RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 13a0307p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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Plaintiff-Appellee, -
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
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No. 11-1201
v.
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Defendant-Appellant. -
ALBERT P. HUGHES,
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Michigan at Grand Rapids.
No. 1:08-cr-120-1—Robert J. Jonker, District Judge.
Argued: July 31, 2013
Decided and Filed: October 25, 2013
Before: GIBBONS, SUTTON, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Anthony J. Dick, JONES DAY, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae.
Suzanne K. Klein, SCOTT GRAHAM PLLC, Portage, Michigan, for Appellant.
Jennifer L. McManus, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Grand Rapids,
Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Anthony J. Dick, JONES DAY, Washington,
D.C., for Amicus Curiae. Scott Graham, SCOTT GRAHAM PLLC, Portage, Michigan,
for Appellant. Jennifer L. McManus, Christopher O’Connor, UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellee.
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OPINION
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KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. In 2010, Congress passed the Fair Sentencing Act
(FSA), which reduced the statutory penalties for crack-cocaine offenses under 21 U.S.C.
§ 841. The Supreme Court later held that the Act’s reduced penalties applied to pre-Act
offenders who were first sentenced after the Act took effect. See Dorsey v. United
1
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 2
States, 132 S. Ct. 2321 (2012). Albert Hughes was first sentenced for his § 841
conviction before the FSA’s effective date, but—due to a mistaken remand on our
part—was resentenced for that offense after that date. The district court reinstated
Hughes’s original sentence. Citing Dorsey, Hughes argues that the FSA should have
applied retroactively to his resentencing. But we think the Supreme Court’s reasoning
in Dorsey, fairly read, cuts against Hughes’s argument here. We therefore affirm.
In March 2008, Hughes’s girlfriend called 911 to report that Hughes was
physically abusing her. After the police arrived at her apartment, they found 64 grams
of crack cocaine, a loaded 9mm pistol, and a loaded 9mm carbine rifle, among other
contraband. Hughes later pled guilty to federal drug and gun charges.
The district court sentenced Hughes on April 30, 2009. At that time, Hughes was
subject to two mandatory-minimum penalties: first, a ten-year mandatory-minimum
sentence under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) for possession with intent to distribute more
than 50 grams of crack; and second, a five-year mandatory sentence enhancement under
18 U.S.C. § 924(c) for possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug-trafficking
offense. Accordingly, the district court sentenced Hughes to 121 months’ imprisonment
on the drug counts and 60 months’ on the gun count, for a total of 15 years plus one
month in prison.
On appeal, we vacated Hughes’s sentence and remanded his case for
resentencing “in light of” United States v. Almany, 598 F.3d 238 (6th Cir. 2010). In
Almany, we held that the § 924(c) enhancement does not apply in cases where the
defendant is already subject to another mandatory-minimum sentence of longer than five
years—as Hughes was here under § 841(b)(1)(A). Before the district court could
resentence Hughes, however, the Supreme Court invalidated our decision in Almany.
See Abbott v. United States, 131 S. Ct. 18 (2010). Thus, by the time of Hughes’s
resentencing, the whole basis for the remand—namely, the “light” provided by our
decision in Almany—had been extinguished.
The district court resentenced Hughes on January 28, 2011. Although Hughes
acknowledged that Almany could no longer support a sentence shorter than the one he
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 3
initially received, Hughes argued that another intervening circumstance did: Congress’s
enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act, which had taken effect four months earlier, on
August 3, 2010. Under the FSA, Hughes’s mandatory-minimum sentence for his crack
offense would have been only five years, rather than ten. But Hughes’s argument
conflicted with a longstanding federal rule that a crime’s penalties are normally those
on the books when the crime was committed. The district court also noted that, pursuant
to another federal statute, the sentencing guidelines applicable to Hughes’s resentencing
were the same ones applicable to his initial sentencing. See 18 U.S.C. § 3742(g)(1). The
court therefore imposed the same 15-year sentence.
Hughes brought this appeal, arguing that the district court should have applied
the FSA retroactively to his case. The government initially filed a brief in opposition,
arguing at some length that the general rule against retroactive application of federal
sentencing statutes applied with full force to Hughes’s resentencing. But then the
government reversed its position in FSA cases nationwide; and thus it filed a new brief
in which it argued we should vacate the district court’s judgment and remand Hughes’s
case for resentencing under the FSA. We appointed Anthony J. Dick, Esq., to argue as
an amicus curiae in support of the district court’s judgment.
We review de novo the district court’s decision not to apply the FSA to Hughes’s
resentencing. See Cnty. of Oakland v. Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, 716 F.3d 935, 939
(6th Cir. 2013). The question presented is whether the FSA applies to a defendant who
is resentenced after the FSA’s effective date, but who committed his crime and was
initially sentenced before that date. The presumptive answer to that question is no. The
federal savings statute—codified at 1 U.S.C. § 109—provides that “[t]he repeal of any
statute shall not have the effect to release or extinguish any penalty, forfeiture, or
liability incurred under such statute, unless the repealing Act shall so expressly
provide[.]” As interpreted by the Supreme Court, “the word ‘repeal[,]’” as used in
§ 109, “applies when a new statute simply diminishes the penalties that the older statute
set forth.” Dorsey, 132 S. Ct. at 2330-31. The FSA is undisputedly such a “repeal.”
Moreover, for purposes of § 109, “penalties are ‘incurred’ under the older statute when
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 4
an offender becomes subject to them, i.e., commits the underlying conduct that makes
the offender liable.” Id. at 2331. Reading these terms together, then, § 109 sets a default
rule that the penalties for a crime are those in place when the defendant commits it.
Thus, “we must assume that Congress did not intend” for the FSA to apply retroactively
in a particular defendant’s case “unless [Congress] clearly indicated to the contrary.”
Id. at 2326 (emphasis in original).
The FSA itself does not contain any such clear indication, since Congress elected
not to include a retroactivity provision in the Act. Absent some other clear indication
that the FSA should apply to Hughes’s resentencing, therefore, the Act does not apply.
The parties here (i.e., the government and Hughes) argue that the Supreme
Court’s decision in Dorsey sets forth some clear indications that the FSA should apply
to Hughes’s resentencing. In Dorsey, the defendant sold crack before the FSA’s
effective date, but—unlike here—was first sentenced after that date. The Court stated
that the question whether the FSA applied to Dorsey’s sentencing was “difficult in part
because relevant language in different statutes argues in opposite directions.” Id. at
2330. One statute—namely, § 109—pointed like a road sign towards the conclusion that
the FSA did not apply to Dorsey’s sentencing, because the FSA was not on the books
when Dorsey committed his crime. But the Court thought that a provision in the
Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 marked out a different path—discernable, perhaps, more
by the tracker’s art than by simple sign reading, but discernable nonetheless.
Specifically, the Court explained, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) “says that when
‘determining the particular sentence to be imposed’ in an initial sentencing, the [district]
court ‘shall consider,’ among other things, the ‘sentencing range’ established by the
Guidelines that are ‘in effect on the date the defendant is sentenced.’” Dorsey, 132 S.
Ct. at 2332 (quoting § 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii)) (emphasis omitted). Thus, in the Court’s view,
§ 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) expresses a “background sentencing principle” that, “when the
Commission adopts new, lower Guidelines amendments, those amendments become
effective to offenders who committed an offense prior to the adoption of the new
amendments” but who are initially sentenced thereafter. Id. And the Court further
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 5
observed that, in the FSA itself, Congress directed the Sentencing Commission to amend
the crack-cocaine Guidelines “as soon as practicable” after the FSA’s effective date. Id.
Hence the Court determined that, in Dorsey’s case, § 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) led to the
opposite conclusion that § 109 did.
But in Hughes’s case these statutes point precisely the same way. For
§ 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) contains an exception, inapplicable in Dorsey but undisputedly
applicable here. Specifically, § 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) provides that, “except as provided in
section 3742(g),” the district court should apply the version of the Guidelines in
effect at the time of the defendant’s initial sentencing. (Emphasis added.) And
§ 3742(g)—entitled “Sentencing upon remand[,]” which is the kind of sentencing at
issue here—provides in relevant part that “[a] district court to which a case is remanded
. . . shall apply the guidelines . . . that were in effect on the date of the previous
sentencing of the defendant prior to the appeal[.]” 18 U.S.C. § 3742(g)(1) (emphasis
added). Thus, as interpreted by our court—and by their plain terms—“§§ 3553(a)(4)(A)
and 3742(g)(1) together [] express Congress’s intent that the district court at
resentencing apply the Guidelines that were in effect at the time of the defendant’s
original sentencing.” United States v. Taylor, 648 F.3d 417, 424 (6th Cir. 2011)
(emphasis added).
Unlike Dorsey, who sought to apply the FSA to his initial sentencing, Hughes
seeks to apply the FSA to his resentencing. Per the Court’s manner of interpretation in
Dorsey, §§ 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) and 3742(g)(1) tell us that Hughes cannot do so—that the
penalties applicable in his resentencing, instead, are those “that were in effect on the date
of [his] previous sentencing[.]” 18 U.S.C. § 3742(g)(1). Section 109 tells us the same
thing. In this case, therefore, the “relevant language in different statutes” does not lead
us in “opposite directions.” Dorsey, 132 S. Ct. at 2330. Instead it leads us to the same
place: the FSA does not apply to Hughes’s resentencing.
What the parties ask us to do in this case, then, is remarkable. The presumption
created by § 109 is one that we are bound to take seriously, as the Supreme Court
reminded us in Dorsey. And in Hughes’s case that presumption is not rebutted, but
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 6
confirmed by the very statute—§ 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii)—that the Court flagged as relevant
there.
But the government offers three reasons why it thinks we should disregard that
presumption nonetheless. First, the government argues that, taken together, three other
statutory provisions—18 U.S.C. §§ 3553(a)(1), (a)(2)(A), and 3661—support retroactive
application of the FSA to Hughes’s case. Sections 3553(a)(1) and (a)(2)(A) direct the
district court to consider “the nature and circumstances of the offense” and “the
seriousness of the offense,” respectively, when determining a defendant’s sentence.
Section 3661 provides: “No limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the
background, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court
of the United States may receive and consider for the purpose of imposing an appropriate
sentence.” Our court has read these provisions together to allow a district court to
consider “postsentencing amendments to the Guidelines” when resentencing a defendant
on remand. Taylor, 648 F.3d at 425. And from this rule—already once removed from
the statutes themselves—the government infers a “sentencing principle” that courts
should “consider and effectuate the latest views of Congress and the Sentencing
Commission on appropriate punishment.” Gov’t Br. at 17. This putative “sentencing
principle,” in the government’s view, then “weighs in favor” of retroactive application
of the FSA. Id.
The argument is more impressionistic than legal. It has little to do with what the
statutes actually say, and more to do, apparently, with one’s perception of their mood or
animating purpose. But statutes are not artistic palettes, from which the court can daub
different colors until it obtains a desired effect. Statutes are instead law, which are
bounded in a meaningful sense by the words that Congress chose in enacting them.
Here, we do not see—and the government does not explain—how, exactly, the directive
in § 3553(a) that the district court consider “the nature and circumstances” and
“seriousness of the offense” has much to do with the question whether the FSA applies
retroactively to Hughes’s resentencing. The same is true as to the allowance in § 3661
for unrestricted consideration of a defendant’s “background, character, and conduct[.]”
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 7
To read these provisions to establish yet another “background sentencing principle”
relevant to the FSA’s retroactivity—and then to apply that putative principle to
overcome the statutory phalanx of §§ 109 and 3553(a)(4)(A)(ii) in this case—would be
no longer to take any of these statutes seriously as law. There is a reason why none of
these provisions—§§ 3553(a)(1), (a)(2)(A), or 3661—found any mention in Dorsey’s
exhaustive recitation of the factors relevant to the question whether the FSA has
retroactive effect. The reason is that these statutes qua statutes are immaterial to that
question. We reject this argument.
Second, the government argues that, if we fail to apply the FSA to defendants
resentenced after the FSA’s effective date, we will create the kind of same-day
sentencing disparities that the Court sought to avoid in Dorsey. There, the Court said
that the imposition of “disparate sentences” by the “same judge” at the “same time” and
in the “same place” were “a kind of unfairness that modern sentencing statutes typically
seek to combat.” 132 S. Ct. at 2333. But this argument too is torpedoed by
§ 3742(g)(1). The disparities that the Court cited in Dorsey were those between initial
sentencings that occurred on the same day. The disparities here, in contrast, would be
between initial sentencings and sentencings “upon remand,” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3742(g)—which is precisely the sort of disparity that Congress expressly prescribed
in § 3742(g)(1). This argument therefore provides us no basis to overcome the
presumption set forth in § 109.
It is true, of course, that in Dorsey the Court sought to avoid “imposing upon the
pre-Act offender a pre-Act sentence at a time after Congress had specifically found in
the Fair Sentencing Act that such a sentence was unfairly long.” 132 S. Ct. at 2333. But
the Court’s opinion cannot be fairly read to suggest that this point, standing alone, is
reason enough to provide the relief that Hughes seeks here. Instead it took “[s]ix
considerations, taken together,” to overcome the § 109 presumption in Dorsey. Id. at
2331. As shown above, those considerations do not overcome the § 109 presumption
here; to the contrary, the most important of them only confirms it. Moreover, any
argument based on this passage would prove too much: if the mere fact that Congress
No. 11-1201 United States v. Hughes Page 8
has chosen to reduce the penalties for an offense were reason enough to apply the new
penalties retroactively, § 109 would never apply. We are confident that the Court in
Dorsey did not mean to repeal § 109 by implication. See 132 S. Ct. at 2332 (describing
§ 109 as an “important background principle of interpretation”).
Finally—and perhaps more to the point—the government argues that the FSA’s
“overriding purpose was to correct an unjust sentencing scheme[,]” and that we ought
not perpetuate that scheme by applying it to Hughes’s resentencing. Gov’t Br. at 17.
As judges—as opposed to, say, legislators—we can be sympathetic to this argument
without being persuaded by it. For the argument is misdirected as presented to an
intermediate court of appeals. Neither policy concerns, nor some general sense of the
statute’s overriding purpose, nor the spirit of the age, provides us with any lawful basis
to do what Hughes asks us to do here. That is not to say it could not have been done:
Congress with a few keystrokes could have included a retroactivity provision in the FSA,
or the President could have granted clemency (and still can) to Hughes and all other
defendants similarly situated to him. See U.S. Const. Art. II, § 2, cl. 1. But as judges
we are confined to what the law says. We need legal grounds, not just equitable ones,
to disregard the § 109 presumption and all that the Supreme Court has said about it. For
the reasons shown above, those legal grounds are absent here.
Separately, we reject Hughes’s argument that, during his resentencing, the
district court failed to consider evidence of Hughes’s post-sentence rehabilitation. The
transcript of the sentencing hearing instead shows that the court did consider that
evidence, but was unpersuaded that the evidence warranted a reduction in Hughes’s
sentence. See Tr. at 15.
The district court’s judgment is affirmed.