George Taylor pleaded guilty to distribution of crack cocaine and was sentenced to 124 months in prison. His appeal presents the recurring issue of the proper treatment of crack sentencing appeals that were pending when the Supreme Court decided
Kimbrough v. United States,
- U.S. -,
Before the Supreme Court’s decision, the rule in this court was that the 100:1 ratio was a statutory
Diktat
that a sentencing judge was not permitted, even under the liberalized regime of the Booker
*747
decision, to question. Even “after
Booker
district judges are obliged to implement the 100-to-l ratio as long as it remains part of the statute and the Guidelines .... [Defendants are not entitled to a deviation from the statutory ratio.... [District judges must continue to carry out the legislative choice, even though there may be powerful reasons for change.”
United States v. Miller,
In
Kimbrough,
the Supreme Court (as the government acknowledges in a post-argument submission in the present case) held that this was incorrect; that the 100:1 ratio is not a statutory dictate, but merely a judgment, entitled to respect but not to uncritical acceptance, made by the Sentencing Commission as an input into fixing guideline ranges for crack offenders.
Even before Kimbrough, a sentencing judge could if he wanted rail against the 100:1 ratio, but that would have been spitting against the wind, since we had held that the ratio was not to be questioned by sentencing judges. Thus the fact that a judge&emdash;the judge in this case for example-does not say anything about the ratio cannot be taken to mean that he (in this case she) thinks it is fíne. The situation is the same as we faced after the Supreme Court in Booker demoted the sentencing guidelines from being mandatory to being merely advisory. Since until then they had been mandatory, the fact that a sentencing judge gave a sentence within the applicable guideline range without questioning the appropriateness of such a sentence did not mean that, had he known that the guidelines were merely advisory, he would have given the same sentence. So in such cases, where the defendant had been sentenced before Booker and his appeal from the sentence was pending after Booker, unless the judge had made clear that he would have given the same sentence under an advisory regime we directed a limited remand to enable the judge to advise us whether he was minded to resen-tence the defendant, and if he said he was then we remanded for resentencing. We pointed out that a sentence founded on a clear error of law was appropriate for correction on review for plain error.
That was
United States v. Paladino,
A complication is that since March 3, persons sentenced for crack offenses have been able to move for a reduction in their sentence to conform to the Sentencing Commissidon’s decision to reduce retroactively the 100:1 ratio that generates such harsh sentences for crack offenses relative to powder offenses. United States Sentencing Commission, “Supplement to the 2007 Guidelines Manual” 1^ (Mar. 3, 2008); News Release, “U.S. Sentencing Commission Votes Unanimously to Apply Amendment Retroactively for Crack Cocaine Offenses” (Dec. 11, 2007), www.ussc. gov/PRESS/rell21107.htm (visited Jan. 28, 2008). It might seem, in light of the Commission’s decision, that our remanding a case for possible resentencing in light of Kimbrough would be pointless, since the judge minded to reduce a crack defendant’s sentence could simply resentence under the new guideline. (Moreover, the judge can do this on his own initiative, or on motion by the director of the federal bureau of prisons, without a motion by the defendant. 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c).)
But that may be incorrect. The new guideline provides that a sentence under it may not be lower than the new guidelines range, U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10(b)(2)(A) (Mar. 3, 2008), unless the original sentence was a nonguideline sentence, in which event, however, “a further reduction generally would not be appropriate.” Id., § 1B1.10(b)(2)(B). Like the rest of the guidelines, this provision may be merely advisory, in which event a sentence lower than the one prescribed by section lB1.10(b)(2)(A) may be “consistent with applicable policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission,” as required by 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2), the statute granting district courts authority to reopen a sentence that has become final. But the status of section 1B1.10(b)(2)(A) has not been argued to us and we take no position on it. In any event, Kimbrough, following Booker, allows a judge to sentence below the guidelines range.
The district judge should hold off on telling us whether she is minded to resen-tence the defendant under Kimbrough until she decides whether to act favorably on the defendant’s motion (if he makes one, or on the judge’s own initiative, if the defendant does not) for relief under the Commission’s new crack regime. If she decides to impose the same sentence under the new guideline, or if though she lowers the sentence the defendant believes that 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) would warrant a still-lower sentence, or if he does not make a proper motion for relief under the new *749 guideline and she is not minded to grant such relief on her own initiative, she will then have to advise us whether she would be inclined to reduce his sentence under the dispensation granted sentencing judges by Kimbrough. To avoid delay, the judge should impose a deadline on the filing of a motion to resentence; we suggest 21 days after the date of this decision.
Because this opinion lays down a rule for handling appeals pending in this court when Kimbrough was decided by the Supreme Court, we have circulated the opinion to the full court in advance of issuance. 7th Cir. R. 40(e). No judge in active service requested that the case be heard en banc.
