United States v. Sumler ( 2021 )


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  •                                     UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.                                      Criminal Action No. 95-154-2 (BAH)
    CALVIN SUMLER,                                                 Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell
    Defendant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Defendant Calvin Sumler led “the so-called Fern Street Crew, an organization which
    distributed crack cocaine for seven years in the District of Columbia and Maryland” between
    1988 and 1995. United States v. Sumler, 
    136 F.3d 188
    , 189 (D.C. Cir. 1998). The organization
    was responsible for distributing, according to a conservative estimate, over 50 kilograms of crack
    cocaine, Presentence Investigation Report (“PSR”) ¶¶ 154–55, ECF No. 685 (sealed), and its
    activities “were facilitated by its use of violence to defend territory from rival drug dealers and
    subvert the efforts of the criminal justice system,” Sumler, 
    136 F.3d at 189
    . 1 Eventually, law
    enforcement’s investigation into the violence and drug dealing by this organization led to the
    indictment of defendant and eleven of his co-conspirators, Indictment, ECF No. 4. In 1996, after
    a four-month trial against defendant and four co-defendants, a jury found the defendants guilty of
    “numerous offenses, including murder, armed robbery, kidnapping, and drug and RICO
    2
    conspiracies.” 
    Id. at 189
    .          Defendant himself was “convicted of one count of premeditated first
    1
    The PSR is filed under seal and unsealed to the limited extent that sealed content is referenced in this
    Memorandum Opinion to explain the Court’s reasoning. See United States v. Reeves, 
    586 F.3d 20
    , 22 n.1 (D.C. Cir.
    2009).
    2
    Defendant was joined at trial with co-defendants Michael Jefferson, Gerald Smith, Vernon Washington,
    and Larry Walker, Jr., while seven other defendants entered guilty pleas pursuant to cooperation agreements. See
    Gov’t’s Suppl. Resp. to Court’s June 9, 2021 Order at 5-7, ECF No. 675 (identifying the following defendants as
    entering cooperation agreements: Antonio Avery, Kahron Sarter, Raymond Harris, George Townsend, Gregory
    Alston, Aaron Rogers, and Verna Perry).
    1
    degree murder while armed,” 
    id.
     at 189 n.2, as well as racketeering conspiracy, continuing
    criminal enterprise, and drug trafficking offenses. The same year, defendant was sentenced to
    life in prison without the possibility of parole. 3
    Now, twenty-five years later, and with evidence of rehabilitation, defendant seeks a
    reduction in his sentence to time served or, at most, to 40 years’ imprisonment. Def.’s Suppl.
    Mot. to Reduce Sentence Pursuant to the First Step Act of 2018 (“Def.’s 404 Mot.”) at 22, ECF
    No. 623. To this end, defendant has two pending motions to reduce his sentence under separate
    statutory provisions. 4 First, defendant moves to reduce his sentence under Section 404 of the
    First Step Act of 2018 (“First Step Act”), Pub. L. 115-391, 
    132 Stat. 5194
    , which makes
    retroactively available the more lenient penalties for certain crack cocaine offenses enacted in the
    Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, Pub. L. 111-220, 
    124 Stat. 2372
    . Def.’s 404 Mot. Second,
    defendant moves for compassionate release, under 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(A)(i), citing his
    chronic medical conditions and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Def.’s Emergency Mot. for
    Compassionate Release (“Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release”), ECF No. 648.
    For the reasons discussed below, defendant’s motion for a reduced sentence under
    Section 404 of the First Step Act is denied since one of his convictions, for which he is serving a
    life sentence, is not covered by Section 404 of the First Step Act. His motion for compassionate
    release is also denied.
    3
    This case was directly reassigned to the undersigned Chief Judge in October 2017, Min. Entry (Oct. 18,
    2017), in accordance with the then-effective Local Rules, which provided for the Chief Judge to “dispose of matters
    requiring immediate action in criminal cases already assigned to any judge of the Court if that judge is unavailable
    or otherwise unable to hear the matters.” D.D.C. LCrR 57.14(6). The Local Rules now provide that
    “[r]eassignment of any criminal case, and matters arising thereform, previously assigned to a judge who no longer
    sits on the district court shall be made by random assignment.” LCrR 57.13(b) (amended Nov. 9, 2017).
    4
    Defendant previously filed pro se versions of each of these motions. See Def.’s Mot. Seeking Retroactive
    Application of the Fair Sentencing Act in Light of the First Step Act of 2018, ECF No. 601 (“Def.’s Pro Se 404
    Mot.”); Def.’s Mot. to Reduce Sentence Pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(A)(i) for Immediate Release (“Def.’s
    Pro Se Mot. Compassionate Release”), ECF No. 641. The pro se motions were superseded by the motions filed by
    counsel and therefore denied as moot. See Min. Order (June 9, 2021).
    2
    I.      BACKGROUND
    As necessary context for the resolution of the pending motions, summarized below is
    background regarding the defendant’s offense conduct, convictions, and sentences, largely drawn
    from the defendant’s original sentencing hearing in 1996 and related documents, as well as
    judicial decisions in this case. It is followed by an overview of the procedural history since the
    filing of the pending motions, including the testimony presented at a June 9, 2021, hearing
    requested by defendant, and post-hearing supplemental filings by both parties.
    A.        Defendant’s Convictions
    Defendant was a leader of the Fern Street Crew, “an organization which distributed crack
    cocaine for seven years in the District of Columbia and Maryland.” Sumler, 
    136 F.3d at 189
    .
    “The Crew’s activities were facilitated by its use of violence to defend territory from rival drug
    dealers and subvert the efforts of the criminal justice system.” 
    Id.
     Defendant purchased
    kilogram quantities of cocaine and then provided crack cocaine to others to distribute. PSR
    ¶¶ 122–152. Defendant was convicted of killing one person, Anthony Hinton, 
    id.
     ¶¶ 84–87, and
    his organization extensively used “violence to defend territory from rival drug dealers,” Sumler,
    
    136 F.3d at 189
    .
    In July 1995, defendant was charged in a 61-count indictment with 11 co-defendants.
    5
    Indictment.       Following a four-month trial, a jury found defendant guilty of the following eleven
    of the thirteen counts with which he was charged, with those counts of conviction carrying the
    penalties indicated at that time:
    •    Count 1: Conspiracy to Distribute and Possess with Intent to Distribute 50 Grams or More of
    Cocaine Base (
    21 U.S.C. §§ 846
     and 841(b)(1)(A)(iii)) (“Crack Conspiracy”)
    Penalty: mandatory minimum 10 years to life imprisonment;
    5
    A superseding indictment was filed in January 1996, Superseding Indictment, ECF No. 192, and a retyped
    superseding indictment was filed on July 26, 1996, Retyped Superseding Indictment, ECF No. 341.
    3
    •   Count 2: Continuing Criminal Enterprise (
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (a) and (b)) (“Super CCE”)
    Penalty: mandatory minimum sentence of life imprisonment;
    •   Count 3: Conspiracy to Participate in Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organization (
    18 U.S.C. § 1962
    (d) and 1963(a)) (“RICO conspiracy”)
    Penalty: life imprisonment;
    •   Count 4: First Degree Murder While Armed (22 
    D.C. Code §§ 2401
    , 3202 & 105)
    Penalty: 20 years to life imprisonment;
    •   Count 6: Continuing Criminal Enterprise Murder (
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e)(l)(A)) (“CCE
    murder”)
    Penalty: mandatory minimum 20 years to life imprisonment;
    •   Count 19: Use of a Firearm During and in Relation to a Crime of Violence or a Drug
    Trafficking Crime “on or about November 1, 1991 (CCE Murder of Anthony Hinton)” (
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c))
    Penalty: mandatory consecutive 5 years’ imprisonment;
    •   Count 29: Possession of a Firearm During a Crime of Violence (22 
    D.C. Code § 3204
    (b))
    Penalty: mandatory minimum 5 years to 15 years’ imprisonment;
    •   Counts 38 and 39: Distribution of Cocaine Base (21 U.S.C. §§ 84l(a)(l) and
    841(b)(l)(B)(iii))
    Penalty: mandatory minimum 5 years to 40 years’ imprisonment on each count; and
    •   Counts 40 and 41: Distribution of Cocaine Base (21 U.S.C. §§ 84l(a)(l) and
    841(b)(l)(A)(iii))
    Penalty: mandatory minimum 10 years to life imprisonment on each count.
    Judgment and Commitment Order, ECF No. 445; PSR ¶¶ 250–258; Verdict Form, ECF No.
    343. 6
    Pertinent to resolution of the pending motions is the quantity of narcotics found to be
    involved in each of the eight narcotics-related counts (Counts 1–3, 6, and 38–41). The jury
    instructions on Count 1 and Counts 38–41 did not require the jury to find a specific quantity of
    crack cocaine, instructing instead that “the actual amount of a controlled substance involved or
    the amount alleged in the indictment is not an element of this Count,” Trial Tr. (July 30, 1996) at
    29:12–14, ECF No. 393 (referring to Count One), and that “[t]he government need not prove that
    6
    Defendant was acquitted of Counts 5 and 7, charging him with First Degree Felony Murder and
    Kidnapping While Armed, respectively. Verdict Form at 5.
    4
    the defendant distributed any particular numerical amount of cocaine base,” id. at 123:22–24
    (referring to Counts 38–41).
    For Count 2, the Super CCE drug charge, the jury was instructed that an element of the
    offense was that “the enterprise was involved in the distribution of quantities of a mixture or
    substance containing a detectable amount of cocaine base . . . and the amount of said mixture and
    substance was 1.5 kilograms or more.” Id. at 54:16–20. On that count, the jury found the
    defendant was guilty of the charged drug conspiracy and had illegally distributed crack cocaine
    on six occasions, including the four that formed the basis for drug distribution in Counts 38–41.
    Verdict Form at 2–3.
    On Count 3, the RICO conspiracy charge, the jury found that defendant engaged in
    numerous predicate acts, including a conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance, unlawfully
    distributing crack cocaine on six occasions, and murdering Anthony Hinton. Id. at 4–5.
    On Count 6, the CCE murder charge, the jury found that defendant committed the
    “[i]ntentional murder of Anthony Hinton, while working in furtherance of a continuing criminal
    enterprise.” Id. at 5. The jury had been instructed that an element of the offense was that “the
    defendant committed the killings or participated in the killings while engaged in or working in
    furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise.” Trial Tr. (July 30, 1996) at 85:5–7. The court
    had further instructed that “the government need not prove that the continuing criminal
    enterprise was responsible for the distribution of any particular or minimum amount of crack as
    required for Count 2 . . . [but that in] order to prove this element, it is sufficient for the
    government to prove that the defendant killed . . . the decedent while the defendant was engaged
    in or working in furtherance of a continued criminal enterprise.” Id. at 85:12–20.
    5
    B.       Defendant’s Sentencing
    Based on the evidence at trial, the PSR estimated that the defendant was responsible for
    distributing at least 50 kilograms of crack cocaine during the seven-year course of the
    conspiracy, PSR ¶ 155, but also indicated this quantity “substantially underestimate[d]” the
    amount of cocaine that defendant was responsible for distributing, id. ¶ 121. Under the 1995
    edition of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual, id. ¶ 192, the PSR grouped Counts 1, 2, and 3
    (RICO drug overt acts), and Counts 38–41 under U.S.S.G. §3D1.2(d), id. ¶ 202 (“Group One”),
    and grouped Count 3 (RICO murder overt act) and Count 6 under §3D1.2(a), id. ¶ 208 (“Group
    Two”). Based on the trial testimony, distribution of over 50 kilograms of crack cocaine was
    attributed to defendant, which quantity provided a base offense level of 38, under U.S.S.G.
    § 2D1.1(a)(3)(c)(1). Id. ¶ 202. Defendant contested this quantity of drugs attributed to him in
    the PSR, contending that he was only responsible for the drugs involved in Counts 38, 39, 40,
    and 41, which would amount to 134.86 grams. Sent’g Hr’g Tr. (Nov. 18, 1996) at 2:23–3:4,
    ECF No. 519; PSR at 50. 7 In response, the government pointed out that defendant’s position
    was inconsistent with the jury’s conviction on Count 2, which required a finding that defendant’s
    enterprise was responsible for distributing over 1.5 kilograms of crack cocaine, see Sent’g Hr’g
    Tr. at 2:19–24, 4:23–25, and the court concurred, stating, “I’m going to find that it’s over 50
    kilos,” id. at 5:16–17).
    For Group One, i.e., Counts 1, 2, 3 (RICO drug overt acts), and 38–41, four levels were
    added to reflect the guideline for Super CCE, which was the count producing the highest offense
    7
    For the four distribution counts, Count 38 charged unlawful distribution of 13.64 grams of crack on June
    23, 1994; Count 39 charged unlawful distribution of 12.42 grams of crack on July 22, 1994; Count 40 charged
    unlawful distribution of 53.06 grams of crack on August 11, 1994; and Count 41 charged unlawful distribution of
    55.74 grams of crack on August 19, 1994, which together, totals 134.86 grams. Retyped Superseding Indictment at
    43–44.
    6
    level in Group One, and therefore driving the resulting offense level to 42. PSR ¶ 202; U.S.S.G.
    § 2D1.5(a)(1). Then two levels were added for firearm possession, under U.S.S.G.
    § 2D1.1(b)(1), and an additional two levels for obstruction of justice, under U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1,
    resulting in an offense level of 46. Id. ¶¶ 203, 206, 207. For Group Two, i.e., Counts 3 (RICO
    murder overt act) and 6 (CCE murder), the PSR calculated a base offense level of 43, under
    U.S.S.G. § 2A1.1, and added four levels for defendant’s leadership role in the offense, under
    U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(a), for an adjusted offense level of 47. Id. ¶¶ 208, 211, 213. After a multiple-
    count adjustment, the PSR calculated the total offense level to be 49. Id. ¶ 218. With a criminal
    history score of 0, defendant’s criminal history category was I and his mandatory sentencing
    range under the then-applicable Guidelines was life. Id. ¶¶ 222, 259.
    At sentencing, the court vacated Count 1 (Crack Conspiracy) because the conduct that
    formed the basis of that conviction was identical to the conduct establishing a necessary element
    of Count 2 (Super CCE). Min. Entry (Nov. 18, 1996); see also Sent’g Hr’g Tr. at 72:24–73:1.
    The sentencing judge adopted the PSR drug quantity estimate, finding defendant was responsible
    for “more than 50 kilos” of crack. Sent’g Hr’g Tr. at 28:3–4. Defendant was then sentenced to
    life imprisonment on Counts 2, 3, 6, 40, and 41, to be followed by five years of supervised
    release “if [he] should at any point be released,” and to 40 years of imprisonment on Counts 38
    and 39, to be followed by four years of supervised release, all to run concurrently. Min. Entry
    (Nov. 18, 1996); Sent’g Hr’g Tr. at 73:2–18. 8
    8
    Defendant was also sentenced, on Count 4, to 20 years to life imprisonment; on Count 29, to 5 to 15 years’
    imprisonment, to run concurrently to one another and to all other counts; and, on Count 19, 5 years’ imprisonment,
    “to run consecutively to all other counts.” Judgment and Commitment Order at 3. The parties agree that these
    counts are not at issue in seeking a sentence reduction, since the sentences on Counts 4 and 29 are already served
    and Count 19 must run consecutively to other counts. See Def.’s 404 Mot. at 14 (“Exercising discretion under the
    First Step Act to remedy Mr. Sumler’s life sentence, this Court should impose a reduced sentence of 20 years on
    Counts 2, 3, 6, 38, 39, 40, and 41, concurrent to the sentences already imposed on Counts 4 and 29, and consecutive
    to the 5 year sentence imposed on Count 19, for a total sentence of 25 years of imprisonment.”); Gov’t’s Opp’n to
    7
    On appeal, defendant’s convictions were affirmed by the D.C. Circuit, see Sumler, 
    136 F.3d at 192
    , and his subsequent collateral challenges to his convictions were denied, see Order
    (Jan. 13, 2000), ECF No. 548; Order (Mar. 5, 2018), ECF No. 596. He remains incarcerated in
    the custody of the Bureau of Prisons serving a life sentence.
    C.       Defendant’s Pending Motions and Hearing
    Now, having spent over 25 years in prison, defendant seeks a sentence reduction to “25
    years, and no more than forty years.” Def.’s 404 Mot. at 22, 37. Defendant, proceeding pro se,
    first filed for relief under the First Step Act on March 7, 2019, Def.’s Pro Se 404 Mot., and that
    same day the Court ordered the government to respond, see Min. Order (Mar. 7, 2019). Pursuant
    to the Court’s Standing Order appointing the Office of the Federal Public Defender (“FPD”) to
    represent indigent defendants in connection with motions under the First Step Act, see Standing
    Order In Re First Step Act of 2018 (Public Law No. 115-391) Retroactive Application of Fair
    Sentencing Act (Jan. 24, 2019), the government conferred with the FPD and the parties proposed
    a briefing schedule whereby defendant, now represented, would file a supplemental motion
    “within 5 months,” given the complexity of the case. Joint Status Rep., ECF No. 608. What
    began as a seven-month long briefing schedule, see Min. Order (Apr. 29, 2019), eventually took
    eighteen months to complete, with defendant requesting, and the Court granting, three extensions
    of time to file his supplemental motion and reply, see Min. Order (Sept. 20, 2019); Min. Order
    (Nov. 20, 2019); Min. Order (Aug. 10, 2020), and the government seeking, and the Court
    Def.’s Suppl. Mot. to Reduce Sentence (“Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n”) at 8, ECF No. 637 (“[Defendant] does not assert that
    he is eligible based on count 4 (first-degree murder while armed), count 19 (§ 924(c)), and count 29 (PFCOV); the
    government agrees that the defendant is not eligible based on these counts.”). Indeed, the First Step Act does not
    authorize “reductions of already-completed sentences.” United States v. Winston, No. 1:95-cr-7 (RCL), 
    2020 WL 7342620
    , at *1 (D.D.C. Dec. 14, 2020) (internal quotations omitted); see also United States v. Martin, 
    974 F.3d 124
    ,
    138, 140 (2d Cir. 2020) (holding that “[t]he First Step Act does not authorize district courts to reduce sentences for
    covered offenses where those sentences have been fully served,” explaining that “[t]he text of the statute permits
    only the ‘impos[ition] of a reduced sentence,’ from which we cannot also imply an authorization to reduce a term of
    imprisonment that has already been served.”).
    8
    granting, four deadline extensions to file its opposition to defendant’s motion, see Min. Order
    (Jan. 29, 2020); Min. Order (Apr. 2, 2020); Min. Order (May 14, 2020); Min. Order (July 13,
    2020). Scheduled briefing was finally complete on October 30, 2020, nineteen months after
    defendant first filed his pro se motion. Def.’s Reply in Supp. of Mot. to Reduce Sentence
    Pursuant to the First Step Act of 2018 (“Def.’s 404 Reply”), ECF No. 644.
    Over the course of briefing the First Step Act motion, defendant filed letters with the
    Court asking, for example, for a new attorney to address his case more quickly, see Def.’s Apr.
    16, 2019 Letter, ECF No. 607, to which the Court responded, see Min. Order (Apr. 29, 2019)
    (denying defendant’s request for a new attorney given the “unlikel[ihood]” that new counsel
    could file the supplement sooner). Along with the scheduled briefing, defendant also filed pro se
    a supplemental motion arguing for a reduction in sentence based on his conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c), see Def.’s Pro Se Suppl. Mot., ECF No. 636, and a second, counseled
    supplemental motion, with additional exhibits, for the same relief, see Def.’s 2d Suppl. to Reply
    in Supp. of Section 404 Mot. (“Def.’s 2d Suppl. 404 Reply”), ECF No. 666. 9
    Before briefing on the First Step Act motion was complete, defendant also filed a pro se
    motion for compassionate release in September 2020. Def.’s Pro Se Mot. Compassionate
    Release. FPD then filed a supplemental, counseled motion on November 12, 2020. Def.’s Mot.
    9
    In his pro se supplemental motion, defendant relied on United States v. Davis, 
    139 S.Ct. 2319
    , 2336 (2019)
    (holding the residual clause of 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c)(3)(B) “unconstitutionally vague”), to seek “permission to present
    this issue” challenging his conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c). Def.’s Pro Se Suppl. Mot. at 1. Defendant was
    charged under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 924
    (c)(1) and (c)(2) for using a weapon in connection with the CCE murder charged in
    Count 6, see Retyped Superseding Indictment at 2, 40, which is defined as a “drug trafficking crime” under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c)(2). Defendant’s conviction thus involves only the first two subsections of § 924(c), which were not
    at issue in Davis. Defendant does not pursue this challenge to Count 19 in his briefing for a sentence reduction
    under the First Step Act, see Def.’s 404 Mot. at 14 (“to remedy Mr. Sumler’s life sentence, this Court should impose
    a reduced sentence of 20 years on Counts 2, 3, 6, 38, 39, 40, and 41, concurrent to the sentences already imposed on
    Counts 4 and 29, and consecutive to the 5 year sentence imposed on Count 19, for a total sentence of 25 years of
    imprisonment”). Furthermore, the Fair Sentencing Act did not amend the penalty section of § 924(c), so it is not a
    covered offense under the First Step Act. See Terry v. United States, 
    141 S.Ct. 1858
    , 1863 (2021). This request is
    therefore denied.
    9
    Compassionate Release. After deadline extensions were granted to both parties, see Min. Order
    (Nov. 12, 2020); Min. Order (Dec. 1, 2020); Min. Order (Dec. 7, 2020), briefing on the
    compassionate release motion was completed on December 14, 2020, although defendant
    subsequently filed two supplemental pleadings with additional exhibits. See Def.’s Suppl.
    Evidence in Supp. of Compassionate Release (“Def.’s 1st Suppl. Evidence Supp. Compassionate
    Release”), ECF No. 656; Def.’s Notice of Suppl. Authority and Suppl. Evidence Supp.
    Compassionate Release (“Def.’s Notice and 2d Suppl. Supp. Compassionate Release”), ECF No.
    667. Over the course of briefing this compassionate release motion, defendant also filed three
    additional letters disputing his conviction for Anthony Hinton’s murder and asserting his
    innocence, see Def.’s Sept. 21, 2020 Letter to Court, ECF No. 654; Def.’s Nov. 17, 2020 Letter
    to Court, ECF No. 653; Def.’s Dec. 28, 2020 Letter to Court, ECF No. 659, which, along with
    the hearing testimony, ultimately prompted the Court to request additional information regarding
    the evidentiary basis for defendant’s conviction of Anthony Hinton’s murder, see Min. Order
    (June 9, 2021).
    Given the violence, including murder, associated with defendant’s offense conduct and
    convictions, and defendant’s repeated requests for a hearing, see, e.g., Def.’s 404 Mot. at 42;
    Def.’s 404 Reply at 23; Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release at 63; Def.’s Reply in Supp. Of
    Emergency Mot. for Compassionate Release (“Def.’s Reply Supp. Compassionate Release”) at
    30, ECF No. 652, the Court sought confirmation from the government about compliance “with
    the applicable provisions of 
    18 U.S.C. § 3771
     regarding the rights of crime victims, particularly
    with respect to the murder victim.” Min. Order (Mar. 1, 2021); see also 
    18 U.S.C. § 3771
    (a)(4)
    (granting crime victim “[t]he right to be reasonably heard at any public proceeding in the district
    court involving release, . . . sentencing, or any parole proceeding”); 
    id.
     §3771(c)(1)(requiring
    10
    prosecutors to “make their best efforts to see that crime victims are notified of, and accorded, the
    right described in subsection (a)”). In addition, in light of a factual assertion made by defendant
    in his reply supporting his First Step Act motion about the government’s pre-trial plea offer, see
    Def.’s 404 Reply at 23, which assertion was not otherwise supported in the record, the Court
    asked the government “whether it contests that it offered defendant a binding plea agreement of
    30 years of imprisonment before he went to trial.” Min. Order (Mar. 1, 2021).
    In response to the Court’s inquiry about compliance with § 3771, the government
    indicated that “due to an inadvertent oversight” it had not contacted defendant’s victims or their
    surviving family members regarding his compassionate release motion and requested more time
    to comply with its statutory obligations under § 3771. Gov’t’s Resp. to Court’s Mar. 1, 2021
    Min. Order at 2, ECF No. 660. Eventually, the government advised that about fifteen victims or
    survivors of defendant’s conspiracy had been identified and would be notified of the pendency of
    the motions to provide any victim impact statement. Gov’t’s Resp. to Apr. 23, 2021 Order at 3–
    4, ECF No. 670. No victim impact statement was submitted.
    As to defendant’s assertion regarding a plea offer, the government indicated that one of
    the trial prosecutors had been contacted and “recalled that a plea offer was made to this
    defendant . . . pursuant to Rule 11(c)(1)(C)” but “was unable to recall the exact terms of the
    plea” and “did not have 100% confidence in his recollections.” Gov’t’s Further Resp. to Court’s
    Mar. 1, 2021 Min. Order at 3, ECF No. 662. The government was unable “to locate any copy of
    any written plea offer made to defendant” in the closed trial files that it had been able to retrieve,
    and asked for another extension to continue to review. Id. at 3–4. The government never located
    any reference to a plea offer in the preserved trial documents. Gov’t’s 2d Suppl. Resp. to Court’s
    Mar. 1, 2021 Min. Order, ECF No. 664. Defendant then supplemented his position with a
    11
    declaration from defendant’s trial attorney regarding the plea offer. Def.’s Suppl. to Reply in
    Supp. of Section 404 Mot., ECF No. 665.
    In the wake of the D.C. Circuit’s decision in United States v. White, 
    984 F.3d 76
     (D.C.
    Cir. 2020), defendant, in a supplemental filing, insisted that he was entitled to a hearing before
    his First Step Act motion was decided. Def.’s 2d Suppl. 404 Reply at 3. Indeed, while every
    Circuit to address this issue has held that Section 404 does not require a full resentencing
    hearing, see United States v. Easter, 
    975 F.3d 318
    , 326 (3d Cir. 2020) (collecting cases); see also
    United States v. Smith, 
    982 F.3d 106
    , 113 (2d Cir. 2020) (per curiam) (“[A] district court is not
    categorically required to hold a hearing at which the defendant is present before denying a
    motion for a sentence reduction under Section 404.”), this Court acknowledged that White
    contained language suggesting otherwise, Min. Order (Apr. 23, 2021) (quoting White, 984 F.3d
    at 81, that “[i]t is important that [defendants] be given full and fair hearings on their claims to
    ensure that the goals of the [First Step] Act are met”). Noting that “defendant [had] previously
    conceded that a hearing on his motion was “not required,” Min. Order (Apr. 23, 2021) (citing
    Def.’s 404. Mot. at 42), but appeared to take the contrary position in his most recent filing, id.,
    the Court directed the parties to clarify their position on the necessity of a hearing and provide
    additional specified information about the evidence to be presented at such a hearing that had not
    already been presented in extensive briefing and exhibits, id.
    Defendant responded that “a full resentencing hearing” was not required but “should” be
    held. Def.’s Resp. to Court’s Apr. 23, 2021 Min. Order at 1, ECF No. 668. The government
    tersely recommended that the Court hold a hearing “if it believes that such a hearing would be
    helpful in the exercise of the Court’s discretion . . . .” Gov’t’s Resp. to Apr. 23, 2021 Order at 3.
    The parties were then directed to address at a hearing various issues raised by defendant’s
    12
    motions, including (1) the efforts made by the government to contact the victims and survivors it
    had identified, Min. Order (May 4, 2021); (2) who those victims and survivors were, id.; (3) how
    those victims and survivors were affected by defendant’s actions or the conspiracy in which he
    was involved, id.; and (4) information relevant to the Court’s consideration of 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a)(6) (“avoid[ing] unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar
    records who have been found guilty of similar conduct”), in particular, for each of defendant’s
    co-defendants, the sentence imposed for each count of conviction, role in the criminal enterprise
    in comparison to defendant, and current incarceration status, Min. Order (June 7, 2021).
    At the hearing requested by defendant and held on June 9, 2021, defendant testified,
    along with six other witnesses. Defendant stood by his earlier claim that he “did not kill,
    command, or induce the murder of Anthony Hinton” and that his conviction for that offense was
    a “mountain of lies . . . manufactured” by the government. Def.’s Aug. 22, 2019 Letter to Court,
    ECF No. 616; see also Rough Transcript of Hearing (June 9, 2021) (“June 9, 2021 Hr’g Tr.
    10
    (Rough)”) at 36:20–24.             Other witnesses attested to defendant’s rehabilitation but also
    challenged the basis for defendant’s convictions, including for the murder of Anthony Hinton.
    For example, defendant’s fiancé Yolanda Tyler testified that defendant “is not the type of man to
    commit a crime like [murder],” June 9, 2021 Hr’g Tr. (Rough) at 42:1–3, that at trial “a number”
    of people had “come forth and had to testify and []had lied on him,” 
    id.
     at 44:23–25, and that she
    knew Hinton’s sister, who had told her that “she never believed Calvin had anything to do with”
    her brother’s death, 
    id.
     at 42:16–19, 44:12–19. Defendant’s friend Tommy Walker, who said he
    had been “sentenced to actually three life sentences” and served 25 years before being released,
    10
    All citations to the June 9, 2021, hearing transcript cite to a rough draft of the transcript, since the court
    reporter has not made a final transcript available. Discrepancies in page numbers between the rough and final
    transcripts may exist.
    13
    
    id.
     45:23–25, testified he “felt the same way [defendant] did, . . . 100 percent sure that [he] was
    innocent” and also challenged the convictions due to witnesses being paid for their testimony,
    “saying what the prosecutor wants to hear, [and] fabricating the case.” 
    Id.
     at 47:15–48:9. While
    defendant acknowledged his guilt for, and harm to the community caused by, his drug trafficking
    offenses, 
    id.
     at 33:8–14 (“I’m shamed and embarrassed for selling drugs and I would like to
    make amends for it. I do have first-hand knowledge of the negative effects that drugs have on
    people and society.”), nowhere in defendant’s letters nor at the hearing did he indicate any
    remorse, concern, or sympathy for the violence, including murders and assaults, meted out to
    many individuals by the drug organization he led. In this respect and compounded by his denial
    of guilt for the murder of Anthony Hinton, the hearing undercut, rather than helped demonstrate,
    that defendant had accepted full responsibility for his offense conduct and thereby raised
    questions about his claim that he had been fully rehabilitated and was ready for reentry into the
    community with the appropriate respect for and willingness to comply with the law. See United
    States v. Resto, Nos. 20-3350, 20-3351, 
    2021 WL 5492809
    , at *1, 3 (3d Cir. Nov. 23, 2021)
    (affirming denial of defendants’ First Step Act sentence reduction motions despite defendants’
    “commendable rehabilitation efforts while incarcerated,” citing “their involvement in violent
    crimes” and “that neither defendant had sufficient remorse regarding their criminal conduct,” in
    particular noting that defendants’ letters “neither mentioned their involvement in murder(s) nor
    the devastation that their conduct caused to the victims’ families.”).
    In light of defendant’s adamant denial that he was guilty of murder, the Court asked the
    government to provide a basic overview of the evidence presented at trial supporting defendant’s
    conviction for Hinton’s murder, including the number of witnesses presented and whether there
    were eyewitnesses. June 9, 2021 Hr’g Tr. (Rough) at 21:1–22:21. The government was unable
    14
    to provide this information at the hearing but requested an opportunity to submit supplemental
    briefing. Id.; see also Min. Order (June 9, 2021). 11 The last of that briefing was submitted on
    October 1, 2021, and defendant’s motions are now ripe for resolution.
    11
    Defendant asserts that “[h]e has maintained his innocence from the beginning, and rejected a 30-year plea
    deal for the very reason that it would have required him to plead guilty to the Hinton murder.” Def.’s Reply to
    Gov’t’s Suppl. Resp. at 3, 12, ECF No. 683. In defendant’s view, he should be granted release “irrespective of his
    guilt or innocence of the Hinton murder,” id. at 1, using the authority of the First Step Act to undo the life sentences
    he received for this murder when, as the government correctly points out, he failed to raise his claim of innocence as
    to the Hinton murder either on direct appeal or in his first Section 2255 motion alleging, inter alia, ineffective
    assistance of counsel, see Gov’t’s Suppl. Resp. to Court’s June 9, 2021 Order at 1 n.1. This is an extraordinary
    request. The government summarized the evidence from eight witnesses at trial presented in support of defendant’s
    conviction for the Hinton murder, which was committed on October 31, 1991, and attempted murder the same night
    of Hinton’s brother, Raymond “Biggie” Harris. These witnesses included (1) a bystander who heard gunshots the
    night of the murder and discovered Hinton’s body the next morning; (2) six members of defendant’s drug
    organization (Gregory Alston, Raymond “Biggie” Harris, Aaron Rogers, Ralph Stancil, Johnny Thornton, and
    George Townsend); and (3) Lenwood Brooks, a junkie also accused, like Hinton, of “messing up” the neighborhood
    and interfering with drug sales. Id. at 2-4. This testimony from multiple witnesses (1) relayed defendant’s
    statements that defendant expected Hinton to testify against two other members of defendant’s organization,
    Michael Jefferson and Aaron Rogers; that Hinton’s conduct was interfering with drug sales; that Hinton should be
    killed; that Rogers did not need to worry about Hinton’s testimony; and, on the night of the murder, defendant’s
    statement “Let’s clean up the Avenue tonight,” which Stancil “interpreted as a directive to attack Hinton and others
    who had been ‘messing up’ the neighborhood;” (2) described defendant picking up his 9mm pistol from Thornton
    the night of the murder, as testified to by Thornton, and Stancil’s statements about later meeting with defendant and
    others to find Hinton and Brooks; (3) detailed the actual murder, starting with Stancil tricking Hinton and Brooks
    into getting into a car to drive to an alley, where Stancil pulled Brooks from the car and beat him up, before Brooks
    ran out of the alley, and then defendant shot Hinton, who turned and ran, with defendant chasing him and firing
    several more shots, along with Stancil, who also inculpated himself in the murder by testifying that he, too, fired two
    or three shots at Hinton; (4) described the attempted murder of Hinton’s brother Harris the same night, with
    defendant slashing Harris’ car tires and then waiting on a path that Harris would ordinarily use to walk home, but
    Harris “foiled the plan by driving his car” with the flat tires; and (5) Stancil reporting that, the day after the murder,
    defendant gave Stancil a discount on the regular price for crack cocaine after his participation in Hinton’s murder.
    Id. Defendant disputes that this trial evidence “conclusively establish[es] that Mr. Sumler killed Anthony Hinton,”
    Def.’s Reply to Gov’t’s Suppl. Resp. at 12, relying on what he characterizes as “key inconsistencies presented at
    trial,” id. 6; see also id. 6-12. The fact remains, however, that the jury convicted defendant of Hinton’s murder
    based on consideration of all the trial evidence, which encompassed those cited inconsistencies. Moreover,
    defendant’s blanket denial that he “did not kill, command, or induce the murder of Anthony Hinton,” Def.’s Aug.
    22, 2019 Letter to Court at 1, offers no specific denial of the robust details presented at trial regarding the murder,
    including defendant picking up his gun the night of the murder, the statements attributed to him, his presence at the
    scene of Hinton’s murder with a gun and shooting at Hinton along with Stancil, and rewarding Stancil the next day
    for the successful murder of Hinton, who was perceived as interfering with the drug business and testifying against
    fellow members of the drug organization. In any event, the current procedural posture of this case is not an
    opportunity to relitigate defendant’s murder conviction, which was affirmed on direct appeal, nor does Section 404
    of the First Step Act require such relitigation, notwithstanding defendant’s persistent protestation of his innocence
    for the murder of Hinton. See United States v. Abdul-Ali, No. 19-60694, 
    2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 36565
    , at *4-5 (5th
    Cir. Dec. 10, 2021) (holding that “a ‘modification proceeding’ cannot serve as a vehicle for a ‘collateral attack on a
    sentence long since imposed and affirmed on direct appeal.’” (quoting United States v. Hernandez, 
    645 F.3d 709
    ,
    712 (5th Cir. 2011)).
    15
    II.      DISCUSSION
    Defendant seeks a substantial sentence reduction under two separate sections of the First
    Step Act, with his request for a reduction under Section 404 of that statute addressed first,
    followed by his request for compassionate release under the First Step Act’s amendment to
    
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c).
    A.       Section 404 Motion for Sentence Reduction
    Defendant argues that he is eligible under Section 404 of the First Step Act for a reduced
    aggregate sentence and that a reduced sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment—time served at the
    completion of the briefing of defendant’s motion—is appropriate upon consideration of the
    factors in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a). Def.’s 404 Mot. at 22. 12 The government contends that such a
    reduction is not permitted under Section 404, is unwarranted even if permitted, and should be
    “summarily den[ied].” Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 1. Set out below is a review of the relevant
    provisions of the First Step Act and the parties’ disputes over its application.
    1.       Statutory Background and Parties’ Dispute over Applicability to
    Defendant’s Convictions
    The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 provided three quantity-based penalty ranges for drug
    offenses under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a): ten years to life in prison, five to 40 years in prison, and up to
    20 years in prison, Pub. L. No. 99-570, 
    100 Stat. 3207
    , with the quantities triggering different
    penalty levels varying based on the scheduled substance involved in the offense. “For nearly 25
    years, federal criminal law punished offenses involving crack cocaine far more harshly than
    offenses involving powder cocaine.” United States v. Lawrence, 
    1 F.4th 40
    , 42 (D.C. Cir. 2021).
    12
    Defendant also argues that a sentence of “no more than 40 years” is appropriate, see 
    id.,
     and in reply that a
    sentence of 30 years is appropriate because the government allegedly offered him a binding plea agreement to 30
    years of imprisonment, Def.’s 404 Reply at 23; Def.’s 404 Mot., Ex. J, Decl. of Thomas Abbenate, ECF No. 665-1.
    The analysis below applies generally to defendant’s request for a reduction from his sentences of life imprisonment,
    regardless of the extent of the requested reduction.
    16
    In 2010, “[a]fter two decades of criticism, Congress reduced, but did not eliminate, the crack-to-
    powder disparity in the Fair Sentencing Act” by “‘reduc[ing] the disparity between cocaine base
    and powder cocaine from 100-to-1 to 18-to-1,’” 
    id.
     (quoting White, 984 F.3d at 81–82, other
    citations omitted). Specifically, the Fair Sentencing Act raised the crack-cocaine threshold
    quantities for triggering certain penalty ranges for convictions, under § 841, but did not apply
    these changes retroactively to defendants who had already been sentenced for crack-cocaine
    13
    offenses.        This changed in 2018 with the enactment of the First Step Act.
    The First Step Act was “intended to rectify disproportionate and racially disparate
    penalties” in federal sentencing for crack and powder cocaine offenses. United States v.
    Boulding, 
    960 F.3d 774
    , 782 (6th Cir. 2020); see also United States v. Birt, 
    966 F.3d 257
    , 263
    (3d Cir. 2020) (“The point of the First Step Act was to ameliorate certain penalties, including
    mandatory minimums, attached to drug dealing.”). To this end, section 404 of the First Step Act
    allows defendants to seek reduced sentences if they committed certain “covered offense[s]” prior
    to the enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act. Section 404, titled “Application of Fair Sentencing
    Act,” provides in full:
    (a) DEFINITION OF COVERED OFFENSE.—In this section, the term “covered
    offense” means a violation of a Federal criminal statute, the statutory penalties for which
    were modified by section 2 or 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (Public Law 111–
    220; 
    124 Stat. 2372
    ), that was committed before August 3, 2010.
    (b) DEFENDANTS PREVIOUSLY SENTENCED.—A court that imposed a sentence for
    a covered offense may, on motion of the defendant, the Director of the Bureau of Prisons,
    the attorney for the Government, or the court, 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.
    13
    Congress increased the cocaine base quantity triggering the 5-year minimum in 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (b)(1)(B)
    from five grams to 28 grams, and the quantity triggering the 10-year minimum in § 841(b)(1)(A) from 50 grams to
    280 grams, and the quantity for the catch-all provision in 841(b)(1)(C) was thus increased from amounts under five
    grams to amounts under 28 grams. See Fair Sentencing Act § 2.
    17
    (c) LIMITATIONS.—No court shall entertain a motion made under this section to reduce
    a sentence if the sentence was previously imposed or previously reduced in accordance
    with the amendments made by sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010
    (Public Law 111–220; 
    124 Stat. 2372
    ) or if a previous motion made under this section to
    reduce the sentence was, after the date of enactment of this Act, denied after a complete
    review of the motion on the merits. Nothing in this section shall be construed to require a
    court to reduce any sentence pursuant to this section.
    Eligibility for relief under Section 404 is limited to defendants previously sentenced for
    “a covered offense,” as defined in Section 404(a), and not subject to the “limitations” in Section
    404(c). First Step Act §§ 404(a), (c). For eligible defendants, Section 404(b) authorizes, but
    does not require, a court to exercise discretion to adjust the sentence by “impos[ing] a reduced
    sentence as if sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act . . . were in effect at the time the
    covered offense was committed.” First Step Act § 404(b). The D.C. Circuit has instructed that,
    in determining whether a sentence reduction is warranted for an eligible defendant, Section
    404(b) requires a court to consider not only the 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a) factors, but also “new
    statutory minimum or maximum penalties; current Guidelines; post-sentencing conduct; and
    other relevant information about a defendant’s history and conduct.” Lawrence, 1 F.4th at 44
    (citing White, 984 F.3d at 92–93, and quoting White, 984 F.3d at 90).
    The parties agree that some of defendant’s offenses of conviction are “covered
    offense[s]” within the meaning of Section 404(a) and that defendant is not subject to the
    limitations of Section 404(c). They disagree, however, whether (1) defendant’s RICO
    conspiracy and CCE murder convictions, in Counts 3 and 6, respectively, are “covered
    offense[s]”; (2) the Court has discretion to resentence a defendant on non-covered offenses for
    which a defendant was sentenced along with covered offenses; and, (3) if so, whether this
    discretion should be exercised in this case to impose a reduced sentence. Each issue is discussed
    in turn.
    18
    2.      Agreed-Upon “Covered Offenses”
    Defendant argues that his convictions on each of the counts for which his sentence
    exceeds 20 years—Counts 2, 3, 6, and 38–41—are covered offenses under Section 404(a),
    subject to potential sentence reduction. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 9–13. To obtain the relief he
    requests, defendant’s life sentences on five of these seven convictions—in Counts 2, 3, 6, 40, and
    41—would have to be reduced. The government agrees he is eligible for a sentence reduction as
    to Counts 2 (Super CCE) and 38 through 41 (crack cocaine distribution), but disputes that the
    other two convictions, on Count 3 (RICO conspiracy) and Count 6 (CCE murder), qualify as
    “covered offenses.” Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 8; Gov’t’s Notice of Filing (“Gov’t’s 404 Notice”) at
    1, ECF No. 643. The Court agrees with the government that Count 6 (CCE murder) is not a
    covered offense, but finds the other counts at issue are covered, as explained below.
    Undisputed “Covered Offenses” in Counts 2, 38–41
    Count 2 (Super CCE) requires, for imposition of a mandatory life sentence, a finding that
    the defendant was involved in a “continuing criminal enterprise” involving “at least 300 times
    the quantity of a substance described in subsection 841(b)(1)(B).” Def.’s 404 Mot. at 9; see also
    
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (b)(2)(A). The Fair Sentencing Act changed the quantity of crack described in
    § 841(b)(1)(B) from five to 28 grams. To apply the heightened mandatory life CCE penalty,
    then, a jury would have had to find that defendant was involved in a continuing criminal
    enterprise responsible for distributing 8.4 kilograms of crack cocaine, rather than the 1.5
    kilograms the jury was instructed it had to find prior to the enactment of the First Step Act.
    Def.’s 404 Mot. at 9–10; Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 10. Without this quantity finding, defendant still
    would have been guilty of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise, as described in 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (c), but he would have been subject to a mandatory minimum of 20 years, not life,
    19
    under 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (a), which applies to felony narcotics trafficking offenses without
    otherwise referencing any quantity of drugs, 
    id.
     § 848(c)(1). 14
    Eligibility for a reduced sentence under Section 404(a) of the First Step Act depends,
    categorically, on the statute of conviction rather than on the defendant’s specific offense conduct
    or the actual effect of the Fair Sentencing Act on the defendant’s Guidelines range given the
    specific offense conduct. See Terry, 141 S. Ct. at 1860, 1864 (holding, “[i]n light of the clear
    text, . . . that § 2(a) of the Fair Sentencing Act modified the statutory penalties only for
    subparagraph (A) and (B) crack offenses—that is, the offenses that triggered mandatory-
    minimum penalties” and therefore that “crack offenders who did not trigger a mandatory
    minimum” do not qualify to receive a reduced sentence (emphasis in original)); White, 984 F.3d
    at 86 (holding that “whether an offense is ‘covered’ does not depend on the actual drug amounts
    attributed to a defendant, whether by a judge or a jury. . . , [but rather] on whether the defendant
    was convicted of an offense with a statutory penalty range that the Fair Sentencing Act altered”);
    United States v. Reed, 
    7 F.4th 105
    , 112 (2d Cir. 2021) (noting that “the Terry Court also
    concluded … that eligibility should be determined by utilizing a categorical approach based upon
    the statutory penalties for the offense of conviction, rather than the nature of the offense conduct
    in a particular case.”).
    The Court agrees with the parties that Count 2 (Super CCE) is a “covered offense”
    because the penalty range to which a defendant is subject for violating 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (b), which
    expressly references 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (b)(1)(B), depends on drug quantity thresholds modified by
    14
    The government described its “revised position” on the scope of “covered offense[s]” as follows: “[T]he
    government’s revised position is that the term ‘covered offense,’ as defined in Section 404(a), refers to any pre-Fair
    Sentencing Act violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (b)(1)(A)(iii), 841(b)(1)(B)(iii), 960(b)(1)(C), or 960(b)(2)(C). The
    same is true of offenses whose statutory sentencing ranges are incorporated by reference from those modified
    provisions.” Gov’t’s 404 Notice at 1.
    20
    the Fair Sentencing Act. Consequently, just as the Fair Sentencing Act changed the drug
    quantity line dividing greater and lesser penalties for violating § 841, it also changed the line
    dividing the lesser penalty under § 848(a) and the heightened, or “super,” penalty under § 848(b).
    Likewise, the government concedes that violations of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (b)(1)(A)(iii) and
    841(b)(1)(B)(iii) are, categorically, covered offenses. Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 8. Thus, counts 38
    through 41, the crack distribution counts charging violations of these two statutory provisions,
    are undisputed “covered offenses” because they are predicated on drug quantities changed by the
    Fair Sentencing Act.
    Disputed Offense in Count 3: Defendant’s RICO Conspiracy
    Conviction is a “Covered Offense”
    The parties disagree whether Count 3 (RICO conspiracy) is a covered offense under the
    Fair Sentencing Act. Defendant argues that the RICO conspiracy conviction is a covered offense
    due to its inextricable link to crack cocaine, noting that “the indictment allege[d] that the
    enterprise affected interstate commerce through activities relating to the distribution of crack
    cocaine.” Def.’s 404 Mot. at 12 (quoting Trial Tr. (July 30, 1996) at 67:22–24). Defendant
    further points out that the statutory penalties for this RICO conspiracy are tied to the underlying
    predicate offenses, which included the crack offenses in Counts 38 and 39, under 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(B), and Counts 40 and 41, under 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1) and
    841(b)(1)(A), and a conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine, under 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    . Def.’s 404
    Mot. at 11–12; see also Verdict Form 1, 4–5. In defendant’s view, a conspiracy charge is a
    “covered offense” if any of the predicate acts underlying conspiracy are crack cocaine offenses
    with sentencing ranges changed by the Fair Sentencing Act. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 12; Def.’s 404
    Reply at 6. After all, defendant contends, the Sentencing Guidelines look to the offense levels of
    the predicate offenses to determine the applicable base offense level for a RICO offense. Def.’s
    21
    404 Mot. at 12 (citing U.S.S.G. § 2E1.1, app. note 1 (“Where there is more than one underlying
    offense, treat each underlying offense as if contained in a separate count of conviction for the
    purposes of [determining the base offense level].”)). Defendant analogizes this to drug
    conspiracy counts, under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    , that contain, as objects of the conspiracy, both crack
    cocaine and other drug offenses. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 12 (citing United States v. Opher, 
    404 F. Supp. 3d 853
    , 867 (D.N.J. 2019)); see also Reed, 7 F.4th at 110–11 (holding “that a sentence
    arising from a multi-object conspiracy conviction involving a crack cocaine object, with a
    statutory penalty provision under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (b)(1)(A)(iii) or 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (b)(1)(B)(iii),
    is a ‘covered offense’ under Section 404 that is eligible for a sentencing reduction, even when
    the other objects of the conspiracy (involving different controlled substances) triggered statutory
    penalties that were not modified and thus the applicable minimum and maximum penalties for
    the conspiracy offense remain unchanged (citing same conclusion reached in United States v.
    Spencer, 
    998 F.3d 843
     (8th Cir. 2021); United States v. Winters, 
    986 F.3d 942
    , 948 (5th Cir.
    2021); United States v. Taylor, 
    982 F.3d 1295
    , 1301 (11th Cir. 2020); United States v. Gravatt,
    
    953 F.3d 258
     (4th Cir. 2020))).
    The government counters that defendant’s RICO conspiracy conviction is not a covered
    offense because the Fair Sentencing Act did not modify the penalties associated with the
    predicate statutes driving the maximum life sentence defendant faced on his RICO conviction.
    Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 11. The statute provides for a statutory penalty of life imprisonment, as
    opposed to 20 years, when a violation is “based on a racketeering activity for which the
    maximum penalty includes life imprisonment.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1963
    (a). Here, the jury found
    defendant guilty of committing two racketeering acts for which the maximum penalty includes
    life imprisonment: conspiracy to distribute over 1.5 kg of crack cocaine and first-degree murder.
    22
    Verdict Form at 1, 5; Trial Tr. (July 30, 1996) at 53:7–12. Defendant would have been exposed
    to life imprisonment regardless of the Fair Sentencing Act both because of the jury finding of his
    guilt for the underlying murder predicate and because the jury-found drug quantity exceeded
    even the post-Fair Sentencing Act quantity required for a maximum penalty of life
    imprisonment. See 21 U.S.C §§ 846, 841(b)(1)(A). Thus, the government reasons that the Fair
    Sentencing Act did not directly change the statutory penalties for RICO conspiracy under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1963
    (a), nor modify the statutory penalties faced by or applied to defendant such that
    Count 3 does not qualify as a “covered offense.” Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 12.
    Although the government’s reasoning makes much sense, the categorical approach to
    application of Section 404(a) makes irrelevant to the analysis of the threshold issue of whether
    the RICO conspiracy is a “covered offense” what the actual effect on the penalty for this charge
    is in this case. As noted, the law is now clear that whether an offense is “covered” depends,
    categorically and notwithstanding the actual sentencing effect, on whether the statutory penalty
    range for the offense was altered by the Fair Sentencing Act. Terry, 141 S. Ct. at 1864; White,
    984 F.3d at 86. The penalty provision for a RICO conspiracy offense provides that “[w]hoever
    violates any provision of section 1962 of this chapter shall be . . . imprisoned not more than 20
    years (or for life if the violation is based on a racketeering activity for which the maximum
    penalty includes life imprisonment) . . . .” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1963
    (a). Consequently, even though the
    penalty provision in § 1963(a) was not directly amended by the Fair Sentencing Act,
    examination of the predicate offense convictions is necessary to determine whether the “statutory
    penalties” were “modified.” See First Step Act § 404(a).
    Here, defendant was subject to a maximum penalty of life imprisonment on Count 3’s
    RICO conspiracy conviction because of the CCE murder predicate, but defendant was also
    23
    convicted of predicate crack offenses carrying mandatory minimum penalties, under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a)(1)(A) and (B), which categorically are “covered offenses.” The D.C. Circuit has not
    addressed the issue of application of Section 404(a) to a conspiracy conviction with both covered
    and non-covered objects, but every other circuit to do so has held that a covered offense as an
    object of a multi-object conspiracy renders the entire conspiracy conviction a covered offense
    eligible for a sentence reduction under Section 404(b). See Gravatt, 953 F.3d at 263–64 (holding
    that defendant’s conviction for conspiracy under §846 was a “covered offense,” despite the fact
    that defendant’s “dual-object conspiracy” involved both crack and powder cocaine, because the
    conspiracy statute “does not proscribe the possession or distribution of particular drugs by itself”
    but instead depended directly on the underlying drug offenses); Reed, 7 F.4th at 110–11
    (collecting cases); see also United States v. Williams, No. 91-cr-559-6 (TFH), 
    2021 WL 5206206
    , at *8 (D.D.C. Nov. 9, 2021) (finding defendant “eligible for First Step Act relief and
    resentencing” on his conviction for multi-drug distribution conspiracy since “at least one of the
    drugs [in the conspiracy] was crack cocaine” and “[t]o find otherwise . . . would impose an
    additional limit on the Act’s applicability that is not in the statute.” (citing Gravatt, 953 F.3d at
    264, other internal citations omitted)).
    This uniform trend of appellate holdings is persuasive. Thus, the fact that defendant
    would have been subject to life imprisonment on the RICO conspiracy offense—regardless of
    any changes implemented by the Fair Sentencing Act and even absent the predicate crack
    offenses—because of the CCE murder conviction, has no bearing on the determination of
    whether the conspiracy offense is “covered” within the meaning of Section 404(a). As the
    Second Circuit explained in Reed, “eligibility should be determined by utilizing a categorical
    approach based upon the statutory penalties for the offense of conviction, rather than the nature
    24
    of the offense conduct in a particular case.” 7 F.4th at 112 (discussing Terry, 141 S.Ct. at 1863–
    64). When one object of a conspiracy triggers the “covered offense” definition of the First Step
    Act, “the statutory text in Section 404 does not require for eligibility any further inquiry
    regarding any other statutory penalties implicated on that count due to the other objects of the
    multi-object conspiracy offense.” Id. at 113. See also Terry, 141 S. Ct. at 1860–64 (holding that
    defendant convicted of 
    21 U.S.C. §841
    (b)(1)(C) offense was not eligible for First Step Act
    sentence reduction because this was not a “covered” crack offense for which the Fair Sentencing
    Act modified the statutory penalties, and merely noting, without any further discussion as
    relevant to the inquiry, that defendant’s sentence “was based on his recidivism, not his drug
    quantity,” under the career-offender Guidelines, which “recommended a higher sentence than the
    drug-quantity Guidelines”); Cf. United States v. Heatley, No. 96-CR-515 (LAP), 
    2021 WL 2418431
    , at *2 (S.D.N.Y. June 14, 2021) (finding that defendant’s RICO and Section 848
    convictions did not involve crack cocaine predicates and therefore were not covered offenses
    under Section 404 of the First Step Act).
    Thus, contrary to the government’s position, defendant’s conviction on Count 3 for RICO
    conspiracy is a covered offense.
    Disputed Offense in Count 6: Defendant’s Conviction for CCE
    Murder is Not A “Covered Offense”
    The parties also disagree whether defendant’s conviction on Count 6 (CCE murder), in
    violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e)(l)(A), is a covered offense under the Fair Sentencing Act.
    Defendant argues that his conviction on Count 6 for murder in furtherance of a continuing
    criminal enterprise, under 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e), is a covered offense since this offense is
    predicated on violations of § 841(b), the penalties for which were modified by the Fair
    Sentencing Act, and because this CCE murder offense incorporates the drug quantities found in
    25
    § 841(b). See Def.’s 404 Mot. at 10–11. The CCE murder statute provides a mandatory
    minimum term of 20 years’ imprisonment and up to life imprisonment, or the death penalty, for
    any person “who intentionally kills or counsels, commands, induces, procures, or causes the
    intentional killing of an individual and such killing results,” either (1) when “engaging in or
    working in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise, or . . . [(2)] engaging in an offense
    punishable under section 841(b)(1)(A) of this title . . . .” 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e)(1)(A) (emphasis
    added). A defendant “is engaged in a continuing criminal enterprise,” under the first prong of
    § 848(e)(1)(A), only if the defendant “violate[d]” a provision of subchapter I or II of Chapter 13
    of Title 21 of the Code, and “such violation is part of a continuing series of violations.”
    
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (c)(1)–(2). Under this first prong to establish a CCE murder offense, then, no
    reference is made to any penalty attached to the drug offense violation. Defendant focuses on
    the second prong, contending that where “the continuing criminal enterprise consisted of a
    violation of § 841(b)(1) involving crack cocaine, the statutory penalties for § 848(e)(1)(A) were
    modified by section 2 of the [Fair Sentencing Act].” Def.’s 404 Mot. at 10. More broadly,
    defendant argues a violation of § 848(e)(1)(A) is a covered offense because it “incorporate[s] by
    reference” a provision that was modified by Section 404. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 10–11.
    The government counters with two arguments. First, the government argues that the
    “statutory penalties” for CCE murder, under 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e), were not modified by the Fair
    Sentencing Act and, thus, in the government’s view, defendant’s conviction on Count 6 is not a
    “covered offense” under the First Step Act. Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 13–14. In explaining this
    position, the government highlights that CCE murder “sets forth an independent offense that is
    separate from any drug crime forming part of the underlying ‘continuing series of violations.’”
    
    Id.
     Under this view, CCE murder is never a “covered offense” under either predicate prong—
    26
    i.e., regardless of whether it is predicated on engaging in a CCE (first prong) or committing drug
    trafficking conduct punishable under § 841(b)(1)(A) (second prong)—because the penalty range
    of the statute was not changed by Section 404 of the First Step Act.
    For support, the government relies on a Sixth Circuit case concluding that CCE murder is
    not a “covered offense[]” because the First Step Act’s Section 404(b) did not modify the
    penalties for this offense conduct under § 848(e)(1)(A). Gov’t’s 404 Notice at 1 (citing United
    States v. Snow, 
    967 F.3d 563
     (6th Cir. 2020) (per curiam)). Snow held that the defendant’s
    conviction, under § 848(e)(1)(A), of conspiring to kill a person while engaged in a conspiracy to
    distribute at least 50 grams of cocaine base, under § 841(b)(1)(A), did not constitute a covered
    offense. 967 F.3d at 564–65. The court noted that the Fair Sentencing Act’s Sections 2 and 3
    did not modify the statutory penalty for a CCE murder but instead eliminated the offense for
    certain defendants, namely those defendants with an underlying § 841(b)(1)(A) violation with
    crack quantities above the pre-Fair Sentencing Act threshold but below the post-Fair Sentencing
    Act threshold. Id. at 565. This elimination of the entire offense with respect to certain
    individuals, the court reasoned, was not a “‘modification’ of ‘statutory penalties’” within the
    meaning of Section 404(a) of the First Step Act, even though the defendant’s § 848(e)(1)(A)
    conviction was predicated on a violation of § 841(b)(1)(A) and the First Step Act changed the
    crack cocaine quantity thresholds in that provision. Id.
    The Court need not weigh in on this construction of the statute, which would insulate a
    CCE murder conviction predicated on the second prong of § 848(e)(1)(A), for a violation of
    § 841(b)(1)(A), even when the First Step Act eliminated that element of the original offense.
    Here, unlike in Snow, defendant’s § 848(e)(1)(A) conviction was predicated on the first prong of
    this statute, namely, for engaging in a CCE. See Verdict Form at 5 (describing the offense as
    27
    “[i]ntentional murder of Anthony Hinton, while working in furtherance of a continuing criminal
    enterprise”). Thus, for this count of conviction, the fact of defendant’s § 841(b)(1)(A) violation
    is not relevant. As described above, § 848(e)(1)(A) provides a penalty for anyone who
    intentionally kills someone while “engaging in or working in furtherance of a continuing
    criminal enterprise, or [while] engaging in an offense punishable under section
    841(b)(1)(A) . . . ,” 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e)(1)(A), with these two prongs providing two alternative
    elements for establishing a violation of the CCE murder statute. Here, as the government’s
    second argument asserts, since defendant was convicted of CCE murder using the CCE prong
    rather than the § 841(b)(1)(A) prong, the First Step Act had no effect on whether a violation of
    the drug laws could be used to establish part of a “continuing series of violations.” Gov’t’s 404
    Opp’n at 14. This second argument is persuasive.
    Defendant focuses on the § 841(b)(1)(A) prong to argue that the CCE murder conviction
    is a covered offense because it is “tied to and incorporate[s] by reference” a statutory provision
    whose penalties were modified by the Fair Sentencing Act. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 10–11. Indeed,
    even if the penalty range of § 848(e)(1)(A) was not expressly altered, some people convicted
    under § 848(e)(1)(A) before enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act could not be found guilty of
    the offense today because of the changes to the quantity threshold in § 841(b)(1)(A). Thus,
    defendant argues, “[t]he statute of conviction here, § 848(e), is a statute for which the triggering
    drug weights were modified by Section 2 of the Fair Sentencing Act.” Def.’s 404 Reply at 7.
    Consistent with this reasoning, defendant relies primarily on a case addressing a conviction using
    the § 841(b)(1)(A) prong. Id. (discussing United States v. Davis, No. 5:93-cr-30025-3 (JPJ),
    
    2020 WL 1131147
    , at *2 (W.D. Va. Mar. 9, 2020)). The district court in Davis held the
    defendant’s § 848(e)(1)(A) murder conviction was a covered offense “because it relies on the
    28
    drug quantity thresholds set by § 841 and, therefore, requires a jury finding that the defendant
    committed a murder in furtherance of a drug conspiracy to sell 280 or more grams of cocaine
    base.” 
    2020 WL 1131147
    , at *2 (citing United States v. Guerrero, 
    52 F. Supp. 3d 643
    , 648–49
    (S.D.N.Y. 2014)). In Davis, the defendant was convicted of “conspiring to distribute cocaine
    base, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 846
     and 841(b)(1)(A)(iii),” and the CCE murder conviction
    relied on this fact. Id. at *1. The defendant was not even charged with participating in a
    continuing criminal enterprise. Id. His CCE murder conviction therefore relied entirely on the
    § 841(b)(1)(A) charge and implicated the crack cocaine quantity limits that were changed by the
    Fair Sentencing Act. For this same reason, Davis is distinguishable from the instant case. 15
    Defendant’s reasoning would be compelling for a § 848(e)(1)(A) conviction predicated
    on a § 841(b)(1)(A) violation, but is irrelevant here, where defendant’s CCE murder conviction
    was based on the CCE prong. The record makes clear that defendant’s CCE murder conviction
    was predicated on his participation in a CCE, and defendant does not argue otherwise. See
    Verdict Form at 5 (describing the offense as “[i]ntentional murder of Anthony Hinton, while
    15
    Defendant also relies on two circuit decisions for the more general proposition that criminal statutes
    incorporating subsections of § 841 directly modified by the Fair Sentencing Act are “modified” within the meaning
    of First Step Act. Def.’s 404 Reply at 7 (discussing United States v. Smith, 
    954 F.3d 446
    , 449 (1st Cir. 2020) and
    United States v. Woodson, 
    962 F.3d 812
    , 815 (4th Cir. 2020)). The government’s notice of its “revised position,”
    stating that a covered offense encompasses “offenses whose statutory sentencing ranges are incorporated by
    reference from those modified provisions,” Gov’t’s 404 Notice at 1, seems in agreement with this general
    proposition. Nonetheless, Smith and Woodson are not helpful to defendant’s position. In both cases, the First and
    Fourth Circuits held that convictions under § 841(a) applying the penalty from § 841(b)(1)(C)—which previously
    applied to violations involving less than five grams of crack cocaine but, after passage of the Fair Sentencing Act,
    applied to violations involving less than 28 grams of crack cocaine—were covered offenses. 954 F.3d at 451; 962
    F.3d at 817. In so holding, each court recognized that § 841(b)(1)(C) had not itself been amended because it was, in
    effect, a catch-all provision to cover crack cocaine quantities below those designated in the amended subsections of
    § 841(b)(1)(A) and (B). See Smith, 954 F.3d at 450 (“Since § 841(b)(1)(C) is defined in part by what § 841(b)(1)(A)
    and § 841(b)(1)(B) do not cover, a modification to the latter subsections also modifies the former by
    incorporation.”). The First Circuit reasoned that the combined impact of a mandatory guideline regime and the
    setting of sentencing ranges under this regime in a manner reflecting the then-applicable crack-powder sentencing
    disparity, warranted remedial action under the First Step Act. Id. at 451. Putting aside the fact that the holdings in
    both Woodson and Smith regarding application of the First Step Act to violations of § 841(b)(1)(C), has since been
    rejected by the Supreme Court in Terry, which held that an offense subject to § 841(b)(1)(C) was not a “covered
    offense,” 141 S. Ct. at 1864, these two cases simply do not address the CCE prong of 
    21 U.S.C. § 848
    (e)(1).
    29
    working in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise”); Retyped Superseding Indictment at
    34 (describing the offense as intentional killing “while engaging in and working in furtherance of
    a Continuing Criminal Enterprise”); Trial Tr. (July 30, 1996) at 86:6–10 (instructing the jury that
    “the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the decedent was intentionally
    killed while the defendants were engaged in or working in furtherance of a continuing criminal
    enterprise”). Even if defendant’s drug crimes formed part of the continuing series of violations
    needed to establish the CCE murder offense, the quantity of drugs and the severity of the
    penalties was irrelevant. Viewed this way, the Fair Sentencing Act’s change in penalties for
    crack offenses did not change whether a crack cocaine offense could form part of a “continuing
    series of violations.” Illegal crack distribution in any quantity was a qualifying felony
    supporting the existence of a CCE offense as an element both before and after enactment of the
    Fair Sentencing Act. Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 14; see also United States v. Roane, No. 3:92-cr-68
    (DJN), 
    2020 WL 6370984
    , at *11 (E.D. Va. Oct. 29, 2020) (“Defendant received the challenged
    sentences for murdering individuals in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise, not for
    violating the federal narcotics laws. Thus, the statutes modified by the Fair Sentencing Act did
    not form the predicates for [d]efendant’s convictions under § 848(e)(1)(A).”); United States v.
    Fletcher, 
    997 F.3d 95
    , 97 (2d Cir. 2021) (“Because Sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act
    did not modify the statutory penalties for Section 848(e)(1)(A), a violation of that law is not a
    “covered offense” eligible for a sentence reduction under Section 404(b) of the First Step Act.”)
    For these reasons, the Court agrees with the government that Count 6 (CCE murder) is
    not a covered offense.
    30
    3.      No Authority Under Section 404(b) to Modify Defendant’s Sentences for
    Non-Covered Offenses
    The parties further disagree about the scope of judicial authority under Section 404(b) of
    the First Step Act to modify a defendant’s sentences for non-covered offenses when a defendant
    has been convicted of a “covered offense” within the meaning of Section 404(a). Defendant
    argues that the “sentencing package doctrine” supports a new sentence on all counts in this case,
    reasoning that, even if the government were correct that Count 6 (CCE murder) is not a covered
    offenses, this count was addressed together, or grouped, with covered offenses in Count 2 (Super
    CCE), Count 3 (RICO conspiracy) and Counts 38–41 (drug trafficking), see supra Part I.B., so a
    reduced sentence on the entire sentencing package should be available. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 33–
    37. As explained below, the narrow circumstances in which the D.C. Circuit has applied the
    sentencing package doctrine do not support such application in the instant case to defendant’s
    non-covered offense in Count 6.
    Under the sentencing package doctrine, “at least in some instances, sentences on multiple
    counts may comprise a ‘sentencing package,’ so that attacking the sentence on some counts . . .
    reopens the sentence on the other counts as well.” United States v. Townsend, 
    178 F.3d 558
    , 567
    (D.C. Cir. 1999). This doctrine has developed in recognition of the fact that “when a defendant
    is found guilty on a multicount indictment, there is a strong likelihood that the district court will
    craft a disposition in which the sentences on the various counts form part of an overall plan, and
    that if some counts are vacated, the judge should be free to review the efficacy of what remains
    in light of the original plan.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Counts that
    “are inherently interdependent” generate sentences “particularly well suited to be treated as a
    package.” 
    Id.
     at 567–68. See also United States v. Smith, 
    467 F.3d 785
    , 789 (D.C. Cir. 2006)
    (“[The doctrine] rests on the interdependence of the different segments of the sentence, such that
    31
    removal of the sentence on one count draws into question the correctness of the initial aggregate
    minus the severed element.”); United States v. Ausby, No. 72-cr-67 (BAH), 
    2019 WL 2870232
    ,
    at *5–6 (D.D.C. July 3, 2019) (“[T]he broader principle underlying the ‘sentencing package’
    doctrine [is] that affording relief on a challenged count requires revisiting other counts due to
    their interdependence . . . .”).
    Defendant argues that the relief contemplated by Section 404(b) is not limited to covered
    offenses so long as the defendant has been charged with at least one covered offense within the
    relevant sentencing package. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 17–18; Def.’s 404 Reply at 2–4. Reconsidering
    the aggregate sentence upon a finding that a defendant was sentenced for a covered offense
    reflects, in defendant’s view, “the holistic approach that a district court should employ when
    sentencing a defendant convicted of multiple offenses.” Def.’s 404 Mot. at 34 (quoting United
    States v. Ventura, 
    864 F.3d 301
    , 309 (4th Cir. 2017)). As support, defendant observes that
    federal statutes and the United States Sentencing Guidelines consider counts of conviction and
    the accompanying terms of imprisonment together, to argue that a court considering a sentence
    reduction under Section 404(b) of the First Step Act should do the same with related counts.
    Def.’s 404 Reply at 2–3 (citing 
    18 U.S.C. § 3584
    (c); U.S.S.G. Ch.3, Pt. D, intro. comment); see
    also Dean v. United States, 
    137 S. Ct. 1170
    , 1175–76 (2017) (concluding that “[a]s a general
    matter, the foregoing provisions [§§ 3553(a), 3582, and 3584(b)] permit a court imposing a
    sentence on one count of conviction to consider sentences imposed on other counts”).
    Put another way, defendant suggests that the sentencing package doctrine effectively
    authorizes a full resentencing on all counts if any constituent count making up the aggregate
    sentence is a “covered offense” under Section 404(a) of the First Step Act, based on the
    assumption that sentences imposed at the same time are sufficiently “interdependent” to qualify
    32
    for invocation of this doctrine. This position is contrary to the D.C. Circuit’s express direction
    that “not every judgment involving multiple convictions presents a sentencing package in which
    vacating the sentence on one count unravels the remaining sentences.” United States v. Palmer,
    
    854 F.3d 39
    , 49 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
    The government is critical of the defendant’s position as overreaching, though the
    government acknowledges that in some cases a sentence reduction should be available for a non-
    covered offense, but only if the non-covered offense was originally grouped with the covered
    offense and the statutory penalties on the covered offense directly affect the guideline calculation
    on the non-covered offense. Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 16 n.8 (citing United States v. White, 
    413 F. Supp. 3d 15
    , 48 (D.D.C. 2019), rev’d 
    984 F.3d 76
     (D.C. Cir. 2020)). Outside this narrow
    category of cases, the government argues that courts lack authority under Section 404(b) of the
    First Step Act to reduce non-covered sentences. Pointing out that 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(B)
    provides the vehicle for sentence reduction under the First Step Act, and that Section 404(b) does
    not “expressly permit” modification of sentences pertaining to non-covered offenses, the
    government concludes that a reduced sentence is unavailable on the non-covered offense at issue
    in this case. Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 15–16. The government further relies on the language in
    Section 404(b) providing that a sentence may be reduced “as if sections 2 and 3 of the [Fair
    Sentencing Act] were in effect at the time the covered offense was committed” as limiting the
    degree to which a court may reduce a defendant’s sentence on a non-covered offense. 
    Id.
    The D.C. Circuit has not addressed the issue of whether Section 404(b) authorizes a court
    to reduce aggregate sentences imposed on both non-covered and covered offenses, whether
    under the sentencing package doctrine or the terms of the First Step Act itself. The Second,
    Fifth, and Eleventh Circuits have expressly held that the First Step Act does not grant the broad
    33
    authority defendant seeks to have exercised here. See United States v. Young, 
    998 F.3d 43
    , 49,
    55 (2d Cir. 2021) (holding that First Step Act did not authorize sentence reduction because
    defendant’s “eligibility for resentencing on Count One under the First Step Act does not alter his
    ineligibility for resentencing on Count Two” and “a court may not resentence a defendant on any
    count of conviction without direct statutory authorization to do so” as “[s]entences are imposed
    for specific convictions within judgments of conviction” (internal citations omitted)); Martin,
    974 F.3d at 137 (noting that “[t]he language of the First Step Act is circumscribed, it permits
    courts only to ‘impose a reduced sentence as if sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act . . .
    were in effect at the time the covered offense was committed,’” and holding that “[t]he plain
    language of the Act permits the limited modification of a specific sentence, it does not give
    district courts carte blanche to modify terms of imprisonment other than those imposed for
    ‘covered offenses.’” (quoting, with emphasis added, § 404(b)); United States v. Hegwood, 
    934 F.3d 414
    , 418 (5th Cir. 2019) (holding that the First Step Act did not permit a court to alter
    defendant’s sentences for non-covered offenses because the “express back-dating only of
    Sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010—saying the new sentencing will be
    conducted ‘as if’ those two sections were in effect ‘at the time the covered offense was
    committed’—supports that Congress did not intend that other changes were to be made as if they
    too were in effect at the time of the offense” and “[i]n statutory construction, the expression of
    one thing generally excludes another” (internal citations omitted)); United States v. Gee, 843 F.
    App’x 215, 217 (11th Cir. 2021) (“The court ‘is not free to change the defendant’s original
    guidelines calculations that are unaffected by sections 2 and 3,’ nor is it free ‘to change the
    defendant’s sentences on counts that are not ‘covered offenses’” (quoting United States v.
    Denson, 
    963 F.3d. 1080
    , 1089 (11th Cir. 2020), and finding that defendant’s “§ 924(c)
    34
    convictions are not ‘covered offenses’ under § 404(b), so that section does not allow him to be
    resentenced on them.”); United States v. McCurry, 833 F. App’x 284, 286–87 (11th Cir. 2020)
    (reiterating holding in Denson, that, pursuant to the First Step Act, a district court may reduce a
    defendant’s sentence “only on a ‘covered offense’” and is ‘not free to change the defendant’s
    original guidelines calculations that are unaffected by sections 2 and 3’ of the Fair Sentencing
    Act, which the First Step Act made retroactive” (citing Denson, 963 F.3d at 1089)). 16
    Diverging from this recent line of authority, defendant relies on United States v. Hudson,
    
    967 F.3d 605
     (7th Cir. 2020), as support for his view that, so long as a covered offense was part
    of the aggregate sentence, the First Step Act permits a sentence reduction on any non-covered
    offense. Def.’s 404 Reply at 9. The Seventh Circuit, in Hudson, concluded that Section 404(b)
    “does not bar a court from reducing a non-covered offense” because “[e]xcluding non-covered
    offenses from the ambit of First Step Act consideration would, in effect, impose an extra-textual
    limitation on the Act’s applicability.” 967 F.3d at 610. While the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Terry did not address the permissibility under the First Step Act of reductions in aggregate
    sentences for combined non-covered and covered offenses, the Court’s guidance runs counter to
    the broad sentence reduction authority invited by this reading of Hudson. Instead, Terry hewed
    closely to the statutory text and denied eligibility to a defendant convicted under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (b)(1)(C) because the “statutory penalties” were “exactly the same,” both before and after
    16
    See also United States v. Smith, No. 04-cr-80857 (SFC), 
    2020 WL 3790370
    , at *10 (E.D. Mich. July 7,
    2020) (“At the very least, Sec. 404(b) does not expressly permit the Court to reduce a sentence for a non-covered
    offense. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(B). [Assuming] that a court could reduce a sentence for a covered offense
    because Sec. 404(b) did not expressly prohibit such a reduction . . . overlooks the longstanding, well-defined limits
    placed on the power of a district court to modify an imposed sentence.” (emphasis in original)); United States v.
    Coleman, 
    382 F. Supp. 3d 851
    , 859 (E.D. Wis. 2019) (“The First Step Act does not ‘expressly permit’ the court to
    conduct a plenary resentencing. It does not authorize the court to disturb the 120-month sentence [imposed on the
    non-covered offense in Count One]. . . . It authorizes the court to do one thing—recalculate the sentence on [the
    covered offense in] Count Two as if section 2(a) of the [Fair Sentencing Act] had been in effect when he committed
    that crime.”).
    35
    enactment of the Fair Sentencing Act, 141 S. Ct. at 1862–63, observing that it “defies common
    parlance to say that altering a different provision modified subparagraph (C),” id. at 1864
    (emphasis in original). Rather than asking whether the First Step Act presented any bar to a
    court’s action on a non-covered offense, as the Hudson reasoning suggests, Terry focused on
    whether the amendments affected by the Fair Sentencing Act altered the statutory penalty for the
    offense of conviction, an approach that cautions against construing Section 404(b) to apply
    broadly to non-covered offenses simply due to inclusion of a covered offense in an aggregate
    17
    sentence.        Even so, this conclusion does not answer the question whether the long-standing
    sentencing package doctrine authorizes reopening sentences imposed on non-covered offenses
    when Section 404 may not, by its terms, so permit.
    Assuming arguendo that the sentencing package doctrine permits resentencing under the
    First Step Act on non-covered offenses “at least in some instances,” Townsend, 
    178 F.3d at 567
    ,
    leads to the key question here whether the life sentence imposed on defendant’s non-covered
    offense in Count 6 (CCE murder) is so interdependent with the sentences imposed on his covered
    offenses that they should be treated as a package. Such interdependence may be gleaned, for
    example, when sentences imposed on some counts are modified, either increasing or decreasing
    in severity, to account for a consecutive mandatory sentence in the aggregate sentence. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Lassiter, 
    1 F.4th 25
    , 26, 31 (D.C. Cir. 2021) (affirming, on resentencing,
    increased sentence from 240 to 300 months on defendant’s kidnapping conviction, after vacatur
    of his 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c) conviction, and finding the fact defendant had originally been granted a
    17
    In any event, Hudson may be read more narrowly to permit sentence reductions on non-covered offenses
    that have been grouped with, and driven the guideline range for, covered offenses at sentencing. See United States
    v. Rollins, No. 06-cr-40063-JPG-004, 
    2021 WL 3891730
    , at *2 (S.D. Ill. Aug. 31, 2021) (“Where another non-
    covered offense is part of an aggregate sentencing package dependent on a covered offense, the Court may reduce
    that component of the package as well.” (citing Hudson, 967 F.3d at 612)).
    36
    “33% discount on [his] kidnapping count, a variance especially striking given [his] concededly
    egregious criminal conduct” to be a strong indicator that the judge had “originally intended a
    sentencing package” (internal citations and quotation marks omitted)); Townsend, 
    178 F.3d at 569
     (observing that “[t]he amount of downward departure allowed by a sentencing judge is
    inevitably affected by the total sentence imposed, and the departure allowed on a given count
    will naturally depend on the departure allowed on other counts,” and affirming reopening of
    entire sentence as a sentencing package, resulting in re-imposition of original sentence, despite
    vacatur of § 924(c) counts, since “the departure actually imposed on the non-924(c) counts was
    chosen in light of the term imposed on the § 924(c) counts”). Conversely, the lack of
    interdependence may also be demonstrated by imposition of separate sentences, without any
    indicia by the sentencing judge that the aggregate sentence was intended to accommodate any
    one of those sentences. See Smith, 467 F.3d at 790 (concluding that defendant was not entitled to
    resentencing on his grouped counts in the wake of vacatur of his 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c) conviction,
    because the sentences on the grouped counts and the § 924(c) violation “were in no way
    interdependent” and the sentencing court “exercising its discretion, [had] sentenced Smith to
    several concurrent life terms,” declining to depart from the “highest sentence available” under
    statute, before imposing the vacated consecutive 30-year term under § 924(c)).
    The D.C. Circuit has also recognized that “mutual exclusivity is an exceptionally strong
    form of interdependence,” permitting resentencing on otherwise unaltered counts as part of a
    sentencing package. Smith, 467 F.3d at 789; see also United States v. Morris, 
    116 F.3d 501
    ,
    504–05 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (affirming trial court’s authority to impose Guidelines enhancement
    provision for possession of a firearm, under U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(b)(1), after vacatur of defendants’
    § 924(c) convictions, thereby increasing their sentences, because these penalties are
    37
    “interdependent and . . . mutually exclusive,” and therefore amending their sentences to include
    the enhancement was “compelled by the complete interdependence and mutual exclusivity of the
    two provisions”).
    Finally, interdependence may be evident based on the statements of the judge at
    sentencing. In Townsend, the panel pointed to the sentencing court’s statements, “in response to
    the government’s motion for reduction of sentence, . . . that he intended to grant the motion, but
    needed to ‘work out the formula’ to accomplish the overall term of imprisonment desired” and
    that “‘there were nine counts, and they all have to be coordinated,’” as evidence that defendant’s
    sentence was comprised of highly interdependent component parts. 
    178 F.3d at
    568–69.
    Similarly, in Lassiter, the court found that the sentencing judge had treated the convictions as
    interdependent by “emphasiz[ing] the need to craft a singular ‘sentence to reflect the seriousness
    of the offense, to promote respect for the law, to provide just punishment, and to deter future
    criminal conduct,’” and “acknowledg[ing] that he could not approach the kidnapping sentence in
    a vacuum, describing the guidelines recommendation as ‘only one factor’ for a just sentence,” 1
    F.4th at 31 (internal alterations and citations omitted), despite never explicitly using the phrase
    “sentencing package,” id. at 30. These statements, the Lassiter court found, supported finding
    18
    that the sentencing judge had intended a sentencing package. Id. at 31.                     See also Palmer, 854
    18
    The out-of-circuit decisions on which defendant relies generally fit within the D.C. Circuit’s framework for
    requiring interdependence for the sentencing package doctrine to apply and, as such, do not support his position that
    the presence of a covered offense should trigger resentencing on non-covered offenses. See Def.’s 404 Mot. at 34–
    36 (citing United States v. Ventura, 
    864 F.3d 301
     (4th Cir. 2017), and United States v. Fowler, 
    749 F.3d 1010
     (11th
    Cir. 2014)). In Ventura, the Fourth Circuit rejected defendant’s challenge when his aggregate sentence for various
    sex trafficking convictions remained the same after vacatur of his sentence for violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c), finding
    that “[p]ursuant to the sentencing package doctrine,” vacatur of the § 924 conviction “left ample room for the district
    court to recalculate the sentences related to [defendant’s] other six convictions,” 864 F.3d at 309. Similarly, in
    Fowler, the Eleventh Circuit highlighted the statements of the sentencing judge as strong evidence of an intent to
    impose a package sentence: “The district court judge also explained that, regardless of any retrial, he was going to
    vacate the sentence on Count 2 and resentence Fowler on that count ‘because obviously a ten-year sentence on
    Count 2 is interrelated with the life sentence I gave on Count 1. I would not have given someone ten years on a
    murder-with-a-firearm charge standing alone.’” 749 F.3d at 1014.
    38
    F.3d at 49 (finding “that resentencing is unnecessary where . . . the district court merely vacated
    convictions for lesser included offenses subject to merger,” particularly where the record
    provided “no basis to conclude that the district court presiding at [a defendant’s] criminal trial
    imposed a harsher sentence on the greater offense than it would have in the absence of the lesser
    offense”).
    Set against this guidance on the contours of the sentencing packaging doctrine, the Court
    concludes that defendant’s sentence on the non-covered offense in Count 6 (CCE murder), has
    no “mutual exclusivity” nor any interdependence with any sentences imposed on the covered
    offenses in Count 2 (Super CCE), Count 3 (RICO conspiracy), and Counts 38–41 (drug
    trafficking), that warrants application of the sentencing package doctrine. Consequently, this
    defendant’s sentence on the non-covered Count 6 (CCE murder) retains its finality and may not
    be reduced.
    First, nothing in the record of the sentencing hearing suggests that the life sentence
    imposed on Count 6 was fashioned to account for the presence of any of other count of
    conviction in the aggregate sentence. By its terms, defendant’s CCE murder conviction stands
    on its own and does not rely either for its continued viability or its associated penalty on a
    predicate offense for which the sentence is subject to reduction under Section 404. In other
    words, any modification of the sentences on the covered offenses in Counts 2, 3, and 38–41, does
    not “draw[] into question the correctness of the initial aggregate minus the severed element[s].”
    Smith, 467 F.3d at 789. Defendant received five concurrent life sentences, on Counts 2, 3, 6, 40,
    and 41. Min. Entry (Nov. 18, 1996); Sent’g Hr’g Tr. at 73:2–18. Reducing three or four of
    defendant’s life sentences on covered offenses to terms of years would not change the “initial
    aggregate” sentence of life, nor “draw[] into question the correctness” of the life sentence on the
    39
    non-covered offense, Smith, 467 F.3d at 789, which instead represents “the punishment for [that]
    single count.” Morris, 
    116 F.3d at 504
    . The covered-offense charges need not have been
    brought to trial, nor resulted in conviction, for defendant to have been found guilty of murder in
    furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise. Five concurrent life sentences on separate counts
    do not amount to an “overall plan.” Townsend, 
    178 F.3d at 567
    .
    Furthermore, close review of the sentencing hearing in this case, with a focus on the plain
    language of the sentencing judge’s remarks, reflects no indication that imposition of the life
    sentence on Count 6 was interdependent with the defendant’s sentences on Counts 2, 3, or 38–
    41. See Sent’g Hr’g Tr. at 73:2–9 (Sentencing judge stating: “On Count 2, I’m imposing a
    sentence of life imprisonment. Count 3, life imprisonment. Count 4, two years to life, the
    mandatory minimum of 20 years. Count 6, life. Count 29, 5 to 15 years. Count 38 and 39, 40
    years. Counts 40 and 41, life sentence. . . . [A]ll those sentences are going to run concurrently.”
    (emphasis added)). See also Ausby, 
    2019 WL 2870232
    , at *6 (finding no interdependence where
    the sentencing judge instructed defendant, “On the first count in which you were found guilty,
    felony murder, the Court will sentence you for a period of life imprisonment. On the second
    count, carnal knowledge while armed, the Court will sentence you for a period of ten to thirty
    years.”). Rather, the judge imposed on defendant a life sentence for Count 2 (Super CCE) and,
    once that was complete, further imposed concurrent terms of life for Counts 3, 6, 40, and 41.
    The language employed at sentencing in no way suggested the sentences were interdependent.
    See Smith, 467 F.3d at 790.
    Defendant argues that a court considering sentence reductions under Section 404(b)
    should look to the grouping of the counts of conviction under the Sentencing Guidelines and
    consider all grouped counts to be part of a sentencing package, regardless of whether each count
    40
    qualifies as a “covered offense.” Def.’s 404 Reply at 5. This approach has the benefit of
    simplicity but is too superficial to comply with the D.C. Circuit’s more rigorous interdependence
    test. As the Second Circuit correctly explained in Young, the mere grouping under the
    Sentencing Guidelines of covered and non-covered offenses does not extend the authority of a
    court under the First Step Act to reduce the sentence on non-covered convictions:
    Sentences are imposed for specific convictions within judgments of conviction.
    Judgments of conviction are final judgments that are only modifiable by courts in
    limited circumstances, including where ‘expressly authorized’ by statute. The
    fact that multiple sentences may be aggregated for administrative purposes does
    not authorize a court to treat those sentences as an undivided whole, the
    authorization to modify one part of which confers authorization to modify the
    whole.
    998 F.3d at 55 (internal citation omitted); see also Martin, 974 F.3d at 136 (“Aggregation for
    administrative purposes does not imply that every sentence imposed may be modified based on
    an authorization to modify one component part.”).
    The Court is persuaded by the reasoning in Young and Martin. While defendant’s non-
    covered conviction in Count 6 was grouped in the PSR “for administrative purposes,” id., with
    his covered-offense conviction in Count 3 (RICO conspiracy), PSR ¶ 208, to calculate the
    aggregate time he would serve, this organizing structure is irrelevant for purposes of the First
    Step Act. The grouping of Counts 3 and 6 does not negate the fundamental independence of
    defendant’s five concurrent life sentences “imposed for specific convictions within [the]
    judgment[] of conviction,” Young, 998 F.3d at 55, as demonstrated by the imposition of each
    sentence on each count separately by the sentencing judge. Sent’g Hr’g Tr. at 73:2–9.
    The D.C. Circuit’s opinion in White does not dictate a different conclusion. While the
    White panel stressed that “[t]he First Step Act ‘make[s] possible the fashion[ing] [of] the most
    complete relief possible,” 984 F.3d at 90 (quoting, with alterations, Albemarle Paper Co. v.
    Moody, 
    422 U.S. 405
    , 421 (1975)), and instructed district courts, when determining whether a
    41
    defendant merits relief, to “consider ‘all relevant factors,’” Lawrence, 1 F.4th at 43 (quoting
    White, 984 F.3d at 93), employing discretion that is “‘broad,’ but not ‘unfettered,’” Lawrence, 1
    F.4th at 43 (quoting White, 984 F.3d at 88), the availability of relief still “depends only on
    whether the defendant was convicted of an offense with a statutory penalty range that the Fair
    Sentencing Act altered,” White, 984 F.3d at 86. As applied here, “if sections 2 and 3 of the Fair
    Sentencing Act were in effect at the time” that defendant committed the conduct underlying
    Count 6, the life sentence defendant currently faces would not change, as the Fair Sentencing Act
    did not modify the penalties driving this sentence nor introduce any “revised penalty range[s ]
    applicable to the drug amount in the original statute[s] of conviction.” Id. The broad authority
    granted by White to reduce sentences for covered offenses under the First Step Act context is not
    so broad to authorize reductions of wholly independent sentences for non-covered offenses that
    fall outside the coverage of that statute.
    To adopt an interpretation of the First Step Act reaching defendant’s non-covered
    conviction would have widespread ramifications beyond the scope of what Congress intended.
    At a minimum, this broader reading of the First Step Act would mean that, under section 404(a),
    the finding of a single “covered offense” would make unnecessary any analysis of whether other
    convictions were “covered” or otherwise interdependent to determine eligibility for a sentence
    reduction, allowing a court to reach both covered and non-covered convictions when determining
    “when a motion for reduced sentence should be granted.” White, 984 F.3d at 88 (emphasis in
    original). In assessing whether such a sentence reduction would be warranted, current advisory
    guidelines would be considered, effectively making the Supreme Court’s decision in United
    States v. Booker, 
    543 U.S. 220
     (2005), retroactive for defendants with any covered offense, while
    not for other similarly situated convicted defendants. See In re Fashina, 
    486 F.3d 1300
    , 1301
    42
    (D.C. Cir. 2007) (“We hold Booker does not apply retroactively.”); In re Zambrano, 
    433 F.3d 886
    , 888 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (noting that the “Supreme Court has never expressly held Booker
    retroactive. Booker itself did not state that its rule was retroactive to cases on collateral review.
    Nor has the Court held Booker retroactive in any subsequent case.” (citation omitted)). Such an
    expansive interpretation of district courts’ authority under Section 404(b) to reduce sentences—
    divorced from the textual limitations in the First Step Act or the circumscribed limits of the
    sentencing package doctrine—would create a substantial risk of sentencing disparities and
    effectively turn each district court judge into an individual parole board for defendants convicted
    of crack cocaine offenses, regardless of the other convictions those defendants simultaneously
    incurred, without offering defendants convicted only of non-covered offenses the same
    opportunity for broad reconsideration of their sentences based on consideration of 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a) factors, including post-sentencing conduct and rehabilitation.
    Notwithstanding the “strong remedial” purposes of the First Step Act, White, 984 F.3d at
    90, and the wholistic nature of sentencing, see Dean, 137 S. Ct. at 1175–76, the mere fact that
    defendant is serving a sentence for some covered offenses does not, standing alone, authorize
    reduction of his life sentence on Count 6, which is not a covered offense. Nor does the
    sentencing package doctrine provide an extra-statutory basis for unraveling his sentence on this
    non-covered offense. Consequently, defendant is “not entitled to relief” as to his non-covered
    offense for which he is currently serving a life sentence, “and thus First Step Act relief is not
    warranted in his case.” United States v. Mendiola, No. 3:08-cr-119 (JKS), 
    2020 WL 569875
    , at
    *4 (D. Alaska Feb. 5, 2020).
    As to defendant’s covered offenses, the government recommends that the Court decline
    to exercise its discretion to consider sentence reductions “[b]ecause reducing the defendant’s
    43
    sentence for his covered offenses will not impact his ultimate sentence of life imprisonment.”
    Gov’t’s 404 Opp’n at 16. 19 The Court agrees. No favorable decision for defendant on the
    covered offenses would actually reduce his term of imprisonment, which is simply not
    redressable under Section 404 of the First Step Act due to the life term he is serving on non-
    covered Count 6.
    Performing the exercise of determining what sentence reductions, if any, would be
    appropriate for each covered offense, after consideration of the 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a) factors,
    would essentially amount to issuance of an advisory opinion and would be futile in actually
    reducing defendant’s sentence. Accordingly, no further discussion or review of the defendant’s
    covered offenses is necessary. See United States v. Parker, 
    993 F.3d 595
    , 606 (8th Cir.
    2021) (declining to review concurrent life sentence on count 2 because the conviction and life
    sentence on count 1 was valid and a ruling in defendant’s favor on count 2 would not reduce the
    time served on count 1); United States v. Stuckey, No. 20-1565, 
    2021 WL 2470308
    , at *2 (6th
    Cir. Feb. 8, 2021) (affirming denial of defendant’s First Step Act motion for sentence reduction
    because “[r]egardless of his sentence for the drug-conspiracy conviction, [defendant]’s
    conviction for murder to prevent a person from providing information concerning a federal crime
    to federal authorities, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1512
    (a)(1)(C), required a sentence of life
    imprisonment” and thus “[d]eclining to review [defendant]’s sentence for his drug-conspiracy
    19
    Defendant is serving life sentences on the covered offenses in Counts 2 (Super CCE), 3 (RICO conspiracy),
    40, and 41, and 40 years’ imprisonment on the covered offenses in Counts 38 and 39. Under current statutory
    penalties, his sentences on Counts 38 and 39 (crack distribution) would change to a maximum of 20 years’
    imprisonment, based on the amounts of 13.64 grams and 12.42 grams, respectively, alleged in the indictment for
    these convictions, and his sentences on Counts 40 and 41 (crack distribution) would change to five to forty years’
    imprisonment, based on the alleged amounts of 53.06 grams and 55.74 grams, respectively. The statutory penalties
    for Counts 2 and 3 would remain unchanged under current law. Although eligible for sentence reductions on these
    covered offenses, defendant concedes that his Guidelines sentencing range on these counts grouped together, with
    the original specific offense characteristics applied, would remain life imprisonment, even using only jury-found
    quantities. Def.’s 404 Mot. at 16.
    44
    conviction is unlikely to subject him to any adverse collateral consequences because he must
    serve a life sentence for his murder conviction.”); Heatley, 
    2021 WL 2418431
    , at *2 (finding that
    defendant’s RICO and Section 848 convictions did not involve crack cocaine and were not
    covered offenses under Section 404 of the First Step Act and therefore denying sentence
    reduction, explaining that “even if [defendant] had been convicted of a covered offense, his
    sentence would not be practically impacted; Defendant would still face a mandatory life sentence
    because of his additional conviction for the murders in aid of racketeering”); United States v.
    Jefferson, No. 97-cr-276 (2) (MJD), 
    2021 WL 2143478
    , at *3–4 (D. Minn. May 26, 2021)
    (declining “to review Defendant’s challenge [under Section 404 of the First Step Act] to his
    sentence on the CCE count,” since even if his sentence were reduced on the CCE count “it would
    not reduce his life sentence on the murder counts”).
    Defendant’s motion for a sentence reduction is therefore denied.
    B.      Motion for Compassionate Release
    Defendant also moves for compassionate release, arguing that his age, history of
    smoking, and various medical conditions, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, constitute
    extraordinary circumstances warranting a sentence reduction to time served or, at most, to 30
    years’ imprisonment. Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release at 3, 63.
    The government opposes this request for compassionate release, arguing, first, that
    defendant’s failure to meet the compassionate release statute’s exhaustion requirements leaves
    this Court without jurisdiction, Gov’t’s Opp’n to Def.’s Emergency Mot. for Compassionate
    Release Pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. §3582
    (c)(1)(A)(i) (“Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release”) at 9,
    ECF No. 650; second, that, even if jurisdiction is proper, he has failed to demonstrate that
    “extraordinary and compelling reasons” support a sentence reduction, id. at 16; and, third, that
    defendant has not met his burden of establishing that a sentence reduction is warranted
    45
    considering the relevant 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a) factors, id. at 23. As set forth below, defendant’s
    health conditions do not qualify as extraordinary and compelling reasons for relief, and
    defendant’s motion for compassionate release is therefore denied.
    1. Legal Standard
    “Federal courts are forbidden, as a general matter, to ‘modify a term of imprisonment
    once it has been imposed;’ but the rule of finality is subject to a few narrow exceptions.”
    Freeman v. United States, 
    564 U.S. 522
    , 526 (2011) (quoting 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)). As
    originally enacted, one such exception, codified in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(A), empowered the
    BOP Director to petition the court “to reduce the term of imprisonment . . .” and gave courts the
    authority to grant those petitions if, “after considering the factors set forth in section 3553(a) to
    the extent that they are applicable,” 
    id.,
     they found that “extraordinary and compelling reasons
    warrant such a reduction.” Pub. L. No. 98-473, Title II, § 212(a)(2), 
    98 Stat. 1837
    . The First
    Step Act expanded the exception in section 3582(c)(1)(A) to authorize a defendant to file a
    motion for such compassionate release directly with the court after exhausting any
    “administrative rights to appeal a failure of the Bureau of Prisons to bring a [compassionate
    release] motion” on his behalf or waiting at least “30 days” after he delivers his request for
    compassionate release to “the warden of [his] facility.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(A).
    In resolving motions for compassionate release, the court may only reduce a term of
    imprisonment “after considering the factors set forth in [18 U.S.C. §] 3553(a) to the extent that
    they are applicable,” id., and upon finding that “extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant
    such a reduction,” id. § 3582(c)(1)(A)(i). 20
    20
    The Sentencing Commission’s policy statement U.S.S.G. § 1B1.13, establishing requirements for BOP
    motions for compassionate release, is “not applicable to compassionate release motions filed by defendants” under
    the First Step Act, United States v. Long, 
    997 F.3d 342
    , 347 (D.C. Cir. 2021), and thus must not be treated as
    “binding” in that context, United States v. Johnson, 
    858 Fed. Appx. 381
    , 384 (D.C. Cir. 2021).
    46
    2.      Exhaustion
    Defendant asserts that he satisfied the exhaustion requirement when he submitted a
    request for compassionate release to the warden of FCI Ray Brook, where he was then housed,
    on May 21, 2020, and it was denied more than 30 days before he filed for relief in this Court.
    Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release at 17; Def.’s Reply Supp. Compassionate Release at 1. The
    government contends nonetheless that defendant has not exhausted his administrative remedies,
    because he “did not reference the medical conditions he now cites as a basis for granting
    extraordinary relief” in his initial request to the warden, and thus “has never given BOP the
    opportunity to consider his asserted medical conditions as bases for his request for
    compassionate relief.” Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release at 9–10. Defendant counters that
    the motion is properly before the Court, as there is “‘no requirement that the basis for the
    defendant’s motion for compassionate release to the court be identical to the basis of the
    defendant’s request to the warden of the BOP.’” Def.’s Reply Supp. Compassionate Release at 2
    (quoting United States v. Gluzman, No. 96-cr-323 (LJL), 
    2020 WL 4233049
    , at *11 (S.D.N.Y.
    July 23, 2020)).
    Even if his initial request were insufficient, defendant notes that he requested
    compassionate release a second time on December 24, 2020, “based on every ground raised in
    his motion for compassionate release,” which request BOP denied on January 12, 2021. See
    Def.’s Notice and 2d Suppl. Supp. Compassionate Release at 2; see also Def.’s Mot.
    Compassionate Release, Ex. M, Request for Compassionate Release at 2–4, ECF No. 667-1.
    Contrary to the government’s position, as this Court has elsewhere explained, the compassionate
    release statute’s “exhaustion” requirement is neither jurisdictional nor a mandatory claims
    processing rule and may be waived when exhaustion “would be futile.” United States v. Morris,
    No. 12-cr-154 (BAH), 
    2020 WL 2735651
    , at *3–6 (D.D.C. May 24, 2020) (internal quotation
    47
    marks omitted). Even if the government were correct that defendant’s motion for compassionate
    release must be limited to precisely those claims the inmate made to the warden of his facility, a
    denial on that basis here would be futile. The warden has already made his position clear: he
    does not believe defendant is in a debilitated medical condition. The government’s bid to have
    defendant’s motion thrown out on exhaustion grounds is thus rejected.
    3.      Extraordinary and Compelling Circumstances
    Defendant argues that his age, history of smoking, and various medical conditions
    including “hypertension, bradycardia (abnormally slow heart rate), borderline obesity,
    debilitating osteoarthritis, and [gastroesophageal reflux disease] GERD,” constitute extraordinary
    and compelling circumstances warranting a sentence reduction, in light of the COVID-19
    pandemic. Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release at 8. The government argues that defendant has
    not demonstrated any extraordinary and compelling reason for a reduction in sentence, “as his
    medical records demonstrate that he does not suffer from any chronic medical condition that has
    been identified by the Centers for Disease Control as elevating his risk of becoming seriously ill
    from COVID-19,” Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release at 1, and also notes defendant’s
    documented refusal of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine as “further support for the
    government’s view,” Gov’t’s Suppl. to Opp’n to Def.’s Emergency Mot. for Compassionate
    Release at 1 (“Gov’t’s Suppl. Opp’n Compassionate Release”), ECF No. 676. The burden on a
    defendant seeking compassionate release is high: “Cutting short a duly authorized prison
    sentence is, in the statute’s own words, an ‘extraordinary’ step to take, and it requires a
    justification which is more than sympathetic and indeed nothing short of ‘compelling.’” United
    States v. Shabazz, No. 17-cr-43 (JDB), 
    2021 WL 4306129
    , at *3 (D.D.C. Sept. 22, 2021).
    Considering the current state of the pandemic and for the reasons set forth below, the Court
    48
    agrees with the government that defendant has not demonstrated extraordinary and compelling
    reasons to warrant a sentence reduction.
    Several of defendant’s conditions, including his bradycardia, GERD, and osteoarthritis,
    are not considered to increase an individual’s risk of COVID-19 complications, nor are they
    otherwise sufficiently serious medical conditions to “compel[]” compassionate release. See
    People with Certain Medical Conditions, CDC (Dec. 14, 2021),
    https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/need-extra-precautions/people-with-medical-
    conditions.html (“CDC Risk Factors”); COVID-19: Who’s at Higher Risk of Serious Symptoms?,
    MAYO CLINIC (Dec. 17, 2021), https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/in-
    depth/coronavirus-who-is-at-risk/art-20483301 (“Mayo Clinic Risk Factors”). While, as
    defendant argues, these “institutions do not have a monopoly on information about COVID-19
    risks,” this guidance “is ‘material’ and frequently relied on by courts assessing motions for
    compassionate release.” United States v. Morales, No. 06-cr-248-4 (JDB), 
    2021 WL 4622461
    , at
    *4 (D.D.C. Oct. 7, 2021) (citing United States v. Powell, 
    468 F. Supp. 3d 398
    , 403 (D.D.C.
    2020)). Furthermore, defendant’s bloodwork showing potential signs of chronic kidney disease
    and diabetes, Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release at 31–32, is insufficient documentation of a
    medical condition to constitute “extraordinary and compelling” grounds for release, without
    formal diagnoses. Indeed, further weighing against finding that defendant’s medical conditions
    are sufficiently serious to warrant compassionate release is the fact that BOP has classified
    defendant’s medical care as “Care Level 1” and his “inmate profile reflects that he is cleared for
    regular work duties, with no medical restrictions.” Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release at 20.
    Defendant’s personal characteristics as an over-50 year old African American man and
    his other medical conditions, namely his history of smoking, obesity, and hypertension, provide
    49
    somewhat stronger support for his argument of heightened susceptibility to COVID-19. See
    CDC Risk Factors; Mayo Clinic Risk Factors. As the government concedes, smoking is a risk
    factor for severe COVID-19 infection, Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release at 20, but there is
    “no indication in the BOP medical records from 2019 or 2020” that defendant was or is a
    smoker, 
    id.
     Defendant has supplemented the record to reflect his smoking history, see Def.’s 1st
    Suppl. Evidence Supp. Compassionate Release at 1 (submitting “receipts showing [defendant]’s
    addiction to smoking, and purchase of Newport cigarettes from the BOP commissary, throughout
    2004 and 2005”), and the Court has no reason to question this evidence that he was smoker at
    least until about 2005. As for defendant’s obesity, the medical records filed in support of
    defendant’s motion reported his current weight, as of March 9, 2020, of 214 pounds. Def.’s Mot.
    Compassionate Release at 9. As the government notes, for a person of defendant’s height, this
    corresponds to a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 29.02 kg/m, below the threshold of 30 kg/m at
    which an individual is considered obese. See Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release at 18
    (citing Def.’s Mot. Compassionate Release, Ex. A at BOP_046, ECF No. 648-1). After
    defendant was again evaluated by BOP medical staff in December 2020, he supplemented the
    record with evidence that his current weight is 228 pounds, corresponding to a BMI of 30.9
    kg/m, which qualifies as obese. See Def.’s Notice and 2d Suppl. Supp. Compassionate Release
    at 2. Both of these conditions support an argument that defendant is at somewhat of a heightened
    risk for complications from COVID-19.
    Regarding defendant’s asserted hypertension, the government questions the sufficiency of
    the evidence, noting that defendant “cites to specific, individual[] blood pressure readings taken
    under sometimes stressful situations (post-injury, post sickness), and after exertion,” rather than
    to any “specific diagnoses.” Gov’t’s Opp’n Compassionate Release at 18. Defendant counters
    50
    with several cases where a defendant was granted compassionate release based on “similar
    evidence of hypertension,” Def.’s Reply Supp. Compassionate Release at 13, but in several of
    the cases cited, this pattern of high blood pressure readings suggestive of hypertension was
    accompanied by other serious and better documented medical conditions weighing in favor of
    compassionate release, such as permanent liver damage from a previous Hepatitis C infection,
    see United States v. Bernard, No. 3:97-cr-48 (RNC), 
    2020 WL 4462878
    , at *1 (D. Conn. Aug. 4,
    2020); or the defendant’s inability to “control his psoriatic arthritis and severe plaque psoriasis
    without the use of immunocompromising drugs that would render him particularly vulnerable to
    COVID-19,” United States v. Nemec, No. 16-cr-134 (SI), 
    2020 WL 4547158
    , at *2 (N.D. Cal.
    Aug. 6, 2020); see also United States v. Orji, 486 F. Supp. 3d. 398, 402 (D.D.C. 2020) (finding
    that defendant had “not carried his burden of demonstrating that his hypertension [was] an
    extraordinary and compelling reason for release” where “the record [did] not establish whether
    defendant’s hypertension [was] severe enough to merit release” and there were “no medical
    records to confirm his diagnosis”); Morales, 
    2021 WL 4622461
    , at *5 (noting that “‘controlled
    or benign hypertension’ usually does not constitute extraordinary and compelling circumstances”
    and “ordinary hypertension only ‘possibly’ ‘make[s] [a patient] more likely to get severely ill
    from COVID-19’” (quoting CDC Risk Factors)). 21 Defendant’s potential, yet-undiagnosed
    hypertension alone, therefore, does not amount to an “extraordinary and compelling reason” to
    merit a sentence reduction.
    21
    The other cases cited by defendant are also distinguishable: in United States v. Hernandez Frometa, No.
    18-cr-660 (AKH), 
    2020 WL 6132296
    , at *3 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 19, 2020), defendant appears to have had a hypertension
    diagnosis, uncontested by the government, as well as a “pattern of elevated high blood pressure readings.” In United
    States v. Lewis, the government had conceded that defendant “suffer[ed] ailments that qualify as extraordinary and
    compelling reasons.” No. 3:18-cr-138 (MHL), 
    2020 WL 6049913
    , at *4 (E.D. Va. Oct. 13, 2020).
    51
    Early in the pandemic, when little was known about how the virus spread and who was
    most at risk, and with “vaccines months (or more) away,” United States v. Johnson, 
    464 F. Supp. 3d 22
    , 37 (D.D.C. 2020 (internal citations omitted)), defendant’s combined afflictions of
    hypertension and slight obesity, alongside his history as a smoker and personal characteristics,
    might have sufficed to constitute “extraordinary and compelling reasons,” see, e.g., United States
    v. Mason, 
    471 F. Supp. 3d 225
    , 226 (D.D.C. 2020) (granting compassionate release to a “50-
    year-old African-American male with hypertension”), although these conditions would put
    defendant at risk both inside and outside federal custody. Regardless, “suffice it to say, it is no
    longer early in the pandemic.” Morales, 
    2021 WL 4622461
     at *5. Today, the widespread
    availability of vaccinations, including within BOP facilities, and the low infection rates at FCI
    Hazleton, where defendant is now housed, outweigh any heightened risk of COVID-19
    complications which might be posed by defendant’s personal characteristics and medical
    conditions. Granting compassionate release to defendant on these bases at this point in the
    pandemic risks creating sentencing disparities between similarly situated defendants. See United
    States v. Miller, No. 20-3079, 
    2021 WL 5537694
    , at *1 (D.C. Cir. Nov. 22, 2021) (finding “the
    district court acted within its discretion in determining that appellant failed to demonstrate that
    his risk of complications or death from COVID-19 constituted an extraordinary and compelling
    reason warranting compassionate release, especially in light of appellant’s refusal of available
    treatment”); United States v. Clark, No. 10-cr-133 (PLF), 
    2021 WL 5630795
    , at *2, 5 (D.D.C.
    Dec. 1, 2021) (denying compassionate relief despite defendant’s multiple chronic medical
    conditions, including obesity, and personal characteristics as an African American man); United
    States v. Spann, No. 19-cr-252 (ABJ), 
    2021 WL 4192046
    , at *2 (D.D.C. Sept. 15, 2021)
    (denying relief because “the record in this case does not show that [defendant] is in particular
    52
    danger at this time” and because “there is little evidence that [coronavirus] remains an issue at
    present, at least at [defendant’s facility]”).
    To date, BOP has fully vaccinated 550 staff members and completed 2,645 inmate
    inoculations at FCI Hazleton. See BOP, COVID-19 Vaccine Implementation (last updated Dec.
    27, 2021), https://www.bop.gov/coronavirus/index.jsp. The BOP reports six active infections
    among FCI Hazelton’s current total population of 2,007 inmates, and one case affecting a staff
    member. See id.; BOP, FCI Hazleton (last visited Dec. 27, 2021)
    https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/haf/. This low infection rate and overall increase in
    vaccinations at the facility where defendant is housed further reduces his risk of infection and
    accompanying complications from COVID-19. See, e.g., United States v. Jackson, No. 1:19-cr-
    347, 
    2021 WL 1299439
     (TNM), at *2 (D.D.C. Apr. 7, 2021) (holding that “statistics” on the
    number of inmates and staff members at defendant’s facility who “ha[d] received both doses of
    the COVID-19 vaccine . . . undermine[d] [his] claims” for compassionate release); Morales,
    
    2021 WL 4622461
    , at *4–5 (finding defendant had “failed to demonstrate an extraordinary and
    compelling reason justifying a sentence reduction” based on “the lack of support in his medical
    records for certain of his alleged ailments [and] the current state of the pandemic” as well as the
    fact that defendant was vaccinated, “none of his more than 1700 fellow inmates [was] currently
    positive for the disease, and [the facility] ha[d] implemented extensive protocols to mitigate the
    spread of COVID-19”); Clark, 
    2021 WL 5630795
    , at *4 (concluding that in light of vaccination
    and case rates at defendant’s facility, defendant had “not established extraordinary and
    compelling reasons for a sentence reduction” and noting that “[g]iven this progress, ‘it is not
    clear that prison presents the same heightened risk of COVID-19 exposure that it once did’”
    53
    (quoting United States v. Edwards, No. 03-cr-234, 
    2021 WL 3128870
     (JDB), at *3 (D.D.C. July
    22, 2021)).
    Despite the encouraging vaccination rates at FCI Hazleton and across the BOP more
    generally, defendant is not vaccinated, having refused the first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech
    COVID-19 vaccine on April 7, 2021. See Gov’t’s Suppl. Opp’n Compassionate Release at 1.
    The government asserts, correctly, that vaccination would diminish the “risk of serious
    complications from COVID-19” and thus “substantially mitigate any increased risk defendant
    has or claims to have based on potential exposure to COVID-19.” 
    Id.
     Were he to be vaccinated,
    he “would not be likely to suffer exacerbation of [his medical] conditions as a result of COVID-
    19 . . . because the vaccine would strengthen defendant’s immune response to the virus,
    protecting him from getting sick or suffering severe health complications.” Id. at 2.
    Defendant counters that “he trusts the vaccine and will be vaccinated once released, but
    he does not trust the BOP to administer it or monitor his symptoms should he have any adverse
    effects,” including because of negative past experiences with BOP medical care and ongoing
    frustration with the treatment he receives for his other conditions. Def.’s Reply to Gov’t’s Suppl.
    to Opp’n to Compassionate Release (“Def.’s Reply Suppl. Opp’n Compassionate Release”) at 1–
    2, ECF No. 681. As the government recognizes, defendant has a right to make his own decisions
    about his healthcare, Gov’t’s Suppl. Opp’n Compassionate Release at 5, and as defendant notes,
    incarcerated people lack the same ability to consult a doctor of their choosing to discuss the pros
    and cons of vaccination that is available to the general population, Def.’s Reply Suppl. Opp’n
    Compassionate Release at 4. Nevertheless, to grant compassionate release to a defendant
    because of the risks posed to him by the COVID-19 pandemic, when he has refused to take steps
    to mitigate those risks, flies in the face of all logic, see Miller, 
    2021 WL 5537694
    , at *1
    54
    (affirming district court denial of compassionate release, “especially in light of appellant’s
    refusal of available treatment”), and further risks creating sentencing disparities between
    similarly-situated defendants, see, e.g., Clark, 
    2021 WL 5630795
    , at *4 (“The Court agrees with
    the United States that, because Mr. Clark is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, his
    circumstances lack the extraordinary and compelling character that would warrant a sentence
    reduction.”). Numerous courts in this district have now recognized that “the remarkable
    effectiveness of these vaccines raises an extremely high bar to establishing extraordinary and
    compelling reasons for a sentence reduction based on the risk of contracting COVID-19.” 
    Id.
    (collecting cases). Defendant cannot appeal to his self-inflicted unvaccinated status to surmount
    that bar here.
    In light of the current status of the COVID-19 pandemic both nationally and within
    defendant’s facility, the Court finds that the defendant’s medical conditions, combined with his
    personal characteristics and history of smoking, do not represent extraordinary and compelling
    reasons for a reduction in his sentence. Since defendant has not presented extraordinary and
    compelling reasons for compassionate release, the 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a) factors need not be
    considered further, as “an inmate may not be granted compassionate release without a finding of
    an extraordinary and compelling reason, no matter how the § 3553(a) factors shake out.”
    Shabazz, 
    2021 WL 4306129
    , at *6.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, defendant is not eligible for a sentence reduction on his
    conviction for an offense not covered by Section 404(b) of the First Step Act, namely Count 6
    (CCE murder), and, consequently, his current life sentence remains final and may not be
    reduced. In addition, defendant has failed to present extraordinary and compelling circumstances
    55
    due to the COVID-19 pandemic warranting his compassionate release under 
    18 U.S.C. § 3582
    (c)(1)(A). Defendant’s motion for a sentence reduction under Section 404(b) of the First
    Step Act and his motion for compassionate release are therefore denied.
    An appropriate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
    Date: December 28, 2021
    __________________________
    BERYL A. HOWELL
    Chief Judge
    56