After a bench trial, Jerome Brough was convicted of conspiring to distribute both heroin and crack cocaine, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment. His main appellatе arguments arise from
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Brough’s lead argument is that 21 U.S.C. § 841 is unconstitutional (and that all conspiracy convictions under 21 U.S.C. § 846 fail derivatively) because § 841 does not mention the burden of persuasion (or the allocation of issues between judge and jury) and does not identify sentencing considerations as elements of the offense. Section 841(a), captioned “Unlawful acts”, provides:
Except as authorized by this subchapter, it shall be unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally — (1) to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or possess with intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a controlled substance; or (2) to create, distribute, or dispense, or possess with intent to distribute or dispense, a counterfeit substance.
Then § 841(b), captioned “Penalties”, says that “any person who violates subsection (a) of this section shall be sentenced as follows” and lays out the minimum and maximum penalties for various types and quantities of drugs, with adjustments depending on whether the defendant has pri- or drug-related convictions and whether the activities caused death or serious injury. Until
Apprendi
we took Congress at its caption and held that only the elements specified in § 841(a) need be proved beyond a reasonable doubt to the jury’s satisfaction; the penalty provisions in § 841(b) were to be administered by the sentencing judge under the preponderance standard. See
United States v. Edwards,
Brough’s argument is confused. Ap-prendi and Nance do not establish that anything in § 841 is unconstitutional or require its severance. If Congress had specified that only judges may make the findings required by § 841(b), or that these findings must be made by a preponderance of the evidence, then § 841 would create a сonstitutional problem. But the statute does not say who makes the findings or which party bears what burden of persuasion. • Instead the law attaches effects to facts, leaving it to the judiciаry to sort out who determines the facts, under what burden. It makes no constitutional difference whether a single subsection covers both elements, and penalties, whether these are divided across multiple subsections (as § 841 does), or even whether they are scattered across multiple statutes (see 18 U.S.C.§§ 924(a), 1963). Apprendi holds that the due process clauses of the fifth and fourteenth amendments make the jury the right decisionmaker (unless the defendant elects a bench trial), and the reasonable-doubt standard the proper burden, when a fact raises the maximum lawful punishment. How statutes are drafted, or implemented, to fulfil that requirement is a subject to which the Constitution does not speak.
Once the maximum penalty has been established in a constitutionаl manner, the judge selects a punishment using the preponderance standard. See
Edwards,
The evidence was quite sufficient to show guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; we reject Brough’s attack on the district judge’s finding of culpability. But the judge, acting before Apprendi, found the kinds аnd quantities of drugs involved by a preponderance of the evidence rather than beyond a reasonable doubt. Brough did not ask the judge to do otherwise, so we must decide whether the court’s conclusion is plain error. See Nance, Westmoreland, Patterson, and the opinion on remand in Jackson. Brough’s argument has some appeal, because when imposing sentence the judge expressed skepticism about the veracity of the witnesses whose testimony he credited; maybe the judge would find the drug-quantity evidence sufficient at the preponderance standard but not enough to suppress a reasonable doubt. Yet the same judge convicted Brough, on the testimony of these same witnesses, and concluded on the basis of evidence received at the sentencing hearing that Brough conspired to distribute at least 2,000 grams of crack cocaine, 40 times the amount that Congress deemed sufficient to support life imprisonment. Would a judge who thought that a preponderanсe of the evidence demonstrates distribution of 2,000 grams have thought that a much smaller quantity had not been established beyond a reasonable doubt? That is very unlikely, and for a simple reason. Agents seized 37 grams of crack at the end of this conspiracy, which lasted for four years. If 37 grams was in stock on a single day, is it conceivable that, during the remaining 1,460 days of the conspiracy, Brough and his confederates handled no more than 12 grams of crack in total? No, it is not conceivable. A judge willing to credit the evidence of the 37-gram seizure, and to find guilt beyond a reаsonable doubt, would have been bound to determine beyond a reasonable doubt that the conspirators distributed at least an additional 13 grams of crack during the conspiracy’s lifеtime. That is enough to establish that a penalty under § 841(b)(1)(A) is not plain error.
As for heroin: Because Brough’s conviction for distributing cocaine is itself enough to authorize a sentence of life imprisonment, it is unnecessary to decide whether the evidence of heroin quantity is equally compelling. Even if the sentence for distributing heroin were cut down to the 20-year maximum authorized for a smidgen of that drug, see 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(C), Brough’s aggregate sentence would be unaffected, for the Sentencing Guidelines instruct the district judge to use the maximum available for the most serious count (and cоnsecutive sentences if necessary) to achieve the total
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punishment appropriate to the convictions and all relevant conduct. U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2. The concurrent sentence doctrine makes it unnecessary to consider the maximum term that could have been imposed for a conviction that does not augment the total punishment. Although the $100 special assessment means that a court must consider every challenge to the propriety of a conviction, see
Ray v. United States,
This conclusion also makes it unnecessary to rely on a possibility raised by the рrosecutor at oral argument: that even 5 grams of crack suffice, because Brough has a prior conviction for a drug felony. In the district court the prosecutor gave notiсe of this conviction under 21 U.S.C. § 851, and
Apprendi
does not overrule the holding of
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
