MARK W. BENNETT, District Judge.
TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION — DEFENDANT DOUGLAS YOUNG ....................................883II. THE OVERVIEW ...............................................................885A. How The § 851 Enhancement Works ........................................885B. A Brief History Of Recidivist Enhancements And § 851 ...................886C. Lack Of A National DOJ § 851 Policy ....................................887D. The Wheel of Misfortune ................................................889
E. Other Problems With The Arbitrary Workings Of § 851 Enhancements .........................................................891III. ANALYSIS OF THE COMMISSION'S § 851 DATA ....................................892A. Overview Of The Underlying Data On § 851 Enhancements ..................892B. Northern District Of Iowa — § 851 Application Disparity ...............894C. The Eighth Circuit — § 851 Application Disparity ......................895D. Intra-circuit — § 851 Application Disparity ...........................899E. Intrastate And National — § 851 Application Disparity .................901F. Summary ................................................................902IV. THE ROLE OF THE JUDICIARY IN ATTEMPTING TO CORRECT THE PROBLEM ...............................................................903V. THE DOJ, THE AUDACITY OF HYPOCRISY, AND THE OPPORTUNITY FOR ATONEMENT .................................................905VI. CONCLUSION .................................................................908VII. APPENDICES .................................................................909A. Appendix A .............................................................909B. Appendix B .............................................................914C. Appendix C .............................................................917D. Appendix D .............................................................922E. Appendix E .............................................................926F. Appendix F .............................................................930
This case presents a deeply disturbing, yet often replayed, shocking, dirty little secret of federal sentencing: the stunningly arbitrary application by the Department of Justice (DOJ) of § 851 drug sentencing enhancements.
Recent statistics obtained from the U.S. Sentencing Commission (Commission) — the only known data that exists on the eligibility and applications of the DOJ's § 851 decision making — reveal jaw-dropping, shocking disparity. For example, a defendant in the Northern District of Iowa (N.D. of Iowa) who is eligible for a § 851 enhancement is 2,532% more likely to receive it than a similarly eligible defendant in the bordering District of Nebraska.
Defendant Douglas Young, whose situation brings the issue of the § 851 enhancement before me now, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute 28 grams or more of cocaine base following a prior conviction for a felony drug offense (count 1) and possession with intent to distribute 28 grams or more of cocaine base (count 2) in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(b)(1)(B), and 851. His preliminary Presentence Investigation Report revealed, inter alia, that he is a 37-year-old African-American male with a Total Offense Level of 29, and 3 criminal history points, putting him in Criminal History Category II. Mr. Young's advisory U.S. Guideline range was 93 to 121 months. His entire criminal history scoring consisted of one offense — a conviction in Cook County, Illinois, in 1996, at age 20, for the manufacture/delivery of a controlled substance — cocaine base. He received probation, which he successfully completed without notation of any probation violations. His mandatory minimum sentence of 60 months is doubled to 120 months as a result of a § 851 enhancement for this 17-year-old conviction, and his maximum sentence of 40 years is increased to life, as well. However, after objections were filed by defense counsel, Mr. Young argued that his one prior conviction should receive no criminal history points, and the AUSA, the U.S. probation officer, and I agreed. Thus, Mr. Young is in Criminal History Category I and is now safety-valve eligible.
Both pre-
Nevertheless, in a somewhat bizarre "O. Henry" ending, the AUSA did make a substantial assistance motion, but also made a Motion For Upward Departure For Under-Representation Of Criminal History (docket no. 88), because Mr. Young's Criminal History Category is I, despite his previous conviction for a felony drug-trafficking offense in 1996. I say "bizarre," because a strong argument can be made that Mr. Young is in the class of 74 % of defendants nationally who are eligible for a § 851 enhancement, yet have it waived. It seems that a defendant, like Mr. Young, who pleads guilty, signs a cooperation plea agreement, actually cooperates to the degree to earn a prosecution recommendation for a substantial assistance reduction (which, in this district, is a very high bar), and who has a 17-year-old predicate state court drug conviction, where he received probation and successfully completed it, so that he received no criminal history points, is likely the kind of defendant who should receive a waiver of his § 851 enhancement. I denied the AUSA's Motion For Upward Departure. Thus, owing to the convoluted workings of Mr. Young's criminal history scoring, making him safety-valve eligible, and my rejection of the AUSA's attempt to reimpose sentencing consequences for Mr. Young's prior conviction, the harsh effect of a § 851 enhancement here was minimized for Mr. Young — but that is a very rare occurrence in this district.
Addressing the individual 3553(a) factors, I find that the 1:1 ratio issue is the only mitigating factor, which is why I am not varying any lower than the revised 1:1 ratio range of 37 to 46 months. Mr. Young asserted that the following aspects of his history and characteristics warranted a lower sentence:
Defendant's Brief In Support Of Motion For Downward Variance (docket no. 87-1), 3-4. I have balanced against these mitigating factors the following aggravating factors:
Balancing all relevant factors, Mr. Young's August 12, 2013, Motion For Downward Variance (docket no. 87) is granted only to the extent that I have applied a 1:1 ratio. Ultimately, after evaluating the U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 factors, I did reduce Mr. Young's sentence, based solely on application of a 1:1 ratio and Mr. Young's substantial assistance, to 24 months of incarceration followed by 4 years of supervised release on each count, to run concurrently, with certain other conditions as stated on the record.
I turn now to the § 851 enhancement issue in this and other cases. Pursuant to the penalty provisions set forth in 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1), enhanced penalties, including increased mandatory minimum and maximum terms of imprisonment, apply if the defendant has a prior conviction for a "felony drug offense." "Felony drug offense" is defined as "an offense that is punishable by imprisonment for more than one year under any law of the United States or of a State or foreign country that prohibits or restricts conduct relating to narcotic drugs, marihuana, anabolic steroids, or depressant or stimulant substances." 21 U.S.C. § 802(44). This sweeping definition includes many state drug convictions that the various states define under state law as misdemeanors. Unlike criminal history scoring under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, no conviction is too old to be used as an enhancement. These enhancements are usually referred to as "§ 851 enhancements" because 21 U.S.C. § 851 establishes and prescribes certain notice and other procedural requirements that trigger them.
In my experience, many § 851 enhancements involve only relatively minor state drug offenses classified as some variation of a misdemeanor under state law. Many predicate prior offenses are also decades old, where the defendant never served so much as one day in jail, and often paid only a small fine.
The highest penalties in federal drug cases are for convictions under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A). This subsection applies when the offense of conviction involves specifically identified drugs coupled with specific quantities of those drugs. A first-time drug offender convicted under § 841(b)(1)(A) faces a statutory mandatory minimum sentencing range of ten years and a maximum sentence of life. With a prior "felony drug conviction," the mandatory minimum doubles to twenty years. With two prior "felony drug convictions," a mandatory life sentence must be given. 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A). On the other hand, § 841(b)(1)(B) applies to offenses involving lower quantities of drugs. A five-year
The modern history of experimentation with enhancements for prior drug convictions can be traced back to the 1964 amendments to the Narcotic Drug Import and Export Act of 1958.
The House Committee, in reporting on the House bill, explained the reasons for revising the penalty structure:
H. Rep. No. 91-1444, 91st Cong., 2d Sess., 1970 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News, pp. 4566, 4576.
In United States v. Noland, 495 F.2d 529 (5th Cir.1974), the first appellate case to be decided under the enhancement section of the 1970 CSA, the court understood this flexibility to be used in situations where neither the prosecutor, nor the court thought the enhancement desirable or necessary. Id. at 532. The court in Noland determined that it was up to the U.S. Attorney to seek enhancement if the sentence was to be doubled. Judge Sidney Thomas noted, in discussing Noland, that "the statutory scheme was completely everted: rather than requiring courts to impose mandatory minimums regardless of prosecutorial desire, courts were prohibited from enhancing sentences unless the government had timely filed an information stating that it intended to seek an enhanced sentence based on specific prior convictions." United States v. Severino, 268 F.3d 850, 863 (9th Cir.2001). So, the Congressional motivation for the injection of prosecutorial discretion for the sentencing enhancement was to overcome the temptation for prosecutors not to charge offenders in situations where the court was likely to impose an unduly harsh sentence because of a qualifying prior drug offense. This is the opposite of the application of § 851 enhancements as currently applied in the N.D. of Iowa, where it is applied in four out of five eligible cases.
Until earlier this week, the DOJ did not appear to have a national policy
In eight of the Nation's ninety-four federal districts, § 851 enhancements have been waived in every case, regardless of whether the defendant pleads, goes to trial, or cooperates, with or without receiving a substantial assistance motion. In many other districts, the § 851 enhancements were used as a plea hammer to induce a defendant to plead — then withdrawn when the defendant did plead. In the N.D. of Iowa, already this year, I have sentenced numerous defendants with § 851 enhancements, regardless of whether they pled, or pled and cooperated, and did or did not receive a substantial assistance motion. Indeed, in one case, the § 851 notice was not waived where a defendant pled, cooperated, was given a U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 motion, but not an 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e) motion, so that the defendant received the full brunt of the doubling of her mandatory minimum sentence, even though she was the least culpable defendant in a small methamphetamine conspiracy. She received the second longest sentence of any of her co-defendants. United States v. Newhouse, 919 F.Supp.2d 955, 987-88, 992 (N.D.Iowa 2013).
At long last, on August 12, 2013, Attorney General Holder issued his 2013 Memo establishing a national policy on charging mandatory minimum sentences and recidivist enhancements in drug cases. In pertinent part, the Holder 2013 Memo addressed § 851 enhancements, as follows:
Holder 2013 Memo at 3.
The lack of any national or local policy, at least until August 12, 2013, rendered application of § 851 enhancements both whimsical and arbitrary — something akin to the spin of a "Wheel of Misfortune" — where similarly-situated defendants in the same district, before the same sentencing judge, sometimes received a doubling of their mandatory minimum sentences and sometimes did not.
The purpose of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984(SRA) was to
Mistretta v. United States, 488 U.S. 361, 374, 109 S.Ct. 647, 102 L.Ed.2d 714 (1989). The lack of a national, regional, intra-state, or local policy on § 851 enhancements rendered that stated purpose as illusory as David Copperfield's Vanishing Statue of Liberty.
If humans continue to be involved in federal sentencing, there will always be some disparity. There was before the passage of the SRA, and there has been in each phase of the unfolding saga of federal Guideline sentencing.
Wholly apart from these critical considerations of arbitrary application and lack of transparency by the DOJ, the serious and pervasive structural deficiencies in § 851 enhancements that existed prior to August 12, 2013, often led to bizarre and incomprehensibly unfair results.
I am optimistic that fair application of the Holder 2013 Memo will rectify this problem going forward.
The grim state of affairs for § 851 enhancements prior to the national policy established by the Holder 2013 Memo is starkly revealed by an examination of the Commission's § 851 data on the one occasion that it collected such information. Every year, pursuant to its statutory mandate, the Commission publishes national data collected from federal sentencings spanning all ninety-four districts.
The N.D. of Iowa ranks fourth in the nation in its use of § 851 enhancements (79% of eligible defendants received a § 851 enhancement), trailing only the S.D. of Iowa (84%), N.D. of Florida (87%), and Guam (100%, but only three eligible defendants). App. A. Prosecutors in the N.D. of Iowa applied this enhancement at a rate more than six times the national median application rate (13%) and more than three times the national average application rate (26%).
Of the ninety-three reporting districts, sixty have an application rate of 25% or less.
Only seven districts applied the enhancement in over two-thirds of eligible cases. Id. Nationally, eight districts (Arizona, W.D. of Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, N.D. of Mississippi, S.D. of Ohio, E.D. of Oklahoma, and the Virgin Islands) never enhanced a single eligible defendant.
The average application rate of § 851 enhancements for districts in the Eighth Circuit is 28%. App. D. The application rates in the Eighth Circuit range from 84% in the S.D. of Iowa, to 0% in the W.D. of Arkansas. Id. Of the ten districts in the Eighth Circuit, Iowa's two districts are responsible for enhancing the sentences of 63% of the eligible offenders. Table 1C, below, shows the total number of defendants sentenced for drug offenses in each district, the number and percentage of those defendants who were eligible for a § 841 enhancement, the number and percentage of eligible defendants who actually received a § 841 enhancement, the number
Eligible Enhanced Eligible Intra — state District Total Eligible /Total Enhanced /Eligible — Enhanced discrepancy Iowa, S 149 73 48.99% 61 83.56% 12 4.32% Iowa, N 107 53 49.53% 42 79.25% 11 Missouri, E 286 147 51.40% 15 10.20% 132 35.37% Missouri, W 191 79 41.36% 36 45.57% 43 Minnesota 211 80 37.91% 6 7.50% 74 Nebraska 219 64 29.22% 2 3.13% 62 Arkansas, E 86 40 46.51% 2 5.00% 38 5.00% Arkansas, W 43 18 41.86% 0 0.00% 18 N. Dakota 57 27 47.37% 12 44.44% 15 S. Dakota 75 25 33.33% 1 4.00% 24
Prosecutors in the N.D. of Iowa applied this enhancement at a higher rate than all other districts in the Eighth Circuit except the S.D. of Iowa. Iowa's two federal district applied the § 851 enhancement to more defendants than the rest of the districts in the Eighth Circuit combined. App. D. The N.D. of Iowa alone, applied the § 851 enhancement at a rate more than twice the amount of six other districts in the Eighth Circuit combined.
Although the N.D. and S.D. of Iowa differ in application by only five percentage points, the difference that geography can make in sentencing becomes apparent when the N.D. of Iowa is compared to the three federal districts, other than the S.D. of Iowa, that border the N.D. of Iowa. Apps. C, D. Nebraska is only one mile south of the federal courthouse in Sioux City, Iowa, where I preside, yet defendants are 2,532% more likely to face a § 851 enhancement in the N.D. of Iowa than in the D. of Nebraska. Ironically, a very significant percentage of my drug cases, including those where a § 851 enhancement is applied, could have been venued and prosecuted in Nebraska.
In each circuit, I took the district with the highest § 851 application rate (strictest) minus the district with the lowest application rate (most lenient) to determine the circuit range. The average intra-circuit range for all circuits is 59 percentage points.App. D. This average indicates that, out of every five defendants to whom an § 851 enhancement was applied in the strictest district in that circuit, three of those defendants in the most lenient district in that circuit did not receive the enhancement.
The Eleventh Circuit's districts have an average enhancement application rate of 38%, while the adjacent Fifth Circuit averages only 17%. Id. The Eleventh Circuit has the largest intra-circuit disparity of 85%; curiously, two adjacent districts provide this extreme range. Prosecutors in the N.D. of Florida opted to at least double the sentences of 60 of 69 eligible offenders over the sample period, yielding an 87% application rate. Just across the border in the M.D. of Georgia, in contrast, there were 52 eligible offenders, but prosecutors deemed only 1 warranted such a severe enhancement, resulting in just a 2% application rate. This means that offenders charged in the N.D. of Florida are 4,529% more likely to receive at least double the time that a similarly-situated defendant just to the north, in the M.D. of Georgia, would receive.
Five states (Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, and Oklahoma) have one district that never enhanced sentences using § 851, but has another district that did apply the enhancement. That is hardly the most striking intra-state disparity, in terms of a particular defendant's likelihood of a § 851 enhancement in one district in a state, as compared to other districts in that state, however, because Arkansas,
Aside from the five states with a district with no § 851 enhancements, Tennessee offers the largest intra-state disparity in application. In the E.D. of Tennessee, offenders are 3,994% more likely to receive a § 851 enhancement than in the W.D. of Tennessee.
Nationally, the districts at the extremes of the application rate show incredible disparity. While it may be unfair to compare Guam's 100% application rate to the 0% application rate in the Virgin Islands, because neither district has many eligible defendants,
While the Commission's 2011 REPORT, itself, observed "a lack of uniformity in the application of the enhanced mandatory
Congress has delegated § 851 enhancement decisions exclusively to federal prosecutors. Thus, the Commission, defendants, their counsel, and federal district and appellate court judges are powerless to do anything but complain about arbitrary application of § 851 enhancements. Nevertheless, as Judge Calabresi recently penned,
United States v. Ingram, 721 F.3d 35, 43 n. 9 (2nd Cir.2013) (Calabresi, J. concurring) (footnotes and citations omitted). I believe we have an equal right — even duty — to call out the DOJ on its application of the new national policy, its secrecy in applying § 851 enhancements, and the completely arbitrary way in which it could continue to apply these devastating enhancements, which add to the burdens of our Nation's mass incarceration problems,
The DOJ could easily do these things, if it wanted, to become less arbitrary, more transparent, or both, to demonstrate its compliance with the new national policy for § 851 enhancements. I respectfully request that the DOJ consider doing so.
The SRA requires the Criminal Division of the DOJ to submit to the Commission, at least annually, a report commenting on the operation of the sentencing guidelines, suggesting changes to the guidelines that appear to be warranted, and otherwise assessing the Commission's work. 28 U.S.C. § 994(o) (2006). On July 11, 2013, the DOJ did just that, writing: "We are pleased to submit this report pursuant to the Act. The report also responds to the Commission's request for public comment on its proposed priorities for the guideline amendment year ending May 1, 2014. Notice of Proposed Priorities and Request for Public Comment, 78 Fed.Reg. 32,533 (May 30, 2013)." Jonathan J. Wroblewski, Director, Office of Policy and Legislation U.S. Department of Justice, Letter from the DOJ to The Honorable Patti B. Saris, Chair, at p. 1 (July 11, 2013).
The Report is replete with references to the DOJ's deep concern for sentencing disparity, at least when created by others, and for greater justice for all:
In contrast to these stated concerns about sentencing disparities, the statistical information presented in this opinion, drawn directly from the Commission's data, conclusively establishes that, at least prior to the statement of a national policy in the Holder 2013 Memo, there was a breathtaking disparity in the DOJ's own application of § 851 enhancements. This dramatic sentencing disparity created, implemented, and ignored by the DOJ, did as much or more to create unwarranted and arbitrary sentencing disparities as any other source I am aware of. It has added thousands of years of arbitrarily inflicted incarceration on drug defendants, most of whom are non-violent drug addicts, based on the absence of a DOJ national policy informed by reasonable factors. The DOJ either had the data about application of § 851 enhancements and not only ignored it, but hid it from the public, or never bothered to gather such data, which was grossly negligent. Either way, allowing this disparity to persist for so long was a terrible abuse of the public trust.
There is much that the DOJ could do to atone for its creation of such arbitrary disparities. First, while the DOJ criticizes others for creating unwarranted sentencing disparity, it ought to give serious consideration to ending or at least narrowing its self-generated § 851 disparity — and it has taken a dramatic first step to do so with the Holder 2013 Memo. Second, now that the DOJ has a national policy for § 851 enhancements, in the interest of
One hopeful sign that the DOJ is willing to address the problem openly came from the August 12, 2013, remarks of Attorney General Eric Holder to the American Bar Association. In those remarks, Attorney General Holder observed, inter alia, that the DOJ, attorneys, and judges must "fundamentally rethink[] the notion of mandatory minimum sentences for drug-related crimes," although there was no specific mention of § 851 enhancements in that address, even though such enhancements have had such a dramatic effect on mandatory minimum sentences.
Much will turn, however, on how the rather vague guiding factors in the Holder 2013 Memo are interpreted and applied by the DOJ generally and by individual United States Attorneys and whether additional guidance from the DOJ is provided. For example, the factor requiring consideration of "[t]he nature of the defendant's criminal history, including any prior history of violent conduct or recent prior convictions for serious offenses" is quite broad.
Finally, when I showed the AUSA in this case some of the evidence of disparities in the application of § 851 enhancements in this district compared to neighboring districts — presented above — during Young's sentencing hearing, the AUSA admitted that he had not seen such information. He also stated that he had only known, from contact with individual AUSAs in neighboring districts that, for example, the D. of Nebraska rarely imposed § 851 enhancements unless a defendant actually went to trial. He stated that he was "a little bit shocked that [neighboring districts] don't hardly ever apply [§ 851 enhancements] based on what they — what I've heard in talking to them. But again, I didn't pull the statistics. They are new to me." Sentencing Hearing, Real Time Transcript. On the other hand, he was only "surprised" at the extent of the disparities. Specifically, he said, "I don't know if shock's the right word because — but yes, it surprises me to see that kind of difference in how they are applying [§ 851] and how we are applying it." Id. He also stated that he could not comment on the reasons for such disparities without reviewing more information about the disparities and the policies in the various districts, but he did admit that the existence of such disparities "certainly raises some questions." Id.
The comments of this AUSA, who is a very experienced prosecutor in this district and one whom I believe operates in absolute good faith, demonstrate that the DOJ never provided the information about the disparities in § 851 enhancements to prosecutors in the field nor provided any direction to them on how to apply such enhancements, which might have helped remedy the disparities. I do not blame this AUSA for either the disparities or his lack of knowledge about them; rather, it is clear that there has been a failure at the higher levels of the DOJ to make even its own prosecutors aware of the problem or to address it. The DOJ has had the pertinent information since the Commission's 2011 REPORT, but apparently did nothing with it until just this week, when it disseminated the Holder 2013 Memo. This secrecy and inaction is extremely disappointing and raises serious concerns about how the DOJ and prosecutors in individual districts will handle § 851 enhancements going forward, even with the Holder 2013 Memo in place.
Again, I am optimistic that fair application of the Holder 2013 Memo will rectify this problem going forward. Of course, if all § 851 enhancement decisions are still made in secret, no reasons for such decisions in particular cases are ever announced, tracked, or published by the DOJ, and no nationwide statistics are kept and made public by the DOJ or the Commission on circumstances in which § 851 enhancements are imposed, we will never know if the Holder 2013 Memo has effectively eliminated intra-state, intra-Circuit, or other regional or national disparities in the application of § 851. Instead, we will still have only anecdotal experiences with the application — or lack of application — of § 851 enhancements. In the absence of such efforts at tracking, analyzing, and disseminating information about § 851 enhancements, I have little faith that the Holder 2013 Memo will actually remedy the gross disparities apparent in past applications of such enhancements.
The massive disparity in eligibility and application of § 851 notices prior to the promulgation of a national policy in the Holder 2013 Memo is deeply disturbing, as is the incredible cloak of secrecy in which these decisions were made. Unfortunately, judges have done very little, if anything, to call this to the attention of the DOJ. That failing is due, in large part, to the lack of dissemination to judges of statistics about this problem. Enhancements for recidivism have been part of the statutory sentencing arsenal for drug crimes at least since the 1964 amendments to the Narcotic Drug Import and Export Act of 1958, and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines and the Commission have been in place since 1987, yet until the Commission's study and 2011 REPORT, there was simply no way to determine what disparities application of § 851 was creating — and the data from the Commission's 2011 REPORT, using sample groups from three fiscal years (2006, 2008, and 2009), is now aging. The lack of information about the problem is why I have undertaken to obtain and analyze the only known data on the subject.
Admittedly, the DOJ has a very full plate. The Office of Inspector General of the DOJ recently submitted a statutorily-required list of top management and performance challenges facing the DOJ dated November 7, 2012.
In testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs, then Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division of the DOJ testified:
The Holder 2013 Memo holds out hope that the DOJ will follow its own Congressional testimony by trying to eliminate the hidden yet massive injustice created by prior application of § 851 enhancements. The dramatic failure of the DOJ, prior to the Holder 2013 Memo, to publicly acknowledge and take steps to reduce the national disparity in the application of § 851 enhancements diminished judicial and public trust and confidence in both the DOJ and the federal criminal justice system. It not only created a perception of injustice, it actually perpetuated a gross injustice and "dr[ew] the public into questioning the motives of governmental officials." Id. Let us hope that the new national policy on § 851 enhancements will undo some of that damage.
We as judges can and should do more. While we still cannot require AUSAs to state on the record how they have applied the § 851 policy, we can certainly request that they do so. The same is true with asking, on the record, what factors an AUSA considered in deciding to apply or waive the § 851 enhancement. We can also ask if the AUSAs are aware of and have studied the Commission's data on § 851 enhancements. We can further probe if the DOJ has any plans to make public the impact of the new national policy on reducing the massive and unwarranted sentencing disparities former application of § 851 enhancements had created.
Finally, it is vitally important to remember that defendants subject to the § 851 enhancements are real people and members of our communities, not contestants on a game show. While they may cross their fingers and hope the winds of change that have blown a new, national § 851 policy onto our shores will blow in their favor, the most important factor for the length of their sentences should not be which prosecutor the tic, tic, tic, tic of the Wheel of Misfortune chooses for them.
THEREFORE, upon consideration of all relevant factors, defendant Douglas Young was sentenced to 24 months of incarceration followed by 4 years of supervised release on each count, to run concurrently, with certain other conditions as stated on the record.
Title 26 U.S.C. § 7237(c)(1) (1964), provided, as follows:
United States Sentencing Commission, REPORT ON THE CONTINUING IMPACT OF UNITED STATES V. BOOKER ON FEDERAL SENTENCING, Pt. A, pp. 2-3 (Dec. 2012) (2012 BOOKER REPORT) (footnotes omitted).
In the 2012 BOOKER REPORT, the Commission notes,
2012 BOOKER REPORT, 113.
Rethinking Recidivist Enhancements, supra, n. 9, at 1139 (footnotes omitted). I have no position, and take no position, on these questions because these policy considerations about the general wisdom of recidivist enhancements like § 851 reside exclusively in the other two branches of government.
Commission's 2011 REPORT at 253-255 (footnotes omitted).
Commission's 2011 REPORT at 254 nn. 696-699. Data was unavailable for the district of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Rethinking Recidivist Enhancements, supra, n. 9, at 1232 (footnotes omitted).
On August 1st of this year, in a joint press release announcing the introduction of their bipartisan Smarter Sentencing Act, Senators Durbin and Lee stated:
Durbin and Lee Introduce Smarter Sentencing Act, WEBSITE OF DICK DURBIN, US SENATOR FOR ILLINOIS, ASSISTANT MAJORITY LEADER (August 1, 2013), http://www.durbin.senate.gov/public/ index.cfm/pressreleases?ID=be68ad86-a0a4-486-853f-f8ef7b99e736.