Sentencing Memorandum
I. Introduction
Before the Court for sentencing is Joshua Perry (“Defendant” or “Perry”), who was convicted in January of 2005 of possession with intent to distribute more than 5 grams of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and b(l)(B), as well as doing so within 1000 feet of a school in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 860. Title 21 U.S.C. § 841(a) prohibits, among other things, possession with the intent to distribute a controlled substance. The statute provides for different mandatory minimum sentences depending on whether the substance is “cocaine” (including “its salts”) or “cocaine base.” 1 Under this stat *281 utory scheme, 5 grams of cocaine base carries the same mandatory minimum sentence as 500 grams of cocaine: 5 years. This 100:1 ratio results in punishments that are three to six times longer for cocaine base than for an equivalent quantity of powder cocaine. This discrepancy is at the core of all of the issues involved in this sentencing.
The first issue raised by the Defendant concerns whether the statutory definition of “cocaine base” in § 841 should be interpreted to mean exclusively “crack” cocaine, which is a type of cocaine base, or whether it should include all types of cocaine base. If cocaine base is understood to mean exclusively crack, then, in order for the Government to seek the stiffer penalty under the statute, it must prove that a defendant possessed crack (as opposed to some other form of cocaine base) to a jury, and its proof must convince the jury beyond a reasonable doubt. The Defendant argues that cocaine base means exclusively crack under the statute; and because the jury did not specifically make such a finding in this case, he should be sentenced under the provisions of the statute and the United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines Manual (“Sentencing Guidelines” or “Guidelines”) that apply to powder cocaine. For the reasons set forth below, this Court declines to adopt Defendant’s interpretation of the statute.
Since 1993 the Guidelines have provided that cocaine base means exclusively crack; therefore, the sentencing judge (not a jury) must determine whether the Government has proven that the cocaine base in question was indeed crack. The Defendant’s second argument is that this proof must be beyond a reasonable doubt, and the Government failed to meet this burden; in the alternative, the Defendant claims that even if the court finds a lower standard of proof applies, the proof presented by the Government did not establish the cocaine base to be crack by a preponderance of the evidence. Again, as will be explained in more detail below, the Court finds neither of the Defendant’s arguments persuasive.
*282 In addition to these challenges, the Defendant objects to the inclusion of $1100 as drug proceeds in the calculation of the advisory guideline range and makes several double jeopardy arguments. Most of these objections are unavailing to the Defendant. One of the Defendant’s arguments, however, does require the technical dismissal of Count I, because Count I is a lesser included offense of Count II.
After determining that the Government met its burden on the crack issue, two more questions follow: how much weight to give the sentencing range established by the Sentencing Guidelines, which are no longer mandatory in the wake of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
II. Facts and Procedural History
Pawtucket Police Detective Dennis Le-fevbre arrested the Defendant on Rte. 95 North, in the city of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, on August 3, 2004, for driving an unregistered motor vehicle. Prior to the arrest, Lefevbre had obtained a search warrant to search the Defendant’s premises located at 52 Lyon Street, Pawtucket. Officers seized marijuana, plastic bags containing suspected crack cocaine, a digital scale, packaging materials and $1100 in United States currency (believed to be drug proceeds) from the Defendant’s bedroom. Police later determined that the Defendant’s bedroom was located within 1000 feet of St. Raphael’s Academy, a private secondary school in Pawtucket. Perry filed a Motion to Suppress Evidence which was denied by the Court, and the case proceeded to trial in January, 2005.
On January 12, 2005, after a week-long trial, a jury found the Defendant guilty of possession with intent to distribute more than 5 grams of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and b(l)(B) (Count I) and within one thousand feet of a school in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 860 (Count II). 2
The trial was conducted in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Blakely v. Washington,
While the jury was deliberating, and just shortly before it reached a verdict, the Supreme Court issued the Booker/Fanfan decision. After the jury reached its verdict of guilty, the Court consulted with counsel and then decided to recess overnight, to give both counsel and the Court time to review the Booker/Fanfan opinion and consider whether the special interrogatories concerning the sentence enhancement factors should be submitted to the jury. The following day, January 13, the Court met with counsel in chambers. Both counsel agreed with the Court that Booker/Fanfan precluded submission of special interrogatories to the jury, and the jury was discharged. Therefore, the jury never answered the specific question of whether the cocaine base was crack.
In the usual course, the United States Office of Probation (“Probation”) prepared a Presentence Report (“PSR”). The PSR sets forth a combined offense level of 34 and a criminal history category of III, yielding a Guideline range of 188 to 235 months. As a result of the Information Charging Prior Offenses, pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 851, the Defendant was subject to an enhanced statutory penalty due to a prior felony drug conviction. Under this statute, the Defendant is potentially subject to a 10-year statutory minimum term of incarceration with a maximum term of life imprisonment as to both counts of the indictment. Thus, according to the PSR, the lowest possible sentence is the mandatory minimum of 10 years, while the maximum statutory penalty is life imprisonment. The (now advisory) Guideline range calls for a sentence between 188 and 235 months.
III. Defendant’s Objections
The Defendant filed two objections to the PSR, and raises several other arguments in his Supplemental Brief. First, the Defendant objects to the designation of the drugs as crack, contending that this question was never posed to the jury and has not been found beyond a reasonable doubt. Alternatively, assuming that a lower standard of proof, preponderance of the evidence, applies here, the Defendant contends that the evidence is nevertheless insufficient. Second, the Defendant objects to the inclusion of the $1100 found in the Defendant’s residence as drug proceeds and conversion of the same into cocaine base for purposes of determining the base offense level. Finally, in his most *284 recent filing, the Defendant makes several arguments under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. This Court will deal with the latter two objections first, and then move on to the more extensive discussion required by the first.
A. The Drug Proceeds Objection
The Defendant’s second objection can be dealt with in short order. The evidence at trial clearly proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the bedroom in which the $1100 was found was indeed Perry’s bedroom, not that of a mysterious roommate, as Perry claimed. Moreover, at the time of his arrest, Perry was not employed. While he was subsequently approved for a claim of social security benefits on September 14, 2004, the Defendant was already in custody at that time and had not received any Social Security checks.
Defendant could provide no other reasonable explanation to Probation regarding the source of this money and he did not attempt to present evidence at the sentencing hearing to rebut this finding. Therefore, the $1100 found in the Defendant’s bedroom was properly found to be drug proceeds. The street value of 1 gram of cocaine base at the time of the Defendant’s arrest was $100; an additional 11 grams ($1100 -t- 100) was appropriately added to the 49.47 grams that was seized at the time of the arrest, making the total 60.47 grams of cocaine base. The calculations in the PSR are entirely consistent with the formula approved by the First Circuit in
United States v. Gerante,
B. The Double Jeopardy Argument
The Defendant’s Supplemental Brief expands his objection to include three additional arguments under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The Double Jeopardy Clause provides that no person shall “be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” U.S. Const, amend. V. The First Circuit has noted that:
[t]he protection of the Clause is threefold; it safeguards an individual against (1) a second prosecution for the same offense, following an acquittal; (2) a second prosecution for the same offense, following a conviction; and (3) multiple punishments for the same offense.
United States v. Rivera-Martinez,
The Defendant first argues that his conviction under both § 841(a)(1) (Count I) and § 860(a) (Count II) constitutes multiple punishment for the same offense in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause, because § 841(a)(1) is a lesser included offense of § 860(a).
4
This Court agrees. The Supreme Court has long held that “the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or only one, is whether each provision requires proof of a fact which the other does not.”
Blockburger v. United States,
Section 841(a)(1) makes it unlawful for any person to knowingly possess with the intent to distribute a controlled substance. Section 860(a), meanwhile, makes it unlawful for any person to knowingly possess with the intent to distribute a controlled substance
within 1000 feet of a school.
Violation of the former statute is clearly a lesser included offense of the latter, as made clear by those circuit courts that have directly addressed this issue.
United States v. White,
The Defendant next argues that this Court’s determination of whether the controlled substance is crack for sentencing purposes also violates the Double Jeopardy Clause, because it results in the Defendant being twice prosecuted—once under the statute for possession of cocaine base, and again under the Guidelines for possession of crack. This argument is unavailing. There simply is no second prosecution here. The Defendant was
*286
prosecuted and convicted of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base. What remains is not a second trial of the Defendant for the same offense, but rather the second phase of the Defendant’s only-trial: sentencing. This case is therefore easily distinguishable from
United States v. Lanoue,
In addition, this Court’s determination that the controlled substance is crack does not result in multiple punishment for the same offense. This argument confuses the relationship between the statute and the Guidelines. “The Sentencing Guidelines are not a separate statutory provision of penalties,” but rather are “intended to provide a narrow sentence range within the range authorized by the statute for the offense of conviction.”
United States v. Sanchez-Lopez,
Most importantly, the Defendant’s double jeopardy claim concerning this Court’s determination of crack rests upon the assumption that this Court is bound by the Guidelines to enhance the Defendant’s sentence should it find that the Defendant possessed crack. This is not the case. In the wake of
Booker IFanfan,
the Guidelines are advisory and to be considered alongside the other § 3553(a) factors. The Double Jeopardy Clause is concerned with a single act or transaction “constituting] a violation of two distinct statutory provisions.”
Blockburger,
Finally, the Defendant argues that the conversion of $1100 cash into drugs for purposes of sentencing violated the Double Jeopardy Clause. This argument is merely a variation on his earlier argument regarding the determination that the cocaine base is crack. The argument fails for the same reasons.
C. The Crack vs. Cocaine Base Objection
Turning to Defendant’s first objection, it appears he is making four separate arguments involving the distinction between crack and cocaine base. Defendant first argues that under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b), the term cocaine base means crack (exclusive *287 ly). Because the jury did not make a specific finding that the cocaine was crack cocaine as opposed to cocaine base, he contends that the Government has not met its burden of proof under § 841(b); and, therefore, this Court should conclude that the Defendant was guilty only of the lesser included offense of cocaine possession, and use the Guideline range for powder cocaine, not the statutory minimum or the crack Guideline range. 7 Second, the Defendant contends that if this argument is rejected, the Court may not make the determination of whether the substance was crack by a preponderance of the evidence, even after Booker/Fanfan, but rather must use the beyond a reasonable doubt standard. 8 Third, even if this Court finds that the preponderance of the evidence standard applies at sentencing, the Defendant suggests that the quantum of proof adduced at trial was nevertheless insufficient to support a finding by this Court that the substance was crack. 9 Fourth, and finally, if this Court does not accept any of the foregoing arguments, the Defendant suggests that this Court sentence the Defendant to the mandatory minimum, rather than use the Guideline range for crack under U.S.S.G. 2D1.1 (2004).
*288
In support of these arguments, the Defendant relies primarily on the reasoning contained in three decisions by Judge Pon-sor of the District of Massachusetts:
United States v. Thomas,
Judge Ponsor’s opinions raise several provocative questions that merit discussion. While Judge Ponsor makes a compelling case for revisiting the meaning of the term cocaine base, this Court believes that prior First Circuit holdings bind the district courts (and presumably the Circuit Court as well) to a broad definition of cocaine base. It would be inconsistent with these precedents to find, as Judge Ponsor suggests, that the definition of cocaine base contained in § 841(b) should be read to mean crack only. Therefore, the mandatory mínimums contained in § 841(b) apply to this case.
1. The Statute and the Guidelines
The origins of the sentencing scheme for cocaine offenses begin with the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 (“the 1986 Act”), now codified at § 841(b). The 1986 Act arose out of an increasing sense of urgency over the growing use of drugs and the development of new forms of drugs, particularly crack cocaine. 10 As has been widely *289 claimed in critical commentary, the 1986 Act passed without the usual deliberative process afforded to such important legislation. See, e.g., David M. Zlotnick, The War Within the War On Crime: The Congressional Assault On Judicial Sentencing Discretion, 57 SMU L.Rev. 211, 219 & n. 52 (Winter 2004) (citing Eric E. Sterling, The Sentencing Boomerang: Drug Prohibition Politics and Reform, 40 Vill. L.Rev. 383, 408 (1996) (claiming “the careful, deliberate procedures of Congress were set aside in order to expedite passage of the bill”)); Peter Kerr, supra, at A1 (quoting Florida Representative Claude Pepper in the second week of September 1986, stating that, “Right now, you could put an amendment through to hang, draw and quarter.... That’s what happens when you get on an emotional issue like this.”).
The central pillars of the 1986 Act are its schedule of mandatory minimum sentences for weight-based possession with intent to distribute, and the upward ratchet for recidivist offenders. Mandatory minimums under the statute begin at 5 and 10 years, respectively, depending on drug quantity, double for a second offense, and, in certain cases, mandate life imprisonment for a third. See 28 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(A)-(B). The quantity-based penalty scheme under the statute employs a 100:1 ratio for cocaine base to powder cocaine, which means that the amount of powder cocaine necessary to trigger the statutory mandatory minimum is 100 times the amount of cocaine base necessary to trigger the same minimum sentence. Thus, it takes 500 grams or more of powder cocaine to trigger a 5-year mandatory minimum penalty whereas only 5 grams of cocaine base triggers the 5-year minimum; it takes 5,000 grams (5 kilograms) of powder cocaine to trigger a 10-year mandatory minimum penalty under the statute, whereas 50 grams or more of cocaine base will trigger this same penalty. 11 Significantly, the term “cocaine base” is not defined anywhere in the statute.
While the U.S. Sentencing Commission (“Sentencing Commission” or “Commission”) was formed pursuant to the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, by 1986 it had not yet issued the Guidelines. In response to passage of the 1986 Act the Commission incorporated the statutory 100:1 crack-to-powder ratio in setting the Sentencing Guideline penalty ranges. The Commission determined that the statutory mandatory minimums would be used to set the base offense level under the Guidelines, and these base levels could then be increased depending upon the presence of other factors. The result was a system that ensured that the sentencing range for *290 most drag offenses would be higher than the applicable statutory mandatory minimum. In those eases where the range was lower, the mandatory minimum set the floor.
Like the statute, the Sentencing Guidelines at first did not define the term cocaine base. This changed in 1993 when Congress passed an amendment, submitted by the Sentencing Commission, U.S.S.G.App. C, amdt. 487 (Nov.1993), to the Sentencing Guidelines. This amendment defined cocaine base as crack, which is “the street name for a form of cocaine base, usually prepared by processing cocaine hydrochloride and sodium bicarbonate [commonly known as baking soda], and usually appearing in a lumpy, rocklike form.” U.S.S.G. § 2Dl.l(c) n.(D) (2004);
United States v. Richardson,
After 1993, therefore, in order to sentence a defendant under the Guideline provision for cocaine base, there must be a finding that the substance was crack cocaine. Under the Guidelines, forms of cocaine base other than crack are treated as ordinary cocaine, and are not subject to the enhanced penalties associated with crack. Congress, however, has not seen fit to similarly amend the statute, which has created considerable disagreement among the circuit courts over whether cocaine base under the statute refers to crack only, or all forms of cocaine base. As described in more detail below, the Sentencing Commission over the past eight years has made several attempts to fix the crack/powder cocaine disparity, without success.
2. Lopez-Gil, Thomas, and the Circuit Split
In 1992 the First Circuit decided the case of
United States v. Lopez-Gil,
Initially, the panel issued an opinion finding that cocaine base meant only crack, citing the legislative history of § 841 as well as the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
United States v. Shaw,
On Petition for Rehearing, the panel withdrew the portion of the opinion which held that cocaine base meant crack and reversed itself, concluding the Government was correct in the first place. While noting that “Congress indeed was concerned primarily with the crack epidemic in enacting the legislation,” the Court held that “it does not necessarily follow that the term ‘cocaine base’ includes
only
crack cocaine.”
Lopez-Gil,
*291 nal panel opinion. 12
In 2000, in
Richardson,
and more recently, in
United States v. Minton,
Judge Ponsor, in the three decisions cited above, called the First Circuit’s so-called “literal approach” into question, predicting that “the First Circuit, if squarely presented with the issue, will agree with the solid majority of circuits that have concluded that the narrower definition of ‘cocaine base’ applicable since 1993 to the Sentencing Guidelines [i.e., cocaine base equals crack cocaine only] applies equally to the statutes governing minimum mandatory sentences.”
Hubbard,
In these three cases, Judge Ponsor relies primarily upon the fact that in 1993 the Sentencing Commission amended the Guidelines to specifically limit the definition of cocaine base to crack for Guidelines purposes, and Congress approved of that amendment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 994(p). While the First Circuit reaffirmed the pre-amendment decision of
Lopez-Gil
in 2000 when it decided
Richardson,
Judge Ponsor suggests that the Circuit Court did so without recognizing or discussing either the 1993 amendment or the emerging circuit conflict over the question. Judge Ponsor predicts that when squarely confronted with the question,
13
the First Circuit will agree with the Eleventh Circuit and conclude that there is no reason “ ‘to assume that Congress meant for “cocaine base” to have more than one definition’ and that its construction of the term in the Guidelines was intended to limit the reach of the statute as well.”
Thomas
at 242 (quoting
United States v. Munoz-Realpe,
If Judge Ponsor is correct in predicting that the First Circuit will adopt his position, the impact will be significant.
14
First, if cocaine base means only crack then it will become necessary for the Government to charge in the indictment, and for a jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt, that the substance in issue is crack (or else pursue a charge for the lesser included cocaine offense). Thus, crack becomes an element of the § 841 offense, not merely an enhancement under the Guidelines. Second, if a defendant is not found by a jury to be in possession of crack, as in the present case, then neither the mandatory minimum for cocaine base under § 841(b) nor the
*292
Guideline range for crack applies. In that event, defendants such as Perry could only be found guilty of the lesser included offense of possession with intent to distribute cocaine.
See United States v. Brisbane,
While Judge Ponsor relies heavily on the reasoning of the Eleventh Circuit in Munoz-Realpe, there is, in fact, a profound split in the circuit courts regarding this issue. Decisions of the Fourth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Eleventh, and D.C. Circuits have all disagreed with the literal approach espoused by Lopez-Gil. Conversely, the Second, Third, Fifth, and Tenth Circuits have joined the First in applying the broader and more literal interpretation of the term cocaine base. Examination of the various approaches of the circuit courts is useful in analyzing the strength of the argument made by Judge Ponsor and pressed by the Defendant here.
The Eleventh Circuit in
Munoz-Realpe
placed great emphasis on the 1993 amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines adopting the cocaine base equals crack approach. The Court argued that because Congress allowed the amendment proposed by the Sentencing Commission to take effect pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 994(p), Congress had signified its approval for this interpretation of the term. (Of course, this reasoning is questionable because congressional approval of a Sentencing Commission amendment in 1993 is not indicative of Congress’ intent in passing the 1986 Act (as the Third Circuit pointed out in
United States v. Barbosa,
The Fourth Circuit approach relied more heavily on a detailed examination of the legislative history surrounding the enactment of § 841.
United States v. Fisher,
A more detailed account of the legislative history is found in the Seventh Circuit’s initial exposition on the question in
United States v. Booker,
Booker
also provides a detailed scientific analysis of the terminology found in
*293
§ 841.
16
Without repeating the details of the chemical composition of cocaine base, what is most critical is this: “[t]o a scientist, ‘cocaine’ and ‘cocaine base’ are synonymous; they both refer to a substance with the formula C17H2iN04.”
Id.
at 490. Cocaine is rarely used in its natural form, but rather it is converted into cocaine powder (a salt); the powder is then reprocessed to create a substance known as “freebase” (i.e., the base is freed from the hydrochloride and converted back to the chemical state it was in before it became a salt). There are various methods of doing this, but the product (freebase) is dangerous to ingest by smoking. A safer mechanism is to dissolve the cocaine hydrochloride with baking soda and water, boil the mixture until only a solid substance remains, and allow it to dry. This is what is commonly known as crack.
Id.
at 490-91. The
Booker
court found that while the chemical properties of the terms used in § 841(b) and Guideline section 2D1.1 (before the 1993 amendment) — cocaine and cocaine base — are the same, it was clear that Congress intended to punish crack more severely than powder cocaine. Therefore, the court rejected the argument that the rule of leniency required the terms to be treated the same. The Seventh Circuit reaffirmed its view that cocaine base means only crack in 1997 in
United States v. Adams,
The Eighth Circuit, agreeing with the Seventh Circuit’s analysis of the legislative history of § 841(b), held, in
United States v. Crawford,
The Sixth Circuit, too, has held that cocaine base equals crack, but has not provided a detailed analysis.
See United States v. Levy,
A variant on these approaches is discussed by the D.C. Circuit in the recent case of
United States v. Brisbane,
The
Shaw
case from the Ninth Circuit, like
Booker
and others, relies largely on legislative history.
United States v. Shaw,
These cases all express, in one form or another, that the meaning of the term cocaine base, contained in § 841(b), should be construed narrowly to mean crack cocaine because that is both what Congress intended in 1986 and what the Sentencing Commission found (and Congress approved) in 1993. With the exception of Shaw (and perhaps Brisbane, which appeared to favor the Shaw approach over the narrower view espoused in Booker, Fisher, Levy and A.S. Jackson), these cases suggest narrow construction best reflects the intent of Congress and the Sentencing Commission.
Cases on the other side of the ledger (other than
Lopez-Gil
and
Richardson)
come from the Second, Third, Fifth and Tenth Circuits. These
cases
— F.
Jackson,
The Second Circuit, in
F. Jackson,
was persuaded that the broader definition should apply, based largely on Congress’ use of what it deemed a chemical name (cocaine base) as opposed to the narrower colloquial term (crack). The court’s analysis is persuasive, but may be called into doubt by the more technical discussion of the chemical components of cocaine, cocaine base, and crack contained in
Booker,
which highlights the lack of clarity in the statute.
See
The Third Circuit in
Barbosa
gives thorough treatment to the dispute and discusses what was in 2001 a well-developed circuit split.
Barbosa,
The Tenth Circuit also adopted the approach of
F. Jackson,
but without detailed discussion.
See Easter,
These cases, all of which adopt the so-called literal approach, stand for three basic points critical to resolving the Defendant’s objection here. First, they set forth a compelling argument that the broader reading of cocaine base is more consonant with the intent of Congress than the approach outlined in Booker, Fisher, Levy, and A.S. Jackson.
Second, these cases reject the suggestion that the 1993 amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines should impact the calculus. As the
Barbosa
court pointed out, “whatever merit we should impart to the Commission for promulgating guidelines in accordance with Congress’ desire to punish more severely certain drug trafficking, its wisdom is not germane to our construction of Congress’ inclusion of mandatory minimum sentences in the drug statute itself.”
Third, both
Barbosa
and
Palacio
acknowledge the binding nature of circuit precedent, even where an event, such as the adoption of the 1993 amendment, has intervened. As noted in
Palacio,
even if the court found the 1993 amendment relevant and persuasive (which it did not), it could not change its statutory interpretation.
Defendant’s objection relies upon Judge Ponsor’s suggestion in Thomas that the First Circuit will conclude that it has not specifically answered the question of what the term cocaine base in § 841(b) means in the context of a direct challenge to the meaning of the statute; and that when it does, it will adopt the narrow reading afforded by Munoz-Realpe, Booker, and their kin. Judge Ponsor is correct when he states that Robinson, which reaffirmed the prior holding of Lopez-Gil after the enactment of the 1993 amendment, was not a direct challenge to the language of § 841(b), but rather a Guideline case. But that is not the case that matters. It is Lopez-Gil that cast the die on this point. That case involved a direct challenge to the meaning of the term cocaine base in § 841(b), and the First Circuit held (after initially going the other way) that the broad interpretation of cocaine base was the better one.
Under
Neal v. United States,
[W]e understand Neal to stand for [] the narrow and now unobjectionable proposition that a court must adhere to its prior decisions interpreting an act of Congress, even in the face of a later, contrary interpretation or definition issued by the Sentencing Commission.
One of the principles of statutory interpretation is that a ‘settled construction of an important federal statute should not be disturbed unless and until Congress so decides.’ Reves v. Ernst & Young,494 U.S. 56 , 74,110 S.Ct. 945 ,108 L.Ed.2d 47 (1990) (Stevens, J., concurring). We recognize that ‘considerations of stare decisis weigh heavily in the area of statutory construction, where Congress is free to change [the courts’] interpretation of its legislation.’ Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,431 U.S. 720 , 736,97 S.Ct. 2061 ,52 L.Ed.2d 707 (1977).
Bath Iron Works Corp. v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs, United States Dep’t of Labor,
3. Resolving the Objection
The Defendant’s objection rests on the contention that the First Circuit will revisit Lopez-Gil, discard it, and adopt the holding of Munoz-Realpe that Congress intended the words cocaine base in § 841(b) to mean crack — and only crack. The Defendant has found cause for hope in Judge Ponsor’s decisions. However, this Court must, for the reasons articulated above, reject Judge Ponsor’s view. This Court concludes that the broader interpretation of cocaine base is the law of the Circuit under Lopez-Gil, and that the Circuit (and this Court) is bound to follow it *297 unless and until Congress modifies the statute or the Supreme Court resolves the circuit split in favor of the more narrow view. Therefore, the statutory mínimums contained in § 841(b), enhanced by § 851, apply to this case, in spite of the fact that the jury did not specifically find the substance to be crack.
The Defendant’s fall-back argument is that the evidence at trial was insufficient to allow this Court to find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the cocaine base was crack. This argument also fails. Numerous First Circuit decisions on this topic make clear that the quantum of proof required to show that a form of cocaine base is in fact crack is not as great as Judge Ponsor (or the panel in Brisbane) suggests that it should be. Once a court hears testimony from a chemist that the substance is cocaine base, there is not much distance to cover to conclude that the cocaine base is in the form of crack. Put simply, the term “crack” is merely the street name for the most common form of cocaine base.
In this case, Senior Forensic Scientist Michael Liberto, an expert in the field of forensic toxicology, testified. As a result of the tests he performed on the substance found in the Defendant’s apartment, Li-berto concluded it was cocaine base and not cocaine hydrochloride (cocaine powder). Next, the Court heard from a lay witness, Detective Paul Sylvestre, who identified the substance as crack, based upon its physical appearance. While it is true that this is not an overwhelming showing, it does not have to be. The First Circuit has made clear that the evidentiary gap between cocaine base and crack is not very wide, and can be bridged with lay opinion testimony.
United States v. Charles,
In this Circuit, the types of evidence relied upon by district courts to determine that a particular substance is crack cocaine under the Guidelines include: (1) a chemist’s testimony that the substance was cocaine base, combined with an investigator’s testimony that the substance was crack, and the defendant’s own admission that he sold “rock,”
see Robinson,
Here, it is clear that the Government sustained its relatively modest bur
*298
den of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the cocaine base possessed by Perry was crack. While there was no evidence that the controlled substance contained sodium bicarbonate (“an admixture which the Guidelines themselves specifically identify as one signature for crack,”
Thomas,
Therefore, as set forth in the PSR, the applicable Guideline yields an Offense Level of 34 and Criminal History Category of III, resulting in a Guideline range of 188 to 235 months. Of course, the determination that cocaine base means more than just crack does not end the inquiry. The question now becomes what does this Court do with this advisory Guideline range.
IV. The Sentence
A. The Advisory Guidelines and § 3553
Having ruled on the Defendant’s objections to the PSR, this Court must now determine an appropriate sentence, giving due consideration to the Sentencing Guideline range applicable to this case (188 to 235 months), as well as to the factors set forth in the Sentencing Reform Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), which states as follow:
The court shall impose a sentence sufficient, but not greater than necessary, to comply with the purposes set forth in paragraph (2) of this subsection. The court, in determining the particular sentence to be imposed, shall consider—
(1) the nature and circumstances of the offense and the history and characteristics of the defendant;
(2) the need for the sentence imposed—
(A) to reflect the seriousness of the offense, to promote respect for the law, and to provide just punishment for the offense;
(B) to afford adequate deterrence to criminal conduct;
(C) to protect the public from further crimes of the defendant; and
(D) to provide the defendant with needed educational or vocational training, medical care, or other correctional treatment in the most effective manner;
(3) the kinds of sentences available;
(4) the kinds of sentence and the sentencing range established for—
(A) the applicable category of offense committed by the applicable category of defendant as set forth in the guidelines ...;
(5) any pertinent policy statement issued by the Sentencing Commission pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 994(a)(2) that is in effect on the date the defendant is sentenced;
(6) the need to avoid unwarranted sentencing disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct; and
(7) the need to provide restitution to any victims of the offense.
In
Booker/Fanfan,
the Supreme Court directed district courts to consider the Guidelines after making the findings of fact necessary to rule on any adjustments or enhancements. Further, district courts are instructed to give consideration to the Guidelines in conjunction with the factors listed in § 3553(a).
See Booker/Fanfan,
*299
The Supreme Court provides no guidance regarding precisely what level of consideration district courts must give the Guidelines in order to arrive at a reasonable sentence. In addition, the First Circuit has not yet had the occasion to address this question. Various district courts have opined on the issue and, predictably, have developed differing approaches.
Compare United States v. Clay,
Balancing the advisory Guideline range with the factors set forth in § 3553(a) cannot be reduced to an exact science, and this Court will refrain from embracing any formulaic approach to this process. As a practical matter, it seems appropriate to begin the sentencing process with the presumption that the range determined by the Guidelines is reasonable. The sentencing judge must start somewhere when determining an appropriate and reasonable sentence, and the most sensible and obvious place to start is with the advisory range established by the Guidelines. In addition to being practical, this approach promotes consistency and uniformity in sentencing among -like cases, among judges within a given district, and from district to district, by respecting the Guidelines’ framework. It matters little whether starting with the advisory range and considering that range presumptively reasonable going into an evaluation of the sentence in the context of § 3553 is denominated “substantial weight” or “heavy weight.” What does matter is that the Court respects the twin goals of fairness and consistency (goals generally pursued by the guidelines) in its attempt to craft a reasonable sentence.
In most cases, this approach produces a sentence consistent with the advisory Guideline range. There have been exceptions, of course, and this Court has varied from the advisory Guideline range on occa *300 sion, by sentencing both above and below the range. This Court’s approach is not only consistent with the approach of other judges in this District, 20 but also appears consistent with data compiled by the United States Sentencing Commission.
Sentencing Commission data reveals that in the post -Booker/Fanfan period, 61.3% of sentences fell within the applicable Guideline range, and 24.1% were below-range government-sponsored/ § 5K downward departures. Therefore, 13.1% of sentences imposed were below the Guideline range for reasons other than government-sponsorship or § 5K: 3.4% were denominated “departures”; 9.7% as non-Guideline sentences. 21 The remaining 1.4% of sentences were above the Guideline range, and included both government-sponsored/ § 5K upward departures and non-Guideline sentences. U.S. Sentencing Commission, Special Posh-Booker Coding Project, Information for All Cases — Cases Sentenced Subsequent to U.S. v. Booker (Data Extraction as of July 12, 2005), Aug. 3, 2005, at 1, available at: http://www.ussc.gov/Blakely/_080805.pdf.
When pr e-Booker/Fanfan Sentencing Commission data is compared with post- Booker/Fanfan Sentencing Commission data, the results reveal that while judges are imposing below-guideline sentences at a great rate, sentencing practices post- Booker/Fanfan are generally consistent with pr e-Booker/Fanfan practices. For example, for the year 2003, 7% of sentences were below the Guideline range for reasons other than government-sponsorship or substantial assistance under § 5K1.1, and the remaining .8% of sentences were above the Guideline range. United States Sentencing Commission, 2003 Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics 56 n. 2, 57, 59 n. 2. It appears judges now depart or issue non-Guideline sentences at a rate of about 13%, versus 7% in 2003. 22 Given that judges presently enjoy complete discretion regarding whether or not to follow the Guidelines, this change is arguably modest and demonstrates both judicial restraint and respect for the overarching goals of the Sentencing Reform Act, consistency and fairness across the system.
B. Crack vs. Poivder Cocaine Controversy
For over a decade, the Sentencing Commission has urged an overhaul of the law concerning sentences in cocaine cases, particularly crack cases. The crack/powder cocaine controversy has long been fodder *301 for criticism within both the criminal law community, in general, and the Sentencing Commission, in particular. Recently, that controversy has even emerged in mainstream media. See Stephen J. Dubner & Steven D. Levitt, Up in Smoke, The New York Times Magazine, Aug. 7, 2005, § 6, at 15. While numerous commentators and courts expressed criticism of the disparity long before the Supreme Court’s opinion in Booker/Fanfan, 23 this decision gives new vitality to the crack/powder cocaine sentencing controversy. No longer is the crack/powder disparity solely a source of frustration for sentencing judges who must impose sentences under a mandatory system. Now sentencing courts must consider this disparity in the context of the § 8553 factors and must also vary from the Guideline range if the Guideline sentence is not consonant with the purposes of § 3553.
In order to fully grasp the problem with the crack/powder disparity as it concerns the § 3553 factors, one need look no further than the work of the Sentencing Commission over the last 10 years. In 1995, by a 4 to 3 vote, the Sentencing Commission submitted to Congress a proposed amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines that would have equalized the penalties for powder cocaine and crack cocaine. Congress, however, passed, and the President signed, legislation disapproving the proposed amendment. In 1997, the Sentencing Commission issued a report urging congressional consideration of a range of alternatives for revising the cocaine penalty scheme. 24 Congress took no action on the report. In its May 2002 report, the *302 Sentencing Commission has once again implored Congress to act to address the unjustified disparity between powder and crack cocaine sentences. Review of the Sentencing Commission reports leaves little doubt that the Guidelines’ penalties for crack lack any principled justification that can withstand scrutiny under § 3553.
The Sentencing Commission’s findings are compelling. 25 In summary, the Commission concluded that the current penalties for crack cocaine exaggerate the relative harmfulness of crack cocaine, particularly in comparison to powder cocaine. While the Commission conceded that a precise quantification of the difference between crack and powder is impossible to determine, the research simply does not justify the 100:1 drug quantity ratio contained in current law.
Four specific Commission findings are worthy of emphasis. First, the feared epidemic of crack cocaine never materialized in the way it was envisioned by Congress at the time of the passage of these laws. Second, the current penalties sweep too broadly and apply too frequently to low level offenders, resulting in a seemingly unintended “penalty gap” between high level and low level offenders. This “penalty gap” appears to widen for offenders with the lowest quantities and the least criminal history, contrary to basic principles of sentencing policy.
Third, the current 100:1 ratio overstates the seriousness of most crack cocaine offenses and fails to provide adequate proportionality. In this regard, the Commission stated that many of the beliefs which appeared to underlie the passage of the 1986 Act and the rejection of the amendments proposed in 1995 (particularly violence) are no longer apposite.
Fourth, and finally, the Commission found that the current penalty structure disparately impacts minorities. While the Commission conceded that it is difficult to empirically study this issue, approximately 85% of the offenders sentenced for crack cocaine violations are black (in the year 2000) and that this leads to, at the very least, a perception that the crack/powder disparity is racially-motivated.
As a result of its findings, the Commission recommends both the elimination of the 100:1 drug quantity ratio and the adoption, by Congress, of a “three-pronged approach” for revising cocaine sentencing laws and policy. This three-prong approach is as follows:
(1) increase the five-year mandatory minimum threshold quantity for crack cocaine offenses to at least 25 grams and the ten-year threshold quantity to at least 250 grams (and repeal the mandatory minimum for simple possession of crack cocaine).
(2) direct the Commission generally to provide appropriate sentencing enhancements in the primary drug trafficking guideline to account specifically for (a) involvement of a dangerous weapon (including a firearm); (b) bodily injury resulting from violence; (c) an offense under 21 U.S.C. §§ 849 (Transportation Safety Offenses), 859 (Distribution to Persons Under Age Twenty-One), 860 (Distribution or Manufacturing in or Near Schools and Colleges), or 861 (Employment or Use of Persons Under 18 Years of Age); (d) repeat felony drug trafficking offenders; and (e) importation of drugs by of *303 fenders who do not perform a mitigating role in the offense.
(3) maintain the current statutory minimum threshold quantities for powder cocaine offenses (understanding that the contemplated specific guideline sentencing enhancements would effectively increase penalties for the more dangerous and more culpable powder cocaine offenders). ■
2002 Report at viii.
The above highlights of the Sentencing Commission’s conclusions and proposed solutions are supported by an overwhelming amount of authority—empirical, scholarly, and otherwise. 26 In fact, it is virtually impossible to find any authority suggesting a principled basis for the current disparity in sentences. Courts now face the question of how to factor the sound criticism and conclusions of the Sentencing Commission, and others, regarding the disparity into the § 3553 analysis in a crack cocaine sentencing such as this.
Section 3553(a)(2) requires the Court to consider four major factors: (1) the sentence should reflect the seriousness of the offense and promote respect for the law and provide just punishment; (2) the sentence should adequately deter criminal conduct (sometimes referred to as general deterrence); (3) the sentence should protect the public from further crimes by the defendant (occasionally referred to as specific deterrence); and (4) the sentence should provide the defendant with needed education/vocational training, medical care, etc. These goals should be accomplished with a sentence that is “sufficient, but not greater than necessary” to achieve them. 18 U.S.C. 3553(a). In this case, there is little doubt that the advisory Guideline range sentence (188 to 235 months) is substantially greater than is necessary to reflect the seriousness of the offense, to promote respect for the law, and to provide for adequate general and specific deterrence.
If this case concerned powder cocaine, instead of crack, the quantities involved, combined with the 2-point adjustment because of proximity to a school, would result in a sentence range of level 18 (versus a level 34). At a level 18, with a criminal history category of III, the sentence would be 33 to 41 months. 27 A sentence in the range of 188 to 235 months would operate as a specific deterrent to further crimes by this Defendant; but this can be said of any extremely long sentence. So long as the Defendant is in prison, he is “deterred” from further committing criminal offenses. It might also be possible to argue that a Guideline sentence would operate as a general deterrent to cocaine trafficking, because it would continue to send the message that crack cocaine will be treated with extremely harsh penalties. But this point is highly debatable.
In actuality, the disparity more probably means that sophisticated, large scale drug traffickers will usually deal in powder, while lower level dealers deal crack. This is a source of the sentencing gap identified by the Commission. Thus, the lengthy sentences for crack do not deter large *304 scale dealers from the cocaine trade; they simply cause the risk to be distributed to lower level dealers.
Further, when a Guideline sentence involves a nearly impossible-to-justify disparity such as this, the sentence neither accurately reflects the seriousness of the offense, nor promotes general respect for the criminal justice system. As stated by the Sentencing Commission in its 2002 report, gross sentencing disparities actually promote less respect for the law because the penalties suggest untoward discrimination and fall more heavily on smaller offenders and those with a lower criminal history category, leaving more significant drug dealers facing shorter sentences.
An example from this Court’s own docket demonstrates this point. This Court recently sentenced a major cocaine dealer, Shawn Montegio, to 188 months for the same crime that Defendant Perry was convicted of, except the substance was powder cocaine.
28
Montegio was caught with 10 kilograms of powder cocaine imported from New York. He had tens of thousands of dollars in cash stashed at various locations, and headed a major drug operation (for which his offense level was adjusted upward by several points). Defendant Perry, in contrast, was in possession of 29.47 grams of crack (not including the 11 grams converted from drug proceeds). The number of police officers involved in the Montegio investigation, and the complexity of the law enforcement methods used to surveil and catch him (highly advanced video and audio surveillance equipment, multiple undercover units, pole cameras, wire taps, etc.), all reflect the sophistication of his operation.
See United States v. Montegio,
This Court’s conclusion that a non-Guideline sentence is called for is also supported by the vast majority of district courts that have evaluated the crack/powder cocaine sentencing disparity in the wake of
Booker/Fanfan.
For example, in
Smith,
Judge Adelman found especially troubling the racially disparate impact created by the 100:1 ratio.
Id.
at 780 (noting that crack-related penalties disproportionately impact black defendants, who comprise “between 80% and 90% of federal crack cocaine defendants, compared to just 20% to 30% of powder cocaine offenders,” and who, primarily because of this disparity, receive sentences that are, on average, more than two years longer than those of white defendants).
See also United States v. Leroy,
In
Simon,
the district court likewise declined to follow the Guidelines’ 100:1 ratio, stating that the sentencing range of 324-405 months recommended by the Guidelines “substantially overstated] the seriousness of the offense, particularly when compared with offenses involving comparable quantities of powder cocaine.”
In
United States v. Clay,
No. 2:03CR73,
After comparing the defendant’s recommended Guidelines range based on 496 grams of crack (235 to 293 months, or 188 to 255 months based on the jury’s finding of at least 50 grams) to sentencing ranges based on various other ratios, the
Clay
*306
court concluded that a non-Guidelines sentence of 156 months of incarceration was warranted.
Id.
at *6. While the court did not specify whether it calculated the sentence based on 496 grams of crack or 50 grams, in either case, the sentence reflects a substantial variance from the 100:1 ratio (i.e., a 156-month sentence based on 496 grams reflects a roughly 5:1 ratio, while this same sentence based on 50 grams is slightly above a 20:1 ratio).
Id.; see also United States v. Castillo,
No. 03 CR. 835(RWS),
Several recent sentencings in this district reflect this view as well. See United States v. Vasconcelos, No. 04-081ML, Tr. of Sentencing at 18, 22 (Lisi, J.) (D.R.I. Jan. 28, 2005) (imposing term of incarceration of 60 months where Guidelines recommended a minimum of 84 months, noting that a “rather small amount of crack cocaine” triggered sentence “far in excess of what might be considered ... appropriate or just,” and that “crack guidelines ... almost universally are believed to be way too high”); United States v. Bilby, No. 04-38, Tr. of Sentencing at 21 (Torres, J.) (D.R.I. Jan. 14, 2005) (imposing term of incarceration of 66 months where Guidelines recommended a minimum of 87 months based, in part, on the Guidelines’ ’’disproportionate increase in the punishment because the offense is crack cocaine as opposed to powder cocaine”). 30
The decisions of other district courts, while falling short of imposing non-Guidelines sentences based directly on the crack cocaine/powder cocaine disparity, nevertheless support below-Guideline sentences in crack cases.
See, e.g., United States v. Franklin,
No. 04-41000701SAC,
The growing sentiment in the district courts is clear: the advisory Guideline range for crack cocaine based on the 100:1 ratio cannot withstand the scrutiny imposed by sentencing courts when the § 3553 factors are applied. This Court, too, will not blindly apply the Guideline range, for to do so would be to disregard the Supreme Court’s directive in Booker/Fanfan to fashion a reasonable sentence in light of the § 3553(a) factors. 32 As to the appropriate ratio to apply, this Court believes a 20:1 ratio (as suggested by the Commission in its 2002 report) 33 makes the most sense. In this case, the 20:1 ratio would yield an advisory Guideline range of *308 97 to 121 months 34 (subject, of course, to the application of the mandatory minimum 10-year sentence).
VI. Conclusion
The advisory Guideline Range of 188 to 235 months is greater than required to reflect the purposes of sentencing as outlined in § 3553(a). If the powder cocaine Guidelines were used in this case, the Defendant would be facing an approximately three-year sentence. Here, § 860 requires a mandatory minimum sentence which, by application of § 851, is 10 years. The Guideline disparity between powder cocaine (approximately three years) and crack cocaine (approximately fifteen years) in this case is far greater than necessary to promote the principles outlined in § 3553. While it may be a moot point to determine precisely where in the range between 3 and 15 years this case would have fallen if not for the application of the mandatory minimum 10-year sentence, the Court believes a 20:1 ratio effectively meets the criteria of § 3553 and the objectives of sentencing policy. This would have yielded a sentencing range of 97 to 121 months. 35 This conclusion is supported by the findings and recommendations of the Sentencing Commission, and the numerous decisions discussed above.
The conviction on count I is vacated. The Defendant is sentenced to 10 years imprisonment on Count II; to be followed by eight years of supervised release with special conditions as follows: the Defendant must participate in a program of mental health treatment approved by Probation, and must participate in a program approved by Probation for substance abuse, which may include testing to determine whether the Defendant has reverted to the use of alcohol or drugs (the Defendant shall submit to up to 72 tests per year as approved by Probation). Finally, the Defendant will be required to pay a $100 special assessment.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. 21 U.S.C. § 841 is not a model of clarity. The statute provides, in relevant part:
(a) Unlawful acts
... it shall be unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally—
(1) to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or possess with intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a controlled substance ....
(b) Penalties
(1) ...
(B) In the case of a violation of subsection
(a) of this section involving—
(ii) 500 grams or more of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of—
*281 (II) cocaine, its salts, optical and geometric isomers, and salts of isomers;
(iii) 5 grams or more of a mixture or substance described in clause (ii) which contains cocaine base;
such person shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment which may not be less than 5 years and not more than 40 years....
21 U.S.C. § 841 (1999) (emphasis added).
For starters, cocaine, scientifically speaking, is itself a "base”; cocaine, therefore, technically
is
"cocaine base.”
See United States v. Booker,
. 21 U.S.C § 860(a) provides, in relevant part:
[a]ny person who violates section 841(a)(1) ... of this title by distributing, possessing with intent to distribute, or manufacturing a controlled substance in or on, or within one thousand feet of, the real property comprising a public or private elementary, vocational, or secondary school or public or private college, junior college, or university ... is ... subject to (1) twice the maximum punishment authorized by section 841(b) of this title; and (2) at least twice any term of supervised release authorized by section 841(b) of this title for a first offense. A fine up to twice that authorized by section 841(b) of this title may be imposed in addition to any term of imprisonment authorized by this subsection.
. Essentially this Court had structured a two-phase trial along the lines of what Justice Stevens described in his dissenting Remedial Opinion in
Booker/Fanfan.
. The Government apparently has no objection, as it filed no reply to the Defendant’s Supplemental Brief raising this issue.
Cf. United States v. Williams,
. The double jeopardy violation arising out of the Defendant’s conviction under both § 841(a)(1) and § 860(a) cannot be remedied by merely refusing to sentence the Defendant under Count I, or having the sentences run concurrently. As the Supreme Court noted:
[t]he second conviction, whose concomitant sentence is served concurrently, does not evaporate simply because of the concurrence of the sentence. The separate conviction, apart from the concurrent sentence, has potential adverse collateral consequences that may not be ignored. For example, the presence of two convictions on the record may ... result in an increased sentence under a recidivist statute for a future offense. Moreover, the second conviction may be used to impeach the defendant's credibility and certainly carries the societal stigma accompanying any criminal conviction.... Thus, the second conviction, even if it results in no greater sentence, is an impermissible punishment.
Rutledge,
. Because the issues impacting the Defendant's sentence arise almost exclusively under § 841, and because § 860 essentially enhances the punishments outlined in § 841, this Court will, for the salte of simplicity, discuss these issues in the context of § 841, notwithstanding the fact that the Defendant’s conviction under this lesser included offense is vacated.
. The Defendant may have waived this objection at trial when he agreed with the Government and the Court that the jury should be discharged and not asked to decide the enhancement questions. (Tr., 1/13/05, at 1 (Defendant agreed with Court’s position that “the majority’s opinion in
Booker
and in
Fanfan ...
essentially precluded the use of [a] sentencing hearing and supplemental special verdict forms and a jury fact finding with respect to specific enhancement facts.”).) Nevertheless, given the newness of the
Booker/Fanfan
decision at the time the Defendant agreed to discharge the jury (the
Booker/Fanfan
decision was issued only the day before), this Court will overlook any such waiver and address the merits of the Defendant’s objection.
Cf. United States v. Leavitt,
. The Defendant argues that the Court may not find facts to support enhancements under the Guidelines generally. This is patently incorrect. It should be beyond serious question by now that the Court at the time of sentencing may find facts, by a preponderance of the evidence, that support enhancements under the Sentencing Guidelines. In
United States v. Antonakopoulos,
.The Court continued the sentencing hearing in this case in order to allow the Government to consider whether it wished to present additional evidence at the sentencing hearing in support of its argument that the cocaine base was in fact crack. The Government chose to rely on the evidence produced at trial and elected not to produce any additional evidence. The Defendant objected to allowing the Government to present additional evidence, but in light of the Government's decision not to do so, this argument is moot.
. While it has often been noted that the death of University of Maryland basketball star, twenty-two-year-old Len Bias, from a cocaine overdose was a factor contributing to congressional action culminating in the 1986 Act, see generally, William Spade, Jr., Beyond the 100:1 Ratio: Towards a Rational Cocaine Sentencing Policy, 38 Ariz. L.Rev. 1233, 1249 (Winter 1996), Bias’ death was only one in a series of cocaine-related events in the professional sports world that captivated national attention. Just eight days after the Bias tragedy, Cleveland Browns defensive back Don Rogers, just twenty-three years old, died of a cocaine overdose. As one writer noted in 1986,
drug abuse is [nothjing new in sports; it has just picked up a terrible new momentum. ... Who can keep up with the cocaine box scores? From Mercury Morris to Mike Norris; from Parker (Dave) to Porter (Darrell) to Pryor (Aaron) to Peters (Tony); from Steve Howe to the Pittsburgh cocaine trial to the Tulane coke-for-points scam.... Six years ago the Atlanta Hawks’ Terry Furlow crashed his car and died — with cocaine in his system. Four years ago the Montreal Expos' Tim Raines took to sliding headfirst in order not to break bottles of cocaine in his back pocket. Last winter former Tennessee quarterback Tony Robinson was in-dieted for cocaine dealing. This past NBA season, Micheál Ray Richardson, John Lucas and Quintín Dailey all fell afoul of cocaine. Right now, some players on the Virginia football team are under investigation for selling cocaine. Tomorrow somebody will snort up the harsh marks and no one will blink.
Rick Reilly, When the Cheers Turned to Tears, Sports Illustrated, July 14, 1986, at 28.
While the exposure of cocaine use among many highly visible athletes clearly played a role in the enactment of the 1986 Act, there were other elements in play as well. The "unexpected explosion of concern about drugs” in 1986, one writer noted, resulted from the confluence of many factors, including: a popular "shift in attitudes against substance abuse over the past five years” in response to "a cycle of widespread drug use that began in the mid-1960’s”; the rise of cocaine addiction among the most affluent and politically influential parts of American society, reaching far beyond the inner city to America’s suburbs and white-collar offices; the appearance of crack cocaine and its "devastating effects on neighborhoods of New York and Los Angeles, only blocks from the offices of major national news organizations”; and the approach of national elections — lead *289 ing the Democratic leadership in the House to press for passage “before press attention was lost and Congress recessed,” and leaving few in Congress or the White House to oppose such a “popular and seemingly one-sided issue.”
Peter Kerr, Anatomy of the Drug Issue: How, After Years, It Erupted, N.Y. Times, Nov. 17, 1986, at Al.
. As the Sentencing Commission stated in its report to Congress in May 2002,
[b]ecause of the statutory and Guideline differentiation between crack cocaine and powder cocaine, the sentencing guideline range based solely on drug quantity is three to over six times longer for crack cocaine offenders than powder cocaine offenders with equivalent drug quantities, depending on the exact quantity of drug involved. In great part because of the difference in quantity-based penalties, in 2000 the average sentence for a crack cocaine offense was 44 months longer than the average sentence for a powder cocaine offense, 118 months compared to 74 months.
United States Sentencing Commission, Report to the Congress: Cocaine and Federal Sentencing Policy p. v. (May 2002), available at http://www.ussc.gov/r_con-gress/02crack/2002crackrpt .htm. (2002) (“2002 Report”).
. Thus, only one currently sitting (now Senior) Judge of this Circuit (Judge Campbell) has actually expressed the view that cocaine base means more than crack in the context of a direct challenge to § 841.
. All three cases are currently on appeal.
. Assuming Judge Ponsor is correct and the Circuit Court adopts this view, the question of retroactivity would need to be addressed. Prospective application of such a holding would likely be quite manageable. As a practical matter, it is fairly simple for indictments under § 841 to allege that the cocaine base is crack. The verdict form could easily address the question as well. And the evidentiary burden, which the First Circuit has discussed on numerous occasions in the context of the Guidelines (discussed below) is not overly burdensome. The Government usually endeavors to meet this burden in all crack cases anyway because it seeks the highest available penalty under the Guidelines.
. This decision is not to be confused with the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
. Much of this scientific information is re-prised in the First Circuit's opinion in
United States v. Robinson,
. This decision is not to be confused with the Second Circuit's 1992 decision in F. Jackson, which held that cocaine base under the statute includes all types of cocaine base, not just crack.
. In the prior case of
United States v. James,
the Third Circuit stated that “[w]e find the
Munoz-Realpe
analysis to be persuasive.”
. As Judge Ponsor has pointed out, the First Circuit has not addressed precisely the question of whether the 1993 amendment to the Guidelines likewise altered the meaning of the statute.
See Thomas,
. An informal sampling of sentencing data in this District post-Booker/Fanfan reveals that approximately 67% of sentences were within the Guideline range, while approximately 17% of sentences were below the range (excluding government-sponsored/ § 5K downward departures). Above-range sentences (excluding those relying on upward departure provisions in the Guidelines) were statistically insignificant.
. These statistics necessarily lack some precision because of the confusion prevailing in the immediate aftermath of Booker/Fanfan. For example, many courts (including this one), for a time, imposed sentences which were called non-Guideline sentences but which could have been handled as departures. At this point, it is likely that most, if not all, judges have returned to utilizing the departure regimen where it fits, and only using non-Guideline sentences in situations that cannot fit into the departure scheme.
.This Court is unable to determine whether the up-tick in departure/non-Guideline sentences is attributable to one or more specific causes, such as the crack/powder disparity discussed in the next section. The Sentencing Commission is in the process of compiling this data. The Court suspects, however, based in part on the non-scientific review of sentences in this District, that in the aftermath of Booker/Fanfan, a significant portion of the increase will be attributable to this disparity.
.
See, e.g., United States v. Dumas,
. The Sentencing Commission, of course, was not alone in its criticism of the crack/powder sentencing disparity during this time. Following the Sentencing Commission's issuance of the 1997 report, then Attorney General Janet Reno and Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Barry R. McCaffrey, sent a letter to President Clinton recommending raising the minimum threshold for crack to 25 grams and raising the corresponding threshold for powder cocaine to 250 grams. Roger W. Haines, Jr. et al.,
Federal Sentencing Guidelines Handbook
557-58 (Nov.2004 ed.). On July 22, 1997, the Clinton administration followed suit, proposing a ratio of 10:1.
Simon,
. This Court will not repeat all of the Commission's findings here, but rather refers readers to the 2002 Report, available at http://www.ussc.gov/r_con-gress/02crack/2002crackrpt.htm.
. The supporting authority is legion. A recent decision of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin,
United States v. Smith,
. As previously mentioned, of course, the 10-year mandatory minimum sets the floor in this case.
. Montegio also received five additional years for the use of a gun, but this additional five years is not relevant for the comparison.
. The Government’s § 3553(e) motion in this case allowed the Court to impose a sentence below the statutory mandatory minimum. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e) ("Upon motion of the Government, the court shall have the authority to impose a sentence below a level established by statute as minimum sentence so as to reflect a defendant's substantial assistance in the investigation or prosecution of another person who has committed an offense.").
. Thus, all three active District Judges in this District appear to agree that non-guideline sentences are appropriate in cases involving crack.
. For the reasons stated in note 35 infra and elsewhere in this Memorandum, this Court believes this view is inconsistent with the holding of Booker/Fanfan.
. Because the Guidelines are now advisory,
pre-Booker/Fanfan
authority in this Circuit holding that the recommendations of the Sentencing Commission regarding the disparity between punishments for crack and powder cocaine is not a ground for departure under the Guidelines is distinguishable.
E.g., United States v. Andrade,
. It has been suggested by the Government that utilizing the findings of the Sentencing Commission to justify a non-Guideline sentence is effectively rejecting the will of Congress because Congress affirmatively rejected the Sentencing Commission's proposed amendment in 1995 to eliminate the 100:1 ratio. There is a simple response to this. To adopt this view would effectively impose the mandatory Guideline regime rejected by Booker/Fanfan. Congress approved the entire Guideline system; the Supreme Court held it must function as an advisory system only and otherwise is unconstitutional. Congress’ rejection of the 1995 Amendment must be treated no differently. That is, if Congress’ rejection of the 1995 amendment was considered binding on courts with respect to whether the crack guidelines must be applied it would lead to the same constitutional problem that plagued the Guidelines as a whole. The only sensible way to resolve this problem is to consider this congressional action as part of *308 the mix in applying the Guidelines on an advisory basis. Furthermore, while Congress passed legislation disapproving the Sentencing Commission’s 1995 proposed amendment adopting a 1:1 equivalence between crack and cocaine, Congress has taken no action with respect to the Commission's 2002 report which effectively recommends a 20:1 ratio.
. A base offense level of 26 plus 2 points for proximity to a school equals a total offense level of 28. Offense level 28 with Criminal History Category III yields a range of 97 to 121 months.
. Base offense level of 26 plus 2 points (proximity to school equals 28; criminal history category of III.
