Jose Guadalupe Valenzuela was convicted of nine offenses, including one conspiracy count (21 U.S.C. § 846); seven substantive narcotic counts (21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1)); and one continuing criminal enterprise count (21 U.S.C. § 848).
Valenzuela was sentenced to fifteen years on the conspiracy count and fifteen years on each of three substantive counts, the four sentences to run consecutively. He was also sentenced to fifteen years on each of the remaining substantive counts, the sentences to run consecutively. On the continuing criminal enterprise count, he received life imprisonment without possibility of parole. In addition, the trial court imposed a special 10-year parole term for the conspiracy and substantive counts. The two sixty year terms were to run concurrently with each other and with the life imprisonment sentence.
Valenzuela’s conviction was affirmed by this court.
United States v. Valenzuela,
The factual record reveals that the United States Drug Enforcement Administration conducted a long term national and international investigation to neutralize the so-called Valenzuela family organization, one of the major sources of Mexican heroin in the United States. The Valenzuela organization was responsible for the importation of vast quantities of heroin which were distributed to customers from Los Angeles, New York, and other cities. The organization was controlled and directed by Jose and his fugitive brother Fernando Valenzuela (Fernando).
On December 14, 1979 Valenzuela moved to reduce and modify his sentence (Fed.R. Crim.P. 35). The motion was denied. Valenzuela appeals.
*354 Valenzuela first contends that his sentence of a life term with no possibility of parole violates the eighth amendment’s proscription of cruel and unusual punishment.
Rummel v. Estelle,
Valenzuela compares a life sentence without parole to a death sentence. He suggests that
Furman v. Georgia,
The Supreme Court has never indicated that a life sentence without parole is constitutionally different from other imprisonment sentences.
See Schick v. Reed,
The punishment provision of section 848, as applied to the facts of this case, does not violate the eighth amendment.
Valenzuela argues alternatively that section 848 is so confusing that it should not be read as barring the possibility of parole. In 1976 Congress revised and re-enacted the parole statutes. See Act of March 15,1976 Pub. Law No. 94-233, 90 Stat. 233 (1975). In re-enacting these provisions Congress failed to change a cross reference in section 848. Valenzuela contends that this failure makes the reference in section 848 to the parole statutes vague and confusing. We disagree.
Congress clearly intended to make parole unavailable to those who violated section 848. There is no indication that Congress intended to change this penalty when it re-enacted the parole statutes.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The recent decision of the Fifth Circuit in
Terrebonne
v.
Blackburn,
Terrebonne’s age, the small amount of heroin involved, and the fact that he distributed heroin to adults as opposed to children ... that Terrebonne was an addict at the time of the transaction, that he distributed heroin to receive a dose necessary to stave off the pain of withdrawal, that he did not distribute heroin for pecuniary gain, and that he had never before distributed any drugs.
