UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Matthew Otis CHARLES, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 15-6074
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Argued: December 1, 2016. Decided and Filed: December 19, 2016.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court‘s judgment denying Middlebrooks‘s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
OPINION
ARGUED: Cecil W. VanDevender, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY‘S OFFICE, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Anne-Marie Moyes, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Cecil W. VanDevender, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY‘S OFFICE, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Anne-Marie Moyes, Mariah A. Wooten, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellee.
Before: GIBBONS, SUTTON, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
SUTTON, Circuit Judge.
Matthew Charles sought and obtained a reduced sentence under guidelines amendments 706 and 750, which lowered the recommended sentencing ranges for crack cocaine offenses. Charles acknowledges that, if the original sentencing court found him to be a career offender, these amendments would not decrease his guidelines range and thus would not permit a sentence reduction. Because a panel of this court previously held that Charles was a career offender on his direct appeal, we reverse.
Twenty years ago, a jury found Charles guilty of several drug and firearm offenses, including conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine and unlawful distribution of crack cocaine.
Charles objected to the amount of cocaine used in the guidelines calculation, the enhancement for obstruction of justice, and the firearm enhancement. He did not object to the report‘s classification of him as a career offender or an armed career criminal.
Ten years later, the Sentencing Commission retroactively amended the sentencing guidelines to lessen the disparity between penalties for crack and powder cocaine offenses. See
In 2008, Charles moved for a sentencing reduction. See
The government appealed.
Federal courts as a general matter may not modify an individual‘s term of imprisonment.
Charles’ motion hinges on his original sentence and direct appeal and whether he has already been deemed a career offender. If he is a career offender, all agree that the amendments would have no effect, and he would not be eligible for a reduction. If the district court relied only on the crack cocaine guidelines in sentencing him originally, and did so without deciding whether he was a career offender, we would need to decide whether applying the designation now would impermissibly alter that court‘s “guideline application decisions.”
The long answer adds these details. In his direct appeal to this court, Charles argued that the district court erred in the amount of drugs it attributed to him. A panel of this court responded that the disputed drug quantity would affect Charles’ sentence only if he was not a career offender. It then determined that “[t]he district court [had] found that Charles met all three criteria and qualified as a career offender as a result of his multiple prior felony convictions.” Id. It thus concluded that, “[b]ecause the sentence range would be identical even if this court adopted Charles’ assertions on the proper amount of drugs he sold, any calculation errors on the part of the district judge would constitute harmless error.” Id. Charles did not file a petition for rehearing in this court or a petition for a writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court.
That ruling was binding on the district court in later phases of the case. If it is important for courts to treat like matters alike in different cases, it is indispensable that they “treat the same litigants in the same case the same way throughout the same dispute.” Bryan A. Garner et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent 441 (2016). Known as the law of the case, this doctrine mandates that the district court adhere to rulings of the appellate court issued earlier in the case. Howe v. City of Akron, 801 F.3d 718, 739 (6th Cir. 2015). In this instance, there is no dispute that our court held on direct appeal that “[t]he district court found that Charles met all three criteria and qualified as a career offender.” Charles, 138 F.3d at 268. That decision was binding on the district court and precluded Charles from obtaining a reduction in his sentence under
Like many rules, this one has exceptions. Courts need not adhere to the law of the case in the face of an intervening change in law, new evidence, or a manifest injustice. Howe, 801 F.3d at 741; see Garner, supra, at 480-89. But none of these exceptions applies here. There is no intervening law about the meaning of a career offender as it applies to sentencing reductions, and indeed Charles points to none. There is no new evidence about whether Charles was a career offender, and indeed Charles points to none. And it would not be a miscarriage of justice to treat Charles as a career offender based on the law in existence in 1996. Consider some of the descriptions of Charles’ many prior offenses: kidnapping a woman on two consecutive days “for the purpose of terrorizing her“; burglarizing a home; and fleeing from a police interrogation, shooting a man in the head, and attempting to run off in the victim‘s car. App. R. 6 at 16-21.
Not even Charles, it‘s worth pointing out, originally thought his treatment as a career offender would be unfair (or for that matter a manifest injustice). Even after the presentence report said that “Charles is a career criminal,” id. at 5, Charles did not object to his career-offender status during sentencing, and he objected to the introduction of his prior convictions only as somehow irrelevant but not as wrongly described. Nor did Charles challenge our court‘s decision on direct appeal, even though it rested on his status as a career offender. Charles, notably, did not object to his career offender status until March of 2013—almost 17 years after the initial presentence report and only after the Sentencing Commission‘s 706 and 750 Amendments. On top of all that,
Charles argues that the government forfeited this argument by not making it below. We disagree. Time and time again, the government responded to Charles’
In its first filing below in response to Charles’
In its second filing below, it said more of the same. “[T]he court,” the government argued, does not have authority “to resentence the defendant under
By the time of its third filing below, any pretense of suspense about the government‘s position was gone. No surprise, it said the same thing again: “Because [Charles] is a career offender and was sentenced as such, and because the FSA unquestionably does not lower [his] guidelines range, [Charles‘] motions for reduction in sentence pursuant to
Charles’
Charles claims that the government forfeited the law-of-the-case argument because it did not cite our prior ruling that the original sentencing court found him to be a career offender. In one of its responses to Charles’ motion for a reduction in sentence, the government said that the
Charles, last of all, claims that, even if this court held that he was a career offender on direct review, he is not—in truth—a career offender. But a
For these reasons, we vacate the district court‘s judgment and remand for purposes of entering an order that rejects Charles’
JEFFREY S. SUTTON
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
