John Snook is a casualty of drug abuse. Consider his own words: “I realize what I’ve done is wrong. I wish I would have seeked out help at an earlier time in my life. For whatever reason, I did not. But I’d like to apologize to my family. I’m sorry that they had to be here to see this and I hope, with some help, I can make a better person of myself.” So do we. Not only did Snook’s drug abuse harm him, it caused him to harm others by dealing drugs to finance his own habit. The crux of this appeal is whether his sentence should reflect that his own personal use of drugs created an additional (if not primary) incentive to distribute drugs to others.
Snook pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and to distribute cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. He appeals only the district court’s determination as to the amount of drugs used to set his base offense level under United States Sentencing Guidelines § 2D1.1. Snook claims that the amount of drugs that he purchased from his supplier, Ernest Strothman, purportedly for personal use, should not be used in calculating his sentence. As this appeal concerns the district court’s interpretation of the Sentencing Guidelines, we review the district court’s decision
de novo. United States v. Hardy,
At the sentencing hearing, the district court accepted the Presentence Report’s conclusion that, during the eighteen month conspiracy, Snook purchased 36 ounces of cocaine from Strothman.
1
Snook argues that the amount of cocaine that he personally used (approximately ¿6 of the total, in Snook’s estimation) should not have been used in calculating his offense level. Snook claimed that because he never intended to distribute this portion of the cocaine — but rather intended to and did in fact put it up his own nose — it wasn’t part of the conspiracy to distribute. The government asserted, and the district court agreed, that this argument had already been rejected in
Precin v. United States,
Snook argues that
Precin
is not controlling and that we should look to the Ninth Circuit’s holdings in
United States v. Kipp,
Kipp and Rodriguez-Sanchez are inappo-site, however, and Precin controls our decision. In Kipp and Rodriguez-Sanchez, the defendants were charged with the offense of possession with the intent to distribute. Guidelines § lB1.3(a)(2) instructs courts to use all drugs “that were part of the same *396 course of conduct or common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction” to calculate a sentence. In Kipp and Rodriguez-Sanchez, the “offense of conviction” was possession with intent to distribute, and the court decided that only the amount of drugs that the defendants intended to distribute was “part of the same course of conduct or common scheme or plan.” While this may be true, it does not address our situation. Snook pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute. Therefore, if the drugs that he claims were for personal use “were part of the same course of conduct or common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction,” — conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and to distribute cocaine — it was proper for the district court to consider that amount in calculating his base offense level.
In Precin, we held that drugs that the defendant obtained for his personal use from his supplier were “part of the same ... common scheme or plan,” the plan being the conspiracy to distribute. By entering the plea agreement, Snook admitted that he and Strothman had a common scheme or plan. Snook attempts to distinguish his case from Precin by claiming that Precin viewed the “personal-use” cocaine as a commission, a form of payment that “was necessarily intertwined with the success of the distribution.” Precin at 1219. He argues, on the other hand, that he “obtained some of the cocaine in a buyer-seller relationship for his personal use and some as a co-conspirator for distribution purposes. These amounts are severa-ble.” Snook’s attempt to distinguish his situation from Precin is futile. All of the cocaine came from Strothman. It was not divided into packages for distribution and packages for personal use. For all Strothman knew, Snook was going to sell it all. More importantly, the amount that Snook personally consumed directly affected the conspiracy— the more Snook used, the more he had to sell to bank-roll his habit. That Strothman did not control exactly how much cocaine Snook had for personal use, as Precin’s supplier apparently did, does not break the link between the personal-use cocaine and the conspiracy. The personal-use cocaine still influenced the size and scope of the conspiracy.
We agree with the Ninth Circuit that the Guidelines are designed “to punish distributors more harshly than consumers of drugs and to make sentence[s] proportional to the amount of harm to society_”
Rodriguez-Sanchez,
Notes
. The defendant objected to the PSR's finding of 36 ounces, claiming that the actual amount was 30-34 ounces. However, the defendant does not pursue this objection on appeal, presumably because it would make no difference in the Guidelines calculation.
