Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
Appellant Craig Pettigrew contends that his 1997 drug convictions and sentence are unconstitutional under
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
I
On September 26, 1996, a grand jury returned a four-count indictment against Pettigrew that grew out of an undercover
Pettigrew’s case went to trial on January 22, 1997. An 'undercover police officer and a government informant testified regarding the defendant’s participation in the two drug transactions. Their testimony was supported by audiotape and, in the case of the second transaction, videotape recordings. The officer testified that Pet-tigrew had agreed to provide two ounces of crack cocaine for $2000 on each occasion. A government chemist, in turn, testified that the crack cocaine Pettigrew actually provided in the first transaction weighed 50.62 grams, and that the amount he provided in the second weighed 50.57 grams. Pettigrew testified in his own defense, conceding that he had engaged in the drug deals, but insisting that he had been entrapped into so doing.
Consistent with then-prevailing precedent in this circuit, the trial court did not instruct the jury that, to convict, it must find the 50-gram drug quantity recited in the indictment for each count; instead, the court told the jury, without objection from the defendant, that “[t]he Government need not prove that the defendant distributed any particular numerical amount of cocaine base or crack but it must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant distributed a detectable or measurable amount of cocaine base or crack.” 1/27/97 Tr. at 100. On January 28, 1997, the jury convicted Pettigrew on Counts 1, 8, and 4, but acquitted him on Count 2. The trial court later vacated Count 3 as a lesser included offense of Count 4. It subsequently entered a judgment of conviction on Count 1 for the distribution of 50 grams or more of cocaine base on March 7, in violation of § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A)(iii), and on Count 4 for the distribution of cocaine base within 1000 feet of a school on March 22, in violation of § 860(a).
The district court conducted a sentencing hearing on July 3, 1997. The Presen-tence Investigation Report (PSR), prepared by the U.S. Probation Office, recited the quantities of crack cocaine as reported by the government chemist. The report stated that, as a consequence of his convictions for violating both § 841(b)(1)(A) and § 860(a), Pettigrew was subject to a statutory mandatory minimum sentence of imprisonment for 10 years followed by supervised release for an additional 10 years. PSR ¶ ¶ 43, 45; see infra Part II. The Probation Office calculated Pettigrew’s sentencing range under the United States Sentencing Guidelines as 151 to 188 months’ imprisonment. 1
On November 8, 2000, Pettigrew filed a motion pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, asking the district court to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence.
3
He asserted that his convictions and sentence were unlawful in light of
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
which the Supreme Court had issued in June of that year.
II
We begin with a description of Petti-grew’s claim of error, and of the standard of review that we must apply to that claim.
Section 841(b)(1) of Title 21 of the United States Code provides three escalating penalty ranges for the distribution of cocaine base: § 841(b)(1)(C) authorizes a maximum sentence of 20 years’ imprisonment (with no mandatory minimum), followed by at least 3 years of supervised release, for distributing any detectable amount of the drug; § 841(b)(1)(B) provides a mandatory minimum sentence of 5 years’ and a maximum sentence of 40 years’ imprisonment, followed by at least 4 years of supervised release, for distributing 5 grams or more; and § 841(b)(1)(A) — the section under which Pettigrew was convicted for the March 7 transaction — provides a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years’ and a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, followed by at least 5 years of supervised release, for distributing 50 grams or more.
See United States v. Webb,
In
Apprendi,
the Supreme Court held that, “[ojther than the fact of prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and
The government responds that there was no
Apprendi
error at all in Petti-grew’s case. It avers that even if the drug quantity found by a judge increases a defendant’s mandatory minimum sentence,
Apprendi
does not apply as long as the sentence imposed does not exceed the maximum sentence provided by § 841(b)(1)(C).
See
Appellee’s Br. at 22-24 (citing
Harris v. United States,
We need not decide the retroactivity question because the government’s second point is sufficient to resolve this case.
9
“Where a defendant has procedurally defaulted a claim by failing to raise it on direct review, the claim may be raised in habeas only if the defendant can first demonstrate either ‘cause’ and actual ‘prejudice,’ or that he is ‘actually innocent.’”
Bousley v. United States,
To establish “actual prejudice,” Pettigrew “must shoulder the burden of showing, not merely that the errors at his trial created a
possibility
of prejudice, but that they worked to his
actual
and substantial disadvantage, infecting his entire trial with error of constitutional dimensions.”
Frady,
In the following Part, we assume for purposes of analysis that there was
Ap-prendi
error in Pettigrew’s case, and ask whether that error resulted in actual prejudice under the standard just described. Because we conclude that Pettigrew has not demonstrated that he suffered such prejudice, we find it unnecessary to determine whether he has demonstrated the kind of “cause” also required to excuse his procedural default.
See Frady,
Before proceeding to the prejudice inquiry, we pause to consider Pettigrew’s threshold objection to the entire enterprise of asking whether his procedural default may be overcome by a showing of cause and prejudice. In Pettigrew’s view, because the jury did not find that he distributed 50 grams of crack cocaine before convicting him, the district court “lacked jurisdiction” to sentence him under § 841(b)(1)(A). Appellant’s Br. at 32. Pettigrew asserts that such a “jurisdictional defect” cannot be “waived” by a procedural default, and that he therefore cannot be required to show cause and prejudice — or even plain error — before the court may address the merits of his claim.
This argument is readily dispatched in light of
United States v. Cotton,
in which the Supreme Court held: the omission of drug quantity from an indictment, in claimed violation of
Apprendi,
does not deprive a trial court of jurisdiction; such a claim can be forfeited by a defendant’s failure to raise it in the trial court; and such a forfeited claim may only be corrected on direct review if it meets the plain error standard.
In short, the omission of drug quantity from jury instructions is not a jurisdictional error. Rather, when a defendant fails to make a timely objection to such an omission, a court must apply the standard of review appropriate to the stage of the proceedings at which it is eventually raised: plain error on direct review, or cause and prejudice on collateral attack. 15 In this case, because the appropriate standard is cause and prejudice, we now proceed to consider how Pettigrew’s claim fares under the “prejudice” prong of that standard.
Ill
The evidence of drug quantity at Pettigrew’s trial was twofold. First, the undercover officer testified that Pettigrew had promised on each occasion to provide “two ounces” of crack cocaine, 1/23/97 Tr. at 21, 50, an amount that corresponds to 56.70 grams. Second, the government chemist testified that he analyzed and weighed the crack that Pettigrew actually provided, and found that Pettigrew sold the undercover officer 50.62 grams in the first transaction and 50.57 grams in the second. Although defense counsel had a full opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses, and did in fact cross-examine the chemist about his weighing technique, counsel did not question the quantities that the chemist reported.
With quantity uncontested at trial, there is no reason to expect that the trial’s outcome would have been different had the issue been specifically put to the jury. As we said in
United States v. Dale,
a case in which the defendant attacked his conviction on the ground that the judge rather than the jury had determined the “materiality” element of the offense of making false statements: “In the absence of any basis for finding that [the defendant’s] misrepresentations were not material, we cannot say that the judge’s failure to submit materiality to the jury worked to [the defendant’s] actual and substantial disadvantage.”
Dale,
Pettigrew raises two objections to this conclusion. First, he contends that, because the weight of the crack cocaine in each transaction was just slightly above the 50-gram threshold, the evidence of quantity was not “overwhelming,” and the jury might therefore have reached a different conclusion than did the judge. But whether or not the evidence of quantity may be characterized as “overwhelming,” there is no question that it was uncontested.
16
And in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the jury would have had
Second, Pettigrew objects that, although he did fail to contest drug quantity at trial, he had no incentive to dispute it at all since courts did not think that drug quantity was a question for the jury before
Ap-prendi.
We have rejected similar arguments in the past because regardless of the incentive that defendants had to ehal-lenge drug quantity at
pre-Apprendi
trials, they still had “every incentive to contest it at sentencing.”
Webb,
In sum, because Pettigrew has failed to demonstrate that the omission of drug quantity from his jury instructions affected the outcome of his district court proceedings, he has failed to establish prejudice sufficient to overcome his procedural default. As a consequence, this court cannot overturn his convictions for violating 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) and § 860(a). And because those convictions stand, the sentence that Pettigrew received — which he concedes was appropriate for the violation of those statutes — stands as well.
See Johnson,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s judgment denying Petti-grew’s motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Probation Office calculated Pettigrew's guidelines offense level as 34: a base offense level of 2 under § 2D 1.2 (the guideline applicable to 21 U.S.C. § 860(a)) for committing an offense near a protected location, plus an offense level of 32 under § 2D 1.1 (c)(4) (the drug quantity table) for distributing 50 to 150 grams of cocaine base. See U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 2D1.2 (1995) (U.S.S.G.); id. § 2D 1.1 (c)(4); see also id. § 3D 1.2(d) (explaining that counts should be grouped and their respective quantities aggregated when the offense level is determined largely according to drug quantity). The offense level of 34, combined with Pettigrew’s criminal history category of I, generated a sentencing range of 151 to 188 months. See PSR ¶¶ 13, 25, 44; U.S.S.G. ch.5, pt. A.
. This court has held, and had held at the time of Pettigrew’s sentencing, that "the crack/powder disparity” is not "a valid basis for downward departure.”
In re Sealed Case,
. Pettigrew timely filed his § 2255 motion within one year of the date upon which the judgment of conviction became final.
See Clay v. United States,
.Section 860(a) also imposes a minimum prison term of 1 year, "[e]xcept to the extent a greater minimum sentence is otherwise provided by section 841(b) of this title.” 21 U.S.C. § 860(a).
. As noted above, the 10-year supervised release term was the product of Pettigrew’s convictions under both § 841(b)(1)(A) and § 860(a).
. Although Pettigrew’s proposed disposition does not expressly refer to his conviction on Count 4 for violating § 860(a), presumably he believes that the concurrent sentence he received on that count must be corrected as well — since it was based on the district court’s determination that the March 22 transaction also involved 50 grams or more of crack cocaine. See 21 U.S.C. § 860(a) (subjecting violators to “twice the maximum punishment” and “at least twice any term of supervised release” authorized by the relevant portion of 21 U.S.C § 841(b)).
. Pettigrew replies that Harris is inapposite because that case involved a statute under which a fact (brandishing a firearm) increased only the minimum and not the maximum sentence, while in his case the determination that Pettigrew’s crime involved 50 grams of crack increased both. Although he concedes that facts that trigger incremental changes in mandatory mínimums may be found by the judge, he contends that facts that change both minimum and maximum terms function as offense elements and must be submitted to the jury. Appellant’s Br. at 10-12.
.Under
Teague,
"new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those cases which have become final before the new rules are announced,” unless the new rule “places certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to proscribe,” or constitutes a "watershed rule[] of criminal procedure” implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.
Id.
at 310-11,
.
See United States v. Dale,
.
See Bousley,
. See Randy Hertz & James S. Liebman, Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure § 26.3c, at 1219-25 (4th ed. 1998).
. In
Dale,
we added that "[c]ircuit precedent suggests that habeas prejudice may require a greater showing, namely,
‘by a preponderance of the evidence,
that the outcome of his trial would have been different but for the errors in question.' ”
. This formulation derives from the third prong of the plain error standard, which requires that the error "affec[t] substantial rights.”
Olano,
. In
Cotton
itself, drug quantity was omitted from the jury instructions as well as from the indictment, although the Court did not discuss the relevance of the former omission.
See Cotton,
.
See Dale,
.
Cf. Neder,
.
See Frady,
. As noted above, the only ground for departure adopted by the district court was an improper one.
See supra
note 2. This suggests a second reason why the defendant suffered no prejudice from the alleged
Apprendi
error, at least with respect to his term of incarceration. Even if we were to do what Pettigrew asks of us — vacate his conviction under § 841(b)(1)(A) and remand for entry of a conviction and resentencing under § 841(b)(1)(C) — he would still receive
at least
the same prison term he received before. Although a minimum 10-year term would no longer be dictated by the statute, the Sentencing Guidelines would still dictate an even longer term in light of the court’s finding that Pettigrew’s offenses involved a total of 101.19 grams of cocaine base.
See
U.S.S.G. §§ 2D 1.1 (c)(4), 2D 1.2 (prescribing a sentence
. For this reason, we have no need to address Pettigrew's contention that, although his 10-year supervised release term is appropriate for a conviction under §§ 860(a) and 841(b)(1)(A), it is not appropriate for a conviction under §§ 860(a) and 841(b)(1)(C).
See Johnson,
