Court Opinion

ID: 9379029
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-14 15:00:53.46373+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:34.534987
License: Public Domain

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                                                            [PUBLISH]
                                    In the
                 United States Court of Appeals
                         For the Eleventh Circuit

                           ____________________

                                 No. 20-13074
                           ____________________

        UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
                                                       Plaintiff-Appellee,
        versus
        PINKNEY CLOWERS, III,
        a.k.a. Boo Boo,
        a.k.a. DOG,

                                                    Defendant-Appellant.

                           ____________________

                  Appeal from the United States District Court
                       for the Middle District of Georgia
                  D.C. Docket No. 5:92-cr-00082-TES-CHW-2
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        2                      Opinion of the Court                20-13074

                             ____________________

        Before JILL PRYOR, GRANT, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
        GRANT, Circuit Judge:
                The First Step Act offers a meaningful benefit: the
        retroactive application of specified provisions of the Fair
        Sentencing Act. But that benefit is limited. The Act permits a
        district court to reduce an eligible defendant’s sentence “as if” the
        Fair Sentencing Act “were in effect at the time the covered offense
        was committed.” First Step Act of 2018, Pub. L. No. 115-391,
        § 404(b), 132 Stat. 5194, 5222. It “does not permit a reduction when
        the Fair Sentencing Act could not have benefitted the movant.”
        United States v. Jones, 962 F.3d 1290, 1303 (11th Cir. 2020). If the
        defendant is already serving the statutory minimum sentence that
        would have applied under the Fair Sentencing Act, the First Step
        Act offers no relief. Id.
               But how does the First Step Act court decide what that
        minimum sentence would have been? The district court
        recalculates the statutory sentencing range as if the Fair Sentencing
        Act’s changes—and only those changes—were in effect at the time
        the offense was committed. See First Step Act § 404(b); cf.
        Concepcion v. United States, 142 S. Ct. 2389, 2402 n.6 (2022) (under
        the First Step Act, a district court cannot “recalculate a movant’s
        benchmark Guidelines range in any way other than to reflect the
        retroactive application of the Fair Sentencing Act”). And as we
        have said, a district court must incorporate a previous drug-
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        20-13074                Opinion of the Court                         3

        quantity finding “that could have been used to determine the
        movant’s statutory penalty at the time of sentencing” into its
        analysis when determining whether the Fair Sentencing Act would
        have benefitted the defendant. Jones, 962 F.3d at 1303. That
        includes findings made for purposes of calculating the defendant’s
        Sentencing Guidelines range.
                Pinkney Clowers appeals the denial of his First Step Act
        motion to reduce his sentence. The district court considering
        Clowers’s motion correctly concluded that it was bound by the
        sentencing court’s drug-quantity finding when determining what
        his statutory penalties would have been under the Fair Sentencing
        Act. And because that drug quantity would still trigger a
        mandatory life sentence after the Fair Sentencing Act, the district
        court also correctly concluded that it could not reduce Clowers’s
        sentence under the First Step Act.
                                          I.
                The “continuing criminal enterprise” statute targets
        organized drug trafficking by setting stiff sentences for the
        managers of criminal drug businesses. 21 U.S.C. § 848. The statute
        mandates a sentence of life imprisonment if the defendant was one
        of the “principal administrators, organizers, or leaders” of the
        enterprise and the offense involved “at least 300 times the quantity”
        of a controlled substance listed in § 841(b)(1)(B) of the federal drug-
        trafficking statute. Id. § 848(b). So, for example, the leader of a
        gang engaged in drug trafficking might be sentenced to life in
        prison if he were convicted of conspiring to distribute a large
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        4                      Opinion of the Court                20-13074

        enough quantity of heroin or cocaine as part of the gang’s drug
        business.    See id.; see also id. §§ 841(b)(1)(B)(i) (heroin),
        841(b)(1)(B)(ii)(II) (cocaine), 841(b)(1)(B)(iii) (“cocaine base” or
        crack cocaine).
                Clowers was convicted of just such an offense. In 1993, a
        jury found him guilty of engaging in a continuing criminal
        enterprise by committing a series of felony drug crimes involving
        the distribution of crack cocaine—a substance listed in
        § 841(b)(1)(B)—along with other offenses. Evidence introduced at
        his trial showed that Clowers and a codefendant founded and led
        an organization that sold crack cocaine in Macon, Georgia in the
        early 1990s. United States v. Boyd, 131 F.3d 951, 952 (11th Cir.
        1997). Clowers faced a possible mandatory life sentence based in
        part on the quantity of crack cocaine involved.
               The jury made no drug-quantity finding. Clowers was tried,
        convicted, and sentenced before the Supreme Court clarified that
        any fact (other than a prior conviction) that increases the statutory
        minimum or maximum sentence must be treated as an element of
        the offense to be found by the jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
        Alleyne v. United States, 570 U.S. 99, 107–08 (2013); Apprendi v.
        New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 490 (2000). Following the usual practice
        at the time, the sentencing court made its own finding that
        Clowers’s offense involved more than 15 kilograms of crack
        cocaine, which corresponded to the highest offense level under the
        Sentencing Guidelines.         See U.S. Sentencing Guidelines
        §§ 2D1.1(c)(1), 2D1.5(a)(1) (Nov. 1993) (yielding an offense level in
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        20-13074               Opinion of the Court                       5

        excess of 43). This was ten times the amount necessary to satisfy
        the then-existing drug-quantity element of the continuing criminal
        enterprise offense. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(b)(1)(B)(iii), 848(b)(2)(A)
        (1988). Because Clowers was also found to be one of the “principal
        administrators, organizers, or leaders” of the crack-cocaine
        business, the statute mandated a life sentence. Id. § 848(b). The
        court sentenced Clowers to life in prison.
                Twenty-five years later—after having spent more of his life
        in prison than out of it, and by all accounts behaving as a model
        prisoner—Clowers filed a motion to reduce his sentence under the
        First Step Act. The district court concluded that although it would
        reduce the sentence if it were authorized to do so based on
        Clowers’s exemplary behavior during nearly three decades in
        prison, the text of the First Step Act did not give that option.
        Clowers now appeals.
                                        II.
               In 2010, Congress enacted the Fair Sentencing Act to reduce
        the dramatic disparity in jail time for defendants whose crimes
        involved powder cocaine and those whose crimes involved crack
        cocaine. See Dorsey v. United States, 567 U.S. 260, 268–69 (2012).
        The Act achieved this purpose by, among other things, amending
        federal drug-trafficking statutes to increase the quantity of crack
        cocaine required to trigger mandatory minimum sentences. Id. at
        269; Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, Pub. L. No. 111-220, § 2(a), 124
        Stat. 2372, 2372. But the Act applied only prospectively; it did not
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        6                      Opinion of the Court                 20-13074

        provide relief for defendants who had been sentenced before its
        effective date. See Jones, 962 F.3d at 1297.
                Apparently dissatisfied that earlier offenders were still
        subject to the same harsh penalties, Congress passed the First Step
        Act, which made the crack cocaine sentencing changes retroactive.
        Id. Under § 404 of the new Act, a district court that sentenced a
        defendant for a “covered offense” may “impose a reduced sentence
        as if sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (Public Law
        111–220; 124 Stat. 2372) were in effect at the time the covered
        offense was committed.” First Step Act § 404(b).
               The statute defines a “covered offense” as “a violation of a
        Federal criminal statute, the statutory penalties for which were
        modified by section 2 or 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act.” Id. § 404(a).
        Those sections contain the quantity adjustments for minimum
        sentences put in place to reduce the disparity between crack and
        powder cocaine sentences. Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 §§ 2–3;
        Dorsey, 567 U.S. at 269. So if a defendant was sentenced before the
        effective date of the Fair Sentencing Act for an offense that includes
        as an element the quantity of crack cocaine described in
        § 841(b)(1)(B)(iii), his offense is a covered offense under the First
        Step Act. Jones, 962 F.3d at 1298.
               But that does not mean that the district court can reduce the
        sentence of every defendant with a covered offense. As we
        explained in Jones, the fact that any sentence reduction must be
        made “as if” the Fair Sentencing Act were in effect at the time of
        the defendant’s offense means that no relief is available under the
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        20-13074                  Opinion of the Court                              7

        First Step Act if the defendant “received the lowest statutory
        penalty that also would be available to him under the Fair
        Sentencing Act.” Id. at 1303. And in determining what the
        defendant’s statutory penalty would have been under the Fair
        Sentencing Act, “the district court is bound by a previous finding
        of drug quantity that could have been used to determine the
        movant’s statutory penalty at the time of sentencing.” Id. 1
                                             III.
               The parties agree, as do we, that Clowers has a covered
        offense under the First Step Act. The jury found him guilty of
        engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise. The penalties for that
        crime incorporated the drug quantity in 21 U.S.C.
        § 841(b)(1)(B)(iii). See 21 U.S.C. § 848(b)(2)(A) (1988). The Fair
        Sentencing Act increased the quantity of crack cocaine required
        under that subsection from 5 grams to 28 grams. Fair Sentencing
        Act § 2(a)(2). Clowers was thus sentenced for a “covered offense”
        because § 2 of the Fair Sentencing Act modified the statutory
        penalties for his offense. Jones, 962 F.3d at 1298.
              But as we have said, having a covered offense is not always
        enough. The Fair Sentencing Act raised the quantity of crack
        cocaine required to trigger statutory minimum sentences; it did not
        remove the mandatory minimum penalties altogether. The First
        Step Act does not authorize a sentence reduction below the

        1 We  recently reaffirmed our reasoning in Jones with respect to these limita-
        tions. See United States v. Jackson, 58 F.4th 1331, 1333 (11th Cir. 2023).
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        8                      Opinion of the Court                20-13074

        statutory minimum sentence that would have applied if the Fair
        Sentencing Act had been in effect when the movant committed his
        offense. Nor does it change the legal significance that the
        sentencing court’s drug-quantity findings held at the time.
               Clowers’s case illustrates the point. Because he would
        receive the same mandatory life sentence even under the Fair
        Sentencing Act, the district court could not reduce his sentence
        under the First Step Act. To explain in more detail, if the Fair
        Sentencing Act had been in effect at the time of Clowers’s offense,
        the quantity of crack cocaine listed in § 841(b)(1)(B) would have
        been 28 grams instead of 5 grams, and the quantity of crack cocaine
        required to trigger a mandatory life sentence for a continuing
        criminal enterprise offense would have been 8.4 kilograms instead
        of 1.5 kilograms. See 21 U.S.C. § 848(b)(2)(A) (mandating a life
        sentence for offenses involving “at least 300 times the quantity of a
        substance described in subsection 841(b)(1)(B)”). Either way, the
        sentencing court’s finding that Clowers’s offense involved more
        than 15 kilograms of crack cocaine would easily satisfy the quantity
        element of Clowers’s continuing criminal enterprise offense; the
        statute would still have required a life sentence. Because the
        sentencing judge would not have had any latitude to impose a
        lower sentence if the Fair Sentencing Act had existed in 1994, the
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        20-13074                   Opinion of the Court                               9

        First Step Act does not authorize the district court to do so now. 2
        See Jones, 962 F.3d at 1303.
                Clowers tries to get around our holding in Jones by
        creatively interpreting the language we used in that opinion. He
        argues that when we referred to a drug-quantity finding that “could
        have been used” at sentencing to determine the applicable
        statutory penalties, we really meant that district courts are bound
        only by a drug-quantity finding that was used for that purpose. Id.
        He contends that because the parties and the sentencing court
        discussed drug quantity at his sentencing only in relation to his
        Sentencing Guidelines range, the court’s finding that his offense
        involved more than 15 kilograms of crack cocaine was not used to
        determine his statutory penalties. Consequently, he argues, the
        district court was not bound by that finding when determining his

        2 Clowers fights the basic premise of this analysis. He argues that the district
        court should not have used the sentencing court’s drug-quantity finding to
        determine his statutory penalty under the Fair Sentencing Act because we
        now recognize that the Sixth Amendment requires such findings to be made
        by a jury. As Clowers acknowledges, we have rejected this argument before,
        and we reiterate that “the Constitution does not prohibit district courts, in
        deciding motions for reduced sentences under the First Step Act, from relying
        on earlier judge-found facts that triggered statutory penalties that the Fair
        Sentencing Act later modified.” Jones, 962 F.3d at 1303. We are, of course,
        bound by our prior panel decision in Jones “unless and until it is overruled or
        undermined to the point of abrogation by the Supreme Court or by this court
        sitting en banc.” United States v. Archer, 531 F.3d 1347, 1352 (11th Cir. 2008).
        We therefore reject without further discussion Clowers’s arguments that
        Jones was wrongly decided.
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        10                     Opinion of the Court                 20-13074

        statutory sentencing range under the Fair Sentencing Act. We
        reject this strained interpretation as inconsistent with the statutory
        text.
                When we explained in Jones that the “as if” clause requires
        district courts considering First Step Act motions to honor any
        drug-quantity finding that “could have been used to determine the
        movant’s statutory penalty at the time of sentencing,” we meant
        what we said. Id. If the jury—or the court, acting before
        Apprendi—made a drug-quantity finding that could have been
        used at the time of sentencing to determine the defendant’s
        statutory penalties, the district court must use the same quantity to
        decide what the defendant’s statutory penalties would have been if
        § 2 of the Fair Sentencing Act had been in effect at the time of the
        offense.
               Our application of this principle to two of the defendants in
        Jones—Alfonso Allen and Warren Jackson—makes our meaning
        clear. Allen and Jackson each received a mandatory life sentence
        for a covered offense: conspiracy to possess with intent to
        distribute 50 grams or more of crack cocaine. Id. at 1294–95. Allen
        was charged in 2006; a jury found him guilty as charged and made
        a drug-quantity finding of 50 grams or more of crack cocaine for
        the drug conspiracy offense. Id. at 1294. The district court imposed
        a mandatory life sentence based on the jury’s drug-quantity finding
        and Allen’s two prior felony drug convictions. Id.; see 21 U.S.C.
        § 841(b)(1)(A)(iii) (2006).
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        20-13074               Opinion of the Court                        11

               Years later, in a postconviction proceeding, the district court
        found that Allen had been responsible for selling more than 420
        grams of crack cocaine per week. See Jones, 962 F.3d at 1294–95.
        And several years after that, the court relied on that quantity
        finding (420 grams) to deny Allen’s First Step Act motion,
        concluding that the retroactive application of the Fair Sentencing
        Act did not benefit him because of the large quantity of crack
        cocaine involved in his offense. See id.
               On appeal, we explained that the district court was not
        bound by its earlier 420-gram finding during First Step Act
        proceedings because the district court’s findings in habeas “did not
        trigger the statutory penalty” for Allen. Id. at 1303. In other words,
        the larger drug-quantity finding could not have been used “to
        determine the movant’s statutory penalty at the time of
        sentencing.” Id. That is true—both because the finding was not
        made until years after Allen was sentenced, and because Allen’s
        sentencing took place after the Supreme Court clarified in
        Apprendi that such findings must be made by a jury beyond a
        reasonable doubt if they increase the penalty for a crime beyond
        the otherwise applicable statutory maximum. See id. at 1294–95;
        Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 490.
               To determine Allen’s new statutory sentencing range “as if”
        § 2 of the Fair Sentencing Act “were in effect at the time the
        covered offense was committed,” we used the only drug-quantity
        finding that “could have been used” by the sentencing court to
        determine Allen’s statutory penalties—the jury’s finding that his
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        12                     Opinion of the Court                 20-13074

        offense involved 50 grams or more of crack cocaine. Jones, 962
        F.3d at 1303–04. Under the Fair Sentencing Act, the statutory
        penalty for a drug-trafficking offense involving 50 grams of crack
        cocaine would have been 10 years to life in prison instead of the
        mandatory life sentence Allen received. Id. at 1304; compare 21
        U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A)(iii) (2006), with 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A)(iii)–
        (B)(iii) (2012). Allen, therefore, could have received a lower
        minimum sentence and was eligible for relief under the First Step
        Act. Jones, 962 F.3d at 1304.
               For Jackson, the story was different. Like Allen, Jackson was
        charged with possessing with intent to distribute 50 grams or more
        of crack cocaine. Id. at 1295. The jury found Jackson guilty as
        charged without making any more specific drug-quantity finding.
        Id. Jackson was subject to a mandatory life sentence because his
        offense involved more than 50 grams of crack cocaine and he had
        three prior felony drug offenses. Id.; see also 21 U.S.C.
        § 841(b)(1)(A)(iii) (1994). But Jackson’s sentencing court—unlike
        Allen’s—made a drug-quantity finding at the time of sentencing. It
        found that his offense involved 287 grams of crack cocaine. Jones,
        962 F.3d at 1295.
               Jackson later moved for a reduction of his life sentence
        under the First Step Act. Id. On appeal from the denial of that
        motion, we used the sentencing court’s drug-quantity finding—
        which was above the updated threshold quantity of 280 grams
        established in the Fair Sentencing Act—to determine that Jackson
        would have been subject to a mandatory life sentence even if the
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        20-13074                   Opinion of the Court                              13

        Fair Sentencing Act had been in effect when he committed his
        offense. 3 Id. at 1304. We also said that because Jackson would face
        the same mandatory minimum statutory penalty under the Fair
        Sentencing Act, the district court was not authorized to reduce his
        sentence under the First Step Act. Id.
                Clowers is in the same boat as Jackson. At his sentencing
        proceeding, the sentencing court found that his offense involved
        more than 15 kilograms of crack cocaine, a finding that could have
        been—and in this case was—used to determine whether Clowers
        was subject to the mandatory life sentence under § 848(b). The
        district court was therefore bound by the sentencing court’s drug-
        quantity finding when determining his new statutory penalties for
        purposes of his First Step Act motion.
               Contrary to Clowers’s assertion, the focus at sentencing on
        his Sentencing Guidelines range does not indicate that the court’s
        drug-quantity finding was used only for Guidelines purposes. At

        3 We note that the sentencing court’s drug-quantity finding was not needed to
        determine Jackson’s statutory penalties. His indictment charged a quantity of
        crack cocaine (more than 50 grams) that, when coupled with his prior offenses,
        was sufficient (before the Fair Sentencing Act) to trigger the highest statutory
        penalty, and the jury found him guilty as charged. Jones, 962 F.3d at 1295. But
        according to the prevailing understanding of the law at the time, the court’s
        finding that Jackson’s offense involved 287 grams of crack cocaine “could have
        been used” to determine his statutory penalties at sentencing. Id. at 1303; see
        United States v. Sanchez, 269 F.3d 1250, 1266–67 & n.28 (11th Cir. 2001) (en
        banc) (describing pre-Apprendi practice), abrogated by Alleyne, 570 U.S. at
        103.
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        14                     Opinion of the Court                 20-13074

        the time, the sentencing court generally was required to make
        factual findings relevant to various statutory sentence
        enhancements as well as to the applicable Guidelines range.
        Where both calculations required a drug-quantity finding, a single
        finding by the court could serve both purposes. See, e.g., Chapman
        v. United States, 500 U.S. 453, 455–56 (1991); United States v.
        Sanchez, 269 F.3d 1250, 1270 (11th Cir. 2001) (en banc), abrogated
        by Alleyne, 570 U.S. at 103. It appears that the parties focused on
        the 15-kilogram quantity of crack cocaine that triggered the highest
        Guidelines range because it was the largest quantity that would
        have had any impact on the court’s sentencing calculations.
                We also reject Clowers’s characterization of the sentencing
        court’s finding that his offense involved more than 15 kilograms of
        crack cocaine as a legal finding that his offense involved enough
        drugs to trigger the highest Guidelines range, rather than a factual
        finding. The court’s drug-quantity finding had legal implications,
        of course, as such findings nearly always do. The same can be said
        of a jury verdict that includes a finding that the defendant’s offense
        involved a quantity of drugs above the statutory threshold. But the
        legal significance of the finding does not change its factual nature.
              We conclude, therefore, that the district court correctly used
        the 15-kilogram finding to determine what the statutory penalty
        would have been for Clowers under the Fair Sentencing Act. And
        because this finding would have compelled the sentencing court to
        impose the same mandatory life sentence even if the Fair
        Sentencing Act had been in effect at the time, the district court
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        20-13074              Opinion of the Court                     15

        correctly concluded that it could not reduce Clowers’s sentence
        under the First Step Act.
                                 *      *      *
               Congress enacted the Fair Sentencing Act to reduce
        disparities between prison sentences for future offenses involving
        crack cocaine and powder cocaine. And in the First Step Act,
        Congress decided to extend the same reduction in sentencing
        disparities to past offenses. The language of that statute is
        straightforward—eligible crack offenders can now be resentenced
        “as if” the Fair Sentencing Act had already been in place during
        their original sentencing.
               What Congress did not do is offer a sentence reduction
        below the statutory minimum under the Fair Sentencing Act, or
        vacate drug-quantity findings that would have triggered that
        minimum at the time of the movant’s offense. Though Congress
        could have chosen any number of ways to bring relief to crack-
        cocaine offenders, we must stick with the one it chose. We
        therefore AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.