470 F.3d 1294 | 9th Cir. | 2006
Lead Opinion
We consider two questions left unanswered by United States v. Ameline, 409 F.3d 1073 (9th Cir.2005):(1) By what standard do we review a district court’s determination that a defendant’s sentence would not have been materially different, had it known that the Guidelines were advisory rather than mandatory? And, (2) may a defendant raise new claims of error during the course of an Ameline remand?
Facts
Defendant was sentenced during the interregnum between Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296, 124 S.Ct. 2531, 159 L.Ed.2d 403 (2004), and United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 125 S.Ct. 738, 160 L.Ed.2d 621 (2005), and the tortured posture of his case illustrates the difficulties the courts of appeals have faced in reviewing such sentences. Defendant was convicted on four counts relating to his involvement in a methamphetamine operation and sentenced to 168 months, a sentence at the low end of the Guidelines range. He appealed on the sole ground that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress certain evidence. We affirmed in an opinion filed the day before Booker was handed down. See United States v. Combs, 394 F.3d 739 (9th Cir.2005). Defendant petitioned for rehearing, claiming Booker error because the district judge had acted under the misapprehension that the Guidelines were mandatory rather than advisory. Because defendant had not raised a sentencing claim below, this belated claim could be reviewed — if at all — only for plain error. We therefore amended our opinion to include a remand to the district court for a determination of whether the error was prejudicial, as directed by Ameline. See United States v. Combs, 412 F.3d 1020 (9th Cir.2005). At no time during his first appeal did defendant challenge the reasonableness of his sentence. Our ruling today applies only to defendants in Combs’s particular situation.
On remand, the district court invited the parties to file memoranda addressing whether resentencing was warranted. Combs argued that the pre-Booker sentencing statute had precluded the district judge from ordering the sentence that would best serve the policy goals of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), and asked to be resen-
Defendant also first raised what we will call the “new claims” — that the district court’s use of the preponderance standard in finding facts that enhanced the Guidelines calculation violated his due process rights; and that the district court’s reliance on hearsay evidence at sentencing violated his Confrontation Clause rights. The district court questioned whether the new claims were properly presented to it, but, assuming they were, rejected both.
On appeal, defendant challenges the district court’s rulings on the new claims as well as its determination that defendant’s sentence would have been the same under an advisory Guidelines system.
Analysis
1. We first consider whether the district court erred in refusing to resentence defendant after finding that the sentence imposed during the original sentencing proceeding would not have differed materially, had the judge known the Guidelines were advisory. Defendant claims that the judge failed to consider each of the section 3553(a) factors, in particular sections 3553(a)(1), which directs the district court to consider the “history and characteristics of the defendant,” and 3553(a)(2)(D), which outlines the goal of “provid[ing] the defendant with needed educational or vocational training, medical care, or other correctional treatment in the most effective manner.” Defendant argues that the district court ignored these provisions by failing to take into account information regarding his educational and vocational skills, mental and emotional conditions, drug and alcohol dependence, and lack of guidance as a youth.
This argument requires us to consider an issue of first impression: By what standard do we review a district court’s determination, made during the course of an Ameline remand, that it would have imposed the same sentence under an advisory Guidelines system? The only guidance Ameline gives is that, when the district judge determines that defendant’s sentence would not have been materially different, “the original sentence will stand, subject to appellate review for reasonableness.” 409 F.3d at 1074-75.
We read the first part of this statement — that the sentence “will stand” — as meaning that the district court’s determination of prejudice is effectively unreviewable. Insofar as this inquiry relates to the district judge’s representation as to his own state of mind, such absolute deference is inevitable. However, Ameline goes on to say that, even where the district judge decides to stick with the original sentence on remand, we review that sentence for “reasonableness.” Id. at 1074-75. This suggests there is something for us to review even after the judge has found that the sentence he imposed pre-Booker would not differ materially from the sentence he would have imposed under a post-Booker regime. We do not read this to be the same as the reasonableness review we conduct on post -Booker sentences. See, e.g., United States v. Mohamed, 459 F.3d 979, 984-85 (9th Cir.2006). Such full-blown reasonableness review presupposes that the judge sentenced defendant under a post-Booker regime, where the judge must take into account all the factors enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). A limited Ame-line remand — a term Ameline uses no fewer than 25 times — does not contemplate that the district judge will engage in a full post -Booker resentencing, unless he first determines that the sentence would have been materially different under an adviso
Somewhat incongruously, however, Ameline allows for appeal of the re-imposed sentence and instructs us to review that sentence for “reasonableness.” And, indeed, there is an issue we can consider that bears on the reasonableness of the sentence: Whether the district judge properly understood the full scope of his discretion in a post-Booker world. After all, the district judge’s determination that he would have imposed the same sentence after Booker is only meaningful if he understood his powers and responsibilities under an advisory Guidelines system. A more demanding inquiry would turn every Ameline remand into a full-blown resen-tencing, and would thus be contrary to Ameline’s central holding that defendants whose sentences are being reviewed for plain error are entitled only to a limited remand.
The record here discloses that the judge understood his post-Soo&er authority to impose a non-Guidelines sentence and that his ultimate determination was therefore not infected by ignorance or a misapprehension of the law. As we instructed in Ameline, the district judge gave the parties the opportunity to present argument both as to the scope of his post-Booker sentencing discretion and as to whether the facts of defendant’s case warranted a sentence outside the Guidelines range. See Ameline, 409 F.3d at 1085; United States v. Montgomery, 462 F.3d 1067, 1072 (9th Cir.2006). The judge then issued an order, reimposing the original sentence, which concluded as follows: “[I]t does not appear that advisory guidelines would have resulted in a materially different sentence than Combs received under the mandatory guidelines.” While the district court used the judicial passive voice, not the active first person that the dissent would prefer, this is a matter of style, not substance. The district judge clearly indicated that he would not have imposed a materially different sentence under an advisory Guidelines system. His decision to stick with the original sentence was therefore reasonable as we understand Ameline to have used that term.
2. We now turn to whether the district court had authority to consider defendant’s new claims. As already noted, defendant appeared before the district court on a limited remand — a remand designed to answer a single question: Whether the district judge would have given defendant a materially different sentence under an advisory Guidelines system. This limited remand gave the district judge no authority to re-sentence defendant unless he first answered the question posed to him in the affirmative. Once the judge answered the question in the negative, his task was complete. The limited remand procedure left no room for the district judge to consider new objections to the original sentence — objections defendant could have raised the first time around, but failed to do so. Because the district judge failed to modify his original sentence in light of these new objections, he acted precisely as Ameline contemplated and we must affirm.
AFFIRMED.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in part:
I respectfully dissent. The majority’s peculiar interpretation of the word “reasonableness” not only defies its common usage in the English language, but more importantly, runs contrary to what this court decided, sitting en banc, in United
I.
In Ameline, we held that in cases where “we are faced with an unpreserved Booker error that may have affected a defendant’s substantial rights, and the record is insufficiently clear to conduct a complete plain error analysis,” a panel should remand the matter to the district court for a limited purpose: to “ascertain[ ] whether the sentence imposed would have been materially different had the district court known that the sentencing guidelines were advisory.” Id. at 1074. If, during the course of that remand, “the district court responds in the negative, the original sentence will stand, subject to appellate review for reasonableness.” Id. at 1074-75 (emphasis added).
There is no indication in Ameline that this subsequent reasonableness review was intended to be anything less than the reasonableness review generally afforded to post -Booker sentences. See generally United States v. Cantrell, 433 F.3d 1269, 1279-80 (9th Cir.2006). To the contrary. Ameline repeatedly and specifically cites to United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 268, 125 S.Ct. 738, 160 L.Ed.2d 621 (2005), and its “reasonableness standard,” in explicating what the appellate panel must do once a district court reimposes a sentence, having held that it would not have imposed a different sentence had it known the Guidelines were advisory. See Ameline, 409 F.3d at 1079 (holding that the reimposed sentence “will stand, provided it is reasonable,” and citing to Booker, 543 U.S. at 268, 125 S.Ct. 738, for the proposition that “both the Sixth Amendment ruling and the remedial interpretation of the Reform Act, including the reasonableness standard, apply to all cases pending on direct review”); id. at 1085 (emphasis added) (explaining that, following remand, “the defendant and the government have the right to appeal to this court the district court’s decision, including a challenge to the sentence based on the reasonableness standard established in Booker,” and citing Booker, 543 U.S. at 261-62, 125 S.Ct. 738).
That this is the standard of review Ame-line intended after a limited remand is corroborated by the fact that the same standard of review was adopted by other circuits whose opinions we explicitly relied on when deciding Ameline. In outlining its version of the limited Ameline remand process, the Seventh Circuit, for example, explained that if the district judge reimposes his original sentence, “we will affirm the original sentence against a plain-error challenge provided that the sentence is reasonable, the standard of appellate re
To be sure, as the majority notes, there is one distinction between Combs’s appeal and the one brought by Ameline. Specifically, while Ameline did not initially challenge the constitutionality of the Guidelines in the district court or in his opening brief, he did challenge other aspects of his original sentence on appeal. See Ameline, 409 F.3d at 1076; see also Paladino, 401 F.3d at 479-81 (describing the sentencing claims raised by defendants on appeal); Crosby, 397 F.3d at 119 (describing the sentencing claim Crosby raised on appeal). Combs, on the other hand, did neither.
I must therefore dissent.
II.
I also dissent from the majority’s conclusion that the district judge in this case properly understood the full scope of his post-Booker discretion. The language used by the district court when reimposing Combs’s sentence leads to precisely the opposite conclusion.
Again, I return to the language of Ame-line. There, we held that when an appellate panel is “faced with an unpreserved Booker error that may have affected a defendant’s substantial rights, and the record is insufficiently clear to conduct a complete plain error analysis, a limited remand to the district court is appropriate for the purpose of ascertaining whether the sentence imposed would have been materially different had the district court known that the sentencing guidelines were advisory.” 409 F.3d at 1074 (emphasis added). This inquiry is inherently subjective. It requires that the district judge ask whether he would have imposed a different sentence at the time of the original sentencing had he sentenced the defendant under a post-Booker advisory Guidelines regime. See id. at 1083; id. at 1085 (noting that, on remand, “the district court judge determines [whether] the sentence imposed would not have differed materially had he been aware that the Guidelines were advisory” (emphasis added)); see also United States v. Lence, 466 F.3d 721, 725 (9th Cir.2006) (holding that a criminal defendant who preserved his Sixth Amendment
The district judge who resentenced Combs failed to conduct the Ameline remand from this properly subjective vantage point. In reimposing Combs’s sentence, the judge did not conclude that he would not have imposed a materially different sentence had he known the sentencing guidelines were advisory. Instead, he found that “[t]he distinction between mandatory and advisory guidelines would not have necessitated a materially different sentence in this case.” (Emphasis added.) The significance of this locution is not simply a matter of an inartful or careless choice of words, or the use of the passive rather than active voice. Instead, like the language quoted by the majority, the language quoted above indicates that the district judge approached his post -Booker sentencing task from as mechanical a perspective as he did pre-Booker, oblivious to the contradiction inherent in his conclusion that an advisory system did not necessitate any particular result at all. In short, unlike the majority, I read the district judge’s words, taken as a whole, as indicating that he did not understand “the full scope of his discretion in a post-Booker world.”
For all of the above reasons, I dissent.
. I concur in that portion of the majority opinion holding that, in a limited Ameline remand, the district judge is not "to consider ... objections defendant could have raised the first time around, but failed to do so.”
. Combs's original appeal challenged only his conviction. See United States v. Combs, 394 F.3d 739 (9th Cir.2005). One day after the Ninth Circuit issued its original decision in Combs, the Supreme Court decided Booker. This court subsequently granted Combs a limited remand, pursuant to Ameline. See United States v. Combs, 412 F.3d 1020 (9th Cir.2005) (amending prior opinion).