UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Joseph Jerry SWEET (14–1226); Ronald Patrick Cook (14–1252), Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 14-1226, 14-1252
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit
Jan. 20, 2015
776 F.3d 447
III.
For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the district court‘s decision denying Tanner‘s motion.
Before: SUHRHEINRICH, CLAY, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges.
ROGERS, Circuit Judge.
Defendants stole firearms and sold them, in part for drugs. In calculating the sentencing guideline range for the federal crime of theft of firearms, the district cоurt applied two four-level enhancements that are the sole bases for the present sentencing appeals. One enhancement was for engaging in the trafficking of firearms,
Joseph Jerry Sweet and Ronald Patrick Cook broke into the businesses of two licensed firearms dealers and stole a total of thirty-two firearms. Law enforcement arrested Sweet and Cook sеparately, a few days after the second break-in. Both cooperated with authorities and admitted stealing the firearms and selling several of the guns for drugs and cash. Sweet reported that he had sold two of the guns to his “dope dealer” in exchange for $200 and three $20 rocks of cocaine base. Sweet also informed authorities that he and Cook had sold an additional eight firearms for approximately $500 and four grams of heroin. Cook helped authorities retrieve nine of the original thirty-twо stolen firearms that he had either buried or stored with a friend.
Sweet and Cook each pled guilty to two counts of theft of firearms from a licensed dealer, in violation of
Sweet and Cook raised two objections to the Reports. First, both contended that
The district court addressed Sweet and Cook‘s arguments at both sentencing hearings. First, the court found that the
whether the parties got the guns because it was easy currency to gеt the drugs that they wanted, ... or whether they had the guns in hand and then were happy to have not only cash but also drugs because they were going to get them anyway, either way ... the firearm not only facilitated the [drug] offense, it was in fact a focal point of it.
Citing this court‘s recent ruling in United States v. Harris, 552 Fed.Appx. 432 (6th Cir.2014), the court determined that a defendant “can facilitate a drug felony by exchanging the weapons for drugs.”
Second, the district court found both four-level enhancements applicable because they addressed “distinct purposes and distinct asрects of [the] conduct ... at issue.” During Sweet‘s hearing, the district judge explained:
[T]he question is: What‘s new about the in-connection-with for four more points? And I think what‘s new is that the weapons when they were put in the hands of the drug dealer were traded in part for drugs. Therе was, in other words, a distribution of drugs, namely, the handing off of drugs from a drug dealer to both of these defendants. That‘s all that‘s necessary for distribution. And certainly the firearms and the exchange of those firearms were there to facilitate that. And you didn‘t even need that much under the 14(B) application note of the guidelines when the firearms and the drugs are in close proximity. That alone is enough to warrant the enhancement. And I think the reason for that is because trafficking all by itself is a dangerous thing. It puts it in the hands of somebоdy who is going to bring it into illegal commerce.... But when a drug distribution is added to the mix, even if it‘s in the form simply of trading firearms for the drugs, you have the capacity to mix the drugs and the firearms in a dangerous way. You also have the capacity to make the movement оf the guns as well as the distribution of the drugs easier.
I mean, one simple example, you know, why is it that restaurants would prefer to give you a coupon for some kind of food as opposed to a cash rebate? Why do manufacturers of automobiles prefer that kind of a ... rebate or price discount as opposed to cash out the door? And in part that‘s because it‘s cheaper for them. It‘s cheaper for the producer if they can hand over portions of their goods than if they ... have to hand over cash. And I don‘t think it‘s any different economically speaking in the drug trade. It‘s cheaper for a drug dealer to acquire those firearms by making some of the consideration drugs. It‘s just cost of goods sold then for the dealer as opposed to cash out the door. So I think there is a rationale and reason for that added four points when as part of the trafficking ... the drugs are exchanged, they are handed over. Yes, that becomes a new offense, that becomes a nеw felony offense, namely, the distribution of those controlled substances, and I think it is [a] distinct, ... separate aspect of the conduct.
In a separate sentencing hearing, the district judge calculated Cook‘s guideline range to be 151 tо 188 months, after accounting for a three-level downward departure for Cook‘s substantial assistance to the government and a one-level downward departure for his efforts in returning the unsold firearms to the authorities. The court then sentenced Cook to a term of 156 months of imprisonment. On this appeal, Cook again claims that the
First, the district court correctly applied the
Cook‘s attempt to portray his “use” of the firearm as “merely coincidental to the underlying” drug offense, and thus outside the reach of the
Further,
Here, it is true that both enhancements rely on the same conduct—the transfer of firearms to a drug dealer. However, the
A recent Sixth Circuit case illustrates how distinct aspects of a defendant‘s conduct may factor into his sentence in multiple wаys. In Battaglia, the defendant pled “guilty to two counts of knowingly receiving and distributing child pornography and to one count of possessing child pornography.” 624 F.3d at 349. At sentencing, the court applied a five-level enhancement after it found that Battaglia had “[d]istribut[ed child pornography] for the receipt, or expectation of receipt, of a thing of value, but not for pecuniary gain.” Id. (internal quotations and citation omitted). On appeal, the defendant argued that the trading enhancement constituted dоuble counting “because both the enhancement and the two counts of knowingly receiving and distributing child pornography punish[ed] him for the same thing—distributing child pornography.” Id. In rejecting the defendant‘s argument, we reasoned, “[i]n the present case, the base offense level punishes Battaglia for distribution regardless of whether he had an expectation of receiving an image in return, whereas the enhancement punishes him for trading or attempting to trade. Because the sentence punishes distinct asрects of his conduct, no double counting occurred.” Id. at 352. Like the defendant in Battaglia who was punished for distinct aspects of his distribution of child pornography, Sweet and Cook were punished for distinct aspects of their firearms trafficking transaction. While the
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
