DefendanL-Appellant Garfield Thomas was sentenced principally to fifty-seven months in prison following his guilty plea to being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). On appeal, Thomas challenges the reasonableness of his sentence, arguing that the District Court procedurally erred by including in Thomas’s applicable sentencing range under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (“U.S.S.G.” or “Guidelines”) the two-level enhancement of § 2K2.1(b)(4)(A), which applies to certain firearms charges in which the firearm was stolen, regardless of whether the defendant knew that it was stolen. Thomas argues that the lack of a mens rea element renders the enhancement invalid on its face and violative of equal protection when compared to the Guidelines’ two-level enhancement for offenses involving stolen explosives only when the defendant “knew or had reason to believe” that the explosives were stolen. U.S.S.G. § 2K1.3(b)(2). Further, Thomas argues that even if the stolen firearm enhancement was properly applied, the District Court failed to recognize its discretionary power to vary from that provision and did not give due consideration to his policy based arguments.
We reaffirm the continuing validity of our holding in
United States v. Griffiths,
BACKGROUND
On November 5, 2008, a bystander was struck during a shooting outside of a nightclub in the Bronx. An eyewitness *67 identified Thomas as the shooter and Thomas was arrested a few days later. Upon his arrest, Thomas possessed a semiautomatic pistol as well as a number of rounds of ammunition. Ballistics evidence later linked that pistol to the shooting. As Thomas had previously been convicted of a felony drug crime — an offense for which he remained on supervised release — he was charged in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York with being a felon in possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
Thomas pled guilty without a plea agreement on June 18, 2009. His presentence report (“PSR”) estimated a Guidelines sentencing range of fifty-seven to seventy-one months based on a Criminal History Category of III and an offense level of twenty-three. With respect to the offense level, the PSR identified a base of twenty pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(a), with a four-level enhancement because the firearm was used in connection with another felony (the shooting), § 2K2.1(b)(6), and anticipated a three-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, § 3E1.1. Additionally, because the firearm had been reported stolen in Virginia, the PSR applied the two-level stolen firearm enhancement of § 2K2.1(b)(4)(A).
Thomas objected, both in writing and during his sentencing proceeding, to the application of the stolen firearm enhancement. Through counsel, Thomas maintained that he did not know that the gun in his possession was stolen; rather, he explained that he obtained the firearm from an individual with whom he was sharing an apartment and had “no idea where the gun came from other than [that] he got it from this individual.” Given his ignorance of the gun’s status, Thomas urged the court to reject the strict liability nature of the enhancement. Conceding “Second Circuit precedent against” him, Thomas contended that the precedent has been impaired by
United States v. Booker,
In response, the District Court noted that it did not “follow the logic” of Thomas’s argument for, “in a post -Booker world, in which ... the guidelines are advisory only and the Court’s discretion is greater, it would seem ... to follow that the preBooker law would be even stronger today, not weaker.” Since the enhancement “is a sentencing factor, ... not an element of the offense,” the court concluded that its authority to apply the enhancement “in a post -Booker world remains just as viable.” Accordingly, the court declined Thomas’s invitation to invalidate or otherwise depart from U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(b)(4)(A). Stating that it “intend[ed] to follow the Second Circuit on this,” the court adopted the PSR’s Guidelines calculation, and ultimately sentenced Thomas principally to fifty-seven months in prison, to run concurrently with an eighteen-month sentence for the related supervised release violations. Thomas now appeals.
DISCUSSION
Though following
Booker
the Guidelines are only advisory, they nevertheless retain an important role in a district court’s sentencing decision. Indeed, “[a] district court should normally begin all sentencing proceedings by calculating, with the assistance of the Presentence Report, the applicable Guidelines range.”
United States v. Cavera,
We review both the procedural and substantive components of a sentence for reasonableness, employing a “deferential abuse-of-discretion standard.”
Cavern, 550
F.3d at 189. “A district court commits procedural error where,” among other things, “it fails to calculate the Guidelines range (unless omission of the calculation is justified), makes a mistake in its Guidelines calculation, ... treats the Guidelines as mandatory,” or “fails adequately to explain its chosen sentence.”
Id.
at 190 (internal citation omitted). In reviewing the propriety of a Guidelines calculation, we review de novo questions of law such as Thomas’s constitutional challenges to U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(b)(4)(A).
Cf. United States v. Hasan,
I. Stolen Firearm Sentencing Guideline
Section 2K2.1(b)(4)(A) of the Guidelines increases the offense level by two for the commission of certain firearms offenses in which “any firearm ... was stolen.” We have interpreted materially similar language in an earlier version of this Guideline to unambiguously apply regardless of the defendant’s state of mind in respect of the firearm’s provenance.
1
United States v. Litchfield,
Thomas readily acknowledges, as he must, that
Griffiths
upheld the validity of the stolen firearm enhancement against this same attack.
Griffiths
first observed that “[t]he government reasonably may determine that stolen firearms often end up in the hands of criminals” and that the government has a “legitimate interest in punishing possession of a stolen firearm and placing the burden upon one who receives a firearm to ensure that the possession is lawful.”
Primarily relying on
United States v. Handy,
Seeking another route around
Griffiths,
Thomas cites “emerging data” suggesting that a number of firearms are erroneously reported as stolen and argues that, as a result, we should revisit
Griffiths’
assumption that it is proper to place the onus of ascertaining a firearm’s provenance on the possessor. We are not persuaded. First, such data is not a basis for overturning extant precedent. It is well established that a panel of this Court is bound by the decision of a prior panel unless the decision has been overturned either by the Supreme Court or this Court en banc.
E.g., Shipping Corp. of India v. Jaldhi Overseas Pte Ltd.,
II. Equal Protection
In addition to challenging the Guideline on its face, Thomas argues that § 2K2.1(b)(4)(A) contravenes equal protection, in violation of the Fifth Amendment, in light of a separate Guideline which imposes a two-level sentencing enhancement for certain offenses involving stolen explosives only if “the defendant knew or had reason to believe” that the explosives were stolen. U.S.S.G. § 2K1.3(b)(2). We have not previously considered the equal protection implications of the stolen firearm enhancement vis-a-vis the stolen explosive enhancement. Because the distinction drawn by the Guidelines “does not involve a suspect classification or impinge on a fundamental right, it need survive only rational basis scrutiny.”
Griffin v. Mann,
Thomas contends that felons in possession of firearms, such as himself, and those in possession of explosives are similarly situated and that the relatively harsher treatment of the former is “irrational,” since “explosives are far more dangerous than firearms.” (Thomas Br. at 25.) While that premise may be true, it does not end the matter. As the Ninth Circuit has cogently explained in rejecting this same argument, “[i]t is reasonably conceivable that although explosives are in theory more deadly than firearms when compared on an individualized basis, stolen firearms are more readily obtainable by felons and therefore more deadly than stolen explosives in the aggregate.”
United States v. Ellsworth,
Because there exists a “reasonably conceivable state of facts” to support the distinction between stolen firearms and stolen explosives, Thomas’s equal protection challenge fails. As a result, the District Court properly included the two-level stolen firearm enhancement in calculating Thomas’s Guidelines range.
III. Additional Procedural Challenges
Finally, Thomas argues that even if his Guidelines range was properly computed, the District Court erred by failing to recognize its power to reject the stolen firearm enhancement on policy grounds and impose a non-Guidelines sentence. While such failure would amount to significant procedural error,
e.g., United States v. Regalado,
Nor is there any error in the fact that the District Court did not expressly parse the details of Thomas’s policy based attacks on the Guideline. “We have time and time again made it clear that we do not insist that the district court address every argument the defendant has made.”
United States v. Bonilla,
In direct response to counsel’s attack on the enhancement for not “representing] the typical experiential careful analysis of the Sentencing Commission ... and also kind of fl[ying] in the face of some ... facts that would suggest that a stolen gun enhancement [i]s very unfair,” the District Court indicated that it did not find the issues Thomas raised to be problematic. Moreover, Thomas’s policy arguments explicitly referenced and paralleled those extensively laid out in
United States v. Handy,
In short, we find no error in any aspect of Thomas’s sentencing. The District Court properly calculated Thomas’s Guidelines range and then, with an understanding of the advisory nature of that range and with due consideration to the arguments presented, proceeded to impose an entirely reasonable sentence.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The 1989 version of the stolen-firearm Guideline, which Litchfield considered, analogously directed an "increase [of] 2 levels” "[i]f the firearm was stolen.” U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(b)(2) (1989).
. An obliterated serial number would be visibly apparent and thus presumably noticed; an altered serial number, on the other hand, might not be apparent, and would therefore present the same issue of knowledge that is at issue in this case.
