Dеfendant Keith Jones appeals from a judgment of conviction entered on October 27, 2005, in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (David G. Larimer,
Judge),
after a jury trial at which Jones was found guilty
*166
of unlawfully possessing more than five grams of a substance containing cocaine base (commonly known as “crack” cocaine) in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). Presently serving the 121-month prison term imposed in this case, Jones challenges his conviction on two grounds. First, he contends that the trial evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to establish his possession of crack cocaine. Second, he asserts that his sentence is unreasonable because the district court (a) miscalculated his Sentencing Guidelines range by including in his relevant drug quantity an amount of crack cocaine derived from the currency seized at the time of Jones’s arrest, which was found to represent the proceeds of a crack sale; and (b) gave controlling effect to the Guidelines 100:1 ratio for assessing the relative seriousness of crimes involving powder cocaine as compared to crack cocaine, resulting in a prison term in his case that is greater thаn necessary to achieve the sentencing objectives of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). For the reasons stated in this opinion, we reject Jones’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and affirm the district court judgment insofar as it convicts him for cocaine possession. We also reject Jones’s challenge to the district court’s finding of drug quantity. Nevertheless, because the sentencing record is ambiguous as to whether the district court’s understanding of its discretion to impose a non-Guidelines sentence was as now clarified in
Kimbrough v. United States,
— U.S. -,
I. Factual Background
Because Jones raises a sufficiency challenge to his conviction, we briefly summarize the record evidence in the light most favorable to the government.
See, e.g., Jackson v. Virginia,
A. The Search Leading to Jones’s Arrest
On March 13, 2004, Rochester police executed a search warrant at 991 North Street, Apartment 2, authorizing the seizure of drugs and drug paraphernalia. 1 Upon entering the subject apartment, the police encountered Keith Jones standing in the hallway. In plain view in the living room they saw various of Jones’s personal effects including a copy of his birth certificate and two photographs, one of Jones with friends, and one of Jones’s daughter. No other persons were present in the apartment, nor did it appear that anyone resided there. Only the living room had any furniture; the two bedrooms were empty, and the kitchen contained no food.
While the officers found no signs of residency, they did find significant evidence indicating that the subject apartment was a “gatehouse,” ie., a location “used solely for the purpose of distribution of a controlled substance,” in this case, crack cocaine. Trial Tr. at 16. Throughout the kitchen, which smelled of burnt acetone, officers found white residue caked onto counter tops, cooking pots, and utensils. They collected 22 grams of this residue, which laboratory analysis confirmed to be crack cocaine. In the kitchen, officers also *167 found four discarded bundles of cellophane wrapping and duct tape, materials often used to package kilogram quantities of powder cocaine, which can be “cooked” into crack. They further seized two boxes of baking soda, which is frequently cooked with powder cocaine to create crack. From a cabinet in the hallway where Jones had been standing, the officers seized eight rounds of ammunition, as well as a digital scale, a razor blade, and plastic sandwich bags; the last three items are all commonly used in the packaging and distribution of drugs. Finally, the officers recovered $883 in cash, of which $783 was found beneath a pillow on a living room couch and $100 was found in plain view on the bathroom floor. When confronted with this evidence of apparently substantial narcotics activity, Jones stated: “I don’t know nothing about that, I’m just selling a little—a little bit. I don’t know nothing about no kilo wrappers.” Id. at 85.
B. Trial
As a result of the seizures made in the subject apartment, Jones was charged in the Western District of New York with unlawful possession of ammunition, see 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2); possession of more than five grams of crack with intent to distribute, see 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) & (b)(1)(B); and unlawful simple possession of the same quantity of crack, see id. § 844(a). After a three day trial, the jury found Jones guilty of simple crack possession and acquitted him on the other two charges.
C. Sentencing
Because the jury specifically found Jones to have possessed more than five grams of crack, he was subject to an enhanced statutory sentence of “not less than 5 years and not more than 20 years.”
Id.; see also, e.g., United States v. Gonzalez,
The district court declined to find Jones to have possessed the 7 grams of crack purchased by the confidential informant, but it otherwise followed the Probation Department’s recommendations for calculating relevant drug quantity. Based on Jones’s possession of approximately 47 grams of crack, the district court identified his Guidelines offense level as 30, which, with a criminal history category of III, yielded a sentencing range of 121 to 151 months’ incarceration. 3
*168 At his sentencing hearing on October 24, 2005, Jones protested the drug quantity finding. In addition, he requested a non-Guidelines sentence on the ground that the Guidelines 100:1 ratio for offenses involving powder as compared to crack cocaine overstated the seriousness of his crime and resulted in a sentencing range greater than necessary to effectuate the goals stated in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). In rejecting this argument, the district court offered the following explanation for its decision to sentence Jones within the Sentencing Guidelines range:
Congress has made a determination, and the Guideline Commission has also made determination—which I guess we can debate—that crack cocaine should be dealt with harshly.
But that’s what it is, and I think the court in general is wise to follow that directive and not substitute its own view. Crack cocaine, of those that receive it and get addicted to it, dеstroy their own lives and they do certainly affect others that commit other crimes.
There has been a history of drug use and abuse [by the defendant]. There was a prior conviction involving drugs— admittedly some time ago, back in 1972, that was a misdemeanor.
But I guess most disturbing also, there was the robbery conviction that Mr. Jones was on parole for when this even happened. That’s especially of concern. So this looked like, you know, a search of a premises where drug dealing occurred. In fact, there’s evidence of that, that two or three weeks before this search and arrest of Mr. Jones there were two buys out of that house for not an insubstantial quantity of drugs. And I just think all of this suggests that a guideline sentence is appropriate in this case, and I will impose such a sentence.
Sentencing Tr. at 20-21. Nevertheless, “recognizing] the severity of the drug calculations for crack cocaine as opposed to powdered cocaine,” id. at 22, the district court imposed a sentence at the low end of Jones’s Guidelines range: 121 months’ incarceration, three years’ supervised release, a $750 fine, and a $100 speciаl assessment.
Jones filed a timely notice of appeal challenging both his underlying conviction and the reasonableness of his sentence.
Discussion
Sufficiency of the Evidence to Prove Possession
Jones asserts that, “[contrary to the jury’s finding, the government failed to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that [he] knowingly and intentionally possessed in excess of five grams [of] a mixture or a substance containing cocaine base.” Appellant’s Br. at 28. Specifically, Jones contends that the government’s evidence, at most, showed that he was present inside an apartment where more than five grams of cocaine base was found; it did not establish his “dominion and control over the cocaine base,” facts necessary to prove possession. Id. at 29.
A defendant making a sufficiency challenge “bears a heavy burden” because the law requires us to view the evidence “in the light most favorable to the government” and to uphold a conviction if
“any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
Notably, Jones was the only person present in a locked apartment, in which crack residue was in plain sight in the kitchen. On more than one occasion, we have ruled that a defendant’s presence alone in a room where contraband was in plain view was sufficient to support a jury inference that he exercised dominion and control over it.
See United States v. Finley,
Further supporting this conclusion was the currency found on the bathroom floor and concealed behind a sofa pillow. Consistent with the cash nаture of retail drug trafficking, this currency strongly suggested Jones’s recent involvement in one or more crack sales at the apartment. Indeed, Jones admitted that he sold “a little” crack at the same time that he tried to distance himself from the larger manufacturing activity plainly evidenced in the apartment. Trial Tr. at 85. Thus, whatever reservations the jury may have had with respect to arguments that Jones also controlled ammunition not in plain view or intended to distribute the seized crack residue, the totality of the evidence certainly permitted the jury reasonably to conclude that Jones was not coincidentally present in the apartment but, rather, was there as a knowing participant in the premises’ obvious drug operations and, as such, exercised sufficient dominion and control over drugs plainly visible therein to be guilty of their possession.
Accordingly, we reject as without merit Jones’s sufficiency challenge to his conviction for crack possession.
*170 B. Reasonableness Challenge to Sentence
1. Standard of Review
In the aftermath of
United States v. Booker,
In
Gall,
the Supreme Court noted various procedural errors that can render a sentence unreasonable: (1) “failing to calculate (or improperly calculating) the Guidelines range,” (2) “treating the Guidelines as mandatory,” (3) “failing to consider the [18 U.S.C.] § 3553(a) factors,” (4) “selecting a sentence based on clearly erroneous facts,” or (5) “failing to adequately explain the chosen sentence—including an explanation for any deviation from the Guidelines range.”
Gall v. United States,
With respect to the second procedural error identified in Gall—which is relevant to this appeal,
see infra
Part II. B.3 (discussing district court’s reliance on Guidelines 100:1 ratio for powder cocaine relative to crack cocaine)—the Supreme Court has now explained that, as a necessary corollary to the constitutional proscription on treating the Guidelines as mandatory, sentencing courts “may not presume that the Guidelines range is reasonable.”
Gall v. United States,
Gall
and
Rita
further instruct that the same constitutional concerns that proscribe district courts from according a presumption of reasonableness to Guidelines ranges prohibit reviewing courts from presuming the unreasonableness of non-Guidelines sentences.
See id.; Rita v. United States,
For example, in reviewing a district court’s explanation of a sentence for reasonableness at either the procedural or substantive step of analysis,
Gall
holds that an appellate court may not demand “extraordinary” circumstances to justify non-Guidelines sentences.
Gall v. United States,
These principles are necessarily borne in mind in considering
Gall’s
“uncontroversial” observation that a major variance
*172
from the Guidelines range “should be supported by a more significant justification than a minor one.”
Id.
at 597. Such a requirement does not presume that the non-Guidelines sentence is unreasonable.
See Irizarry v. United States,
— U.S. -,
The Supreme Court has clearly signaled that district courts enjoy considerable discretion in identifying the grounds that can justify a non-Guidelines sentence.
6
In
Kimbrough,
it specifically rejected an argument that had found some favor in appellate courts, including our own,
see, e.g., United States v. Castillo,
In sum, these references to “closer review” and “significant justification” cannot be construed as a signal to view non-Guidelines sentences with inherent suspicion or to establish a higher standard of review than abuse of discretion for some non-Guidelines sentences. While an appellate court may certainly consider the extent of a Guidelines variance as well as any policy concerns informing it in reviewing the totality of circumstances bearing on the reasonableness of a challenged sentence, what it may
not
do is review the district court’s fact finding for anything other than clear error.
See Gall v. United States,
*174
Sentencing is not, after all, a precise science.
See generally Irizarry v. United States,
This is not to suggest that district courts have a blank check to impose whatever sentences suit their fancy. The statutory mandate of § 3553—which includes the requirement for respectful consideration of the Guidelines,
see id.
§ 3553(a)(4)—necessarily channels district court sentencing discretion. Neverthеless, assuming that a district court satisfies its § 3553 obligations and commits no other procedural error, the duty of a reviewing court is not to identify the “right” sentence but, giving due deference to the district court’s exercise of judgment, to determine whether the sentence imposed falls within the broad range that can be considered reasonable under the totality of the circumstances.
See Gall v. United States,
With these review principles in mind, we consider Jones’s particular challenges to the reasonableness of his sentence.
2. Miscalculation of the Guidelines
Jones contends that his sentence is procedurally unreasonable because the district court committed significant procedural error by miscalculating his Sentencing Guidelines range.
See Gall v. United States,
128 S.Ct. at
597; United States v. Toohey,
a. Drug Quantity May Be Inferred from Cash Proceeds of Drug Trafficking
A Sentencing Guidelines calculation must begin with an identification of the defendant’s relevant conduct, which in the
*175
case of a drug possession offense includes the quantity of drugs controlled by the defendant, whether as a principal or as an aider and abettor.
See generally United States v. Shonubi,
Consistent with this Guidelines principle, we reject defendant’s argument that, as a matter of law, drug quantity cannot be inferred from seized currency. We hold that where, as in this case, seized currency appears by a preponderance of the evidence to be the proceeds of narcotics trafficking, a district court may consider the market price for the drugs in which the defendant trafficked in determining the drug quantity represented by that currency. While this appears to be the first time that we specifically approve such a drug quantity inference in a published opinion, the conclusion is hardly novel as evidenced by our summary approval of such cash-based drug quantity findings in a number of non-precedential orders.
See United States v. Smith,
Indeed, our eight sister circuits that have addressed the issue have uniformly concluded that a sentencing court may derive drug quantity from seized currency that appears to be the proceeds of illegal trafficking.
See United States v. Keszthelyi,
*176 We now formally reach the same conclusion and hold that a district court may use money attributable to drug transactions to determine the quantity of drugs relevant to sentencing.
Higher Standard than Preponderance of the Evidence Is Necessary to Infer Drug Quantity from Cash Proceeds
Jones argues that, if seized cash is used to determine drug quantity, our decision in
United States v. Shonubi
demands that the inference be supported by more than a preponderance of the evidence.
See
Appellant’s Br. at 26. His argument misreads our precedent. In
Shonubi,
we observed that, because the then-mandatory Guidelines system “prescribes punishment for unconvicted conduct at the same level of severity as convicted conduct,” courts must “proceed carefully” in establishing standards for proving relevant conduct,
United States v. Shonubi,
Jones’s argument for a more rigorous standard of proof not only lacks support in our precedent, but is precluded by the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Watts,
Accordingly, like our sister circuits, we hold that a district court may equate seized currency to a quantity of drugs, at least when a preponderance of the evidence indicates that the currency was used to purchase drugs.
The Record Supports the District Court’s Preponderance Finding that Jones Possessed a Quantity of Crack Commensurate with the Cash Seized at the Time of His Amst
Because a district court’s determination of drug quantity is a finding of fact, our review is limited to clear error.
See United States v. Powell,
First, the district court reasonably found that Jones possessed the seized money. Jones contends that no such inference was
*177
possible given the lack of “specific evidence, such as fingerprints or a statement,” indicating his knowledge or control the currency. Appellant’s Br. at 27. essentially the same reasons that we rejected Jones’s sufficiency challenge to jury’s finding beyond a reasonable doubt that he possessed the seized drugs, reject his challenge to the sentencing court’s preponderance finding that he possessed the seized cash. Although Jones was not arrested with $883 in his hands nor discovered in the living room or bathroom where these monies were found, the cash—minimally concealed behind a sofa pillow and in plain view on a bathroom floor—was certainly readily accessiblе to him as the sole occupant of the subject premises. The only use of the uninhabited premises was plainly crack trafficking, and Jones admitted that he sold crack. Indeed, when the curious location of the money is considered in light of this obvious and singular use of the premises, it appears not only more likely than not that Jones knew of the seized money, but also more likely than not that Jones had recently acquired the money in the course of crack transactions conducted in the apartment in which Jones was arrested.
See generally United States v. Rizzo,
Second, the district court reasonably found that the seized money represented the proceeds of drug trafficking. Indeed, Jones does not seriously suggest otherwise, nor could he given evidence that (1) the subject apartment served only аs a “gatehouse,” essentially unfurnished except with items that facilitated the manufacture and distribu-of crack; (2) significant crack residue plainly visible throughout the kitchen, no crack bundles were found on the premises despite the presence of discarded packaging and the scent of burnt acetone, circumstances strongly suggesting recent crack manufacture; (3) crack had been purchased at the subject apartment a few weeks earlier by a confidential informant; (4) Jones admitted selling crack; (5) at the time of the seizure, Jones had no other means of employment that could be a legitimate source of the money; and (6) the money was found concealed behind a sofa pillow and in plain view on the bathroom floor. These circumstances, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, permitted the sentencing court to find that the seized monies were, more likely than not, narcotics proceeds.
reasonably found that the seized $883 would have purchased 25.75 grams of crack cocaine. based this calculation on the price the government’s confidential informаnt had paid for crack cocaine recently purchased from the subject premises.
See United States v. Rios,
In sum, the err in finding that a preponderance of the evidence established Jones’s possession of both the 22 grams of crack actually seized *178 from the subject apartment and an additional 25.75 grams of crack of which the seized $883 were the likely proceeds. Based on these findings, it correctly concluded that Jones’s possession of a total of approximately 47 grams of crack resulted in a Guidelines base offense level of 30, see U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1 (providing for level 30 to apply to crimes involving 35 to 50 grams of cocaine base), which, coupled with a criminal history category of III, provided a Guidelines sentencing range of 121 to 151 months’ incarceration. Accordingly, we reject as without merit Jones’s argument that his sentence is infected by any procedural error in the calculation of his Guidelines range.
3. Reliance on the Guidelines 100:1 Ratio to Determine the Seriousness of Jones’s Crock Possession
a. Defendant’s Reasonableness Challenge
Jones asserts that, even if the district court properly calculated his Guidelines range, his sentence, although at the bottom of that range, was still “greater than necessary” to reflect the seriousness of his crime or to serve the other sentencing objectives specified in § 3553(a). As a challenge to the substantive reasonableness of a sentence, such an argument confronts significant hurdles. This court has stated that, “in the overwhelming majority of cases, a Guidelines sentence will fall comfortably within the broad range of sentences that would be reasonable in the particular circumstances.”
United States v. Fernandez,
Jones submits that the district court committed significant procedural error by giving determinative effect to the Guidelines because they reflected a policy determination by both Congress and the Commission that crimes involving one gram of crack cocaine should be viewed to be as serious as those involving one hundred grams of powder cocaine. See U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1 (2006). To address this argument, we must first briefly review the crack Guidelines and recent precedent relevant to their application by district courts.
b. The Crack Guidelines
Because the history and provenance of the crack Guidelines have been exhaustively described by our court in
United States v. Castillo,
In the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, Congress created “a two-tiered scheme of five- and ten-year mandatory minimum sentences for drug manufacturing and distribution offenses.”
Id.
at 566. In distinguishing the “major” traffickers who would be subject to the ten-year term from the “serious” traffickers who would be eligible for five-year terms, Congress relied exclusively on “the weight of the drugs involved in the offense.”
Id.
at 566-67. Treating one gram of crack as the equivalent of 100 grams of powder cocaine, the Act applies a five-year mandatory minimum term to any
*179
defendant accountable for five grams of crack or 500 grams of powder,
see
21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(B)(ii), (iii); and a ten-year mandatory minimum term to any defendant accountable for 50 grams of crack or 5,000 grams of powder,
see id.
§ 841 (b)(1)(A)(ii), (iii). In developing Guidelines for drug offenses, the Sentencing Commission “employed the 1986 Act’s weight-driven scheme,” so that the drug quantity table in U.S.S.G. § 2Dl.l(c),
inter alia,
mimicked the Act’s 100:1 ratio for offenses involving cocaine powder and crack cocaine.
Kimbrough v. United States,
Over time, the Commission that authored § 2Dl.l(c) became one of its leading critics.
See id.
at 568 (“Based on additional research and experience with the 100-to-l ratio, the Commission concluded that the disparity fails to meet the sentencing objectives set forth by Congress.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). After failing in several attempts to amend the Guidelines 100:1 ratio,
see United States v. Castillo,
c. Precedent Relevant to Postr-Booker Application of the Crack Guidelines
Jones submits that the district court felt itself bound by the Guidelines’ assessment of the relative seriousness of crimes involving crack cocaine as compared to powder cocaine, so that it never made its own “individualized assessment” of the seriousness of his crime.
Gall v. United States,
The Supreme Court concluded otherwise in
Kimbrough,
effecting a sea change in our jurisprudence.
See United States v. Regalado,
Recognizing that our precedent may have unduly restricted district courts in their ability to assess for themselves the seriousness of particular crack offenses, we recently fashioned a remand mechanism for crack sentencing cases on appeal at the time
Kimbrough
was decided.
See United States v. Regalado,
d. The Need to Vacate and Remand Jones’s Case for Resentencing
Because Jones specifically argued in the district court that application of the Guidelines’ powder/crack disparity would result in a sentence greater than necessary to serve the objectives of § 3553(a) in his case, his procedural challenge to the mandatory application of these Guidelines is preserved for appeal, so that our review is not limited to plain error as in
Regalado. See id.
at 148-49. Having carefully reviewed the sentencing record, we find it ambiguous in revealing the error charged by Jones. On the one hand, the district court’s statement that the Guidelines’ “harsh[j” treatment of crack offenses is “what it is, and I think the Court in general is wise to follow that directive and not substitute its own view,” Sentencing Tr. at 20-21, might be construed to accord an impermissible presumption of reasonableness to the Guidelines sеntencing range,
see Gall v. United States,
The fact that the record is somewhat ambiguous as to the district court’s understanding of the presumption limitation identified in
Rita
and
Gall
and the variance discretion recognized in
Kimbrough
not surprising given that the district judge sentenced Jones without the benefit these decisions. Any confusion on these points would be understandable given that prior to
Kimbrough
and
Gall,
a number of courts, our own included, misapprehended the scope of a district court’s authority to reject the Guidelines 100:1 ratio as an accurate measure of the seriousness of a particular crack offense.
See United States v. Castillo,
we are mindful that to secure the objectives of 3553(a), district courts, no less than the Sentencing Commission, must fully exercise their proper sentencing authority.
See Rita v. United States,
In remanding this case to ensure that Jones’s sentence is informed by such an individualized assessment, we signal no criticism of the able and conscientious district judge. Nor do we express any view as to what sentence Jones should receive on remand or whether it should fall within or outside his Guidelines range. On remand, the district judge will be in the best position to choose among all available sentencing options and to state with a clarity hopefully facilitated by
Kimbrough
and
Gall
the reasons for the option he chooses. See
United States v. Thorpe,
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude that (1) the trial evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s guilty verdict on the crack possession count of conviction; (2) the district court did not miscalculate Jones’s Guidelines range by including within the relevant drug quantity an amount of crack that Jones could have sold for the cash seized at the time of his arrest; and (3) ambiguities in the sentencing record respecting the district court’s understanding of its authority not to follow the Guidelines *183 100:1 ratio in determining the seriousness of Jones’s crack offense warrant a plenary remand so that the court can resentence the defendant consistent with this opinion and those of the Supreme Court in Kim-brough v. United States and Gall v. United States, and with due regard for recent retroactive changes to the applicable Sentencing Guidelines.
AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED AND REMANDED in Part.
Notes
. On appeal, Jones does not contest the validity of this warrant, which was obtained after a confidential informant purchased gram quantities of crack cocaine at the subject premises on February 17 and 28, 2004.
. The Probation Department recommended using the price paid for crack by the confidential informant to determine the drug quantity that Jones likely sold for $883. The Department did not recommend that the court attribute any drug possession to Jones from the seized wrapping materials, which appeared consistent with four kilograms of powder cocaine.
. Had Jones been found to have possessed more than 50 grams of crack as the Probation Department recommended, his offense level would have been 32, which, with a criminal history category of III, would have resulted in *168 sentencing range of 151 to months.
. The last point may well have been undervalued in a mandatory Guidelines regime focused on identifying and quantifying every possible sentencing factor. Even before
Booker,
however, the Supreme Court recognized the importance of district court discretion to identify those cases that did not fall within the Guidelines’ "heartland.”
See Koon v. United States,
. Like the Sixth Circuit, sitting en banc in United States v. Vonner, we think “[o]ne theme runs through” Rita, Gall, and Kim-brough:
Booker empowered district courts, not appellate courts and not the Sentencing Commission. Talk of presumptions, plain error and procedural and substantive rules of review means nothing if it does not account for the central reality that Booker breathes life into the authority of district court judges to engage in individualized sentencing within reason in applying the § 3553(a) factors to the criminal defendants that come before them. If there is a pattern that emerges from Rita, Gall, and Kim-brough, it is that the district court judges were vindicated in all three cases.... [Tjhe central lesson from these decisions [is] that district courts have considerable discretion in this area and thus deserve the benefit of the doubt when we review their sentences and the reasons given for them.
. Such broad discretion comports with 18 U.S.C. § 3661, which states: "No limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the bаckground, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court of the United States may receive and consider for the purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence.” Even before
Booker,
the Supreme Court specifically cited § 3661 in concluding that the law afforded reviewing courts no basis "to invent a blanket prohibition against considering certain types of evidence at sentencing.”
United States v. Watts,
.
Kimbrough
and
Gall
both emphasize that, after
Booker,
the Guidelines’ claim on judicial respect derives from the fact that the Sentencing Commission “has the capacity courts lack" to frame Guidelines on the basis of "empirical data and national experience, guided by a professional staff with appropriate expertise.”
Kimbrough v. United States,
At the same time, however, the Court recognized that, to the extent certain Guidelines "do not exemplify the Commission’s exercise of its characteristic institutional role,” that fact could obviate the need for closer review of non-Guidelines sentences based on policy disagreements in “mine-run” cases.
Kimbrough v. United States,
. District courts’ exercise of their discretion in imposing non-Guidelines sentences is critical to the ongoing development of responsible Guidelines. As the Supreme Court noted in
Rita,
the district court’s “reasoned sentencing judgment, resting upon an effort to filter the Guidelines’ general advice through § 3553(a)’s list of factors, can provide relevant information to both the court of appeals and ultimately the Sentencing Commission. The reasoned responses of these latter institutions to the sentencing judge’s explanation should help the Guidelines constructively evolve over time, as both Congress and the Commission foresaw.”
Rita v. United States,
. Where a defendant sentenced pursuant to the former crack Guidelines has waived his right to appeal, neither
Kimbrough, Regalado,
nor the amended Guidelines "constitute grounds for finding [that] appeal waiver unenforceable.”
United States v. Lee,
