US
v. Kelley, No. 19-30066 (6-15-20)(Ikuta w/R. Nelson &
Oliver). This is an important First Step Act decision. The 9th holds that a
resentencing under First Step (crack disparity) does NOT permit a plenary
resentencing proceeding in which a defendant’s career status can be
reconsidered. The 9th concludes that the Act allows a defendant sentenced for a
crack offense to move the court to “impose a reduced sentence as if the First
Step Act had been in effect and gives the court discretion to do so. The 9th interprets
the Act as only allowing a narrow counterfactual resentencing.
The defendant had argued that (1) the statute’s
language fell under 3582; and (2) the Act’s use of “impose” a sentence grants
authority for a plenary resentencing. The 9th rejects the arguments. The 9th
holds that the specific controls over the general in the First Step Act text;
and that “impose” is out of context and not plausible.
This decision “deepens” a circuit split. The 9th joins
the 5th and 6th Circuits in their analysis. The 4th Circuit would allow a
plenary resentencing. Thus, be aware of this split, calling for SCOTUS review.
Sadly, the defendant’s priors which had made her a
career offender had been found not to qualify under a categorical approach.
Matt Campbell, Fed Def of E. Wa. & Idaho (Spokane)
made a valiant effort on appeal.
The decision is here:
https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2020/06/15/19-30066.pdf
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