NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
___________
No. 16-4238
___________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
WILLIAM S. DAHL,
Appellant
____________________________________
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
(D.C. Criminal No. 2-14-cr-00382-001)
District Judge: Honorable Harvey Bartle, III
____________________________________
Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
September 15, 2017
Before: VANASKIE, RENDELL, and FUENTES, Circuit Judges
(Opinion filed: October 26, 2017)
_________
OPINION *
_________
FUENTES, Circuit Judge.
In a previous appeal in this case, we ruled that defendant-appellant William Dahl
had been improperly designated as a recidivist sexual offender under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.5—
*
This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not
constitute binding precedent.
which nearly doubled his sentencing exposure—and vacated his top-of-the-Guidelines-
range sentence of 293 months in prison. On remand, the District Court recalculated the
Guidelines range without the § 4B1.5 enhancement, but then—at the government’s
urging—varied upwards to reimpose the same 293-month prison sentence. Dahl now
appeals the judgment of sentence for a second time, arguing both that it violates his
constitutional right to due process and that the District Court committed procedural error
at resentencing. We will affirm.
I.
We write against the backdrop of our prior precedential opinion, United States v.
Dahl, 833 F.3d 345 (3d Cir. 2016). As such, we assume the reader’s familiarity with the
facts and recite only what is germane to today’s disposition.
In 2013, two 15-year-old boys responded to William Dahl’s Craigslist
advertisements, in which Dahl, then on probation, had sought sexual encounters with
“young” men. Although the advertisements themselves left the lower boundaries of
“young” ambiguous, Dahl expressed interest in the two underage boys, sending (and
requesting) explicit pictures, engaging in sexually charged dialogue, and attempting to
arrange a meeting. After the “boys” turned out to be undercover detectives, Dahl was
charged in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania with offenses involving the use of
interstate commerce to engage minors in sexual activities.
Some months after indictment, Dahl and the government entered into a Fed. R.
Crim. P. 11(c)(1)(C) plea agreement containing a binding recommendation of 205
2
months in prison. On the eve of trial, the parties convened for a change-of-plea hearing.
However, the District Court advised counsel that it would not accept the plea agreement,
and impose the 205-month term, without knowing more about Dahl, his background, and
his criminal history, and without the benefit of allocution and witness testimony. Dahl
then decided to enter an open plea without the benefit of a plea agreement.
Information about Dahl’s background came to the District Court by way of the
pre-sentence report (PSR) prepared by the Probation Office, which laid out Dahl’s
lengthy adult criminal history. Because of Dahl’s “multiple prior sex offenses,” 1 the PSR
applied the § 4B1.5 recidivism enhancement, amounting to a five-point increase in
offense level and a single-level upward criminal history adjustment. Dahl’s Guidelines
range was calculated at 235–293 months, whereas without the § 4B1.5 enhancement he
would face 121–151 months—a significant difference.
At sentencing, the government argued in favor of a prison term of 293 months—
the top of the enhanced Guidelines range—while the defense asked the Court to vary
below the Guidelines range to the rejected plea agreement’s term of 205 months. The
District Court ultimately sided with the government. Referencing the “reprehensible”
nature of Dahl’s current offenses, his lengthy criminal history, and the need to protect the
public, the District Court declined to vary and sentenced Dahl to 293 months in prison. 2
On appeal, and reviewing for plain error, we vacated Dahl’s sentence and
1
PSR ¶ 37.
2
See JA 101–04.
3
remanded for resentencing. A 1991 Delaware conviction, we held, could not be a
predicate offense for the § 4B1.5 enhancement under the “categorical approach”—the
rule establishing that the required elements of a prior conviction, rather than the
underlying facts, determine whether it qualifies as a predicate offense—because the
Delaware statutes in question swept more broadly than the comparative federal offense. 3
The sentencing transcript, meanwhile, did not allow the conclusion that the District Court
would have imposed the same sentence irrespective of the Guidelines mistake, although
that outcome also was not foreclosed. 4 Remand was therefore warranted.
Back before the District Court, the parties submitted revised sentencing
memoranda. The government now acknowledged that Dahl’s actual Guidelines exposure
was 121–151 months. But it nevertheless urged the District Court to depart or vary
upwards to a sentence within the now-inapplicable, enhanced Guidelines range, arguing
that an unenhanced sentence “underrepresents [Dahl’s] criminal history” and “in no way
accounts for [Dahl’s] undeterred sexual crimes against children.” 5 The defense accused
the government of “trying to sidestep [this Court’s] remand for a new sentencing,” 6
formally objected to the government’s request for an upward departure or variance, and
argued that a sentence within the revised range of 121–151 months would be
appropriate—the latter due in part to Dahl’s age and declining health.
3
See United States v. Dahl, 833 F.3d 345, 353–57 (3d Cir. 2016).
4
See Dahl, 833 F.3d at 358–59.
5
JA 143.
6
JA 116, 125.
4
The parties made their presentations during a November 2016 resentencing
hearing. As before, the government emphasized the seriousness of Dahl’s offense and his
lengthy criminal history. The defense, in addition to echoing the points made in the
sentencing memorandum, argued that it would be unfair and prejudicial, and possibly
raise due process concerns, for the District Court to consider the facts of Dahl’s older
offenses, in light of counsel’s inability to meaningfully contest them. Instead, the District
Court should “start at [the Guidelines range of] 121 to 151 [months] and then look at
appropriate factors that may warrant a sentence . . . slightly outside that Guideline
range.” 7 Elsewhere, however, the defense appeared to stipulate to the facts of Dahl’s
prior offenses, while conceding that the District Court “can consider almost anything
when imposing a sentence” including “[the not-contested] facts about priors in the PSR.” 8
Having heard the attorneys’ arguments and elicited a statement from Dahl, the
District Court imposed its sentence. First, the Court calculated the correct Guidelines
range: 121–151 months. The Court then turned to the § 3553(a) factors. With regard to
Dahl’s current and prior convictions, the Court described Dahl’s current offenses as
“some of the most serious . . . in the criminal code” and referred to his “most serious
criminal history” that “spanned over three decades.” 9 The Court also acknowledged
Dahl’s extensive history of therapy, treatment, and alternatives to incarceration, “none of
7
JA 127.
8
JA 116, 125.
9
JA 134.
5
[which] ha[s] seemed to do any good.” 10 In light of these factors, considered in tandem
with Dahl’s “recidivist” tendencies and the need to “act to protect society and particularly
young boys from further crimes,” the Court granted the government’s request for an
upward variance. In the end, Dahl was resentenced to 293 months in prison—or precisely
the same custodial sentence originally imposed. 11 Dahl lodged no objection during or
after the District Court’s explanation of its decision.
II. 12
a) Due Process Challenge
Dahl argues that the District Court’s reimposed custodial sentence—at the high
end of the now-inapplicable enhanced recidivist range—denied him the benefit of our
earlier decision, perpetuated the error corrected on appeal, and violated his right to due
process. Our review of this constitutional challenge is plenary. 13
Sentencing under the advisory Guidelines follows a three step process: 1) the
calculation of the correct advisory Guidelines range, incorporating any relevant
sentencing enhancements; 2) formal consideration and rulings on any motions for
departure; and 3) consideration of the Guidelines range together with the § 3553(a)
statutory factors in order to determine, and impose, the appropriate sentence, which may
10
JA 134.
11
JA 135.
12
We have jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a) and 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
13
See United States v. Bass, 54 F.3d 125, 132 (3d Cir. 1995).
6
vary upward or downward from the advisory Guidelines range. 14 Step 1, calculating the
correct Guidelines range, proceeds exactly as it would have under the mandatory, pre-
Booker Guidelines 15—extending to the use of the formal, elements-based “categorical
approach” to determine the application of certain enhancements based on prior
convictions. 16 Because Guidelines errors carry over to the subsequent steps of
sentencing, and affect the District Court’s perception of what is and is not a reasonable
sentence, the law recognizes a presumption in favor of remanding for correction or
clarification those sentences that are based on erroneous Guidelines ranges. 17
Our previous opinion in this case corrected a plain error at step 1: the calculation
of the Guidelines range, which was erroneously enhanced by convictions that did not
qualify as predicates under the categorical approach. We did not go beyond that first
step, as we were not called upon to do so; we did not opine on what might or might not
be an appropriate sentence, or whether 293 months in prison was substantively
reasonable.
14
See United States v. Fumo, 655 F.3d 288, 308 (3d Cir. 2011). The government’s
request for a Guidelines “departure” does not appear to have been explicitly ruled upon;
presumably, the District Court thought it was subsumed under the alternative request for
a variance. Regardless, Dahl does not appeal any error at step 2.
15
United States v. Gunter, 462 F.3d 237, 247 (3d Cir. 2006).
16
See, e.g., United States v. Chapman, No. 16-1810, ___ F.3d ___, 2017 WL 3319287, at
*4 (3d Cir. Aug. 4, 2017) (career-offender Guideline).
17
See Molina-Martinez v. United States, 136 S. Ct. 1338, 1349 (2016); United States v.
Knight, 266 F.3d 203, 208 (3d Cir. 2001).
7
On resentencing, and in line with our mandate, 18 the District Court correctly
recalculated Dahl’s Guidelines range at step 1. But then, at step 3, it considered the
§ 3553(a) factors, and particularly Dahl’s criminal history and the danger he posed to the
public, in imposing sentence.
The difference between steps is crucial. While the categorical approach is
required by the mechanical Guidelines calculation found at step 1, we have never held
that the categorical approach’s constraints apply to step 3—or, by extension, that the facts
deemed improper at step 1 may not be considered at step 3. As Dahl recognizes, the
Eleventh Circuit has upheld a sentencing court’s discretion to reimpose, on remand, a
sentence earlier vacated by the Court of Appeals due to a categorical approach error, and
he points to no authority to the contrary. 19
Dahl nevertheless argues that his due process rights were violated because the
underlying error of the first sentencing proceeding—the incorrect, enhanced Guidelines
range—was not truly eliminated from the case. With the elimination of the enhancement,
18
Dahl argues that he was denied the “benefit of this Court’s mandate” when the District
Court imposed the same sentence on remand. Dahl Br. at 19; see also United States v.
Kennedy, 682 F.3d 244, 252–53 (3d Cir. 2012) (explaining the “mandate rule”). Our
mandate directed the District Court to recalculate Dahl’s Guidelines range and then
conduct resentencing. Dahl received the benefit of that directive; his Guidelines range no
longer included the enhancement, and his above-Guidelines sentence no longer carried
the same default appearance of reasonableness. “Nothing in our mandate altered the
[D]istrict [C]ourt’s duty to make an individualized assessment [of Dahl] based on the
facts presented.” United States v. Alston, 722 F.3d 603, 607 (4th Cir. 2013) (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
19
See United States v. Rosales-Bruno, 789 F.3d 1249, 1256–61 (11th Cir. 2015).
8
Dahl argues, the old, erroneous 235–293 range was “now random” 20 from the perspective
of the correct Guidelines range. Using it as the guidepost at resentencing, which Dahl
claims the District Court did, simply “perpetuated the original Guidelines error” and
violated Dahl’s right to due process. 21
But this argument mischaracterizes the District Court’s consideration of the factors
in step 3. The record reflects that the District Court considered all relevant § 3553(a)
factors when deciding the sentence. The judge considered the “seriousness of the
offenses,” the “need to protect the public,” and noted how in Dahl’s case, non-custodial
measures such as therapy and treatment, home confinement, and probation had all proved
fruitless in preventing him from re-offending. 22
Even if the District Court had explicitly referred to the erroneous Guidelines range
in resentencing, Dahl’s argument rests on the faulty assumption that an inapplicable
Guidelines range cannot guide the District Court in its discharge of its sentencing
responsibilities. In fashioning an appropriate sentence, the District Court may reasonably
look to Guidelines more broadly as providing guidance and alternatives. 23 Sometimes
20
Dahl Br. at 16.
21
Dahl Br. at 16.
22
Indeed, Judge Bartle stated at resentencing: “In a word, Mr. Dahl, you are a pedophile
and a recidivist. The Court, above all, is compelled to act to protect society and
particularly young boys from further crimes of you, the defendant. The Court has no
doubt that without a long sentence and significant upward variance, you would be back
on the street as a sexual predator. The Court cannot afford to take a chance on your
behaving yourself back in society.”
23
Dahl cites Molina-Martinez to the contrary, but that case dealt with the kind of error
we encountered in his previous appeal: the District Court’s mistaken calculation of, and
9
this can inure to a defendant’s benefit—if, for instance, a court thinks that a recidivism
enhancement overstates a defendant’s culpability and then refers to the unenhanced
range—and sometimes to his or her detriment. But Dahl has cited nothing suggesting
that the mere presentation of an alternative calculation, even if that calculation ends up
being technically erroneous, puts its consideration beyond the reach of the District
Court’s holistic sentencing assessment. Notwithstanding that in the first instance, a 293-
month sentence based on the inapplicable enhancement was not justified, it was
nonetheless justified at resentencing based on other considerations.
Thus, without forestalling the possibility that the consideration of erroneous
Guidelines ranges might warrant remand in certain circumstances, we detect no such
mistake here. The range considered by the District Court was the range that would have
applied had Dahl been deemed a recidivist under the Guidelines. The categorical
approach at step 1 notwithstanding, the District Court did not err in considering at step 3
the facts of Dahl’s criminal history and granting the government’s motion to vary back
within the recidivist range based on those facts and the other § 3553(a) considerations.
b) Other Procedural Sentencing Errors
reliance on, an incorrect Guidelines range at step 1. See Molina-Martinez, 136 S. Ct. at
1346. Molina-Martinez does not hold that a District Court’s decision to reference or be
guided by an inapplicable Guidelines range on step 3 is a procedural error. Further, it is
not necessary for a trial court to “err” for more than one potential Guidelines range to be
in place at sentencing, as Guidelines calculations are often disputed. For instance, had
Dahl objected initially to the use of his prior offenses at predicates, and had the District
Court agreed, the Court would nevertheless be aware of the possible recidivism
enhancement even as it declined to apply it at Step 1.
10
Dahl argues that the District Court committed two step-3 errors. First, it failed to
meaningfully consider the applicable (i.e., unenhanced) Guidelines range. Second, it
failed to justify its variance without responding to the arguments made by the defense in
mitigation.
Dahl concedes that this second point draws plain error review, but he contends that
the meaningful-consideration argument was preserved through his underlying argument
that “imposing 293 months would require ignoring the 121–151 month range
altogether.” 24 Having reviewed the record, we disagree. Dahl’s opening brief makes
clear that the complained-of error derives from the District Court’s alleged failure to
adequately explain, and thus make clear on the record, its consideration of the
unenhanced Guidelines range, and show its “cognizance” of that range throughout step 3.
A timely objection at sentencing or after the pronouncement of sentence could have cured
this alleged error by eliciting additional explanation from the District Court, but Dahl
lodged no objection. Accordingly, both alleged errors draw plain error review. 25
While recognizing the sheer magnitude of the District Court’s upward variance, no
plain error is apparent on the points Dahl identifies. The District Court thought that the
applicable Guidelines range understated Dahl’s criminal history, likelihood of (and prior)
24
Reply Br. at 7.
25
See United States v. Flores-Mejia, 759 F.3d 253, 255 & n.1 (3d Cir. 2014) (en banc);
see also id. at 258 (“An objection at sentencing, even if sometimes time-consuming,
serves the important purpose of reminding the judge of these requirements and allowing
the judge to immediately remedy omissions or clarify and supplement inadequate
explanations.”).
11
recidivism, and continued danger to the community. The District Court summarily
dismissed Dahl’s reliance on the mitigating circumstances of age and infirmity, which (in
tandem with other aspects of Dahl’s background) had been discussed at length earlier in
the hearing. Reading the transcript, we come away understanding what the District Court
intended to do and why it did so. We cannot say that the lack of a more fulsome
explanation or discussion of the relevant sentencing factors amounted to an error that was
clear, prejudicial, and affected the fairness of the judicial proceeding. 26
III.
Dahl’s sentence is undeniably harsh, but as explained above, the District Court did
not err in choosing and imposing it. The judgment of sentence will thus be affirmed.
26
Dahl, 833 F.3d at 349 n.4 (articulating plain error standard). Dahl’s reliance on Gall v.
United States, 552 U.S. 38 (2007), and United States v. Negroni, 638 F.3d 434 (3d Cir.
2011), is unavailing, as neither of those cases arose on plain error review. See Gall, 552
U.S. at 56; Negroni, 638 F.3d at 445.
12