AI Case Brief
Generate an AI-powered case brief with:
đKey Facts
âď¸Legal Issues
đCourt Holding
đĄReasoning
đŻSignificance
Estimated cost: $0.10â$0.50 per brief, depending on opinion length and retries
Full Opinion
USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 1 of 59 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No. 24-4039 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff - Appellee, v. JESSE FERNANDO PEREZ, Defendant - Appellant. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond. Roderick Charles Young, District Judge. (3:23-cr-00019-RCY-1) Argued: December 13, 2024 Decided: August 12, 2025 Before WYNN, HARRIS, and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges. Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Quattlebaum wrote the opinion in which Judge Wynn joined. Judge Wynn wrote a concurring opinion. Judge Harris wrote an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part. ARGUED: Joseph Stephen Camden, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. William Connor Winn, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Geremy C. Kamens, Federal Public Defender, Frances H. Pratt, Assistant Federal Public Defender, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant. Nicole M. Argentieri, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Lisa H. Miller, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Appellate Section, Angelica Carrasco-Riley, Child Exploitation & Obscenity Section, Criminal Division, UNITED STATES USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 2 of 59 DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C.; Jessica D. Aber, United States Attorney, Richmond, Virginia, Jacqueline R. Bechara, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee. 2 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 3 of 59 QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judge: To convict a defendant of producing and possessing obscene visual depictions of the sexual abuse of children in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(a)(1) and (b)(1), the government must establish the jurisdictional element of the offenseâhere, that the offense was committed within the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States. 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d)(5). That jurisdictional element asks two questions: (1) where did the defendant commit the offense; and (2) was that location within the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States? In this appeal, we decide who must resolve the second question. Does the factfinderânormally the jury, but the court in a bench trialâor the court decide whether the location of the offense was within the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States? After a bench trial, the district court convicted Jesse Perez of producing and possessing child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1466A at the Federal Correctional Institution in Petersburg, Virginia. The district court determined Perez âcommitted [his offense] in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United Statesâ because FCI Petersburg is within federal territorial jurisdiction. 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d)(5). Perez appeals, arguing the government must prove FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status to the factfinder. He believes the underlying facts needed to determine FCI Petersburgâs status are adjudicative in nature and, therefore, must be presented to the factfinder. And since the government failed to introduce evidence of FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status at trial, Perez argues the government presented insufficient evidence to convict him. 3 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 4 of 59 We disagree. Perez concedes that the government proved the factual issue of where he committed the offenseâFCI Petersburg. A locationâs jurisdictional status, on the other hand, is a legal issue. And because the facts informing jurisdictional status are legislative in nature, the court can notice them. So, we agree with the district court that while the location of Perezâs crime is a question for the factfinder, the jurisdictional status of that location is a legal question for the court. But in considering that legal issue, the district court applied the wrong legal standard. As a result, we vacate the district courtâs judgment of conviction and remand for the district court to analyze FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status consistent with this opinion. I. Factual and Procedural Background In 2016, Jesse Perez pled guilty to possessing child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A. See Minutes of Change of Plea, United States v. Perez, No. 2:15-cr-533 (C.D. Cal. April 14, 2016), ECF No. 29. The court sentenced him to a 121-month prison term. Soon afterwards, Perez arrived at FCI Petersburg. While incarcerated there, Perez collected photos of children from books and magazines, drew genitalia and depictions of sexual acts on them and photocopied them so they âlook[ed] almost real.â J.A. 165. Perez masturbated to these images and wrote graphic stories about them. He kept the images and stories in a box in his cell. During a routine contraband search of Perezâs cell, correctional officers discovered the images and stories. Perez admitted to owning the images. And in a later interview with FBI agents, Perez admitted to making the images as well as writing the stories and masturbating to these materials. 4 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 5 of 59 A grand jury indicted Perez with producing and possessing obscene visual depictions of the sexual abuse of children, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(a)(1) and (b)(1). A violation of § 1466A must involve a jurisdictional âcircumstance described in subsection (d).â Id. §§ 1466A(a), (b). Subsection (d) lists five potential jurisdictional circumstances, including the use âof interstate or foreign commerceâ to communicate, or âthe offense is committed in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States or in any territory or possession of the United States.â Id. § 1466A(d)(1), (5). As relevant here, special maritime and territorial jurisdiction is defined in 18 U.S.C. § 7(3): Any lands reserved or acquired for the use of the United States, and under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction thereof, or any place purchased or otherwise acquired by the United States by consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of a fort, magazine, arsenal, dockyard, or other needful building. See also U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 17. For a property to fall within federal territorial jurisdiction: (1) the federal government must acquire the property âby purchase or condemnationâ; (2) the state must consent to federal, or cede its own, jurisdiction; and (3) âthe federal government itself must accept jurisdiction.â 1 United States v. Davis, 726 F.3d 357, 363 (2d Cir. 2013). Property acquired before 1940 carries a presumption of federal acceptance, while property acquired after 1940 carries a presumption against federal 1 Consent occurs when a state legislature authorizes federal acquisition of land within the state for the purposes mentioned in Article I, section 8, clause 17 of the Constitution. See Paul v. United States, 371 U.S. 245, 264 (1963). Cession occurs when the federal government acquires land without consent and the state subsequently cedes legislative authority. See Kleppe v. New Mexico, 426 U.S. 529, 542 (1976). 5 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 6 of 59 acceptance. See 40 U.S.C. § 3112 (formerly codified at 40 U.S.C. § 255); Adams v. United States, 319 U.S. 312, 313â14 (1943); Markham v. United States, 215 F.2d 56, 58 (4th Cir. 1954). Perez waived his right to a jury trial. In closing arguments at his bench trial, Perez argued that the government failed to prove the required jurisdictional element. He claimed the government only introduced evidence of the photocopier document feederâs interstate commerce status, but not evidence of the photocopierâs status. And he argued that the government failed to demonstrate its acceptance of territorial jurisdiction over FCI Petersburg. See 40 U.S.C. § 3112(c). In response, the government argued that it sufficiently proved the copier Perez used was an instrumentality of interstate commerce. It also argued that FCI Petersburg falls within federal territorial jurisdiction. The government pointed to testimony about the federal governmentâs use of the prison to house federal inmates. And it argued that FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status was ultimately âa legal question for the Court.â 2 J.A. 123. The district court found the government proved the substantive elements of Perezâs § 1466A(a) and (b) offenses. Turning to the jurisdictional circumstances, the court rejected the interstate commerce basis for finding jurisdiction. It determined that the government 2 Our dissenting colleague criticizes the government for putting on evidence of FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status and then arguing on appeal that it is a legal question. See, e.g., Diss. Op. at 36. Yet throughout the trial, the government took both pathsâit offered evidence and repeatedly argued âthe status of a place as within the âspecial maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United Statesâ is a question of law for the Court.â J.A. 19; see also J.A. 106, 123, 191â93. Particularly for an issue that is not totally settled, thatâs not changing horses in midstream; itâs smart lawyering. 6 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 7 of 59 only showed the copierâs document feederânot the copier itselfâtraveled in interstate commerce, and the government failed to show Perez used the document feeder while committing the offense. But the district court explained that the jurisdictional element could still be established if the visual depiction involved in the offense was produced in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States. The district court concluded that FCI Petersburg, where Perez produced the images, was within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States because the federal government exercised practical usage and dominion over the prison. J.A. 127â28 (citing United States v. Erdos, 474 F.2d 157 (4th Cir. 1973)). Thus, the court found Perez guilty. Perez subsequently moved for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that the government failed to sufficiently prove federal territorial jurisdiction over FCI Petersburg. The government opposed his motion, claiming the trial evidence sufficed and, alternatively, the district court could judicially notice FCI Petersburgâs status. In its response, the government attached several letters dated in 1930 that reflect the Attorney Generalâs selection of land outside Petersburg for a federal prison. The district court denied Perezâs motion. It explained that, as Perez conceded, trial evidence established his actions occurred at FCI Petersburg. The court then took âjudicial notice that FCI Petersburg, a federal prison, falls under federal jurisdiction.â J.A. 204. It explained âthat the federal government exercises the sort of âpractical usage and dominionâ over FCI Petersburg that the Erdos court contemplated.â J.A. 205 (quoting Erdos, 474 F.2d at 159). Alternatively, the court concluded that the government proved at trial its âpractical 7 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 8 of 59 usage and dominionâ over FCI Petersburg. J.A. 207â08 (quoting United States v. Blunt, 558 F.2d 1245, 1247 (6th Cir. 1977)). The district court sentenced Perez to 180 monthsâ imprisonment. Perez timely appealed. During the pendency of the appeal, the government moved us to judicially notice roughly 300 pages of deeds, charts, government reports and Virginia statutesânot introduced at trialâthat it argues establish FCI Petersburgâs federal territorial jurisdictional status. See U.S. Motion for Jud. Notice, United States v. Perez, No. 24-4039 (4th Cir. Sept. 20, 2024), ECF No. 35-1. Perez opposed. 3 II. Analysis Perez challenges the district courtâs determination of the federal territorial jurisdictional element. According to Perez, the underlying facts needed to determine FCI Petersburgâs status are adjudicative in nature, so a court can only notice them under Federal Rule of Evidence 201(f) and must present them to a factfinder in a criminal case. Thus, Perez argues the government presented insufficient evidence at trial to convict him. To address Perezâs appeal, we must first determine whether FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status is a question for the factfinder or for the court. 3 Perezâs appeal presents us with Perezâs judgment of conviction at his bench trial and the district courtâs denial of his post-trial motion for judgment of acquittal. We review âjudgments resulting from a bench trial under a mixed standard of review: factual findings may be reversed only if clearly erroneous, while conclusions of law are examined de novo.â United States v. Landersman, 886 F.3d 393, 413 (4th Cir. 2018) (quoting Raleigh Wake Citizens Assân v. Wake Cty. Bd. of Elections, 827 F.3d 333, 340 (4th Cir. 2016)). We review a denial of a motion for a judgment of acquittal de novo. See United States v. Romer, 148 F.3d 359, 364 (4th Cir. 1998). And we review a courtâs decision to take judicial notice for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Garcia, 855 F.3d 615, 621 (4th Cir. 2017). 8 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 9 of 59 A. Jurisdictional Status â Who Decides? Perezâs appeal requires us to answer who decides a locationâs jurisdictional status in a criminal case. According to Perez, the government must prove to the factfinderâ beyond a reasonable doubtâthat FCI Petersburg is within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States. According to the government, it must only prove to the factfinder that Perezâs conduct occurred at FCI Petersburg; the court decides whether FCI Petersburg is within federal territorial jurisdiction as a matter of law. The government is correct. To be sure, the government must prove to the factfinder that the defendant committed the offense at a particular location. But that locationâs jurisdictional status is a legal question for the court. Related to that, the facts underlying that determination are legislative in nature. Thus, a court can judicially notice those facts to inform its legal determination about the jurisdictional status of a particular location. 1. Bifurcation of Jurisdictional Elements Perez correctly notes that the jurisdictional element of a criminal statute âmust be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.â Torres v. Lynch, 578 U.S. 452, 467 (2016); see also Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 490 (2000) (a jury must assess all facts that increase the range of penalties to which a criminal defendant is exposed). But he overreads that general proposition. 4 In Taylor v. United States, decided just one month after Torres, 4 In fact, Torres did not involve any of the issues we confront today. Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, an alien convicted of an aggravated felony, as defined in 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43), may be deported. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii); Torres, 578 U.S. at 455. A state crime that matches a listed felony in § 1101(a)(43) also constitutes an 9 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 10 of 59 the Supreme Court explained that criminal jurisdictional elements often contain an embedded legal component. 579 U.S. 301, 305, 308â09 (2016). The Court addressed a Hobbs Act robbery prosecution. Id. at 302. Under that statute, the government must show that a defendant âobstructs, delays, or affects commerce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce, by robbery . . . .â 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a). The Act defines âcommerceâ to include âcommerce over which the United States has jurisdiction.â Id. § 1951(b)(3). Taylor attempted two marijuana robberies, and the government successfully prosecuted him under the Hobbs Act. Taylor, 579 U.S. at 304â05. Before the Supreme Court, Taylor argued the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the particular drugs in question, or the dealer who Taylor targeted, were in interstate commerce. Id. at 308. The Court rejected his argument. It held â[t]here is no question that the Government in a Hobbs Act prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant engaged in conduct that satisfies the Actâs commerce element, but the meaning of that element is a question of law.â Id. (emphasis added). The Court then imported its holding in Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1, 22 (2005) to conclude that marijuana robbery generally affects commerce within federal jurisdiction. Taylor, 579 U.S. at 303, 308. So, Taylor tells us a factfinder assesses, as a factual matter, whether the defendant aggravated felony. See Torres, 578 U.S. at 455. The Torres Court considered whether a New York arson statuteâwhich matched the federal arson statute in every element except it lacked the federal statuteâs jurisdictional elementâconstituted an aggravated felony. Id. at 456. And the Court concluded that a jurisdictional âelement is properly ignored when determining if a state offense counts as an aggravated felony under § 1101(a)(43).â Id. at 473. 10 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 11 of 59 undertook activity âxyz.â But a court determines whether activity âxyzâ affects commerce. 5 We have similarly approved of bifurcating a criminal jurisdictional element into a fact-conduct component and a legal-status component. In United States v. Beyle, we reviewed as a âquestion of law de novoâ whether a yachtâs location was on the âhigh seasââand therefore within the âspecial maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.â 782 F.3d 159, 165â66 (4th Cir. 2015); see 18 U.S.C. § 7(1). There, pirates captured an American yacht and killed its passengers between thirty and forty nautical miles off the coast of Somalia. Beyle, 782 F.3d at 161â62. The government prosecuted the pirates for several crimes, including murder within federal territorial jurisdiction in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1111(b). Id. at 164â65. The pirates argued the yacht was within Somaliaâs territorial seas and, therefore, outside the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States. After reviewing a treaty and Somali law, we rejected the piratesâ argument, concluding the yachtâs location was on the âhigh seas.â Id. at 166â69. No one disputed the yachtâs location was between thirty and forty miles off the Somali coastâan issue for the factfinderâbut 5 The Supreme Courtâs decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma, 591 U.S. 894, 898 (2020) reflects the same approach as Taylor. Under the Major Crimes Act, certain enumerated offenses committed âwithin the Indian countryâ fall within the federal governmentâs exclusive jurisdiction. 18 U.S.C. § 1153(a). Thus, state courts lack jurisdiction over such crimes. In McGirt, the Supreme Court assessed whether McGirt âcommit[ted] his crimes in Indian country?â 591 U.S. at 898. No one disputed the geographic coordinates of McGirtâs crimes. But the Court analyzed treaties and statutes to decide, as a matter of law, that the location of his crimes was in âIndian country.â Id. at 903â38. 11 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 12 of 59 the court assessed that locationâs jurisdictional status as a matter of law. Id. at 164, 168â 69. This approach is nothing new in our circuit. Decades ago, we treated a locationâs jurisdictional status as a legal question. See United States v. Lovely, 319 F.2d 673, 676â80 (4th Cir. 1963). On a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion, Lovely argued that jurisdiction of New Fort Jackson, ceded by South Carolina, never vested in the federal government. Id. at 675. To resolve this dispute, we analyzed documents submitted by the governmentâa condemnation judgment and a letter from the Secretary of War to the South Carolina governorâalong with relevant South Carolina statutes. Id. at 676â80. And we concluded that not only had the federal government acquired the land and South Carolina ceded jurisdiction; the federal government had also accepted it. Id. at 680. That meant New Fort Jackson fell within federal territorial jurisdiction. Id. We then turned to the jury instructions on âthe critical factual issue of whether the locus of the crime was within the boundaries of the New Fort Jackson area . . . .â Id. (emphasis added). The trial judge instructed the jury that âif a crime was committed at all, it occurred on the lands of Fort Jackson . . . .â Id. at 682. Although the court erred in taking the fact-conduct question away from the jury, we found no prejudice to Lovely because there was not âeven the vaguest questionâ about his crimeâs location. Id. In subsequent cases, we have treated the legal-status component as a question of law. In United Sates v. Lossiah, 537 F.2d 1250, 1251 (4th Cir. 1976), we noted a witness testified to the location of a murder and â[t]he Court properly took judicial notice that that town is within the Cherokee Indian Reservation.â And in United States v. Raffield, 82 F.3d 12 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 13 of 59 611, 612â13 (4th Cir. 1996), we affirmed a conviction after concluding state and federal statutes established concurrent jurisdiction over Pisgah National Forest. 6 Nor is this bifurcated approach unique to the Fourth Circuit. In Davis, the Second Circuit addressed a challenge to a federal prisonâs jurisdictional status under § 7(3). 726 F.3d at 368. The court described the underlying components of a federal territorial jurisdictional element: [T]o determine whether a crime took place within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States requires two separate inquiries: one to determine the âlocus of the crimeâ and one to determine the existence vel non of federal jurisdiction. See [United States v. Hernandez-Fundora, 58 F.3d 802, 810 (2d Cir. 1995)]. While the former is plainly a factual question for the jury to decide, the latterâturning on a fixed legal status that does not change from cases to case and involving consideration of source materials (such as deeds, statutes, and treaties) that judges are better suited to evaluate than juriesâhas always been treated in this Circuit as a legal question that a court may decide on its own. Id. The Sixth, Eighth and Ninth Circuits have similarly divided territorial jurisdiction into fact-conduct and legal-status components. See, e.g., United States v. Silvers, 129 F.4th 332, 342 (6th Cir. 2025) (explaining that jurisdictional elements require a legal inquiry into âthe pure question of a locationâs jurisdictional characterâ and a factual inquiry into âwhether the alleged offense occurred within that areaâ); United States v. Love, 20 F.4th 407, 411 (8th Cir. 2021) (analogizing territorial jurisdictional status to the Major Crimes Actâs âwithin the Indian countryâ status, and concluding that âfederal jurisdiction over a 6 In recent unpublished decisions, we have continued to treat a crimeâs location as an issue for a factfinder and the locationâs jurisdictional status as an issue for the court. See, e.g., United States v. Bridges, No. 94-5130, 1994 WL 687301, at *1 (4th Cir. Dec. 9, 1994); United States v. Johnson, 738 F. Appâx 798, 799 (4th Cir. 2018). 13 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 14 of 59 particular place is a question of lawâ); United States v. Warren, 984 F.2d 325, 327 (9th Cir. 1993) (a court âmay determine as a matter of law the existence of federal jurisdiction over the geographic area, but the locus of the offense within that area is an issue for the trier of factâ (quoting United States v. Gipe, 672 F.2d 777, 779 (9th Cir. 1982))). Perez responds to this precedent with United States v. Jackalow, a piracy case involving a venue challenge. 7 66 U.S. 484, 484â85 (1861). Jackalow boarded a ship off the coast of New York and âpiraticallyâ assaulted its master. Id. at 485. The government prosecuted him in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of New Jersey. 8 Id. Under the Constitutionâs Venue Clause, however, criminal venue only lies âin the State where the said crimes shall have been committed,â unless the crime was committed outside 7 While pirates still wreak havoc at times on the high seas, the golden age of piracy was during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. See Gabriel Kuhn, Life Under the Jolly Roger: Reflections on Golden Age Piracy 1 (2d ed. 2020). During that time, valuable cargoes moving across the oceans lured criminal activity. In fact, the final battle of Blackbeard, perhaps the most famous pirate, took place in 1718 off the North Carolina coast. Id. at 20â21. While interest in pirates has fueled modern adventure stories (Pirates of the Caribbean) and sports mascots (the Pittsburgh Pirates), it is odd to have two piracy decisionsâissued centuries apartârelevant to the question we confront today. See Jackalow, 66 U.S. at 485; Beyle, 782 F.3d at 161. 8 Prior to the creation of the modern federal circuit courts of appeal in 1891, Judiciary Act of 1891 (Evarts Act), ch. 517, § 2, 26 Stat. 826, 826â27, the âcircuit courtsâ consisted of Supreme Court justices and district judges, see Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20, § 4, 1 Stat. 73, 74â75. These circuit courts would ârideâ the circuit and meet separately in each district. Id. § 4. And they had original jurisdiction over many federal criminal actions. Id. § 11. In 1869, Congress created separate circuit court judgeships. Judiciary Act of 1869, ch. 22, § 2, 16 Stat. 44, 44â45. This decreased the need for circuit riding and enabled the circuit courts to sit concurrently in different districts. Id. From 1891 until 1912, the circuit courts coexisted alongside the modern federal circuit courts of appeal. Congress abolished the circuit courts in 1912. See Judicial Code of 1911, ch. 231, § 289, 36 Stat. 1087, 1167 (1912). 14 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 15 of 59 any state. U.S. Const., art. III, § 2. So, the case presented the issue of whether Jackalow committed his offense âout of the jurisdiction of any particular State.â Jackalow, 66 U.S. at 486. If he committed the offense in New York or Connecticut, venue only laid in those forums. See id. If, however, he committed the offense outside of any state, venue in New Jersey was permissible. See id. By special verdict, the jury found that the precise location of the ship at the time of the crime was âin the waters adjoining the State of Connecticut, between Norwalk harbor and Westchester county, in the State of New York, at a point five miles eastward of Lyonsâs Point, . . . and one mile and a half from the Connecticut shore at low-water mark.â Id. at 485. But to the Supreme Court, that was not enough. The Court held that in a venue dispute, a jury must determine not just the location of the crime but the state boundary lines. It explained that â[a]ll the testimony bearing upon this question, whether of maps, surveys, practical location, and the like, should be submitted to them under proper instructions to find the fact.â Id. at 487â88. Only after the jury finds the boundary lines can âthe court [] determine whether or not the offence was committed out of the jurisdiction of a State . . . .â Id. at 488. Perez believes Jackalow âcut[s] the Gordian knotâ in his case. Perez Reply Br. at 6. And at face value, one might argue that Jackalowâs venue reasoning should be extended to the jurisdictional inquiry we face. After all, determining state boundary lines is arguably similar to determining whether a prison is within the United Statesâ special territorial jurisdiction. But Perezâs case does not raise the venue issue present in Jackalow. See Silvers, 129 F.4th at 359 (Thapar, J., concurring in judgment) (declining to apply Jackalow 15 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 16 of 59 to a territorial jurisdictional element dispute because Jackalow only addressed venue). And over the last 160 years, the Supreme Court has never cited Jackalow for the proposition that a jury decides a locationâs jurisdictional status. In fact, the Supreme Court has barely cited Jackalow at all. On our count, the Court has cited the case only three times, two of which were in the 1890s and never discussed the roles of courts and juries. See Cook v. United States, 138 U.S. 157, 183 (1891); United States v. Rodgers, 150 U.S. 249, 283 (1893) (Brown, J., dissenting). The Court recently cited Jackalow again, but without reference to its allocation of jury and court responsibilities. See Smith v. United States, 599 U.S. 236, 250 (2023). We have found no Fourth Circuit references to Jackalow. Whatâs more, Supreme Court decisions after Jackalow contradict Perezâs reading of that Civil War-era decision. In Jones v. United States, 137 U.S. 202, 216 (1890), the Court affirmed taking judicial notice of a Caribbean islandâs status within federal territorial jurisdiction. In reaching that conclusion, the court held that â[a]ll courts of justice are bound to take judicial notice of the territorial extent of the jurisdiction exercised by the government whose laws they administer, or of its recognition or denial of the sovereignty of a foreign power, as appearing from the public acts of the legislature and executive, although those acts are not formally put in evidence, . . . .â Id. at 214. The Court then resolved jurisdictional status itself via judicial notice. Id. at 217; see also Silvers, 129 F.4th at 355â56 (Thapar, J., concurring in judgment). And in Adams, the Court considered whether the federal government accepted jurisdiction over Camp Claiborne in compliance with 40 U.S.C. § 3112 (formerly codified at 40 U.S.C. § 255). 319 U.S. at 312â13. The Court decided the government had not, reasoning that â[s]ince the government had not 16 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 17 of 59 accepted jurisdiction in the manner required by the Act,â Camp Caliborne was outside of federal territorial jurisdiction. Id. at 315. As a result, Adamsâ conviction could not stand. Id. But most important for our purposes, a courtânot a juryâassessed the campâs jurisdictional status. Also, as demonstrated above, we have long assessed a locationâs jurisdictional statusâin a criminal caseâas a question of law without regard for Jackalow. See, e.g., Beyle, 782 F.3d at 166â69; Lovely, 319 F.2d at 676â80. The same is true for many of our sister circuits. See, e.g., Davis, 726 F.3d at 368; Silvers, 129 F.4th at 348; Love, 20 F.4th at 411; Warren, 984 F.2d at 327. Adding another persuasive piece to the puzzle, Judge Thaparâs Silvers concurrence points out that state courts have long treated a locationâs jurisdictional statusâin a criminal caseâas a legal question. See Silvers, 129 F.4th at 357â 59 (Thapar, J., concurring). We, therefore, hold that Jackalowâs allocation of responsibilities between jury and court in a venue dispute does not control how juries and courts must assess a locationâs federal jurisdictional status. To sum up this question-of-law versus question-of-fact issue, criminal jurisdictional elements often contain an embedded legal-status componentâdoes activity âxyzâ affect interstate commerce, or is location â123â within federal territorial jurisdiction? See, e.g., Taylor, 579 U.S. at 308; Lovely, 319 F.2d at 676â80. The jury must find the fact-conduct componentâthat defendant undertook activity âxyzâ or committed the crime at location â123.â But a court must determine the legal-status component as a matter of law. Although Jackalow dictates that a jury find material facts for purposes of venue, no precedent has applied it to a federal territorial jurisdictional element. We decline to do so here. 17 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 18 of 59 Judge Harris agrees that criminal jurisdictional elements have fact and legal components. See Diss. Op. at 43. But she interprets the legal component more narrowly than we do. According to her, the legal question is simply about the âmeaning of a jurisdictional element.â Id. at 11. So, she believes that in Beyle, the Fourth Circuit only decided the meaning of âhigh seasâ as a matter of law. Id. at 11â12. And in Taylor, she believes the Supreme Court only interpreted what kind of impact sufficiently affects interstate commerce. Id. at 7. With respect, we disagree. In Beyle, we determined the boundary between Somali waters and the âhigh seas,â just as Judge Harris suggests. But we went further. We also concluded that the yacht, the pirates âand the victims were on the high seas when the murders occurred.â 782 F.3d at 169. In other words, we determinedâas a matter of lawâ that the crime itself occurred on the âhigh seas.â We did not remand for the factfinder to apply our definition of âhigh seasâ to the facts in the record. Similarly, in Taylor, the Supreme Court did interpret the meaning of the interstate commerce element of the offense. But it did more than that. It also determined that robbery of a marijuana dealerâs drugs or illegal proceeds affects interstate commerce as âa question of law.â 579 U.S. at 308. In other words, the Court considered the âmeaningâ of interstate commerce by assessing the facts at hand. Following those two examples, a court can determine as a legal matter whether FCI Petersburg falls within the meaning of the âspecial maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.â § 7(3). 18 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 19 of 59 Thus, considered in its totality, precedent leans heavily one way. Post-Apprendi decisions from the Supreme Court, our Court and our sister circuits treat jurisdictional status as a legal question. 2. Legislative versus Adjudicative Fact Even though a locationâs jurisdictional status is a question of law for a court, facts underlie that determination. To explain, recall that land falls within the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States when (1) the federal government acquires the land; (2) the state consents to federal, or cedes its own, jurisdiction; and (3) the federal government accepts jurisdiction. 18 U.S.C. § 7(3); 40 U.S.C. § 3112; Davis, 726 F.3d at 363â64. Resolving these questions requires consideration of facts. And at first blush, one might naturally think all facts should be decided by the factfinder. After all, â[q]uestions of law are to be determined by the court; questions of fact, by the jury.â Nudd v. Burrows, 91 U.S. 426, 439 (1875). But recognizing that facts are involved does not necessarily mean that the factfinder must decide them. Thatâs because there are two kinds of factsâadjudicative and legislative. Treatises, courts and the Federal Rules of Evidence recognize this distinction. See, e.g., Kenneth C. Davis, An Approach to Problems of Evidence in the Administrative Process, 55 Harv. L. Rev. 364, 402 (1942); Davis, 726 F.3d at 366; Fed. R. Evid. 201(a) advisory committeeâs note to 1972 proposed rules. Adjudicative facts concern âthe immediate partiesâwho did what, where, when, how, and with what motive or intent.â Fed. R. Evid. 201(a) advisory committeeâs note to 1972 proposed rules. Such facts ânormally go to the jury in a jury case. They relate to the parties, their activities, their properties, their businesses.â Id. Under Rule 201, courts may 19 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 20 of 59 notice adjudicative facts only in particular circumstances and must instruct a criminal jury âthat it may or may not accept the noticed fact as conclusive.â Fed. R. Evid. 201(f). An adjudicative fact is therefore the kind of factual issue ordinarily decided by a jury. See 2 McCormick on Evidence § 328 (8th ed. 2022). Other facts, dubbed âlegislative facts,â involve âestablished truths, facts or pronouncements that do not change from case to case but apply universally . . . .â United States v. Gould, 536 F.2d 216, 220 (8th Cir. 1976). Such facts âhave relevance to legal reasoning and the lawmaking process, whether in the formulation of a legal principle or ruling by a judge or court or in the enactment of a legislative body.â Fed. R. Evid. 201(a) advisory committeeâs note to 1972 proposed rules. Courts judicially notice them when assessing the constitutional validity of, or interpreting, a statute. See 2 McCormick on Evidence § 328 (8th ed. 2022). âNo rule [of evidence] deals with judicial notice of âlegislativeâ facts,â so a court may notice a legislative fact and charge a criminal jury with accepting its truth. Fed. R. Evid. 201(a) advisory committeeâs note to 1972 proposed rules. Or a court of appeals can judicially notice a legislative fact in the first instance, even in criminal cases. See, e.g., Davis, 726 F.3d at 367 (citing United States v. Lavender, 602 F.2d 639, 641 (4th Cir. 1979)). With these categories in mind, what type of factsâadjudicative or legislativeâ underly a § 7(3) analysis? First off, assessing a propertyâs status under § 7(3) involves some purely legal considerations. Whether a state has consented to federal jurisdiction, or ceded its own, requires an assessment of state statutes. See, e.g., Lovely, 319 F.2d at 676â 80 (analyzing South Carolina statutes); Raffield, 82 F.3d at 612â13 (analyzing North 20 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 21 of 59 Carolina statutes); Davis, 726 F.3d at 368â70 (analyzing New York statutes); Palmer v. Barrett, 162 U.S. 399, 403 (1896) (analyzing New York statute). Whether the federal government has accepted jurisdiction often turns on whether 40 U.S.C. § 3112 applies. See, e.g., Markham, 215 F.2d at 58; Davis, 726 F.3d at 369. The court has a duty âto expound the lawâ on these matters. Sparf v. United States, 156 U.S. 51, 106 (1895). And Perez concedes that â[t]he text of a statute is unquestionably a legislative fact.â Perez Reply Br. at 12 n.4. So there is no dispute the court must consider federal and state statutes as it addresses jurisdictional status under § 7(3). Section 7(3) also requires consideration of particular facts. Did the federal government acquire the property, and when did acquisition occur? We agree with most of our sister circuits that these are legislative facts and thus disagree with our dissenting colleagueâs contrary view. Drawing on Professor Kenneth Davisâ Administrative Law Treatise, the Eighth Circuit described legislative facts as unrelated âspecifically to the activities or characteristics of the litigants. . . . Legislative facts are established truths, facts or pronouncements that do not change from case to case but apply universally, while adjudicative facts are those developed in a particular case.â Gould, 536 F.2d at 220. Accordingly, âfacts that resolve the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction question are legislative, not adjudicative.â Love, 20 F.4th at 411; see also Silvers, 129 F.4th at 343. The Second Circuit has also concluded âthat resolution of the [territorial] jurisdictional issue in this case requires the determination of legislative facts, rather than âadjudicative facts . . . .ââ Hernandez-Fundora, 58 F.3d at 811. It cited an apt example from Professor Davisâ treatise, explaining that â[w]hether 123 C Street is inside or outside the city is a 21 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 22 of 59 question about 123 C Street, not about a party. . . . [T]he fact that that address is within the city is not an adjudicative fact.â Id. at 812 (quoting 2 Kenneth C. Davis & Richard J. Pierce, Jr., Administrative Law Treatise § 10.6, at 155 (3d ed. 1994) (emphasis added)). And this circuit has even affirmed, in an unpublished opinion, a district courtâs noticing of legislative facts informing a veteran hospitalâs status within federal jurisdiction. See Johnson, 738 F. Appâx at 799. Perez and our dissenting colleague instead rely on the First Circuitâs minority approach of classifying facts about territorial jurisdiction as adjudicative. In United States v. Bello, the defendant challenged whether the district court could take judicial notice of federal jurisdiction of a detention center. 194 F.3d 18, 20 (1st Cir. 1999). The court concluded that classification of a fact turns ânot on the nature of the factâe.g., who owns the landâbut rather on the use made of [the fact] (i.e., whether it is a fact germane to what happened in the case or a fact useful in formulating common law policy or interpreting a statute) . . . .â Id. at 22. Applying that standard, the court concluded that â[w]here the prison sits is an element of the offense and unquestionably an adjudicative fact . . . .â Id. at 23. We disagree with the First Circuitâs approach for several reasons. First, it is an outlier. In fact, the First Circuit acknowledged its departure from the approach of other circuits and Professor Davisâ treatise. Id. at 23 n.4; see also 21B Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Kenneth W. Graham, Jr., Federal Practice and Procedure § 5103.2 & nn.17â18 (2d ed. 2024) (concurring with Bello and rejecting the âintrinsicâ approach to legislative facts in Davis and other cases). Second, although the government is a party to this case, Perezâs actions at FCI Petersburg are almost entirely divorced from the federal 22 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 23 of 59 governmentâs acquisition of the property by deed and condemnation in 1919. When the federal government acquired the property is not âgermane to what happenedâ in Perezâs case. 9 Bello, 194 F.3d at 22. Second, FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status is unchanging. It applies to any case relying on the federal governmentâs jurisdiction of the prison. Tasking a jury with the ânuanced and cumbersomeâ § 7(3) analysis âwould leave open the distinct possibility of conflicting decisions as to federal jurisdiction over an identical parcel of propertyâa status which by its nature either exists or doesnât exist.â United States v. Johnson, No. 3:17-CR-136, 2018 WL 1023355, at *2 (E.D. Va. Feb. 22, 2018). Third, our precedent has treated these facts as legislative in nature. In Lavender, we explicitly noticedâon appeal following a jury verdictâthe Blue Ridge Parkwayâs federal jurisdictional status. 602 F.2d at 641. If the underlying jurisdictional facts are adjudicative, then Lavender violated Federal Rule of Evidence 201(f)âand potentially the defendantsâ Sixth Amendment rightsâby noticing the facts without instructing the jury that it could accept or deny them. We instead read Lavender to illuminate the legislative nature of jurisdictional facts. 10 As we explained many decades ago, âthe United States is not called 9 Judge Harris argues the factual portion of the jurisdictional element here should be treated like the interstate commerce requirement of felon-in-possession prosecutions under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). See Diss. Op. at 52. But that situation seems quite distinct from this case. Whether a particular firearm in defendantâs possession has travelled in interstate commerce is âgermane to what happenedâ in the defendantâs case. Whether the government acquired the real property on which FCI Petersburg sits in 1919 versus 1940 is not. 10 Judge Harris recognizes the problem of reading Lavender as taking notice of adjudicative facts on appeal in a criminal case. See Diss. Op. at 59. If Lavenderâs reference 23 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 24 of 59 on to try title in a murder case.â Schoppel v. United States, 270 F.2d 413, 418 (4th Cir. 1959) (citing Holt v. United States, 218 U.S. 245, 252 (1910)). In addition to Bello, Perez argues that our United States v. Burroughs decision supports his argument that FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status is a question of adjudicative fact. 564 F.2d 1111 (4th Cir. 1977) (Burroughs II), abrogated on other grounds by United States v. Steed, 674 F.2d 284, 285 n.2 (4th Cir. 1982) (en banc). There, a jury convicted Burroughs and another defendant of intercepting oral communications under 18 U.S.C. § 2511(1)(a) when they listened in on union-related conversations via a motelâs internal telephone system. Id. at 1112â13; see also United States v. Burroughs, 379 F. Supp. 736, 738â39 (D.S.C. 1974) (Burroughs I). Even though § 2511(1)(a) contains no federal jurisdictional element, the district court read in such an element to preserve the statuteâs constitutionality. Burroughs I, 379 F. Supp. at 740â41. âAll that would have to be shown to establish an effect on interstate commerce is that the telephone which was transformed into a listening device was used in interstate commerce.â Id. at 744. But at defendantsâ jury trial, the government failed to prove that the telephone service provider whose system the defendant used to eavesdrop was a communications common carrier in interstate commerce. Id. And the government failed to ask the trial court to take judicial notice of that information during trial. Id. It asked the court to do so on defendantsâ motion to âcommonly known factsâ classified jurisdictional status as an adjudicative fact, then Lavender violated the Federal Rules of Evidence and potentially the Sixth Amendment. We decline to read such a major error into our precedent. And to be clear, the appellants in Lavender explicitly argued that the government failed to prove the Blue Ridge Parkwayâs jurisdictional statusâthe same issue we face today. 24 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 25 of 59 for judgment of acquittal, but the court held that because â[t]his was not done in the instant case [before the jury] . . . it [was] now too late.â Id. We agreed that âsome basis for federal jurisdiction [must] be established at trial.â Burroughs II, 564 F.2d at 1115. The government neither presented evidence of such a federal nexus at trial nor requested âduring trial that the trial court take judicial notice of facts from which some federal nexus might have been found as fact.â Id. The government asked us to take judicial notice on appeal, but in a footnote we ârefuse[d] to take judicial notice of the fact that defendantsâ electronic eavesdropping had an effect on interstate commerce.â Id. at 1115 n.7. Noting that â[t]he district court declined to take judicial notice of the existence of a federal nexus,â we refused to take âjudicial notice on appeal of an unproven essential element of a criminal offense.â Id. Burroughs II does not provide a lot of explanation for why it did not take judicial notice on appeal. But viewed alongside the district courtâs decision, Burroughs II might be read to imply that the telephone service providerâs status as a communications common carrier in interstate commerce was an adjudicative fact. See Burroughs I, 379 F. Supp. at 744. Standing alone, this implied reasoning might support Perezâs argument. 11 But even were we to credit that implicit reasoning, we cannot view the Burroughs decisions in isolation. We must view them along with prior and subsequent decisions from the Supreme Court and our Court. 11 This is not the only plausible reading of the Burroughs decisions. They might also be read to reflect a concern with the timing of the governmentâs request for judicial notice in a jury case. Cf., infra, n.16. 25 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 26 of 59 Those decisions compel a different approach. First, the Supreme Courtâs later reasoning in Taylor directly contradicts Perezâs interpretation of the Burroughs decisions. In Perezâs view, the Burroughs decisions indicate the jury should decide whether the telephone service provider âis a communications common carrier[.]â Burroughs I, 379 F. Supp. at 744. But remember Taylor held that the government must prove âthe defendant engaged in conduct that satisfies the Actâs commerce element, but the meaning of that element is a question of law.â Taylor, 579 U.S. at 308. And the Taylor Court determined as a matter of law that marijuana robbery affects interstate commerce. So, under Taylor, the government in Burroughs would have had to prove the defendants used a telephone. But whether that telephoneâs service provider qualifies as a communications common carrier in interstate commerceâand whether location â123â falls within federal territorial jurisdictionâare legal-status questions that a court must resolve. That resolution demands consideration of legislative facts. See Silvers, 129 F.4th at 343. To the extent the Burroughs decisions might be read to require that a jury make this determination, that reasoning would be âinconsistent with Supreme Court authority . . . .â United States v. Banks, 29 F.4th 168, 178 (4th Cir. 2022). And when a prior decision of this Court rests on reasoning inconsistent with a Supreme Court decision, it becomes âuntenableâ authority that we decline to follow. Id. at 175. Second, even if Taylor did not render the Burroughs decisions untenable, Perezâs reading would be inconsistent with prior Fourth Circuit precedent. Several earlier decisions of this Court affirm the propriety of judicially noticing facts informing the legal-status component. In Markham, while trial evidence showed the defendant committed his crime 26 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 27 of 59 at a military base, we explained âthe court could take judicial notice of [the baseâs] acquisition and of the exercise of jurisdiction over it by the Government of the United States.â 215 F.2d at 57. In Lossiah, testimony established that a murder occurred at âthe Boundary Tree Motel in the Town of Cherokee, North Carolina,â and â[t]he Court properly took judicial notice that that town is within the Cherokee Indian Reservation.â 537 F.2d at 1251. Unlike Perezâs view of the Burroughs decisions, these cases speak directly to the legislative nature of facts informing a locationâs jurisdictional status. His view is irreconcilable with prior binding law. See McMellon v. United States, 387 F.3d 329, 332â 33 (4th Cir. 2004) (explaining that an earlier-issued panel opinion controls over a later conflicting opinion). It is, therefore, little surprise that our subsequent decisions have not applied Perezâs interpretation of the Burroughs decisions, either. See, e.g., Lavender, 602 F.2d at 641; Johnson, 738 F. Appâx at 799. To conclude, a federal territorial jurisdictional element contains a fact-conduct questionâwhere did the defendant commit the crime?âand a legal-status questionâis that location within federal territorial jurisdiction? The fact-conduct question turns on adjudicative facts and is decided by the factfinder. Here, no one disputes the fact-conduct questionâPerez committed these acts at FCI Petersburg. The legal-status question involves legislative factsâwhich may be judicially noticedâand questions of law for the court to find and decide. In this case, the legal-status questionâwhether FCI Petersburg is within federal territorial jurisdictionâturns on an analysis of 18 U.S.C. § 7(3). 27 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 28 of 59 B. The District Courtâs Analysis With these principles established, we turn to the district courtâs analysis of FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status. The court took judicial notice that the prison was part of the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States. In doing so, it determined that the federal government has âpractical usage and dominionâ over FCI Petersburg. J.A. 205 (quoting Erdos, 474 F.2d at 159). But that conclusion mistakenly bypasses § 7(3)âs three- part test for special territorial jurisdiction: (1) federal acquisition of the property; (2) state consent to federal, or cession of its own, jurisdiction; and (3) federal acceptance of jurisdiction. See 18 U.S.C. § 7(3); see also Davis, 726 F.3d at 363â64. The district court failed to evaluate each element. To explain, we review our Erdos decision. In Erdos, we considered whether an American embassy in the Republic of Equatorial Guinea fell within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States, as defined in § 7(3). 474 F.2d at 159. 12 In accordance with the statutory elements, we determined that the federal government acquired the embassy by a lease and that it fell under the United Statesâ concurrent jurisdiction. Id. at 159â60. But we also added the following explanation: âThe test, as to property within or without the United States, [is] one of practical usage and dominion exercised over the embassy or other federal establishment by the United States government.â Id. at 159. 12 While we and the Ninth Circuit have found that 8 U.S.C. § 7(3) applies extraterritorially, the Second Circuit has rejected its extraterritorial application. Compare Erdos, 474 F.2d at 160, and United States v. Corey, 232 F.3d 1166, 1183 (9th Cir. 2000), with United States v. Gatlin, 216 F.3d 207, 210 (2d Cir. 2000). We do not address that issue today. 28 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 29 of 59 The district court applied that language as if it were the § 7(3) test. And the Sixth Circuit did the same in Blunt, concluding that a federal prison fell within federal jurisdiction because the federal government exercised âpractical usage and dominionâ over it. 558 F.2d at 1246â47. But the federal governmentâs practical usage and dominion alone does not address whether the property satisfies the § 7(3) elements. The Supreme Courtâs decision in Adams makes this clear. There, the federal government exercised practical usage and dominion over Camp Claiborne during World War II. See Adams, 319 U.S. at 312 (assessing jurisdictional status of a military camp for which the federal government held title). Yet the Supreme Court found no federal jurisdiction over Camp Claiborne because of a lack of federal acceptance. Id. at 313, 315. By relying on the Erdos gloss and overlooking the statutory elements of § 7(3) in this case, the district court erred. 13 Other cases cited by the district court exemplify a proper § 7(3) analysis. In United States v. Corey, the Ninth Circuit determined (1) the United States acquired the Yokota Air Force Base; (2) Japan ceded concurrent jurisdiction via treaty; and (3) the United States accepted concurrent jurisdiction through the same treaty. 232 F.3d 1166, 1176â77, 1181â 82 (9th Cir. 2000). In Davis, the Second Circuit determined (1) the federal government 13 To the district courtâs credit, it did address the letters attached to the governmentâs Rule 29 response brief. J.A. 206 n.5. It explained that the letters reflected the federal governmentâs acquisition of the property some time before 1940 and therefore defeated Perezâs invocation of 40 U.S.C. § 3112âs presumption against acceptance. Id. at 206â07. So the district court addressed the third element of a § 7(3) analysisâacceptance of jurisdiction by the federal government. But its analysis remained incomplete; it never squarely addressed federal acquisition or state consent to, or cession of, jurisdiction. The government conceded as much at oral argument. See Oral Arg. at 21:26â21:34. 29 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 30 of 59 acquired the relevant property in 1918; (2) New York consented to federal jurisdiction for broad purposes, including prisons; and (3) the federal governmentâs acceptance was presumed because the purchase occurred prior to 1940. 726 F.3d at 368â70. Without consideration of each of § 7(3)âs elements, we do not know whether FCI Petersburg is within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States. The parties diverge on what we should do on appeal. Because Perez believes jurisdictional status is a fact question for the jury, he insists double jeopardy prevents the government from proving FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status on appeal or remand. But because jurisdictional status is a legal question based on legislative fact, resolving it on appeal or remand poses no double jeopardy concern; instead, there was simply âan error in the proceeding[] leading to conviction . . . .â Burks v. United States, 437 U.S. 1, 14 (1978) (quoting United States v. Tateo, 377 U.S. 463, 465 (1964)). The government urges us to judicially notice several hundred pages of documentsâ state statutes, government publications, land transactions and a condemnation judgmentâ and affirm based on them. And it is correct that precedent permits us to notice these facts for the first time on appeal. See Lavender, 602 F.2d at 641; see also Davis, 726 F.3d at 367. 14 We believe the better course here, however, is for the district court to assess the governmentâs many documents on remand. When âan appellate court discerns that a district To be sure, appellate courts engage in legislative fact finding all the time. See, 14 e.g., Brown v. Bd. of Ed. of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483, 489â95, 489 n.4, 494 n.11 (1954); N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Assân, Inc. v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 38â70 (2022). 30 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 31 of 59 court has failed to make a finding because of an erroneous view of the law, the usual rule is that there should be remand for further proceedings to permit the trial court to make the missing findings.â United States v. Bailey, 74 F.4th 151, 160 (4th Cir. 2023) (quoting Pullman-Standard v. Swint, 456 U.S. 273, 291 (1982)). And remanding for further inquiry in a criminal case is a recognized remedy. See, e.g., Kolod v. United States, 390 U.S. 136, 137 (1968) (remanding so district court could hold a hearing on the relevance of unlawful electronic eavesdropping to the convictions); United States v. Hung, 629 F.2d 908, 920 (4th Cir. 1980) (remanding so district court could screen whether documents contained Jencks Act material); United States v. Stoddart, 574 F.2d 1050, 1054â55 (10th Cir. 1978) (remanding so district court could hold a hearing and apply a proper speedy trial analysis). Whatâs more, we perform our best work as âa court of review, not of first view.â Lovelace v. Lee, 472 F.3d 174, 203 (4th Cir. 2006) (quoting Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U.S. 709, 718 n.7 (2005)). So, we vacate the current judgment of conviction and remand for the district court to assess FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status. See 28 U.S.C. § 2106. 15 The district court can decide which, if any, legislative facts to judicially notice. Perez can challenge the noticed facts and raise arguments he made hereâthat the documents do not clarify the jurisdictional status of his cellâs location and that the Department of Defenseâs transfer of the property to the Bureau of Prisons triggered a reversion clause in Virginiaâs general consent statute. The government can dispute those arguments. Then the district We, therefore, dismiss the governmentâs pending motion for judicial notice as 15 moot. The government can move the district court to notice these documents on remand. 31 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 32 of 59 court can apply § 7(3)âs three-element test to assess FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status. If the district court concludes FCI Petersburg is within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States, âit will enter [a] new final judgment[] of conviction[] based on the existing record as supplemented by its further findings[.]â Kolod, 390 U.S. at 138. If not, the district court must enter a judgment of acquittal. 16 III. Conclusion Accordingly, we agree with the district court that FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status is a legal question for the court that involves legislative facts. We vacate the district courtâs judgment of conviction because the court did not properly assess FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status. And we remand for a proper analysis of jurisdictional status consistent with this opinion. VACATED AND REMANDED 16 It might matter that Perezâs conviction followed a bench trial. In the case of a jury trial, it would seem odd, if not problematic, that a jury could find the fact-conduct component and convict the defendant before the court assessed the locationâs jurisdictional status. Said another way, if a jury first finds a defendant committed a crime at location â123â and convicts, before the court concludes location â123â is within federal territorial jurisdiction, it is not clear the jury found the jurisdictional element satisfied. To avoid any sequencing problem, the best practice for district courts is to first resolve the legal-status component and then charge the jury accordingly so that the jury has that law when it considers the evidence, including the evidence related to the fact-conduct component. See Silvers, 129 F.4th at 348. But a bench trial like Perezâs does not pose these sequencing concerns. In a bench trial, the court is the factfinder, see United States v. Bales, 813 F.2d 1289, 1293 (4th Cir. 1987), so it does not need to resolve the legal-status issue before the fact-conduct issue. 32 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 33 of 59 WYNN, Circuit Judge, concurring: I agree that we should remand this case for the district court to reconsider the legal component of the jurisdictional element and write separately to emphasize that my concurrence hinges on the fact that this matter was tried as a bench trial, not before a jury. As Judge Quattlebaum acknowledges, the resolution of this appeal would have been different had a jury, and not the district court, served as the finder of fact at trial. See Maj. Op. at 32 n.16. Jurisdictional elements âmust be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.â Torres v. Lynch, 578 U.S. 452, 467 (2016). The jurisdictional element of the statute at issue contains a mixed question of law and fact. The legal component is to determine whether a location falls within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States; the factual component is to determine whether the offense occurred at that location. See 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d)(5). In a jury trial, the judge determines the legal component of a jurisdictional issue and then the jury the factual component. Had this trial proceeded before a jury, I doubt that we could remand this case without infringing upon Perezâs Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury. After all, âthe juryâs constitutional responsibility is not merely to determine the facts, but to apply the law to those facts and draw the ultimate conclusion of guilt or innocence.â United States v. Gaudin, 515 U.S. 506, 514 (1995). In this way, the jury is not just making factual findings in a void but is applying law to those findings in order to render a verdict. For this application to be meaningful, the jury must understand the full import and consequences of its findings. The manner in which jury trials proceed demonstrates this understanding: when decision-making is bifurcated between finders of fact and a finder of law, the very USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 34 of 59 act of submitting factual questions to the fact finders seems to presuppose that the dispositions of those factual questions have already been deemed legally significant. The Supreme Court has long recognized the right of a criminal defendant to select between trial by judge and jury and to have their trial completed by their chosen tribunal. See, e.g., Wade v. Hunter, 336 U.S. 684, 689 (1949). Had Perez decided to proceed in front of a jury, it is not obvious how his choice of tribunal could be respected if we were to remand for the judge to reconsider the legal component of the jurisdictional question. After all, the jurors would have been discharged after they had rendered a verdict and almost certainly could not be reassembled. But cf. Dietz v. Bouldin, 579 U.S. 40, 51 (2016); Summers v. United States, 11 F.2d 583, 586 (4th Cir. 1926). The genie would have already escaped the bottle. I believe that it is only permissible to remand the legal component of a jurisdictional element in a criminal statute when a defendant has elected to forgo trial by jury. In cases where, as here, the proceedings below had been conducted as a bench trial, on remand, the defendantâs chosen tribunal will decide the legal component and had already decided the factual component. So, the defendantâs choice of tribunal will be respected. And, because an Article III judge is making the determination on the legal component, any concern related to the sequencing of the questions and how it relates to the application of law to fact are ameliorated. Additionally, I agree with Judge Harrisâs observation that this appeal presents a difficult question that appears to be recurring. See United States v. Davis, 726 F.3d 357, 34 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 35 of 59 371 (2d Cir. 2013); United States v. Silvers, 129 F.4th 332, 341â48 (6th Cir. 2025); United States v. Love, 20 F.4th 407, 412 (8th Cir. 2021). The government can avoid uncertainty in future prosecutions by confirming that the process prescribed in 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) was followed for every federal prison. And, in the event that it was not, the government can, at least prospectively, resolve this problem by following the statuteâs strictures and creating a record of cessation of state jurisdiction and acceptance of federal jurisdiction. 35 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 36 of 59 PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part: Nobody disputes that when the government went to trial in this case, it tried but failed to prove the facts necessary to establish an element of Mr. Perezâs crime of conviction. It would seem, then, that a judgment of acquittal is in order. But the majority holds otherwise. The unproven facts relate to the jurisdictional status of the place where Perez committed his alleged crime, the majority reasons, and they are âlegislativeâ facts that can be judicially noticed at any time â even on appeal, after a purported criminal conviction. I disagree. The government used to disagree, too. At trial, it attempted to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, all of the facts necessary to satisfy a jurisdictional element of the statute under which Perez was charged. Indeed, that was the whole point of the trial; Perez did not dispute the other elements of his offense, and contested only jurisdiction. With that issue front and center, the government advanced two different and alternative theories under which, it said, it could prove jurisdiction. The problem for the government is that its efforts at proof failed under both. So now, to salvage its conviction, the government comes to us with a new theory that would excuse its trial failures and relieve it, retroactively, of the need to prove facts establishing all the elements of Perezâs offense. In my view, we should not endorse that counterintuitive result. Because the government did not prove facts necessary to satisfy all 36 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 37 of 59 the elements of the criminal offense with which Perez was charged, Perezâs conviction must be reversed. 1 I. I begin by filling in some details of the governmentâs ill-fated attempts to prove, at Perezâs bench trial, the jurisdictional element of the charged offense. I have no quarrel with the majorityâs able summary. See Maj. Op. at 6â8. But I think a closer review of the trial record helps to set the stage, because it reflects that all parties to this case understood from the start that the government had the burden of proving facts necessary to satisfy the jurisdictional element of Perezâs crime. The government, the public defender, and the district court â all repeat players, all with a thorough and practical understanding of how criminal trials work â all agreed that the government was required to âprove upâ jurisdiction, the only element challenged at Perezâs trial. 2 1 As explained below, I agree with the majority that the district court erred in its analysis of FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status, overlooking the statutory standard set out in 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) and relying instead on United States v. Erdos, 474 F.2d 157 (4th Cir. 1973), see Maj. Op. at 28â30, and concur in that aspect of its opinion. I also support the majorityâs decision to remand for the district court to assess, in the first instance, the several hundred pages of new documents the government has produced on appeal. See Maj. Op. at 30â32. 2 As the majority points out, the government at trial argued that âthe status of a place as within the âspecial maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United Statesâ is a question of law for the Court.â Maj. Op. at 6 n.2 (quoting J.A. 19). But the government never suggested â at least not until after trial â that âthe underlying facts needed to determine FCI Petersburgâs [jurisdictional] status,â id. at 8, did not need to be proven at trial and could instead be judicially noticed. Instead, the government tried and failed to prove such facts at trial. See J.A. 19, 58â60. 37 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 38 of 59 The government first attempted to establish federal jurisdiction by proving a nexus with foreign commerce. As the majority explains, Perez was charged with two counts of using a prison photocopier to produce and possess child pornography, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1466A. Maj. Op. at 5. To show these images were âproduced using materials that have been . . . shipped or transported in interstate or foreign commerceâ â thus satisfying the jurisdictional element of § 1466A(d)(4) â the government tried to prove that the prison photocopier had been designed in Japan and assembled in China. 3 As evidence, it relied on what seemed to be the photocopierâs serial number, displayed on what it said was a photograph of the prison photocopier. But unfortunately for the government, that photograph turned out, as Perez showed at trial, to depict not the photocopier but instead its document feeder, a separate component with its own serial number. Because the government had no evidence that Perez used the document feeder or that the photocopier itself had travelled in interstate or foreign commerce, the district court concluded that the government could not prove jurisdiction under this theory. That left the government with its alternative theory: that it could establish jurisdiction under § 1466A(d)(5) by proving Perez committed his offenses in the âspecial maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States.â This effort, too, was a failure, 3 The same fact, if proven, would have established jurisdiction under § 1466A(d)(1), which includes catchall language asserting federal jurisdiction when âany means or instrumentality of interstate or foreign commerce is otherwise used in committing or in furtherance of the commission of the offense.â Because the government argued at closing that the photocopier was âused to produce the images,â J.A. 105, I am assuming it intended to establish jurisdiction under § 1466A(d)(4). But nothing turns on this distinction. 38 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 39 of 59 for the reasons explained by the majority. The government sought to prove that FCI Petersburg was within the âspecial [] territorial jurisdictionâ of the United States through testimony from prison guards describing the federal governmentâs dominion and control over the facility. But as the majority rightly concludes â and the government now agrees â that standard, drawn from United States v. Erdos, 474 F.2d 157 (4th Cir. 1973), does not govern here. Instead, the government must establish special territorial jurisdiction by proving that the three requirements set out by 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) have been satisfied. Maj. Op. at 28. And nobody believes the government met that burden at trial. In short, Perez was âconvictedâ under 18 U.S.C. § 1466A despite the fact that the government failed, twice over, to prove a jurisdictional element of the offense at his trial. This much is now common ground and undisputed. The only question is what follows from this failure of proof as to an element of the criminal offense with which Perez was charged. II. The governmentâs view is that its failed effort to prove jurisdiction at Perezâs trial is without consequence. It turns out, the government says, that this has all been a big misunderstanding. It was never required to prove facts that would satisfy one of § 1466A(d)âs jurisdictional elements at Perezâs trial and before Perez was convicted. Instead, it can simply ask us to take judicial notice of those facts on appeal. And to help, it has submitted more than 300 pages of documents with its appellate brief and an accompanying motion for judicial notice. 39 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 40 of 59 The majority mostly agrees. It wisely declines the invitation to become an initial finder â or ânoticerâ â of fact, instead remanding to the district court for a first assessment of the governmentâs documents. But it adopts the governmentâs position that a court may take judicial notice of the facts necessary to determine FCI Petersburgâs jurisdictional status either at trial or post-conviction and on appeal. And that is so, the majority reasons, because those jurisdiction-adjacent facts are âlegislativeâ and not âadjudicative,â so they may be judicially noticed outside the constraints of Federal Rule of Evidence 201. This is a difficult question, which our court has not squarely addressed. And while there are cases from the other courts of appeals pointing in different directions, I recognize that at least three circuits have adopted the approach of the government and the majority. See United States v. Silvers, 129 F.4th 332, 342â43 (6th Cir. 2025); United States v. Love, 20 F.4th 407, 411â12 (8th Cir. 2021); United States v. Davis, 726 F.3d 357, 366â68 (2d Cir. 2013). Still, I have a different view. As I see it, the context in which this judicial-notice issue arises â a criminal prosecution â is dispositive. Under the Constitution, any fact necessary to establish an element of a crime, jurisdictional or otherwise, must be proven by the government at trial beyond a reasonable doubt. As for Rule 201, I would follow the First Circuit in holding that a fact relied on to establish an element of a crime is âadjudicative,â which means that it is not subject to conclusive judicial notice under the terms of that Rule. See United States v. Bello, 194 F.3d 18, 22â23 (1st Cir. 1999); Fed. R. Evid. 201(f) (making judicial notice non-conclusive in criminal cases). That approach avoids the pitfalls of the majorityâs more 40 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 41 of 59 sweeping view of legislative facts and aligns Rule 201 with the Constitutionâs requirements for factfinding in criminal cases. A. 1. It is bedrock constitutional law that the government must prove every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See United States v. Gaudin, 515 U.S. 506, 510 (1995); Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 477 (2000) (citing Gaudin). And the constitutional requirement that a factfinder (a jury, or, at a bench trial, a judge) must find a defendant guilty of every element of the crime extends to âthe facts necessary to establish each of those elements.â Sullivan v. Louisiana, 508 U.S. 275, 278 (1993) (emphasis added). In short, the Constitution â in this federal case, the Fifth and Sixth Amendments â âprotects the accused against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged.â In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364 (1970). Until recently, courts sometimes treated jurisdictional elements, and especially those going to territorial jurisdiction, as a kind of exception to this rule. Our court, for instance, has allowed convictions to stand even if territorial jurisdiction had been established only by a preponderance of the evidence. See United States v. Walker, 878 F.2d 1431, at *1 (4th Cir. 1989) (per curiam) (citing United States v. Bowers, 660 F.2d 527, 531 (5th Cir. 1981)). But we can no longer rely on those precedents because that is no longer a viable approach. The Supreme Court has since clarified that jurisdictional and substantive elements have the same status for these purposes, and that jurisdictional 41 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 42 of 59 elements, as well as substantive elements, âmust be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.â Torres v. Lynch, 578 U.S. 452, 467 (2016). I do not understand the government or the majority to dispute this general proposition. So we may take this constitutional command as our starting point. 2. Nor is there any dispute that questions of law, unlike questions of fact, fall outside this principle, and are for a court rather than a jury to decide. And I agree with the majority that âcriminal jurisdictional elements often contain an embedded legal componentâ or question, Maj. Op. at 10 â which I would describe, at least in most cases, as a question about the scope or âmeaning of the element that must be proved.â See Taylor v. United States, 579 U.S. 301, 308 (2016). Also like the majority, I think Taylor provides an excellent example. There, the Supreme Court explained that the government must prove at trial all facts necessary to show a defendantâs conduct satisfies the commerce element of the Hobbs Act. At the same time, the âmeaning of that elementâ â the kind of impact on interstate commerce required â is a question of law, not a question of fact. Id. at 308 (emphasis added); see also id. at 306 (treating as a question of law âhow far this commerce element extendsâ and âwhat the Government must prove to meet itâ). In Taylor, the Court answered that legal question by holding that the jurisdictional element was satisfied â the effect on commerce was sufficient â if a defendant targeted a drug dealer, attempting to rob him of drugs or drug proceeds. Id. at 308. So that is what the prosecution was required to prove beyond a 42 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 43 of 59 reasonable doubt: not only that Taylor committed a robbery, and but also that he âtargeted a marijuana dealerâs drugs or illegal proceeds.â Id. Another good example would be the felon-in-possession statute, which prohibits a person convicted of a felony from possessing a firearm or ammunition âin or affecting commerce.â 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). We have treated the scope of that jurisdictional element â âin or affecting commerceâ â as a question of law, holding that it extends to cover any weapon that has âpreviously traveled in interstate or foreign commerce.â United States v. Ervin, 131 F.4th 253, 260 (4th Cir. 2025). But there is also a factual component, requiring the government to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, conduct satisfying that element: not only that a person convicted of a felony possessed a firearm, but also that the firearm âhad travelled in interstate or foreign commerce at some point during its existence.â Id. at 259 (citation omitted); see also, e.g., United States v. Gallimore, 247 F.3d 134, 138 (4th Cir. 2001) (explaining that government may prove jurisdictional element at trial by âshowing that a firearm was manufactured outside the state where the defendant possessed itâ). The same is true here. I agree with the majority that 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d)âs âspecial territorial jurisdictionâ element has both factual and legal components. There is no dispute, for instance, that as a factual component of its case under § 1466A(d), the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt the location of Perezâs offense â specifically, that it was committed at FCI Petersburg. Nor do I dispute that the scope of the âspecial territorial jurisdictionâ element â âwhat the Government must prove to meet 43 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 44 of 59 it,â see Taylor, 579 U.S. at 306 â is a question of law, like the scope of the commerce element under the Hobbs Act or § 922(g)(1). But we have now decided, as a matter of law, that the scope of that element is defined by 18 U.S.C. § 7(3): Land falls within the âspecial territorial jurisdictionâ of the United States for purposes of § 1466A(d) when (roughly speaking) it is acquired by the federal government; the state consents to federal jurisdiction or cedes its own; and the federal government accepts jurisdiction. Some of those factors may themselves call for a purely legal analysis, as the majority explains, Maj. Op. at 20â21 â an evaluation of state statutes purportedly ceding jurisdiction, for instance, or of whether acts taken by the federal government to accept jurisdiction were done âin [a] manner prescribed by the laws of the State where the land is situated,â 40 U.S.C. § 3112(b). But, critically, others will call for findings of fact, as the majority also recognizes â whether the government acquired the property on which FCI Petersburg sits, and if so, when that acquisition occurred, because the timing may be critical to whether jurisdiction has been accepted. See Maj. Op. at 21. What the government did and when it did it â those are fact questions, not questions of law. And that, finally, is where I part ways with the majority â on the narrow but critical question of how those facts are to be found. In my view, showing that the government acquired FCI Petersburgâs land before 1940 in order to satisfy 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d)âs jurisdictional element is no different than showing that a defendant robbed a drug dealer to satisfy the Hobbs Actâs jurisdictional element, or that a gun traveled across state lines to satisfy § 922(g)(1)âs. Each is a fact necessary to establish an element of the offense with which the defendant has been charged, so each must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt 44 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 45 of 59 by the prosecution at trial. See Gaudin, 515 U.S. at 510; Sullivan, 508 U.S. at 278. The government, in other words, was right the first time. 3. The majority sees it differently â and again, I acknowledge, with support from some other circuits. On this understanding, the question of law in these cases is not just the scope of the special territorial jurisdiction element and âwhat the Government must prove to meet it.â See Taylor, 579 U.S. at 306. It is also a question of law whether the government has met the element â whether FCI Petersburg in fact falls within the scope of the United Statesâ special territorial jurisdiction under the 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) factors, because, inter alia, the United States did acquire the land on which the prison sits, and did acquire it before 1940. See Maj. Op. at 20â21 (concluding that whether a location falls within federal territorial jurisdiction is a question of law); see also, e.g., Davis, 726 F.3d at 365â66 (same). With respect, I do not understand how what gives every appearance of being a question of fact â say, when did the United States acquire the land under FCI Petersburg? â becomes a question of law. See Dupree v. Younger, 598 U.S. 729, 737 (2023) (purely legal question depends on âlaw books, not trial exhibitsâ). The answer cannot be in cases like Taylor, 579 U.S. 301, which, as described above, draw the line between law and fact differently. Nor should it rest on an intuition that the jurisdictional status of a federal prison will be so obvious that it cannot give rise to any meaningfully disputed questions of fact. See Dupree, 598 U.S. at 737 (â[A] purely legal question is, by definition, one whose answer is independent of disputed facts[.]â). Determining special territorial jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) is not a simple matter of looking at a map, and â[o]ne cannot simply assume 45 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 46 of 59 that a federal installation on federal land automatically comes within [f]ederal jurisdiction.â Davis, 726 F.3d at 366â67 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted) (discussing case in which federal prison was found to fall outside the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States). The majority suggests that its result is compelled by precedent, but I disagree. It is true that in Jones v. United States, the Supreme Court held that âcourts of justice are bound to take judicial notice of the territorial extent of the jurisdiction exercised by the government whose law they administer . . . as appearing from the public acts of the legislature and executive, although those acts are not formally put in evidence.â 137 U.S. 202, 214 (1890). But I would not put too much weight on Jones. The âpublic acts of the legislature and executiveâ referenced by the Jones Court sound very much like law â and judicial notice of law, as opposed to facts, is a commonplace and uncontroversial feature of judicial decision-making. See Lamar v. Micou, 114 U.S. 218, 223 (1885); Fed. R. Evid. 201 advisory committeeâs note to 1972 proposed rules (âAdvisory Committee Noteâ) (distinguishing between judicial notice of law and fact). 4 Perhaps for that reason, Jones affirmed a defendantâs conviction only after recounting the factual evidence presented by 4 The same is true of McGirt v. Oklahoma, 591 U.S. 894 (2020), on which the majority also relies. There, the Court was required to assess whether the defendant âcommit[ted] his crimes in Indian Country.â Id. at 898. Because it was âobviousâ and undisputed that Congress had established a reservation for the Creek Nation, id. at 899, the case turned on whether that reservation had been disestablished. And there âis only one placeâ courts may look â[t]o determine whether a tribe continues to hold a reservation,â the Court explained: âthe Acts of Congress.â Id. at 903. Taking ânoticeâ of and interpreting statutes and treaties is well within a courtâs prerogative, and does not raise the same issues as judicial notice of elemental facts. 46 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 47 of 59 the government at trial to prove jurisdiction. 137 U.S. at 204â08; see also United States v. Lovely, 319 F.2d 673, 676 (4th Cir. 1963) (âAt trial the Government introduced in evidence, as proof of asserted federal jurisdiction over the area in question, [public records] and an authenticated copy of a letter[.]â). 5 The majority also relies on our decision in United States v. Beyle, 782 F.3d 159 (4th Cir. 2015). But to my eye, that case stands only for the well-established Taylor proposition that the meaning of a jurisdictional element is a question of law for the court. There, the question was whether a yachtâs location was on the âhigh seasâ as that phrase is used in 18 U.S.C. § 7(1) to define the special maritime jurisdiction of the United States. Id. at 165â 66. Our court answered that question as a matter of law â just as we have now decided, as a matter of law, that the meaning of the âspecial territorial jurisdictionâ element under 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d) is keyed not to Erdos, 474 F.2d at 157, as the district court believed, but to the factors in 18 U.S.C. § 7(3). Maj. Op. at 28â30. In Beyle, our determination of the âtrue legal meaningâ of the phrase âhigh seasâ â areas farther than twelve nautical miles off shore â was enough to resolve the case, because the defendant was contesting only the legal standard; it was âundisputedâ at trial that the yacht was thirty to forty miles off shore. 782 F.3d at 164, 68â69 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). But here, the 5 That is also why Perez does not dispute (and nor do I) that a court could take judicial notice of the parts of the governmentâs documentary submission consisting of various state statutes or other statements of law. But here, the government has also asked us to rely on non-public documents like letters, internal government memoranda, deeds, and the work of private land surveyors â none of which has been authenticated, and none of which appear to fall within the scope of Jones as âpublic acts of the legislature and executive,â 137 U.S. at 214. 47 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 48 of 59 defense is the reverse: Perez challenges not our decision to adopt the 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) factors to define âspecial territorial jurisdiction,â but whether the facts establish that FCI Petersburg is within that jurisdiction so defined. Then there is the question of the Supreme Courtâs decision in United States v. Jackalow, 66 U.S. 484 (1861). In that case, the Court held that all the facts necessary to establish whether a criminal defendant committed his offense âout of the jurisdiction of any particular Stateâ â including the location of state boundary lines â were for a jury to decide. Id. at 486â88. As the majority candidly explains, Jackalowâs reasoning could be read to apply here, too, requiring the government to prove at trial all facts necessary to establish that FCI Petersburg falls within special territorial jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 7(3). Maj. Op. at 15. The majority ultimately reads Jackalow more narrowly, confining it to the venue context in which it arose, in part because of the Supreme Courtâs subsequent decision in Jones. Maj. Op. at 16 (âWhatâs more, Supreme Court decisions after Jackalow contradict Perezâs reading of that Civil War-era decision.â). I am inclined to read it more broadly, in part because I make less of Jones than the majority does. But I will match the majorityâs candor with my own: I am perfectly content to leave Jackalow â and most of these older cases â as a draw. Since they were decided, the Supreme Court has come to embrace as a near bright-line rule that every element of a criminal offense, including jurisdictional elements, must be proven at trial beyond a reasonable doubt. See Gaudin, 515 U.S. at 510; Torres, 578 U.S. at 467; see also Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490 (âOther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, 48 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 49 of 59 and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.â). It is enough for me that nothing in earlier cases unambiguously requires us to depart here from this more modern command. In sum, I take the same view of this case as the government did at trial: Under the Constitution, the prosecution was required to prove, at trial, the facts necessary to satisfy one of 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d)âs jurisdictional elements. If it wanted to establish that FCI Petersburg was within the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States under the correct legal standard â that laid out in § 7(3) â then it was required to prove if and when the government acquired the property on which the prison sits. Because the prosecution, as all agree, failed to do that, Perez is entitled to a judgment of acquittal. B. That leaves Federal Rule of Evidence 201, and the distinction between adjudicative and legislative facts on which the government and the majority rely. On my view, of course, this is something of a non-issue; if the Constitution required the prosecution to prove the facts around FCI Petersburgâs acquisition at Perezâs trial, as I believe it did, then the terms of Rule 201 are beside the point. But for the government and the majority, and the other courts adopting their view, whether those facts are adjudicative or legislative matters very much. Rule 201 governs only adjudicative facts, not legislative facts, see Fed. R. Evid. 201(a), and to âsafeguard[] the criminal defendantâs Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury,â it bars courts from taking conclusive judicial notice of adjudicative facts in criminal trials. Bello, 194 F.3d at 25; Fed. R. Evid. 201(f) (requiring court in criminal case to instruct âjury that it may or may not accept [a] noticed fact as conclusiveâ). So for the governmentâs theory of judicial notice to work, the facts in question here must be 49 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 50 of 59 legislative and not adjudicative. See Maj. Op. at 19; Silvers, 129 F.4th at 343; Davis, 726 F.3d at 365â67. The distinction between legislative and adjudicative facts is notoriously slippery. See Haley N. Proctor, Rethinking Legislative Facts, Rethinking Legislative Facts, 99 Notre Dame L. Rev. 955, 957, 975 (2024) (explaining that line-drawing in this area has âproven uncommonly difficultâ). But here, too, my view is different than the majorityâs. Some of this follows directly from my understanding of the constitutional issue in this case: I would not adopt a reading of Rule 201 that puts it on a collision course with the Constitutionâs requirements for factfinding in criminal adjudications. But even on its own terms, I have serious doubts about the majorityâs view of what counts as a âlegislativeâ fact, subject to judicial notice at any time â even on appeal of a criminal conviction â and outside the constraints of Rule 201. 1. For the government and the majority, what makes the facts related to the United Statesâ acquisition of FCI Petersburg âlegislativeâ is primarily their characteristics. Facts involving âestablished truthsâ that âdo not change from case to case but apply universally,â like whether and when the United States acquired the land under FCI Petersburg, are legislative and not adjudicative. See Maj. Op. at 20 (quoting United States v. Gould, 536 F.2d 216, 220 (8th Cir. 1976)); see also Br. of United States at 23 (â[A]djudicative facts focus on a defendantâs acts whereas legislative facts touch on broader non-case-specific matters.â). 50 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 51 of 59 Our circuit has not adopted that test, but others have, some in this very context. See, e.g., Davis, 726 F.3d at 366. This characteristic-based approach, however, has been widely criticized. It can be hard to conceptualize or identify the innate features of a fact. See 21B Wright & Millerâs Federal Practice and Procedure § 5103.2 (2d ed. 2025) (âFederal Practice and Procedureâ) (â[S]ometimes judicial definitions wrongly suppose that âlegislative factsâ have some intrinsic quality that can be used to identify them.â). Facts that can be described as universal also can be ârestated in ways that are both particular and concrete,â so that how a court chooses to formulate a finding may âalter [the] procedural limitsâ that apply. Proctor, supra, at 979. And perhaps most important, there is âno obvious place to draw a line beyond which a fact becomes general enough to be legislative.â Id. In my view, this is a case in point. Without a principled stopping point, the governmentâs conception of what counts as a legislative fact sweeps broadly indeed. Consider, again, the felon-in-possession statute, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). We, like the government, take for granted that to satisfy § 922(g)(1)âs jurisdictional element, the government must prove at trial that a defendantâs gun âhas previously traveled in interstate or foreign commerce.â Ervin, 131 F.4th at 260; see also, e.g., Gallimore, 247 F.3d at 136, 138; United States v. Smoot, 690 F.3d 215, 222â23 (4th Cir. 2012). 6 But why? A gunâs 6 Indeed, we have held that a § 922(g)(1) defendant who refuses to stipulate to a gunâs past movements across state lines puts the government to a burden of proof at trial so substantial that he may forgo any credit for acceptance of responsibility. United States v. Cheatwood, No. 22-4652, 2025 WL 18098, at *5, *7 (4th Cir. Jan. 2, 2025) (affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion after oral argument). 51 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 52 of 59 history at the time it is possessed by a defendant is an âestablished truthâ that âappl[ies] universally,â Maj. Op. at 20; where a gun was manufactured and sold does not change from case to case, and whether it has previously crossed state lines often will have nothing to do with âa defendantâs acts,â see Br. of United States at 23; cf. Maj. Op. at 23 n.9. Moreover, our practice of âtasking a juryâ with determining a gunâs jurisdictional status leaves open the same possibility that worries the government and the majority here: If two defendants were charged under § 922(g)(1) with possession of the same gun, juries could reach âconflicting decisions as to federal jurisdiction over an identical [firearm] â a status which by its nature either exists or doesnât exist.â Maj. Op. at 23. 7 Or consider this very case. Recall that at Perezâs trial, the government sought to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the photocopier used by Perez had travelled through foreign commerce, as an alternative means of satisfying the 18 U.S.C. § 1466A jurisdictional element. But where the photocopier was manufactured and put together is also an unchanging and âuniversalâ fact that would apply in any case involving its illegal use at FCI Petersburg, and it has nothing to do with Perezâs actions. If the governmentâs theory is right, then it might have saved itself a lot of time and effort â and us the 300 pages 7 At oral argument, the government indicated some receptiveness to the idea that its theory might also relieve it of the need to prove a gunâs movement in interstate or foreign commerce under § 922(g)(1). In a subsequent 28(j) letter, however, the government clarified that it was not taking the position that a gunâs movement in commerce is a âlegislative factâ that may be judicially noticed in a § 922(g)(1) prosecution. But to my mind, at least, it provided no persuasive ground for distinguishing § 922(g)(1)âs jurisdictional element from the one before us today. And I would not be surprised if the government, once we adopt its position in this case, were to reconsider and seek to apply the same logic to the jurisdictional element of § 922(g)(1) and other criminal statutes. 52 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 53 of 59 of documents â by simply presenting the district court with the actual serial number of the photocopier and asking the court to take judicial notice that it was assembled overseas. I could go on, but there is no need to belabor the point. If all facts that can be characterized as âuniversalâ count as legislative and not adjudicative, there is no easy way to cabin the results. And it is not just that whatever facts fall within this capacious âlegislativeâ bucket can be judicially noticed. Because those facts are not adjudicative, they also can be judicially noticed free of any constraint under Rule 201. And that presents a whole second order of problems. Rule 201 does more than preclude conclusive judicial notice of adjudicative facts in a criminal trial. It also guarantees a criminal defendant the right to be heard âon the propriety of taking judicial notice and the nature of the fact to be noticed.â Fed. R. Evid. 201(e); see Holmes v. South Carolina, 547 U.S. 319, 324 (2006) (â[T]he Constitution guarantees criminal defendants a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense.â (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). And it limits judicial notice of adjudicative facts to those that are ânot subject to reasonable disputeâ because they are âgenerally knownâ or can be âaccurately and readily determinedâ from sources of unimpeachable accuracy. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). But none of that applies to legislative facts. No matter how genuinely and reasonably disputed a fact on which FCI Petersburgâs jurisdiction rests, a court may take judicial notice, and it may do so by reference to sources whose accuracy is also reasonably disputed. It could do so without first giving a criminal defendant a meaningful opportunity to object. And because, as the majority explains, Rule 201 has no application to legislative 53 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 54 of 59 facts, there also is room for a court of appeals to take judicial notice of a legislative fact in the first instance â even after a purported conviction in a criminal case. See Maj. Op. at 20; Davis, 726 F.3d at 367â68 (adopting same position). Again, this case provides all the example that is needed. Perez was convicted at the end of his bench trial. But as of now, as everyone agrees, the jurisdictional element of his offense has yet to be proven. To fix that defect, the government asks us to analyze, for the first time on appeal, over 300 exceedingly dense pages of documents, which it produced as an attachment to its appellate brief and with an accompanying motion for judicial notice. Those documents were never presented to a trial court, authenticated, or admitted into evidence. Perez saw them for the first time when the government filed its appellate brief, and had only the time â and page-limited opportunity provided by an appellate reply brief to respond â which he used to raise what appear to be genuine questions about the documentsâ import. Reply Br. of Appellant at 19 (describing questions raised by fact that âaccording to the plat maps and deeds, the United States acquired different parcels at different time[s] and in different ways, which it combined to form first Camp Lee, and then subdivided later to convey to BOP to build and operate FCI Petersburgâ). And were we to take the government up on its invitation, we would be effectively convicting Perez on appeal, notwithstanding his absence from our appellate proceedings. Cf. United States v. Gagnon, 470 U.S. 522, 526 (1985) (per curiam) (discussing constitutional right of defendant to âbe present at a proceeding whenever his presence has a relation, reasonably substantial, to the fulness of his opportunity to defend against a chargeâ) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); Fed. R. Crim. P. 43(a)(2). 54 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 55 of 59 I appreciate the majorityâs decision not to exercise what it views as its discretion to take judicial notice, on appeal, of the facts necessary to satisfy the jurisdictional element of Perezâs offense, and instead to remand to the district court for a first assessment. Maj. Op. at 30. And I hope the district court, mindful of the criminal context, will exercise its discretion to provide at least some of the protections contemplated by Rule 201. But all of this is a matter of discretion. As the majority recognizes, its generous understanding of legislative facts would allow future appellate panels to go ahead and decide, post- conviction, whether every element of a criminal offense has been satisfied, even if that means wading through unauthenticated documents produced for the first time on appeal, looking for an answer that is not obvious on their face. Id. For me, that is reason enough to be concerned about its proposed definition of legislative facts. 2. There is an alternative approach to defining legislative facts, focused not on a factâs supposed innate characteristics but on the use to which it is being put. See, e.g., Federal Practice and Procedure, supra, § 5103.2 & nn.17â18 (factsâ status as legislative or adjudicative should depend on âthe use to which they are put in the case, not by what they are like in the wildâ). Under this functional standard, a fact used in a legislatureâs lawmaking process or a courtâs legal reasoning â to determine the meaning of a law, say, or to âformulat[e] a legal principleâ â is a âlegislativeâ fact. See Fed. R. Evid. 201(a) Advisory Committee Note (describing legislative facts). A fact that relates to a particular case â one âto which the law is applied in the process of adjudicationâ â is an adjudicative fact, subject to the limits of Rule 201. Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). 55 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 56 of 59 In Bello, the First Circuit applied this functional approach to the same question in front of us today: Are the facts necessary to show the jurisdictional status of a federal prison under 18 U.S.C. § 7(3) legislative or adjudicative? 194 F.3d at 22â23. The court outlined the test as follows: âWhether a fact is adjudicative or legislative depends not on the nature of the fact â e.g., who owns the land â but rather on the use made of it (i.e., whether it is a fact germane to what happened in the case or a fact useful in formulating common law policy or interpreting a statute) and the same fact can play either role depending on context.â Id. at 22. And it had little difficulty applying that standard, concluding that â[w]here the prison sits is an element of the offense and unquestionably an adjudicative fact.â Id. at 23. 8 I agree. The facts we are being asked to judicially notice on appeal â including whether and when the federal government acquired the land on which FCI Petersburg sits â are not facts being used to make law, but facts âto which the law is applied in the process of adjudication.â Fed. R. Evid. 201(a) Advisory Committee Note (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The legal question, again, is the meaning of âspecial territorial jurisdictionâ as used in 18 U.S.C. § 1466A(d) â which we now know tracks the factors laid out in § 7(3). Whether and when the government acquired FCI Petersburgâs land is a fact 8 The Bello court sustained the defendantâs conviction because the district court followed Rule 201âs direction and left the final determination of the prisonâs jurisdictional status to the jury, instructing it that it need not accept the noticed facts as conclusive. 194 F.3d at 25. Whether that mechanism is sufficient to protect a defendantâs Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights, and how it would apply in a bench trial like this one, is not before us today, on Perezâs purely constitutional claim. 56 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 57 of 59 to which that standard, now undisputed, will be applied, to ascertain whether § 1466A(d)âs jurisdictional element has been satisfied. In holding those facts up against the legal standard, in other words, the factfinder will be engaged in âlaw application,â not the making of law. Proctor, supra, at 1004 (emphasis added). 9 In my view, this approach has distinct virtues. Most obviously, it heads off a conflict with the Constitutionâs requirements for factfinding in criminal cases, by deeming âadjudicativeâ the same facts that must be found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments â those necessary to satisfy an element of the offense. It also relieves courts of the metaphysical task of pinning down a factâs inherent nature or characteristic, substituting a more functional approach recognizing that a factâs coloration can change with the use to which it is put. See Bello, 194 F.3d at 22 (explaining that the same fact can be legislative and adjudicative âdepending on contextâ). I am under no illusion that this approach, or any other, can eliminate all the complexities or edge cases when it comes to distinguishing legislative from adjudicative facts. But on balance, I think the First Circuitâs approach has the most to commend it. Finally, to the extent the majority argues that our own precedent compels a different result, I disagree. Indeed, as the majority recognizes, Maj. Op. 22â25, at least one of our 9 The majority also refers to this more functional standard once or twice. See Maj. Op. at 20 (âCourts judicially notice [legislative facts] when assessing the constitutional validity of, or interpreting, a statute.â). But I understand the majority to apply it only in connection with its determination â with which Perez and I agree â that some portion of the § 7(3) analysis will involve the evaluation of state and federal statutes, and that such materials are undoubtedly legislative facts that can be noticed on appeal. Maj. Op. at 20â 21. 57 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 58 of 59 prior decisions can be read as embracing the proposition that facts related to a jurisdictional element are adjudicative, not legislative. In United States v. Burroughs, 564 F.2d 1111, 1115 n.7 (4th Cir. 1977), abrogated on other grounds by United States v. Steed, 674 F.2d 284, 285 n.2 (en banc), we refused to âtake judicial notice on appeal of an unproven essential element of a criminal offense.â If, as the majority would have it, whether the defendantâs use of a telephone satisfied an interstate commerce jurisdictional element rested on legislative rather than adjudicative facts, then Rule 201 would pose no obstacle to taking judicial notice of those facts on appeal. The majority puts more weight on United States v. Lavender, 602 F.2d 639, 641 (4th Cir. 1979), in which we indeed seem to have taken judicial notice, on appeal, that the Blue Ridge Parkway falls within the special territorial jurisdiction of the United States â something we should not have done if that fact is adjudicative and thus covered by Rule 201. At the same time, however, the court was clear that it could do so because the relevant facts were âcommonly known,â id. â a requirement for notice of adjudicative facts under Rule 201(b). Beyond that, the Lavender court never grappled with Rule 201, nor with the three-factor standard for proving special territorial jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 7(3). So I would not put as much weight on Lavender as the majority does. See R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377, 386 n.5 (1992) (declining to treat as conclusive cases where an issue is ânot presented or even envisionedâ). I think it is fair to say, though, that our case law is a bit opaque and perhaps not entirely consistent on the question at hand: whether facts being used to prove a 58 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4039 Doc: 58 Filed: 08/12/2025 Pg: 59 of 59 jurisdictional element of a criminal offense are legislative or adjudicative under Rule 201. 10 That issue appears to have been rarely, if ever, pressed directly by litigants or carefully analyzed by our court. But while a lack of opportunity for close examination may have generated some tension in our precedent, I see nothing that would foreclose the First Circuitâs functional approach, and for the reasons given above, I believe it is the sounder option. III. As I said at the start, this is a difficult question on which several courts have adopted the position of the government and the majority, and I fully respect the majorityâs careful and candid analysis. In my view, though, the answer to the case becomes clear when it is stripped down to its essentials: The prosecution was required by the Constitution to prove at trial, beyond a reasonable doubt, all facts necessary to satisfy the jurisdictional element of the offense with which Perez was charged. It tried to do so and failed twice over. As a result, Perez is entitled to a judgment of acquittal. For that reason, I respectfully dissent. 10 As I have noted before, that question â how best to read and apply Rule 201 â is of course separate from the constitutional question of whether the Fifth and Sixth Amendments require the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the facts necessary to satisfy the jurisdictional element of a criminal offense. In my view, as discussed above, the Supreme Court has made clear, since the time of Burroughs and Lavender, that whatever the dictates of Rule 201, every fact necessary to satisfy any element of a criminal offense must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt by the prosecution at trial. See Gaudin, 515 U.S. at 522â23; Torres, 578 U.S. at 467. But the scope of Rule 201 is critical to the governmentâs theory and is important in its own right. 59
Case Information
- Court
- 4th Cir.
- Decision Date
- August 12, 2025
- Status
- Precedential