United States v. Kevin Winters

117 F.3d 346, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 15448, 1997 WL 365374
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 25, 1997
Docket96-2941
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 117 F.3d 346 (United States v. Kevin Winters) 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. Kevin Winters, 117 F.3d 346, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 15448, 1997 WL 365374 (7th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

*347 BAUER, Circuit Judge.

Kevin Winters pleaded guilty to unlawful distribution of firearms and was sentenced to forty-six months’ imprisonment. In imposing Winters’ sentence, the district court refused to grant a downward departure despite a substantial assistance motion by the government. On appeal, Winters challenges his sentence, claiming that the district court misconstrued its authority to depart downward under U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1. We find that we have no jurisdiction to review Winters’ sentence.

BACKGROUND

Kevin Winters was an employee of United Parcel Service. While on the job, he met James Bush, a federally-licensed firearms dealer, who worked in the shipping and receiving department of the Chicago Transit Authority. Toward the end of 1994, Winters found himself down on his luck, having suffered a shoulder injury which would keep him out of work for nearly a year. So, he decided to strike a deal with Bush. Bush would obtain handguns, and Winters would sell the guns to gang members and narcotics dealers on the streets of Chicago. From September 1994 to mid-December 1994, the duo was responsible for the unlawful sale of approximately 250 handguns.

Winters was arrested on December 19, 1994 during an attempted sale of a handgun. He signed a detailed confession outlining his illegal gun sales with Bush and agreed to cooperate with the government. Winters helped to introduce Bush to an undercover agent, who made sixty-two illegal handgun purchases from Bush over a two-week period. Bush was arrested on February 2, 1995. Thereafter, he was indicted, entered a plea of guilty to weapons violations and was sentenced to fifty-seven months’ imprisonment.

On October 2, 1995, Winters was charged with conspiring to unlawfully sell and deliver approximately 200 firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 371, 922(b)(2), 922(k) and 923(g)(3)(A). On December 19, 1995, Winters entered a guilty plea pursuant to a written plea agreement. The agreement indicated that the government would move for a downward departure based upon Winters’ cooperation with the authorities. Specifically, it stated that the government would

recommend that the sentence imposed by the Court include a term of imprisonment in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons for fifty percent of the lowend of the applicable sentencing guideline range. Defendant understands that the decision to depart from the applicable guideline range rests solely with the Court.

On May 6, 1996, Winters filed a Sentencing Memorandum and Motion for Departure in which he asked the court to consider a wide range of financial, family and community matters in evaluating both the government’s motion for departure and his own request for a lateral departure from the guidelines. 1 The government opposed the lateral sentencing portion of the motion and disputed Winters’ claim of financial difficulties during the fall of 1994.

On June 28, 1996, - Winters appeared for sentencing before Judge Brian Barnett Duff. Winters’ counsel and the government each stated their respective positions. Winters’ counsel reviewed Winters’ family, work and lack of criminal history, and she informed the court of Winters’ cooperation with the government which led to Bush’s arrest. The government opposed Winters’ request for a lateral departure, but argued in favor of the court granting a fifty-percent reduction from the low end of the guideline range in light of Winters’ conduct after his arrest. The government explained to the court that Winters’ cooperation hastened its apprehension of Bush.

After hearing from Winters, Judge Duff commented extensively before pronouncing sentence:

If you knew me better, you’d know I never make up my mind until the very last minute, and I take everything I hear in consideration. Most particularly I let the defendants speak last so I can hear what he or *348 she wants to say to me. And I do listen to the whole thing. And I feel quite limited by the guidelines often, and everybody knows that. I don’t like them. Sometimes they are too low, and sometimes they are too high. Sometimes the recommendations are valid, and sometimes they are not, in my opinion.
* * * * * *
And I let [defense counsel] know early that she had to try to talk to me because I meant it, and not because I had made my mind up early, but because I wasn’t at all convinced that this deserved a downward departure for any reason at all, at least not from the lower extent of the guidelines. And the reason I say that is because if there was no recommendation at all, on this record alone, I would not have gone to the low end of the guidelines. And the reason for that is that there are, from my experience here sitting on the bench for many years — the growing problems of our world include, of course, things like poverty and alcohol and drugs. But the three biggest concerns that society has today are guns, drugs, substance abuse and gangs. ***** *
Now I am glad that Bush got convicted, but I think he would have been convicted anyway. It might have taken a little more time, but he’d be serving time. And a matter of whether he served an extra two months ot five months is not going to make the difference here.
* * * * * *
Everything in the world has been done for you. But you have enabled the worst kinds of crime, drugs and violence. And it is not easy to say that you haven’t done anything violent, you have. I just think it is reprehensible totally.... Your own wife and child could have walked out into your street, your block and been killed by one of the guns on a drive-by_ It is a ■terrible thing you did, really, truly.
There is a poet named Dante who wrote a poem called the Inferno. And he and another poet named Virgil in this book were walking down into hell. And at the lower — the lower you went into hell, the more serious the crimes, and those were the crimes which were done with a clear head, not with any emotion or any passion, but simply because somebody calculated how to make money out of evil. That’s exactly what you did.
* * * * * *
And so I am not going to downward depart at all. But on the basis of your — the rest of your life and your record, I am going to give you the minimum sentence. And the minimum sentence is 46 months. And I also agree that you are not in a position to pay any crimes [sic] — any—and that minimum is taken into consideration of the fact that you cooperated. But, see, they had you cold. You were going to go to jail and you knew it. People get very, very sorry about what they did when they have been caught.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F.3d 346, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 15448, 1997 WL 365374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kevin-winters-ca7-1997.