UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Kelvin Dernard BADGER, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 13-6301.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Oct. 31, 2014.
582 Fed. Appx. 541
PER CURIAM.
Kelvin Dernard Badger was serving a life sentence for drug trafficking when a random search at the penitentiary turned up nine packets of heroin stuffed in his pants pockets. He pleaded guilty to possessing heroin, preserving the right to appeal his sentence.
At sentencing, the district court noted the difficulty of finding an appropriate sentence for a man already serving life imprisonment. The court sentenced Badger to 60 months, consecutive to his outstanding sentence, noting that the added five years would likely have little effect on him but might deter others. To impose a punishment that would matter to Badger, the court also fined him $5,000, stating that he could pay by working in prison and by using money that his family regularly deposited into his prison account. The court did not set a payment schedule. Instead, the court ordered the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) to seize half of the funds in Badger‘s prison account and half of all future deposits to collect the fine.
Badger appealed the prison sentence and the fine as procedurally wrong and substantively unreasonable. He also appealed district court‘s fine-collection order, arguing that it violated the Consumer Credit Protection Act,
We review claims that a district court improperly applied the Guidelines or failed adequately to address the
Badger‘s procedural and substantive challenges to the length of the sentence fail. The record shows that the district court did not abuse its discretion in explaining or imposing the above-Guidelines 60-month sentence, given Badger‘s prior convictions and the importance and difficulty of keeping drugs out of the prisons.
Badger contends that the fine was procedurally improper because the district court applied a presumption of reasonableness to the Guidelines fine range and did not adequately analyze Badger‘s ability to pay. The record makes clear that the district court properly considered factors beyond the Guidelines range in determining whether to impose the fine and how large to make it. The record is also clear
Badger additionally claims that the fine was procedurally improper because the district court‘s order that the BOP garnish 50% of Badger‘s prison account and future deposits into the account violated the CCPA‘s limit on garnishment orders to 25% of disposable earnings for a work week. The government responded that garnishment orders to collect criminal fines are exempt from the CCPA‘s 25% limit. Shortly before argument, the government—to its credit—conceded that the district court had improperly ordered garnishment at the outset, before any default.
Federal law authorizes a court to impose a fine as part of a criminal sentence and to require either a lump sum or installment payments.
