UNITED STATES оf America, Appellee, v. James Antonio JONES, also known as Tonio, Appellant.
No. 15-3063 Consolidated with 15-3064
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued October 21, 2016 Decided January 24, 2017
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Nicholas P. Coleman, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the cause for аppellee. With him on the briefs were Elizabeth Trosman, Chrisellen R. Kolb, William B. Wiegand, and John Dominguez, Assistant U.S. Attorneys.
Before: KAVANAUGH and WILKINS, Circuit Judges, and WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge.
WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge:
Appellants Melvin Butler and James Antonio Jones are each serving lengthy prison sentences for drug offenses. Based on a recent retroactive amendment to the United Statеs Sentencing Guidelines, they sought reductions of those sentences under
Appellants challenge those denials as substantively unreasonable. Before reaching the merits, we must consider our statu
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Section 3582 of Title 18 sets out the statutory background for the district court proceedings that we review. While it starts with the general proposition that a court may not modify a term of imprisonment “once it has been imposed,” it goes on to create exceptions, notably
Along with several others, appellants were convicted in 1989 of conspiracy to distribute lаrge amounts of cocaine. After post-trial motions and appeals (the details of which are not relevant here), the district court determined that, based on the quantity of drugs and various enhancements, the then-mandatory Sentencing Guidelines provided a range of 324 to 405 months for both Butler and Jones. The district court then impоsed sentences at or near the top of that range—405 months for Butler and 393 months for Jones. According to the Bureau of Prisons, Butler is scheduled to be released on October 14, 2017 and Jones on February 23, 2018.
Roughly twenty years later, the Sentencing Commission adopted amendments that authorized retroactive reduction of the sentences for most drug offenses. Unlike prior amendments that targeted specific substances, Amendment 782 worked an across-the-board reduction in the offense levels for most drug crimes. And in Amendment 788 the Commission provided for courts to apply the reduction retroactively after determining that offense levels had previously beеn set unnecessarily high and “that a reduction would be an appropriate step toward alleviating the overcapacity of the federal prisons.”
Appellants filed unopposed motions invoking Amendment 782 to reduce their sentences to time served as of November 1, 2015. The district court agreed that appellants were each eligible for a reduсtion under Amendment 782, which reduced their sentencing ranges to 262 to 327 months. Butler, 130 F.Supp.3d at 321. (Although by that point appellants had each served more than 327 months, the terms of Amendment 788 limited their maximum benefit to release on its November 1, 2015 start date.) Despite appellants’ eligibility for reductions, the district court considered defendants’ motions in light of the
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Denials of sentence reductions are unquestionably “final decisions of [a] district court[]” because they close the criminal cases once again.
While Hazel would be binding in the absence of Booker, that case radically changed the landscape by eliminating the Guidelines’ mandatory character. With a sentencing judge’s departure from a specified “rangе” no longer subject to the special requirements of
Of course the proposition that an appellant can’t avoid restrictions under a path of review designed for his case by proceeding along a more general avenue of review presupposes that the path avoided was actually available. In fact we have serious doubt as to whether a statute specifically directed at appeals of sentences (
In any event, the availability of appeal under
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Thus we reach the merits, and start with a review of the evidence on which the appellants were convicted. The two were key members of a drug ring that brought massive amounts of Colombian cocaine into the District over the course of the 1980s. Led by Rayful Edmond III, the group sold the bulk of that cocaine in an open-air drug market in Northeast D.C. known as “the Strip.” See United States v. Edmond, 52 F.3d 1080, 1084-86 (D.C. Cir. 1995). Because Butler supplied the organization with the Colombian cocaine that fueled its growth, he occupied a position at the very top of the organization (essentially equal to Edmond himself). Once the drugs arrived in the District, Jones (alоng with a few others) managed their distribution—overseeing day-to-day drug dealing on the Strip and supervising the “lieutenants” (who supplied street-level dealers and collected the proceeds of their sales). As one of the gang’s “enforcers,” Jones “use[d] force ... to keep rival drug distributors from” dealing in their territory and “to ensure that nо one interfered with the daily operation ... on the ‘Strip.’” Pre-Sentence Report ¶ 33 (Feb. 13, 1990). After a lengthy jury trial, eleven members of the gang (including Butler and Jones) were convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. The trial judge calculated a range of 324 to 405 months under the Guidelines and sentenced Butler at the very top and Jones just below (393 months). (It is unclear why Jones’s sentence was lower.) As we noted at the start, the reduced range
In considering the appellants’ motions for relief under
The district court attached great weight to the fact that “[e]ach defendant was a key player in one of the largest drug conspiracies in the history of this city.” Butler, 130 F.Supp.3d at 321-22 (citing
Appellants claim that the denials of their sentence-reduction motions were substаntively unreasonable for three reasons. First, they argue that because the newly-amended Guidelines already accounted for the nature and seriousness of their offenses (through the weight of the drugs involved and the various role-related enhancements imposed), the district court couldn’t double-count those factors in dеnying their requested reductions. Particularly since the initial sentencing court concluded that these crimes fitted within the Guidelines (rather than requiring upward departures), appellants argue that it is unreasonable for the district court to now find that the same crimes are too serious for sentences within Amendment 782’s newly-reduced range.
Indеed one might reasonably think that the district court’s role under such a downshift in the Guidelines range would be simply to pick the spot in the new range corresponding to the spot chosen in the old one. But even apart from
Here the court considered the
Second, appellants argue that the district court ignored the Sentencing Commission’s own findings that middle-aged offenders who served lengthy sentences (as appellants have) pose little risk of recidivism and that the sentence reductions enabled by Amendment 782 would not increase the risk of recidivism. See Appellants’ Br. at 25-26 (citing United States Sentencing Commission, Recidivism Among Offenders Receiving Retroactive Sentence Reductions: The 2007 Crack Cocaine Amendment (May 2014) and United States Sentencing Commission, Measuring Recidivism: The Criminal History Computation of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines (May 2004)). As appellants would have it, thosе studies in combination show there should be little concern over their recidivism. But statistics can only speak to the likely results for the average offender, whereas under
Finally, appellants argue that the district court ran afoul of Bearden v. Georgia, 461 U.S. 660, 103 S.Ct. 2064, 76 L.Ed.2d 221 (1983), by resting its denials of their reductions in part on their failure to make finаncial restitution to the victims of their drug gang. Of course, it would be highly questionable if the district court kept appellants in jail solely because they genuinely couldn’t afford to pay restitution—and possibly unconstitutional. See United States v. Burgum, 633 F.3d 810, 815 (9th Cir. 2011) (“[T]he Constitution prohibits imposition of a longer prison
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Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
