Case Information
*1 Before: SUHRHEINRICH, BATCHELDER and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Cornelius Easley appeals his 360-month sentence for possessing crack cocaine and other drugs with the intent to distribute them. Because the district court did not err in calculating his advisory sentencing-guidelines range, we affirm.
I.
On February 16, 2006, members of a DEA task force arrested Easley after watching him take part in an attempted drug sale. They found crack cocaine and other drugs on him and discovered more drugs, scales, a cooking tube, two handguns and a large quantity of cash in his home. In July 2006, a federal grand jury indicted Easley for possessing with intent to distribute at least 50 grams of crack cocaine and unspecified amounts of hydrocodone and marijuana. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
The drugs seized during the February 2006 arrest, as it turns out, scratched the surface of Easley’s drug trade. As Easley admitted to investigators in October 2006, he had been selling drugs *2 for more than two decades. While he had sold a variety of drugs to his customers over the years, crack long had been his best seller. During one fifteen-year stretch, he sold four ounces (roughly 113 grams) of crack every week. Even the February arrest and July indictment did not curb his business: By the time he met with the investigators, eight months after his arrest, he had been caught three more times selling crack and other drugs, each time resulting in a separate state-court indictment.
In August 2007, Easley pleaded guilty to the federal charges stemming from the February 2006 arrest. In calculating his advisory sentencing-guidelines range, the presentence report (PSR) considered the drugs seized in connection with the February arrest and his earlier drug sales dating back to 1988. Taking Easley at his word, the PSR added up Easley’s estimates of prior weekly sales, attributing to him total sales of over 83 kilograms of crack along with sales of other drugs.
Over Easley’s objection, the district court accepted the PSR’s drug-quantity finding. After addressing the statutory sentencing factors, see 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), the court imposed a bottom-of- the-guidelines sentence of 360 months.
II.
In appealing his sentence, Easley argues that the district court miscalculated the guidelines
range, which (if true) generally would establish that the sentence was procedurally unreasonable.
See Gall v. United States
,
A.
One component of the sentencing calculus in a drug-trafficking case is the quantity of drugs
involved, which requires the district judge to distinguish between drug-related activities that
constitute “relevant conduct” (which affect the offense level) and unrelated misdeeds (which do not).
See United States v. Gill
,
The district court legitimately concluded that Easley’s prior drug transactions involved the same course of conduct as his crime of conviction. Easley pleaded guilty to possessing with intent to distribute crack and hydrocodone—the same two drugs he told investigators he had been peddling steadily since the mid-1980s. The drug paraphernalia found at his home—equipment, guns and *4 cash—confirmed that his business was ongoing and thriving, and so did his three state-law arrests after the federal indictment. Even though the PSR provides few details about the prior drug deals, Easley’s own description of them establishes their similarity and regularity.
Easley’s rejoinder is that the length of time between the first drug sales, which date back to
1988, and his offense stretches “relevant conduct” to the breaking point. Even shorter gaps between
the offense of conviction and similar prior misdeeds, we have held, can break the common-plan or
course-of-conduct link.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Kappes
,
B.
But even if these earlier drug transactions may be considered relevant conduct as a matter of law, Easley argues that the district court clearly erred as a matter of fact in making the drug-quantity calculations. Easley takes issue not with the district court’s arithmetic but with the reliability of the *5 evidence purporting to support its figures because (1) his statement to investigators—describing the amount of crack he sold per week between 1988 and 2005—does not supply adequate evidence to support the court’s drug-quantity calculation, and (2) the district court’s addition of prior drug sales based on this estimate did not account for the fact that Easley had been arrested several times in that period and had spent roughly six years between 1988 and 2005 behind bars.
That the district court accepted the PSR’s account of Easley’s prior acts, which in turn
summarized what Easley told investigators, without hearing other evidence does not undermine its
decision. In determining drug quantities, as in determining other sentencing facts, a “district court
may rely on any competent evidence in the record” so long as it “ha[s] some minimum indicium of
reliability beyond mere allegation.”
United States v. Hough
,
Nor does it make a difference that Easley described his previous practices in an interview
with the police, as opposed to testifying at the sentencing hearing or submitting a notarized written
statement. A party admission is not hearsay, and at any rate the rules of evidence generally do not
apply to sentencing hearings.
See
Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(A), 1101(d)(3);
United States v. Hamad
,
The district court’s failure to account for Easley’s six years of prison time during these 17 years of drug trafficking is a trickier matter. Whether Easley temporarily suspended his drug dealing while incarcerated, as he implies, or whether he continued to sell drugs through outside associates or “resumed selling with a vengeance” (to make up for lost sales) after his release, as the government speculates, Br. at 20, it is odd that the PSR and the district court never mentioned the point. Of course, Easley and his counsel share some of the blame because they did not mention it either in their written objections to the PSR or at the sentencing hearing; they argued more generally about the unreliability of Easley’s memory. But we need not decide whether plain error applies because any apparent error could not have made a difference in Easley’s sentence.
A sentencing mistake is harmless when the record establishes that the district court would
have imposed the same sentence with or without the error.
See United States v. Alford
, 436 F.3d
677, 682–83 (6th Cir. 2006);
see also United States v. Anderson
,
In this case, as the district court appreciated, the amount of drugs so far exceeded the threshold for the highest tier of the drug-quantity table that even excluding a great deal of them would not have affected Easley’s offense level. Setting aside the other drugs Easley was pushing, his offense level would have reached the highest rung of the drug-quantity ladder even if the court had attributed 4.5 kilograms (as opposed to 83 kilograms) of crack to him—under the guidelines then in effect. See U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(c)(1) (2007); cf. U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(c)(1) (2005) (requiring only 1.5 kilograms of crack to reach the highest offense level). Moving that much merchandise would be no small feat for most sellers. But at the rate Easley acknowledged he was selling crack for well over a decade, he would have reached that amount in just over nine months. At Easley’s pace, even if one excludes the time he was incarcerated, the amount of crack he sold would surpass the threshold for the highest guidelines range nearly thirteen times over. And even if the court had counted only the time since 1997 when Easley ended his last lengthy stay in prison (on the theory that activities before that imprisonment are too remote to be relevant conduct), he still would have sold over nine times the minimum needed to make it to the top tier of the drug-quantity table. Correcting the district court’s mistake—if a mistake it was—would not have affected his advisory offense level.
Nor is there any other reason to think that this correction would have affected his sentence. To the contrary: the court noted that, had the range not been so high already, it “would probably [have] adjust[ed] the range up,” but it was “not necessary to do that in this case because of the very *8 high range.” JA 60. The court’s failure to account for Easley’s imprisonment could not plausibly have affected his sentence, making any potential error harmless.
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
