Case Information
*1 Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, MELLOY, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.
___________
COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
Robert Edward Maloney was convicted by a jury of unlawful possession of a firearm as a previously convicted felon, and he was sentenced to 180 months’ imprisonment. Maloney appeals his conviction, and the government appeals the sentence. We affirm the conviction but vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
I.
Maloney was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm as a previously convicted felon, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), and with unlawful possession of an unregistered firearm, in violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5841, 5861, 5871. At trial, the government presented evidence that on September 4, 2004, the St. Cloud Police Department received a complaint that a motorist in a blue, four-door Chevrolet with South Dakota plates and a cracked windshield had pointed a handgun at another driver. Sergeant James Steve testified that he went to the area and soon encountered a blue Chevrolet with South Dakota plates and a cracked windshield. According to Sergeant Steve, while he was driving behind the vehicle, he saw the driver and the passenger of the Chevrolet making “quick movements,” “side to side, up and down,” which were “not ordinary for a normal person,” and which caused him to believe that “there [wa]s something going on in the vehicle.” (T. Tr. at 36).
Sergeant Steve testified that he decided not to stop the vehicle by himself, but that after another officer reached the area, he turned on his emergency lights and attempted to stop the car. The driver of the Chevrolet did not respond to his lights, so Steve turned on his siren, but the other car accelerated. Steve testified that he pursued the Chevrolet for several blocks until the driver “drove the vehicle right into the woods and fled from the vehicle.” (T. Tr. at 43).
Concerned that the driver might be armed, Sergeant Steve did not immediately pursue the driver into the woods on foot. As other officers arrived, Steve instructed them to seal off the perimeter of the wooded area into which the suspect had fled. Later, one of the perimeter officers apprehended an individual in the woods, and Steve identified him as the person who had been driving the blue Chevrolet. The individual gave his name as “Joseph McMahon,” but he was later identified as Robert Maloney.
Officers inventoried the contents of the blue Chevrolet and found several items in the back seat, including a back pack, a black canvas bag, a green canvas bag, and miscellaneous articles of clothing. The green canvas bag was partially open, and the barrel of a “pellet-type pump-up rifle” was sticking out of the bag. When officers opened the black canvas bag located in the back seat, they found a sawed-off shotgun.
The government also presented a tape and transcript of a police interview with Maloney. Maloney said in the interview that he did not own a car and that he had borrowed the Chevrolet from a friend earlier that same day. Maloney stated that he had thrown his clothes into the rear of the vehicle and had seen a bag with a pellet rifle on the back seat. He said that when some girls drove past him in another vehicle and gave him a “crazy” look, he grabbed the pellet gun and held it in his hands. Maloney explained that when police officers later attempted to effect a traffic stop, he “had the pellet gun still sittin’ there,” and he “didn’t wanna pull over.” When asked the reason why he ran from the police, Maloney said, “[o]bviously there was things in the car.” Police did not ask Maloney about the sawed-off shotgun during the interview.
At the close of the government’s case, Maloney moved for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction. The district court denied the motion, and the jury then found Maloney guilty of unlawful possession of a firearm as a previously convicted felon, but acquitted him of unlawfully possessing an unregistered firearm.
A presentence investigation report (“PSR”) was prepared by the United States Probation Office. The PSR calculated a criminal history category of VI based on 15 criminal history points. The PSR also noted that Maloney’s criminal history included convictions for second-degree assault, simple robbery, and terroristic threats, and concluded that Maloney was both a career offender under USSG § 4B1.1 and an armed career criminal under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). The PSR calculated an offense level of 37, which produced an advisory guideline range of 360 months’ to life *4 imprisonment. In addition, the PSR described Maloney’s turbulent upbringing and lengthy history of substance abuse.
At sentencing, the court acknowledged Maloney’s “bad record” and the fact that he had “appropriately” been classified as an armed career criminal and career offender, and the court adopted the PSR’s findings and advisory guideline range. Nonetheless, the court determined that the appropriate sentence, considering all of the factors in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), was the statutory minimum sentence of 180 months. The court believed that “180 months in prison is a long period of time in anybody’s book,” (S. Tr. at 14), and that a sentence of that length would promote respect for the law, provide just punishment, and protect the public. The court also thought the sentence would deter crimes by others, since it was unlikely anyone would be “more deterred by a 360 month sentence than a 180 month sentence.” (S. Tr. at 13). With respect to Maloney in particular, the court noted his “troubled childhood,” “mother who left early,” and “father who, from all reports, was abusive,” which “explain[ed] perhaps some of what he was doing,” and also observed that Maloney would benefit from “educational or vocational training, psychiatric counseling, alcohol and drug abuse training while he’s in prison.” (S. Tr. at 13). Ultimately, the court believed that “if this defendant has any chance or the system has any chance to cure him of his past misdeeds and his ways, it will not occur if he’s given a . . . 360 month sentence or anything more than 180 months.” (S. Tr. at 12).
II.
Maloney challenges the sufficiency of the evidence against him, arguing that
no reasonable juror could have believed that he knowingly possessed the sawed-off
shotgun. When we review a claim that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a
conviction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
accepting all reasonable inferences that may be drawn in favor of the verdict, and we
*5
will affirm unless no reasonable juror could have found the defendant guilty.
United
States v. Walker
,
To convict Maloney of unlawful possession of a firearm as a previously convicted felon, the government was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Maloney knowingly possessed a firearm. Id . at 846. It is undisputed that the pellet gun protruding from one bag in the back seat of the Chevrolet was not a “firearm” within the meaning of the statute, so the conviction turns on whether a reasonable jury could find that Maloney knowingly possessed the shotgun found in the black bag in the back seat of the car. Maloney argues that the evidence was insufficient to support this finding.
“Possession” can be either actual or constructive, and either sole or joint.
Id.
at 847. A person may be in constructive possession of a firearm when he has
“dominion and control” over the firearm itself, or the premises in which the firearm
was located.
Id.
By driving the blue Chevrolet in which the firearm was found,
Maloney clearly exercised “dominion or control” over the sawed-off shotgun.
United
States v. Hiebert
,
Knowledge may be proved by circumstantial evidence, and the government did present evidence from which the jury could have inferred that Maloney was aware of the items in the back seat area of the car, including the firearm. Sergeant Steve testified that when he was following the Chevrolet, he saw quick and unusual movements by the driver of the car, thus permitting an inference that the driver may have been trying to hide an object in the back seat. The shotgun was found in the *6 same area of the car with Maloney’s clothing and with the pellet gun, which Maloney admitted carrying earlier in the day. Maloney continually sought to evade law enforcement, first by failing to stop, then by exiting his vehicle and fleeing into the woods, and later by giving a false name to police. He admitted knowing that there were “things” in the car that led him to flee. (Gov’t Ex. 16 at 3).
Maloney argues that the evidence shows only that he knew about the pellet gun,
but not the sawed-off shotgun in the closed bag. He contends that the government’s
key evidence – his flight and his admission that there were “things” in the car – can
be explained by his concern that he would be charged with brandishing the pellet gun
at another driver who reported the incident to police. A jury might have drawn this
inference, but the presence of one possible “innocent” explanation for the
government’s evidence does not preclude a reasonable jury from rejecting the
exculpatory hypothesis in favor of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v.
Ellefson
,
III.
In its cross-appeal, the government argues that Maloney’s 180-month sentence is unreasonable with regard to the factors set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). See United States v. Booker , 543 U.S. 220, 261 (2005). The government contends that the sentence, which varied substantially from the advisory guideline range of 360 months’ to life imprisonment, was not justified by the individualized circumstances of the case and lies outside the range of reasonable options available to the district court. Our review of a district court’s variance from the guideline range at sentencing is akin to abuse of discretion review, but our ultimate task is to determine whether the sentence *7 is unreasonable with regard to 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). United States v. Ture , 450 F.3d 352, 356 (8th Cir. 2006).
In fashioning a sentence under the system announced in
Booker
, a district court
should continue to calculate the applicable advisory guideline range. The Supreme
Court pointedly rejected the suggestion that a sentencing judge “has the same
discretion ‘he possessed before the [Sentencing Reform] Act was passed,’”
Booker
,
Our appellate review under the
Booker
regime is not designed to provide the
same
uniformity that Congress originally sought to secure with the mandatory
sentencing guidelines.
Id
. at 264. The Supreme Court made clear, however, that
application of a “reasonableness standard” was intended to further the statutory
objectives of achieving “honesty,” “uniformity,” and “proportionality” in sentencing,
and to help in avoiding “excessive sentencing disparities.”
Id
. In light of that
guidance, and because it is impractical for appellate review to assist in avoiding
“excessive sentencing disparities” unless there is a benchmark from which to measure
potential disparities, we have concluded that “[t]he further the district court varies
from the presumptively reasonable guideline range, the more compelling the
justification based on the [§] 3553(a) factors must be.”
United States v. Bryant
, 446
*8
F.3d 1317, 1319 (8th Cir. 2006). “[A]bsent exceptional facts,” imposition of a
sentence that is “dramatically lower than that recommended by the guidelines is an
abuse of the district court’s discretion.”
United States v. Goody
,
A “dramatic” variance cannot be defined precisely, but we have found it
instructive to consider the actual sentence as a percentage of the advisory sentence,
or the number of offense levels traversed by a variance. The offense-level approach
seems more in keeping with our assigned role to further the objectives of the
Sentencing Reform Act, because the guideline system established by the Act was
designed to adjust sentences incrementally by offense level, rather than by
percentages.
Cf. United States v. Saenz,
In this case, the sentence of 180 months’ imprisonment was fifty percent of the bottom of the advisory guideline range of 360 months’ to life imprisonment, and it constituted a variance of seven offense levels. Under any measure, this is a substantial *9 deviation from the advice of the Sentencing Commission. The district court thought that despite the magnitude of the variance, a term of 15 years’ incarceration was sufficient to afford adequate deterrence, to provide just punishment, and to promote respect for the law. Accepting those propositions for the sake of argument, we believe the district court’s analysis nonetheless gave insufficient weight to the statutory objective of avoiding unwarranted sentence disparities. 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6).
Congress specified that “career offenders” should be sentenced at or near the statutory maximum , 28 U.S.C. § 994(h), which in this case is life imprisonment, and the advisory guidelines thus recommend substantial punishments for offenders in those categories. USSG § 4B1.1. The primary reason given by the district court for sentencing Maloney to the statutory minimum of 180 months’ imprisonment was Maloney’s youthful age of 22 years, and the court’s view that a longer sentence would undermine his chances at rehabilitation. The court stated that if Maloney were 35 or 40 years old, the court would “be sending him off to closer to the 360 months,” because the court would have serious questions about whether a defendant at that age could be rehabilitated. (S. Tr. at 14).
The sentencing guidelines provide that “[a]ge (including youth) is not ordinarily
relevant in determining whether a departure is warranted.” USSG § 5H1.1. This
policy statement is no longer mandatory after
Booker
, but it is still “advice” that the
sentencing court must consider and take into account when sentencing.
See
18 U.S.C.
§ 3553(a)(5);
United States v. Lee
,
To the extent that prior lenient treatment by state courts was an individualized
circumstance on which the district court relied in this case, the presence of this
additional factor does not alleviate our concern about excessive sentence disparities.
Some district judges believe prior leniency is a circumstance warranting a reduction
in the recommended sentence for career offenders,
e.g.
,
United States v. Senior
, 935
F.2d 149, 151 (8th Cir. 1991), while others view it as a factor justifying enhanced
punishment in a later case.
E.g.
,
United States v. Shannon
,
We reiterate that after
Booker
, the purpose of our appellate review is not to
attain the same uniformity in sentencing that Congress sought to achieve through the
Sentencing Reform Act. But it is worth noting that in this appeal, as in most others
that we have considered after
Booker
,
see United States v. McDonald
,
* * *
For these reasons, we affirm Maloney’s conviction, but vacate his sentence and remand for resentencing.
______________________________
