United States v. Garrison

560 F. Supp. 2d 83, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40543, 2008 WL 2121784
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 20, 2008
Docket07cr10142-NG
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 560 F. Supp. 2d 83 (United States v. Garrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Garrison, 560 F. Supp. 2d 83, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40543, 2008 WL 2121784 (D. Mass. 2008).

Opinion

SENTENCING MEMORANDUM

GERTNER, District Judge.

William Garrison (“Garrison”) pled guilty to a three-count Information charging him with Distribution of Cocaine Base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (Counts 1-3). According to Garrison’s plea agreement, he was responsible for sales of between 5 grams and 20 grams of crack cocaine to undercover officers of the Boston Police Department — a cumulative quantity derived from three sales of small amounts of crack cocaine over the period of a single week, November 30 to December 5, 2006. Garrison was the only defendant named in the information. (He waived indictment at the time he pled guilty.) As such, the Presentence Report (“PSR”) and the parties’ arguments focused on him. In the PSR, under the category “related cases,” the probation officer wrote “none.”

The fact was, however, that Garrison was one of 21 people who were arrested by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”), DEA’s Mobile Enforcement Team (“DEA”) and the Boston Police Department (“BPD”) in a single sweep in the fall of 2006. 1 All the arrests were of residents of the area of Greenwood, Harvard, Hendry, and Bernard Streets in Dorchester. 2 Some of the defendants were allegedly involved in vio *84 lence, gun possession and gangs, 3 but no such accusations were made against Garrison. All 21 of those arrested were charged with cocaine distribution. 4 In a regime that purports to value similar treatment for similarly situated individuals, the fact that Garrison’s sentencing could have proceeded without considering the other men involved in the same sweep was troubling. Surely some of these individuals — non-violent street dealers, arrested at or near the same time, part of the same investigation' — were presumptively similarly situated with Garrison. While the Federal Sentencing Guidelines did not ask about these other individuals — clearly, a flaw — I did.

As a result of the passing reference to the “sweep” in the PSR, the Court determined which defendants had been arrested at the same time, what their sentences were (if they had been sentenced), reviewed the dockets (statements of reasons, transcripts, plea agreements and the parties’ memoranda), prepared a chart (attached as Exhibit A) and sought to compare the disposition in each case with the proposed disposition in Garrison’s case. 5

The Guidelines define “similarly situated” only with reference to the particular guideline categories. If a defendant had an offense level of 14 and a criminal history of I, the Guidelines assumed that you were similarly situated to other 14s and Is. But in this case — and perhaps many others — that is a false assumption. Similarly situated with respect to the Guideline categories does not necessarily mean similarly situated with respect to the defendant’s actual role in the criminal endeavor or his real culpability. The individual supplying the drugs, for example, could have been a first offender, with a criminal history I, not because he had been crime-free all of his life but because he did not “do” street drug deals and thus rarely encountered government agents. And the reverse, an offender with a high criminal history score, could have been caught in this drug sweep even when his drug dealing was episodic, when he had tried to change the direction of his life. The numbers — the Guideline computation — could mask real differences between offenders, in effect, a “false uniformity.” Sandra Guerra Thompson, The Booker Project: The Future of Federal Sentencing, 43 Hous. L.Rev. 269, 275 n. 25 (2006); Michael M. O’Hear, The Myth of Uniformity, 17 Fed. Sent’g Rep. 249 (2005). It is especially important, now that the Guidelines are advisory, 6 that judges are charged with looking beyond the Guidelines categories and that they know what their colleagues have done in comparable cases. The new discretion will *85 be influenced, as it should be, by the precedents of the court: a true common law of sentencing.

In fact, in reviewing the cases of other similarly situated individuals — non-violent, street — level dealers of crack-many of my colleagues did in fact exercise their discretion in varying the Guidelines sentences. The quantity calculations for these offenders under the Guidelines did not reflect meaningful differences in culpability; the quantity calculations more often reflected the happenstance of when the police happened to be on a given corner or for how long the police surveilled them. Their criminal history scores were problematic, because the Guidelines make no distinction between offenders with violent records and those without, those with multiple minor offenses which lead to the same “score” as a few very violent ones. The drug involved was crack cocaine, which the Guidelines have singled out for harsh treatment, without empirical support. See Kimbrough, 128 S.Ct. at 574-75. And these were offenses over which the state had concurrent jurisdiction. Had these low-level street dealers been sentenced in state court, the punishment range would likely have been far less severe.

Garrison’s sentencing was delayed to give the parties an opportunity to consider the issues raised by the sentencing of other individuals in the same “sweep.” Some individuals had already been sentenced by other judges; some were about to be sentenced. The Court directed the government (and Probation) to confirm the criminal history, the offense level and the sentencing of each defendant in the related cases.

I will first describe Garrison’s background without reference to the Guidelines, as has been my practice. 7 I will then address the Guideline computations — and the reasons why the Guidelines should not be followed here, both because of the circumstances of this particular case and the Guidelines’ inaccurate equation of drug weight and culpability. Finally, I will address the appropriate sentence length under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).

I. BACKGROUND

Garrison is a 27-year-old-man with a supportive family. His mother and father divorced when he was eight. He lived with his mother for the most part, seeing his father on weekends until his father moved to California. He spent a short amount of time with his father in California before returning to Boston when his father remarried. With a serious alcohol and drug problem, Garrison dropped out of school at the 11th grade, and had sporadic employment after that. 8 When he was not employed, he was supported by his grandmother, and lived in the house she owns. He had no skills, no high school diploma, and was frequently under the influence of alcohol. The defendant reported that, in general, on Fridays and Saturdays, he drank three to four glasses of cognac and became intoxicated.

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Bluebook (online)
560 F. Supp. 2d 83, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40543, 2008 WL 2121784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-garrison-mad-2008.