RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 13a0048p.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. 11-6433
v.
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Defendant-Appellant. -
STEVEN SHAW,
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Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Tennessee at Memphis.
No. 2:09-cr-20235-1—Jon Phipps McCalla, Chief District Judge.
Argued: October 12, 2012
Decided and Filed: February 21, 2013
Before: SUTTON and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; WELLS, District Judge.*
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Randolph W. Alden, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER,
Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellant. Kevin G. Ritz, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S
OFFICE, Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Randolph W. Alden,
Stephen B. Shankman, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Memphis,
Tennessee, for Appellant. S. Keenan Carter, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S
OFFICE, Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellee.
SUTTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WELLS, D. J., joined.
GRIFFIN, J. (pp. 8-15), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
*
The Honorable Lesley Wells, Senior United States District Judge for the Northern District of
Ohio, sitting by designation.
1
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 2
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OPINION
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SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Officer Harold Cheirs and his partner, Officer
Robinson, tried to serve an arrest warrant on Phyllis Brown at 3171 Hendricks Avenue
in Memphis, Tennessee. When they got to Hendricks Avenue, they could not find a
house with a 3171 address. They eventually found two houses on opposite sides of the
street with a 3170 address, at which point, you might say, they were getting warmer.
One of the houses presumably was mislabeled, and the officers had several options at
their fingertips to figure out which house was 3171 Hendricks and which was not. They
could have determined which side of the street contained odd-numbered addresses and
served the warrant on the “3170” address on that side of the street. They could have
checked city records or for that matter Google Maps to identify which house was the
right one. Or they could have gone up to one of the houses and asked an occupant which
house was 3171 Hendricks and which one was 3170 Hendricks.
The officers picked the last option—in part. Noticing that one of the two houses
was occupied, they proceeded to that one. Now they were getting colder. Officer Cheirs
knocked, a woman answered, and she promptly shut the door. While Officer Robinson
went to the back of the house, Officer Cheirs knocked again. The occupant eventually
opened the door, though not for seven or eight minutes. Instead of asking the woman
what the address of the house was, whether Phyllis Brown lived there or whether this
was the odd-numbered side of the street, Officer Cheirs represented to the woman that
he had a warrant “for this address.” False. He had a warrant for 3171 Hendricks, and
this was 3170 Hendricks.
Having no reason to know that this representation was false and opting not to
insist on looking at the warrant, the woman let the officers into the house—the house of
Phyllis Brown’s hapless neighbor, Steven Shaw. The officers performed a protective
sweep of the house. Instead of finding Brown, they found a lot of cocaine. They
arrested Shaw, and a grand jury charged him with a battery of drug-dealing and drug-
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 3
possession offenses. The district court denied Shaw’s motion to suppress the drugs
found at his house. He pled guilty to distributing cocaine, see 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), all
the while reserving the right to appeal the suppression ruling. The district court
sentenced him to 126 months in prison.
Shaw’s appeal raises two Fourth Amendment questions: Did the officers
permissibly enter the house? And did they permissibly stay there long enough to see the
cocaine?
As to the first question, what made the officers think this was 3171 Hendricks?
And was that thinking reasonable? Was it reasonable to tell the occupant they had an
arrest warrant “for this house” when that statement had at least a fifty-fifty likelihood of
being false and when readily available alternatives could have confirmed where
3171 Hendricks was? The Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable searches and
seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. That means, among treatises full of other
requirements, that officers must “take steps to reasonably ensure” they are not entering
the wrong home when they execute an arrest warrant. El Bey v. Roop, 530 F.3d 407, 416
(6th Cir. 2008); see Steagald v. United States, 451 U.S. 204, 216 (1981); Payton v. New
York, 445 U.S. 573, 603 (1980); United States v. Pruitt, 458 F.3d 477, 480 (6th Cir.
2006).
The officers offer five potential reasons for entering Shaw’s house to serve this
arrest warrant, and none is reasonable—singly or cumulatively. Reason one: this house
was occupied, and the other was not. But the occupation of a house at a given point in
the day says nothing about its address or whether the object of an arrest warrant lives
there. It is quite possible, indeed, that the opposite is true—that fugitives generally do
not spend a lot of time at home.
Reason two: a woman answered the door, and Phyllis Brown is a woman. Yet
there were many people in the house, and the reality that one of them was a woman
proves nothing. Of course, if the officers had looked at a picture of Phyllis Brown
before serving this warrant, that could have confirmed or, as here, alleviated their
suspicions when they met someone other than Phyllis Brown. As with other obvious
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 4
options in this case—checking for the odd-numbered side of the street, checking city
records, checking Google Maps—the apparent choice not to learn what Phyllis Brown
looked like before serving this arrest warrant amounts to one more self-imposed shroud
of ignorance that made other potential clues look more salient than they were.
Reason three: the woman closed the door upon first seeing them. Perhaps the
officers could think that this reaction showed the woman was up to no good, but it does
not make her Phyllis Brown (particularly when the same woman returned to the door),
it does not make the house 3171 Hendricks, and it does not by itself justify entry into the
house. That is all the more so here. The officers had an arrest warrant for criminal
trespassing, not drug dealing or something else that an occupant might wish to hide from
the officer’s view. The most law-abiding place for criminal trespassers to be is at home,
on their property. The only people apparently trespassing that day were the officers.
Reason four: the officers saw scales in the house. Ditto. This might be helpful
if the officers could connect this observation to Phyllis Brown and the reason for her
arrest. Yet this criminal-trespassing arrest warrant had nothing to do with drug dealing,
and the officers do not claim that the observation of the scale gave them exigent
circumstances to enter the house.
Reason five: the officers had a fifty-fifty chance of being right, and that alone
allowed them to take this approach. Yes, yes, and no. Yes, the officers had even odds
of being right—at least as long as they refused to determine which side of the street
contained odd-numbered houses. Yes, there was nothing wrong with going up to the
house. But, no, officers may not say something is true —that they have an arrest warrant
“for this house”—as a basis for obtaining entry into the house when there is a fifty-fifty
probability that the statement is false. That is all the more true when there are readily
available means for alleviating most, if not all, doubt about the point, and when no
officer-safety concerns justify the deception. See United States v. Hardin, 539 F.3d 404,
425 n.12 (6th Cir. 2008).
Law-enforcement work is not easy, and no one doubts the correlation between
preserving public safety and preserving a free society. Nor does anyone doubt the
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 5
imperative of allowing officers to use ruses and lies in the course of this essential work,
particularly if the tools of indirection ensure police safety. Think of an undercover
officer asked what he does for a living. But none of this permits officers to tell an
occupant that they have a warrant to make an arrest at a given address when they do not.
The officers took a knowing roll of the dice, and perhaps it would have worked had they
been right as a matter of chance about the address. But when they were wrong, that was
their problem, leaving them with having obtained entry into the wrong house based on
a false pretense. An officer may not falsely tell a homeowner that he has an arrest
warrant for a house, then use that falsity as the basis for obtaining entry into the house.
The Supreme Court has said as much. Forty-five years ago, it faced this
question: whether “a search can be justified as lawful on the basis of consent when that
‘consent’ has been given only after the official conducting the search has asserted that
he possesses a warrant” when he does not? The answer was no. Bumper v. North
Carolina, 391 U.S. 543, 546–51 (1968); see also United States v. Escobar, 389 F.3d 781,
786 (8th Cir. 2004) (holding that officers may not obtain consent to search through a
“false claim of legal authority”). The equivalent is true here.
Is there any doubt, moreover, that the woman at the door would have denied
entry had the officers told her the truth—that they had an arrest warrant for the address
across the street? That is the relevance of the door-closing episode, not that it somehow
showed this was 3171 Hendricks.
This is not the only problem with the encounter. Just as the officers entered the
house based on a hollow representation, they overstayed their stay based on one. After
the officers falsely said they had a warrant for this address, the woman trustingly let
them in. The officers saw five people in the front room, and one officer asked who lived
there and who owned the property. The still-unidentified woman at the front door said
she lived there, and so did one of the men. One of the occupants then asked, “[W]hat
address y’all looking for?” R.52 at 36. An officer responded, “3170 Hendricks.” False
again. The apparent justification for this answer was the risk that, if the officers told
them the truth—they had an arrest warrant for 3171 Hendricks—the occupants would
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 6
“lie” and say that this was 3170 Hendricks. The officers were right about one thing—the
proclivity for lying that day—as the occupants answered, falsely, that “this is 3171
Hendricks.” Seizing on the answer, the officers claim that it gave them a definitive right
to stay in the house. But the officers misjudged the impact of a false response to a false
statement, what you might say was being too deceptive by half. The two falsities still
left the officers with a false premise—that this was 3171 Hendricks. It was not.
What a tangled web, one not even justified by the pull of expedience. Had it not
occurred to anyone to ask, straightforwardly, which house is 3171 Hendricks and which
house is 3170 Hendricks? That question would leave no one, truthful and deceptive
alike, any room to maneuver.
But that is not the key problem. No custom of law-enforcement training of which
we are aware, and certainly no custom of Fourth Amendment law, allows an officer to
give a false answer to the question “What right do you have to be here?” as a basis for
staying put. Just as a lie about an address cannot supply the basis for entering a house,
it cannot supply the basis for staying in a home once an occupant asks the officers what
right they have to be there. Otherwise, an officer, when challenged over his right to
enter a house, could say he had an arrest warrant when he did not. Or these officers,
when asked to show the arrest warrant, could have produced a false arrest warrant, one
with the wrong address. No one plausibly thinks that is permissible. See Bumper, 391
U.S. at 549–50. Why was this law-enforcement encounter any different? The
government offers no good reason, and we cannot think of one on our own.
The officers, in short and in truth, had no right to enter the house based on a
falsity and no right to stay there based on a falsity. That is all there is to it, or at least
almost all. One other thing: There may be good candidates for taking a stand on the
exclusionary rule, but this is not one of them. The government urges us not to exclude
this evidence even if the officers violated the Fourth Amendment in obtaining it.
Herring v. United States, 555 U.S. 135 (2009), it is true, recognized that the exclusionary
rule often is over-inclusive, requiring courts to suppress evidence even when officers
have obtained it in good faith and even when suppression does not further the central
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 7
premise of the rule: deterrence. Id. at 141. But so long as there is an exclusionary rule,
it seems safe to say that it will apply to officers who enter and remain in a house based
on false pretenses—one step removed from the “isolated negligence” at issue in Herring
and another step removed from the “attenuated” link between the officer misconduct in
Herring and the arrest there. Id. at 137. Shaw’s case is not Herring’s case.
We reverse the district court’s contrary Fourth Amendment decision and remand
the case for further proceedings.
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 8
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DISSENT
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GRIFFIN, J., dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. Because the district court did not clearly err in its fact
finding and correctly applied the law, I would affirm its denial of defendant Shaw’s
motion to suppress the cocaine evidence. In addition, I would affirm defendant’s within-
Guidelines sentence.
I.
“When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, this [c]ourt reviews a
‘district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo,’
considering the evidence ‘in the light most likely to support the district court’s
decision.’” United States v. Pruitt, 458 F.3d 477, 480 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting United
States v. Hurst, 228 F.3d 751, 756 (6th Cir. 2000)). A factual finding is clearly
erroneous when, “‘although there may be evidence to support it, the reviewing court on
the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
committed.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Navarro–Camacho, 186 F.3d 701, 705 (6th
Cir.1999)).
The findings of facts that we must accept, unless clearly erroneous, are set forth
in the district court’s order adopting the report and recommendation of the magistrate
made following an evidentiary hearing. The factual findings of particular significance
are as follows:
On October 28, 2008, the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department assigned
Officer Harold Cheirs (“Officer Cheirs”) to serve a valid arrest warrant
on Phyllis Brown (“Brown”) at 3171 Hendricks Avenue. Upon arriving
at the location, Officer Cheirs and Officer Robinson found two homes
with an address of 3170 Hendricks, and no home with an address of 3171
Hendricks. Among the two houses, the officers chose to approach the
house with signs of activity, an open front door, and several cars parked
in front. Officer Cheirs testified that he would first attempt to “make
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 9
contact” with the inhabitants and then investigate outside the home if
unable to do so.
Officer Cheirs, dressed in his police uniform, proceeded to the back of
the house and knocked on the door. Stephanie Harris (“Harris”) opened
the door and slammed it in his face. Officer Cheirs believed, however,
that the black female who slammed the door in his face was Phyllis
Brown, the subject of the arrest warrant.1 He alerted Officer Robinson
of what occurred and knocked again. Harris did not open the back door
of the house until seven or eight minutes had passed. In the meantime,
Officer Cheirs observed “a couple people in the living room, people in
the kitchen area and stuff on . . . scales on the table.”
Officer Cheirs testified that he did not go in the house at this moment for
safety reasons, but was “kind of half and half” in the doorway so that
“[t]hey couldn’t close the door on [him].” He announced that “we got a
warrant for this address” and asked “who all lives here” and “who’s the
owner?” Harris identified herself as a resident, but none of the occupants
clarified who owned the house. When Harris asked what address Officer
Cheirs was looking for, he replied 3170 Hendricks, instead of the 3171
Hendricks address on the warrant. Officer Cheirs testified that he did so
because in his experience people often lie “when you are looking for a
particular address,” and he sought to elicit the address of the premises.
Harris told him that the address was 3171 Hendricks, and “then
everybody else said 3171.” In light of this comment and the suspicious
activity he observed, Officer Cheirs “believed that it was the correct
address at that time.”
___________________________________________________________
1
Officer Cheirs testified that he could not recall whether he had seen a
photo of Brown, whether he “pulled her booking photo,” whether any
photo was attached to the arrest warrant, or whether he did any further
search to obtain a photo.
__________________________________________________________
(Internal record citations omitted; emphasis added.)
After its review of the evidence presented at the evidentiary hearing, the district
court correctly followed the authority of Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573 (1980), in
ruling that Shaw’s Fourth Amendment rights were not violated by the subsequent
discovery of the cocaine during the entry into the residence in execution of the arrest
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 10
warrant. In Payton, the Supreme Court held that, “for Fourth Amendment purposes, an
arrest warrant founded on probable cause implicitly carries with it the limited authority
to enter a dwelling in which the suspect lives when there is reason to believe the suspect
is within.” Id. at 603. In Pruitt, we expressly applied a “reasonable belief” standard for
the entry of a dwelling pursuant to an arrest warrant. Pruitt, 458 F.3d at 485. In doing
so, we rejected the approach utilized by the Ninth Circuit which equated “reasonable
belief” with “probable cause.” Id. at 483; see United States v. Gorman, 314 F.3d 1105,
1111 (9th Cir. 2002). Although in dicta the panel majority in United States v. Hardin
questioned the binding effect of Pruitt’s interpretation of Payton, 539 F.3d 404, 416 n.6
(6th Cir. 2008), Pruitt remains controlling: “we hold that an arrest warrant is sufficient
to enter a residence if the officers, by looking at common sense factors and evaluating
the totality of the circumstances, establish a reasonable belief that the subject of the
arrest warrant is within the residence at that time.” Pruitt, 458 F.3d at 483.
As Pruitt made clear, the “reasonable belief” standard is different and less
demanding than the “probable cause” standard. Id. at 484. While “probable cause” is
a “fair probability,” Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 238 (1983), “reasonable belief” is
an actual belief, rationally drawn through a common sense evaluation of the
circumstances presented. See Pruitt, 458 F.3d at 483. Thus, the “fair probability”
standard of probable cause as defined by Gates does not apply in this case.
Here, the district court found, as a matter of fact, that when the African-American
woman slammed the door in his face, Officer Cheirs believed that he had found the
subject of the arrest warrant, Phyllis Brown. Although it was subsequently shown that
Officer Cheirs was mistaken, his belief was actual and based on a rational assessment
of the circumstances. Because two houses had the address of 3170 Hendricks, and
therefore one of them must have been 3171 Hendricks (the believed residence of arrest
warrant subject Brown), the officers had a fifty-percent chance of knocking on the right
house. While fifty percent may not pass the “probable cause” standard, it certainly
passes the “reasonable belief” standard, particularly in view of the ongoing activity
within the home.
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 11
Most importantly, the police were not executing a search warrant on a particular
residence. Rather, they were executing an arrest warrant for a person: Phyllis Brown,
whose last known address was 3171 Hendricks. Brown had previously evaded the
authorities by failing to appear at a state court proceeding on a underlying charge of
criminal trespass. In the present case, the black woman who answered the door of
3170 Hendricks slammed it in the face of the uniformed police officer. At the
evidentiary hearing, Officer Cheirs testified that the woman’s defiance reinforced his
belief that he had found Brown, explaining that “when people do something like that, I
mean like close the door on me, I’m thinking that, well, we got one fixing to run or
something, fixing to hide.” In this regard, Officer Cheirs reasonably concluded that the
woman’s evasion to him as a uniformed police officer was consistent with someone who
was the subject of an arrest warrant issued for failing to appear on a criminal trespass
charge. Pursuant to Payton and Pruitt, no Fourth Amendment violation was committed
because Officer Cheirs’s belief was rationally drawn from a common sense evaluation
of the circumstances.
The majority avoids this conclusion by holding that the officers acted without
reason in executing the arrest warrant. I disagree. With the benefit of hindsight, the
majority notes many investigative checks the police “could” have performed to confirm
with certainty that the person whom the police thought was Phyllis Brown, was in fact
her. However, the determination of reasonable belief is based on real-world
circumstances, not hypotheticals. See United States v. Bervaldi, 226 F.3d 1256, 1266
(11th Cir. 2000). Caution must be exercised before second-guessing what police officers
could or should have done. See, e.g., United States v. Lovelock, 170 F.3d 339, 344 (2d
Cir. 1999) (“[T]he constitutional requirement is that [police officers] have a basis for a
reasonable belief as to the operative facts, not that they acquire all available information
or that those facts exist[.]”); see also Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 205 (2001).
My colleagues raise the bar by creating an impossible and unique standard for
the Fourth Amendment: because the officers got it wrong and “could have” done more
to get it right, the Fourth Amendment is violated and the exclusionary rule applies. This
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 12
absolutist approach is naive and contrary to the Constitution. If accepted by our circuit,
it will devastate practical law enforcement.
The majority also questions the lawfulness of the ruse engaged by Officer Cheirs
in responding with the wrong address when asked for what address he was looking. The
only authority cited by the majority are inapplicable cases dealing with improperly
obtained consents to search. However, this is not a case adjudicating a subject’s consent
to search. Instead, it involves the standard governing the entry of a dwelling pursuant
to a valid arrest warrant. See United States v. Alejandro, 368 F.3d 130, 137–38 (2d Cir.
2004) (“There is no constitutional mandate forbidding the use of deception in executing
a valid arrest warrant.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); United States
v. Michaud, 268 F.3d 728, 731, 733 (9th Cir. 2001) (defendant’s objection to police
officers’ use of deception during the execution of an arrest warrant described as
“unavailing” given the existence of a valid arrest warrant). The issue of consent is
simply not relevant because the Fourth Amendment allows officers to enter private
residences without consent to execute an arrest warrant, provided the officers had a
reasonable belief that the target of that warrant lived at the residence entered and was
present at that time. El Bey v. Roop, 530 F.3d 407, 416 (6th Cir. 2008). That is the case
here.
II.
Next, the district court correctly held in the alternative that, even if the officers
had conducted an improper search, the drugs discovered during that search “would not
be subject to suppression because of the officers’ good faith reliance on their mistaken
identification of Harris as their suspect.” The district court explained:
The exclusionary rule is intended to “deter deliberate, reckless, or grossly
negligent conduct.” Herring v. United States, 129 S. Ct. 695, 702 (2009)
(holding that the exclusionary rule does not apply to seized evidence
during a search incident to arrest where the officers mistakenly believed
the defendant had an outstanding search warrant). Here, suppression
would serve no great deterrent effect where Officers Cheirs and
Robinson shared the good faith belief that they were at the correct house
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 13
and also exercised restraint in searching the house until they obtained a
search warrant.
Again, I agree with the ruling of the district court.
The majority conclusorily dismisses the good faith exception to the exclusionary
rule. However, assuming, arguendo, that the officers violated Shaw’s Fourth Amendment
rights, application of the exclusionary rule is not warranted. “[S]uppression is not an
automatic consequence of a Fourth Amendment violation.” Herring, 129 S. Ct. at 698.
“To trigger the exclusionary rule, police conduct must be sufficiently deliberate that
exclusion can meaningfully deter it, and sufficiently culpable that such deterrence is
worth the price paid by the justice system.” Id. at 702. The rule serves to deter
deliberate, reckless, or grossly negligent conduct, and, in some circumstances, recurring
or systemic negligence. Id.
Here, the record demonstrates an absence of deliberate, reckless, or grossly
negligent conduct. At worst, the officers had a valid arrest warrant and negligently
served it on the wrong house. Suppression serves no appreciable deterrent effect given
the officers shared a good-faith belief that, based on a totality of the circumstances, they
were at 3171 Hendricks Avenue. They also exercised restraint in their protective sweep
of the residence until they obtained a search warrant. Moreover, they halted their sweep
once they learned that they were at the wrong house. Any error on the part of the
officers was not premeditated, reckless, or grossly negligent. Nor was their conduct
sufficiently culpable to justify the principal cost of applying the exclusionary rule.
Accordingly, I conclude that this is not an appropriate case for deterrence and
suppression is not warranted.
III.
Shaw also argues that his sentence is substantively unreasonable. First, he asserts
that the district court impermissibly attempted to “make up” for perceived lapses in the
state criminal justice system by declining to consider a sixty-month sentence. Shaw
claims that because the district court suggested that state court punishments were lax as
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 14
compared to the federal system, it harshly sentenced Shaw to “make up the difference.”
Second, he argues that the district court refused to “even consider” his individual
characteristics until the 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(2)(C) analysis.
We review a district court’s sentencing decision for substantive reasonableness
under the abuse-of-discretion standard. United States v. Jones, 641 F.3d 706, 711 (6th
Cir. 2011). “[A] sentence within a properly calculated Guidelines range is presumed to
be reasonable.” United States v. Rosenbaum, 585 F.3d 259, 267 (6th Cir. 2009). “A
sentence is substantively unreasonable if the district court selects a sentence arbitrarily,
bases the sentence on impermissible factors, fails to consider relevant sentencing factors,
or gives an unreasonable amount of weight to any pertinent factor.” United States v.
Camiscione, 591 F.3d 823, 832 (6th Cir. 2010) (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted).
Shaw has not rebutted the presumption that his within-Guidelines sentence is
substantively reasonable. His first argument apparently originates from the parties’
discussions with the district court about how the state system punishes defendants less
severely than the federal system for similar crimes. Shaw cannot fairly extract from this
conversation the proposition that the district court sentenced him within the Guidelines
to deliberately “send a message” to the state court system. It does not follow from the
district court’s apparent disapproval of a state court sentencing regime that a within-
Guidelines sentence is substantively unreasonable. Nothing in the record supports
Shaw’s speculation that the district court “refused to even consider a variance” because
it was preoccupied with “making up” for perceived inadequacies in the state system.
Contrary to his second argument, the sentencing transcript reveals that the district
court thoroughly reviewed and considered Shaw’s individual circumstances. It contains
numerous examples of how the court factored Shaw’s background and characteristics in
the § 3553(a) analysis, not just during the § 3553(a)(2)(C) discussion as Shaw claims.
Accordingly, Shaw has failed to rebut the presumption that the district court’s
within-Guidelines sentence was substantively reasonable.
No. 11-6433 United States v. Shaw Page 15
IV.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent and would affirm.