United States v. David Albers

489 F. App'x 73
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2012
Docket11-1883
StatusUnpublished

This text of 489 F. App'x 73 (United States v. David Albers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. David Albers, 489 F. App'x 73 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Defendant David Scott Albers pled guilty to using interstate facilities in furtherance of committing a murder-for-hire, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1958(a), and was sentenced to 120 months’ imprisonment. He appeals, claiming that his sentence is both procedurally and substantively unreasonable. We disagree and therefore affirm.

I.

David Albers was charged in state court with soliciting the murder of his wife Andrea. While he was incarcerated pending trial on this charge, he encountered a man he knew named John Floyd. Albers asked Floyd to assist him in finding someone to kill Andrea, as well as the undercover police officer who was the crucial witness in his case. Floyd was soon transferred to federal custody, but Albers asked Floyd to *75 stay in touch with him after the transfer, and said that he would use the code phrase “kitchen job” when he wanted to discuss his plan to hire a hit man.

After Floyd was transferred to a federal penitentiary in Kentucky, he began receiving letters from Albers, and emails from Albers’s girlfriend, asking about his progress on the “kitchen job.” Floyd became concerned that Albers was serious about the job and informed the authorities. Federal agents met with Floyd and asked him to tell Albers that he had found someone to murder Albers’s wife. Floyd did so, emailing Albers’s girlfriend with news that a man named “Scott Jameson” would be visiting Albers at the Ionia State Penitentiary to discuss the job.

“Scott Jameson” was, of course, an undercover police officer. During Jameson’s multiple visits to the jail, Albers and Jame-son discussed how they could make Andrea’s murder look like an accident; Alb-ers suggested, for example, that she could be pushed down the stairs. Albers also told Jameson where Andrea lived, the layout of her house, who lived there with her, and sent Jameson a photograph of her. Albers and Jameson agreed that the price for Andrea’s murder would be $2,500.

On October 13, 2010, federal investigators confronted Albers regarding his dealings with Jameson. Albers initially claimed that Jameson was a building contractor that he had business dealings with, and, when shown the photograph of Andrea he had sent to Jameson, he claimed that he did not know who she was. Once the investigators told Albers that Jameson was a police officer, however, he admitted that he had tried to hire Jameson to kill Andrea. Albers later pled guilty to using interstate facilities in furtherance of committing a murder-for-hire, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1958(a).

A presentence report calculated Albers’s sentencing Guideline range as 108 to 135 months, which it truncated to 120 months in accordance with the statutory maximum. The report also recommended that Alb-ers’s sentence be imposed consecutively with his existing state sentence. Albers did not object to the presentence report, but argued at the sentencing hearing that the court should impose a concurrent, rather than a consecutive, sentence. The district court rejected Albers’s arguments and imposed a consecutive sentence of 120 months’ imprisonment.

Albers timely appeals.

II.

Albers claims that his 120-month sentence is substantively unreasonable because his conduct does not warrant the longest possible sentence for the crime. He also claims that his sentence is procedurally and substantively unreasonable because the district court ordered it to run consecutively, rather than concurrently with his state sentence. We address each of these arguments in turn.

A district court’s sentencing determination is reviewed “under a deferential abuse-of-discretion standard” for reasonableness. Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38, 41, 128 S.Ct. 586, 169 L.Ed.2d 445 (2007). A sentence is procedurally unreasonable if “it is marked by significant procedural error, such as failing to calculate (or improperly calculating) the Guidelines range, treating the Guidelines as mandatory, failing to consider the § 3553(a) factors, selecting a sentence based on clearly erroneous facts, or failing to adequately explain the chosen sentence[.]” United States v. Brown, 557 F.3d 297, 299 (6th Cir.2009) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A sentence is substantively unreasonable when a district court se *76 lects the sentence arbitrarily, bases the sentence on impermissible factors, fails to consider pertinent § 3558(a) factors, or gives an unreasonable amount of weight to any pertinent factor. United States v. Vowell, 516 F.3d 503, 510 (6th Cir.2008). We may apply a presumption of reasonableness to sentences, like Albers’s, that fall within the advisory Guideline range. United States v. Vonner, 516 F.3d 382, 389-90 (6th Cir.2008) (en banc).

Albers contends that the presumption of substantive reasonableness has been overcome in this case because his conduct is not deserving of the maximum possible punishment. He notes that we have previously emphasized the importance of proportionality between a sentence and the seriousness of the offense; that proportionality was a key consideration in the creation of the Guidelines; that § 3553 instructs courts “to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct,” 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6); and that, in some cases in this circuit, defendants have received lesser sentences for the same crime based on conduct that Albers believes is more serious than his own. We find Albers’s arguments meritless.

Our decision in United States v. Poynter, 495 F.3d 349 (6th Cir.2007), which Albers relies on as support for his proposition that the presumption of reasonableness has been rebutted because he received the harshest possible sentence, is not on point. Poynter addressed a district court’s imposition of an above-Guideline’s sentence, not a wiifem-Guideline’s one. And, properly applied, the Guidelines themselves provide a better measure of proportionality than do statutory máxi-mums because they allow for more nuanced comparisons both within and between cases. Moreover, in Poynter, we remanded for resentencing because the reasons the district court gave for imposing the statutory maximum sentence— “Poynter is unsafe to children” and “can’t control himself’ — were potentially applicable to all persons convicted of the same offense. Id. at 353. The same cannot be said here.

In this case, the district court found that Albers’s offense was very serious “in light of the fact that this is the second time that [he] has attempted the same crime, and that he did so while imprisoned for the first attempt to have his wife murdered.” The Honorable Janet T.

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Related

United States v. Figueroa
215 F. App'x 343 (Fifth Circuit, 2007)
Gall v. United States
552 U.S. 38 (Supreme Court, 2007)
United States v. David Ward
436 F. App'x 601 (Sixth Circuit, 2011)
United States v. Berry
565 F.3d 332 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
United States v. Johnson
553 F.3d 990 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
United States v. Vowell
516 F.3d 503 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
United States v. Vonner
516 F.3d 382 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
United States v. Poynter
495 F.3d 349 (Sixth Circuit, 2007)
United States v. Brown
557 F.3d 297 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
489 F. App'x 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-albers-ca6-2012.