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- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 94-6187
- --------
- STEVEN KURT WITTE, PETITIONER v.
- UNITED STATES
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court
- of appeals for the fifth circuit
- [June 14, 1995]
-
- Justice Stevens, concurring in part and dissenting in
- part.
- Petitioner pleaded guilty to attempting to possess with
- intent to distribute more than 100 kilograms of marijua-
- na. At petitioner's sentencing hearing, the District
- Court heard evidence concerning petitioner's participa-
- tion in a conspiracy to import cocaine. Pursuant to its
- understanding of the Guidelines, the District Court
- considered the cocaine offenses as -relevant conduct- and
- increased petitioner's sentence accordingly. Petitioner
- received exactly the same sentence that he would have
- received had he been convicted of both the marijuana
- offenses and the cocaine offenses. The Government then
- sought to prosecute petitioner for the cocaine offenses.
- The question presented is whether the Double Jeop-
- ardy Clause bars that subsequent prosecution. The
- Court today holds that it does not. In my view, the
- Court's holding is incorrect and unprecedented. More
- importantly, it weakens the fundamental protections the
- Double Jeopardy Clause was intended to provide.
-
- I
- In my view, the double jeopardy violation is plain.
- Petitioner's marijuana conviction, which involved 1,000
- pounds of marijuana, would have resulted in a Guide-
- lines range of 78 to 97 months. When petitioner's
- cocaine offenses were considered in the sentencing
- calculus, the new Guidelines range was 292 to 365
- months. This was the range that the District Court
- used as the basis for its sentencing calculations. Thus,
- the District Court's consideration of the cocaine offenses
- increased petitioner's sentencing range by over 200
- months.
- Under these facts, it is hard to see how the Double
- Jeopardy Clause is not implicated. In my view, quite
- simply, petitioner was put in jeopardy of punishment for
- the cocaine transactions when, as mandated by the
- Guidelines, he was in fact punished for those offenses.
- The Double Jeopardy Clause should thus preclude any
- subsequent prosecution for those cocaine offenses.
-
- II
- Despite the intuitive appeal of this approach, the
- majority concludes that these facts do not implicate the
- Double Jeopardy Clause. To reach this conclusion, the
- majority relies on our prior decisions that have permit-
- ted sentencers to consider at sentencing both prior
- convictions and other offenses that are related to the
- offense of conviction. The majority's reliance on these
- cases suggests that it has overlooked a distinction that
- I find critical to the resolution of the double jeopardy
- issue at hand.
- -Traditionally, sentencing judges have considered a
- wide variety of factors in addition to evidence bearing on
- guilt in determining what sentence to impose on a
- convicted defendant.- Wisconsin v. Mitchell, 508 U. S.
- __, __ (1993) (slip op., at 7). -One such important
- factor- to be considered in the sentencing calculus is -a
- defendant's prior convictions.- Nichols v. United States,
- 511 U. S. __, __ (1994) (slip op., at 9). Indeed, the
- prominent role played by past conduct in most guide-
- lines-based sentencing regimes and in statutes that
- punish more harshly -habitual offenders- reveals the
- importance of this factor. As the majority notes, we
- have repeatedly upheld the use of such prior convictions
- against double jeopardy challenges. See ante, at 11
- (citing cases). However, an understanding of the reason
- for our rejection of those challenges makes clear that
- those cases do not support the majority's conclusion.
- Traditional sentencing practices recognize that a just
- sentence is determined in part by the character of the
- offense and in part by the character of the offender.
- Within this framework, the admission of evidence of an
- offender's past convictions reflects the longstanding
- notion that one's prior record is strong evidence of one's
- character. A recidivist should be punished more severe-
- ly than a first offender because he has failed to mend
- his ways after a first conviction. As we noted in Moore
- v. Missouri, 159 U. S. 673, 677 (1895), -`the punishment
- for the second [offense] is increased, because by his
- persistence in the perpetration of crime, [the defendant]
- has evinced a depravity, which merits a greater punish-
- ment, and needs to be restrained by severer penalties
- than if it were his first offense.'- See also McDonald v.
- Massachusetts, 180 U. S. 311, 313 (1901) (commission of
- a second crime after conviction for first -show[s] that the
- man is an habitual criminal-). Thus, when a sentencing
- judge reviews an offender's prior convictions at sentenc-
- ing, the judge is not punishing that offender a second
- time for his past misconduct, but rather is evaluating
- the nature of his individual responsibility for past acts
- and the likelihood that he will engage in future miscon-
- duct. Recidivist statutes are consistent with the Double
- Jeopardy Clause not because of the formalistic premise
- that one can only be punished or placed in jeopardy for
- the -offense of conviction,- but rather because of the
- important functional understanding that the purpose of
- the prior conviction is to provide valuable evidence as to
- the offender's character. The majority's reliance on
- recidivist statutes is thus unavailing.
- When the offenses considered at sentencing are
- somehow linked to the offense of conviction, the analysis
- is different. Offenses that are linked to the offense of
- conviction may affect both the character of the offense
- and the character of the offender. That is, even if he is
- not a recidivist, a person who commits two offenses
- should also be punished more severely than one who
- commits only one, in part because the commission of
- multiple offenses provides important evidence that the
- character of the offender requires special punishment,
- and in part because the character of the offense is
- aggravated by the commission of multiple offenses.
- Insofar as a sentencer relies on an offense as evidence
- of character, the Double Jeopardy Clause is not impli-
- cated. However, insofar as the sentencer relies on the
- offense as aggravation of the underlying offense, the
- Double Jeopardy Clause is necessarily implicated. At
- that point, the defendant is being punished for having
- committed the offense at issue, and not for what the
- commission of that offense reveals about his character.
- In such cases, the defendant has been -put in jeopardy-
- of punishment for the offense because he has in fact
- been punished for that offense.
- Under many sentencing regimes, of course, it is
- difficult if not impossible to determine whether a given
- offense has affected the judge's assessment of the
- character of the offender, the character of the offense, or
- both. However, under the federal Sentencing Guidelines,
- the role played by each item in the sentencing calculus
- is perfectly clear. The Guidelines provide for specific
- sentencing adjustments for -criminal history- (i.e.,
- character of the offender) and for -relevant conduct- (i.e.,
- character of the offense). Under the Guidelines, there-
- fore, an offense that is included as -relevant conduct-
- does not relate to the character of the offender (which is
- reflected instead by criminal history), but rather mea-
- sures only the character of the offense. Even if all other
- mitigating and aggravating circumstances that shed light
- on an offender's character have been taken into account,
- the judge must sentence the offender for conduct that
- affects the seriousness of the offense.
- The effect of this regime with respect to drug crimes
- provides a particularly striking illustration of why this
- mandatory consideration of relevant conduct implicates
- the Double Jeopardy Clause under anything but a
- formalistic reading of the Clause. Under the Guidelines,
- the severity of a drug offense is measured by the total
- quantity of drugs under all offenses that constitute
- -relevant conduct,- regardless of whether those offenses
- were charged and proved at the guilt phase of the trial
- or instead proved at the sentencing hearing. For
- example, as I have noted above, petitioner's guidelines
- range was determined by adding the quantity of mari-
- juana to the quantity of cocaine (using the conversion
- formula set forth in the Guidelines). Petitioner has thus
- already been sentenced for an actual offense that
- includes the cocaine transactions that are the subject of
- the second indictment. Those transactions played
- precisely the same role in fixing his punishment as they
- would have if they had been the subject of a formal
- charge and conviction. The actual imposition of that
- punishment must surely demonstrate that petitioner was
- just as much in jeopardy for the offense as if he had
- been previously charged with it.
- In sum, traditional sentencing practice does not offend
- the Double Jeopardy Clause because (1) past convictions
- are used only as evidence of the character of the
- offender, and not as evidence of the character of the
- offense, and (2) in traditional sentencing regimes, it is
- impossible to determine for what purpose the sentencer
- has relied on the relevant offenses. In my view, the
- Court's failure to recognize the critical distinction
- between the character of the offender and the character
- of the offense, as well as the Court's failure to recognize
- the change in sentencing practices caused by the
- Guidelines, cause it to overlook an important and
- obvious violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
-
- III
- Once this error in the majority's analysis is recog-
- nized, it becomes apparent that none of the cases on
- which the majority relies compels today's novel holding.
- In Williams v. New York, 337 U. S. 241 (1949), the
- Court held that the Due Process Clause did not prevent
- a sentencing judge from considering information con-
- tained in a presentence report. The Court's conclusion
- in Williams is consistent with my approach. The
- Williams Court repeatedly emphasized that the informa-
- tion in the presentence report provided the court with
- relevant information about the character of the defen-
- dant. For example, the Court noted that -the New York
- statutes emphasize a prevalent modern philosophy of
- penology that the punishment should fit the offender
- and not merely the crime.- The Court continued: -The
- belief no longer prevails that every offense in a like
- legal category calls for an identical punishment without
- regard to the past life and habits of a particular
- offender.- Finally, the Court observed that -[t]oday's
- philosophy of individualizing sentences makes sharp
- distinctions for example between first and repeated
- offenders.- Id., at 247-248. Thus, the entire rationale
- of the Williams opinion focussed on the importance of
- evidence that reveals the character of the offender. Not
- a word in Justice Black's opinion even suggests that if
- evidence adduced at sentencing were used to support a
- sentence for an offense more serious than the offense of
- conviction, the defendant would not have been placed in
- jeopardy for that more serious offense.
- The Court also relies on McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
- 477 U. S. 79 (1986), suggesting that McMillan -necessar-
- ily impl[ies]- that consideration of -offender-specific
- information at sentencing- does not -result in `punish-
- ment for such conduct.'- Ante, at 11. I believed at the
- time and continue to believe that McMillan was wrongly
- decided. However, even accepting the Court's conclusion
- in McMillan, that case does not support the majority's
- position. In United States v. Halper, 490 U. S. 435, 448
- (1989), and Department of Revenue of Montana v. Kurth
- Ranch, 511 U. S. __, __ (1994) (slip op., at 10), we
- emphatically rejected the proposition that punishment
- under the Double Jeopardy Clause only occurs when a
- court imposes a sentence for an offense that is proven
- beyond a reasonable doubt at a criminal trial.
- The case on which the Court places its principal
- reliance, Williams v. Oklahoma, 358 U. S. 576 (1959), is
- not controlling precedent. Williams was decided over 10
- years before the Court held in Benton v. Maryland, 395
- U. S. 784 (1969), that the Double Jeopardy Clause
- -should apply to the States through the Fourteenth
- Amendment.- Id., at 794. Thus, Williams did not even
- apply the Double Jeopardy Clause and instead applied
- only a -watered-down- version of due process, see
- Benton, 395 U. S., at 796. Moreover, in Williams, the
- State's discretionary sentencing scheme was entirely
- dissimilar to the federal Sentencing Guidelines, which
- require that -relevant conduct- be punished as if it had
- been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. The Court is
- therefore free to accept or reject the majority's reasoning
- in Williams.
- The precise issue resolved in Williams is also some-
- what different from that presented in today's case. In
- Williams, the petitioner committed two offenses, kidnap-
- ping and murder, arising out of the same incident.
- Though petitioner was convicted of capital murder, the
- judge imposed a sentence of life imprisonment. There is
- no reason to believe that the judge considered the
- kidnapping offense as relevant conduct in sentencing
- petitioner for the murder. Williams was then prosecuted
- for kidnapping. He did not raise a double jeopardy
- objection to the kidnaping prosecution-an objection that
- would have been comparable to petitioner's claim in this
- case regarding his cocaine prosecution. After Williams
- pleaded guilty to the kidnapping, the court considered
- the circumstances of the crime, including the murder,
- and imposed a death sentence. This Court affirmed. I
- agree with Justice Douglas' dissent -that petitioner was
- in substance tried for murder twice in violation of the
- guarantee against double jeopardy.- Id., at 587. In any
- event, I surely would not apply the Williams Court's
- dubious reasoning to a federal sentence imposed under
- the Guidelines.
- Given the absence of precedent requiring the major-
- ity's unjust result, the case should be decided by giving
- effect to the text and purpose of the Double Jeopardy
- Clause. Petitioner received the sentence authorized by
- law for the offense of attempting to import cocaine.
- Petitioner is now being placed in jeopardy of a second
- punishment for the same offense. Requiring him to
- stand trial for that offense is a manifest violation of the
- Double Jeopardy Clause.
-
- IV
- Though the majority's holding in Parts I and II
- removes the Double Jeopardy Clause as a constitutional
- bar to petitioner's second punishment, the majority does
- recognize that the provisions of the Sentencing Guide-
- lines reduce the likelihood of a second punishment as a
- practical matter. The Guidelines will generally ensure
- that the total sentence received in the two proceedings
- is the same sentence that would have been received had
- both offenses been brought in the same proceeding.
- Moreover, as the majority notes, the departure power is
- available to protect against unwarranted double punish-
- ment, see ante, at 15, as well as to prevent any possibil-
- ity that -a second sentence for the same relevant
- conduct may deprive [a defendant] of the effect of the
- downward departure under 5K1.1 of the Guidelines for
- substantial assistance to the Government,- ibid.
- The Court's statutory holding thus mitigates some of
- the otherwise unfortunate results of its constitutional
- approach. More importantly, the Court's statutory
- analysis is obviously correct. Accordingly, I join Part III
- of the Court's opinion.
-
- V
- In my view, the Double Jeopardy Clause precludes
- petitioner's subsequent prosecution for the cocaine
- offenses because petitioner was placed in jeopardy when
- he was punished for those offenses following his convic-
- tion for the marijuana offenses. I therefore join only
- Part III of the Court's opinion, and I respectfully dissent
- from the Court's judgment.
-