United States v. Patrick Lett

483 F.3d 782, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 7995, 2007 WL 1028777
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 2007
Docket06-12537
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 483 F.3d 782 (United States v. Patrick Lett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Patrick Lett, 483 F.3d 782, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 7995, 2007 WL 1028777 (11th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

CARNES, Circuit Judge:

The facts of Patrick Lett’s life that gave rise to this case read somewhat like a morality play. He was born and raised in Monroe County, Alabama. He had what he described as a nice childhood. Married and divorced, he has three daughters. He served his country in the National Guard and then the regular army. Some of his service was in Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom, and all of it was honorable. He received numerous citations and medals for meritorious achievement. His superior officers used superlatives to describe him and his dedication to the missions he was assigned.

After fourteen years in the military, Lett returned to civilian life the week before Christmas in 2003. It was not a happy time for him. He had lost friends and had seen fellow soldiers killed in Iraq. He had also seen what he described as “some very, very strange things.” While he was in Iraq, his fiancée died. When he returned home his father was dying. He had trouble supporting his children. He felt pressured. He was depressed. He began to drink heavily, which only helped fuel the downward trajectory of his life. Lett felt, in his words, like “the lowest person on the face of the earth.”

Enter temptation in the form of his cousin, Michael. Michael was a big time cocaine distributor, or what passes for one in Monroe County. He bought powder cocaine wholesale in Montgomery for resale as cocaine and crack back home. For distribution, Michael had something of a friends and family plan. Influenced perhaps by the cultural mores of a south Alabama county, he did not rely on strangers or mere acquaintances to sell his drugs for him. Instead, he used his personal friends and members of his family.

Michael eventually prevailed upon Patrick to be one of his street level sellers, operating out of trailers, vacant houses and yards. On seven occasions during a five-week period in the spring of 2004, Patrick Lett sold cocaine and crack cocaine to Ceonia Stanton, and sometimes to another person in Stanton’s presence, in quantities ranging from just over a gram to nearly fourteen and a half grams. It was typical drug dealer conduct. But Patrick Lett was atypical, because he was a drug dealer with a conscience. With his conscience came remorse and a search for redemption. He felt guilty about his actions. He realized, as he put it, that “it takes a cruel-hearted person to actually take advantage of someone who has a disease, and that disease is addiction,” and he “decided to get on my knees and pray a little harder and ask God to pull me back together, ... which [H]e did.” Lett quit selling drugs and left Michael’s operation to the devil’s own devices.

Lett re-enlisted in the military in October 2004, and again he rendered exemplary service to his country. His superior officers attested that Lett, a sergeant, was an outstanding soldier, dedicated to the welfare of his men and to accomplishing whatever mission he was given. He made his men’s lives better and his superiors’ jobs easier. His captain said that Lett “exemplified the Army values” of “loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity, personal courage.” He would be willing to entrust his life to Lett.

*784 Having pulled himself out of the world of illegal drugs and gone back to serving his country, Lett may have thought that he had left his past behind him. As Faulkner reminded us, however, “The past is never dead. It is not even past.” 1 It turns out that Ceonia Stanton, to whom Lett had sold the drugs, was an undercover law enforcement agent working as part of a task force aimed at shutting down Michael Lett’s operation. In September 2005, a grand jury indicted Lett and fourteen others, including Michael, for various federal drug crimes stemming from their roles in the conspiracy. Lett pleaded guilty to seven counts of possession with intent to distribute, one for each of the sales to the undercover agent, all in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).

I.

The presentence investigation report noted that Lett admitted selling 60.42 grams of crack cocaine and 7.89 grams of powder cocaine, which put his base offense level at thirty-two. The report recommended, and the government did not object to, that level being lowered: by two levels because he met the five criteria for a safety valve reduction; by another two levels because he accepted responsibility for his crime; and by one more level because he timely notified the government of his intention to plead guilty before it dedicated substantial resources to prosecuting him. Those reductions left an offense level of twenty-seven.

With that adjusted offense level and no prior criminal record, Lett’s advisory guideline range was seventy to eighty-seven months imprisonment. He faced a mandatory minimum prison sentence of sixty months on five of the counts under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B). About those statutory mandatory minimum sentences, and the resulting inapplicability of the U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2 safety valve provision, the PSR stated:

Based on a total offense level of 27 and a criminal history category of I, the guideline range of imprisonment is 70 to 87 months. Counts 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12, each carry a mandatory minimum penalty of 60 months. Although it appears that the defendant is eligible for consideration under U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2, because the minimum of the guideline range is 70 months, which is greater than the statutory mandatory minimum 60 months, 5C1.2 consideration is a moot issue.

Neither the government nor Lett lodged any objection to the PSR, and with the consent of both parties the district court adopted it as written. Lett called three witnesses to testify for him at the sentence hearing: a sergeant, a first sergeant, and a captain, all of whose testimony we alluded to earlier in describing Lett’s military service. Two of the three implored the court to impose the least sentence the law allowed. Lett himself also took the stand. He admitted the drug crimes he had committed during the short period of time two years earlier, accepted responsibility for them, described the “pride and respect and unity and honor” he feels when he puts on the uniform in service of his country, and asked the court to give him a sentence that would allow him to stay in the military so that he could continue to support his three daughters, the oldest of whom was sixteen and pregnant.

At the end of the testimony, Lett’s counsel asked the district court to put him on supervised release “or some kind of probation” or to give him “the minimum sentence possible” so that he could stay in the *785 military. According to counsel, the Army was willing to allow Lett to continue his service if the district court sentenced him to probation. Even though he made the request, counsel acknowledged that “there’s a minimum mandatory five-year sentence under the statute, and it would be very hard for the Court to find a five-year sentence that’s constitutionally excessive,” so he asked the court to give the lightest sentence possible.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
483 F.3d 782, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 7995, 2007 WL 1028777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-patrick-lett-ca11-2007.