United States v. Montrell Dupriest

794 F.3d 881, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 12981, 2015 WL 4523805
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 2015
Docket14-2419
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 794 F.3d 881 (United States v. Montrell Dupriest) 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. Montrell Dupriest, 794 F.3d 881, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 12981, 2015 WL 4523805 (7th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

This case comes before us on a second appeal from a supervised release revocation hearing. The first time we heard this case, we remanded for resentencing after the government conceded that the term of imprisonment — eighteen months — exceeded the statutory maximum by six months. This time, the issue before us is whether the district court failed to consider the relevant 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors before resentencing Appellant Montrell DuPri-est. 1

*882 I. Background

In 2006, DuPriest pled guilty to one count of “Use of a Telephone to Facilitate a Drug Trafficking Crime.” Notably, Judge Stadtmueller served as the sentencing judge for that offense. He sentenced DuPriest to a forty-eight-month term of imprisonment and a twelve-month term of supervised release. Judge Stadtmueller ran the sentence concurrently with DuPri-est’s related state sentence in Wisconsin.

DuPriest wasreleased from confinement on November 15, 2012. Five months later, while serving his concurrent terms of state and federal supervised release, Milwaukee police arrested DuPriest after observing him enter an abandoned house. The officers searched him and found a pistol and forty-three small bags of marijuana. The State of Wisconsin charged DuPriest in Milwaukee County Court with possession of a firearm and possession with intent to deliver THC. Wisconsin dismissed those charges once the federal government took over prosecution, but it did seek incarceration for the violation of his state supervised release. He eventually received an eighteen-month sentence on the state violation.

DuPriest subsequently pled guilty to the federal offense of being a felon in possession of a firearm under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). That plea had two immediate consequences. First, it meant that DuPriest would be sentenced for the firearm offense under § 922(g). And second, it meant that DuPriest would then face mandatory revocation and a second term of imprisonment for violating the terms of his federal supervised release. 18 U.S.C. § 3583(g).

District Judge Adelman served as the sentencing judge for the underlying § 922(g) offense. He sentenced DuPriest to a thirty-three-month term of imprisonment and a twenty-four-month term of supervised release. Judge Adelman ran that sentence concurrently to DuPriest’s eighteen-month state revocation sentence.

In consideration for DuPriest’s guilty plea before Judge Adelman, the government agreed- to recommend a federal revocation sentence that would run concurrently with his sentence for the underlying crime under § 922(g). The government upheld its end of the bargain. The only question that remained was whether the judge at the revocation hearing would go along with it.

Re-enter Judge Stadtmueller, the same judge who sentenced DuPriest in 2006. He presided over DuPriest’s revocation hearing. He disagreed with the government’s recommendation for a concurrent sentence. He subsequently issued an eighteen-month term of imprisonment, with nine of those months to be served concurrently to the sentence for the underlying crime, and the remaining nine to be served consecutively. Judge Stadtmueller justified the consecutive portion of the sentence by emphasizing the need for incremental punishment.

As mentioned in our introduction, Du-Priest appealed the revocation sentence, and the government conceded error on appeal. Given the sentence miscalculation — eighteen months was clearly six months more than the statutory maximum — -we remanded for resentencing on the revocation issue.

On remand, Judge Stadtmueller again served as the sentencing judge. This marked the third time in ten years that he sentenced DuPriest. Pursuant to the terms of the original plea deal, the government asked for a twelve-month concurrent sentence. DuPriest’s attorney asked for a five-month term of imprisonment to run consecutively ■ to the imprisonment for § 922(g) offense.

Judge Stadtmueller rejected both requests. He issued the statutory maximum twelve-month sentence. And as before, he made half the sentence concurrent and the *883 other half consecutive. As justification, Judge Stadtmueller again relied on the need for incremental punishment. Then he went a step further. Over the course of three transcribed pages, Judge Stadtmuel-ler explained the reasons behind his sentence. We reproduce his explanation in its entirety here:

Well, Mr. Du[P]riest, I appreciate the thought that you would like to do better. As I often say in these hearings, we have an absolute pandemic of violence in this community, and it starts with people like yourself who unfortunately have not learned from the error of their way. And I’m not here to suggest that you’re out on the street pointing a gun at any and everyone whom you might have contact. But guns in the wrong hands, particularly with individuals who are convicted of criminal conduct, in particular felonies, are a recipe for disaster. •You, sir, are very, very fortunate that you’re even able to sit in a courtroom because there isn’t a single day, not a single day that goes by in this community or any urban community where individuals are not shot and many, many times killed as a result of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, involved in drug trafficking or other criminal conduct that involves violence.
And your record speaks loud and clear of your inability to conform your conduct to the requirements of the law. That’s why we’re here. We’re not here because I take any great pride or joy in having to send anybody to prison. But unfortunately we as a society have figured out no better way to deal with this phenomenon other than to remove peo-pie from their homes, the community, and incarcerate them.
It’s very, very sad. As you well know as a prisoner, we have more individuals in prison in these United States than any country in the world. We have barely 5 percent of the world’s population yet we have over 25 percent of the world’s incarcerated defendants. And it’s become very, very, very expensive — over $17 million a day at the federal level alone. Over $6 billion of the U.S. Department of Justice budget is being spent on the Federal Bureau of Prisons. But unfortunately the voters and members of Congress, indeed every state legislature haven’t figured out a better way to deal with all of this.
And so in the unique circumstances of your case, obviously you haven’t learned a lot from your prior encounters with the criminal justice system. And as I made very, very clear at the sentencing hearing back in December, contrary to what was represented by an advocate in the court of appeals, 2 there is a very, very cogent reason that the sentence is to run consecutive, because there must — indeed must be incremental punishment for those who are unable to even conform their conduct to the requirements of supervised release.

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Bluebook (online)
794 F.3d 881, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 12981, 2015 WL 4523805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-montrell-dupriest-ca7-2015.