5th Cir.

United States v. Garza

July 15, 2026 ·25-50785 ·Per Curiam · By James Taylor

The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit dismissed the appeal as moot because the defendant had completed his prison term. The court also denied the appointed attorney's motion to withdraw as unnecessary.

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Background

Gustavo Facundo Garza appealed a district court order revoking his supervised release. His appointed attorney moved to withdraw and filed a brief pursuant to Anders v. California, noting that Garza had not filed a response. Garza had completed the prison term imposed upon revocation of his supervised release and was released from custody without an additional term of supervision.

The court’s reasoning

The court determined that because Garza completed his prison term and was released from custody, there was no longer a case or controversy for the court to address. The court relied on Spencer v. Kemna to conclude that the appeal was moot. Consequently, the motion to withdraw was denied as unnecessary.

What it means going forward

The dismissal resolves the appeal without addressing the merits of the supervised release revocation, leaving the district court’s underlying order in place but unreviewed due to mootness.