

Legal Sidebari
Gun Crime Penalty Tossed
June 20, 2019
Summary
The full United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit (Sixth Circuit) (sitting en banc), in United
States v. Havis, recently held that prior attempt convictions do not warrant a felon-in-possession-of-a-
firearm sentencing enhancement. Ordinarily binding commentary included in the U.S. Sentencing
Commission’s sentencing guidelines would require enhancement for prior attempt convictions. A number
of other federal appellate courts, including the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in 2017,
have deferred to the Sentencing Commission’s interpretation. The Sixth Circuit, however, concluded that
the commentary is not entitled to deference because it conflicts with the text of the guideline.
Sentencing Commission
Congress authorizes the Sentencing Commission to promulgate the federal sentencing guidelines. The
Commission ordinarily updates the guidelines as part of an annual cycle that begins with the publication
of proposed amendments followed by a notice and comment period. The Commission sends its final
proposed amendments to Congress for approval, and the amendments become effective shortly thereafter
unless Congress intervenes statutorily. The Commission also issues interpretative commentary in the
form of application notes that do not go through the amendment process. The Supreme Court has held that
an application note is binding unless it “violate[s] the Constitution or a federal statute …” or “is plainly
erroneous or inconsistent with” the guideline it accompanies. The Court has also held that federal courts
must begin the sentencing process by calculating the sentencing range recommended by the guidelines.
The courts must consider the results along with other statutorily required considerations, and any
guideline miscalculation may doom the sentence ultimately imposed.
Havis
A federal district court convicted Havis of unlawful possession of a firearm by a previously convicted
felon. Some seventeen years earlier, a Tennessee court had convicted Havis on a charge of selling or
delivering cocaine. The Tennessee statute covered both actual and attempted delivery. The sentencing
guideline applicable to unlawful possession of a firearm calls for a substantial sentencing enhancement if
a defendant has a prior “controlled substance offense” conviction. The accompanying commentary’s
application note defines a controlled substance offense, by way of a cross-reference, to a second guideline
and its commentary. The second guideline states that “the term ‘controlled substance offense’ means an
offense under federal or state law, punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year, that
prohibits the manufacture, import, export, distribution, or dispensing of a controlled substance (or a
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counterfeit substance) or the possession of a controlled substance (or a counterfeit substance) with intent
to manufacture, import, export, distribute, or dispense.” The commentary, in an application note, declares
that “[f]or purposes of this guideline— . . . ‘controlled substance offense’ include[s] the offenses of aiding
and abetting, conspiring, and attempting to commit such offense[].” The district court applied the
sentencing enhancement in its calculation of Havis’ sentence. On appeal to a three-judge Sixth Circuit
panel, Havis argued that the enhancement should not apply because the sentencing guideline mentioned
only controlled substance offenses. He contended that the application note that interpreted the guideline to
include attempted controlled substance offenses exceeded the Sentencing Commission’s authority.
The panel agreed. It conceded that the Commission and its guideline system have survived separation-of-
powers attacks. In its 1989 Mistretta decision, the Supreme Court concluded “that in creating the
Sentencing Commission – an unusual hybrid in structure and authority – Congress neither delegated
excessive legislative power nor upset the constitutionally mandated balance of powers among the
coordinated Branches.” The panel majority, however, countered that the Mistretta decision is premised on
the very limitations that the Commission disregarded in Havis:
The Court’s explanation hinged in part on the limits Congress placed on the Commission’s
power to promulgate the Guidelines. First, Congress must have a chance to review
amendments to the Guideline’s text before they take effect. And second, the Sentencing
Commission must comply with the notice-and-comment requirements in the
Administrative Procedure Act. Without these limits, the Court explained that the
Commission might be said to possess “the power of judging joined with the legislative,”
thereby compromising the ability of the branches to check one another’s power – “the
greater security against tyranny.”. . . A problem thus arises when the Commission bypasses
these procedures by adding offenses to the Guidelines through commentary rather than
through an amendment. … This means that in order to keep the Sentencing Commission in
its proper constitutional position – whatever that is exactly – courts must keep Guidelines
text and Guidelines commentary, which are two different vehicles, in their respective lanes.
However, the panel had a problem. In an earlier decision, United States v. Evans, the Sixth Circuit had
read the guideline to include attempt offenses, and a majority of the panel’s members felt bound by that
precedent at least until Evans was overturned by the Sixth Circuit sitting en banc. Moreover, several other
federal appellate courts, with some exceptions, had deferred to the Commission’s application note, and
the government argued that the Supreme Court’s Stinson decision compelled the Sixth Circuit to do so as
well.
The three members of the panel each filed a separate opinion. Two concurred to emphasize that the
obligation to defer to interpretative guideline commentary does not extend to commentary that amends the
guideline (“one does not ‘interpret’ a text by adding to it. Interpreting a menu of ‘hot dogs’ hamburgers,
and bratwursts to include pizza is nonsense.”). The third dissented because she did not believe that Evans
supplied a binding precedent and that Havis’s sentence therefore should have been vacated.
Sixth Circuit en banc
The judges of the Sixth Circuit collectively agreed to reconsider Evans and vacated the panel decision.
Sitting en banc, they returned a relatively terse, unanimous, per curiam opinion that largely tracked the
panel opinion.
The issue before the court was simply whether the term “controlled substance offense” in the guideline
includes attempted controlled substance offenses. The court pointed out that the Supreme Court’s
Mistretta opinion indicated that “two constraints – congressional review and notice and comment – stand
to safeguard the Commission from uniting legislative and judicial authority in violation of the separation
of powers.” The court acknowledged that the Commission might issue valid commentary as application
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notes without subjecting it to congressional review or notice and comment, but emphasized that “the
commentary has no independent legal force – it serves only to interpret the Guidelines’ text, not to replace
or modify it.” In Havis’ case, “the Commission did not interpret a term in the guideline itself …. Rather,
the Commission used Application Note 1 to add an offense not listed in the guideline.” Consequently,
“[t]he Commission’s use of commentary to add attempt crimes to the definition of ‘controlled substance
offense’ deserves no deference,” the en banc court opined.
In sum, the court explained that:
Although it is neither a legislature nor a court, the . . . Sentencing Commission plays a
major role in criminal sentencing. But Congress has placed careful limits on the way the
Commission exercises that power. Jeffery Havis argues that the Commission stepped
beyond those limits here and, as a result, he deserves to be resentenced. We agree . . . .
Congress has several alternative options if it is dissatisfied with the results in Havis. First, it may amend
the Havis guideline to include the definition of controlled substance offense now found in the
interpretative note. Second, it may instruct the Sentencing Commission to do so. Third, it may direct the
Sentencing Commission to include any substantive additions to the guidelines in the package of the
amendments the Commission annually sends to the Congress for review. Fourth, it may amend the
statutory penalty for unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon in cases where the felon has a prior
attempted controlled substance conviction. Fifth, it may postpone any action until the Commission or the
Supreme Court has had an opportunity to take up to the Havis decision.
Author Information
Charles Doyle
Senior Specialist in American Public Law
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