UNITED STATES оf America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. William Henry MULDROW, a/k/a William Cooper, a/k/a Willie, a/k/a Fred Washington, Defendant-Appellant. United States of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Luis Gomez, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 15-7298, No. 15-7608
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Decided: December 27, 2016
844 F.3d 434
Before DUNCAN and AGEE, Circuit Judges, and BRUCE H. HENDRICKS, United States District Judge for the District of South Carolina, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge DUNCAN wrote the opinion, in which Judge AGEE and Judge HENDRICKS joined.
DUNCAN, Circuit Judge:
Defendants William Henry Muldrow (“Muldrow“) and Luis Gomez (“Gomez“) challenge thе district court‘s determination that the Guidelines commentary—as amended by United States Sentencing Guideline Amendment 759 (“Amendment 759“)—requires a district court at resentencing to calculate the “applicable guide
I.
A.
Both Defendants were convicted of drug offenses in unrelated cases—Muldrow in 2006 and Gomez in 1996. This court consolidated their appeals.
Muldrow pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute five or more grams of cocaine and oxycodone, on January 19, 2006. At his sentencing on March 29, 2006, the district court adopted the findings of the presentence report with one exception. It departed from a criminal history category VI to a category V because it found Muldrow‘s criminal history category overrepresented the seriousness of his criminal record.
A jury convicted Gomez of one count of conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, on June 29, 1996. At sentencing, the district court calculated his guideline range based on an offense level 44 and a criminal history category III; resulting in a then-mandatory guideline sentence of life imprisonment. On November 6, 1996, the court imposed a life sentence, but subsequently granted Gomez‘s
B.
In 2014 and 2015, Defendants separately filed motions for resentencing under
Each Defendant argued that the district court should calculate his guideline range at resentencing by using the post-departure criminal history category determined at his original sentencing. However, the district court did not reduce the sentences to the extent Defendants requested. At resentencing, the district court instead chose to calculate their ranges using their pre-departure criminal history categories. After recalculating the guideline ranges in
For Muldrow, the district court granted relief in part on July 29, 2015, reducing his sentence from 235 months to 210 months—the low end of the amended guideline range using a pre-departure criminal history category. For Gomez, the district court granted relief in part on October 6, 2015, reducing Gomez‘s sentence from 340 months to 324 months—the low end of the amended guideline range using a pre-departure criminal history category.
The district court based its decisions to use a pre-departure сriminal history category on a separate guideline amendment—Amendment 759. U.S.S.G., app. C., amend. 759 (2011). Specifically, the district court found that Amendment 759 (1) precluded the district court from considering
II.
On appeal, Defendants argue that the district court incorrectly deemed itself bound by Amendment 759, and thus, erred in not granting them greater relief. According to Defendants, the district court should have applied
“We review a distriсt court‘s decision to reduce a sentence under
A.
Our decision today respects a congressionally mandated—and Supreme Court sanctioned—balance between the interpretive power of the Commission and our duties as an Article III court. With the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984,
In addition, Congress entrusted the Commission with the power, and duty, to periodically review and revise the guideline provisions, policy statements, and commentary.
B.
Under the Sentencing Reform Act, a federal court generally “may not modify a term of imprisonment once it has been imposed.”
In considering whether and by how much to reduce a sentence under
C.
This appeal—and the issue in Munn—concerns how a court calculates the amended guideline range at step one. In particular, the parties dispute whether the resentencing court calculates the range using a pre-departure criminal history category or a post-departure criminal history category. In Munn—decided prior to Amendment 759—this court held that a defendant‘s applicable guideline range is determined after applying any departures. 595 F.3d at 192-95. Therefore, the defendant in Munn—a career offender who received a departure for overrepresentation
In response to this circuit split, the Commission promulgated Amendment 759. U.S.S.G., app. C., amend. 759 (2011). Amendment 759 revised the commentary to
III.
The issue on appeal is a narrow one. Defendants do not contest that the Commission can resolve circuit splits and abrogate our prior precedent by promulgating amendments. Instead, they argue that the district court erroneously deemed itself bound by the revised commentary to
A.
If the commentary conflicts with the Guidelines text, it cannot bind courts. Stinson, 508 U.S. at 38. In deciding whether commentary conflicts with the Guidelines text, we recognize that the Commission “has the first responsibility to formulate and announce” how guideline provisions should be interpreted. Id. at 45. Cognizant of our role vis-à-vis the Commission, this court rarely invalidates part of the commentary as inconsistent with the Guidelines text. See United States v. Shell, 789 F.3d 335, 357 (4th Cir. 2015) (Wilkinson, J., dissenting). This is unsurprising given that “[t]he functional purpose of commentary (of the kind at issue here) is to assist in the interpretation and application of those rules, which are within the Commission‘s particular area of concern and expertise.” Stinson, 508 U.S. at 45.
1.
To argue that the commentary, as amended by Amendment 759, conflicts with the Guidelines, Defendants first point
However, Amendment 759 does not conflict with the text. Amendment 759 revised Application Note 1(A) to define the “applicable guideline range” as “the guideline range that corresponds to the offense level and criminal history category determined pursuant to
2.
In another effort to manufacture an inconsistency, Defendants next point to
This argument reads more into
Here, we see no inconsistency between the Guidelines and the commentary as revised by Amendment 759. We decline to strain the text to create one.
B.
Defendants next contend that Amendment 759 does not apply retroactively. But this argument misses the point. The question is not whether Amendment 759 applies retroactively, but rather whether the district court properly applied Amendment 759 to Defendants who were resentenced after Amendment 759 took effect.
Normally, a sentenсing court must apply the edition of the Guidelines in effect at the time “the defendant is sentenced.”
Nevertheless, Defendants still contend that Munn, decided prior to Amendment 759, should apply to their resentencing. But “our precedent in the sentence-reduction context must give way if it conflicts with the Commission‘s amendments.” Id. at 259; see also Braxton, 500 U.S. at 348. The Commission specifically stated that it promulgated Amendment 759 in response to a split among the circuits, and rejected the approach taken by this court in Munn. U.S.S.G., app. C., amend. 759 (Reason for Amendment). As the Suprеme Court has recognized, “Congress necessarily contemplated that the Commission would periodically review the work of the courts, and would make whatever clarifying revisions to the Guidelines conflicting judicial decisions might suggest.” Braxton, 500 U.S. at 348; see also
IV.
Defendants’ argument hinges on finding an inconsistency between the commentary and text of the Guidelines. We fail to see one, and decline Defendants’ invitation to “recreate the split that the Commissiоn hoped to resolve.” Id. at 292 n.2. For this and the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Montanez, 717 F.3d at 293 (alteration in original).ignores the relationship between the “applicable guideline range” and the “amended guideline range.” Under
§ 1B1.10(a)(2)(B) , a defendant is not eligible for a reduction if an amendment “does not have the effect of lowering the defendant‘s applicable guideline range.” In the absence of any change to the applicable guideline range, speaking of an “amended guideline range” makes little sense. Where an amendment does change the applicable guideline range, however, the court can calculate a new “applicable” range by “substitut[ing] the amend[ed] guideline provisions] for the corresponding provisions that were applied when the defendant was sentenced.”U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10(b)(1) . Section 1B1.10(b)(1) defines this new, applicable range as the “amended guideline range.” The phrase “amended guideline range,” then, is simply the name by which the guidelines distinguish one applicable guideline range—i.e., the one that incorporates guideline amendments—from another—i.e., the one that applied under earlier versions of the guidelines. It follows, then, that courts should use the same procedure to сalculate both the applicable guideline range and the amended guideline range, departing from that procedure in the case of the amended guideline range only to “substitute ... the [relevant guideline] amendments.” Id. Under the guidelines, courts applying this procedure should not “consider[] any departure provision in the Guidelines Manual or any variance.”U.S.S.G. § 1B1.10 cmt. n.1(A).
