered person.â In each case, of
course, the italicized modifying clause refers to every item in the
preceding list. That is because the series-qualifier rule reflects how all
of us use language, in writing and in speech, in formal and informal
contexts, all the time.
8 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
would have no doubt: Your friend wants some produce
from Mexico; it would not do to get her, say, sour lemons
from Vietnam. However weird the way she listed fruitsâ
or the way §2252(b)(2) lists offensesâthe modifying clause
still refers to them all.
The majority as well seeks refuge in the idea that apply-
ing the series-qualifier canon to §2252(b)(2) would violate
the rule against superfluity. See ante, at 9â10. Says the
majority: âAny conduct that would qualify as âaggravated
sexual abuse . . . involving a minor or wardâ or âsexual
abuse . . . involving a minor or wardâ would also qualify as
âabusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward.â â Ante,
at 9. But that rejoinder doesnât work. â[T]he canon
against superfluity,â this Court has often stated, âassists
only where a competing interpretation gives effect to every
clause and word of a statute.â Microsoft Corp. v. i4i Ltd.
Partnership, 564 U. S. 91, 106 (2011) (internal quotation
marks omitted); see, e.g., Bruesewitz v. Wyeth LLC, 562
U. S. 223, 236 (2011). And the majorityâs approach (as it
admits, see ante, at 9) produces superfluity tooâand in
equal measure. Now (to rearrange the majorityâs sen-
tence) any conduct that would qualify as âabusive sexual
conduct involving a minor or wardâ or âaggravated sexual
abuseâ would also qualify as âsexual abuse.â In other
words, on the majorityâs reading as well, two listed crimes
become subsets of a third, so that the three could have
been written as one. And indeed, the majorityâs superfluity
has an especially odd quality, because it relates to the
modifying clause itself: The majority, that is, makes the
term âinvolving a minor or wardâ wholly unnecessary.
Remember the old adage about the pot and the kettle?
That is why the rule against superfluity cannot excuse the
majority from reading §2252(b)(2)âs modifier, as ordinary
usage demands, to pertain to all the terms in the preced-
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 9
KAGAN, J., dissenting
ing series.3
II
Legislative history confirms what the natural construc-
tion of language shows: Each of the three predicate of-
fenses at issue here must involve a minor. The list of
those crimes appears in two places in §2252(b)âboth in
§2252(b)(1), which contains a sentencing enhancement for
those convicted of distributing or receiving child pornogra-
phy, and in §2252(b)(2), which includes a similar en-
hancement for those (like Lockhart) convicted of pos-
sessing such material. Descriptions of that list of offenses,
made at the time Congress added it to those provisions,
belie the majorityâs position.
The relevant languageâagain, providing for a manda-
tory minimum sentence if a person has a prior state-law
conviction for âaggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or
abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or wardââfirst
made its appearance in 1996, when Congress inserted it
into §2252(b)(1). See Child Pornography Prevention Act of
1996, §121(5), 110 Stat. 3009â30, 18 U. S. C. §2251 note.
At that time, the Senate Report on the legislation ex-
plained what the new language meant: The mandatory
minimum would apply to an âoffender with a prior convic-
tion under . . . any State child abuse law.â S. Rep. No.
104â358, p. 9 (1996) (emphasis added). It is hard to imag-
ine saying any more directly that the just-added state
sexual-abuse predicates all involve minors, and minors
only.4
ââââââ
3 The majority asserts that it has found, concealed within
§2252(b)(2)âs structure, an âexplanationâ for its own superfluity, ante, at
9, but that claim, as Iâll soon show, collapses on further examination.
See infra, at 13â16.
4 And it makes no difference that the Senate Report accompanied
§2252(b)(1)âs, rather than §2252(b)(2)âs, amendment. No one can
possibly think (and the majority therefore does not try to argue) that
10 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
Two years later, in urging Congress to include the same
predicate offenses in §2252(b)(2), the Department of Jus-
tice (DOJ) itself read the list that way. In a formal bill
comment, DOJ noted that proposed legislation on child
pornography failed to fix a statutory oddity: Only
§2252(b)(1), and not §2252(b)(2), then contained the state
predicates at issue here. DOJ described that discrepancy
as follows: Whereas §2252(b)(1) provided a penalty en-
hancement for âindividuals charged with receipt or distri-
bution of child pornography and who have prior state
convictions for child molestation,â the adjacent §2252(b)(2)
contained no such enhancement for those âcharged with
possession of child pornography who have prior convictions
for child abuse.â H. R. Rep. No. 105â557, p. 31 (1998)
(emphasis added). That should change, DOJ wrote: A
possessor of child pornography should also be subject to a
2-year mandatory minimum if he had âa prior conviction
for sexual abuse of a minor.â Ibid. (emphasis added). DOJ
thus made clear that the predicate offenses it recom-
mended adding to §2252(b)(2)âlike those already in
§2252(b)(1)ârelated not to all sexual abuse but only to
sexual abuse of children. And Congress gave DOJ just
what it wanted: Soon after receiving the letter, Congress
added the language at issue to §2252(b)(2), resulting in
the requested 2-year minimum sentence. See Protection of
Children From Sexual Predators Act of 1998, §202(a)(2),
112 Stat. 2977, 18 U. S. C. §1 note. So every indication, in
1998 no less than in 1996, was that all the predicate
crimes relate to children alone.
The majorityâs response to this history fails to blunt its
force. According to the majority, the reference to âany
state child abuse lawâ in the Senate Report is simply an
âincomplete[ ] descri[ption]â of âthe state sexual-abuse
ââââââ
the disputed language means something different in §2252(b)(2) than in
its neighbor and model, §2252(b)(1).
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 11
KAGAN, J., dissenting
predicates.â Ante, at 12. And similarly, the majority
ventures, the DOJ letter was merely noting âone of the
provisionâs many salient features.â Ibid. But suppose that
you (like the Senate Reportâs or DOJ letterâs authors) had
to paraphrase or condense the statutory language at issue
here, and that you (like the majority) thought it captured
all sexual-abuse crimes. Would you then use the phrase
âany state child abuse lawâ as a descriptor (as the Senate
Report did)? And would you refer to the whole list of state
predicates as involving âsexual abuse of a minorâ (as the
DOJ letter did)? Of course not. But you might well use
such shorthand if, alternatively, you understood the statu-
tory language (as I do) to cover only sexual offenses
against children. And so the authors of the Report and
letter did here. Such documents of necessity abridge
statutory language; but they do not do so by conveying an
utterly false impression of what that language is most
centrally aboutâas by describing a provision that (sup-
posedly) covers all sexual abuse as one that reaches only
child molestation.5
ââââââ
5 The majority tries to bolster its âincomplete descriptionâ claim by
highlighting another summary statement in the Senate Report, but
that reference merely illustrates my point. In amending §2252(b)(1)
(and later §2252(b)(2)), Congress added not only the child sexual-abuse
predicates at issue here, but also a set of predicate state offenses
relating to child pornography. Specifically, Congress provided a man-
datory minimum sentence for individuals previously convicted of the
âproduction, possession, receipt, mailing, sale, distribution, shipment,
or transportation of child pornography.â Child Pornography Prevention
Act, §121(5), 110 Stat. 3009â30. The Senate Report described those
predicate crimes in an abbreviated fashion as ârelating to the produc-
tion, receipt or distribution of child pornography.â S. Rep. No. 104â358,
p. 9 (1996). That synopsis doubtless leaves some things out, as any
synopsis does; but no reader of the Report would be terribly surprised
to see the fuller statutory list. The same cannot be said of the phrase
âany state child abuse lawâ if that in fact refers to laws prohibiting all
rape, sexual assault, and similar behavior.
The majority makes the identical mistake in asserting that the DOJ
12 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
Further, the majority objects that the Senate Reportâs
(and DOJ letterâs) drafters did ânothing to explain whyâ
Congress would have limited §2252(b)âs state sexual-abuse
predicates to those involving children when the provisionâs
federal sexual-abuse predicates (as all agree) are not so
confined. Ante, at 13 (emphasis in original). But Congress
is under no obligation to this Court to justify its choices.
(Nor is DOJ obliged to explain them to Congress itself.)
Rather, the duty is on this Court to carry out those deci-
sions, regardless of whether it understands all that lay
behind them. The Senate Report (and DOJ letter too) says
what it says about §2252(b)âs meaning, confirming in no
uncertain terms the most natural reading of the statutory
language. Explanation or no, that is more than sufficient.
And the majority (as it concedes) cannot claim that
Congress simply must have wanted §2252(b)(2)âs federal
and state predicates to be the same. See ante, at 11
(â[O]ur construction of §2252(b)(2)âs sexual-abuse predi-
cates does not rely on a general assumption that Congress
sought full parity between all of the federal and state
predicatesâ). That is because both §2252(b)(1) and
§2252(b)(2) contain many federal predicates lacking state
matches. Under §2252(b)(1), for example, a person is
subject to a mandatory minimum if he previously violated
ââââââ
letter merely âhighlight[s]â one of §2252(b)(1)âs many features. Ante, at
13. To support that claim, the majority notes that the letter omits any
discussion of sexual crimes against adult wards, even though the
statute covers those offenses on any theory. But that elision is perfectly
natural. The number of sex crimes against adult wards pales in com-
parison to those against children: In discussing the latter, DOJ was
focused on the mine-run offense. (For the same reason, this opinionâs
descriptions of §2252(b) often skip any reference to wards. See supra,
at 9, 11; infra, at 13. Count that as a writerâs choice to avoid extrane-
ous detail.) The majority cannot offer any similar, simple explanation
of why DOJ would have repeatedly referred only to sex crimes against
children if the statutory language it was explicatingâand proposing to
add to another provisionâalso covered sex crimes against all adults.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 13
KAGAN, J., dissenting
18 U. S. C. §1591, which prohibits â[s]ex trafficking of
children or [sex trafficking] by force, fraud, or coercion.â
But if the prior conviction is under state law, only sex
trafficking of children will trigger that minimum; traffick-
ing of adults, even if by force, fraud, or coercion, will not.
That mismatchâtrafficking of both adults and children on
the federal side, trafficking of children alone on the state
sideâprecisely parallels my view of the sexual-abuse
predicates at issue here. More generally, ten federal
obscenity crimes trigger both §2252(b)(1)âs and
§2252(b)(2)âs enhanced punishments; but equivalent state
crimes do not do so. And five federal prostitution offenses
prompt mandatory minimums under those provisions; but
no such state offenses do. Noting those disparities, the
Government concedes: â[W]hen Congress adds state-law
offenses to the lists of predicate offenses triggering child-
pornography recidivist enhancements, it sometimes adds
state offenses corresponding to only a subset of the federal
offensesâ previously included. Brief for United States 43.
Just so. And this Court ought to enforce that choice.
III
As against the most natural construction of §2252(b)(2)âs
language, plus unusually limpid legislative history, the
majority relies on a structural argument. See ante, at 5â7.
The federal sexual-abuse predicates in §2252(b)(2), the
majority begins, are described as crimes âunder . . . Chap-
ter 109A,â and that chapter âcriminalizes a range of sexual-
abuse offenses involving adults or minors.â Ante, at 5â6
(emphasis in original). Once again, the majority cannot
say that this fact alone resolves the question presented,
given the many times (just discussed) that Congress opted
to make federal crimes, but not equivalent state crimes,
predicates for §2252(b)(2)âs mandatory minimums. But
the majority claims to see more than that here: The head-
ings of the sections in Chapter 109A, it contends, âmirror
14 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
precisely the order . . . and nearly precisely the words used
to describeâ the state predicate crimes at issue. Ante, at 6.
The majority âcannot state with certainty,â but hazards a
guess that Congress thus used Chapter 109A âas a tem-
plate for the list of state predicatesââor, otherwise said,
that Congress âfollowedâ the âstructure and language of
Chapter 109Aâ in defining those state-law offenses. Ibid.
But §2252(b)(2)âs state predicates are not nearly as
similar to the federal crimes in Chapter 109A as the ma-
jority claims. That Chapter includes the following offenses:
âAggravated sexual abuse,â §2241, âSexual abuse,â
§2242, âSexual abuse of a minor or ward,â §2243, and
âAbusive sexual contact,â §2244. The Chapter thus con-
tains four crimesâone more than found in §2252(b)(2)âs
list of state offenses. If the drafters of §2252(b)(2) meant
merely to copy Chapter 109A, why would they have left
out one of its crimes? The majority has no explanation.6
And there is more. Suppose Congress, for whatever hard-
to-fathom reason, wanted to replicate only Chapter 109Aâs
first three offenses. It would then have used the same
language, referring to âthe laws of any State relating to
aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or sexual abuse of
a minor or ward.â (And had Congress used that language,
the phrase âof a minor or wardâ would clearly have applied
only to the third term, to differentiate it from the other-
wise identical second.) But contra the majority, see ante,
at 6, 9â10, that is not what §2252(b)(2)âs drafters did.
ââââââ
6 In a footnote, the majority intimates that Chapter 109A contains
only three crimesâbut that reading is unambiguously wrong. Unlike
the fifth through eighth sections of that chapter (which the majority
invokes to no purpose), the fourthâagain, entitled â[a]busive sexual
contactââsets out an independent substantive offense, criminalizing
acts not made illegal in the first three sections. §§2244(a)â(c); see also
42 U. S. C. §16911 (separately listing this offense in identifying who
must register as a sex offender). The majority, as noted above, gives no
reason why Congress would have ignored that fourth crime had it been
using Chapter 109A as a template.
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 15
KAGAN, J., dissenting
Rather than repeating the phrase âsexual abuse,â they
used the phrase âabusive sexual conductâ in the listâs last
termâwhich echoes, if anything, the separate crime of
âabusive sexual contactâ (included in Chapter 109Aâs
fourth offense, as well as in other places in the federal
code, see, e.g., 10 U. S. C. §920(d)). The choice of those
different words indicates, yet again, that Congress did not
mean, as the majority imagines, to duplicate Chapter
109Aâs set of offenses.
Indeed, even the Government has refused to accept the
notion that the federal and state sexual-abuse predicates
mirror each other. The Government, to be sure, has ar-
gued that it would be âanomalousâ if federal, but not
state, convictions for sexually abusing adults trigger
§2252(b)(2)âs enhanced penalty. Brief for United States
23. (I have discussed that more modest point above:
Anomalous or not, such differences between federal and
state predicates are a recurring feature of the statute. See
supra, at 12â13.) But the Government, in both briefing
and argument, rejected the idea that Congress wanted the
list of state predicates in §2252(b)(2) to mimic the crimes
in Chapter 109A; in other words, it denied that Congress
meant for the state and federal offenses to bear the same
meaning. See Brief for United States 22, n. 8; Tr. of Oral
Arg. 26. Even in the face of sustained questioning from
Members of this Court, the Government held fast to that
position. See, e.g., Tr. of Oral Arg. 25â26 (JUSTICE ALITO:
â[W]hy do you resist the argument that what Congress
was doing was picking up basically the definitions of the
Federal offenses [in Chapter 109A] that are worded almost
identically?â Assistant to the Solicitor General: â[W]e
donât think that Congress was tryingâ to do that). The
listed state and federal offenses, the Government made
clear, are not intended to be copies.
The majority seems to think that view somehow con-
sistent with its own hypothesis that Chapter 109A served
16 LOCKHART v. UNITED STATES
KAGAN, J., dissenting
as a âtemplateâ for §2252(b)(2)âs state predicates, ante, at
6; in responding to one of Lockhartâs arguments, the ma-
jority remarks that the state predicates might have a
âgenericâ meaning, distinct from Chapter 109Aâs, ante, at
14. But if that is so, the majorityâs supposed template is
not much of a template after all. The predicate state
offenses would âfollowâ or âparallelâ Chapter 109A in a
single respect, but not in any othersâthat is, in including
sexual abuse of adults, but not in otherwise defining
wrongful sexual conduct (whether concerning adults or
children). Ante, at 6. The template, one might say, is good
for this case and this case only. And the majority has no
theory for why that should be so: It offers not the slimmest
explanation of how Chapter 109A can resolve todayâs
question but not the many issues courts will face in the
future involving the meaning of §2252(b)(2)âs state predi-
cate offenses. That is because no rationale would make
sense. The right and consistent view is that Chapter
109A, like the other federal predicates in §2252(b)(2), is
across-the-board irrelevant in defining that provisionâs
state predicates. Thus, the federal chapterâs four differ-
ently worded crimes are independent of the three state
offenses at issue hereâall of which, for the reasons Iâve
given, must âinvolv[e] a minor or ward.â
IV
Suppose, for a moment, that this case is not as clear as
Iâve suggested. Assume there is no way to know whether
to apply the last-antecedent or the series-qualifier rule.
Imagine, too, that the legislative history is not quite so
compelling and the majorityâs âtemplateâ argument not
quite so strained. Who, then, should prevail?
This Court has a rule for how to resolve genuine ambi-
guity in criminal statutes: in favor of the criminal defend-
ant. As the majority puts the point, the rule of lenity
insists that courts side with the defendant âwhen the
Cite as: 577 U. S. ____ (2016) 17
KAGAN, J., dissenting
ordinary canons of statutory construction have revealed no
satisfactory construction.â Ante, at 14 (citing Callanan v.
United States, 364 U. S. 587, 596 (1961)); see also Bifulco
v. United States, 447 U. S. 381, 387 (1980) (holding that
the rule of lenity âapplies not only to interpretations of the
substantive ambit of criminal prohibitions, but also to the
penalties they imposeâ). At the very least, that principle
should tip the scales in Lockhartâs favor, because nothing
the majority has said shows that the modifying clause in
§2252(b)(2) unambiguously applies to only the last term in
the preceding series.
But in fact, Lockhartâs case is stronger. Consider the
following sentence, summarizing various points made
above: âThe series-qualifier principle, the legislative history,
and the rule of lenity discussed in this opinion all point
in the same direction.â Now answer the following ques-
tion: Has only the rule of lenity been discussed in this
opinion, or have the series-qualifier principle and the
legislative history been discussed as well? Even had you
not read the preceding 16-plus pages, you would know the
right answerâbecause of the ordinary way all of us use
language. That, in the end, is why Lockhart should win.