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Comprehensive guide to federal direct appeal procedures, deadlines, standards of review, and practical advice
 
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'''Direct Appeal Procedures''' in the federal criminal justice system govern the process by which a defendant who has been convicted and sentenced in a United States District Court may seek review by a United States Court of Appeals. The right to one appeal of right is guaranteed by the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure (FRAP) and the Constitution. Appeals are filed in one of the 13 federal circuits (including the D.C. Circuit and the Federal Circuit for certain cases) and must be initiated within 14 calendar days of the entry of either the judgment or the order being appealed (FRAP 4(b)(1)(A)). The appeal is docketed in the circuit where the district court is located and is decided by a three-judge panel unless the case is heard en banc.
{{Infobox Legal Process
| name = Direct Appeal Procedures
| jurisdiction = United States Federal Courts
| statute = 18 U.S.C. § 3742; 28 U.S.C. § 1291
| authority = United States Courts of Appeals
| time_limit = 14 days after sentencing (criminal)
| related = Post-Conviction Relief, Habeas Corpus
}}


The Bureau of Prisons has no role in the appellate process; jurisdiction remains with the judiciary. Most appeals are resolved on the briefs without oral argument, and the vast majority of convictions and sentences are affirmed. In fiscal year 2024, defendants prevailed in whole or in part in approximately 8–10% of criminal appeals terminated on the merits.<ref>https://www.uscourts.gov/statistics-reports/federal-court-management-statistics-2024 Federal Court Management Statistics 2024 – Appeals</ref><ref>https://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frap/rule_4 Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4 – Appeal as of Right</ref>
'''Direct appeal procedures''' in the federal criminal justice system provide defendants the right to challenge their '''conviction''' and '''sentence''' in a United States Court of Appeals. A direct appeal is the first and most important opportunity to correct legal errors that occurred during the trial or sentencing process. Under '''Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b)''', a notice of appeal must be filed within '''14 days''' of the entry of judgment, making timely action critical.<ref name="frap4">Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, Rule 4(b).</ref>


== Summary ==
== Overview ==


A direct criminal appeal is initiated by filing a Notice of Appeal (Form AO 24A or equivalent) with the district court clerk within 14 days of judgment. The appellant must order transcripts, designate the record, and file an opening brief within 40 days of the record being transmitted (FRAP 31). The government files its response within 30 days, and a reply brief is optional within 21 days.
=== What Is a Direct Appeal? ===


Issues that may be raised include:
A direct appeal is a legal proceeding in which a defendant asks a higher court (the Court of Appeals) to review the proceedings in the lower court (the District Court) for legal errors. Unlike a new trial, an appeal is based on the '''existing record''' from the district court proceedings.
* Trial errors (evidentiary rulings, jury instructions, prosecutorial misconduct)
* Sufficiency of the evidence
* Constitutional violations
* Sentencing errors (miscalculation of Guidelines, failure to consider § 3553(a) factors, or substantive unreasonableness)


Issues not raised in the district court are generally reviewed only for plain error. The court of appeals may affirm, reverse, vacate, remand for resentencing, or order a new trial. Further review by the Supreme Court via petition for writ of certiorari is discretionary and granted in fewer than 1% of cases.
'''Key characteristics:'''
* Review is limited to issues preserved in the district court (with some exceptions)
* The appellate court does not hear new evidence or witness testimony
* The standard of review varies depending on the type of error alleged
* The government generally cannot appeal an acquittal (Double Jeopardy)
* Both the defendant and government may appeal sentencing decisions


== Timeline and Key Deadlines ==
=== Right to Appeal ===


* Judgment entered → 14 calendar days to file Notice of Appeal
'''Constitutional basis:'''
* Record transmitted → 40 days for appellant’s opening brief
* While there is no constitutional right to appeal in criminal cases, federal statute provides for appellate review
* Government response → 30 days after appellant’s brief
* 18 U.S.C. § 3742 specifically governs appeals of sentences
* Reply brief → 21 days after government response
* 28 U.S.C. § 1291 provides general jurisdiction for appeals from final decisions
* Median time from notice of appeal to disposition: 10–12 months (varies by circuit)


Late filing is jurisdictional and almost never excused.
'''Waiver considerations:'''
* Many plea agreements contain appeal waivers
* Waivers are generally enforceable but have exceptions
* Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel may survive waivers
* Claims that the sentence exceeded the statutory maximum survive waivers
* Challenges to the voluntariness of the plea itself survive waivers


== Anders and Cronic Procedures ==
== Timeline and Filing Requirements ==


If appointed counsel finds the appeal wholly frivolous, counsel may file an ''Anders'' brief (''Anders v. California'', 1967) and seek to withdraw. The defendant is given an opportunity to file a pro se response. In rare cases of complete denial of counsel or structural error, reversal is automatic (''United States v. Cronic'', 1984).
=== Notice of Appeal: The 14-Day Deadline ===


== Terminology ==
'''Critical deadline:'''
* The notice of appeal must be filed within '''14 days''' of the entry of judgment
* This deadline is jurisdictional and cannot be extended by the court
* Missing this deadline permanently waives the right to direct appeal
* The notice is filed in the district court, not the appellate court


* '''Notice of Appeal''' – One-page document that starts the appeal (FRAP 3)
'''What constitutes "entry of judgment":'''
* '''Anders Brief''' – Motion to withdraw when counsel finds no non-frivolous issues
* The judgment is entered when it is recorded on the criminal docket
* '''Plain Error Review''' – Standard for unpreserved claims (FRAP 52(b))
* Oral pronouncement of sentence is not the entry of judgment
* '''Certificate of Appealability (COA)''' – Required only for § 2255/2254 appeals, not direct criminal appeals
* The written judgment (typically prepared by the probation office) triggers the deadline
* '''En Banc''' – Full-circuit rehearing (rare in criminal cases)
* '''Mandate''' – Formal order issued by the court of appeals returning jurisdiction to the district court


== Additional Resources ==
=== Extensions and Tolling ===


* [https://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frap Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure (Cornell LII)]
'''Limited extension authority:'''
* [https://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/content/view.php?pk_id=0000001003 Ninth Circuit Criminal Justice Act Appellate Guide (representative example)]
* The district court may extend the filing deadline by up to 30 days upon a showing of excusable neglect or good cause
* [https://www.fd.org/sites/default/files/criminal_defense_topics/direct_appeal/direct_appeal_handbook_2025.pdf Federal Defender Direct Appeal Handbook (2025)]
* Extension requests must be filed within 30 days of the original deadline
* [https://jnet.ao.dxc.technology/court-services/criminal-cases/appellate-procedures Appellate Procedures – U.S. Courts]
* No further extensions are available
* Incarceration-related delays may constitute good cause
 
=== Post-Trial Motions That Toll the Deadline ===
 
Certain post-trial motions suspend the appeal deadline until the motion is resolved:
* '''Motion for judgment of acquittal''' (Rule 29)
* '''Motion for new trial''' (Rule 33)
* '''Motion for arrest of judgment''' (Rule 34)
 
The 14-day appeal period begins anew after the district court rules on these motions.
 
== The Appellate Process ==
 
=== Step 1: Notice of Appeal ===
 
'''Filing requirements:'''
* Simple document identifying the defendant, the judgment appealed from, and the court to which the appeal is taken
* Filed in the district court clerk's office
* Court-appointed counsel for indigent defendants
* Criminal Justice Act (CJA) panel attorneys or Federal Public Defenders handle most appeals
 
=== Step 2: Ordering the Transcript ===
 
'''Record preparation:'''
* Appellant must order transcripts of relevant proceedings within 14 days of filing the notice
* Transcripts include trial proceedings, sentencing hearing, and relevant pretrial hearings
* Court reporter has 30 days to prepare transcripts (extensions available)
* Record on appeal includes all documents filed in the district court
 
=== Step 3: Briefing Schedule ===
 
'''Written arguments:'''
* '''Appellant's opening brief''': Due 40 days after the record is filed (typically)
* '''Government's response brief''': Due 30 days after appellant's brief
* '''Appellant's reply brief''': Due 21 days after government's brief (optional)
* Page limits: Typically 30 pages for principal briefs, 15 for reply (or word count equivalent)
* Extensions routinely granted upon motion
 
=== Step 4: Oral Argument ===
 
'''Hearing before the panel:'''
* Cases are assigned to three-judge panels
* Oral argument is not guaranteed; the court may decide on the briefs alone
* Each side typically receives 10-15 minutes for argument
* Judges may ask questions throughout the argument
* Quality of oral advocacy can influence outcomes
 
=== Step 5: Decision ===
 
'''Types of decisions:'''
* '''Published opinion''': Creates binding precedent within the circuit
* '''Unpublished opinion''': May be cited but is not binding precedent
* '''Summary affirmance''': Brief order affirming without detailed analysis
* Decisions typically issued weeks to months after argument
 
=== Step 6: Further Review ===
 
'''Post-decision options:'''
* '''Petition for rehearing''' - Ask the panel to reconsider (14 days)
* '''Petition for rehearing en banc''' - Ask the full circuit to review (14 days)
* '''Petition for certiorari''' - Ask the Supreme Court to review (90 days)
* Supreme Court grants certiorari in less than 1% of petitions
 
== Standards of Review ==
 
The standard of review determines how much deference the appellate court gives to the district court's decision:
 
=== De Novo Review ===
 
'''No deference - the appellate court decides independently:'''
* Questions of law (statutory interpretation, constitutional questions)
* Jury instructions
* Sufficiency of the indictment
* Legal elements of the offense
 
=== Abuse of Discretion ===
 
'''High deference - reversal only if the decision was unreasonable:'''
* Evidentiary rulings
* Sentencing decisions (post-''Booker'' reasonableness review)
* Discovery rulings
* Trial management decisions
 
=== Clear Error ===
 
'''Factual findings reversed only if clearly wrong:'''
* District court's factual findings at sentencing
* Findings supporting suppression rulings
* Factual determinations in Guidelines calculations
 
=== Plain Error ===
 
'''Strictest standard - for unpreserved errors:'''
* Error that was not objected to at trial
* Must show: (1) error, (2) that is plain, (3) affecting substantial rights, (4) seriously affecting the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings
* Very difficult standard to meet; reversal is rare
 
== Common Issues on Appeal ==
 
=== Trial Issues ===
 
'''Frequently raised claims:'''
* Sufficiency of the evidence to support conviction
* Improper admission or exclusion of evidence
* Erroneous jury instructions
* Prosecutorial misconduct during trial
* Ineffective assistance of trial counsel (rarely successful on direct appeal)
* Violation of the Confrontation Clause
* Fourth Amendment suppression issues
 
=== Sentencing Issues ===
 
'''Guideline and statutory challenges:'''
* Incorrect Guidelines calculation (offense level, criminal history)
* Procedural unreasonableness (failure to properly calculate Guidelines)
* Substantive unreasonableness (sentence is too harsh or too lenient)
* Application of mandatory minimums
* Improper enhancements or failure to apply reductions
* Restitution calculations
 
=== Plea Agreement Issues ===
 
'''Challenges to guilty pleas:'''
* Plea was not knowing and voluntary
* Inadequate Rule 11 colloquy
* Breach of plea agreement by the government
* Ineffective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations
 
== Appeal Waivers in Plea Agreements ==
 
=== Prevalence and Enforceability ===
 
Most federal plea agreements contain appeal waivers:
* Approximately 95% of federal plea agreements include some form of appeal waiver
* Courts generally enforce appeal waivers if entered knowingly and voluntarily
* The scope of the waiver depends on its specific language
 
=== Exceptions to Appeal Waivers ===
 
Even with a valid waiver, defendants may appeal:
* '''Sentence exceeding the statutory maximum'''
* '''Ineffective assistance of counsel''' affecting the validity of the waiver itself
* '''Involuntary plea''' - challenges to the voluntariness of the plea
* '''Racial discrimination''' in sentencing
* '''Breach of the plea agreement''' by the government
 
== Anders Briefs and Frivolous Appeals ==
 
=== When Counsel Finds No Merit ===
 
If appointed counsel determines the appeal lacks merit:
* Counsel must file an '''Anders brief''' (named after ''Anders v. California'', 386 U.S. 738 (1967))
* The brief identifies potential issues and explains why they lack merit
* The defendant is given an opportunity to file a pro se supplemental brief
* The court independently reviews the record for appealable issues
* If the court agrees the appeal is frivolous, it may dismiss
 
=== Pro Se Filings ===
 
* Defendants may file pro se supplemental briefs
* Courts construe pro se filings liberally
* Pro se filings may raise issues counsel did not identify
* Quality varies significantly
 
== Bail Pending Appeal ==
 
=== Standard for Release ===
 
Under 18 U.S.C. § 3143(b), a defendant seeking bail pending appeal must show:
* The appeal raises a '''substantial question of law or fact'''
* The question is likely to result in reversal, a new trial, or a sentence with no imprisonment
* The defendant is not a flight risk or danger to the community
* The defendant is not likely to flee or pose a danger
 
=== Practical Reality ===
 
* Bail pending appeal is rarely granted in federal cases
* Most defendants begin serving their sentences during the appeal
* The appeal process typically takes 12-18 months
* Time served during appeal counts toward the sentence
 
== Statistics ==
 
=== Federal Appeal Outcomes ===
 
'''Approximate reversal rates:'''
* Overall reversal rate in criminal appeals: approximately 7-10%
* Reversal rate for sentencing issues: approximately 15-20%
* Reversal rate for sufficiency of evidence: approximately 3-5%
* Most reversals result in remand for resentencing rather than acquittal
 
=== Timeline ===
 
'''Typical duration:'''
* Notice of appeal to briefing completion: 6-9 months
* Briefing to oral argument: 2-6 months
* Argument to decision: 1-6 months
* Total process: typically 12-18 months
 
== Practical Advice ==
 
=== For Defendants ===
 
* '''File your notice of appeal within 14 days''' - This deadline is absolute
* '''Request appointed counsel immediately''' if you cannot afford an attorney
* '''Preserve all issues at trial''' by making timely objections
* '''Cooperate with your appellate attorney''' in identifying potential issues
* '''Understand the limitations''' - appeals are not retrials
 
=== For Families ===
 
* '''Ensure the notice of appeal is filed on time''' - Help track the deadline
* '''Contact the Federal Public Defender's office''' if your family member needs representation
* '''Be patient''' - the appellate process takes 12-18 months or longer
* '''Understand that most appeals are unsuccessful''' - manage expectations
 
== See Also ==
 
* [[Federal Habeas Corpus: Section 2255]]
* [[Federal Sentencing Guidelines]]
* [[Plea Agreements and Cooperation]]
* [[Ineffective Assistance of Counsel]]
* [[Post-Conviction Relief]]
* [[Supreme Court and Criminal Law]]


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />
== External Links ==
* [https://www.uscourts.gov/rules-policies/current-rules-practice-procedure Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure]
* [https://www.fd.org/ Federal Defender Services]
* [https://www.uscourts.gov/statistics-reports/federal-judicial-caseload-statistics Federal Judicial Caseload Statistics]
[[Category:Legal Processes]]
[[Category:Appeals]]
[[Category:Criminal Defense]]
[[Category:Federal Courts]]
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|title_separator= - Prisonpedia
|description=Complete guide to federal direct appeal procedures in criminal cases. Learn about filing deadlines, standards of review, common issues, and practical advice for defendants.
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{{MetaDescription|Guide to federal direct appeal procedures including the 14-day filing deadline, standards of review, common appellate issues, and practical advice for criminal defendants.}}

Latest revision as of 07:22, 13 February 2026

Template:Infobox Legal Process

Direct appeal procedures in the federal criminal justice system provide defendants the right to challenge their conviction and sentence in a United States Court of Appeals. A direct appeal is the first and most important opportunity to correct legal errors that occurred during the trial or sentencing process. Under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b), a notice of appeal must be filed within 14 days of the entry of judgment, making timely action critical.[1]

Overview

What Is a Direct Appeal?

A direct appeal is a legal proceeding in which a defendant asks a higher court (the Court of Appeals) to review the proceedings in the lower court (the District Court) for legal errors. Unlike a new trial, an appeal is based on the existing record from the district court proceedings.

Key characteristics:

  • Review is limited to issues preserved in the district court (with some exceptions)
  • The appellate court does not hear new evidence or witness testimony
  • The standard of review varies depending on the type of error alleged
  • The government generally cannot appeal an acquittal (Double Jeopardy)
  • Both the defendant and government may appeal sentencing decisions

Right to Appeal

Constitutional basis:

  • While there is no constitutional right to appeal in criminal cases, federal statute provides for appellate review
  • 18 U.S.C. § 3742 specifically governs appeals of sentences
  • 28 U.S.C. § 1291 provides general jurisdiction for appeals from final decisions

Waiver considerations:

  • Many plea agreements contain appeal waivers
  • Waivers are generally enforceable but have exceptions
  • Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel may survive waivers
  • Claims that the sentence exceeded the statutory maximum survive waivers
  • Challenges to the voluntariness of the plea itself survive waivers

Timeline and Filing Requirements

Notice of Appeal: The 14-Day Deadline

Critical deadline:

  • The notice of appeal must be filed within 14 days of the entry of judgment
  • This deadline is jurisdictional and cannot be extended by the court
  • Missing this deadline permanently waives the right to direct appeal
  • The notice is filed in the district court, not the appellate court

What constitutes "entry of judgment":

  • The judgment is entered when it is recorded on the criminal docket
  • Oral pronouncement of sentence is not the entry of judgment
  • The written judgment (typically prepared by the probation office) triggers the deadline

Extensions and Tolling

Limited extension authority:

  • The district court may extend the filing deadline by up to 30 days upon a showing of excusable neglect or good cause
  • Extension requests must be filed within 30 days of the original deadline
  • No further extensions are available
  • Incarceration-related delays may constitute good cause

Post-Trial Motions That Toll the Deadline

Certain post-trial motions suspend the appeal deadline until the motion is resolved:

  • Motion for judgment of acquittal (Rule 29)
  • Motion for new trial (Rule 33)
  • Motion for arrest of judgment (Rule 34)

The 14-day appeal period begins anew after the district court rules on these motions.

The Appellate Process

Step 1: Notice of Appeal

Filing requirements:

  • Simple document identifying the defendant, the judgment appealed from, and the court to which the appeal is taken
  • Filed in the district court clerk's office
  • Court-appointed counsel for indigent defendants
  • Criminal Justice Act (CJA) panel attorneys or Federal Public Defenders handle most appeals

Step 2: Ordering the Transcript

Record preparation:

  • Appellant must order transcripts of relevant proceedings within 14 days of filing the notice
  • Transcripts include trial proceedings, sentencing hearing, and relevant pretrial hearings
  • Court reporter has 30 days to prepare transcripts (extensions available)
  • Record on appeal includes all documents filed in the district court

Step 3: Briefing Schedule

Written arguments:

  • Appellant's opening brief: Due 40 days after the record is filed (typically)
  • Government's response brief: Due 30 days after appellant's brief
  • Appellant's reply brief: Due 21 days after government's brief (optional)
  • Page limits: Typically 30 pages for principal briefs, 15 for reply (or word count equivalent)
  • Extensions routinely granted upon motion

Step 4: Oral Argument

Hearing before the panel:

  • Cases are assigned to three-judge panels
  • Oral argument is not guaranteed; the court may decide on the briefs alone
  • Each side typically receives 10-15 minutes for argument
  • Judges may ask questions throughout the argument
  • Quality of oral advocacy can influence outcomes

Step 5: Decision

Types of decisions:

  • Published opinion: Creates binding precedent within the circuit
  • Unpublished opinion: May be cited but is not binding precedent
  • Summary affirmance: Brief order affirming without detailed analysis
  • Decisions typically issued weeks to months after argument

Step 6: Further Review

Post-decision options:

  • Petition for rehearing - Ask the panel to reconsider (14 days)
  • Petition for rehearing en banc - Ask the full circuit to review (14 days)
  • Petition for certiorari - Ask the Supreme Court to review (90 days)
  • Supreme Court grants certiorari in less than 1% of petitions

Standards of Review

The standard of review determines how much deference the appellate court gives to the district court's decision:

De Novo Review

No deference - the appellate court decides independently:

  • Questions of law (statutory interpretation, constitutional questions)
  • Jury instructions
  • Sufficiency of the indictment
  • Legal elements of the offense

Abuse of Discretion

High deference - reversal only if the decision was unreasonable:

  • Evidentiary rulings
  • Sentencing decisions (post-Booker reasonableness review)
  • Discovery rulings
  • Trial management decisions

Clear Error

Factual findings reversed only if clearly wrong:

  • District court's factual findings at sentencing
  • Findings supporting suppression rulings
  • Factual determinations in Guidelines calculations

Plain Error

Strictest standard - for unpreserved errors:

  • Error that was not objected to at trial
  • Must show: (1) error, (2) that is plain, (3) affecting substantial rights, (4) seriously affecting the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings
  • Very difficult standard to meet; reversal is rare

Common Issues on Appeal

Trial Issues

Frequently raised claims:

  • Sufficiency of the evidence to support conviction
  • Improper admission or exclusion of evidence
  • Erroneous jury instructions
  • Prosecutorial misconduct during trial
  • Ineffective assistance of trial counsel (rarely successful on direct appeal)
  • Violation of the Confrontation Clause
  • Fourth Amendment suppression issues

Sentencing Issues

Guideline and statutory challenges:

  • Incorrect Guidelines calculation (offense level, criminal history)
  • Procedural unreasonableness (failure to properly calculate Guidelines)
  • Substantive unreasonableness (sentence is too harsh or too lenient)
  • Application of mandatory minimums
  • Improper enhancements or failure to apply reductions
  • Restitution calculations

Plea Agreement Issues

Challenges to guilty pleas:

  • Plea was not knowing and voluntary
  • Inadequate Rule 11 colloquy
  • Breach of plea agreement by the government
  • Ineffective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations

Appeal Waivers in Plea Agreements

Prevalence and Enforceability

Most federal plea agreements contain appeal waivers:

  • Approximately 95% of federal plea agreements include some form of appeal waiver
  • Courts generally enforce appeal waivers if entered knowingly and voluntarily
  • The scope of the waiver depends on its specific language

Exceptions to Appeal Waivers

Even with a valid waiver, defendants may appeal:

  • Sentence exceeding the statutory maximum
  • Ineffective assistance of counsel affecting the validity of the waiver itself
  • Involuntary plea - challenges to the voluntariness of the plea
  • Racial discrimination in sentencing
  • Breach of the plea agreement by the government

Anders Briefs and Frivolous Appeals

When Counsel Finds No Merit

If appointed counsel determines the appeal lacks merit:

  • Counsel must file an Anders brief (named after Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738 (1967))
  • The brief identifies potential issues and explains why they lack merit
  • The defendant is given an opportunity to file a pro se supplemental brief
  • The court independently reviews the record for appealable issues
  • If the court agrees the appeal is frivolous, it may dismiss

Pro Se Filings

  • Defendants may file pro se supplemental briefs
  • Courts construe pro se filings liberally
  • Pro se filings may raise issues counsel did not identify
  • Quality varies significantly

Bail Pending Appeal

Standard for Release

Under 18 U.S.C. § 3143(b), a defendant seeking bail pending appeal must show:

  • The appeal raises a substantial question of law or fact
  • The question is likely to result in reversal, a new trial, or a sentence with no imprisonment
  • The defendant is not a flight risk or danger to the community
  • The defendant is not likely to flee or pose a danger

Practical Reality

  • Bail pending appeal is rarely granted in federal cases
  • Most defendants begin serving their sentences during the appeal
  • The appeal process typically takes 12-18 months
  • Time served during appeal counts toward the sentence

Statistics

Federal Appeal Outcomes

Approximate reversal rates:

  • Overall reversal rate in criminal appeals: approximately 7-10%
  • Reversal rate for sentencing issues: approximately 15-20%
  • Reversal rate for sufficiency of evidence: approximately 3-5%
  • Most reversals result in remand for resentencing rather than acquittal

Timeline

Typical duration:

  • Notice of appeal to briefing completion: 6-9 months
  • Briefing to oral argument: 2-6 months
  • Argument to decision: 1-6 months
  • Total process: typically 12-18 months

Practical Advice

For Defendants

  • File your notice of appeal within 14 days - This deadline is absolute
  • Request appointed counsel immediately if you cannot afford an attorney
  • Preserve all issues at trial by making timely objections
  • Cooperate with your appellate attorney in identifying potential issues
  • Understand the limitations - appeals are not retrials

For Families

  • Ensure the notice of appeal is filed on time - Help track the deadline
  • Contact the Federal Public Defender's office if your family member needs representation
  • Be patient - the appellate process takes 12-18 months or longer
  • Understand that most appeals are unsuccessful - manage expectations

See Also

References

  1. Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, Rule 4(b).