The defendant was sentenced to 151 months in prison for bank robbery, a sentence within the guidelines range of 151 to 189 months for a career offender, which the judge correctly determined him to be. At the time sentence was imposed, Amendment 709 to the sentencing guidelines, proposed by the Sentencing Commission, was pending. Had the amendment been in effect, the defendant’s guidelines range would have been only 63 to 78 months.
Under the guidelines governing the calculation of a defendant’s criminal history as they existed before the amendment, a defendant’s prior sentences were to be treated as a single sentence in calculating that history if they had been imposed in “related cases,” and an application note *592 explained that cases were “related” if (so far as pertains to this case) they had been “consolidated for trial or sentencing.” U.S.S.C. § 4A1.2(a)(2) and Application Note 3. The defendant in our case had previously committed eight bank robberies in a short time and had been sentenced for all eight on the same day. But the charges had not been consolidated and so the judge treated them as multiple prior offenses, and that is what made the defendant a career offender. Amendment 709 changed the guideline to require counting prior sentences separately unless they were “imposed on the same day,” as our defendant’s prior sentences had been.
The amendment took effect only six weeks after he was sentenced. He argues that since it was pending when he was sentenced, the judge should have considered it in deciding what sentence to impose and that having failed to do so — if only because the defendant’s lawyer had not drawn the amendment to the judge’s attention — the judge should be required to resentence him. He acknowledges that the guidelines applicable to a resentencing are those that were in force on the date of the original sentencing.
United States v. Tanner,
The failure of the defendant’s lawyer to have advised the judge of the pending amendment makes the argument frivolous. It would require that, in preparation for sentencing, the judge canvass all the possible sources of information or opinion or insight or advice that might influence him in deciding how severe a sentence to -impose. If, after the defendant was sentenced, his lawyer discovered a source of enlightenment that the judge had somehow overlooked in his pre-sentencing research, the defendant would be entitled to be resentenced. The sentencing process would be interminable.
We would have a different case if the Sentencing Commission had, as it could have done but did not do, made the amendment retroactive. Then, unless it was apparent from the sentencing hearing that the judge would have imposed the same sentence even if the amendment had been in force, we would remand the case for the judge to decide whether to impose a different sentence in light of the new amendment. 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2),
United States v. Taylor,
It would likewise be a different case if Amendment 709 had merely clarified the criminal-history guideline rather than changing it. U.S.S.G. § 1B1.11;
United States v. Hartz,
But Amendment 709 changed the guideline rather than merely clarifying it,
United States v. Wood,
The defendant would have a slightly more appealing case if, as in
United States v. Godin,
In Tanner we disapproved delaying sentencing in order to give the defendant the benefit of a new amendment to the guidelines, and what the First Circuit did in Godin in delaying action on the petition for rehearing until the proposed amendment was approved was similar to the district judge’s grant of a continuance in Tanner. There is enough delay in court as it is without reopening sentences on the basis of changes in the law that are not intended to be applied retroactively, and there is a strong social interest in the promptness and finality of criminal judgments.
Godin
is an outlier; the other cases that deal with the issue hold, and the guidelines themselves state, see U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10(a), that an amendment to the guidelines that is not made retroactive by the Sentencing Commission is not a ground for reopening a sentence imposed before the amendment went into effect.
United States v. Perez,
AFFIRMED.
