UNITED STATES оf America, Plaintiff-Appellee v. Jason Dejuan LEATCH, also known as Criptonite, Defendant-Appellant
No. 16-10701
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
FILED June 6, 2017
859 F.3d 974
Leigha Amy Simonton, James Wesley Hendrix, Assistant U.S. Attorneys, U.S. Attorney‘s Office, Northern District of Texas, Dallas, TX, for Plaintiff-Appellee. Aisha J. Dennis, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Kevin Joel Page, Federal Publiс Defender‘s Office, Northern District of Texas, Dallas, TX, for Defendant-Appellant. Before REAVLEY, HAYNES, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
From time to time, the Sentencing Commission decides to lower the guideline range applicable to an offense and gives retroactive effect to that reduction for thosе sentenced before the change. Amendment 782 to the Guidelines was one such change. It lowered by two the offense level for most drug crimes.1 As a result of this change, Jason Dejuan Leatch, had his 262-month sentence for trafficking in crack cocaine reduced to 235 months. His appeal contends that he should have received a greater reduction to account for the downward departure based on overrepresented criminal history that the district court awarded him at his original sentencing. We decide whether a district court considering a motion tо reduce a sentence based on a retroactive change to the Guidelines must disregard any downward departures previously granted (other than one based on substantial assistance to the government) and, if so, whether this poses any constitutional or other problems.
After Amendment 782 was announced, Leatch sought a reduction to his sentencе. The district court determined that Amendment 782 reduced the applicable sentencing range to 235-293 months and imposed a new sentence of 235 months. Leatch asserted that the district court should also reapply the criminal history category departure in determining the new range. With that departure included, the new range would be 210-262 months. The district court reluctantly concluded, however, that
A defendant is eligible for a sentence reduction if the guidelines range originally applicable was subsequently lowered as a result of an amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines that was given retroactive effect by being listed in section 1B1.10(d).
Leatch nonetheless maintains that a section 4A1.3(b) criminal history departure may be reapplied as part of a sentence reduction because he views it is part of the original guideline calculation that just gets adjusted to take account of the amendment. In other words, he is not seeking a departure from the new range; he believes that the downward departure for overrepresented criminal history should be used in calculating that new range. He argues that the Guidelines clearly provide that a departure for unrepresentative criminal history is part of the Guideline itself, citing the basic Guidelines instructions found in section 1B1.1(a)(6). Among other things, that section provides that a court shall “[d]etermine the defendant‘s criminal history category as specified in Part A of
Even if his view has some merit to it, the Guidelinеs language does not unambiguously support it. Chapter 4 first lists the points assigned to prior convictions that a court uses to “determine the criminal history category.”
With that uncertainty, we are able to consider whether the Commission‘s commentary to the Guidelines provides a clear answer to our question. It does. Recall that thе key term the Guidelines use as the starting point for a reduction is the “applicable” guideline range.3
If the term of imprisonment imposed [at a defendant‘s original sentencing] was outside the guideline range applicable to the defendant at the time of sentencing, the limitation in subsection (b)(2)(A) ... applies. Thus, if the term of imprisonment imposed [based on an applicable guideline range of 70 to 87 months] ... was a sentence of 56 months (constituting a downward departure or variance), the court ... may[, after a guideline amendment lowers the applicable range to 51 to 63 months,] reduce the defendant‘s term of imprisonment, but shall not reduce it to a term less than 51 months.
Other sections of the commentary also directly counter Leatch‘s view that a departure for overrepresented criminal history is part of the guideline range itself. The starting point for this analysis is commentary to section 4A1.3, which states that “departurе” is defined pursuant to the commentary in section 1B1.1. See
This is the unanimous view of the circuits that have decided the question since the Commission in 2011 added the commentary providing that the “applicable guideline range” is “the guideline range that corresponds to the offense lеvel and criminal history category determined pursuant to section 1B1.1(a), which is determined before consideration of any departure provision in the Guidelines Manual or any variance.”
Leatch has also not established that the district court‘s inability to reapply the departure violates res judicata or collateral estoppel, because a
As for his contention that depriving him of the departure will undermine the sentenсing goal of proportionality between himself and his codefendants, a sentence reduction under
Some of the circuits that agree that the Guidelines disallow a sentencing court from reapplying a prior criminal history departure have nonetheless agreed with Leatch‘s critique оf that policy decision. See, e.g., Montanez, 717 F.3d at 294 (“[W]e question why a court should not have the discretion to give defendants the benefit of section 4A1.3 departures during the sentencing reduction proceedings. A criminal history category that exaggerates a defendant‘s past crimes during an initial sentеncing will continue to do so at a reduction.“); Hogan, 722 F.3d at 63 (“Because the Commission has made clear that a defendant‘s ‘amended guideline range’ does not incorporate previously granted departures under § 4A1.3, a defendant‘s criminal history category that overstates his past crimes during аn initial sentencing will continue to do so when that defendant moves for a reduction.“). They make some good points. But as it is solely through the Commission‘s grace that these retroactive reductions come about, it is for that body to decide the wisdom of limits on the scope of such reduсtions.
