FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH October 19, 2010
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
No. 10-2089
v.
JOSE DE JESUS RENDON-ALAMO,
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of New Mexico
(D.C. No. 2:09-CR-02225-JAP-1)
Submitted on the briefs: *
Stephen E. Hosford, CJA Appointed Counsel, Arrey, NM, for Defendant-
Appellant.
Kenneth J. Gonzales, United States Attorney, and Terri J. Abernathy, Assistant
United States Attorney, Las Cruces, NM, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before MURPHY, GORSUCH, and HOLMES, Circuit Judges.
GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.
*
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has
determined unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs
without oral argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(f) and 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The
case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
When calculating the applicable, albeit advisory, Guidelines sentence for
Jose de Jesus Rendon-Alamo, the district court assessed a 16-level enhancement
under U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2. The court did so because Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s criminal
record included a term of imprisonment exceeding 13 months for a prior drug
trafficking felony offense. Mr. Rendon-Alamo complains that the district court
reached § 2L1.2’s critical 13-month threshold only by adding his original 9-month
drug trafficking prison term to a 6-month prison term he received after violating
the conditions of his probation. This aggregation business, Mr. Rendon-Alamo
says, § 2L1.2 won’t allow.
As it happens, the Guidelines not only permit but compel the district
court’s math. For purposes of § 2L1.2’s 13-month threshold, a commentary
issued by the Sentencing Commission tells us that initial sentences and probation-
revocation sentences should be combined. Given that the Commission wrote the
Guidelines’s equations, its commentaries on how to perform them are,
unsurprisingly, due much deference. Mr. Rendon-Alamo offers no reason to deny
that deference here, we can imagine none, and so we affirm.
***
A defendant can seek to attack the procedural reasonableness of his
sentence in a number of ways. One way is to dispute the accuracy of the district
court’s Guidelines calculations. Because the advisory Guidelines sentencing
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range constitutes the foundation or “starting point” from which the sentencing
process proceeds and on which it rests, we will vacate a sentence premised on an
erroneous Guidelines calculation as procedurally unreasonable “unless we are
able to ascertain that the court’s calculation error was harmless.” United States v.
Todd, 515 F.3d 1128, 1134-35 (10th Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
On first blush, any challenge to the district court’s sentencing procedures in
this case would seem unlikely to succeed. After Mr. Rendon-Alamo pled guilty to
a charge of illegal re-entry into the United States after a previous deportation, all
in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) & (b)(2), the district court proceeded to
calculate his advisory Guidelines sentence. The court ultimately concluded that
the Guidelines suggested a sentence of somewhere between 46-57 months, but (of
course) it did not stop there. Instead and proceeding under U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3, the
court found that Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s criminal history score didn’t adequately
reflect his past criminal conduct and reduced his sentence to 41 months — five
months lower than the low end of the recommended Guidelines range. The court
also went on to consider the various factors outlined in § 3553(a) and found them
consistent with a 41-month sentence.
But while this might seem well and good, Mr. Rendon-Alamo argues a
serious problem lurks in the district court’s initial Guidelines calculation. As part
of that calculation, the district court had to take account of Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s
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prior conviction for a drug trafficking offense. No one disputes that. But under
U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, Mr. Rendon-Alamo says, he should have received only a 12-
level sentencing enhancement — rather than the 16-level enhancement the district
court incorporated into its calculation. And with a 12-level enhancement, his
recommended Guidelines range would’ve been significantly lower — 27 to 33
months. Had the district court known all this, Mr. Rendon-Alamo says, he
might’ve received a shorter sentence than he did. And this means his sentence
rests on a Guidelines calculation error, one we can’t be sure was harmless, and
thus it is his sentence should be vacated.
In coming to this conclusion, Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s argument follows a
particular path. It begins, as it must, with the language of § 2L1.2, which tells
district courts that
[i]f the defendant previously was deported, or unlawfully remained in the
United States, after—(A) a conviction for a felony that is (i) a drug
trafficking offense for which the sentence imposed exceeded 13 months
. . . , increase [offense level] by 16 levels; (B) a conviction for a felony
drug trafficking offense for which the sentence imposed was 13 months or
less, increase by 12 levels.
U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(1). Mr. Rendon-Alamo acknowledges that he was ultimately
sentenced to 15 months in prison in connection with his prior drug trafficking
offense. And he admits this is why the district court issued a 16-level
enhancement. But, he says, the district court reached this conclusion only by
improperly aggregating two separate “sentence[s] imposed” on him. Aplt. Br. at
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7. The district court should have focused solely on the fact that he was originally
sentenced in 2007 to just 9 months’ imprisonment and a period of probation.
While Mr. Rendon-Alamo later violated his probation and was sentenced in 2009
to 6 additional months of imprisonment, this is a distinct and different sentence
and the two stints in prison can’t be added together. It is for this reason, he says,
he was entitled to only a 12-level enhancement.
We can’t agree. In 2003, the Sentencing Commission added a commentary
to § 2L1.2 defining the term “sentence imposed” to “include[] any term of
imprisonment given upon revocation of probation, parole, or supervised release.”
U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, cmt. n.1(B)(vii) (emphasis added). To “include” means “[t]o
contain as a member of an aggregate” or “[t]o contain as a subordinate element,
corollary, or secondary feature.” 7 Oxford English Dictionary 800-01 (2d ed.
1989) (emphasis added). To say then that the “sentence imposed” includes a
post-revocation sentence means that Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s 6-month revocation
sentence is part of the total “sentence imposed,” along with his original 9-month
sentence. To ascertain the total “sentence imposed” we must account not only for
Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s original 9-month sentence, we must also add, include, or
aggregate any other, subordinate or secondary term of imprisonment given upon
revocation. Respecting the plain meaning of the Commission’s commentary
means the “sentence imposed” in this case had to be 15 months, the district court
got it right, and Mr. Rendon-Alamo’s appeal must fail.
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Neither was the district court free to disregard the Commission’s
commentary when conducting its Guidelines calculations. The Commission
writes the Guidelines’s equations, and its commentaries on how to perform them
are due deference from us much like the math teacher’s directions to his pupil:
“[W]e must defer to the Sentencing Commission’s view unless we can say that the
notes so far depart from the language of the Guideline that they are inconsistent
with, or a plainly erroneous reading of [the] guideline.” United States v. Morris,
562 F.3d 1131, 1136 (10th Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
In an apparent effort to suggest that the district court should have rejected
the Commission’s interpretation of § 2L1.2, Mr. Rendon-Alamo draws our
attention to certain case law issued by this and other courts interpreting the term
“sentence imposed” before the Commission offered its 2003 comment. But in
doing so Mr. Rendon-Alamo quickly confronts two difficulties.
First, the Supreme Court has told us that “prior judicial constructions of a
particular guideline cannot prevent the Commission from adopting a conflicting
interpretation.” Stinson v. United States, 508 U.S. 36, 46 (1993); see also
Braxton v. United States, 500 U.S. 344, 348 (1991) (“Congress necessarily
contemplated that the Commission would periodically review the work of the
courts, and would make whatever clarifying revisions to the Guidelines
conflicting judicial decisions might suggest.”). While the legal analysis
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contained in earlier cases may bear on the question whether the Commission’s
new interpretation is one to which we must defer, it can do no more than that.
Second, examining the analysis and holdings in the cases Mr. Rendon-
Alamo cites actually hurts, not helps, his cause. Instead of suggesting that the
Commission’s 2003 interpretation might be inconsistent with or a plainly
erroneous reading of § 2L1.2, those cases (issued in 2003 before the Commission
provided its commentary in November 2003) reveal that this and other courts took
the view that the plain language of § 2L1.2 was best read in the very fashion the
Commission’s commentary eventually endorsed. See United States v. Ruiz-Gea,
340 F.3d 1181, 1186-87 (10th Cir. 2003); United States v. Compian-Torres, 320
F.3d 514, 515 (5th Cir. 2003); United States v. Moreno-Cisneros, 319 F.3d 456,
458 (9th Cir. 2003). Later cases from our sister circuits, after 2003, have not
always acknowledged the Commission’s intervening guidance but they have
continued to come to the same conclusion. See, e.g., United States v. Gomez-
Leon, 545 F.3d 777, 784 (9th Cir. 2008); United States v. Leiva-Deras, 359 F.3d
183, 189-90 (2d Cir. 2004). In the end, then, all the cases Mr. Rendon-Alamo has
cited to this court tend to confirm rather than call into question the reasonableness
of the Commission’s interpretation. Cf. United States v. Dozier, 555 F.3d 1136,
1139 (10th Cir. 2009) (holding that the term “prior sentence” includes sentences
issued on the revocation of probation for purposes of yet another Guidelines
provision, § 4A1.1).
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Mr. Rendon-Alamo seeks to suggest otherwise by pointing out that the
defendant’s post-revocation prison term in Ruiz-Gea itself exceeded 13 months,
while here the district court had to combine pre- and post-revocation sentences to
achieve a “sentence imposed” of more than 13 months. Aplt. Br. at 6. As it
happens, however, Ruiz-Gea did not place any stress on this fact. Instead, Ruiz-
Gea expressly held that “including the sentence imposed upon revocation of
probation as part of the ‘sentence imposed’ for the purposes of
§ 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)(i) is consistent with how such sentences have been treated under
other provisions of § 2L1.2.” 340 F.3d at 1186. This court, thus, came to exactly
the same conclusion that the Commission later did in its permissible — and now
controlling — commentary: prison terms before and after a probation revocation
should be aggregated.
***
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Because the district court’s sentence was predicated on a correct calculation
of the advisory Guidelines range, we cannot say it suffered from any potentially
reversible procedural defect. ** The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
**
Beyond his challenge to the procedural aspects of the district court’s
sentencing decision, Mr. Rendon-Alamo alludes to the possibility that his
sentence may be substantively unreasonable, suggesting that his 41-month
sentence is simply too long. But to win a substantive reasonableness appeal is no
easy thing. The Supreme Court has told us, repeatedly now, that a district court’s
sentencing decision should be upheld in the face of substantive challenges unless
the defendant can show the sentence issued falls outside the realm of the
rationally available sentencing choices available to the district court after
conducting a procedurally proper inquiry. See United States v. McComb, 519
F.3d 1049, 1053 (10th Cir. 2007) (discussing the Supreme Court’s guidance).
Flatly claiming that a sentence is too long does not meet this onerous standard.
Neither can we imagine how Mr. Rendon-Alamo might prevail on a substantive
challenge — he was issued a sentence that took pains to take into account his
personal circumstances and that was five months lower than the range suggested
by the Guidelines.
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