UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JASON J. JARVIS, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 20-3912
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
June 3, 2021
21a0126p.06
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b). Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland. No. 1:94-cr-00068-4—Christopher A. Boyko, District Judge.
Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; CLAY and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ON BRIEF: Jeffrey B. Lazarus, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. Justin Seabury Gould, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY‘S OFFICE, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee.
SUTTON, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court in which McKEAGUE, J., joined. CLAY, J. (pp. 9–16), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
SUTTON, Chief Judge. A jury found Jason Jarvis guilty of committing a series of bank robberies. He now seeks a reduced sentence. The district court denied his motion for compassionate release, concluding that non-retroactive changes in the law could not serve as the “extraordinary and compelling reasons” required for a sentence reduction. We agree and affirm.
In 1994, a federal grand jury indicted Jarvis on a slew of offenses connected with a string of bank robberies. A jury found him guilty of four counts of armed bank robbery, one count of conspiracy to commit the same, and five counts of using a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence. See
In sentencing Jarvis, the district court determined that his first firearm conviction under
In 2014, the Supreme Court decided Rosemond v. United States, 572 U.S. 65 (2014). Rosemond clarified the proof required for the intent element of aiding-and-abetting liability under
In 2018, Congress enacted the First Step Act. See
Even so, Jarvis moved for a sentence reduction under what has come to be known as the “compassionate release” statute. See
The district court denied the motion. Among other rationales, it explained that the First Step Act‘s non-retroactive change to
A recent decision all but resolves this appeal in favor of the government. In United States v. Tomes, 990 F.3d 500 (6th Cir. 2021), we held that a similar, non-retroactive statutory change in the First Step Act could not serve as an “extraordinary and compelling reason” under
The provision at issue in Tomes, § 401 of the First Step Act, reduced the penalties for certain drug crimes. Id. When it came to § 401‘s retroactivity, Congress struck a deliberate balance: “This section, and the amendments made by this section, shall apply to any offense that was committed before the date of enactment of this Act, if a sentence for the offense has not been imposed as of such date of enactment.” First Step Act, § 401(c). Permitting defendants sentenced before the Act to benefit from § 401, we reasoned, would render § 401(c) useless. Tomes, 990 F.3d at 505. Tomes establishes that the sentence-reduction
That principle applies with identical force here. As it did for § 401 of the First Step Act, Congress explained that § 403 of the Act (which amended
Jarvis argues that, even if the First Step Act‘s amendments do not amount to an extraordinary and compelling reason on their own, they meet the standard when combined with three other considerations: COVID-19, his high blood pressure, and his rehabilitative efforts. His approach assumes that the district court did not err when it reasoned that these three considerations in combination did not rise to the level of extraordinary and compelling. See United States v. Loggins, 966 F.3d 891, 893 (8th Cir. 2020). The approach then contemplates that an error nonetheless occurred when the court failed to add the First Step Act‘s non-retroactive amendments to the extraordinary-and-compelling equation. But adding a legally impermissible ground to three insufficient factual considerations does not entitle a defendant to a sentence reduction.
Jarvis insists that Tomes‘s First Step Act discussion amounts to dicta. We do not see why. That analysis was central to its reasoning, the key point indeed of its reasoning. Ask this question: Would Tomes have come out differently if sentencing law required the district court to consider the First Step Act amendments in deciding whether extraordinary circumstances had been shown? Yes is the only answer we can discern from reading the opinion. That the First Step Act‘s amendments could amount to an extraordinary and compelling reason, Tomes reasoned, fails to grapple with congressional design, expressed through the text of the statute, in which Congress chose not to make these sentencing amendments retroactive. 990 F.3d at 505. Why would the same Congress that specifically decided to make these sentencing reductions non-retroactive in 2018 somehow mean to use a general sentencing statute from 1984 to unscramble that approach? If every defendant who received a longer sentence than the one he would receive today became eligible for compassionate release, the balance Congress struck
would come to naught. See id.; see also United States v. Maumau, 993 F.3d 821, 838 (10th Cir. 2021) (Tymkovich, C.J., concurring) (“Indeed, the imposition of a sentence that was not only permissible but statutorily required at the time is neither an extraordinary nor a compelling reason to now reduce that same sentence.”).
We appreciate that the Fourth Circuit disagrees with us, and that the Tenth Circuit disagrees in part with us. The Fourth Circuit held that the First Step Act‘s changes to
The first answer to this line of argument is that Tomes binds us. McCoy and McGee do not.
The second answer is that McCoy and McGee seem to rest on the goals of alleviating unfair and unnecessary sentences as judged by today‘s sentencing laws, McCoy, 981 F.3d at 285–86, and of promoting “individualized, case-by-case” sentencing decisions, McGee, 992 F.3d at 1047. We have no quarrel with these ends. But there happens to be a superior means for achieving them, one that accounts for these fairness concerns and honors the choices Congress made through the laws it enacted.
In United States v. Maxwell, 991 F.3d 685, 688 (6th Cir. 2021), we considered how a different non-retroactive legal change (our intervening case law about the Guidelines) interacted with a different sentencing reduction statute (§ 404(b) of the First Step Act). The district court, we reasoned, could not rely on a non-retroactive sentencing law change in calculating the guidelines sentencing range, but it could consider that change in selecting an appropriate sentence under the
sentencing law in the intervening years.” Maxwell, 991 F.3d at 689. The text of
An analogous approach works here. The text of these sentencing statutes does not permit us to treat the First Step Act‘s non-retroactive amendments, whether by themselves or together with other factors, as “extraordinary and compelling” explanations for a sentencing reduction. See Tomes, 990 F.3d at 505. But for those defendants who can show some other “extraordinary and compelling” reason for a sentencing reduction (and we have plenty of deferential decisions on this score), they may ask the district court to consider sentencing law changes like this one in balancing the
That leaves one last development, a recently decided case of our court: United States v. Owens, No. 20-2139, 2021 WL 1811538 (6th Cir. May 6, 2021). Owens, in one sense, shares many premises of today‘s decision. It does not dispute that the same rule for compassionate-release motions should apply to § 401 and § 403 of the First Step Act. See Owens, 2021 WL 1811538 at *4 n.3. It does not dispute Tomes‘s retroactivity discussion. And it does not dispute that district courts may consider the non-retroactive First Step Act amendments in applying the
Despite these shared premises, Owens does not follow Tomes‘s reasoning or holding that a non-retroactive First Step Act amendment fails to amount to an “extraordinary and compelling” explanation for a sentencing reduction. But Tomes, decided before Owens, “remains controlling authority” that binds this panel. Salmi v. Sec‘y of Health & Hum. Servs., 774 F.2d 685, 689 (6th Cir. 1985). Forced to choose between conflicting precedents,
We appreciate that Owens and our colleague in dissent today interpret this part of Tomes as dicta. Owens, for example, claims that Tomes held only that a defendant may not rely on a
non-retroactive amendment alone when trying to establish extraordinary and compelling reasons. Owens, 2021 WL 1811538 at *4. But that is inaccurate. The defendant in Tomes added his First Step Act arguments to his contention that his “rehabilitation, strong family support, and apparently inequitable sentence were extraordinary and compelling reasons for release.” 990 F.3d at 502. The defendant in Tomes in fact presented five reasons for granting relief. Id. at 501–02. A faithful reading of Tomes, we respectfully submit, leads to just one conclusion: that it excluded non-retroactive First Step Act amendments from the category of extraordinary or compelling reasons, whether a defendant relies on the amendments alone or combines them with other factors.
As a practical matter, we wonder if a defendant has ever invoked the First Step Act amendments alone to establish extraordinary or compelling reasons for a sentencing reduction, particularly during COVID. No doubt, “never,” “ever,” and “always” are words usually best removed from lawyers’ and judges’ vocabulary. But we think any such instance would be rare. Even the one case that might seem to fit the bill, United States v. Wills, No. 20-6142, 2021 WL 1940430 (6th Cir. May 14, 2021), does not. In his handwritten request for relief, it turns out, Wills urged the district court to grant relief not just because he would have received a shorter sentence today, but also because it would allow him to “return to my family . . . [and be able to] reside with my father . . . [after having] learned a marketable skill [involving] industrial sewer . . . [and permit me to] resume taking financial responsibility for my child.” No. 2:16-CR-055, 2020 WL 5800922 (E.D. Tenn. Sept. 28, 2020), R.1011 at 1–2 (No. 20-6142). Owens, in short, runs the risk of distinguishing Tomes into a null set, one that would not even include Tomes himself.
One last point. After the district court entered its order in this case, we explained that courts considering compassionate release motions do not have to follow the Sentencing Commission‘s policy statement in U.S.S.G. § 1B1.13, a policy statement that “limits . . . ‘extraordinary and compelling reasons’ . . . to just four situations.” Tomes, 990 F.3d at 502; see United States v. Elias, 984 F.3d 516, 519–20 (6th Cir. 2021). They instead “have discretion to define ‘extraordinary and compelling’” circumstances. Elias, 984 F.3d at 519–20. Jarvis claims that the district court mistakenly believed it had to stick to the policy statement
when determining whether “extraordinary and compelling reasons” exist. Not so. The district court noted that the policy statement was “outdated” and simply looked to it for “guidance,” R.580 at 7, an approach we approved in Tomes. See 990 F.3d at 503 n.1. The district court, moreover, correctly concluded that it lacked the authority to reduce Jarvis‘s sentence based on a non-retroactive change in the law—not because of the Sentencing Commission‘s policy statement but because of the relevant statutory texts.
We affirm.
DISSENT
CLAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting. In passing the First Step Act, Congress amended
The majority today ignores this binding precedent from our circuit and erroneously concludes that our previous decision in United States v. Tomes, 990 F.3d 500, 505 (6th Cir. 2021), requires that we affirm the district court‘s denial of compassionate release in this case. But in fact, Tomes’ conclusion that a non-retroactive sentence amendment cannot support a motion for compassionate release amounts to dicta that we are not bound to follow. Additionally, as Owens made clear, Tomes did not foreclose the conclusion that a sentencing disparity from a non-retroactive statutory change along with other grounds for release can serve as extraordinary and compelling reasons. See Owens, 996 F.3d at 763. By ignoring Owens, the majority contravenes the purpose of compassionate release to grant release, based on the consideration of the defendant‘s unique circumstances, to individual defendants in extraordinary situations not covered by another statute. Accordingly, I would reverse and remand this case so that the district court can consider in the first instance whether the combination of Defendant Jason Jarvis’ health conditions in light of the risk from COVID-19 and the sentence disparity
based on the First Step Act‘s amendment to
Contrary to the majority opinion‘s contention, we are bound in the present case by our recent decision in Owens. In that case, the district court had denied Owens’ motion for compassionate release because “the disparity between the sentence that Owens received and the sentence that he would receive today because of the First Step Act‘s amendments to
We then proceeded to adopt the position taken in United States v. McGee, in which the Tenth Circuit held that a district court could find the “existence of ‘extraordinary and compelling reasons’ based, in part, on a defendant‘s pre-First Step Act mandatory life sentence under
‘extraordinary and compelling reasons’ for purposes of
Our decision in Owens applies squarely in the present case. In support of his motion for compassionate release, Jarvis argued that he should receive a sentence reduction based on his health conditions of high blood pressure and bronchitis, BOP‘s poor handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the sentencing disparity created by the amendment to
Ignoring our precedent in Owens, the majority opinion incorrectly applies dicta from Tomes to affirm the district court in
In considering the binding effect of published panel opinions on future panels, we have previously indicated that “the holding of a published panel opinion binds all later panels,” but dicta is not binding. Wright v. Spaulding, 939 F.3d 695, 700 (6th Cir. 2019). In Wright, we noted that the following principles were relevant to determining whether a court‘s conclusion is a holding or dictum: (1) “[t]he decision of the issue must contribute to the judgment: whether and why the court affirms, reverses, vacates, or remands,” such as “[a] legal conclusion that is necessary to the judgment” or “one sufficient to support the judgment but not strictly necessary in light of an independent and equally sufficient conclusion;” (2) “the court intended to rest the judgment (if necessary) on its conclusion about the issue;” and (3) “the court considered the issue and consciously reached a conclusion about it.” Id. at 701–02 (emphasis in original).
The conclusion in Tomes regarding whether § 401 of the First Step Act could be a ground for compassionate release is dicta because it was not necessary for the judgment. In Tomes, we did not need to discuss whether extraordinary and compelling reasons for release existed because we found that the district court‘s analysis of the
serious illness from COVID-19,” as a ground for compassionate release). And we only briefly considered the argument based on the First Step Act amendment under § 401 as an afterthought at the end of the opinion after already relying on the district court‘s
In contrast, Owens’ holding that district courts can consider a sentence disparity resulting from a non-retroactive First Step Act amendment along with other factors as an extraordinary and compelling reason for release is “controlling authority” that “[a] panel of this Court cannot overrule.” Salmi v. Sec‘y of Health & Hum. Servs., 774 F.2d 685, 689 (6th Cir. 1985). Unlike in Tomes, in Owens, the only basis that the district court offered in denying the motion of compassionate release was that “the disparity between the sentence that Owens received and the sentence that he would
Additionally, nothing in Tomes precludes a district court from considering a sentencing disparity due to a statutory amendment along with other grounds for release. The majority incorrectly assumes that this Court in Tomes considered all of the reasons that Tomes raised for release in combination with each other based on him having presented them all to the district court in support of his motion for compassionate release. See Majority Op. at 7. But, after affirming the district court‘s analysis of the
sentencing disparities could be considered in combination with other individual circumstances on compassionate release. Id.; see also McGee, 992 F.3d at 1048 (“[W]e also agree with the Sixth Circuit‘s decision in Tomes that the fact a defendant is serving a pre-First Step Act mandatory life sentence imposed under
The majority‘s contention that the approach applied in Owens contravenes the “balance Congress struck” in making the First Step Act amendments non-retroactive ignores the individualized nature of compassionate release. Majority Op. at 4–5. As the Fourth Circuit noted in its decision in United States v. McCoy, “there is a significant difference between automatic vacatur and resentencing of an entire class of sentences — with its avalanche of applications and inevitable resentencings — and allowing for the provision of individual relief in the most grievous cases.” 981 F.3d 271, 286–87 (4th Cir. 2020) (internal quotations and citations omitted). In holding in McCoy that it was permissible for district courts to “treat[] as ‘extraordinary and compelling reasons’ for compassionate release the severity of the defendants’
approach also acknowledges the role of compassionate release to consider individual circumstances in determining whether a sentence reduction is appropriate.
The majority also attempts to overcome the shortcomings in its argument by offering the alternative that a district court could consider a nonretroactive change in sentencing law in its analysis of the
In contrast we have explicitly held that, in evaluating compassionate release motions under
disparities under
Ultimately, we are bound in the present case by our previous holding in Owens that a district court can consider a sentencing disparity created by a non-retroactive sentencing amendment as an extraordinary and compelling reason for release in combination with other factors. The majority‘s reliance on dicta from Tomes is an impermissible attempt to overrule Owens, which “remains controlling authority unless an inconsistent decision of the United States Supreme Court requires modification of the decision or this Court sitting en banc overrules the prior decision.” Salmi, 774 F.2d at 689. And the relevant dicta from Tomes can only be read to indicate that a non-retroactive First Step Act amendment creating a sentencing disparity cannot alone serve as the basis for an extraordinary and compelling reason for release. Owens’ holding that a non-retroactive sentencing amendment can be considered along with other grounds for release is not only consistent with Tomes but also comports with the goal of compassionate release to allow sentence reductions for those individual defendants presenting unique and extraordinary circumstances.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent and would reverse the district court‘s order denying compassionate release and remand the case for further proceedings.
