United States v. Thomas J. Sumner

325 F.3d 884, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 6592, 2003 WL 1813835
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 2003
Docket02-1335
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 325 F.3d 884 (United States v. Thomas J. Sumner) 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. Thomas J. Sumner, 325 F.3d 884, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 6592, 2003 WL 1813835 (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge.

This is Thomas Sumner’s second effort to obtain some relief from a 132-month sentence for drug dealing. On his first appeal to this court, he was partially successful: we vacated his sentence and remanded for resentencing because the district court had not made adequate factual findings linking his uncharged trafficking of a substantial amount of crack cocaine to the offense of conviction. United States v. Sumner, 265 F.3d 532 (7th Cir.2001) (Sumner I). At the resentencing hearing, the district court made the necessary factual findings and then imposed the same 132-month sentence as before. Sumner has appealed again, but this time we find no merit in his arguments and therefore affirm.

I

Although we reviewed the facts in our earlier opinion, we repeat the highlights for ease of reference. In August 1999, the FBI and the Federal Housing Drug Task Force conducted a sting operation against the then-seventy-five-year-old Sumner, who was selling drugs from his home in Carrier Mills, Illinois. Three different confidential sources purchased cocaine from Sumner. One named customer, Chrissy Smith, reported upon leaving his residence that she had just seen someone purchase a large amount of crack cocaine. On September 15, 1999, agents executed a search warrant and found in the house powder cocaine and marijuana, drug paraphernalia, and firearms. No crack cocaine was recovered during the search.

Sumner was arrested and, after waiving his Miranda rights, made a series of statements concerning the timing, amounts, and types of drug sales he had engaged in beginning in “possibly the winter of 1997.” Sumner specifically admitted to selling crack cocaine for a period of two months in 1997. He stopped, he explained, after he witnessed one of his customers in the throes of a convulsive reaction to the crack; from that time onward, he limited his stock to powder cocaine and marijuana. (Smith, of course, claimed otherwise, as she reported a crack sale as late as August of 1999.) Sumner said that Troy Ash had been his principal supplier until August 1998, when Ash was arrested.

At a proffer interview, Sumner provided still more information, confirming and enlarging upon information he provided in *887 the post-arrest interview. He again named Ash as his supplier until Ash’s arrest. After Ash left the picture, Sumner turned, in July 1999, to a man named Mark LNU (or last name unknown, in FBI jargon — we will call him “Mark”). Mark supplied Sumner until Sumner’s September 1999 arrest. Sumner admitted that he had allowed others to cook powder cocaine into crack cocaine at his residence. Cooperating witnesses confirmed many of these details, although at least one source claimed to have purchased powder cocaine from Sumner as early as April 1999, which was three months before Sumner claims he located Mark as a source.

The post-arrest interview formed the basis for the pre-sentence report (PSR). Based on the amounts and timing of sales Sumner reported in the post-arrest interview, the Probation Office determined that he sold 56.7 grams of crack cocaine in the winter of 1997 (with Ash as supplier), 198.45 grams of powder cocaine from January to July 1998 (again with Ash as supplier), 198.45 grams of powder cocaine from April to September 1999 (with Mark as supplier), and 34.3 grams of marijuana.

Sumner made several objections to the PSR. In them, he presented a very different account of his dealings than he had done in his post-arrest and proffer interviews. Many of the PSR findings, he now claimed, lacked “sufficient indicia of reliability.” He denied ever receiving powder cocaine from Ash. Instead, according to Sumner’s new account, Ash gave him only seven grams of crack cocaine. Along similar lines, Sumner claimed that he had received only six ounces of powder cocaine from Mark. Sumner summarized the amounts that he believed could be counted as relevant conduct as follows: seven grams of crack cocaine, six ounces (which corresponds to approximately 170 grams) of powder cocaine, and 34 grams of marijuana. The PSR, in contrast, recommended that the court find 56.7 grams of crack, 397 grams of powder cocaine, and 34 grams of marijuana. When specifically asked about the relevant-conduct issue, defense counsel reiterated the amounts Sumner was advocating. Defense counsel also expressed concern that the PSR erroneously found that at least some of the relevant conduct took place during Sumner’s probation from August 1996 to October 1998 on unrelated charges of public indecency.

At the ensuing sentencing hearing, the court heard evidence from Agent Kirkham, who had been present at both the post-arrest and proffer interviews. Agent Kirkham testified about statements Sumner made on both occasions. Sumner also testified, changing his story for a third time. In contradiction to his post-arrest interview, proffer interview, and objections to the PSR, Sumner now claimed that he had briefly dealt in crack cocaine, but in 1992 rather than 1997, and that he never did so again. He also stated that he had no other drug dealings until he began selling powder cocaine in March of 1999. Sumner also specifically testified that he did not sell any drugs during his probation, between October 1997 and October 1998. He explained that he kept marijuana around because “girls” liked it, but that the “girls” in question were always of adult age. Sumner was then forced to admit that a 16-year-old girl was present in his house at the time of his arrest.

The district court rejected all of Sumner’s shifting stories and effectively adopted the PSR. It sentenced him to 132 months’ imprisonment, based on 1,213.72 kilograms of marijuana equivalent as well as guidelines enhancements for violation of his probation and possession of firearms, and a reduction for acceptance of responsibility. Sumner then appealed.

*888 On appeal, we vacated his sentence and remanded for resentencing on a single ground: that the district court had failed to make adequate findings of fact whether the crack cocaine dealings in 1997 were part of the same course of conduct for sentencing purposes. See Sumner I, 265 F.3d at 539-40. Although Sumner had forfeited that issue by failing to raise it before the district court, we nonetheless found plain error. Id.

Sumner took the remand as a more open-ended invitation to continue challenging his sentence. As contemplated by our mandate, he filed supplemental objections to inclusion of the crack cocaine dealings. In addition, however, he challenged the inclusion of 198.45 grams of powder cocaine allegedly received from Ash. This was an objection Sumner had initially made to the PSR, but he did not include it in his first appeal to this court. Sumner also renewed another of his objections to the PSR — again, one he had not raised in ■ his first appeal — that he did not deal in crack or powder cocaine during his probation. The government filed a Supplemental Addendum to the PSR in opposition.

At the resentencing hearing, the district court heard additional testimony from Agent Kirkham, but nothing more from Sumner. The district court specifically found Agent Kirkham’s testimony credible and specifically rejected Sumner’s.

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Bluebook (online)
325 F.3d 884, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 6592, 2003 WL 1813835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-thomas-j-sumner-ca7-2003.