United States v. Allen Helton

370 F. App'x 709
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2010
Docket09-3185
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 370 F. App'x 709 (United States v. Allen Helton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Allen Helton, 370 F. App'x 709 (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER

Allen Helton pleaded guilty to conspiring to transport stolen motor vehicles in interstate commerce. The advisory guidelines range, which is not challenged on appeal (Helton, however, did argue for a lower range in the district court), called for a sentence of 30 to 37 months. The district court, relying primai'ily on Hel-ton’s atrocious criminal record, moved beyond the top of the advisory range and imposed the statutory maximum sentence of 60 months. On appeal Helton argues that the sentence was unreasonable and that the court failed to explain why it was imposed.

The defendant and his brothers, Danny and Albert Helton, were charged with conspiring together and with unnamed others to transport stolen vehicles from Wisconsin to Illinois. The single conspiracy count alleges among other overt acts that the defendant and Danny stole two all-terrain vehicles (“ATVs”) from a Wisconsin retailer in September 2007 and sold them in Illinois. In October 2007, the indictment continues, the defendant and Danny stole three more ATVs and took them to Illinois, where they were sold. The indictment does not mention the defendant in connection with the remaining vehicle thefts: Danny and Albert are accused of stealing a motorcycle in July and a sixth ATV in November 2007, both of which Danny sold in Illinois.

The written factual basis incorporated into the defendant’s plea agreement states that Danny and other coconspirators stole the two ATVs in September and transported them to Illinois. The defendant followed behind in another vehicle and, once in Illinois, sold one of those ATVs for approximately $5,500 and shared in the proceeds. The factual basis also states that members of the conspiracy stole and sold the other four ATVs and the motorcycle, but the defendant’s name is not specifically linked with those thefts.

The probation officer calculated a total offense level of 12, reflecting a base offense level of 6, see U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(a)(2), a 6-level increase for the loss amount of $33,614, see id. § 2B 1.1 (b)(1)(D), a 2-level increase because the offense involved an organized scheme to steal vehicles, see id. § 2Bl.l(b)(12)(A), and a 2-level decrease for acceptance of responsibility, see id. § 3El.l(a). Although the probation officer counted 20 criminal-history points, the parties apparently agreed that 19 was the correct figure. Either total was well above the 13 points needed to place the defendant in criminal-history Category VI.

The defendant raised three objections to the presentence report, each of which the district court rejected. The defendant first argued that he should be accountable only for the $16,253 loss attributed to his conduct in September, which would have decreased his offense level by 2. The court agreed with the probation officer, however, and found that all of the vehicle thefts were part of the conspirators’ “jointly undertaken criminal activity.” The defendant also disputed that he was part of an organized scheme to steal vehicles, but the court ruled that the 2-level increase applied because the defendant was accountable for the others’ conduct as well as his own. Finally, the defendant argued that he was a lesser participant in the criminal activity and deserved a downward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2. But the court perceived no difference between the defendant and other participants and *711 adopted the analysis of the probation officer, who reasoned that the defendant knew the scope and structure of the plan and the activities of others involved and was not “substantially less culpable” than the others. The court thus accepted the probation officer’s calculations, which yielded an imprisonment range of 30 to 37 months.

The government recommended a sentence of 37 months. The prosecutor noted that the defendant had 21 convictions— including 10 for theft or conversion, one for burglary, and another for receipt of stolen motor vehicles — which placed him in Category VI by a wide margin, even though 12 of those convictions were too old to count. The government also argued that the defendant had received significant sentences for some of his prior convictions and that a lighter sentence in this case thus would be unlikely to have a deterrent effect.

The defendant made his case for a sentence significantly less than 30 months, or at least at the low end of the range. He contended that his role was not as serious as Danny’s and that he benefitted little from the crime. The defendant asserted that he did not recruit people in Wisconsin to help the brothers, as Danny had, and that his primary role was to assist Danny. (The district court had already sentenced Danny to 51 months — after a credit of 9 months for state time — despite the government’s recommendation of 37 months. The court had emphasized Danny’s lengthy criminal history, manifested in 19 criminal-history points.) Ultimately, the defendant acknowledged that his criminal record looked bad but argued that a below-guidelines sentence was appropriate, primarily because his “actual participation” was less than that of other people involved, including his brothers.

The district court disagreed, putting a heavy emphasis on the defendant’s history and characteristics, see 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(1), and on his criminal record specifically. The defendant had been in constant contact with the law and had committed several crimes soon after his release for other offenses. The defendant’s record, according to the court, established that he was a menace to society. The court explained:

I noticed on some of these earlier things back in Tennessee — -was it Tennessee? No, it was Indiana where you were shoplifting from the Wal-Marts. Then you were shoplifting from Meijer’s. And the disposition there said a fine, a suspended sentence, and then with the admonition from the Judge that you don’t show up at Wal-Mart anymore. You don’t show up at Meijer’s anymore. I mean, that Judge is smoking something when he looks at a record like that and says now don’t go near that store again. Because it’s my record that people who commit burglaries, people who lift ATVs, people who shoplift — if you see one of those on a person’s record, they’ve done at least 20 of them. That they haven’t been caught at. This record is just the tip of the iceberg, which reflects to me that you are a menace to society. Unless you change your ways.

The defendant’s record, the district court concluded, justified a sentence above the guidelines range. In explaining that decision, the court remarked that the defendant — who was 36 at the time of sentencing — had accumulated many more criminal-history points than necessary to be in Category VI: “[The prosecutor] has pointed out that you’re 150 percent above the points necessary to meet the highest criminal history on the sentencing guidelines.” The court also observed that the defendant had not been employed, had drug and alcohol problems, and had “continual contacts with law enforcement, in multiple jurisdictions.” The court concluded that it was necessary to do “the same *712 thing that I did with Danny” and sentenced the defendant to 60 months.

When reviewing sentences, we first examine whether the district court committed procedural error and then consider whether the sentence is substantively reasonable. Gall v. United States,

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Related

United States v. Allen Helton
556 F. App'x 504 (Seventh Circuit, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
370 F. App'x 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-allen-helton-ca7-2010.