This appeal concerns the amount of narcotics to be counted in sentencing for a conspiracy offense where a portion of the quantity the defendant planned to sell was not narcotics. Specifically, the issue is whether a defendant who agreed to sell an additional six ounces of cocaine after two prior sales should have the six ounces included in his sentencing calculation even though he later decided to substitute flour for cocaine. Defendant-Appellant Richard A. Dallas appeals from the March 1, 2000, *107 judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Vermont (J. Gar-van Murtha, Chief Judge), sentencing him to 33 months after he pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (1994). We conclude that the conspiratorial agreement to sell narcotics included the disputed six ounces of cocaine, notwithstanding the Defendant’s decision to substitute flour for cocaine before the six-ounce sale was made. We therefore affirm.
Facts
The essential facts are undisputed. In the summer of 1999, Dallas and his girlfriend Rebecca Heyward were engaged in a conspiracy to distribute narcotics. When a prospective buyer was identified, Hey-ward would try to obtain narcotics from her source. In May, Dallas agreed to sell an ounce of cocaine to a confidential informant (“Cl”), but the sale did not occur at that time because the source could not supply the drugs on short notice. On July 23, 1999, Dallas and Heyward traveled from Massachusetts to Vermont, and sold an ounce of cocaine to the Cl, along with six small packages of heroin included as a bonus.
In a telephone conversation a few days later, Dallas agreed to sell the Cl three ounces of cocaine for $3,000, and twenty bags of heroin for $400. This second sale occurred on July 30; to resolve a disagreement about the price of the heroin, Dallas gave the Cl, in addition to the cocaine, twenty-two bags of heroin rather than the twenty they had negotiated.
On August 6, 1999, Dallas agreed to sell the Cl six more ounces of cocaine and 40 bags of heroin. Heyward attempted to get the narcotics for the third sale from her source, but was unable to do so. She then decided to substitute six ounces of flour for the cocaine. 1 Dallas contends, and the Government does not dispute, that Dallas was aware of the substitution. On the evening of August 6, Dallas and Heyward began traveling to Vermont with the six ounces of flour. Police arrested them on the highway before their scheduled meeting with the Cl and in their car found two packages containing the flour.
Dallas pled guilty to a one-count information charging him with conspiring to distribute controlled substances between July 23 and August 6, 1999. The Presen-tence Report attributed 288.32 grams of cocaine to the defendant: 28.35 grams from the July 23 one-ounce sale, 84.97 grams from the July 30 three-ounce sale, 170 grams for the six ounces of cocaine he agreed to supply on August 6, and five grams of cocaine, which was the converted equivalent of the heroin sold during the first two transactions. Dallas challenged the inclusion of the six ounces of cocaine.
Chief Judge Murtha rejected Dallas’s challenge, finding that Dallas intended to deliver and was reasonably capable of producing the six ounces of cocaine. Because Dallas was involved with between 200 and 300 grams of cocaine (including the six ounces), his base offense level was 20, resulting in a total offense level of 19 after adjustments. The District Judge imposed a sentence that included 33 months’ imprisonment, the bottom of the range for a defendant in Criminal History Category II.
Discussion
In its zeal to calibrate narcotics punishments precisely with the quantity of narcotics involved in an offense, the Sentencing Commission has specified seventeen different categories of quantities, correlating each with a different base offense level.
See
U.S.S.G. § 2Dl.l(e) (drug quantity table). This approach, which has been characterized as reflecting a notion of “incremental immorality,”
see United States v. Martinez-Rios,
The lawfulness of including the aborted six-ounce transaction in the sentencing calculation involves both an issue of law, which we review
de novo, see United States v. Stroud,
1. Legal Issue Concerning Intent
Application Note 12 to section 2D1.1 of the Guidelines provides the starting point for our analysis. One sentence of Note 12 states:
In an offense involving an agreement to sell a controlled substance, the agreed-upon quantity of the controlled sub *109 stance shall be used to determine the offense level unless the sale is completed and the amount delivered more accurately reflects the scale of the offense.
U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1, comment, (n.12) (1998) (emphasis added). This sentence, read in isolation, indicates that Dallas may be sentenced for the disputed six ounces because his offense involved an agreement to sell a controlled substance and the six ounces was part of the “agreed-upon quantity.”
See, e.g., United States v. Pimentel,
However, Application Note 12 continues: If, however, the defendant establishes that he or she did not intend to provide, or was not reasonably capable of providing, the agreed-upon quantity of the controlled substance, the court shall exclude from the offense level determination the amount of controlled substance that the defendant establishes that he or she did not intend to provide or was not reasonably capable of providing.
U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1, comment, (n.12) (emphasis added). This provision, added in 1995,
see
U.S.S.G.App. C at 341, 344 (amend. 518), amended the prior version of Note 12 to make lack of either intent or capability a ground for reducing the quantity for which a defendant could be sentenced.
See Hazut,
The amended Note 12 also somewhat resolved the previously existing issue of which side has the burden of proof concerning intent and capability. Although the amended Note seems to require the defendant to prove lack of intent or capability, this Court has construed the amended Note to impose on the defendant only a
burden of production. See Hazut,
In the pending case, the legal issue , arising under amended Application Note 12 is whether an intent once formed and expressed satisfies the intent requirement even though the defendant later changes his mind and acts without such intent, in this case, by selling flour instead of the originally intended cocaine. The Appellant first contends that “there was no intent by this defendant to sell a controlled substance on the date in question [ie., August 6, the date of the planned sale of flour].” Brief for Appellant at 10. The Appellant must be referring to a claimed lack of intent on the
evening
of August 6, after he and. Heyward had decided to substitute flour for cocaine; it is undisputed that earlier on that day, when Dallas agreed with the Cl to sell him six ounces of cocaine, he and Heyward had the requisite intent. An agreement to produce a specific amount evidences an intent to produce it.
See United States v. Desimone,
Apparently acknowledging his initial intent to sell the six ounces, the Appellant presses his legal argument in these words: “However, to the extent that he has taken steps to withdraw from the conspiracy and put an end to future distributions, he should not be held accountable for quantities with which he was not involved.” Reply Brief for Appellant at 4.
A person can withdraw from a conspiracy “ ‘either [by] making ... a clean breast to the authorities ... or communicating] ... the abandonment in a manner reasonably calculated to reach co-conspirators.’ ”
United States v. Salameh,
2. Factual Issue Concerning Capability
The factual issue arising under Application Note 12 is whether the Government has sustained its burden of proving that Dallas was “reasonably capable” of providing six ounces of cocaine.
9
Chief Judge Murtha found such reasonable capability, and, although such a finding was not inevitable, we cannot say that it was clearly erroneous. Dallas had previously shown himself capable of producing one ounce of cocaine on one occasion and three ounces on another, although it took some time to obtain these quantities.
See Hazut,
Conclusion
Since Dallas agreed to sell the disputed six ounces of cocaine and had the intent and capability to do so, his punishment calculation properly included this amount. The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The record is unclear as to whether the Cl wanted the drugs that evening, or whether Dallas simply needed money as soon as possible.
. For defendants in Criminal History Category I, the sentencing range for offense level 16 is 21-27 months, and for offense level 14 is 15-21 months. For defendants in Criminal History Category II, the comparable ranges are 24-30 months and 18-24 months.
. Although Congress has made gross distinctions among drug punishments by specifying different mandatory minimum sentences for different quantities, e.g., ten years for more than five kilograms of cocaine and five years for more than 500 grams of cocaine, see 21 U.S.C. § 841 (b)( 1 )(A)(ii)(II), (B)(ii)(II), nothing in the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, which mandated the Guidelines, see 28 U.S.C. § 994(a) (1994), required the minute quantity differentiations in the Commission's drug quantity table. The Commission was obliged only to "take ... into account” various factors including "the nature and degree of the harm caused by the offense,” id. § 994(c)(3), and to do so "only to the extent that [these factors] do have relevance," id. § 994(c).
.Since 33 months is both the top of the'range for offense level 17, which Dallas seeks, and the bottom of the range for offense level 19, in which he was placed, the sentencing judge could have eliminated the dispute concerning the challenged six-ounce transaction if the judge had thought that 33 months would have been the appropriate sentence, regardless of which of the two offense levels applied.
See United States v. Benningham,
. A third change effected by amended Note 12 is the substitution of the phrase "agreed-upon amount” as the starting point for the base level determination instead of the previously used phrase "weight under negotiation.” See ■ U.S.S.G.App. C, at 342 (amend.518).
. Hendrickson
was focusing on intent for a somewhat different purpose than the mitigating language of Application Note 12, which permits exclusion, from the quantity used to determine the base offense level, of any quantity that the defendant did not intend to distribute. In
Hendriclcson,
the Court was applying former section 2D 1.4, which specified that the base-offense level quantity in a narcotics conspiracy was determined by the "object” of the conspiracy.
See
. Although Dallas communicated to Heyward his decision to sell the Cl flour, it is not so clear that he withdrew from the agreement to sell cocaine, including the six ounces originally planned to be sold to the CL He contends that a future sale to the Cl was impossible, once the fake cocaine was discovered, but the charged offense, a conspiracy to sell cocaine, was not limited to a particular buyer, and, if it became relevant, Dallas could have been found to have continued to intend to sell six ounces of cocaine to a subsequent buyer, notwithstanding his decision to fool the CL
. We have no occasion to consider whether in some circumstances such a defendant might remain liable for an attempt.
. We note that the Guidelines' exclusion from the base level amount of a quantity that a defendant is not reasonably capable of producing is an instance where punishment law is more lenient than the law determining criminal responsibility. As we stated in
United States v. Wallach,
"[I]t does not matter that the ends of the conspiracy were from the beginning unattainable .... The central question becomes whether the government’s proof could establish that the accused planned to commit a substantive offense which, if attainable, would have violated a federal statute, and that at least one overt step was taken to advance the conspiracy's purpose.”
Id.
at 470-71 (quoting
United States v. Giordano,
. To the extent that this assessment of present capability to produce the quantity within a reasonable time includes a legal issue as to whether the defendant was "reasonably capable,” see U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1, comment, (n.12) (emphasis added), the ultimate finding was sustainable.
