Koons v. United States
Koons v. United States
Opinion
Under
I
All five petitioners pleaded guilty before the same sentencing judge to methamphetamine conspiracy offenses that subjected them to mandatory minimum sentences under
That is what happened here. In each of petitioners' cases, the top end of the Guidelines range fell below the applicable mandatory minimum sentence, and so the court concluded that the mandatory minimum superseded the Guidelines range.
E.g.,
App. 197; see also
When a statute sets out a mandatory minimum sentence, a defendant convicted under that statute will generally receive a sentence at or above the mandatory minimum-but not always. If the defendant has substantially assisted the Government "in the investigation or prosecution of another person," the Government may move under
The Government filed such motions in each of petitioners' cases, and in each case, the District Court departed downward from the mandatory minimum because of petitioners' substantial assistance. In settling on the final sentences, the court considered the so-called "substantial-assistance factors" found in § 5K1.1(a) of the Guidelines, all of which relate to the assistance defendants supply the Government. App. 80, 197; see, e.g., USSG §§ 5K1.1(a)(1)-(3), (5) (the "extent," "timeliness," "significance[,] and usefulness" of the defendant's assistance and the "truthfulness, completeness, and reliability of [the] information" provided). In no case did the court consider the original drug Guidelines ranges that it had earlier discarded. See App. 115-116, 148-154, 174-177, 197-198, 216-218. The sentences ultimately imposed in these cases represented *1788 downward departures from the mandatory minimums of between 25 and 45 percent. See Brief for United States 3.
Years after petitioners' sentences became final, the Sentencing Commission issued amendment 782, which reduced the Guidelines' base offense levels for certain drug offenses, including those for which petitioners were convicted. See USSG App. C, Amdt. 782 (Supp. Nov. 2012-Nov. 2016); see also Hughes v. United States, --- U.S, at ----, 138 S.Ct., at 1774, ante. And because the amendment applied retroactively, ibid., it made defendants previously convicted of those offenses potentially eligible for a sentence reduction under § 3582(c)(2).
Petitioners sought such reductions, but in order to qualify, they had to show that their sentences were "based on" the now-lowered drug Guidelines ranges. § 3582(c)(2). The courts below held that petitioners could not make that showing, App. 93-97;
II
We hold that petitioners do not qualify for sentence reductions under § 3582(c)(2) because their sentences were not "based on" their lowered Guidelines ranges. Instead, their sentences were "based on" their mandatory minimums and on their substantial assistance to the Government. 1
A
For a sentence to be "based on" a lowered Guidelines range, the range must have at least played "a relevant part [in] the framework the [sentencing] judge used" in imposing the sentence.
Hughes,
--- U.S, at ----,
Petitioners' sentences fall into this latter category of cases. Their sentences were not "based on" the lowered Guidelines ranges because the District Court did not consider those ranges in imposing its ultimate sentences. On the contrary, the court scrapped the ranges in favor of the mandatory minimums, and never considered the ranges again; as the court explained, the ranges dropped out of the case. App. 114-115, 148, 174, 197, 216. And once out of the case, the ranges could not come close to forming the "basis for the sentence that the District Court imposed,"
*1789
Hughes,
--- U.S, at ----,
B
Petitioners' four counterarguments do not change our conclusion.
First, petitioners insist that because the Guidelines ranges serve as "the starting point for every sentencing calculation in the federal system,"
Peugh v. United States,
But it does not follow that any sentence subsequently imposed must be regarded as "based on" a Guidelines range. What matters, instead, is the role that the Guidelines range played in the selection of the sentence eventually imposed-not the role that the range played in the initial calculation. And here, while consideration of the ranges may have served as the "starting point" in the sense that the court began by calculating those ranges, the ranges clearly did not form the "foundation" of the sentences ultimately selected. See
Hughes,
--- U.S, at ---- - ----,
Second, petitioners argue that even if their sentences were not actually based on their Guidelines ranges, they are eligible under § 3582(c)(2) because their sentences should have been based on those ranges. See Brief for Petitioners 25-34. 2 But even under that reading of "based on," petitioners are not eligible because the District Court made no mistake at sentencing. Petitioners emphasize that when a court departs downward because of a defendant's substantial assistance, § 3553(e) requires it to impose a sentence "in accordance with the guidelines." Id., at 28 (emphasis deleted). But that does not mean "in accordance with the guidelines range ." Instead, a court imposes a sentence "in accordance with the guidelines" when it follows the Guidelines-including the parts of the Guidelines that instruct it to disregard the advisory ranges, see USSG §§ 1B1.1(a)(8), 5G1.1(b) -in settling on a sentence. And that is precisely what the court did here. It properly discarded the advisory ranges, ibid., and permissibly considered only factors related to petitioners' substantial assistance, rather than factors related to the advisory ranges, as a guide in determining how far to depart downward, *1790 USSG § 5K1.1. See § 3553(e). 3
Third, petitioners stress that the Sentencing Commission's policy statement makes clear that the Commission wanted defendants in their shoes to be eligible for sentence reductions. Brief for Petitioners 35-38; see USSG § 1B1.10(c) (policy statement). But the Commission's policy statement cannot alter § 3582(c)(2), which applies only when a sentence was "based on" a subsequently lowered range. The Sentencing Commission may limit the application of its retroactive Guidelines amendments through its " 'applicable policy statements.' "
Dillon v. United States,
Fourth and finally, far from creating "unjustifiable sentencing disparities," Brief for Petitioners 38-42, our rule avoids such disparities. Identically situated defendants sentenced today may receive the same sentences as petitioners received. See App. 89-90. Now, as then, district courts calculate the advisory Guidelines ranges, see USSG § 1B1.1(a)(7) ; discard them in favor of the mandatory minimum sentences, §§ 1B1.1(a)(8), 5G1.1(b) ; and then may use the substantial-assistance factors to determine how far to depart downward, §§ 1B1.1(b), 5K1.1(a). See § 3553(e). Those resulting sentences, like the sentences here, are not "based on" a lowered Guidelines range-they are "based on" the defendants' mandatory minimums and substantial assistance to the Government. And those defendants, like petitioners, are not eligible for sentence reductions under § 3582(c)(2).
* * *
For these reasons, we affirm.
It is so ordered.
The Government argues that defendants subject to mandatory minimum sentences can never be sentenced "based on a sentencing range" that the Commission has lowered,
We assume for argument's sake that what should have happened at the initial sentencing proceedings, rather than what actually happened, matters for purposes of § 3582(c)(2). But cf.
Dillon v. United States,
Many courts have held that § 3553(e)
prohibits
consideration of the advisory Guidelines ranges in determining how far to depart downward. See,
e.g.,
United States v. Spinks,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Timothy D. KOONS, Kenneth Jay Putensen, Randy Feauto, Esequiel Gutierrez, and Jose Manuel Gardea, Petitioners v. UNITED STATES.
- Cited By
- 57 cases
- Status
- Published