Jones v. United States
Jones v. United States
Opinion
The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied.
Justice SCALIA, with whom Justice THOMASand Justice GINSBURGjoin, dissenting from denial of certiorari.
A jury convicted petitioners Joseph Jones, Desmond Thurston, and Antwuan Ball of distributing very small amounts of crack cocaine, and acquitted them of conspiring to distribute drugs. The sentencing judge, however, found that they had engaged in the charged conspiracy and, relying largely on that finding, imposed sentences that petitioners say were many times longer than those the Guidelines would otherwise have recommended.
Petitioners present a strong case that, but for the judge's finding of fact, their sentences would have been "substantively unreasonable" and therefore illegal. See
Rita v. United States,
For years, however, we have refrained from saying so. In
Rita v. United States,
*9
we dismissed the possibility of Sixth Amendment violations resulting from substantive reasonableness review as hypothetical and not presented by the facts of the case. We thus left for another day the question whether the Sixth Amendment is violated when courts impose sentences that, but for a judge-found fact, would be reversed for substantive unreasonableness.
This has gone on long enough. The present petition presents the nonhypothetical case the Court claimed to have been waiting for. And it is a particularly appealing case, because not only did no jury convict these defendants of the offense the sentencing judge thought them guilty of, but a jury acquitted them of that offense. Petitioners were convicted of distributing drugs, but acquitted of conspiring to distribute drugs. The sentencing judge found that petitioners had engaged in the conspiracy of which the jury acquitted them. The Guidelines, petitioners claim, recommend sentences of between 27 and 71 months for their distribution convictions. But in light of the conspiracy finding, the court calculated much higher Guidelines ranges, and sentenced Jones, Thurston, and Ball to 180, 194, and 225 months' imprisonment.
On petitioners' appeal, the D.C. Circuit held that
even if
their sentences would have been substantively unreasonable but for judge-found facts, their Sixth Amendment rights were not violated.
With one exception: We held in
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Joseph JONES, Desmond Thurston, and Antwuan Ball v. UNITED STATES.
- Cited By
- 35 cases
- Status
- Relating-to