We consider whether a defendant is eligible for a reduction of his supervised release revocation sentence because the guideline range for his original crime was lowered.
Facts
In 1990, Leroy Morales pled guilty to distribution of crack cocaine and was sentenced to 110 months in prison and 5 years supervised release. Morales served his time but, while on supervised release, he was convicted of robbery in state court. Because of this conviction, the federal district court revoked Morales’s supervised release and sentenced him to 36 months, which he is to serve on completion of his state sentence.
Effective November 2007, the United States Sentencing Commission lowered the offense levels for crack cocaine, see U.S.S.G. app. C, amend. 706 (2007), and this change is retroactive, id. at amend. 713 (2008). Morales moved to reduce his sentence for violating supervised release in March 2008. He argued that, had he been sentenced under the revised guidelines, his sentencing range would have been 92-115 months instead of 110-137 months. Based on this difference, he requested an 18-month reduction of his supervised release revocation sentence. The district court concluded that it had no authority to reduce Morales’s sentence and denied the motion. Morales appeals.
Analysis
We review de novo whether the district court had jurisdiction to modify Morales’s sentence.
United States v. Leniear,
[I]n the case of a defendant who has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment based on a sentencing range that has subsequently been lowered by the Sentencing Commission ... the court may reduce the term of imprisonment ... if such a reduction is consistent with *1051 applicable policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission.
A defendant must meet two criteria to be eligible for a sentence reduction under this provision: (1) He must have been sentenced to a term of imprisonment based on a sentencing range that was later lowered by the Commission; and (2) the reduction must be consistent with the Commission’s applicable policy statements.
Leniear,
In
United States v. Etherton,
we held that a defendant was eligible for a reduction of his supervised release revocation sentence because the guideline range for his original crime was lowered.
We take our duty to follow circuit precedent seriously.
See Miller v. Gammie,
Just one year after
EtheHon,
the Commission amended its commentary to U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10, which is a policy statement applicable to section 3582(c)(2),
Leniear,
Application Note 4(A) is an authoritative interpretation of section 1B1.10, so long as it’s not inconsistent with or a plainly erroneous reading of the guideline, or a violation of the Constitution or a federal statute.
See United States v. Rising Sun,
So, unlike the sentence reduction in
Etherton,
which predated Application Note 4(A), a reduction in a supeivised release revocation sentence today would be inconsistent with an applicable policy statement. In light of this development, two circuits have held that district courts aren’t authorized by section 3582(c)(2) to reduce sentences for violating supervised release.
See United States v. Fontenot,
Of course, the Commission can’t tell federal courts how to interpret statutes.
See generally Neal v. United States,
In affirming a sentence reduction under section 3582(c)(2),
EtheHon
implicitly held that there were no inconsistent policy statements. We reach the opposite result because the law has changed: Application Note 4(A) clarifies that reducing a supervised release revocation sentence is inconsistent -with U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10. In
Stinson v. United States,
the Supreme Court reversed the Eleventh Circuit for failing to reconsider its interpretation of a guideline in light of commentary later issued by the Commission.
Morales argues that under
United States v. Booker,
The Supreme Court explained in
Braxton v. United States
that “Congress has granted the Commission the unusual explicit
power
to decide whether and to what extent its amendments reducing sentences will be given retroactive effect, 28 U.S.C. § 994(u). This power has been implemented in U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10, which sets forth the amendments that justify sentence reduction.”
Morales satisfies the first requirement for a sentence reduction pursuant to section 3582(c)(2): Under Etherton, Morales has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment “based on a sentencing range that has subsequently been lowered.” But Morales fails to satisfy the second: A reduction isn’t consistent with the Commission’s applicable policy statements. Thus, the district court was without jurisdiction to reduce Morales’s sentence.
AFFIRMED.
