This appeal pivots on the intriguing interplay between ex post facto principles and the now-advisory Sentencing Guidelines. 1 Guided by the light of controlling caselaw, we vacate Ricardo Rodriguez’s sentence and remand for resentencing.
Setting the Stage
Caught selling two sawed-off guns to an undercover police officer in 2006, Rodriguez pled guilty to a multi-count indictment charging him with various firearms offenses. See 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1); 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d), 5861(e), and 5871. 2 Sentencing Rodriguez in 2009, the district judge used the Guidelines then in force and applied a four-level trafficking-in-firearms enhancement, see USSG § 2K2.1(b)(5) — a proviso added to the Guidelines after Rodriguez’s crime spree, a fact that apparently escaped everyone’s attention. This is no small matter. The post-offense amendment meant the difference between a sentencing range of 108-135 months (again, using the Guidelines in effect at the time of sentencing) and 70-87 months (using the version in force at the time of the crimes). Ultimately, the judge imposed a 108-month prison term (comprising concurrent sentences of varying amounts), the very bottom of what he thought the right range was.
Rodriguez appeals, raising an interesting question: Does sentencing a defendant under advisory Guidelines made more severe since the time of the crime violate the Constitution’s ex post facto clause? Some circuits say yes.
See, e.g., United States v.
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Turner,
Fascinating as this issue is, we do not have to pick sides in this split to decide Rodriguez’s case. Leery of making unnecessary constitutional decisions,
see, e.g., Buchanan v. Maine,
Surveying the Legal Landscape
Because Rodriguez did not raise any ex post facto concerns below, we review his claim only for plain error.
See, e.g., United States v. Duarte,
Booker
and its sequels certainly changed the dynamics of criminal sentencing. The Guidelines are no longer binding, and district judges can choose sentences that differ from the Sentencing Commission’s recommendations — provided of course that they stay within the range set by the statutes of conviction.
See, e.g., Kimbrough v. United States,
But this system is not a blank check for arbitrary sentencing.
See, e.g., Gall v. United States,
Because most sentences fall within the Guidelines even after
Booker, see, e.g., United States v. Saez,
Congress tells them to use the Guidelines in force at the time of sentencing. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(4)(A). But if doing that would infract the Constitution’s ex post facto clause, the Commission directs them to use the edition in effect on the day the defendant committed the crime. See USSG § 1B1.11(b)(1) (policy statement). We too tell judges to use the old version if the new one raises ex post facto concerns. Reduced to essentials, our set protocol runs this way:
[W]e ordinarily employ the [Guidelines in effect at sentencing only where they are as lenient as those in effect at the time of the offense; when the [Guidelines have been made more severe in the interim, the version in effect at the time of the crime is normally used....
United States v. Maldonado,
But that does not mean that judges who start with old Guidelines cannot
consult
new ones in choosing suitable sentences. Quite the contrary. Exercising their
Booker
discretion, judges mulling over the multiple criteria in § 3553(a) can turn to post-offense Guidelines revisions to help select reasonable sentences that (among other things) capture the seriousness of the crimes and impose the right level of deterrence.
See United States v. Gilmore,
We come full circle. Because we need not rest our commonsense protocol on a constitutional command — a holding that squares with the general principle of steering clear of unnecessary constitutional decisions — we do not have to take sides in the inter-circuit conflict highlighted above. And now we turn to Rodriguez’s case.
Applying the Law
Without focusing on which Guidelines controlled, the district judge here used the version in effect at the time of sentencing, even though the Commission had made the Guidelines harsher by adding a four-level enhancement after Rodriguez’s crimes. In other words, the judge used the wrong starting point — an error that was plain enough given Rita/Gall (holding that district judges must construct Guidelines ranges accurately) and Maldonado/Wallace (explaining that judges in this situation must use the earlier version to avoid even the possibility of ex post facto punishment).
So, given an error that is plain (although admittedly not called to the district judge’s attention), we must ask whether there is
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reasonable likelihood of a different result if we remanded and whether there is also a threat of injustice if we affirm.
See, e.g., United States v. De La Paz-Rentas,
The government spends little effort arguing lack of prejudice or injustice, but it notes briefly that the district judge at one point said that he “would impose the same sentence without the guidelines, that is, on a nonguideline basis.” But a closer look at the full quote suggests that it is more ambiguous than might at first appear. 3 In fact, the quotation could easily be read to underscore the importance of the Guidelines in the framing of a sentence.
Certainly there are situations in which a judge might make clear that a dispute about a Guidelines calculation did not matter to the sentence. This might be a different case if, for example, the district judge had been faced with an explicit choice between the two sets of Guidelines, and thus understood the magnitude of the difference between them, when he said the choice did not affect the sentence. But, recognizing that plain error is a demanding standard,
United States v. Padilla,
Summing Up
The parties spend a lot of time debating whether the district judge committed an error of constitutional dimensions, which is understandable given the inter-circuit dust-up over this issue. But we decline to join the fray. Instead we decide Rodriguez’s case in line with the sensible policy outlined above — a policy that holds sway irrespective of any constitutional pedigree.
Against this legal backdrop, Rodriguez’s plain-error claim prevails, so we exercise our discretion to remand for resentencing consistent with this opinion. 4
So Ordered.
Notes
. The Guidelines are no longer mandatory after
United States v. Booker,
.
Consistent with past practice, we take the key facts from the plea colloquy, the uncontested parts of the presentence investigation report, and the sentencing transcript.
See, e.g., United States v. Innarelli,
. The full paragraph in the transcript reads as follows. Tr. 38 (emphasis added).
And I'm going to sentence him as if he were a level 31 and impose a 108-month sentence. That is a guideline departure sentence. I would impose the same sentence without the guidelines, that is, on a nonguideline basis. It is a nine-year sentence, which is a long term for someone his age, but the activity is dangerous and serious, and I cannot grant any further departure or downward movement other than that.
. Rodriguez also challenges the district judge's § 3553(a) assessments in several respects. We need not decide these issues now, however — the district judge can work these matters out as necessary on remand.
