Pepper v. United States, 131 S. Ct. 1229 (2011)
Pepper v. United States, 131 S. Ct. 1229 (2011)
Pepper v. United States, 131 S. Ct. 1229 (2011)
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.
Held:
1. When a defendants sentence has been set aside on appeal, a dis
trict court at resentencing may consider evidence of the defendants
postsentencing rehabilitation, and such evidence may, in appropriate
cases, support a downward variance from the now-advisory Guide
lines range. Pp. 927.
(a) Consistent with the principle that the punishment should fit
the offender and not merely the crime, Williams v. New York, 337
U. S. 241, 247, this Court has observed a consistent and uniform pol
icy under which a sentencing judge could exercise a wide discretion
in the sources and types of evidence used to assist him in determin
ing the kind and extent of punishment to be imposed within limits
fixed by law, id., at 246, particularly the fullest information possi
ble concerning the defendants life and characteristics, id., at 247.
That principle is codified at 18 U. S. C. 3661, which provides that
[n]o limitation shall be placed on the information a sentencing court
may consider concerning the [defendants] background, character,
and conduct, and at 3553(a), which specifies that sentencing courts
must consider, among other things, a defendants history and char
acteristics, 3553(a)(1). The Guidelines, which Booker made effec
tively advisory, 543 U. S., at 245, should be the starting point and
the initial benchmark, but district courts may impose sentences
within statutory limits based on appropriate consideration of all of
the 3553(a) factors, subject to appellate review for reasonableness,
Gall v. United States, 552 U. S. 38, 4951. This sentencing frame
work applies both at initial sentencing and at any subsequent resen
tencing after a sentence has been set aside on appeal. Pp. 912.
(b) Postsentencing rehabilitation evidence may support a down
ward variance from the advisory Guidelines range. The plain lan
guage of 3661 makes clear that there is [n]o limitation . . . on . . .
background, character, and conduct information, and it makes no
distinction between an initial sentencing and a subsequent resen
tencing. In addition, postsentencing rehabilitation evidence may be
Syllabus
highly relevant to several 3553(a) factors that district courts are re
quired to consider at sentencing. The extensive evidence of Peppers
rehabilitation since his initial sentencing is clearly relevant to the se
lection of an appropriate sentence here. Most fundamentally, that
evidence provides the most up-to-date picture of his history and
characteristics. 3553(a)(1). At the time of his initial sentencing, he
was an unemployed drug addict who was estranged from his family
and sold drugs. By his second resentencing, he had been drug-free
for nearly five years, was attending college, was a top employee
slated for promotion, had re-established a relationship with his fa
ther, and was married and supporting a family. His postsentencing
conduct also sheds light on the likelihood that he will engage in fu
ture criminal conduct, a central factor that sentencing courts must
consider. See 3553(a)(2)(B)(C). Pp. 1215.
(c) The contrary arguments advanced by amicus appointed to de
fend the judgment are unpersuasive. Pp. 1526.
(1) While 3742(g)(2)which prohibits a district court at re
sentencing from imposing a sentence outside the Guidelines range
except upon a ground it relied upon at the prior sentencing
effectively precludes a court from considering postsentencing reha
bilitation, that provision is invalid after Booker. Like the provisions
invalidated in Booker3553(b)(1) and 3742(e)3742(g)(2) re
quires district courts effectively to treat the Guidelines as mandatory
in an entire set of cases. Thus, the proper remedy is to invalidate the
provision. While applying 3742(g)(2) at resentencing would not al
ways result in a Sixth Amendment violation, this Court rejects a par
tial invalidation that would leave the Guidelines effectively manda
tory in some cases and advisory in others. The fact that 3742(g)(2)
permits a resentencing court on remand to impose a non-Guidelines
sentence where the prior sentence expressly relied on a departure
upheld by the court of appeals also does not cure the constitutional
infirmity. And the argument that any constitutional infirmity in
3742(g)(2) can be remedied by invalidating 3742(j)(1)(B) is rejected.
Pp. 1520.
(2) This Court finds unpersuasive amicus arguments focusing
on Congress sentencing objectives under 3553(a). Contrary to
amicus contention, 3742(g)(2) does not reflect a congressional pur
pose to preclude consideration of postsentencing rehabilitation evi
dence. Thus, that provision has no bearing on this Courts analysis of
whether 3553(a) permits consideration of such evidence. Nor is the
consideration of postsentencing rehabilitation inconsistent with the
sentencing factor in 3553(a)(5)which directs sentencing courts to
consider any pertinent policy statement of the Sentencing Commis
sionparticularly as the pertinent policy statement in this case is
No. 096822
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[March 2, 2011]
3553(a).
Although a separate statutory provision,
3742(g)(2), prohibits a district court at resentencing from
imposing a sentence outside the Federal Sentencing
Guidelines range except upon a ground it relied upon at
the prior sentencingthus effectively precluding the court
from considering postsentencing rehabilitation for pur
poses of imposing a non-Guidelines sentencethat provi
sion did not survive our holding in United States v.
Booker, 543 U. S. 220 (2005), and we expressly invalidate
it today.
We hold that when a defendants sentence has been set
aside on appeal, a district court at resentencing may
consider evidence of the defendants postsentencing reha
bilitation and that such evidence may, in appropriate
cases, support a downward variance from the now
advisory Federal Sentencing Guidelines range. Sepa
rately, we affirm the Court of Appeals ruling that the law
of the case doctrine did not require the District Court in
this case to apply the same percentage departure from the
Guidelines range for substantial assistance that had been
applied at petitioners prior sentencing.
I
In October 2003, petitioner Jason Pepper was arrested
and charged with conspiracy to distribute 500 grams or
more of methamphetamine in violation of 21 U. S. C. 846.
After pleading guilty, Pepper appeared for sentencing
before then-Chief Judge Mark W. Bennett of the U. S.
District Court for the Northern District of Iowa. Peppers
sentencing range under the Guidelines was 97 to 121
months.1 The Government moved for a downward depar
2 USSG 5K1.1 provides that a court may depart from the Guidelines
[u]pon motion of the government stating that the defendant has
provided substantial assistance in the investigation or prosecution of
another person who has committed an offense. Pepper provided
information to Government investigators and a grand jury concerning
two other individuals involved with illegal drugs and guns.
3 The court also cited Peppers lack of a violent history and, to a lesser
extent, the need to avoid unwarranted sentencing disparity with
Peppers co-conspirators. App. 144145.
4 The Court of Appeals also held that the District Court further erred
by considering Peppers lack of violent history, which history had
already been accounted for in the sentencing Guidelines calculation,
and by considering sentencing disparity among Peppers co-defendants
without adequate foundation and explanation. Pepper II, 486 F. 3d, at
413.
7 We
10
11
8 Of
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13
14
15
16
9 See
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11 See
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19
20
to invalidate 3742(g)(2).12
Amicus contends that any constitutional infirmity in
3742(g)(2) can be remedied by invalidating 3742(j)(1)(B)
rather than 3742(g)(2). Brief for Amicus Curiae in Sup
port of Judgment Below 2122. Section 3742(j)(1)(B)
provides that a ground of departure is permissible for
purposes of 3742(g)(2)(B) only if it is, inter alia, author
ized under section 3553(b). In Booker, we noted that
statutory cross-references to the SRA provisions we
invalidated were also constitutionally infirm. 543 U. S., at
259. Because 3742(j)(1)(B) incorporates a cross-reference
to 3553(b)(1), one of the provisions we invalidated in
Booker, amicus suggests that invalidating 3742(j)(1)(B)
would cure any constitutional defect in 3742(g)(2)(B). As
the Government explains, however, even if 3742(j)(1)(B)
were invalidated and a district court could depart on any
ground at an initial sentencing, the district court would
not be able to depart on any new ground at resentencing
so long as 3742(g)(2) remains in force. Because amicus
proposed solution would still result in the Guidelines
being effectively mandatory at resentencing in an entire
set of cases, it fails to remedy the fundamental constitu
tional defect of 3742(g)(2).
12 Amicus
21
2
Amicus next cluster of arguments focuses on Congress sentencing objectives under 3553(a). Preliminarily,
amicus contends that even if 3742(g)(2) is constitution
ally invalid, that provision reflects a congressional policy
determination that only information available at the time
of original sentencing should be considered, and that this
policy determination should inform our analysis of
whether 3553(a) permits consideration of postsentencing
rehabilitation evidence. This argument, however, is based
on a faulty premise.
Contrary to amicus contention, 3742(g)(2) does not
reflect a congressional purpose to preclude consideration
of evidence of postsentencing rehabilitation at resentenc
ing. To be sure, 3742(g)(2) has the incidental effect of
limiting the weight a sentencing court may place on post
sentencing rehabilitation by precluding the court from
resentencing outside the Guidelines range on a ground of
departure on which it did not previously rely. But on its
face, nothing in 3742(g)(2) prohibits a district court from
considering
postsentencing
developmentsincluding
postsentencing rehabilitationin selecting a sentence
within the applicable Guidelines range. Section 3742(g)(2)
also does not apply to resentencings that occur for reasons
other than when a sentence is overturned on appeal and
the case is remanded (e.g., when a sentence is set aside on
collateral review under 28 U. S. C. 2255). In such cir
cumstances, 3742(g)(2) does not restrict a district court at
all, much less with respect to consideration of postsentenc
ing developments. Accordingly, because we see no general
congressional policy reflected in 3742(g)(2) to preclude
resentencing courts from considering postsentencing
information,13 that provision has no bearing on our analy
22
PROTECT Act of 2003, 401(e), 117 Stat. 671, was not aimed at prohib
iting district courts from considering postsentencing developments.
Rather, it was meant to ensure that under the then-mandatory Guide
lines system, when a particular departure was reversed on appeal, the
district court could not impose the same sentence on remand on the
basis of a different departure. See H. R. Conf. Rep. No. 10866, pp. 58
59 (2003) (noting that 401 of the PROTECT Act, inter alia, prevent[s]
sentencing courts, upon remand, from imposing the same illegal depar
ture on a different theory). Like the provisions invalidated in Booker,
then, the purpose of 3742(g)(2) was to make Guidelines sentencing
even more mandatory than it had been. 543 U. S. 220, 261 (2005). As
we recognized in Booker, that purpose has ceased to be relevant. Ibid.
23
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30
Opinion of BREYER, J.
No. 096822
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[March 2, 2011]
Opinion of BREYER, J.
Opinion of BREYER, J.
Opinion of BREYER, J.
Opinion of BREYER, J.
Opinion of ALITO, J.
No. 096822
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[March 2, 2011]
Opinion of ALITO, J.
statement, 18 U. S. C. 3553(a)(5).
No. 096822
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[March 2, 2011]
1 I agree with the Court that the law of the case doctrine did not con
trol Peppers resentencing. See ante, at 2931.