Lead Opinion
Dеfendants were convicted under all counts of a multi-count indictment charging narcotics offenses.
I.
Both defendants seek reversal based on remarks made by government counsel in oral argument. One remark referred to defendants’ “sell[ing] cocaine and crack knowing whаt it does to people, knowing the misery it causes.” The second remark was: “If you sit on five, six, seven more juries during the course of your life, I doubt that you will find a case with evidence more overwhelming than this.” Neither defendant made an objection or motion for mistrial. Counsel’s remarks, if еiTor at all, do not even approach plain error.
II.
The court found that Jones was not entitled to a two-level adjustment in the offense level for being a minor participant. He was not the supplier, but the court concluded that he set up transactions and had some decision-making authority. He was not a mere “mule” but acted as a sort of middleman through whom buys were made. The informant contacted Jones when he wanted to make a buy. Jones would tell him whether the drugs and quantity desired were available and would set the times and locations fоr the buy. Jones was present at some buys, and at times the money was handed to him. At some of the buys a person working for Jones would make the actual delivery of the drugs purchased. On this evidence, the court’s finding was not plainly erroneous.
III.
The court did not 'err in applying a two-point аdjustment to Lockhart’s sentence for possession of a dangerous weapon during commission of the offense. According to the PSI the weapon, a handgun loaded with six rounds, was found in Lockhart’s apartment on the headboard of the master bed. There was evidence that Lockhart “cooked” cocaine at the apartment, made deliveries there to a juvenile courier, and when agents searched and found the pistol they also found drug-handling paraphernalia.
IV.
Lockhart contends that in sentencing him the court improperly departed upward because he was not given notice before the hearing that it would consider upward departure and of any possible ground for upward departure. The PSI did not suggest that an upward departure would be considered, and before the hearing the government made no such suggestion. In Burns v. U.S., — U.S.
The PSI categorized Lockhart as a career offender under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1, based upon two predicate offenses of robbery in 1981, said to have been committed when Lockhart was аge 17. As the sentencing hearing began Lockhart’s counsel stated objections to possible career offender characterization: the two predicate offenses were related because within the same scheme of activity and done within a short span, one was committed while Lockhart was only 17, and in one of the convictions the plea requirements of Boykin v. Alabama,
The succeeding 15 to 20 pages of the transcript of the sentencing hearing were devoted to the issue of relatedness of the two priors. Counsel for Lockhart addressed the objections that he had stated.
So even if these were nоt related offenses, I do think that they would justify a downward departure for the reasons stated, because I think all of these factors are matters that the Guidelines had not anticipated in applying the career offender provisions in the manner in which they are applied. And, finally, from my review of the pre-sentence report, I think that the indicated punishment, based upon the amount of controlled substances involved under the guideline calculation without application of the career offender provisions, certainly satisfies the goals of punishment and deterrence in this particular case.
Id. at 486.
The court then turned to the issues of enhancement for possession of a dangerous weapon, enhancement based on Lockhart’s being a leader, organizer or supervisor, and the issue of acceptance of responsibility. When these inquiries had been completed the court inquired of counsel whether its ruling
I am going to exercise a discretion that I am given pursuant to the application notes which points out if the defendant commits a number of offenses on indepеndent occasions, even though I don’t feel like this was a sufficient situation to trigger the independent offenses for the purpose of applying the career offender, I certainly think that there were — that there is enough evidence of separate offenses here that it would be under reflected in the guideline calculation.
Id. at 489-90. The court explained that the offenses that it was considering as “committed on independent occasions” were one of the two priors found to be related (the judge did not include the prior in which Lockhаrt was not personally involved) plus other offenses. This added three points to Lock-hart’s criminal history, producing a criminal history category of four. The judge’s calculation, he announced, produced a guideline range of 262 to 327 months.
The court then inquired whether there were objections to its calculations. Counsel for Lockhart announced that he would preserve his objections based on possession of a dangerous weapon and role in the offense and added: “We also would enter an objection to the upward depаrture.” Rec. 6, p. 491. The court did not pursue the matter further nor did counsel. The dialogue shifted to possible downward departure on grounds not relevant to our decision. Following argument by counsel the court announced that it would sentence at the upper mid-level of the 262-327 guidelinе range, and it chose 310 months. Rec. 6, p. 496. Prior to the court’s upward departure the range would have been 235-293 months imprisonment.
In Paslay this court announced that in cases in which the defendant was sentenced after June 13,1991, the date on which Bums was decided, if the defendant did not receive notice, he must make an objection, to the sentencing court, based on Bums, and if no objection was made the case would be reviewed only for plain error.
In the circumstances of this case, the failure to give pre-hearing notice to Lockhart was a failure so obvious and substantial that it seriously affected the fairness and integrity of his sentencing hearing. It does not suffice to suggеst that had notice been given the judge might well have reached the same decision about an upward departure. Bums’ purpose was to insure that a decision as critical as an upward departure will be tested by the adversarial process. See - U.S. at -,
In U.S. v. Wright, decided 18 days before Paslay but not referred to in Paslay, this court had strongly reiterated the Bums principle. It quoted with approval that part of Justice Souter’s dissent in Bums that described the purpose of notice and the inadequacy of contemporary notice given to a defendant at the hearing:
such a practice would be of little use in reducing the risk of error in sentencing determinations. A contemporaneous warning of upward departure might sharpen defense counsel’s rhetoric, but it would not be of much help in enabling him to present evidence on disputed facts he had not previously meant to contest, or in preparing him to address the legal issue of the adequacy of the Guidelinеs in reflecting a particular aggravating circumstance. Contemporaneous notice, would, then, probably him out to be more a formality than a substantive benefit.
Paslay also indicated that, because failure to give notice implicates due process rights, review of a Bums violation would be subject to a test of harmless error beyond reasonable doubt.
The convictions of Jones and of Lockhart are AFFIRMED. The sentence of Jones is AFFIRMED. The sentence of Lockhart is VACATED and the case against him is REMANDED for resentencing.
Notes
. With respect to the Boykin objection, the government contended, by analogy to habeas corpus, that Lockhart must show cause and prejudice to question the voluntariness of his plea to one of the priors. The transcript of the sentencing in that prior was missing and no longer available, and the government attempted to remedy this deficiency by showing the trial judge's allegedly uniform sentencing practices.
. See U.S. v. Jones,
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I join the court’s opinion except for that part addressing the sentencing issue raised by Lockhart; as to that part, I concur in the result.
