John R. Marshall appeals a sentence of eighty-seven months imprisonment after a guilty plea to manufacturing and possessing with intent to manufacture in excess of one hundred marijuana plants. We affirm.
This case is before us for the second time. The district court originally sentenced Marshall to sixty-six months imprisonment, after a
sua sponte
downward departure from the United States Sentencing Guidelines. The government appealed that sentence and we remanded for resentencing.
United States v. Marshall,
We admonished Marshall to present only novel arguments and not “mere repetition of prior rejected arguments, without new facts or legal analysis.”
Marshall,
On remand, Marshall argued for the first time that there was insufficient evidence that he possessed 414 marijuana plants.
1
He asserts that more than one hundred of the 414 plants seized from his home had no root hairs and should not be counted. We review a district court’s determination of the quantity of drugs relevant to a defendant’s offense only for clear error.
United States v. Cassidy,
The evidence established that 414 marijuana plants were removed from Marshall’s residence. Transcript of Resentenc-ing Proceedings (“Transcript”) at 10. The plants were not examined for root structure and have since been destroyed.
Id.
at 43. The district court was entitled to discredit Marshall’s testimony that he “cloned” (or planted cuttings of) over one hundred plants on the night before he was arrested.
See United States v. Wyatt,
Notes
. The government argues that Marshall has waived this argument or that it is precluded by the doctrine of "law of the case.” In light of our disposition, we will not address these arguments.
