UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. WILLIAM D. KING, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 21-3196
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Submitted July 7, 2022 — Decided July 11, 2022
Before EASTERBROOK, WOOD, and KIRSCH, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 07-CR-20055 — Harold A.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. When deciding whether “extraordinary and compelling reasons”,
William King, who was sentenced to 216 months’ imprisonment following his guilty plea to three heroin charges, contends that Concepcion v. United States, No. 20–1650 (U.S. June 27, 2022), requires us to abandon these decisions and hold that anything at all—factual or legal, personal or systemic, routine or unique—may be treated as “extraordinary and compelling”. That would be hard to reconcile with the language of the statute. Routine is the opposite of extraordinary.
The statute also says that applications must be assessed according to policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission.
Concepcion does not alter that understanding. It held that, when substantive changes made by the First Step Act (principally reductions in the authorized ranges for crack-cocaine crimes) entitle a prisoner to be resentenced, the judge may consider everything that would have been pertinent at an original sentencing. We may assume that the same would be true if a district judge were to vacate a sentence on application for compassionate release and hold a full resentencing proceeding. But decisions such as Thacker concern the threshold question: whether the prisoner is entitled to a reduction under
The Supreme Court has encountered other threshold issues under the First Step Act without hinting that everything is up in the air. For example, Terry v. United States, 141 S. Ct. 1858 (2021), holds that persons convicted of violating
That the First Step Act did multiple things—lowering sentences for some cocaine crimes, enabling prisoners to seek compassionate release on their own motions, and more—does not mean that every decision about any aspect of the First Step Act applies to every potential question under that statute. The First Step Act did not create or modify the “extraordinary and compelling reasons” threshold for eligibility; it just added prisoners to the list of persons who may file motions. We take the Supreme Court at its word that Concepcion is about the matters that district judges may consider when they resentence defendants. So understood, Concepcion is irrelevant to the threshold question whether any given prisoner has established an “extraordinary and compelling” reason for release.
This brings us to King’s situation. He contends that United States v. Ruth, 966 F.3d 642 (7th Cir. 2020), furnishes an “extraordinary and compelling” reason for compassionate release. The district court disagreed and denied King’s application.
Ruth holds that an unusual feature in one Illinois statute defining the word “cocaine” means that a conviction under that state law does not count as a prior cocaine conviction for the purpose of certain federal recidivist enhancements. King could have made such an argument on appeal after his own sentencing but did not, nor did he file a collateral attack based on the way Illinois defines cocaine. His effort to use Ruth as a door opener under the compassionate-release statute is foreclosed by Brock, which rejects the sort of argument that King advances. Because Brock is consistent with Concepcion, the district court’s judgment is
AFFIRMED.
