Robert Rose was convicted of distributing “1 gram or more of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD).” 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(B)(v). The minimum sentence for the violation of this provision is five years in prison without possibility of parole, see § 841(b)(1)(B); the judge sentenced Rose to this term and tacked on four years of supervised release. Rose challenges the constitutionality of the provision under which he was sentenced. He emphasizes that the net weight of LSD in the 472 dosage units that he sold the government’s undercover agent was only .01787 grams (that is, less than 2 percent of a gram). What carried him over the one-gram threshold was the “blotter paper” (weighing 7.3 grams), saturated with the LSD, that was the actual substance that he sold the agent. (Although called blotter paper, this is not the sort of thick blotter paper that is used for blotting ink.) Had the defendant sold a substance containing LSD but weighing less than a *388 gram, there would have been no mandatory minimum penalty. See § 841(b)(1)(C).
In his eagerness to present a constitutional challenge, Rose virtually concedes that the LSD-saturated blotter paper was the mixture or substance whose weight determines the gravity of the offense under § 841(b)(l)(B)(v). The concession is supported by authority. See Sentencing Guidelines § 2D1.1;
United States v. Taylor,
Section 841(b)(l)(B)(v) sets widely varying minimum weights as the trigger points for the mandatory minimum prison terms fixed by the statute — 100 grams for heroin, 500 grams for cocaine, 100 kilograms for marijuana, and so on, down to 1 gram for LSD. See §§ 841(b)(l)(B)(i)-(viii). Rose argues that these disparities are irrational, and therefore violate the equal protection clause. Noting that one hundred kilograms is 100,000 times 1 gram, he asks rhetorically whether LSD is 100,000 times more dangerous than marijuana. He goes further, and argues that LSD is not dangerous at all. But in so arguing he has mischaracterized the principal study that he cites — Hofmann, LSD: My Problem Child (1980), written by the Swiss chemist who invented LSD. While Dr. Hofmann states that “genuine addiction, characterized by the fact that psychic and often severe physical disturbances appear on withdrawal of the drug, has not been observed, even in cases in which LSD was taken often and over a long period of time,” and “no organic injury or death as a direct consequence of an LSD intoxication has yet been reported,” id. at 66, he goes on to observe that LSD intoxication can cause “lasting mental injury” to unstable persons, occasionally precipitating suicide, and to youths. Id. at 70.
Rose’s constitutional challenge would fail no matter how we might characterize the dangers LSD presents. This would be clear if the various drug prohibitions were scattered throughout the federal statute books rather than consolidated in a handful of sections in Title 21. The Constitution has not been interpreted to require that the pattern of punishments for different federal crimes compose a harmonious whole. Such a requirement would be unrealistic. Criminal statutes are enacted at different times, in different moral and penological climates, and in response to the pressures of different groups in the community. Sometimes federal criminal statutes enacted at different times impose different punishments for the same crime, leaving the prosecutor free to pick and choose. See, e.g.,
Edwards v. United States,
This discussion answers Rose’s further contention that a sentence of five years in prison without possibility of parole was so disproportionate to the gravity of his crime as to impose cruel and unusual punishment. See, e.g.,
id.
at 1178-79;
United States v. Serhant,
Which brings us to the final issue. Judge Shabaz did not base the sentence he gave Rose on the Sentencing Guidelines, although they are applicable to this case, because he held them unconstitutional. He added, however, that if he had thought the Guidelines valid he would have imposed the same sentence under them. Such a “conditional sentence” is improper.
United States v. Agyemang,
We add for future reference that five years in prison does not appear to be a proper sentence under the Guidelines, given the character of Rose’s crime. When the district judge announced what Rose’s sentence would have been under the Guidelines, he used the weight of the LSD itself, without the blotter paper. This was an error, for the Guidelines make clear that in scaling base offense levels for drug crimes up or down depending on the quantity sold, the judge must use the total weight of the *390 mixture or substance containing the drug. See Sentencing Guidelines § 2D1.1; United States v. Taylor, supra. This would push the Guidelines range for Rose up to 97-121 months. This is just the beginning, and other adjustments might bring it down (or up). Because the district judge used a much lower weight figure, he concluded that the starting range was 6-12 months, which he raised to five years only because that was the statutory minimum. However, as we said earlier, neither party challenges the judge’s failure to sentence Rose under the Guidelines, and the sentence will therefore stand.
Affirmed.
