United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 05-2455
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellant,
v.
SAMBATH PHO,
Defendant, Appellee.
No. 05-2461
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellant,
v.
SHAWN LEWIS,
Defendant, Appellee.
__________________________
APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Selya, Lipez and Howard, Circuit Judges.
Donald C. Lockhart, Assistant United States Attorney, with
whom Robert Clark Corrente, United States Attorney, Lee Vilker and
Peter F. Neronha, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on brief,
for appellant.
Edward C. Roy, Jr., Assistant Federal Public Defender, for
appellee Pho.
Kevin J. Fitzgerald, Assistant Federal Public Defender, for
appellee Lewis.
January 5, 2006
SELYA, Circuit Judge. In these consolidated appeals, we
are called upon to answer a vexing question of first impression at
the appellate level: May a federal district court, consistent with
the teachings of United States v. Booker, 125 S. Ct. 738 (2005),
impose a sentence outside the advisory guideline sentencing range
based solely on its categorical rejection of the guidelines'
disparate treatment of offenses involving crack cocaine, on the one
hand, and powdered cocaine, on the other hand? The court below
believed that it could and sentenced the defendants in accordance
with that belief. After careful consideration, we conclude that
the district court's approach was incorrect as a matter of law.
Consequently, we vacate the defendants' sentences and remand for
resentencing.
I. BACKGROUND
We start by limning the history of the disparate
treatment of crack and powdered cocaine embedded in the federal
sentencing guidelines (commonly referred to as the 100:1 ratio).
We move from there to a brief glimpse of how that differential
fared in our pre-Booker jurisprudence.
A. The Crack-to-Powder Disparity.
The sentencing differential for crack and powdered
cocaine offenses had its genesis in the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of
1986, Pub. L. No. 99-570, 100 Stat. 3207 (1986) (codified in
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pertinent part at 21 U.S.C. § 841) (the Act).1 That legislation
created two mandatory sentencing ranges for drug offenses. See id.
§ 1002 (codified at 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)). The lower bracket
spanned periods of imprisonment ranging from a mandatory minimum of
five years to a maximum of forty years; the higher bracket spanned
periods of imprisonment ranging from a mandatory minimum of ten
years to a maximum of life. See id. Congress prescribed the
threshold quantities of both crack and powdered cocaine needed to
bring a particular offense within either bracket. See id. Despite
the chemical identity of crack and powdered cocaine, Congress set
widely disparate threshold quantities for the two drugs, requiring
one hundred times more powdered cocaine than crack cocaine to
trigger inclusion in a particular range. See id. (setting the
threshold quantities for the lower range at five hundred grams of
powdered cocaine and five grams of cocaine base and the threshold
quantities for the higher range at five kilograms and fifty grams,
respectively). Thus, for sentencing purposes, Congress treated one
unit of crack on par with one hundred units of powder.2
1
The Act speaks of "cocaine base," not crack. See 21 U.S.C.
§§ 841(b)(1)(A)(iii), 841(b)(1)(B)(iii). The guidelines, however,
define cocaine base to mean crack cocaine. See USSG §2D1.1(c),
n.D. Because virtually all trafficking in cocaine base involves
crack cocaine, see United States v. Brisbane, 367 F.3d 910, 912
(D.C. Cir. 2004), we use the terms interchangeably.
2
Although the 100:1 ratio is sometimes used to describe a
supposed disparity in the length of sentences, that description is
inaccurate. The 100:1 ratio refers to the relative quantities of
each drug required to trigger the Act's mandatory sentencing
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Congress grounded this differential on its determination
that crack cocaine and powdered cocaine are not fair congeners and
that, all other things being equal, offenses involving the former
pose a more serious societal danger than offenses involving the
latter. See U.S. Sentencing Comm'n, Special Report to Congress:
Cocaine and Federal Sentencing Policy 117-18 (1995) (1995 Report).
In particular, Congress found that crack cocaine was more likely to
(i) induce addiction; (ii) correlate with the incidence of other
serious crimes; (iii) implicate especially vulnerable members of
society; (iv) cause deleterious physiological effects; and (v)
attract youthful users. Id. at 118.
Shortly after passage of the Act, the Sentencing
Commission issued the initial compendium of federal sentencing
guidelines. The Commission built the base offense levels for
crimes involving crack and powdered cocaine around the threshold
quantities set by Congress. This architectural decision comported
with Congress's discernible intent. See 28 U.S.C. § 994(i)(5)
(requiring the Commission to "specify a sentence to a substantial
term of imprisonment" for offenders convicted of "trafficking in a
substantial quantity of a controlled substance"). Consistent with
its congressionally imposed obligation to "reduc[e] unwarranted
ranges. The resulting disparity in sentence length is much
smaller. See U.S. Dep't of Justice, Federal Cocaine Offenses: An
Analysis of Crack and Powder Penalties 19 (2005) (reporting that
the average sentence for crack offenses is 1.6 times longer than
the average sentence for comparable powdered cocaine offenses).
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sentence disparities," id. § 994(f), the Commission also fixed the
guideline sentences for offenses involving non-threshold quantities
of crack and powdered cocaine in accordance with the 100:1 ratio.
See generally USSG §2D1.1, cmt. (backg'd.) (concluding that "a
logical sentencing structure for drug offenses" requires
coordination with mandatory minimum sentences). Thus, while
Congress designed the 100:1 ratio to operate at the minimum and
maximum poles of the mandatory statutory sentencing ranges, it was
the Commission that incorporated the ratio root and branch into its
calculation of every cocaine offender's guideline sentencing range
(GSR).
Over time, Congress began to have second thoughts about
the wisdom of this dichotomy. As part of the Mandatory Minimum
Reform Act of 1994, Congress enacted a safety valve provision,
which provided a vehicle for lowering mandatory minimum sentences
in a narrow subset of drug cases. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(f); see
also United States v. Matos, 328 F.3d 34, 38-42 (1st Cir. 2003)
(describing the operation of the safety valve). That same year,
Congress directed the Sentencing Commission to study the crack-to-
powder ratio and to submit recommendations anent its retention or
modification. See Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of
1994, Pub. L. No. 103-322, § 280006, 108 Stat. 1796, 2097 (1994).
The 1995 Report embodied the Commission's response to
this directive. Based on its review of the available data, it
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concluded that "it [could] not recommend a ratio differential as
great as the current 100-to-1 quantity ratio," 1995 Report at 196,
and suggested that the ratio "be re-examined and revised," id. at
197. At the same time, however, the Commission determined that
empirical data supported Congress's core finding that "crack
cocaine poses greater harms to society than does powder cocaine,"
id. at 195, and that, therefore, "important distinctions between
the two may warrant higher penalties for crack," id. at xii. The
Commission advised Congress that it would present more
comprehensive recommendations at a future date. Id. at 198-200.
Notwithstanding its acknowledgment that higher penalties
for crack offenses were justified, the Commission subsequently
proposed guideline amendments designed to eliminate entirely the
sentencing differential between crack and powdered cocaine. See
Notice of Submission to Congress of Amendments to the Sentencing
Guidelines, 60 Fed. Reg. 25,074, 25,075-25,076 (May 10, 1995). To
accomplish this objective, the Commission called for reducing the
base offense levels for crack offenses to the base offense levels
for offenses involving equivalent quantities of powdered cocaine.
Congress held hearings on the Commission's
recommendation. See 28 U.S.C. § 994(p) (providing that proposed
guideline amendments must be submitted to Congress, which may
"modif[y] or disapprove[]" them). It found that "the evidence
overwhelmingly demonstrates significant distinctions between crack
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and powder cocaine." H.R. Rep. No. 104-272, at 3 (1995), reprinted
in 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. 335, 337. Congress also determined that a
change in the guideline sentencing structure unaccompanied by a
corresponding change in statutory mandatory minimums would result
in "gross sentencing disparities" between offenses involving drug
quantities around the threshold levels. Id. at 4. Based on these
considerations, Congress rejected the Commission's proposed
guideline amendments. See Pub. L. No. 104-38, § 1, 109 Stat. 334,
334 (1995).
Two years later, the Commission issued a follow-up
report. See U.S. Sentencing Comm'n, Special Report to Congress:
Cocaine and Federal Sentencing Policy (1997) (1997 Report). In
that document, the Commission reiterated both its position that the
100:1 ratio was excessive, id. at 2, and its conclusion that
"federal sentencing policy must reflect the greater dangers
associated with crack," id. at 4. The Commission recommended that
the 100:1 ratio be reduced to 5:1 by increasing the threshold
quantities for offenses involving crack cocaine and decreasing the
threshold quantities for offenses involving powdered cocaine. Id.
at 2, 5, 9. Even though this report prompted the introduction of
several bills aimed at reducing or eliminating the crack-to-powder
disparity, Congress took no action.
In late 2001, members of the Senate Judiciary Committee
invited the Sentencing Commission to update the Commission's views
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vis-à-vis the 100:1 ratio. The following year, the Commission
issued a third report. See U.S. Sentencing Comm'n, Report to the
Congress: Cocaine and Federal Sentencing Policy (2002) (2002)
Report). In it, the Commission again advocated narrowing the gap
that separated crack cocaine offenses from powdered cocaine
offenses because (i) more recent data suggested that the penalties
were disproportionate to the harms associated with the two drugs;
(ii) the dangers posed by crack could be satisfactorily addressed
through sentencing enhancements that would apply neutrally to all
drug offenses; and (iii) the severe penalties for crack offenses
seemed to fall mainly on low-level criminals and African Americans.
Id. at v-viii. The Commission hastened to add, however, that
crucial differences existed "in the intrinsic . . . and other
harms" attributable to the two forms of cocaine and acknowledged
that these differences justified stiffer penalties for crack
offenses. Id. at 92. Taking into account these competing
centrifugal and centripetal forces, the Commission endorsed a
reduction of the 100:1 ratio to 20:1. Id. at viii. It did not,
however, propose any amendments to the sentencing guidelines.
Congress subsequently deliberated on the substance of the 2002
Report but did not act.
B. The Legal Landscape.
Our pre-Booker case law recognized the relative severity
of the penalty paradigm for offenses involving crack cocaine but
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consistently deferred to Congress's policy judgments in this
regard. See, e.g., United States v. Eirby, 262 F.3d 31, 41 (1st
Cir. 2001); United States v. Singleterry, 29 F.3d 733, 741 (1st
Cir. 1994). This approach produced a series of decisions that
upheld the 100:1 ratio against an array of challenges. These
included forays based upon the Equal Protection Clause, see, e.g.,
United States v. Graciani, 61 F.3d 70, 74-75 (1st Cir. 1995), and
the rule of lenity, see, e.g., United States v. Manzueta, 167 F.3d
92, 94 (1st Cir. 1999). Pertinently, we held that, under the
mandatory guidelines system that was in vogue before Booker,
neither the Sentencing Commission's criticism of the 100:1 ratio
nor its unrequited 1995 proposal to eliminate the differential
provided a valid basis for leniency in the sentencing of crack
offenders. See United States v. Andrade, 94 F.3d 9, 14-15 (1st
Cir. 1996) (discussing the possibility of a downward departure
under USSG §5K2.0); United States v. Sanchez, 81 F.3d 9, 11 (1st
Cir. 1996) (same).
II. TRAVEL OF THE CASES
It is against this backdrop that we rehearse the travel
of these two cases. Because both appeals follow guilty pleas, we
draw the relevant facts from each defendant's plea colloquy, the
unchallenged portions of his presentence investigation report (PSI
Report), and sentencing transcript. United States v. Mercedes
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Mercedes, 428 F.3d 355, 357 (1st Cir. 2005); United States v.
Dietz, 950 F.2d 50, 51 (1st Cir. 1991).
A. Pho.
On January 11, 2005, law enforcement officers searched a
house occupied by defendant Sambath Pho pursuant to a warrant.
They found 16.73 grams of crack cocaine together with drug-
processing supplies, cash, and firearms. On June 10, 2004, Pho
entered a guilty plea to a one-count information charging
possession with intent to distribute five grams or more of cocaine
base in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a). That offense carried a
mandatory minimum sentence of five years. See id. § 841(b)(1)(B).
A probation officer subsequently compiled the PSI Report.
After converting the confiscated cash into its drug equivalent, see
United States v. Gerante, 891 F.2d 364, 368-70 (1st Cir. 1989)
(explicating the provision now found at USSG §2D1.1, cmt. n.12),
the PSI Report concluded that Pho should be held responsible for
40.43 grams of cocaine base. That yielded a base offense level of
30. A two-level gun enhancement, USSG §2D1.1(b)(1), and a three-
level discount for acceptance of responsibility, id. §3E1.1,
brought the adjusted offense level to 29. Given the absence of any
meaningful prior criminal record, Pho's GSR was 87-108 months.
At the disposition hearing, the district court confirmed
the adjusted offense level proposed in the PSI Report over Pho's
contention that the conversion of cash was inappropriate in this
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instance. The court then discussed its understanding of the
controlling law in a post-Booker world:
The question now is whether [the GSR] is a
reasonable sentence. . . . The guidelines are
no longer mandatory since Booker. The law now
is that the Court impose a sentence that is
reasonable whether it's in the guideline range
or not, and what we're talking about is
whether the guidelines produce a reasonable
sentence. It is the law that the Court has to
impose whatever mandatory minimum may have
been prescribed by Congress, and [t]he Court
cannot exceed any statutory maximum that's
been prescribed by Congress. But beyond that,
[the guidelines are] not the law.
After rejecting Pho's plea that his prior military service
justified a lower sentence, the court described "the only real
remaining question" as "this recurring question of . . . [w]hether
it is fair and reasonable in calculating a sentence to consider
crack cocaine as 100 times more serious than cocaine powder."
(Emphasis supplied).
In the court's estimation, the 100:1 ratio was
"excessive" and "not reasonable." The court explained that it had
"consistently taken the position that the Commission's
recommendation [of a 20:1 ratio] makes sense" and declared that,
except for the 100:1 ratio, it had "no quarrel with the guideline
range . . . because the guidelines take into account all the
relevant factors and otherwise take an approach that is
reasonable."
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Based on its conclusion about the inherent unfairness of
the 100:1 ratio, the court recalculated Pho's sentencing range in
accordance with the 20:1 ratio. This approach produced a jerry-
built sentencing range of 57-71 months. The court then reiterated:
I'm not saying that's the guideline range.
The guideline range is 87 to 108 months. What
I'm saying is that in order to arrive at what
I would consider to be a fair and reasonable
sentence that complies with the statutory
criteria . . . it seems to me that it's more
reasonable to use a 20 to 1 ratio, and that's
how I come up with 57 to 71 months.
The court proceeded to impose an incarcerative sentence in the
middle of the reconstituted range (64 months). The government
filed a timely appeal. See 18 U.S.C. § 3742(b).
B. Lewis.
On September 30, 2004, police officers searched defendant
Shawn Lewis's home pursuant to a warrant and discovered a virtual
cornucopia of drugs: 153.75 grams of crack cocaine, 174 grams of
powdered cocaine, 147 grams of marijuana, and nine grams of heroin.
The search also revealed various drug-related artifacts, a large
sum of cash, and two loaded .9 mm handguns. On June 3, 2005, Lewis
entered a guilty plea to a two-count information charging
possession with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of cocaine
base and possession by a convicted felon of two handguns. See 21
U.S.C. § 841(a); 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The mandatory minimum
sentence for Lewis's drug-trafficking offense was ten years. See
21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A).
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A probation officer subsequently prepared the PSI Report.
Based in large part on Lewis's admission that he had possessed more
than one hundred fifty grams of crack cocaine, the PSI Report
concluded that his base offense level for the drug-trafficking
count should be 34. A two-level gun enhancement, USSG
§2D1.1(b)(1), and a three-level downward adjustment for acceptance
of responsibility, id. §3E1.1, brought the adjusted offense level
to 33. Lewis's prior criminal record was extensive and placed him
in the highest possible criminal history category (VI). Those
calculations yielded a GSR of 235-293 months.
At the disposition hearing, the district court adopted,
without objection, the findings in the PSI Report. The court then
reviewed the particulars of Lewis's case. It found nothing at all
in Lewis's background or upbringing that militated in favor of a
shorter sentence. Moreover, the evidence indicated that he was a
"fairly big time drug dealer" who had been "dealing in a
significant quantity of a variety of different drugs"; that the
loaded firearms posed a high degree of danger; and that he had been
undeterred by previous periods of incarceration over a "long
history of some serious criminal offenses." Based on this bleak
picture, the court concluded that "a severe sentence is called for
here."
The court then turned to Lewis's principal argument in
favor of a lower sentence, namely, that the standard GSR was too
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punitive because it reflected the 100:1 ratio. The court described
its approach to fashioning sentences in the post-Booker world:
[T]he starting point the Court always looks to
is the guidelines. The guidelines generally
produce a sentence that is fair under the
circumstances. . . . And in this case, my
starting point is to look at the guideline
range and try to determine whether I think
that it produces an unfair sentence and, if
so, to what degree the sentence called for
under the guidelines would be unfair.
Conceding that the factors delineated in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)
supported a higher sentence than the government was recommending
(the low end of the standard GSR), the court candidly acknowledged
that "the only thing I see in your favor here, the only reason I
would conclude that the guidelines may call for an excessive
sentence, is this question . . . about the disparity between the
crack cocaine and the powder cocaine." (Emphasis supplied). The
court proceeded to voice its agreement with the Sentencing
Commission's position that a 20:1 ratio was "more appropriate" than
the 100:1 ratio because "the guidelines overstate what the penalty
ought to be for crack cocaine as opposed to powder cocaine."
Starting from this premise, the court recalculated
Lewis's exposure in accordance with the 20:1 ratio. This
recalculation yielded a jerry-built sentencing range of 188-235
months for the drug-trafficking count. The court imposed a
sentence of 188 months on that count. It also imposed a concurrent
sentence of 120 months on the firearms count (which is not directly
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at issue in this proceeding). The government filed a timeous
appeal. See 18 U.S.C. § 3742(b).
III. DISCUSSION
On appeal, the government's position is not that the
sentences imposed were unreasonable but, rather, that the district
court committed legal error. While Booker recognizes the authority
of a sentencing court to tailor a sentence based on individual,
case-specific considerations, the government's thesis runs, it does
not give the court free rein to reject, on a categorical basis, the
100:1 ratio embedded in both the statutory scheme and the
sentencing guidelines. The defendants' rejoinder is twofold. They
assert that the district court's deviation from the advisory
guidelines was appropriate in light of Booker and that, in all
events, the district court based the sentences actually imposed on
the individual circumstances of each case (not on broad-gauged
policy considerations). We subdivide our analysis of this
important controversy into two segments. We begin by articulating
the standard of review. We then address the merits of the dispute
that underlies these appeals.
A. Standard of Review.
It long has been the law that properly preserved
challenges to a trial court's conclusions of law engender de novo
review. See, e.g., United States v. Colon-Solis, 354 F.3d 101, 102
(1st Cir. 2004). In the past, we have applied this standard to
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appellate review of a district court's interpretation of the
sentencing guidelines. See, e.g., United States v. Carrasco-Mateo,
389 F.3d 239, 243 (1st Cir. 2004); United States v. St. Cyr, 977
F.2d 698, 701 (1st Cir. 1992).
The defendants argue that this long line of cases does
not survive the remedial holding of Booker. While the defendants
are correct in their observation that Booker altered the landscape
of appellate review of sentencing decisions, they are incorrect in
asserting that Booker displaces the de novo standard of review with
respect to a sentencing court's errors of law. See United States
v. Robinson, ___ F.3d ___, ___ (1st Cir. 2005) [No. 05-1547, slip
op. at 7-8] (holding that Booker did not alter the de novo standard
applicable to review of a sentencing court's legal interpretation
of the guidelines). We explain briefly.
As part of its remedial holding, the Booker Court excised
a provision of the Sentencing Reform Act that established standards
of appellate review for certain claims of sentencing error because
the operation of that provision depended on the mandatory nature of
the guidelines system. See Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 765 (striking
down 18 U.S.C. § 3742(e)). The Court filled the resulting lacuna
with a directive that the courts of appeals thereafter should
review sentences for reasonableness. Id.; see United States v.
Antonakopoulos, 399 F.3d 68, 76 (1st Cir. 2005) (explicating
Booker).
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Although the Court instructed that reasonableness review
of the length of a sentence would be guided by the statutory
sentencing factors, see Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 765-66, it provided
no similar instruction as to how the reasonableness standard should
be applied to claims — such as the one that the government presses
here — that a sentencing court committed an error of law rather
than an error of judgment. We agree with two of our sister
circuits that, regardless of length, a sentence based on an error
of law is per se unreasonable. See United States v. Price, 409
F.3d 436, 442 (D.C. Cir. 2005); United States v. Crosby, 397 F.3d
103, 114 (2d Cir. 2005), abrogated on other grounds by United
States v. Fagans, 406 F.3d 138, 142 (2d Cir. 2005).
This conclusion is reinforced by an analogy. The
reasonableness standard and the familiar abuse of discretion
standard bear a strong family resemblance to each other. See
United States v. Ramirez-Rivera, 241 F.3d 37, 40 n.4 (1st Cir.
2001) (observing that the "practical import" of the difference
between the abuse of discretion and reasonableness standards is
"not immediately evident"). Under the latter standard, courts
consistently have regarded an error of law as a per se abuse of
discretion. See, e.g., Koon v. United States, 518 U.S. 81, 100
(1996); United States v. Snyder, 136 F.3d 65, 67 (1st Cir. 1998).
Accordingly, while the abuse of discretion standard contemplates
substantial deference to the judgment calls of a nisi prius court,
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it entails "in practice . . . de novo review on issues of abstract
law." Roger Edwards, LLC v. Fiddes & Son, 427 F.3d 129, 132 (1st
Cir. 2005). We believe that the reasonableness standard functions
in precisely the same way: errors of law render a sentence per se
unreasonable, and appellate review of claimed errors of law is
nondeferential (i.e., de novo).
B. The Merits.
In our constitutional system, the power to define
penalties for federal crimes belongs to the legislative branch of
government, not the judicial branch. United States v. Evans, 333
U.S. 483, 486 (1948). While federal courts possess the discretion
to tailor individual sentences within the boundaries set by the
statutory framework, that discretion is subject to the limitations
imposed by Congress. See Mistretta v. United States, 488 U.S. 361,
364 (1989). The creation of the Sentencing Commission and the
inauguration of a guideline sentencing scheme were valid exercises
of congressional authority to fix penalties for federal crimes and,
concomitantly, to cabin judicial discretion. See id. at 412. So
too was Congress's adoption of the 100:1 crack-to-powder ratio.
See Singleterry, 29 F.3d at 739-41.
Of course, Congress's authority in this area is not
unbounded. Earlier this year, the Supreme Court identified a
constitutional infirmity in the sentencing guidelines. See Booker,
125 S. Ct. at 756. The Booker Court held that mandatory sentencing
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enhancements triggered by judge-found facts were in derogation of
the constitutionally assured right to trial by jury. Id. (citing
U.S. Const. amend. VI). To cure that infirmity, the Court excised
the statutory provision that made the sentencing guidelines binding
on the federal courts. Id. at 756-57. That surgical strike
rendered the guidelines effectively advisory and freed sentencing
courts to tailor individual sentences in light of the factors
enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).3 Id. at 757. This means that
district courts now possess greater flexibility in reaching
individual sentencing decisions.
We caution, however, that this newfound discretion,
though broad, is not limitless: the guidelines remain part and
3
Those factors include:
(1) the nature and circumstances of the offense and the
history and characteristics of the defendant; (2) the
need for the sentence imposed — (A) to reflect the
seriousness of the offense, to promote respect for the
law, and to provide just punishment for the offense; (B)
to afford adequate deterrence to criminal conduct; (C) to
protect the public from further crimes of the defendant;
and (D) to provide the defendant with needed educational
or vocational training, medical care, or other
correctional treatment . . . ; (3) the kinds of sentences
available; (4) the kinds of sentence and the sentencing
range established for . . . the applicable category of
offense committed by the applicable category of defendant
as set forth in the guidelines . . . ; (5) any pertinent
policy statement . . . ; (6) the need to avoid
unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with
similar records . . . ; and (7) the need to provide
restitution to any victims of the offense.
18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).
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parcel of the sentencing algorithm. See Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 767
(directing sentencing courts to "consult [the] Guidelines and take
them into account when sentencing"); see also 18 U.S.C. §
3553(a)(4) (directing sentencing courts to consider the
guidelines). It is for this very reason that the Court made it
pellucid that the Sentencing Commission would continue to function
and to update the guidelines with a view toward "encouraging . . .
better sentencing practices . . . and promot[ing] uniformity in the
sentencing process." Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 766.
Over and above the guidelines themselves, Booker
recognized another significant restriction on sentencing decisions.
Post-Booker, those decisions must still be grounded on the factors
contained in section 3553(a). Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 766. Although
the statutory sweep is wide, see supra note 3, those factors also
serve to guide the discretion of sentencing courts in individual
cases and thereby promote greater uniformity in sentencing
decisions. See id. at 766-67.
With this mise-en-scêne in place, we turn to the
propriety of the defendants' sentences. Laboring in uncharted
waters, the lower court jettisoned the guidelines and constructed
a new sentencing range by using a 20:1 crack-to-powder ratio in
lieu of the 100:1 ratio embedded in both the statutory scheme and
the guidelines. This approach, which evinced a categorical,
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policy-based rejection of the 100:1 ratio, amounted to error as a
matter of law.
Matters of policy typically are for Congress. See, e.g.,
Plumley v. S. Container, Inc., 303 F.3d 364, 374 (1st Cir. 2002)
(explaining that "it is Congress's mission to set the policy of
positive law," whereas a court's role is "to interpret that law");
United States v. Robinson, 144 F.3d 104, 110 (1st Cir. 1998)
(stating that the 100:1 crack-to-powder ratio is "a permissible
policy choice articulated by Congress" and that, therefore, the
courts "are obliged to give it effect"). A corollary to this
principle is that, in the absence of constitutional infirmity,
federal courts are bound by Congress's policy judgments, including
judgments concerning the appropriate penalties for federal crimes.
See Eirby, 262 F.3d at 41.
By congressional edict, the Sentencing Commission is
allied with Congress in the important endeavor of calibrating
sentences for federal offenses.4 Congress has directed the
Commission to devise policies that "avoid[] unwarranted sentence
disparities," while at the same time providing "sufficient
flexibility to permit individualized sentences when warranted by
mitigating or aggravating factors." 28 U.S.C. § 991(b)(1)(B)
4
The Commission's authority to set policy, however, is limited
to those instances in which it manages to obtain congressional
approval. See 28 U.S.C. § 994(p). Where Congress withholds its
approval, the Commission's policy judgments do not command judicial
allegiance.
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(emphasis supplied). The clear import of this statutory framework
is to preserve Congress's authority over sentencing policy and to
guarantee that the exercise of judicial discretion over sentencing
decisions be based on case-specific circumstances, not on general,
across-the-board policy considerations.
Nothing in Booker altered this distribution of authority
over sentencing policy. Booker established that a district court
may exercise discretion in fashioning sentences — but that
discretion was meant to operate only within the ambit of the
individualized factors spelled out in section 3553(a).5 See
Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 764-66.
The decision to employ a 100:1 crack-to-powder ratio
rather than a 20:1 ratio, a 5:1 ratio, or a 1:1 ratio is a policy
judgment, pure and simple. See Andrade, 94 F.3d at 14-15 (holding
that the crack-to-powder sentencing differential is not an
individualized circumstance that justifies disregard of the
guidelines). After all, Congress incorporated the 100:1 ratio in
the statutory scheme, rejected the Sentencing Commission's 1995
proposal to rid the guidelines of it, and failed to adopt any of
the Commission's subsequent recommendations for easing the
5
In addition to the compendium of factors that a sentencing
court may appropriately consider under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a),
Congress removed any limitation on "the information concerning the
background, character and conduct of a person convicted of an
offense which a court . . . may receive and consider for the
purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence." Id. § 3661.
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differential between crack and powdered cocaine. It follows
inexorably that the district court's categorical rejection of the
100:1 ratio impermissibly usurps Congress's judgment about the
proper sentencing policy for cocaine offenses.
The defendants take issue with the characterization of
the 100:1 ratio as a matter of congressional policy. They argue
that Congress prescribed this ratio at the maximum and minimum
poles of the statutory sentencing ranges but did not mandate its
use in other applications. This is true as far as it goes — but it
does not take the defendants very far. As the Sentencing
Commission recognized when it superimposed the guidelines on the
statutory framework, it would be illogical to set the maximum and
minimum sentences on one construct and then to use some other,
essentially antithetic construct as the basis for fashioning
sentences within the range. See USSG §2D1.1, cmt. (backg'd.).
Such a patchwork sentencing scheme would run counter to Congress's
goal of eliminating disparities in federal sentences. See 18
U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6); 28 U.S.C. § 994(f); see also Booker, 125 S.
Ct. at 767.
Even if the defendants are correct in their assertion
that the 100:1 ratio does not amount to a congressional policy
choice binding on the federal courts — and we doubt that they are
— the district court's categorical rejection of the 100:1 ratio
still runs headlong into the will of Congress as embodied in the
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Sentencing Reform Act. Congress's purpose in creating a guideline
sentencing scheme was to promote uniformity in federal sentences
based on the "real conduct that underlies the crime of conviction."
Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 759 (emphasis in original).
The district court's approach threatens to undermine this
desired uniformity in two ways. In the first place, if sentencing
courts are free to replace the 100:1 ratio with whatever ratio they
deem appropriate, the sentences of defendants for identical "real
conduct" will depend largely on which judge happens to draw a
particular case. This problem has already begun to surface; in the
wake of Booker, some sentencing courts have continued to impose
sentences for crack offenses in lockstep with the sentencing
guidelines and the 100:1 ratio while others have imposed reduced
sentences based on varying ratios. Compare, e.g., United States v.
Gipson, 425 F.3d 335, 337 (7th Cir. 2005) (affirming sentence based
on 100:1 ratio), with, e.g., United States v. Smith, 359 F. Supp.
2d 771, 782 (E.D. Wis. 2005) (adopting a 20:1 ratio), and United
States v. Fisher, No. S3 03 CR 1501, 2005 WL 2542916, at *6
(S.D.N.Y. Oct. 11, 2005) (adopting a 10:1 ratio).
In the second place, mandatory minimum sentences in drug
cases are fixed by statute. Under the Act, a first-time offender
convicted of an offense involving fifty or more grams of crack
cocaine is subject to a ten-year mandatory minimum sentence. See
21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A). Because the current guidelines were
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constructed around the mandatory minimums, a first-time offender
convicted of an offense involving, say, forty-nine grams of crack
would likely encounter a GSR of 97-121 months.6 See USSG
§2D1.1(c)(5); id. Ch.5, Pt.A. If, however, a sentencing court
displaced the guidelines by applying a 20:1 crack-to-powder ratio,
the second offender's GSR would plummet to 63-78 months. See 2002
Report, Appx. at A-4; USSG Ch.5, Pt.A. In short, a one-gram
difference in drug quantity would create a huge sentencing
differential (nearly fifty percent). It was exactly this sort of
concern that drove Congress's decision to reject the proposed
guideline amendments in 1995. See H.R. Rep. No. 104-272, supra, at
4, reprinted in 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 337.
The defendants concede that the categorical adoption of
a 20:1 ratio by a single district judge would create these
distorting effects. They nonetheless argue that such a praxis
reduces sentencing disparities. This is so, the defendants aver,
because the 20:1 ratio places sentences for crack and powdered
cocaine offenses on a more even keel. This argument misapprehends
the nature of the disparity that ought to concern us.
Although the district court's approach does ameliorate
the disparity in sentences for crack and powdered cocaine offenses,
6
We say "likely" because the GSR would be subject to upward
and downward adjustments for elements such as the presence of a
firearm, USSG §2D1.1(b)(1), role in the offense, id. §§3B1.1-3B1.2,
acceptance of responsibility, id. §3E1.1, and a host of others.
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what counts is the uniformity in sentencing sought by Congress.
That uniformity "does not consist simply of similar sentences for
those convicted of violations of the same statute" but "consists,
more importantly, of similar relationships between sentences and
real conduct." Booker, 125 S. Ct. at 761. Congress plainly
believed that not all cocaine offenses are equal and that
trafficking in crack involves different real conduct than
trafficking in powder. Otherwise, it would not have ordered
dissimilar treatment of the two types of offenses in the Act.
Clearly, then, Congress intended that particular disparity to
exist, and federal courts are not free to second-guess that type of
decision. Cf. Snyder, 136 F.3d at 68-70 (rejecting argument that
disparity between federal and state sentences for similar firearms
offenses justified reduced sentence because Congress deliberately
created the disparity through the Armed Career Criminal Act).
In an effort to sidestep the force of this reasoning, the
defendants assert that the sentences in these cases resulted from
individualized analysis rather than from any categorical
imperative. For example, Lewis points out that, at his sentencing,
the lower court addressed a number of the section 3553(a) factors.
In a similar vein, Pho alludes to the district court's discussion
of several particularized considerations. We find this argument
unpersuasive.
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The sockdolager is that, although the district court
considered individualized factors in each case, it did not base its
sentencing decisions on those factors. By the district court's own
description, "the only thing" that supported reduced sentences for
the defendants was the "tragic" and "incongruous" treatment of
crack cocaine offenses in the sentencing guidelines and the
underlying statutory scheme. The court made no bones about its
intention to apply its preferred 20:1 ratio categorically in future
cases:
I've encountered this in other cases, and I've
consistently taken the position that the [20:1
ratio] makes sense. . . . I would imagine
that by now this question must be under
consideration by the First Circuit . . . and I
hope we get some clarification on this
sometime soon before we build up too much of a
backlog of these cases. But that's the
position I take now.
Thus, the record, fairly read, belies the insinuation that the
district court imposed the sentences appealed from on the basis of
case-specific factors.
To recapitulate, we hold that the district court erred as
a matter of law when it constructed a new sentencing range based on
the categorical substitution of a 20:1 crack-to-powder ratio for
the 100:1 ratio embedded in the sentencing guidelines. This
holding recognizes that sentencing decisions must be done case by
case and must be grounded in case-specific considerations, not in
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general disagreement with broad-based policies enunciated by
Congress or the Commission, as its agent.
Let us be perfectly clear. We do not intend to disparage
the district court's thoughtful attempt to deal with a problem that
has tormented many enlightened observers ever since Congress
promulgated the 100:1 ratio. By the same token, we do not intend
to diminish the discretion that, after Booker, district courts
enjoy in sentencing matters or to suggest that, in a drug-
trafficking case, the nature of the contraband and/or the severity
of a projected guideline sentence may not be taken into account on
a case-by-case basis. Our goal is simply to channel the district
courts' newfound discretion in ways that both comport with the
Booker Court's remedial opinion and respect the separation of
powers between the legislative and judicial branches of government.
While we share the district court's concern about the fairness of
maintaining the across-the-board sentencing gap associated with the
100:1 crack-to-powder ratio, the proper place to assuage that
concern is in the halls of Congress, not in federal courtrooms. In
the final analysis, it is Congress, not the courts, that possesses
the institutional capacity to address the problem in a coherent and
uniform fashion. See Singleterry, 29 F.3d at 741.
IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above,
we vacate the defendants' sentences and remand for resentencing in
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accordance with this opinion. We intimate no view as to the length
of the sentences to be imposed on remand.
Vacated and remanded.
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