United States v. Glore

371 F. Supp. 3d 524
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 6, 2019
DocketCase No. 99-cr-82-pp
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 371 F. Supp. 3d 524 (United States v. Glore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Glore, 371 F. Supp. 3d 524 (E.D. Wis. 2019).

Opinion

PAMELA PEPPER, United States District Judge

On February 25, 2019, the court issued an order granting the defendant's motion for resentencing under the First Step Act of 2018, and resentencing him to time served. Dkt. No. 110. The next day, the defendant filed this motion, asking the court to "correct" that sentence. Dkt. No. 112. The court did not err in imposing the time-served sentence, and will deny the motion.

I. The 1994 Case

On July 6, 1994, the grand jury indicted the defendant and Jermaine O'Conner on several counts of possessing with intent to distribute and distributing cocaine. United States v. Jermaine O'Conner and Theodore Glore, Case No. 94-cr-102 (E.D. Wis.), Dkt. No. 13. The defendant pled guilty before Judge Terence T. Evans. Id. at Dkt. No. 50. On December 12, 1994, Judge Evans sentenced the defendant to serve a total of 144 months in custody, followed by five years of supervised release. Id. at Dkt. No. 57. Judge J.P. Stadtmueller later revised that sentence (presumably because Judge Evans had ascended to the Seventh Circuit), but the term of supervised release-five years-remained the same. Id. at Dkt.

*526Nos. 80, 85. Judge Evans had imposed conditions of supervised release, including a condition that the defendant could not illegally possess any controlled substance, ordering that if he did, he would be revoked and sent to prison. Id.

II. The 1999 Case

On May 11, 1999, the grand jury indicted the defendant for possession with intent to distribute in excess of five grams of cocaine base, or "crack"-that indictment is the basis for this current case. Dkt. No. 4. As the defendant states in his motion, "[a]t the time, that five-gram threshold was enough to subject a person to the penalties of 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B), and its minimum/maximum prison range of five-to-40 years." Dkt. No. 107 at 1. The defendant was serving his five-year term of supervised release in Case No. 94-cr-102 at the time he committed the offense in this case.

A. The Contempt Finding

On July 7, 1999, during the final pretrial conference in this case, the defendant "intentionally threw or knocked the microphone from the defense table causing it to break; he cursed, shouted, and had to be restrained by deputy U.S. Marshals, thereby delaying and disrupting the proceeding." Dkt. No. 31. On October 5, 1999, Judge Clevert found the defendant in contempt, based on this conduct. Id.

B. The Conviction and Sentencing

After a bench trial on the substantive charge of possession with intent to distribute crack, the defendant was convicted on July 21, 1999. Dkt. No. 29. Judge Clevert conducted the sentencing hearing on October 5, 1999. Dkt. No. 32. As noted, a defendant convicted of possessing in excess of five grams of crack faced a mandatory minimum sentence of five years (sixty months), and a maximum of forty years. The United States Sentencing Guidelines were mandatory at that time (the Supreme Court did not issue its decision in United States v. Booker until 2005). The defendant qualified as a career offender under § 4B1.1. Because the applicable statutory maximum was forty years and he qualified as a career offender, the defendant's base offense level under § 4B1.1(b)(2) was 34 and his criminal history category was VI, resulting in a guideline range of 262 to 327 months. Dkt. No. 107 at 1-2. Judge Clevert imposed a sentence of 276 months-fourteen months over the low end of the range. Dkt. Nos. 32, 33.

During that same hearing, the defendant admitted that his conviction in this case proved that he had violated the conditions of his supervised release in Case No. 94-cr-102; Judge Clevert sentenced him to serve eighteen months in custody for that violation, to run consecutively to the sentence imposed in this case. Case No. 94-cr-102, Dkt. No. 93.

Finally, Judge Clevert found that the defendant had committed contempt of court during his outburst at the final pretrial conference, and sentenced him to serve ninety days in custody for the contempt. Dkt. No. 31. Judge Clevert ordered that that ninety-day sentence run concurrently with the eighteenmonth sentence he'd imposed for the defendant's supervised release violations in Case No. 94-cr-102 (which he'd imposed to run consecutively to the 276-month sentence imposed in this case). Id.

III. The First Step Act

In 2010, Congress passed the Fair Sentencing Act, which reduced the disparity between sentences for crack and powder offenses; it reduced the powder-to-crack ratio from 100 to 1 to 18 to 1.

*527Dorsey v. United States, 567 U.S. 260, 263, 132 S.Ct. 2321, 183 L.Ed.2d 250 (2012). The statute took effect on August 3, 2010. Id. Specifically, the statute changed the triggering amount for the five-year mandatory minimum and forty-year maximum in 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B)(iii) from five grams or more of crack to twenty-eight grams or more. Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, PL 111-220, Aug. 3, 2010, 124 Stat. 2372 at § 2(a)(2). Under the Fair Sentencing Act, crack offenses involving less than twenty-eight grams carried no mandatory minimum penalty and a maximum of twenty years. 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(C). The Supreme Court analyzed the language of the Fair Sentencing Act and determined that "Congress intended the Fair Sentencing Act's new, lower mandatory minimums to apply to the post-Act sentencing of pre-Act offenders." Dorsey, 567 U.S. at 281, 132 S.Ct. 2321.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 F. Supp. 3d 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-glore-wied-2019.