In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
No. 16-1991
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
NORVELL MOORE,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 1:10-cr-00896-1 — Charles P. Kocoras, Judge.
SUBMITTED DECEMBER 7, 2016* — DECIDED MARCH 15, 2017
*
Pursuant to Seventh Circuit Internal Operating Procedure 6(b), this appeal
has been submitted to the same panel of judges that decided Moore’s
previous two appeals. See United States v. Moore, 763 F.3d 900 (7th Cir. 2014)
(Appeal No. 13-2905); United States v. Moore, 617 F. App’x 562 (7th Cir. 2015)
(per curiam) (non-precedential decision) (Appeal No. 15-1272). After
examining the briefs and the record, we have unanimously concluded that
oral argument is unnecessary to the resolution of the instant appeal. The
appeal is therefore submitted on the briefs and the record. See FED. R. APP.
(continued...)
2 No. 16-1991
Before POSNER, FLAUM, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Norvell Moore is before us for the
third time, challenging the sentence he received following a re-
trial on two of the three offenses with which he was charged in
connection with a 2010 carjacking. He was acquitted of both of
those offenses, and then re-sentenced on a felon-in-possession
conviction (see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1)) that we affirmed in a prior
appeal. See United States v. Moore, 763 F.3d 900, 914 (7th Cir.
2014) (“Moore I”). Unhappily for Moore, the district judge
imposed the same sentence—240 months—that he had been
given after the first trial, when he was convicted of both the
felon-in-possession charge and a second weapons charge.
Moore contends that the sentence is flawed for two reasons.
First, he argues that because he was originally sentenced to a
term of 120 months on the felon-in-possession conviction (to be
served consecutively with an identical term on the companion
firearm conviction), the district judge was obliged to impose
the same term on that charge when he was re-sentenced.
Second, although it is now clear that, as an armed career
criminal, he was and is subject to a minimum term of 180
months on the felon-in-possession charge, the government
waived any reliance on that enhanced minimum term by not
pursuing it when he was originally sentenced. Beyond these
two arguments, Moore pursues no challenge to the substantive
reasonableness of the sentence imposed. We find neither of the
*
(...continued)
P. 34(a)(2)(C).
No. 16-1991 3
arguments he does make to be meritorious and affirm the
sentence.
I.
In 2010, Norvell Moore stole a BMW sedan from its driver
after showing her that he was armed with a gun. He was cap-
tured by Chicago police after a high-speed chase during which he
crashed the BMW into another vehicle. A federal grand jury
charged him with carjacking, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2119;
using or carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of
violence, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A); and possession
of a firearm following a felony conviction, in violation of section
922(g)(1).
Moore was first tried on these charges in 2013 before Judge
Grady, but the jury was unable to reach a verdict on the carjack-
ing charge. When jurors, at the conclusion of their first day of
deliberations, informed the judge that they were not making
progress and asked to be released for the day, Judge Grady asked
them whether they had reached agreement as to any of the
charges. When they responded that they had, the judge solicited
a partial verdict and the jury returned verdicts of guilt on both
the using-or-carrying charge and the felon-in-possession charge.
Deliberations thereafter continued on the carjacking charge, but
the jury was never able to achieve unanimity and the court
ultimately declared a mistrial on that charge and, on the govern-
ment’s motion, dismissed it without prejudice.
When he sentenced Moore on the using-and-carrying and
felon-in-possession charges, Judge Grady concluded that a total
sentence of 240 months was a reasonable sentence. The advisory
range under the Sentencing Guidelines was 360 months to life.
Judge Grady thought that a sentence of 360 months was exces-
4 No. 16-1991
sive. Nonetheless, he believed a substantial sentence was
warranted in light of Moore’s criminal history. Moore had three
prior convictions for robbery, among other offenses. In 2002,
Moore and an accomplice had forced their way into a Burger
King restaurant, where they assaulted an employee (who
sustained injuries requiring medical attention) and compelled
him to open a safe; the two made off with $5,000. R. 123 at 9 ¶ 41.
In 2004, Moore and two other individuals had robbed two female
victims at gunpoint. R. 123 at 10 ¶ 43. And in 2007, Moore had
pushed a female victim against a fence and snatched her purse.
He subsequently resisted arrest and twice struck an arresting
officer in the face. A handgun was recovered from his vehicle. R.
123 at 10 ¶ 44. Compounding the gravity of Moore’s criminal
history was the fact that despite the prison terms (ranging from
three to eight years) to which he was sentenced for these crimes,
he had continued to re-offend; indeed, Moore had committed the
car theft at issue in this case shortly after being paroled on the last
of these prior robbery convictions and while still wearing an
electronic monitoring bracelet on his ankle. “This isn’t really a
matter of punishment,” Judge Grady observed. R. 156 at 38. “It’s
a matter of protecting the public from this defendant, who is a
person who simply does not respect the law.” R. 156 at 38. After
hearing from the victim and Moore’s sister and weighing the
sentencing factors set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553, the judge con-
cluded that a below-Guidelines sentence of 20 years, or 240
months, was sufficiently lengthy “to promote the objectives of
specific and general deterrence and avoidance of inappropriate
and unjustified sentencing disparities.” R. 156 at 66. “Twenty
years is a long time. It will give the defendant a long time to think
about his attitude toward the rights of others … .” R. 156 at 66.
No. 16-1991 5
When asked by the probation officer how the 240-month
sentence should be allocated between the two convictions, Judge
Grady ordered Moore to serve consecutive terms of 120 months
on each. We should point out here that the parties and the court
were laboring under the mistaken assumption that the statutory
range of possible punishments on the felon-in-possession
conviction was zero to 120 months. See R. 123 at 17 ¶ 82; R. 156 at
67–68. In fact, as we discuss below, Moore’s criminal history of
multiple convictions for armed robbery triggered an increase in
the statutory sentencing range on that conviction: Moore was
subject to a statutory minimum term of 180 months (15 years) and
a maximum term of life. See 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). The increased
range remained overlooked until Moore was re-sentenced
following a second trial on the carjacking and using-and-carrying
charges.
The re-trial was the result of a remand we ordered in Moore’s
first appeal. In that 2014 decision, we affirmed Moore’s convic-
tion on the felon-in-possession charge but vacated his conviction
on the using-or carrying charge. Moore I, 763 F.3d 900. Our
decision to vacate the latter conviction was animated by a
concern that the district judge had prematurely solicited a
partial verdict from the jury when it had not yet declared that
it was at an impasse as to the underlying crime of violence
(carjacking) in relation to which Moore had allegedly used or
carried a firearm. 763 F.3d at 912–14. We remanded the case to
the district court for further proceedings consistent with our
opinion. Id. at 914.
On remand, the case was reassigned from Judge Grady
(who had retired) to Judge Kocoras, and a grand jury issued a
superseding indictment re-asserting the carjacking charge
6 No. 16-1991
(which, as we have mentioned, had been dismissed without
prejudice following the jury’s inability to reach a verdict at the
first trial) and the using-or-carrying charge, the conviction
which we had vacated. Moore moved to dismiss the supersed-
ing indictment on double jeopardy grounds, but Judge Kocoras
denied that motion, and we sustained his decision in a second
appeal. United States v. Moore, 617 F. App’x 562 (7th Cir. 2015)
(per curiam) (non-precedential decision) (“Moore II”).
Moore was re-tried on both charges in 2015, and the jury
acquitted him. Given the veil of secrecy that enshrouds jury
deliberations, we cannot be sure why the jury decided to acquit
Moore on these charges. What we can note is that one element
of the carjacking charge was that Moore intended to cause
serious bodily harm or death if the victim did not surrender the
automobile to him. § 2119; see Holloway v. United States, 526 U.S.
1, 11–12, 119 S. Ct. 966, 972 (1999). This was a point that the
defense vigorously contested. When he took the witness stand
at the second trial, Moore testified that he had gone hunting for
a car to steal and that he brought a loaded handgun with him
in order to discourage resistance from his victim; he also
conceded that he showed the gun to his victim in order to
intimidate her. R. 276 at 42, 44, 53, 67, 74–75, 84. But he denied
harboring any intent to kill or harm the victim in the event she
did not cooperate. R. 276 at 40, 74, 86. And Moore specifically
disputed the victim’s testimony that he had pointed the gun at
her head and threatened to kill her if she did not get out of the
BMW. R. 276 at 45, 68–69, 71, 72. He told the jury he had
simply shown the victim the gun and asked her to exit the car,
which she eventually did. R. 276 at 41, 42, 84. Defense counsel
in turn questioned the victim’s credibility on this point and
No. 16-1991 7
contended that the government had not proved, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that Moore had intended to harm the victim.
R. 277 at 12–18, 23–28. And if the government had not suc-
ceeded in proving that Moore was guilty of carjacking, counsel
argued, neither had it proved that Moore was guilty of using
or carrying a firearm during and in relation to the offense of
carjacking. R. 277 at 29. Doubt about Moore’s intent to harm
the victim may explain the jury’s decision to acquit him of both
charges.
Following the acquittals, it remained for Judge Kocoras to
re-sentence Moore on the felon-in-possession conviction that
we had affirmed in Moore I. For that purpose, the court
directed the probation officer to prepare a supplemental pre-
sentence report (“PSR”). In connection with that PSR, the
government submitted a supplemental version of the offense
in which it asserted, for the first time, that Moore’s three prior
robbery convictions, because they were convictions for a
violent crime, rendered him subject to a minimum prison term
of 15 years and a maximum term of life on the felon-in-posses-
sion charge, pursuant to the Armed Career Criminal Act
(“ACCA”), 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). R. 252 at 12-13. The probation
officer agreed, and the PSR reflected that Moore was subject to
an enhanced statutory term of imprisonment. R. 252 at 3. As
calculated by the probation officer, the advisory Sentencing
Guidelines imprisonment range on the felon-in-possession
conviction was 262 to 327 months. R. 252 at 3.
Moore objected to the supplemental PSR and argued that
the district court was obligated to impose the same sentence on
the felon-in-possession charge that Judge Grady had imposed
after the first trial. As we have noted, Judge Grady had
8 No. 16-1991
ordered Moore to serve a total prison term of 240 months, with
120 months of that total to be served (consecutively) on the
felon-in-possession charge. R. 145 at 2; R. 156 at 66, 67–68. In
Moore’s view, because we had affirmed his conviction on that
charge in Moore I and he had now been acquitted of the other
charges, there was nothing for Judge Kocoras to do but re-
sentence him to the same 120-month term that Judge Grady
had imposed in the first instance. He contended that he was
not subject to the 15-year minimum term specified by the
ACCA because (1) his three prior robbery convictions did not
qualify as “violent felonies” triggering the ACCA enhance-
ment, because simple robbery, as defined by Illinois law, does
not categorically involve the use of physical force, see Taylor v.
United States, 495 U.S. 575, 110 S. Ct. 2143 (1990); and (2) the
government had waived any reliance on the ACCA by not
raising it at his original sentencing.
Judge Kocoras rejected Moore’s position in both respects.
The judge concluded that he had authority to re-sentence
Moore de novo. Given that Moore’s original sentence was
based on his conviction on two charges, our decision to vacate
Moore’s conviction on one of those two charges unbundled
that sentence and opened the door to a new sentence based on
the record before the court at the time of re-sentencing. R. 273
at 12, 15. Judge Kocoras went on to find that Moore’s three
robbery convictions constituted crimes of violence and thus
triggered the 15-year minimum specified by the ACCA. R. 273
at 13, 15. He was not convinced that the government had
waived its argument as to the minimum, and because it was a
statutory minimum term, he was not free to overlook it. R. 273
at 13–14.
No. 16-1991 9
After adopting the Guidelines calculations set forth in the
PSR (R. 273 at 15; R. 274 at 17–18), Judge Kocoras found that a
below-Guidelines sentence of 240 months—the same sentence
that Judge Grady had imposed—was a reasonable sentence (R.
274 at 38-40). He was inclined to accept Moore’s profession of
genuine remorse for his conduct in this case. R. 274 at 33, 34,
35. But like Judge Grady, Judge Kocoras was struck not only by
the serious nature of Moore’s prior offenses but the failure of
his prior punishments to cease his pattern of criminal conduct:
It is the conduct that he has engaged in repeat-
edly—not once, not twice, not three times, but now
four times—and it is the conduct where we start the
analysis of what is appropriate [i]n a particular case;
and, as the Presentence Report points out, what he
has learned with punishment.
He went from sentences of two years, to three years,
to seven years, to eight years, and none of that
deterred him. Not a day in jail, from what I can tell.
And it is reflect[ed] in his conduct in this case. As I
remember his testimony—and, I think, fairly accu-
rately so—he woke up that morning having in mind
… he was going to get himself a car at whatever
cost it was going to take. And he saw this nice black
BMW and he said, “That’s the one.”
And he brought a gun with him, to make sure he
was going to do it and get away with it. And it is
[for] that conduct that we are here to decide what
[sentence] is appropriate, aside from the effect on
the victim.
10 No. 16-1991
R. 274 at 33–34. The court deemed it “an imponderable
question” whether Moore would have used the (loaded) gun
to harm his victim had she not surrendered her car to him, but
noted that he had otherwise “admitted to practically every-
thing the jury acquitted him of.” R 274 at 36. Ultimately, the
judge was convinced, in light of Moore’s recidivism, that a
serious sentence was called for. “He has got a very, very bad
record. He has never … assumed a change in his lifestyle.”
R. 274 at 38. Acknowledging his obligation to “rethink” the
sentence, Judge Kocoras came to the conclusion that a below-
Guidelines sentence of 240 months—the same sentence Judge
Grady had imposed—was severe enough to account for the
gravity of Moore’s offense and criminal history. R. 274 at
38–39. The Judge emphasized that he arrived at that conclusion
independently rather than by “rote” or by simply deferring to
Judge Grady’s judgment. R. 274 at 39.
II.
On appeal, Moore pursues two of the arguments that he
made unsuccessfully below: (1) that on remand, Judge Kocoras
was bound to re-sentence him to the same 120-month sentence
originally imposed on the felon-in-possession conviction ; and
(2) that the government waived any reliance on the 15-year
minimum specified by the ACCA. Neither argument is
persuasive.
Our decision in Moore I did not preclude Judge Kocoras
from re-sentencing Moore de novo on the felon-in-possession
conviction. In contrast to United States v. Tello, 687 F.3d 785,
798–800 (7th Cir. 2012), on which Moore relies, we did not
remand the case for the limited purpose of correcting a discrete
No. 16-1991 11
sentencing error; rather, we remanded generally for any and
all further proceedings consistent with our opinion (which
included, as occurred, a second trial), and we did so upon
vacating one of the two convictions that formed the basis for
Moore’s original sentence. Although we affirmed Moore’s
felon-in-possession conviction, the 120-month term imposed on
that conviction by Judge Grady after the first trial was not a
stand-alone sentence, but rather part of a sentencing package.
As such, the 120-month term was to be served consecutively
with the identical term imposed on the using-or-carrying
charge, for a total term of 240 months. When we vacated
Moore’s conviction on the using-and-carrying charge, we
unbundled the sentencing package and left the door open to a
new sentence on the felon-in-possession charge—in conjunc-
tion with any other charge on which Moore might have been
convicted after a second trial. See United States v. Shue, 825 F.2d
1111, 1113–14 (7th Cir. 1987); see also United States v. Soy, 413
F.3d 594, 606–08 (7th Cir. 2005); United States v. Binford, 108
F.3d 723, 728–30 (7th Cir. 1997); United States v. Smith, 103 F.3d
531, 533–35 (7th Cir. 1996). In the wake of the acquittals at the
second trial, Judge Kocoras was presented with a conviction
record distinct from the one that had confronted Judge Grady
(a conviction on one charge rather than two), but his task was
the same: to determine an appropriate sentence taking into
account the full extent of Moore’s underlying conduct in
conjunction with his criminal history. His discretion in arriving
at that sentence was not cabined by the term that Judge Grady
imposed on just one of the two counts of which Moore was
originally convicted.
12 No. 16-1991
The landscape at re-sentencing was also altered by the
belated realization that Moore was subject to the 15-year
minimum specified by the ACCA for the felon-in-possession
charge in view of his three prior robbery convictions. Indeed,
the ACCA enhancement altered not only the statutory mini-
mum term but also the maximum term—from 10 years to life.
Compare § 924(a)(2) with § 924(e)(1). So the sentence Judge
Grady had imposed (mistakenly assuming it was the maxi-
mum possible term) was actually five years shy of the mini-
mum term mandated by statute and nowhere near the maxi-
mum term. At this juncture, there is no dispute that the ACCA,
by its terms, applies to Moore; he has abandoned his argument
that his three prior robbery convictions do not constitute
violent felonies triggering the enhanced minimum and
maximum terms.
The ACCA is a statutory command, so as Judge Kocoras
recognized, he was not free to disregard the 15-year minimum
regardless of whether the government (and for that matter,
everyone else) overlooked it at the first sentencing. For what it
is worth, Moore points us to no evidence that the government
intentionally ignored the ACCA when Moore was first
sentenced, so we certainly can see no abuse of discretion in the
determination that the government was not precluded from
invoking the statute at the second sentencing. More to the
point, though, we can discern no basis for holding that the
court itself was precluded from complying with the ACCA at
the second sentencing. See United States v. Cobia, 41 F.3d 1473,
1475–76 (11th Cir. 1995) (per curiam) (given mandatory nature
of section 924(e), the increase in the minimum prison term
should be applied automatically regardless of whether govern-
No. 16-1991 13
ment has affirmatively sought that enhancement) (collecting
cases); cf. United States v. Worthen, 842 F.3d 552, 554 (7th Cir.
2016) (defendant cannot waive his right to be sentenced within
statutory limits); Smith, 103 F.3d at 535 (“It would be silly, we
think, to say that a judge, noting an incorrect base offense level
in an original sentence in a situation like this, is powerless to
correct the error.”).
Based on the record presented to him, Judge Kocoras
determined that a sentence of 240 months was a reasonable
and appropriate sentence to impose on the felon-in-possession
conviction, and we are given no cause to question the propriety
of that sentence. Apart from the two challenges discussed
above, Moore has not cited, nor have we independently
identified, any procedural error in the sentencing: there was no
apparent error in the determination of the statutory or Guide-
lines sentencing ranges, for example; the judge did not treat the
Guidelines range as binding; and the record indicates that the
judge complied with his obligation to consider the sentencing
factors set forth in § 3553(a) and to state the reasons for his
choice of sentence. See United States v. Miller, 829 F.3d 519, 527
(7th Cir. 2016), pet’n for cert. filed, No. 16-6925 (U.S. Nov. 11,
2016); United States v. Hurt, 574 F.3d 439, 442 (7th Cir. 2009).
Nor, as we noted at the outset, has Moore questioned the
substantive reasonableness of the sentence imposed. Our
review, when presented with such a challenge, is one for abuse
of discretion. E.g., Miller, 829 F.3d at 527. We presume that a
within-Guidelines sentence is reasonable, see Rita v. United
States, 551 U.S. 338, 347–56, 127 S. Ct. 2456, 2462–68 (2007); e.g.,
United States v. Maxwell, 812 F.3d 1127, 1130 (7th Cir. 2016) (per
curiam), and the same presumption obviously extends to a
14 No. 16-1991
below-Guidelines sentence like the one imposed here, e.g.,
United States v. Miller, 834 F.3d 737, 744 (7th Cir. 2016); United
States v. Nania, 724 F.3d 824, 839 (7th Cir. 2013). As the appel-
lant, Moore bears the burden of rebutting that presumption by
showing that the sentence is unreasonably high in light of the
section 3553(a) factors. United States v. Mykytiuk, 415 F.3d 606,
608 (7th Cir. 2005). That is a particularly onerous burden when
the sentence falls below the advisory Guidelines range. See
United States v. Trudeau, 812 F.3d 578, 594 (7th Cir. 2016) (“A
below-guidelines sentence will almost never be unreason-
able[.]”) (citing United States v. Tahzib, 513 F.3d 692, 695 (7th
Cir. 2008)), cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 566 (2016); United States v.
George, 403 F.3d 470, 473 (7th Cir. 2005) (“It is hard to conceive
of below-range sentences that would be unreasonably high.”);
Miller, 829 F.3d at 527. Apart from the noteworthy fact that
Moore has not attempted to make such a showing, we note
that the 240-month term was nearly two years below the low
end of the Guidelines range; this was Moore’s fourth convic-
tion arising from the use of force to take property from a
victim; the theft of the BMW was apparently part of an
ongoing series of auto thefts (Moore testified that he had
previously stolen a truckload of Audis); and even if we credit
Moore’s testimony and assume that he did no more than show
the gun to the victim, by his own account he used the gun to
intimidate the victim. Judge Kocoras reasonably concluded, in
view of Moore’s recidivism, that a substantial sentence was
warranted both to account for the serious nature of his offense
and to deter Moore from committing additional crimes. Would
a lesser sentence have sufficed to achieve these ends? That may
be open to debate. But our role is not to second-guess the
No. 16-1991 15
sentencing judge but rather solely to assess whether he abused
his discretion in passing sentence. Judge Kocoras, like Judge
Grady, is one of the most experienced district judges in our
circuit. We simply cannot say that he abused his discretion in
selecting the term of imprisonment that he did.
III.
Finding no error in the sentence imposed on Moore, we
AFFIRM the judgment.
16 No. 16-1991
POSNER, Circuit Judge, dissenting. In his first trial, which
was before Judge Grady, Moore, the defendant in this ex-
tended litigation—he was indicted a few months short of
seven years ago—was convicted of being a felon in posses-
sion of a gun, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), and also (though not, as
it turns out, properly) convicted of using or carrying a fire-
arm during and in relation to a crime of violence. 18 U.S.C.
§ 924(c)(1)(A). He was also charged with, but not convicted
of, carjacking. 18 U.S.C. § 2119. Judge Grady sentenced
Moore to two successive prison terms, one for each crime of
which the defendant had been convicted—felon in posses-
sion and using or carrying a firearm—with each term to run
120 months, making a total sentence of 240 months. The de-
fendant appealed, and we reversed and remanded the using
or carrying charge. United States v. Moore, 763 F.3d 900, 902
(7th Cir. 2014). By then, Judge Grady had retired, and the
case was reassigned to Judge Kocoras to take charge of on
the remand.
On remand the jury acquitted Moore of the using or car-
rying charge, and again of the carjacking charge). He had
then to be resentenced on the felon in possession charge.
With the using or carrying charge out of the case, one
might have expected Judge Kocoras to have resentenced the
defendant to 120 months (=10 years) for being a felon in pos-
session, and stopped there. But the prosecutors wanted
more, and for the first time argued that the defendant, hav-
ing had three robbery convictions before his conviction for
being a felon in possession, was subject to a minimum sen-
tence of 15 years on the felon in possession charge. 18 U.S.C.
§ 924(e)(1). The judge’s response was to sentence the de-
fendant, on the felon in possession count (the only remain-
No. 16-1991 17
ing count, remember), to 240 months in prison—20 years,
rather than the 15-year minimum (the statutory maximum is
life).
I find that unacceptable. Judge Grady had thought that
120 months of prison for being a felon in possession was the
proper sentence for this defendant. The government had not
expressed disagreement. In the trial before Judge Grady it
had not brought up the robberies as a reason that Moore
could or should be sentenced to more than 120 months on
the felon in possession charge. A further problem with the
government’s reliance on the robberies to push up the de-
fendant’s sentence was that he’d been punished for those
robberies—on what principle was he to be repunished for
them? A defendant’s criminal history can of course be a rel-
evant consideration at sentencing, but if these robbery con-
victions were really so important a factor in deciding on a
proper sentence for this defendant, why hadn’t the govern-
ment noticed them before?
If one assumes (as I do not) that the 15-year statutory
minimum sentence for felon in possession is applicable de-
spite the government’s belated invocation of it, that equates
to 180 months, yet Judge Kocoras did not, so far as appears
from the record, consider the alternative of a 180-month sen-
tence. I also incline to the view that the government’s failure
to notice, until the last remand of this protracted litigation,
that the defendant could be sentenced to 20 years in prison
(or indeed to life in prison) because of his robberies, on the
felon in possession charge alone, precluded the imposition
of any sentence in excess of the 120-month term that Judge
Grady had imposed without objection by the government. In
the first appeal we affirmed the defendant’s conviction for
18 No. 16-1991
being a felon in possession without ruling on the sentence
the judge had imposed, United States v. Moore, supra, 763 F.3d
at 914, and I would expect our affirmance to bind a district
judge in subsequent proceedings. Moore’s briefs argue per-
suasively, with case support—see, e.g., United States v. Ad-
ams, 746 F.3d 734, 744 (7th Cir. 2014); United States v. Barnes,
660 F.3d 1000, 1006 (7th Cir. 2011) (citing United States v. Avi-
la, 634 F.3d 958, 961 (7th Cir. 2011))—that the scope of a re-
mand is determined by the language in the appellate opin-
ion ordering the remand; the language in our opinion did
not envisage a doubling of the sentence based on the de-
fendant’s earlier felonies.
Although I am a friend and admirer of Judge Kocoras, I
fear that in this case, being a latecomer to it and failing as it
seems to appreciate the significance of our having affirmed
the defendant’s conviction for being a felon in possession,
Judge Kocoras erred. I would reverse the defendant’s sen-
tence with directions to sentence him to 120 months, period.
I don’t wish to minimize the gravity of the three rob-
beries that the judge used to double the defendant’s sen-
tence, but neither should their gravity be exaggerated. Alt-
hough two of the robberies involved assaults, the defendant
received no prison time at all for the first robbery (though it
included one of the assaults), committed when he was 20
(although he later received a three-year sentence for violat-
ing the term of probation that he had been given in lieu of
prison), and he served only three years in prison (of an
eight-year sentence, before being paroled) for the second
robbery, committed when he was 21, and also three years (of
a seven-year sentence, before being paroled) for the third,
committed when he was 24. Evidently the state courts did
No. 16-1991 19
not consider the crimes serious enough to warrant long pris-
on terms. He’s now a few months short of 35. A 20-year sen-
tence for a robber of that age is excessive, as such crimes are
rarely committed by persons in their fifties. I find no recog-
nition of this point either in the district judge’s opinion or in
my court’s majority opinion. A 20-year sentence ought not
lightly to be imposed, even on a robber.
Needless to say, there is no recognition in either the dis-
trict court’s sentencing statement or my colleagues’ majority
opinion of the need to curtail imprisonment of violent of-
fenders, a need stressed in an excellent recent article by
Fordham Law Professor John Pfaff, “A Better Approach to
Violent Crime: If We’re Going to End Mass Incarceration in
the U.S., It Will Mean Figuring Out Better Ways to Prevent
Violent Crimes and to Deal with Those Who Commit
Them,” Wall Street Journal, Jan. 27, 2017, www.wsj.com/
articles/a-better-approach-to-violent-crime-1485536313, an
article amplified in a recently published book by him enti-
tled Locked In: The True Causes of Mass Incarceration and How
to Achieve Real Reform (2017), and summarized by David
Scharfenberg in a recent article—“Why We Should Free Vio-
lent Criminals,” Boston Globe, Feb. 5, 2017, www.boston
globe.com/ideas/2017/02/05/why-should-free-violent-crim
inals/HK8zo5OMtsMjhhQuXySuDM/story.html.
As Pfaff explains in his Wall Street Journal article, one of
his concerns is the high discount rates of typical violent of-
fenders, though he doesn’t use the phrase “high discount
rates” but instead says that “those contemplating crime often
don’t know how long sentences are, or even that sentences
have gotten longer. More important, those who are most
likely to engage in violence and antisocial behavior tend to
20 No. 16-1991
be very present-minded. They don’t think a lot about tomor-
row. What really deters them, if anything does, is the risk of
getting caught in the first place: policing and arrests, not
prison sentences.”
Many violent offenders, moreover, age out of crime, of-
ten as early as their mid- to late-twenties—“by the time a
person in his 30s has generated a long criminal history sug-
gesting that he poses a continuing risk, he is likely to have
started ‘aging out’ of crime, violent behavior in particular. ...
A long prison sentence also undermines someone’s ability to
find the stabilizing influence of a job or a spouse, thus in-
creasing the long-run risk that he will reoffend.” Among
other alternatives to prison for dealing with violent crimi-
nals, Pfaff mentions “hot-spot policing,” which “identifies ...
high-crime blocks and significantly increases patrols and
community involvement there [and] has produced signifi-
cant results.”
Maybe we judges could learn something from these ex-
perts.