In our opinion reported at
But since Jackson had not raised in the district court the issue later decided by
Apprendi,
he can obtain the benefit of that decision only if the sentencing of him in disregard of it was a plain error. (The applicability of the plain-error standard to
Apprendi
errors is established in this circuit by our recent decision in
United States v. Nance,
Overwhelming that evidence was. Jackson was an official of the Gangster Disciples, a very large Chicago drug gang whose principal commodity was crack cocaine. On one occasion alone Jackson sold 51.7 grams of crack, more than ten times the amount required to make a defendant eligible for a 40-year maximum sentence under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B). One of the counts on which he was convicted charged the conspiracy with trafficking in 51.7 grams of crack. Other counts on which he was convicted also charged amounts greatly in excess of 5 grams. No reasonable jury could have failed to convict Jackson of being involved in the sale of hundreds, if not thousands, of grams of crack. The failure to ask the jury to determine whether the amount was at least 5 grams was harmless far beyond a reasonable doubt.
We therefore reinstate our previous judgment.
Judgment Reinstated.
