Kevin Hall was convicted of conspiring to distribute marijuana, money laundering, and tax evasion. 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) & 846; 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(l)(B)(i); 26 U.S.C. § 7201.
1
For the second time, Hall appeals his conviction and sentence. In Hall’s first appeal, we rejected his
Brady
challenge and affirmed his conviction.
United States v. Hall,
I.
In
United States v. Hall,
we presented the background facts of this case in detail.
In his first appeal, Hall argued that the government committed a Brady violation by failing to disclose the full extent of the criminal history of one of its witnesses. This witness, John Redihan, testified against Hall pursuant to a plea agreement.
Before Hall’s trial began, the government disclosed to the defense that Redihan had been convicted in Maine in 1998 of terrorizing, theft by extortion, and unlawful trafficking in marijuana. It also informed the defense that Redihan had been convicted in Rhode Island in 1998 of possessing a firearm and trafficking in steroids and Percodan. Redihan admitted these convictions at Hall’s trial.
Following Hall’s conviction, but prior to his sentencing, the probation office discovered additional details about Redihan’s 1998 Rhode Island convictions. As it turned out, Redihan also had been convicted of conspiring to distribute marijuana and pled no contest to a charge that he possessed marijuana with intent to distribute.
In Hall I, we concluded that the government’s failure to disclose additional details regarding Redihan’s 1998 Rhode Island convictions did not amount to a remediable Brady violation. We explained in part:
[E]ven assuming the government had to disclose the dеtails of Redihan’s Rhode Island conviction, Hall has not shown sufficient prejudice to warrant relief. Brady prejudice exists where “there is a reasonable probability that the suppressed evidence would have produced a different verdict.” Hall elicited from Redihan, on cross-examination, that he was a convicted drug dealer and that he had distributed drugs in Rhode Island. Additional detail about the Rhode Island conviction would have been mostly cumulative.
Hall I,
*18 Nevertheless, we remanded the case. The Supreme Court had issued Booker after Hall’s initial sentencing. Because the district court had expressed some reservation when sentencing Hall, based on its uncertainty about the drug quantities involved in Hall’s crimes and about Hall’s personal circumstances, we remanded for resentencing in light of Booker.
While the case was on remand, Hall moved for a new trial based on the government’s alleged Brady violation. Hall argued that his further research of both Redihan’s 1998 Rhode Island convictions, and the investigation underlying them, produced additional evidence he characterized as material. This evidence consisted of an affidavit from a government informant which provided support for a warrant to search Redihan’s house and police reports and witness statements describing the execution of that search. In the affidavit, the informant stated that Redihan was a large-scale marijuana trafficker who supplied others with marijuana from Redihan’s house. The police reports and witness statements described how government agents seized a small amount of cocaine, Percodan, steroids, a twelve-gauge shotgun, and three large plastic storage bags containing 1004 grams of marijuana from Redihan’s home. Primarily on the basis of this evidence, Hall requested an evidentiary hearing on his new trial motion.
The district court did not hold an evi-dentiary hearing on Hall’s new trial motion and ultimately denied the motion. The district court interpreted our Brady decision in Hall I as constituting the “law of the case,” concluding that our ruling in Hall I that there was no Brady prejudice, meant that there could be no remediable Brady violation. The court concluded that our prejudice ruling was based largely on the premise that the impeachment value of any additional information about Redihan’s Rhode Island convictions would be diminished. Although Hall argued to the court that he had unearthed “new evidence” not presented in his first appeal, specifically, further details regarding Redihan’s Rhode Island convictions and the investigation underlying them, the court considered the prejudice issue foreclosed.
In anticipation of resentencing, Hall filed two motions. The first was for the preparation of a new presentence report. In this motion, Hall outlined what he claimed was the government’s disparate treatment of non-cooperating and cooperating defendants when disclosing evidence to the sentencing court. Specifically, Hall described the government’s practice in the District of Maine of “piling on” speculative evidence of drug quantity for non-cooperating defendants but only introducing irrefutable evidence of drug quantity for cooperating defendants. This, Hall alleged, led to broad-based sentencing disparities between cooperating and non-cooperating defendants. His motion requested an evi-dentiary hearing.
Hall’s second motion sought to compel the government to file a substantial assistance motion under either U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 or 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e). Hall requested an evidentiary hearing on this motion as well, alleging that the government failed to file a substantial assistance motion because he had exercised his right to trial.
The district court rejected Hall’s motions and his requests for hearings. The court explained that Hall’s allegation regarding the government’s disparаte treatment of non-cooperating and cooperating defendants had been “fully ventilated” at his first sentencing. It also, alternatively, noted that the issue was beyond the scope of the remand. As for Hall’s request for a hearing on the government’s failure to file *19 a substantial assistance motion, the court explained that Hall had failed to make a substantiаl threshold showing of a constitutional violation by the government. It also considered this issue to be beyond the scope of the remand.
The district court ultimately sentenced Hall to 120 months imprisonment. 2 This appeal followed, in which Hall presents myriad challenges to both his conviction and sentence.
II.
Hall first challenges the district court’s denial of both his new trial motion and his request for a hearing on that motion. We review both rulings for an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Connolly,
To cut to the chase, no new trial was warranted. Regardless of whether the district court correctly concluded that our original decision in
Hall I
foreclosed Hall’s renewed
Brady
claim, the claim fails in all events. To justify a new trial, Hall must show that the government’s failure to disclose evidence caused him prejudice.
Strickler v. Greene,
The evidence Hall identifies — Redi-han’s 1998 Rhode Island convictions for conspiracy to traffic marijuana and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and information about the government’s underlying investigation of these convictions — is
not
material. It is merely cumulative of the impeachment evidence adduced at Hall’s trial.
United States v. Garcia-Torres,
Moreover, the government presented evidence sufficient to convict Hall on all counts. This evidence is discussed at length in our first decision, and we will not rehash it here.
Hall I,
*20 The court also acted within its discretion in denying Hall’s request fоr a hearing on his new trial motion. Hall requested a hearing on his new trial motion for two reasons: (1) to find out what the government knew about Redihan’s 1998 Rhode Island convictions prior to Hall’s trial; and (2) to learn more about Redihan’s marijuana dealing in general.
In determining whether an evi-dentiary hearing is needed, a district court must make a “practical, commonsense evаluation.”
Connolly,
Next, Hall challenges the court’s refusal to receive evidence on the government’s alleged practice of inappropriately treating cooperаting and non-cooperating defendants differently and to hold a hearing on the government’s failure to file a substantial assistance motion pursuant to either U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 or 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e). We address each challenge in turn. Our review, again, is for an abuse of discretion.
Owens v. United States,
At Hall’s first sentencing, his counsel described the government’s alleged practice of selectively withholding or piling on drug quantity evidence for sentencing purposes, referring, somewhat colloquially, to a practice known generally as “fact-bargaining.” On remand, and prior to Hall’s second sentencing, Hall’s counsel renewed the argument, requesting an opportunity to present evidence regarding the practice.
The district court denied the request in part because it concluded that Hall’s claim that the government inappropriately treated cooperating and non-cooperating defendants disparately had been “fully ventilated” at the first sentencing. At that first sentencing, the court observed that prosecutors could offer what the court characterized as “extraordinary” inducements to people who сooperate, including inducements concerning the presentation of evidence. The court acted within its discretion in declining to entertain evidence on this issue that had been addressed previously.
*21
Although Hall trains this particular challenge on the court’s decision not to entertain evidence on the government’s sentencing practices in Maine, to the extent he is challenging fact-bargaining in general, its lack of transparency in certain cases, or both, these arguments also fail. We have upheld the practice generally.
See United States v. Yeje-Cabrera,
We also conclude that the court acted within its discretion in denying Hall’s request for a hearing regarding the government’s decision not to file a substantial assistance motion. To be entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the government’s refusal to file such a motion, Hall had to make a “substantial” threshold showing of a constitutional violation.
Wade v. United States,
The district court was well within its bounds in concluding that Hall had not made a substantial showing of a constitutional violation.
See Wade,
We turn, finally, to Hall’s challenge to his sentence. In line with his requests for evidentiary hearings, Hall argues that his sentence is unreasonable because: (1) he was denied an opрortunity to present evidence of a broad-based sentencing disparity between pleading defendants and those who go to trial; and (2) his sentence is more severe than the sentence imposed on Redihan.
In reviewing a sentence, we look at whether the sentence is both procedurally sound and substantively reasonable, taking into account the tоtality of the circumstances when considering reasonableness.
Gall v. United States,
— U.S. -,
We have already explained why the court was not required to take evidence on sentencing disparities between defendants who plead guilty and those who do not. As for Hall’s complaint based on Redihan’s sentence, the differences between the sentence given to Redihan, a cooperating defendant who pled guilty, and to Hall, a non-cooperating defendant who went to trial, are significant but not unjustifiable. Redihan and Hall were not “similarly situated” for sentencing purposes.
See United States v. Brandao,
III.
For the reasons provided above, we affirm.
Notes
. Altogether, he was convicted on 168 counts: one count of conspiring to distribute marijuana, 163 counts of money laundering, and four counts of tax evasion,
. Hall was sentenced to 151 months imprisonment at his first sentencing.
. Hall also argues that the district court erred in not granting his request for an evidentiary hearing because of its erroneous understanding that the law of the case doctrine precluded it from doing so. This argument is made for the first time in Hall's reply brief and is therefore waived.
United States v. Eirby,
. Differing treatment of defendants who plea bargain and those who go to trial does not render unconstitutional the practice of plea bargaining in general, or fact-bargaining in particular.
See Cabrera,
. We note that Hall also contends that the court failed to directly address his disparate treatment and substantial assistance claims based on the erroneous belief that those issues were beyond the scope of the remand in Hall I. Although the court did observe in a written procedural order that the scope of the remand was limited, the court nevertheless offered alternative reasons- — which we have limned above — for rejecting each of Hall’s challenges.
. In a last gasp effort, Hall urges us to break with the Supreme Court’s precedent in Booker. We decline to do so.
