Concepcion v. United States ( 2022 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2021                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U. S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
    THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 20–1650. Argued January 19, 2022—Decided June 27, 2022
    Congress passed the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 to correct the wide dis-
    parity between crack and powder cocaine sentencing. Section 2 of that
    Act increased the amount of crack cocaine needed to trigger a 5-to-40-
    year sentencing range from 5 grams to 28 grams. §2(a)(2), 
    124 Stat. 2372
    . The Fair Sentencing Act did not apply retroactively, but in 2011,
    the Sentencing Commission amended the Sentencing Guidelines to
    lower the Guidelines range for crack-cocaine offenses and applied that
    reduction retroactively for some defendants. In 2018, Congress en-
    acted the First Step Act, authorizing district courts to “impose a re-
    duced sentence” on defendants serving sentences for certain crack-co-
    caine offenses “as if sections 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act . . .
    were in effect at the time the covered offense was committed.” Pub. L.
    115–391, §404(b), 
    132 Stat. 5222
    .
    In 2007, petitioner Carlos Concepcion pleaded guilty to one count of
    distributing five or more grams of crack cocaine in violation of 
    21 U. S. C. §841
    (a)(1), and he was sentenced in 2009 to 19 years (228
    months) in prison. When Concepcion was sentenced, he qualified for
    sentencing as a “career offender.” The career offender provision and
    other enhancements increased Concepcion’s Sentencing Guidelines
    range from 57 to 71 months to 262 to 327 months. Because Concepcion
    was sentenced as a career offender, he was not eligible for relief under
    the Sentencing Commission’s 2011 amendment.
    In 2019, Concepcion filed a pro se motion for a sentence reduction
    under the First Step Act. He argued that he was serving a sentence
    for a “covered offense” because §2 of the Fair Sentencing Act “modified”
    the statutory penalties for his conviction under 
    21 U. S. C. §841
    (a)(1).
    Concepcion contended that retroactive application of the Fair Sentenc-
    ing Act lowered his Guidelines range from 262 to 327 months to 188 to
    2                  CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    235 months. The Government conceded Concepcion’s eligibility for re-
    lief but opposed the motion, emphasizing that Concepcion’s original
    sentence of 228 months fell within the new Guidelines range of 188 to
    235 months, and citing factors in Concepcion’s prison record that the
    Government believed counseled against a sentence reduction. In his
    reply brief, represented by counsel, Concepcion made two primary ar-
    guments in support of a reduced sentence. First, he argued that he
    would no longer be considered a career offender because one of his
    prior convictions had been vacated and his remaining convictions
    would not constitute crimes of violence that trigger the enhancement.
    Without the enhancement, Concepcion contended that his revised
    Guidelines range should be 57 to 71 months. Second, Concepcion
    pointed to postsentencing evidence of rehabilitation.
    The District Court denied Concepcion’s motion. It declined to con-
    sider that Concepcion would no longer qualify as a career offender
    based on its judgment that the First Step Act did not authorize such
    relief. App. to Pet. for Cert. 72a. The District Court did not address
    Concepcion’s evidence of rehabilitation or the Government’s counter-
    vailing evidence of Concepcion’s disciplinary record. The Court of Ap-
    peals affirmed in a divided opinion, and added to the disagreement
    among the Circuits as to whether a district court deciding a First Step
    Act motion must, may, or may not consider intervening changes of law
    or fact.
    Held: The First Step Act allows district courts to consider intervening
    changes of law or fact in exercising their discretion to reduce a sen-
    tence. Pp. 6–18.
    (a) Federal courts historically have exercised broad discretion to
    consider all relevant information at an initial sentencing hearing, con-
    sistent with their responsibility to sentence the whole person before
    them. That discretion also carries forward to later proceedings that
    may modify an original sentence. District courts’ discretion is bounded
    only when Congress or the Constitution expressly limits the type of
    information a district court may consider in modifying a sentence.
    Pp. 6–11.
    (1) There is a “long” and “durable” tradition that sentencing
    judges “enjo[y] discretion in the sort of information they may consider”
    at an initial sentencing proceeding. Dean v. United States, 
    581 U. S. 62
    , 66. That unbroken tradition also characterizes federal sentencing
    history. Indeed, “[i]t has been uniform and constant in the federal ju-
    dicial tradition for the sentencing judge to consider every convicted
    person as an individual and every case as a unique study in the human
    failings that sometimes mitigate, sometimes magnify, the crime and
    the punishment to ensue.” Koon v. United States, 
    518 U. S. 81
    , 113.
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                      3
    Syllabus
    Accordingly, a federal judge in deciding to impose a sentence “may ap-
    propriately conduct an inquiry broad in scope, largely unlimited either
    as to the kind of information he may consider, or the source from which
    it may come.” United States v. Tucker, 
    404 U. S. 443
    , 446. Pp. 6–8.
    (2) The discretion federal judges hold at initial sentencings also
    characterizes sentencing modification hearings. The Court in Pepper
    v. United States, 
    562 U. S. 476
    , found it “clear that when a defendant’s
    sentence has been set aside on appeal and his case remanded for re-
    sentencing, a district court may consider evidence of a defendant’s re-
    habilitation since his prior sentencing.” 
    Id., at 490
    . Accordingly, fed-
    eral courts resentencing individuals whose sentences were vacated on
    appeal regularly consider evidence of rehabilitation, or evidence of rule
    breaking in prison, developed after the initial sentencing. Where dis-
    trict courts must calculate new Guidelines ranges as part of resentenc-
    ing proceedings, courts have also exercised their discretion to consider
    nonretroactive Guidelines changes. In some cases, a district court is
    prohibited from recalculating a Guidelines range to account for non-
    retroactive Guidelines amendments, but the court may nevertheless
    find those amendments to be germane when deciding whether to mod-
    ify a sentence at all, and if so, to what extent. Pp. 8–9.
    (3) The only limitations on a court’s discretion to consider relevant
    materials at an initial sentencing or in modifying that sentence are
    those set forth by Congress in a statute or by the Constitution. See
    Pepper, 
    562 U. S., at 489, n. 8
    ; Mistretta v. United States, 
    488 U. S. 361
    , 364. Congress has placed such limits where it deems them appro-
    priate. See 
    18 U. S. C. §§3582
    (a), 3583(c). Congress has further im-
    posed express statutory limitations on one type of sentencing modifi-
    cation proceeding, expressly cabining district courts’ discretion by
    requiring courts to abide by the Sentencing Commission’s policy state-
    ments. See also §3582(c)(1)(A) (compassionate release). Pp. 9–11.
    (b) Congress in the First Step Act did not contravene well-estab-
    lished sentencing practices. Pp. 11–18.
    (1) Nothing in the text and structure of the First Step Act ex-
    pressly, or even implicitly, overcomes the established tradition of dis-
    trict courts’ sentencing discretion. The text of the First Step Act does
    not so much as hint that district courts are prohibited from considering
    evidence of rehabilitation, disciplinary infractions, or unrelated Guide-
    lines changes. The only two limitations on district courts’ discretion
    appear in §404(c): A district court may not consider a First Step Act
    motion if the movant’s sentence was already reduced under the Fair
    Sentencing Act or if the court considered and rejected a motion under
    the First Step Act. Neither limitation applies here. By its terms,
    §404(c) does not prohibit district courts from considering any argu-
    ments in favor of, or against, sentence modification. In fact, §404(c)
    4                   CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    only underscores that a district court is not required to modify a sen-
    tence for any reason. “Drawing meaning from silence is particularly
    inappropriate” in the sentencing context, “for Congress has shown that
    it knows how to direct sentencing practices in express terms.” Kim-
    brough v. United States, 
    552 U. S. 85
    , 103.
    The “as if ” clause in §404(b) does not impose any limit on the infor-
    mation a district court can consider in exercising its discretion under
    the First Step Act. The term “as if ” simply enacts the First Step Act’s
    central goal: to make retroactive the changes in the Fair Sentencing
    Act, necessary to overcome 
    1 U. S. C. §109
    , which creates a presump-
    tion that Congress does not repeal federal criminal penalties unless it
    says so “expressly.” The “as if ” clause also directs district courts to
    apply the Fair Sentencing Act as if it applied at the time of the com-
    mission of the offense, not at the time of the original sentencing, sug-
    gesting that Congress did not intend to constrain district courts to con-
    sidering only the original sentencing record. Thus, the “as if ” clause
    requires district courts to apply the legal changes in the Fair Sentenc-
    ing Act when recalculating a movant’s Guidelines, but it does not limit
    the information a district court may use to inform its decision whether
    and how much to reduce a sentence. Pp. 11–14.
    (2) Consistent with this text and structure, district courts decid-
    ing First Step Act motions regularly have considered evidence of post-
    sentencing rehabilitation and unrelated Guidelines amendments
    when raised by the parties. First Step Act movants have amassed
    prison records of over a decade. See §404(a), 
    132 Stat. 5222
     (requiring
    the movant to have been sentenced for an offense “committed before
    August 3, 2010”). Those records are naturally of interest to judges au-
    thorized by the First Step Act to reduce prison sentences or even to
    release movants immediately. Likewise, when deciding whether to
    grant First Step Act motions and in deciding how much to reduce sen-
    tences, courts have looked to postsentencing evidence of violence or
    prison infractions as probative. Moreover, when raised by the parties,
    district courts have considered nonretroactive Guidelines amend-
    ments to help inform whether to reduce sentences at all, and if so, by
    how much. Nothing express or implicit in the First Step Act suggests
    that these courts misinterpreted the Act in considering such relevant
    and probative information. Pp. 14–16.
    (3) The Court therefore holds that the First Step Act allows dis-
    trict courts to consider intervening changes of law or fact in exercising
    their discretion to reduce a sentence pursuant to the First Step Act.
    When deciding a First Step Act motion, district courts bear the stand-
    ard obligation to explain their decisions and demonstrate that they
    considered the parties’ nonfrivolous arguments. See Golan v. Saada,
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                      5
    Syllabus
    596 U. S. ___, ___. The district court is not required to articulate any-
    thing more than a brief statement of reasons. See Rita v. United
    States, 
    551 U. S. 338
    , 356.
    The broad discretion that the First Step Act affords to district courts
    also counsels in favor of deferential appellate review. See Solem v.
    Helm, 
    463 U. S. 277
    , 290, n. 16. Section 404(c) of the First Step Act
    confers particular discretion because the Act does not “require a court
    to reduce any sentence.” Other than legal errors in recalculating the
    Guidelines to account for the Fair Sentencing Act’s changes, see Gall
    v. United States, 
    552 U. S. 38
    , 51, appellate review should not be overly
    searching. Pp. 16–18.
    
    991 F. 3d 279
    , reversed and remanded.
    SOTOMAYOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which THOMAS,
    BREYER, KAGAN, and GORSUCH, JJ., joined. KAVANAUGH, J., filed a dis-
    senting opinion, in which ROBERTS, C. J., and ALITO and BARRETT, JJ.,
    joined.
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                                 1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that
    corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 20–1650
    _________________
    CARLOS CONCEPCION, PETITIONER v.
    UNITED STATES
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    [June 27, 2022]
    JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
    There is a longstanding tradition in American law, dating
    back to the dawn of the Republic, that a judge at sentencing
    considers the whole person before him or her “as an individ-
    ual.” Koon v. United States, 
    518 U. S. 81
    , 113 (1996). In
    line with this history, federal courts today generally “exer-
    cise a wide discretion in the sources and types of evidence
    used” to craft appropriate sentences. Williams v. New York,
    
    337 U. S. 241
    , 246 (1949). When a defendant appears for
    sentencing, the sentencing court considers the defendant on
    that day, not on the date of his offense or the date of his
    conviction. Pepper v. United States, 
    562 U. S. 476
    , 492
    (2011). Similarly, when a defendant’s sentence is set aside
    on appeal, the district court at resentencing can (and in
    many cases, must) consider the defendant’s conduct and
    changes in the Federal Sentencing Guidelines since the
    original sentencing. 
    Ibid.
    Congress enacted the First Step Act of 2018 against that
    backdrop. The First Step Act authorizes district courts to
    reduce the prison sentences of defendants convicted of cer-
    2              CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    tain offenses involving crack cocaine. The Act allows a dis-
    trict court to impose a reduced sentence “as if ” the revised
    penalties for crack cocaine enacted in the Fair Sentencing
    Act of 2010 were in effect at the time the offense was com-
    mitted. The question in this case is whether a district court
    adjudicating a motion under the First Step Act may con-
    sider other intervening changes of law (such as changes to
    the Sentencing Guidelines) or changes of fact (such as be-
    havior in prison) in adjudicating a First Step Act motion.
    The Court holds that they may. It is only when Congress
    or the Constitution limits the scope of information that a
    district court may consider in deciding whether, and to
    what extent, to modify a sentence, that a district court’s dis-
    cretion to consider information is restrained. Nothing in
    the First Step Act contains such a limitation. Because dis-
    trict courts are always obligated to consider nonfrivolous
    arguments presented by the parties, the First Step Act re-
    quires district courts to consider intervening changes when
    parties raise them. By its terms, however, the First Step
    Act does not compel courts to exercise their discretion to re-
    duce any sentence based on those arguments.
    The District Court in this case declined to consider peti-
    tioner Carlos Concepcion’s arguments that intervening
    changes of law and fact supported his motion, erroneously
    believing that it did not have the discretion to do so, and the
    Court of Appeals affirmed. The Court now reverses.
    I
    A
    In 2007, Concepcion pleaded guilty to one count of dis-
    tributing five or more grams of crack cocaine in violation of
    
    21 U. S. C. §841
    (a)(1) (2006 ed.). Concepcion admitted that
    he sold 13.8 grams of crack cocaine, and he was sentenced
    in 2009 to 19 years (228 months) in prison. Two features of
    his sentencing are relevant here. First, Concepcion was
    sentenced under a scheme that created a 100-to-1 disparity
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)            3
    Opinion of the Court
    between crack-cocaine and powder-cocaine offenders. At
    the time Concepcion was sentenced, an offense involving
    five or more grams of crack cocaine resulted in a statutory
    sentencing range of 5 to 40 years’ imprisonment; it required
    100 times as much powder cocaine to trigger the same pen-
    alties. Second, when Concepcion was initially sentenced,
    he qualified as a “career offender.” The career offender pro-
    vision, together with other enhancements, increased Con-
    cepcion’s Guidelines range from 57 to 71 months to 262 to
    327 months.
    Both of these features of Concepcion’s sentencing have
    since been altered. Just one year after Concepcion was sen-
    tenced, Congress passed the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 to
    correct the harsh disparities between crack and powder co-
    caine sentencing. Section 2 of that Act increased the
    amount of crack cocaine needed to trigger the 5-to-40-year
    sentencing range from 5 grams to 28 grams. §2(a)(2), 
    124 Stat. 2372
    . The Sentencing Commission then retroactively
    amended the Sentencing Guidelines to lower the Guidelines
    range for crack-cocaine offenses, but that amendment did
    not benefit all prisoners serving sentences handed down
    during the 100-to-1 regime. See United States Sentencing
    Commission, Guidelines Manual App. C, Amdt. 750 (Supp.
    Nov. 2011) (USSG). Concepcion was not eligible for retro-
    active relief under that 2011 Sentencing Commission’s
    amendment because he was sentenced under the career of-
    fender enhancement, but he became eligible to have his sen-
    tence reduced in 2018, when Congress passed the First Step
    Act. The First Step Act authorized district courts to “im-
    pose a reduced sentence” for qualifying movants “as if sec-
    tions 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act . . . were in effect
    at the time the covered offense was committed.” Pub. L.
    115–391, §404(b), 
    132 Stat. 5222
    .
    B
    Concepcion filed a pro se motion under the First Step Act
    4                CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    in 2019. He argued that he was serving a sentence for a
    “covered offense” because §2 of the Fair Sentencing Act
    “modified” the statutory penalties for his conviction under
    
    21 U. S. C. §841
    (a)(1). Concepcion contended that retroac-
    tive application of the Fair Sentencing Act lowered his
    Guidelines range from 262 to 327 months to 188 to 235
    months. The Government conceded Concepcion’s eligibility
    for relief and his calculation of the Guidelines but opposed
    the motion, emphasizing that Concepcion’s original sen-
    tence of 228 months fell within the new Guidelines range of
    188 to 235 months. While recognizing Concepcion’s partic-
    ipation in various programs in prison, the Government de-
    tailed “troubling behaviors such as ‘[f]ighting (12/19/2017);
    Interfering with Staff (11/15/2012); and Possession of a
    Weapon’ ” in Concepcion’s prison records that, in the Gov-
    ernment’s view, counseled against a sentence reduction.
    Electronic Case Filing in No. 1:07–cr–10197 (Mass.) (ECF),
    Doc. 78, pp. 4–5, n. 4.
    In his reply brief, represented by counsel, Concepcion
    made two primary arguments in support of a reduced sen-
    tence. First, he argued that he would no longer be consid-
    ered a career offender under the amended Guidelines, be-
    cause one of his prior convictions had been vacated and his
    remaining convictions would no longer be considered crimes
    of violence that trigger the enhancement.1 Without the ca-
    reer offender enhancement, Concepcion argued that his re-
    vised Guidelines range should be 57 to 71 months. Second,
    Concepcion pointed to postsentencing evidence of rehabili-
    tation. Concepcion highlighted his successfully completed
    drug and vocational programming, as well as his stable
    ——————
    1 In 2015, this Court held that the Armed Career Criminal Act’s resid-
    ual clause was unconstitutional, see Johnson v. United States, 
    576 U. S. 591
    , prompting the Sentencing Commission to amend the identical
    clause of the career offender Guideline, see USSG App. C, Amdt. 798
    (Supp. Aug. 2016). The Sentencing Commission did not apply the
    amendment retroactively.
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)             5
    Opinion of the Court
    reentry plan. He also submitted a letter from a Bureau of
    Prisons chaplain who attested to Concepcion’s spiritual
    growth while incarcerated.
    The District Court denied Concepcion’s motion. It
    adopted the Government’s argument that if the Court “con-
    sidered only the changes in law that the Fair Sentencing
    Act enacted, [Concepcion’s] sentence would be the same.”
    App. to Pet. for Cert. 71a. The court declined to consider
    that Concepcion would no longer qualify as a career of-
    fender on the ground that the First Step Act “does not au-
    thorize such relief.” 
    Id.,
     at 72a. In doing so, the District
    Court adopted the reasoning of the Fifth Circuit, which un-
    derstood the First Step Act to require a district court to
    “ ‘plac[e] itself in the time frame of the original sentencing,
    altering the relevant legal landscape only by the changes
    mandated by the 2010 Fair Sentencing Act.’ ” 
    Id.,
     at 74a
    (quoting United States v. Hegwood, 
    934 F. 3d 414
    , 418 (CA5
    2019)). The District Court did not address Concepcion’s ev-
    idence of rehabilitation or the Government’s countervailing
    evidence of Concepcion’s disciplinary record.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed in a divided opinion. The
    court interpreted the First Step Act as requiring a “two-step
    inquiry.” 
    991 F. 3d 279
    , 289 (CA1 2021). At the first step
    of that inquiry, a district court decides whether a movant
    should be resentenced at all, considering only the changes
    wrought by the Fair Sentencing Act. 
    Ibid.
     If the district
    court answers in the affirmative at the first step, it may
    then, in its discretion, consider new factual or legal devel-
    opments in determining how to resentence the movant. 
    Id.,
    at 289–290. Judge Barron dissented, rejecting the panel’s
    bifurcated approach. In his view, the First Step Act re-
    quires only one step of analysis, at which district courts
    have “substantial discretion” to consider evidence of reha-
    bilitation and Guidelines changes. Id., at 293, 309–310.
    The Court of Appeals opinion added to the disagreement
    among the Circuits as to whether a district court deciding a
    6                 CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    First Step Act motion must, may, or may not consider inter-
    vening changes of law or fact.2 This Court granted certio-
    rari to resolve this disagreement. 594 U. S. ___ (2021).
    II
    “From the beginning of the Republic, federal judges were
    entrusted with wide sentencing discretion.” K. Stith & J.
    Cabranes, Fear of Judging: Sentencing Guidelines in the
    Federal Courts 9 (1998) (Stith & Cabranes). Federal courts
    historically have exercised this broad discretion to consider
    all relevant information at an initial sentencing hearing,
    consistent with their responsibility to sentence the whole
    person before them. That discretion also carries forward to
    later proceedings that may modify an original sentence.
    Such discretion is bounded only when Congress or the Con-
    stitution expressly limits the type of information a district
    court may consider in modifying a sentence.
    A
    There is a “long” and “durable” tradition that sentencing
    judges “enjo[y] discretion in the sort of information they
    may consider” at an initial sentencing proceeding. Dean v.
    United States, 
    581 U. S. 62
    , 66 (2017).3 This history dates
    ——————
    2 Compare United States v. Collington, 
    995 F. 3d 347
    , 355, 360 (CA4
    2021) (must consider changed law and facts); United States v. Easter, 
    975 F. 3d 318
    , 325–327 (CA3 2020) (same); United States v. Brown, 
    974 F. 3d 1137
    , 1144–1145 (CA10 2020) (must consider intervening Circuit prece-
    dent); United States v. White, 
    984 F. 3d 76
    , 93 (CADC 2020) (must con-
    sider changed facts), with United States v. Maxwell, 
    991 F. 3d 685
    , 689
    (CA6 2021) (may consider); United States v. Moore, 
    975 F. 3d 84
    , 92, n.
    36 (CA2 2020) (same); United States v. Harris, 
    960 F. 3d 1103
    , 1106 (CA8
    2020) (same); United States v. Shaw, 
    957 F. 3d 734
    , 741–742 (CA7 2020)
    (same), with United States v. Denson, 
    963 F. 3d 1080
    , 1089 (CA11 2020)
    (may not consider); United States v. Kelley, 
    962 F. 3d 470
    , 475 (CA9 2020)
    (same); United States v. Hegwood, 
    934 F. 3d 414
    , 418–419 (CA5 2019)
    (same).
    3 The dissent invokes another background principle: the importance of
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                   7
    Opinion of the Court
    back to before the founding: “[B]oth before and since the
    American colonies became a nation, courts in this country
    and in England practiced a policy under which a sentencing
    judge could exercise a wide discretion in the sources and
    types of evidence used to assist him in determining the kind
    and extent of punishment to be imposed within limits fixed
    by law.” Williams, 
    337 U. S., at 246
    . Early state and Eng-
    lish courts broadly recognized this discretion. See, e.g., Rex
    v. Bunts, 2 T. R. 683, 100 Eng. Rep. 368 (K. B. 1788)
    (“[W]hen any defendant shall be brought up for sentence on
    any indictment” the court shall hear evidence from the pros-
    ecution and the defense in determining an appropriate sen-
    tence); State v. Summers, 98 N. C. 702, 705, 
    4 S. E. 120
    , 121
    (1887) (“It was competent for [the trial judge] to hear such
    evidence as he might deem necessary and proper to aid his
    judgment and discretion in determining the punishment to
    be imposed”); State v. Reeder, 79 S. C. 139, 141, 
    60 S. E. 434
    ,
    435 (1908) (rejecting claim that trial court erred in consid-
    ering aggravating evidence at sentencing, and explaining
    that “[t]he circuit judge merely permitted himself to be in-
    formed as to the character of the accused and the circum-
    stances of the crime, so that he might be able to exercise his
    discretion intelligently and pronounce a just sentence”).
    That unbroken tradition characterizes federal sentencing
    history as well. “Federal judges exercising sentencing dis-
    cretion have always considered a wide variety of aggravat-
    ing and mitigating factors relating to the circumstances of
    both the offense and the offender.” Stith & Cabranes 14.
    Indeed, “[i]t has been uniform and constant in the federal
    judicial tradition for the sentencing judge to consider every
    convicted person as an individual and every case as a
    ——————
    “finality of criminal judgments.” Post, at 2 (opinion of KAVANAUGH, J.).
    No one doubts the importance of finality. Here, however, the Court in-
    terprets a statute whose very purpose is to reopen final judgments.
    8              CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    unique study in the human failings that sometimes miti-
    gate, sometimes magnify, the crime and the punishment to
    ensue.” Koon, 
    518 U. S., at 113
    ; see, e.g., United States v.
    Randall, 
    27 F. Cas. 696
    , 708 (No. 16,118) (DC Ore. 1869)
    (considering the defendant’s “former good reputation” in
    imposing sentence); United States v. Nye, 
    27 F. Cas. 210
    ,
    211 (No. 15,906) (CC Mass. 1855) (considering “palliating
    circumstance[s],” including that the defendants were “so-
    ber, and fit for duty,” in imposing sentence); Lyon’s Case, 
    15 F. Cas. 1183
    , 1185 (No. 8,646) (CC Vt. 1798) (considering
    the “reduced condition of [the defendant’s] estate” in impos-
    ing sentence). Accordingly, a federal judge in deciding to
    impose a sentence “may appropriately conduct an inquiry
    broad in scope, largely unlimited either as to the kind of
    information he may consider, or the source from which it
    may come.” United States v. Tucker, 
    404 U. S. 443
    , 446
    (1972).
    B
    The discretion federal judges hold at initial sentencings
    also characterizes sentencing modification hearings. Rely-
    ing on Williams and Koon, the Court in Pepper found it
    “clear that when a defendant’s sentence has been set aside
    on appeal and his case remanded for resentencing, a district
    court may consider evidence of a defendant’s rehabilitation
    since his prior sentencing.” 
    562 U. S., at 490
    . Pepper
    reached that conclusion in light of the “federal sentencing
    framework” that allows sentencing judges to consider the
    “ ‘fullest information possible concerning the defendant’s
    life and characteristics.’ ” 
    Id., at 488, 490
    .
    Accordingly, federal courts resentencing individuals
    whose sentences were vacated on appeal regularly consider
    evidence of rehabilitation developed after the initial sen-
    tencing. See, e.g., United States v. Rodriguez, 
    2020 WL 2521551
    , *5 (SDNY, May 18, 2020) (considering the mo-
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)            9
    Opinion of the Court
    vant’s “exemplary conduct during a lengthy period of incar-
    ceration”); United States v. Raifsnider, 
    2020 WL 1503527
    ,
    *3 (D Kan., Mar. 30, 2020) (considering that the movant
    “has completed his GED, taken hundreds of hours of pro-
    gramming offered by the Bureau of Prisons, and is taking
    college classes”). Similarly, district courts in resentencing
    proceedings frequently consider evidence of violence and
    rule breaking in prison. See, e.g., United States v. Riley,
    
    785 Fed. Appx. 282
    , 285 (CA6 2019) (considering a “ ‘series
    of disciplinary violations while in the Bureau of Prisons’ ”);
    United States v. Diaz, 
    486 Fed. Appx. 979
    , 980 (CA3 2012)
    (considering “infractions while in prison, e.g., possession of
    marijuana”).
    Where district courts must calculate new Guidelines
    ranges as part of resentencing proceedings, courts have also
    considered unrelated Guidelines changes in their discre-
    tion. See, e.g., United States v. Frates, 
    896 F. 3d 93
    , 101–
    102 (CA1 2018) (distinguishing between recalculating a
    Guidelines range based on nonretroactive intervening
    changes of law and considering those changes as a matter
    of “discretion to select an appropriate sentence”); United
    States v. Taylor, 
    648 F. 3d 417
    , 425 (CA6 2011) (“[T]he dis-
    trict court can consider subsequent amendments to the
    Guidelines for purposes of fashioning an appropriate sen-
    tence [at resentencing]”); United States v. Gilmore, 
    599 F. 3d 160
    , 166–167 (CA2 2010) (considering subsequently
    updated Guidelines as “evidence of society’s judgment of the
    seriousness of [the movant’s] offense”). In many cases, a
    district court is prohibited from recalculating a Guidelines
    range in light of nonretroactive Guidelines amendments,
    but the court may find those amendments to be germane
    when deciding whether to modify a sentence at all, and if
    so, to what extent.
    C
    The only limitations on a court’s discretion to consider
    10             CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    any relevant materials at an initial sentencing or in modi-
    fying that sentence are those set forth by Congress in a stat-
    ute or by the Constitution. See Pepper, 
    562 U. S., at 489, n. 8
     (“Of course, sentencing courts’ discretion . . . is subject
    to constitutional constraints”); Mistretta v. United States,
    
    488 U. S. 361
    , 364 (1989) (“[T]he scope of judicial discretion
    with respect to a sentence is subject to congressional con-
    trol”).
    Congress is not shy about placing such limits where it
    deems them appropriate. At an initial sentencing, Con-
    gress has provided generally that “[n]o limitation shall be
    placed on the information concerning the background, char-
    acter, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense” when
    deciding what sentence to impose. 
    18 U. S. C. §3661
    . Con-
    gress has, however, expressly prohibited a district court in
    crafting an initial sentence from considering a defendant’s
    need for rehabilitation in support of a prison sentence. See
    §3582(a); Tapia v. United States, 
    564 U. S. 319
    , 328 (2011).
    In other aspects of sentencing, Congress also has ex-
    pressly limited district courts to considering only certain
    factors. For example, in determining whether to include a
    term of supervised release, and the length of any such term,
    Congress has expressly precluded district courts from con-
    sidering the need for retribution. See §3583(c); id., at 326.
    Congress has further imposed express statutory limita-
    tions on one type of sentencing modification proceeding.
    Section 3582(c)(2) provides that
    “in the case of a defendant who has been sentenced to
    a term of imprisonment based on a sentencing range
    that has subsequently been lowered by the Sentencing
    Commission . . . the court may reduce the term of im-
    prisonment, after considering the factors set forth in
    section 3553(a) to the extent that they are applicable,
    if such a reduction is consistent with applicable policy
    statements issued by the Sentencing Commission.”
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                     11
    Opinion of the Court
    For those proceedings, Congress expressly cabined district
    courts’ discretion by requiring courts to abide by the Sen-
    tencing Commission’s policy statements.             See also
    §3582(c)(1)(A) (permitting district courts to grant compas-
    sionate release in certain circumstances if “such a reduction
    is consistent with applicable policy statements issued by
    the Sentencing Commission”).4
    III
    A
    Congress in the First Step Act simply did not contravene
    this well-established sentencing practice. Nothing in the
    text and structure of the First Step Act expressly, or even
    implicitly, overcomes the established tradition of district
    courts’ sentencing discretion.
    The first section of the First Step Act, §404(a), sets out
    who is eligible for relief:
    “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 . . . that was committed
    before August 3, 2010.” 
    132 Stat. 5222
    .
    The second section, §404(b), describes what relief is avail-
    able for the parties who meet §404(a)’s criteria:
    “A court that imposed a sentence for a covered of-
    fense may, on motion of the defendant, the Director of
    the Bureau of Prisons, the attorney for the Govern-
    ment, or the court, impose a reduced sentence as if sec-
    tions 2 and 3 of the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 . . .
    ——————
    4 The dissent brushes aside this venerable tradition of discretion by
    emphasizing the differences between initial sentencings and sentence
    modification proceedings. See post, at 2–3. Of course there are differ-
    ences between the two, but the feature common to both is that only Con-
    gress and the Constitution limit the historic scope of district courts’ dis-
    cretion.
    12             CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    were in effect at the time the covered offense was com-
    mitted.” 
    132 Stat. 5222
    .
    The third section, §404(c), places two explicit limitations
    on available relief:
    “No court shall entertain a motion made under this
    section to reduce a sentence if the sentence was previ-
    ously imposed or previously reduced in accordance with
    the amendments made by sections 2 and 3 of the Fair
    Sentencing Act of 2010 . . . 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 sec-
    tion shall be construed to require a court to reduce any
    sentence pursuant to this section.” 
    132 Stat. 5222
    .
    The text of the First Step Act does not so much as hint
    that district courts are prohibited from considering evi-
    dence of rehabilitation, disciplinary infractions, or unre-
    lated Guidelines changes. The only two limitations on dis-
    trict courts’ discretion appear in §404(c): A district court
    may not consider a First Step Act motion if the movant’s
    sentence was already reduced under the Fair Sentencing
    Act or if the court considered and rejected a motion under
    the First Step Act. Neither of those limitations applies
    here. By its terms, §404(c) does not prohibit district courts
    from considering any arguments in favor of, or against, sen-
    tence modification. In fact, §404(c) only underscores that a
    district court is not required to modify a sentence for any
    reason. “Drawing meaning from silence is particularly in-
    appropriate” in the sentencing context, “for Congress has
    shown that it knows how to direct sentencing practices in
    express terms.” Kimbrough v. United States, 
    552 U. S. 85
    ,
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                      13
    Opinion of the Court
    103 (2007).5
    Nor did Congress hide any limitations on district courts’
    discretion outside of §404(c). Section 404(b) does not erect
    any additional such limitations. The term “as if ” simply
    enacts the First Step Act’s central goal: to make retroactive
    the changes in the Fair Sentencing Act. That language is
    necessary to overcome 
    1 U. S. C. §109
    , which creates a pre-
    sumption that Congress does not repeal federal criminal
    penalties unless it says so “expressly.” To defeat the pre-
    sumption established by this statute, Congress needed to
    make clear that the Fair Sentencing Act applied retroac-
    tively. Notably, the “as if ” clause requires a district court
    to apply the Fair Sentencing Act as if it applied at the time
    of the commission of the offense, not at the time of the orig-
    inal sentencing. Had Congress intended to constrain dis-
    trict courts to consider only the record as it existed at the
    time of the original sentencing, Congress would have writ-
    ten the “as if ” clause to refer to that sentencing, not the
    commission of the offense. Thus, the language Congress
    enacted in the First Step Act specifically requires district
    courts to apply the legal changes in the Fair Sentencing Act
    when calculating the Guidelines if they chose to modify a
    ——————
    5 The dissent demands that Congress expressly specify the scope of in-
    formation that a district court can consider in a sentencing modification
    proceeding. See post, at 3. This gets it backward. The consistent historic
    norm is that a district court can consider any information in crafting a
    new or modified sentence, subject to congressional or constitutional lim-
    its.    See supra, at 6–11.         Moreover, the dissent’s reliance on
    §3582(c)(1)(B), post, at 3, misses the point. Section 3582(c)(1)(B) is
    simply a gateway provision that refers to whichever statute “expressly
    permit[s]” the sentencing modification. Ibid. It does not impose any sub-
    stantive or procedural limits on a district court’s discretion; for those de-
    tails, it refers to the statute authorizing the sentence modification. See
    United States v. Triestman, 
    178 F. 3d 624
    , 629 (CA2 1999) (“ ‘[S]ubsection
    (c)(1)(B) simply notes the authority to modify a sentence if modification
    is permitted by statute’ ” (quoting S. Rep. No. 98–225 (1984)).
    14                CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    sentence.6 The “as if ” clause does not, however, limit the
    information a district court may use to inform its decision
    whether and how much to reduce a sentence.
    B
    Consistent with this text and structure, district courts de-
    ciding First Step Act motions regularly have considered ev-
    idence of postsentencing rehabilitation and unrelated
    Guidelines amendments when raised by the parties. By
    definition, First Step Act movants have amassed prison rec-
    ords of over a decade. See §404(a), 
    132 Stat. 5222
     (requiring
    the movant to have been sentenced for an offense “commit-
    ted before August 3, 2010”). Those records are naturally of
    interest to judges authorized by the First Step Act to reduce
    prison sentences or even to release movants immediately.
    See, e.g., United States v. Crawford, 
    483 F. Supp. 3d 378
    ,
    381 (ND W. Va. 2020) (considering that the movant earned
    his GED in prison, obtained a carpentry certification
    through a local community college, and was sanctioned for
    only “two minor write-ups” in the nine years preceding his
    motion); United States v. Henderson, 
    399 F. Supp. 3d 648
    ,
    656 (WD La. 2019) (considering that the movant “ha[d] not
    seen his children in eight years,” that he had “possible em-
    ployment opportunities . . . upon his release,” and that he
    “ha[d] received only two incident reports” while incarcer-
    ated); United States v. Mitchell, 
    2019 WL 2647571
    , *8 (D
    DC, June 27, 2019) (considering that the movant “incurred
    ——————
    6 A district court cannot, however, recalculate a movant’s benchmark
    Guidelines range in any way other than to reflect the retroactive appli-
    cation of the Fair Sentencing Act. Rather, the First Step Act directs dis-
    trict courts to calculate the Guidelines range as if the Fair Sentencing
    Act’s amendments had been in place at the time of the offense. That
    Guidelines range “anchor[s]” the sentencing proceeding. Peugh v. United
    States, 
    569 U. S. 530
    , 541 (2013). The district court may then consider
    postsentencing conduct or nonretroactive changes in selecting or reject-
    ing an appropriate sentence, with the properly calculated Guidelines
    range as the benchmark.
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)                    15
    Opinion of the Court
    no disciplinary infractions over his last fourteen years in
    prison” and that the movant would no longer be considered
    a career offender based on an intervening change of law).
    Likewise, when deciding whether to grant First Step Act
    motions and in deciding how much to reduce sentences,
    courts have looked to postsentencing evidence of violence or
    prison infractions as probative. See, e.g., United States v.
    Rose, 
    841 Fed. Appx. 328
    , 329 (CA2 2021) (affirming partial
    denial of motion where the district court relied on the mo-
    vant’s “lengthy history of prison disciplinary infractions,
    which included many recent violent infractions”); United
    States v. Barlow, 
    544 F. Supp. 3d 491
    , 505 (NJ 2021) (con-
    sidering, in denying motion, that the movant was disci-
    plined in prison seven times, including “three times for pos-
    sessing a dangerous weapon,” “once for possessing
    marijuana,” and “once for fighting”); United States v.
    Slutzkin, 
    2019 WL 5696122
    , *8 (Conn., Nov. 4, 2019) (con-
    sidering in denying motion the movant’s “behavior once in-
    carcerated [as] perhaps the greatest concern to the Court,”
    in light of “25 disciplinary citations while in state incarcer-
    ation and six more in federal prison”).7
    Moreover, when raised by the parties, district courts have
    considered nonretroactive Guidelines amendments to help
    inform whether to reduce sentences at all, and if so, by how
    much. See, e.g., United States v. Coachman, 
    2020 WL 6939890
    , *3 (ND Fla., June 22, 2020) (considering that the
    movant “would not qualify for career offender status” at the
    time of his sentence modification hearing); United States v.
    ——————
    7 In the dissent’s view, each of these District Courts erred in consider-
    ing evidence outside of the original sentencing record. See post, at 1–2.
    Instead, the dissent’s interpretation would require a district court adju-
    dicating a First Step Act motion to decide whether, and by how much, to
    reduce a sentence based only on the original sentencing record. But
    again, the text of the First Step Act does not require that counterfactual
    procedure.
    16                CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    Frederick, 
    2020 WL 555302
    , *4 (WD Pa., Feb. 4, 2020) (con-
    sidering “the fact that [the movant] would not qualify as a
    career offender under the current version of the career of-
    fender provisions . . . as a factor favoring the exercise of the
    discretionary relief that may be awarded”); United States v.
    Newton, 
    2019 WL 1007100
    , *5 (WD Va., Mar. 1, 2019) (con-
    sidering that the movant, “if he were sentenced today,”
    would no longer qualify for career offender status). Nothing
    express or implicit in the First Step Act suggests that these
    courts misinterpreted the Act in considering such relevant
    and probative information.8
    C
    The Court therefore holds that the First Step Act allows
    district courts to consider intervening changes of law or fact
    in exercising their discretion to reduce a sentence pursuant
    to the First Step Act.
    It follows, under the Court’s sentencing jurisprudence,
    that when deciding a First Step Act motion, district courts
    bear the standard obligation to explain their decisions and
    demonstrate that they considered the parties’ arguments.
    ——————
    8 The dissent contends that permitting a district court to consider non-
    retroactive Guidelines amendments will create a disparity between First
    Step Act-eligible movants and other defendants. See post, at 3–4. To
    reiterate, the First Step Act does not require a district court to recalcu-
    late a movant’s Guidelines in any respect other than applying the Fair
    Sentencing Act. See n. 6, supra. In any event, it is a feature of our sen-
    tencing law that different judges may respond differently to the same
    sentencing arguments. Cf. Kimbrough v. United States, 
    552 U. S. 85
    , 110
    (2007) (permitting, but not requiring, district courts to consider certain
    policy arguments at sentencing). Moreover, disparities are always una-
    voidable when some, but not all, defendants are permitted to move for
    modifications of an original sentence. Even the dissent’s interpretation
    would create disparities between First Step Act movants and defendants
    eligible for a sentence reduction under the 2011 retroactive crack-cocaine
    Guidelines, see supra, at 3, because the Commission permitted the latter
    group to argue postsentencing developments, see USSG §1B1.10, com-
    ment, n. 1(B)(iii).
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)            17
    Opinion of the Court
    It is well established that a district court must generally
    consider the parties’ nonfrivolous arguments before it. See
    Golan v. Saada, 596 U. S. ___, ___ (2022) (slip op., at 11).
    Of course, a district court is not required to be persuaded
    by every argument parties make, and it may, in its discre-
    tion, dismiss arguments that it does not find compelling
    without a detailed explanation. Nor is a district court re-
    quired to articulate anything more than a brief statement
    of reasons. See Rita v. United States, 
    551 U. S. 338
    , 356
    (2007). Nothing in the First Step Act contravenes those
    background principles.
    When it comes to that reasoned explanation, the First
    Step Act “ ‘leaves much . . . to the judge’s own professional
    judgment.’ ” Chavez-Meza v. United States, 585 U. S. ___,
    ___ (2018) (slip op., at 3) (quoting Rita, 
    551 U. S., at 356
    ).
    The First Step Act does not “require courts to expressly re-
    but each argument” made by the parties. United States v.
    Maxwell, 
    991 F. 3d 685
    , 694 (CA6 2021). In exercising its
    discretion, the court is free to agree or disagree with any of
    the policy arguments raised before it. Cf. Kimbrough, 
    552 U. S., at 111
    . All that the First Step Act requires is that a
    district court make clear that it “reasoned through [the par-
    ties’] arguments.” 991 F. 3d, at 693.
    The broad discretion that the First Step Act affords to
    district courts also counsels in favor of deferential appellate
    review. As a general matter, “it is not the role of an appel-
    late court to substitute its judgment for that of the sentenc-
    ing court as to the appropriateness of a particular sen-
    tence.” Solem v. Helm, 
    463 U. S. 277
    , 290, n. 16 (1983).
    Section 404(c) of the First Step Act confers particular dis-
    cretion, clarifying that the Act does not “require a court to
    reduce any sentence.” Other than legal errors in recalcu-
    lating the Guidelines to account for the Fair Sentencing
    Act’s changes, see Gall v. United States, 
    552 U. S. 38
    , 51
    (2007), appellate review should not be overly searching.
    Put simply, the First Step Act does not require a district
    18             CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    Opinion of the Court
    court to accept a movant’s argument that evidence of reha-
    bilitation or other changes in law counsel in favor of a sen-
    tence reduction, or the Government’s view that evidence of
    violent behavior in prison counsels against providing relief.
    Nor does the First Step Act require a district court to make
    a point-by-point rebuttal of the parties’ arguments. All that
    is required is for a district court to demonstrate that it has
    considered the arguments before it.
    *    *     *
    The First Step Act does not require a district court to be
    persuaded by the nonfrivolous arguments raised by the par-
    ties before it, but it does require the court to consider them.
    The contrary judgment of the Court of Appeals for the First
    Circuit is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)            1
    KAVANAUGH, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 20–1650
    _________________
    CARLOS CONCEPCION, PETITIONER v.
    UNITED STATES
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    [June 27, 2022]
    JUSTICE KAVANAUGH, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE,
    JUSTICE ALITO, and JUSTICE BARRETT join, dissenting.
    Beginning in the mid-1980s, Congress prescribed higher
    criminal sentences for crack-cocaine offenses than for pow-
    der-cocaine offenses involving the same amounts of cocaine.
    In 2010, Congress enacted the Fair Sentencing Act to nar-
    row that crack/powder disparity by lowering the sentencing
    ranges for certain crack-cocaine offenses. But the Act low-
    ered those crack-cocaine sentencing ranges only prospec-
    tively—that is, for crack-cocaine offenders who were sen-
    tenced on or after the Act’s effective date of August 3, 2010.
    The First Step Act of 2018 changed that. It provided that
    the 2010 Fair Sentencing Act’s lower crack-cocaine sentenc-
    ing ranges would also apply retroactively to offenders who
    were sentenced before August 3, 2010. But how to imple-
    ment that change? Congress did not mandate a specific
    across-the-board reduction to all pre-August 3, 2010, crack-
    cocaine sentences. Instead, the First Step Act authorized
    district courts, on motion, to “impose a reduced sentence as
    if ” the lower sentencing ranges for crack-cocaine offenses
    “were in effect at the time the covered offense was commit-
    ted.” §404(b), 
    132 Stat. 5222
    .
    The straightforward question in this case is whether dis-
    trict courts in First Step Act sentence-modification proceed-
    ings may reduce sentences based not only on the changes to
    2              CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    KAVANAUGH, J., dissenting
    the crack-cocaine sentencing ranges, but also on other un-
    related legal or factual changes that have occurred since the
    original sentencing. For many crack-cocaine offenders who
    were sentenced before August 3, 2010, the most significant
    such change is a non-retroactive 2016 Sentencing Guide-
    lines amendment that substantially altered the career-of-
    fender guideline and would significantly lower many of
    those offenders’ Guidelines ranges. See United States Sen-
    tencing Commission, Guidelines Manual, App. C, Amdt.
    798 (Nov. 2021).
    The Court today concludes that district courts in First
    Step Act sentence-modification proceedings may reduce
    sentences based not only on the changes to the crack-co-
    caine sentencing ranges, but also on other unrelated legal
    or factual changes that have occurred since the original sen-
    tencing.
    I respectfully disagree. The text of the First Step Act au-
    thorizes district courts to reduce sentences based only on
    changes to the crack-cocaine sentencing ranges, not based
    on other unrelated changes that have occurred since the
    original sentencing. In other words, the First Step Act di-
    rects district courts to answer one fundamental question:
    What would the offender’s sentence have been if the lower
    crack-cocaine sentencing ranges had been in effect back at
    the time of the original sentencing?
    The Court sidesteps the text of the Act and equates sen-
    tence-modification proceedings with plenary sentencing
    proceedings. But as this Court has recognized, there are
    “fundamental differences between sentencing and sen-
    tence-modification proceedings.” Dillon v. United States,
    
    560 U. S. 817
    , 830 (2010). The finality of criminal judg-
    ments is essential to the operation of the criminal justice
    system. See Calderon v. Thompson, 
    523 U. S. 538
    , 555–556
    (1998); United States v. Frady, 
    456 U. S. 152
    , 166 (1982).
    Once a federal sentence becomes final, a court may alter
    that sentence “only in very limited circumstances.” Pepper
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)             3
    KAVANAUGH, J., dissenting
    v. United States, 
    562 U. S. 476
    , 501–502, n. 14 (2011). As
    relevant here, Congress has made clear that courts may re-
    duce “an imposed term of imprisonment to the extent” such
    a reduction is “expressly permitted by statute.” 
    18 U. S. C. §3582
    (c)(1)(B) (emphasis added).
    The First Step Act states that the district court “may . . .
    impose a reduced sentence as if ” the lower sentencing
    ranges for crack-cocaine offenses “were in effect at the time
    the covered offense was committed.” §404(b), 
    132 Stat. 5222
    . By its terms, the First Step Act authorizes consider-
    ation only of the lower sentencing ranges for crack-cocaine
    offenses. The First Step Act does not authorize considera-
    tion of unrelated intervening legal or factual changes. In-
    deed, the relevant provision of the First Step Act does not
    mention changes other than the lower sentencing ranges for
    crack-cocaine offenses. Therefore, the First Step Act does
    not “expressly permi[t]” reductions based on those unre-
    lated intervening changes. 
    18 U. S. C. §3582
    (c)(1)(B).
    In support of its conclusion that district courts in First
    Step Act sentence-modification proceedings may consider
    other unrelated changes, the Court cites Pepper and similar
    decisions. See ante, at 8–9. But those decisions involved
    resentencings, not sentence-modification proceedings. See
    Pepper, 
    562 U. S., at
    486–487. Those cases therefore do not
    support the Court’s approach here. To reiterate, for sen-
    tence-modification proceedings, Congress has declared that
    courts may reduce a sentence only as “expressly permitted
    by statute.” 
    18 U. S. C. §3582
    (c)(1)(B). And the First Step
    Act does not authorize consideration of unrelated interven-
    ing legal or factual changes since the original sentencing.
    The Court’s disregard of the text of the First Step Act and
    §3582(c)(1)(B) will create significant and inexplicable sen-
    tencing inequities. Consider the following. First Step Act
    sentence-modification proceedings are available only for of-
    fenders who were sentenced before August 3, 2010. So a
    4             CONCEPCION v. UNITED STATES
    KAVANAUGH, J., dissenting
    crack-cocaine offender such as Concepcion who was sen-
    tenced before August 3, 2010, may now obtain the benefit
    of the non-retroactive 2016 change to the career-offender
    guideline. But a crack-cocaine offender who was sentenced
    from August 3, 2010, to July 31, 2016, will not be able to
    obtain the benefit of the non-retroactive 2016 change to the
    career-offender guideline. What sense does that make?
    That anomalous outcome will amount to a “haphazard
    windfall” for crack-cocaine offenders sentenced before Au-
    gust 3, 2010. United States v. Lancaster, 
    997 F. 3d 171
    , 180
    (CA4 2021) (Wilkinson, J., concurring in judgment).
    Still more inequities will ensue because the Court affords
    district courts blanket discretion to choose between two
    vastly different approaches to First Step Act proceedings.
    To be sure, the Court properly notes that district courts
    must begin a First Step Act proceeding by calculating the
    new Guidelines range based solely on the changes to the
    crack-cocaine sentencing ranges. See ante, at 14, n. 6. So
    far, so good. But district courts then have free rein either
    to take into account—or to completely disregard—other in-
    tervening changes since the original sentencing.
    Needless to say, different district courts will choose dif-
    ferent approaches. The Court’s decision will therefore pro-
    duce massive inequities in how the First Step Act is imple-
    mented on the ground. Those inequities further illustrate
    why today’s decision is wrong as a matter of statutory in-
    terpretation: Congress enacted the First Step Act to pro-
    vide a targeted retroactive reduction in crack-cocaine sen-
    tencing ranges, not to unleash a sentencing free-for-all in
    the lower courts.
    The Court’s disregard of the text of the First Step Act is
    especially audacious because the Act was a heavily negoti-
    ated and vigorously debated piece of legislation. The Act
    reflects a compromise among competing interests. Not for
    the first time in a sentencing case, the Court’s decision to-
    day unravels the legislative compromise reflected in the
    Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022)            5
    KAVANAUGH, J., dissenting
    statutory text. The Court in effect green-lights district
    courts, if they wish, to make the 2016 amendment to the
    career-offender guideline retroactive in First Step Act pro-
    ceedings—even though neither Congress nor the Sentenc-
    ing Commission has made that amendment retroactive.
    Perhaps the Court’s decision represents better sentencing
    policy. Perhaps not. But under the Constitution’s separa-
    tion of powers, this Court may not simply rewrite the First
    Step Act as the Court thinks best.
    In sum, I would conclude that the First Step Act author-
    izes district courts to reduce a sentence based on changes to
    the crack-cocaine sentencing ranges, but not based on other
    unrelated legal or factual changes since the original sen-
    tencing. The Court holds otherwise. Therefore, I respect-
    fully dissent.