United States v. Jabar Gibson ( 2011 )


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  •      Case: 10-31085   Document: 00511637836   Page: 1   Date Filed: 10/19/2011
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    October 19, 2011
    No. 10-30852                     Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    SHAWNA TICKLES, also known as Shawna Tickless
    Defendant - Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Louisiana
    No. 10-31085
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    JABAR GIBSON,
    Defendant - Appellant
    Case: 10-31085    Document: 00511637836      Page: 2   Date Filed: 10/19/2011
    Nos. 10-30852
    10-31085
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    Before JONES, Chief Judge, and STEWART and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    The court considered these cases jointly without oral argument because
    they raise a single issue: whether these defendants, who were convicted inter
    alia of possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine, were entitled to be
    sentenced according to the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (“FSA”), Pub. L. No. 111-
    220, 124 Stat 2372, when their illegal conduct preceded the Act but their
    sentencing proceedings occurred post-enactment. The issue is the retroactivity,
    or partial retroactivity, of the FSA, a statute intended by Congress to “restore
    fairness to Federal cocaine sentencing,” 124 Stat. at 2372, by reducing the
    previous 100:1 ratio between thresholds for sentences for crack and powder
    cocaine offenses. We are one among many circuit courts that have thoroughly
    vetted this issue, and we have little to add to the discussions of others. As will
    be seen below, we side with those courts that have denied retroactive
    application.
    The defendants in these unrelated cases, Shawna Tickles and Jabar
    Gibson, were each sentenced to the statutory minimum of 120 months for
    possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine. Tickles was convicted by a
    jury for possession with intent to distribute 50 grams of crack cocaine and she
    was sentenced to the pre-FSA statutory minimum of 120 months. Jabar Gibson
    pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute five grams of crack cocaine, as
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    well as other drug charges. He was sentenced to the 120 month statutory
    minimum sentence for the crack cocaine offense.
    The unusual procedural posture of these cases should, however, be noted.
    In Gibson’s case, the district court had expressly refused retroactive application
    of the FSA, while Tickles failed to preserve the issue and advocated plain error
    in this court. During the spring of 2011, the United States sought in its
    appellate briefing to uphold the sentences that each court imposed without
    applying the FSA. In August, however, the United States filed in each appeal
    a Supplemental Brief with Request to Remand urging the opposite result: that
    each sentence be vacated and the cases remanded for re-sentencing in
    accordance with the FSA.       To achieve this position in Tickles’s case, the
    government had to take the additional position, contrary to Tickles herself, that
    the retroactivity issue had been properly preserved in the trial court.
    On the merits, the government’s Supplemental Brief had to admit the
    simplicity of its original position, founded largely on the Savings Statute,
    1 U.S.C. § 109, which holds that the repeal of a criminal statute does not
    extinguish liability for violations of that statute unless the repealing statute so
    states expressly.   Because the FSA does not expressly extinguish liability
    computed under the former threshold quantities for crack cocaine offenses, the
    prior law should apply to all conduct that predated enactment of the FSA on
    August 3, 2010. The Supplemental Brief, in contrast, adopts the reasoning of
    a few courts that have applied FSA where the illegal conduct predated its
    enactment but the sentencing occurred afterward. The government now reads
    the “intent” of Congress as creating “a necessary implication” that the revised
    statutory penalties must supersede the former penalty scheme “in all future
    sentencings.” To the government, “the analysis [now] turns on much more than
    the presence or absence of an express statement extinguishing incurred
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    liability.”   Needless to add, the appellant’s briefs, written before the
    government’s supplemental briefs, generally accord with the new analysis.
    This court has been influenced, if not bound, by our prior determination
    that the FSA was not retroactively applicable, despite its beneficent intentions,
    to conduct that occurred pre-enactment. United States v. Doggins, 
    633 F.3d 379
    ,
    384 (5th Cir. 2011). Doggins reflected the common view of circuit courts. United
    States v. Lewis, 
    625 F.3d 1224
    , 1228 (10th Cir. 2010); United States v. Brewer,
    
    624 F.3d 900
    , 909 n.7 (8th Cir. 2010); United States v. Bell, 
    624 F.3d 803
    , 814-15
    (7th Cir. 2010); United States v. Gomez, 
    621 F.3d 1343
    , 1346 (11th Cir. 2010)
    (per curiam); United States v. Carradine, 
    621 F.3d 575
    , 580 (6th Cir. 2010). We
    have considered carefully the opinions of circuits that have spoken more recently
    to the question of the FSA’s retroactivity. See United States v. Dixon, 
    648 F.3d 195
    , 199-200 (3rd Cir. 2011); United States v. Rojas, 
    645 F.3d 1234
    , 1237-38
    (11th Cir. 2011); United States v. Douglas, 
    644 F.3d 39
    , 42-46 (1st Cir. 2011);
    United States v. Fisher, 
    635 F.3d 336
    , 339-40 (7th Cir. 2011); United States v.
    Acoff, 
    634 F.3d 200
    , 202-03 (2d Cir. 2011); Unites States v. Spires, 
    628 F.3d 1049
    ,
    1055 (8th Cir. 2011). Having done so, we are persuaded by those that have
    relied heavily on Section 109 and its application to this statute, which fails to
    contain an express statement repealing the prior sentencing structure
    retroactively. See 
    Fisher, 635 F.3d at 340-41
    ; 
    Acoff, 634 F.3d at 202-03
    ; 
    Spires, 628 F.3d at 1055
    ; see also United States v. Holcomb, No. 11-1558, 
    2011 WL 3795170
    (7th Cir. Aug. 24, 2011) (Judge Easterbrook, denying rehearing en
    banc). We conclude that the penalties prescribed by the FSA do not apply to
    federal criminal sentencing for illegal conduct that preceded the FSA’s
    enactment.1
    1
    As to Tickles, this court determines the standard of review for ourselves. United
    States v. Molina-Solorio, 
    577 F.3d 300
    , 303 (5th Cir. 2009). There was no error, much less
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    The sentences imposed by the district courts in each of these cases are
    AFFIRMED.
    plain error, in the district court’s sentencing decision. United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    (1993).
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    CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    These cases present a straightforward question of statutory interpretation:
    whether Congress intended that all federal cocaine offenders immediately
    receive fair sentences, or whether Congress intended that a subset of federal
    cocaine offenders receive unfair sentences merely on the basis of the date and
    time of their underlying offenses. To conclude the latter is not only unfair, but
    inconsistent with all of the congressional deliberation that preceded the final
    passage of the Fair Sentencing Act. Moreover, the panel majority, and the
    circuits which support its view, unduly hinder the amelioration of a chronic
    injustice. For the following reasons, I dissent from the approach taken by the
    majority.
    The Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 has increased the amount of crack cocaine
    involved in a federal drug offense that is necessary to trigger mandatory
    minimum penalties under 21 U.S.C. § 841. In United States v. Doggins, 
    633 F.3d 379
    (5th Cir. 2011), we held that the Fair Sentencing Act does not apply
    retroactively to persons sentenced prior to the Act’s enactment. The issue in
    these cases, which was left over from Doggins, is whether defendants whose
    cocaine offenses were committed prior to the enactment of the Act, but who were
    sentenced following the enactment of the Act, should receive reduced penalties
    pursuant to the Fair Sentencing Act’s revisions.
    It is rare that Congress’s intent is as easily discernible as it is here. The
    ameliorative purpose of the Fair Sentencing Act is reflected most obviously in its
    name. Moreover, as expressed in its preamble, the Fair Sentencing Act’s explicit
    purpose is “[t]o restore fairness to Federal cocaine sentencing.” Underlying this
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    purpose was Congress’s determination that the prior 100:1 sentencing ratio for
    crack cocaine offenses to powder cocaine offenses was fundamentally unfair. In
    addition to its other provisions, the Act granted emergency authority for the
    United States Sentencing Commission to revise the federal sentencing
    guidelines in accordance with the Act within 90 days.
    “The necessary inference is that the will of Congress was for the FSA to
    halt unfair sentencing practices immediately.” United States v. Rojas, 
    645 F.3d 1234
    , 1240 (11th Cir. 2011). As expressed by the district court in United States
    v. Whitfield, “[t]his court is hesitant to impose a sentence that Congress has
    deemed unfair. Holding otherwise appears to this court as illogical.” No. 2:10-
    CR-13, 
    2010 WL 5387701
    , at *2 (N.D. Miss. 2010). “That Congress wanted the
    new ‘fair’ sentences to apply to everyone sentenced after the Fair Sentencing Act
    became law, not just to some, is the necessary implication of what it did.” United
    States v. Holcomb, No. 11-1558, 
    2011 WL 3795170
    , at *17 (7th Cir. 2011)
    (Williams, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc).
    In support of the conclusion that the Fair Sentencing Act should not apply
    to all federal cocaine offenders sentenced after its enactment, the majority relies
    on the general savings statute, 1 U.S.C. § 109. The Supreme Court, however,
    has explained that the savings statute “cannot justify a disregard of the will of
    Congress as manifested, either expressly or by necessary implication, in a
    subsequent enactment.” Great N. Ry. Co. v. United States, 
    208 U.S. 452
    , 465
    (1908).
    All that can be said in favor of punishing under the old law
    defendants not yet sentenced when the new one took effect is that
    if Congress were omnicompetent it would, out of an abundance of
    caution, have “expressly” directed that sentences imposed after the
    new law went into effect would be subject to the guideline
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    amendments that the new law ordained. . . . Such questionable
    thinking can lead to gratuitously silly results in particular cases—
    these cases, for example.
    Holcomb, 
    2011 WL 3795170
    , at *19 (Posner, J., dissenting from denial of
    rehearing en banc).
    The will of Congress, as expressed in the Fair Sentencing Act’s substance,
    preamble, and title, will be disregarded by the courts’ continued imposition of
    severe penalties which Congress has explicitly determined to be unfair.
    Accordingly, I agree with a number of our sister circuits that the provisions of
    the Fair Sentencing Act apply to all federal cocaine offenders sentenced after the
    statute’s enactment, regardless of whether the underlying offense conduct
    occurred prior to the Act’s enactment. See United States v. Douglas, 
    644 F.3d 39
    (1st Cir. 2011); Rojas, 
    645 F.3d 1234
    (11th Cir. 2011); United States v. Dixon,
    
    648 F.3d 195
    (3d Cir. 2011).
    The majority opinion would continue to impose disproportionately harsh
    sentences of imprisonment on many crack cocaine offenders, despite Congress’s
    clear and obvious determination that such penalties are unfair. For this reason,
    I respectfully dissent.
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