United States v. Florence

143 F.3d 11, 1998 WL 207203
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 1998
Docket97-2194
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 143 F.3d 11 (United States v. Florence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Florence, 143 F.3d 11, 1998 WL 207203 (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

*12 SELYA, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant James P. Florence strives to convince us that the district court erred when it ordered a federal sentence to be served consecutively to the undischarged portion of certain state sentences. We are not persuaded.

I.

Background

In October 1993, the appellant asked a cousin who lived in Kentucky to buy guns for him. The cousin complied. Florence then brought the firearms into Massachusetts. At the time the appellant purchased, possessed, and transported the weapons, he was a convicted felon (manslaughter and unlawful possession of a firearm).

On February 15, 1994, masked men used one of the transported firearms, a Norinco semi-automatic pistol, to rob a pizza parlor in Rosindale, Massachusetts. A brigand armed with that pistol shot a bystander, leaving him paralyzed. Some weeks later, a state trooper attempted to stop the appellant for a motor vehicle infraction. During an ensuing chase, Florence threw the same Norinco pistol onto the median strip where the authorities subsequently recovered it.

Like the mills of the Gods, see George Herbert, Jacula Prudentum (1651), the wheels of justice sometimes grind slow. Nearly three years elapsed before a federal grand jury charged the appellant with transporting a firearm across state lines and being a felon in possession of a firearm. See 18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(3) and (g)(1) (1994). Both counts of the indictment referred to the Nor-inco semi-automatic pistol. The appellant eventually pled guilty to these charges. The district court imposed a 60-month incarcera-tive term for the transportation offense and a 96-month term for the felon-in-possession offense. The court stipulated that these sentences were to be served concurrently with each other, but consecutively to all undischarged state sentences.

At the time of the federal disposition (July 18, 1997), the appellant was serving a two-year state sentence for possession of heroin with intent to distribute (State Sentence No. 1), which he had begun on April 17, 1996. Between April and August 1996, he received (and elected not to contest) five separate citations for probation violations in connection with (1) a charge of heroin possession, (2) a charge of marijuana possession, and (3) three separate motor vehicle offenses. In the same time frame, he also pleaded guilty to several outstanding state charges, including two separate charges related to possession of cocaine; a charge of possession of heroin with intent to distribute; and a charge of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. The state courts revoked the appellant’s probation, imposed concurrent sentences for the probation violations and the new offenses, and specified that the new sentences (none of which exceeded one year, and all of which expired on or before May 21, 1997) would run concurrently with State Sentence No. 1. During the. same period, the state courts likewise revoked a one-year term of probation stemming from an underlying narcotics offense and imposed a one-year sentence (State Sentence No. 2) to be served “from and after” the expiration of State Sentence No. 1.

When Judge Harrington convened the federal disposition hearing, the appellant had served approximately 15 months of the total of three years’ immurement levied against him for the compendium of state offenses. The remaining time (roughly 21 months) constituted the undischarged portion of his state sentences (Nos. 1 and 2).

II.

The Legal Landscape

Appellate review of a district court’s application of the sentencing guidelines demands a bifurcated inquiry. The court of appeals affords plenary review to the sentencing judge’s assessment of a guideline’s legal meaning and scope, but reviews the judge’s factfinding only for clear error. See United States v. Brewster, 1 F.3d 51, 54 (1st Cir.1993); United States v. St. Cyr, 977 F.2d 698, 701 (1st Cir.1992).

Ordinarily, federal sentencing proceeds according to the version of the guidelines in effect at the time that sentence is *13 pronounced. See United States v. Harotuni an, 920 F.2d 1040, 1041-42 (1st Cir.1990). An exception exists, however, if changes in the guidelines between the date of the offense and the date of disposition threaten the defendant with harsher treatment. In deference to ex post facto concerns, the sentencing court then customarily applies the version of the guidelines that obtained when the defendant committed the crime. See id.

USSG § 5G1.3 covers the sentencing of defendants who are subject to undischarged terms of imprisonment (federal or state). In the instant case, the government and the appellant agree that the 1993 version of section 5G1.3, in effect on the date Florence committed the federal offenses, should control. 1 We therefore abjure independent consideration of the point and proceed to analyze the appellant’s claim under the November 1993 edition of the sentencing guidelines.

We reproduce in the margin the text of this guideline as it read in 1993. 2 In general, this guideline contemplates three somewhat different types of situations: subsection (a) deals with federal offenses committed during the pendency or service of a state sentence; subsection (b) deals with state sentences arising out of conduct related to the offense of conviction (i.e., conduct which must be taken into account when calculating the federal sentence); and subsection (c) applies to all other federal sentences imposed while the defendant is serving an undischarged term of imprisonment. At the time of the federal disposition in this matter, the appellant was serving a state term of imprisonment for conduct wholly unrelated to his federal firearms offenses (State Sentence No. 1), he had pending another undischarged state term of imprisonment for unrelated conduct (State Sentence No. 2), and he had perpetrated the federal offenses prior to the commission of the state offenses that underlay those sentences. Consequently, section 5G1.3(c) applies here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 F.3d 11, 1998 WL 207203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-florence-ca1-1998.