NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Chicago, Illinois 60604
Argued August 3, 2021
Decided August 6, 2021
Before
DIANE S. SYKES, Chief Judge
MICHAEL B. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge
AMY J. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge
No. 20-3061
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appeal from the United States District
Plaintiff-Appellee, Court for the Northern District of
Illinois, Eastern Division.
v. No. 1:18-CR-00287(1)
MONTE DIGGS, Ronald A. Guzmán,
Defendant-Appellant. Judge.
ORDER
Monte Diggs pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm as a felon, 18 U.S.C.
§ 922(g)(1), and the district court sentenced him to 88 months in prison. On appeal he
contends that the district judge overlooked mitigating arguments and relied on
extraneous facts about pervasive gun violence in Chicago. The judge did not
procedurally err in sentencing Diggs, so we affirm.
One January evening, Diggs was standing near a home on Chicago’s west side
(Austin) when he spotted police in the area. He ran into the backyard of a nearby
residence and tossed a loaded gun—a semiautomatic pistol with a large-capacity
No. 20-3061 Page 2
magazine—onto the roof of a house. Police recovered the gun and apprehended Diggs.
He was charged with, and eventually pleaded guilty to, unlawfully possessing a
firearm as a felon. See § 922(g)(1).
In a presentence investigation report, a probation officer calculated a guidelines
range of 92 to 115 months (based on a total offense level of 23 and criminal history
category of VI).
In his sentencing memorandum, Diggs raised several arguments in mitigation
that, he believed, justified a below-guidelines sentence. He highlighted his difficult
childhood in a neighborhood afflicted with “gangs, drugs, and violence” and argued
that his early exposure to substance abuse contributed to his long history of arrests.
That criminal history was further mitigated, he argued, by his relative youth (he was
under 25 when he committed most of his offenses). Diggs added that he obtained the
gun for personal protection, citing social science research that showed high rates of gun
ownership for personal-safety reasons in his neighborhood. He also urged the court to
consider the risks that COVID-19 posed to prisoners. The government countered that a
sentence at the bottom of the guidelines range—92 months—would be appropriate to
deter future wrongdoing and reflect the seriousness of the offense.
The district judge adopted the presentence investigation report’s guidelines
calculation without objection and sentenced Diggs to 88 months (92 months less four
months’ credit for time that Diggs served in state custody). In weighing the factors
under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), the judge noted Diggs’s “truly extensive” criminal history
(five juvenile findings of delinquency and 19 adult convictions), remarking that Diggs
had “no respect whatsoever” for the law. The judge added that Diggs’s firearm-
possession offense was “frankly as serious as … there is,” given the ongoing gun
violence in Chicago. The judge also acknowledged Diggs’s “out-and-out traumatic
childhood” in “an area just devastated by violence and drugs.” Based on these
considerations, the judge settled upon a bottom-of-the-range sentence—a term
necessary to reflect the seriousness of the offense and deter illegal gun possession by
those with “no good reason to have them, no legal reason to have them, nor justifiable
reason to have them.”
On appeal, Diggs argues that the district judge procedurally erred by
overlooking or inadequately analyzing four mitigating arguments for a below-
guidelines sentence. First, Diggs contends that the judge ignored his argument that he
obtained the gun for personal safety, not criminal purposes. But a judge’s consideration
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of principal mitigating arguments can be “implicit or imprecise,” United States v. Patel,
921 F.3d 663, 670 (7th Cir. 2019), particularly when, as here, the judge imposes a within-
guidelines sentence and states that he has reviewed the written arguments.
See United States v. Terronez, 926 F.3d 390, 395 (7th Cir. 2019); United States v. Graham,
915 F.3d 456, 459 (7th Cir. 2019). By stating that Diggs had “no good reason” to have the
gun, the judge rejected his justification for acquiring it.
Second, Diggs argues that the judge disregarded his argument about his relative
youth during most of his arrests and convictions. True, the judge did not specify that
Diggs committed most of his crimes before age 25. But the judge did distinguish
between Diggs’s juvenile and adult convictions, finding that his criminal history
reflected a disrespect for the law and was more aggravating than mitigating.
See United States v. Stephens, 986 F.3d 1004, 1010 (7th Cir. 2021).
Third, Diggs argues that the judge’s discussion of his childhood-risk factors was
too cursory to allow for meaningful appellate review. But that argument
misapprehends the nature of the judge’s statements. The judge referred to Diggs’s
“traumatic childhood” in an area blighted by violence and drugs, acknowledging that
“those life experiences obviously made it really difficult for him to stay out of trouble.”
The judge’s discussion may have been brief, but judges need not “belabor the obvious”
so long as their thinking is clear, as it was here. United States v. Castaldi, 743 F.3d 589,
595 (7th Cir. 2014).
Finally, Diggs argues that the judge glossed over his mitigation argument that
the COVID-19 pandemic has made time in prison “more difficult and dangerous.” But
the judge needn’t have commented on such a “generic challenge,” given that Diggs did
not suggest that he was more at risk of COVID-19 in prison than any other prisoner.
United States v. McLaughlin, 760 F.3d 699, 707 (7th Cir. 2014). Further, to the extent that
conditions arising from COVID-19 provide any mitigating argument, the Bureau of
Prisons has now made vaccines available to inmates, and Diggs has not asserted that
the Bureau has denied him access to a vaccine or that he is medically or otherwise
unable to receive or benefit from one. See United States v. Broadfield, No. 20-2906,
__F.4th__, 2021 WL 3076863, at *1–2 (7th Cir. July 21, 2021); United States v. Ugbah, No.
20-3073, __F.4th__, 2021 WL 3077134, at *1 (7th Cir. July 21, 2021).
Next, Diggs argues that the proceedings were tainted by the judge’s comments
about Chicago’s general problems with gun violence. Citing United States v. Robinson,
829 F.3d 878, 880 (7th Cir. 2016), Diggs contends that the judge inappropriately blamed
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him for a societal problem that was not tied to his specific offense. The judge’s
comments were concise enough that we repeat them here:
The city of Chicago, for the last few years and certainly for the last few months,
has been suffering from an absolutely incredible barrage of gun violence. You
know, children are shot in front of their homes while they’re playing. People are
shot inside their homes by stray bullets. People in restaurants eating after going
to church witness gangland type of shootings, three people getting out and
shooting guns.
The violence is almost daily. It is recurring. It has so far been unaffected by any
efforts of law enforcement to stop it. And it is seriously degrading the conditions
of life for large numbers of innocent citizens of Chicago who have to get up, go to
work, to school, to church every day surrounded by the fear that someone with a
gun, usually involved in drug-dealing in one form or another, is going to shoot
them or try to shoot somebody else and hit them instead, or their children.
So, the Court is extremely concerned by this violence, which is, most of the time,
connected with drugs and gangs. All three go together, from gangs defending
their drug points, retaliations. And this defendant has in his background a
mixture of dealing narcotics; and now he’s caught with a gun, fully-loaded, semi-
automatic 9-millimeter weapon, which is lethal and meant for only one thing,
and that’s to shoot other people.
The judge’s comments do not undermine the appropriateness of the sentence.
When assessing the seriousness of a firearm offense, district judges may consider
“locality-based categorical factors” like Chicago’s increase in gun violence. United States
v. Hatch, 909 F.3d 872, 874–75 (7th Cir. 2018) (affirming above-guidelines sentence for
firearm trafficking where judge commented on the “gun violence that plagues this city”
and “[c]hildren [being] shot while playing in front of their own homes”). The judge’s
remarks in this case are not meaningfully distinguishable from his comments in Hatch
or other cases in which we have upheld the imposed sentences. See, e.g., United States v.
Dawson, 980 F.3d 1156, 1161, 1163 (7th Cir. 2020) (affirming above-guidelines revocation
sentence for illegal firearm possession where judge remarked that Chicago was “a city
where innocent people are shot every day, where you turn on the news … and you find
another horrible weekend where so many dead and so many injured”). As in Hatch, the
record here shows that the judge was not blaming Diggs for Chicago’s gun violence but
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rather acknowledging the local context when assessing the seriousness of his offense
and the need to deter similar conduct. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(2)(A)–(B).
Finally, Diggs argues that the judge incorrectly inferred that his firearm offense
had something to do with drugs and gang activity. He points to the judge’s statements
that “All three go together, from gangs defending their drug points, retaliations. And
this defendant has in his background a mixture of dealing narcotics; and now he’s
caught with a gun[.]” He urges that that inference was unreasonable because his last
drug-dealing conviction was eight years earlier, and no evidence tied his gun
possession to drug dealing.
The judge’s comments were not inappropriate. The judge was entitled to
consider Diggs’s criminal history. See § 3553(a)(1). And even if the record does not
support a finding that Diggs’s firearm offense related to drug dealing, the judge was
more than entitled to conclude that the firearm offense was particularly serious.
See § 3553(a)(2)(A).
AFFIRMED