We hold that a conviction of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana is a “controlled substance offense” for purposes of career criminal sentence enhancement under section 4B1.1 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines. This decision conflicts with a decision of the D.C.Circuit, upon which the district court relied in finding that defendant-appellee was not a career offender for enhancement purpоses.
United States v. Price
Only one other circuit appears to support
Price. United States v. Bellazerius,
Norman Weir pled guilty tо bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113. Weir previously had been convicted of a prior bank robbery and conspirаcy to possess with the intent to distribute marijuana. Section 4B1.1 requires that the instant offense and the two prior convictions used to define a career offender for enhancement purposes must be for either a сrime of violence or for a controlled substance offense. Weir’s prior bank robbery conviction аnd the instant bank robbery both constitute crimes of violence. The probation officer considered Weir’s mаrijuana conviction to be a controlled substance offense as the second prior convictiоn. The defense, citing Price, objected to the classification of Weir’s conviction as a controlled substance offense because it involved a conspiracy, not a substantive offense. The district court, noting a lаck of contrary precedent, followed Price and sentenced Weir to forty-six months imprisonment, three years supervised release, and restitution. The Government appealed.
Weir contends that 28 U.S.C. § 994(h), the statute that the Guidеline’s Commission commentary cites as section 4Bl.l’s mandate, does not specifically refer to the cоnspiracy statute when delineating which statutes’ violation provide for the imposition of career offеnder status. Therefore, the Commission overstepped its mandate when it classified drug conspiracies as сontrolled substance offenses.
The Government argues, rightfully, in our judgment, that the majority of circuits, not
Price,
properly decided the issue. First, although the commentary to section 4B1.1 states that the career offender provision is imрlementing the mandate of 28 U.S.C. § 994(h), it does not suggest that section 994(h) is the only mandate for that provision. 28 U.S.C. § 994(a), the Guidelines’ еnabling statute, provides independent grounds for the career offender provision, and the language of this sеction grants sufficient authority to the Commission to include drug conspiracies in its definition of controlled substance offenses. Second, the legislative history indicates that the specific offenses listed in section 994(h) are nоt necessarily exhaustive. Finally, common sense dictates that conspiring to distribute drugs constitutes a controlled substance offense.
See United States v. Kennedy,
We note the defendant argues that the Government waived its right to appeal the failure of the district court to enhance his sentence. In
United States v. Jones,
In Jones, we thoroughly explained the post-conviction, pre-sentenсe procedure *1033 wherein a pre-sentence investigation report is prepared by a probаtion officer, and the district judge resolves all disputes regarding the report after counsel are given an оpportunity to be heard. The district court must offer the parties the opportunity to object to the report. Since issues outside the scope of the pre-sentence investigation report can arise аt sentencing, the district court must also offer the parties the opportunity to object to the court’s ultimate findings of fact and conclusions of law. Once given these opportunities, failure to object will constitute wаiver.
It is undisputed that at the sentencing hearing the district judge gave the parties the opportunity to object to the pre-sentence investigation report. Weir, citing
Price,
objected to his classification as a career offender and moved for a sentence without the career criminal enhancement. The Government opposed Weir’s motion and fully articulated its objections to the application of
Price.
After hearing all arguments on the issue, the district court chose not to adopt this recommendation for enhancement in the report. Contrary to Weir’s argument, the Government’s failure to repeat its objection to the appliсation of
Price
after the imposition of the sentence does not preclude the Government from raising this issue оn appeal.
Jones
provides for post-sentence objections because new issues may arise betwеen the pre-sentence report and the imposition of sentence. If the relevant objection is raised after the presentation of the report, however, but before the actual imposition of the sеntence,
Jones
is satisfied.
See United States v. Brokemond,
SENTENCE VACATED AND REMANDED.
