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EXPLAINER: CRIMINAL HISTORY RETROACTIVITY
I don’t usually write this kind of thing, but I am getting a lot of questions about the possibly retroactive changes in the criminal history Guidelines.
Earlier this month, the United States Sentencing Commission proposed two Sentencing Guidelines changes benefitting people at both ends of the criminal history spectrum. Because these changes might become retroactive, many prisoners wonder what might be in it for them. So here goes:
A sentencing range for a Federal defendant is determined on a table found in Section 5 of the Sentencing Guidelines. A defendant’s offense level – specific to the offense of conviction and usually fortified with several enhancements for leadership, weapon, sophisticated planning and the like – is calculated. Then, the court takes a dive into the defendant’s criminal history, assigning points to prior offenses depending on severity, status at the time of the offense, and the like.
Those two rankings are applied to the Sentencing Table, with the Total Offense Level being the ordinant and the Criminal History Category (from I to VI) being the abscissa.
When Zero is Hero: Anyone with zero or one criminal history points falls in Criminal History I. But believing someone who absolutely no prior criminal history points is a special breed of virgin, the Commission has proposed USSG § 4C1.1. This Guideline would provide a 2-level decrease in the Total Offense Level for people with zero points.
Caution: the draft has more holes than a prairie dog village. The two-level decrease would only apply when the defendant did
(1) not receive any criminal history points;
(2) not receive a terrorism adjustment under 3A1.4;
(3) not use violence or threats of violence in the offense;
(4) not commit an offense resulting in death or serious bodily injury, or a sex offense;
(5) not personally cause substantial financial hardship;
(6) not possess of a gun or other dangerous weapon, or get someone else to do so);
(7) not commit an offense involving individual rights, a hate crime, or serious human rights offense); or
(8) not receive a USSG § 3B1.1 role adjustment and was not engaged in a 21 USC § 848 continuing criminal enterprise.
As an example, a defendant with no criminal history points who was convicted of selling a pound of cocaine might have a Total Offense Level of 22. As a Criminal History Category I, she would have an advisory sentencing range of 41-51 months. But if she had been a cheerleader and churchgoer before her unfortunate descent into drug-dealing – with zero prior criminal history points – her Total Offense Level would fall by two. Her sentencing range would then be 33-41 months, not exactly probation, but eight months less is eight months less.
Status Seekers: The status point change is easier. Currently, § 4A1.1(d) of the Guidelines currently adds two criminal history points “if the defendant committed the instant offense while under any criminal justice sentence, including probation, parole, supervised release, imprisonment, work release, or escape status.”
Makes sense. Prison is supposed to teach inmates a lesson, which is (among othert things) ‘don’t break the law‘. Hitting recently-released people with extra status points because they didn’t read the memo (the one that said ‘go forth and break the law no more’). Nevertheless, the Commission has found that its research showed the status points have no effect
Now, the Guidelines will only add a single point if a defendant committed the instant offense while under any criminal justice sentence – including probation, parole, supervised release, imprisonment, work release, or escape status – and already has seven criminal history points before the status point is added.
Going Retro: The USSC has sought comment on whether it should make the key parts of its new criminal history amendment “available for retroactive application.” If it becomes retroactive and Congress does not veto the change, people who were “crim zeros” or who had status points could file for benefit probably starting in early 2024.
Just note that unless application of the Guidelines change reduces a defendant;s Guidelines sentencing range, he or she can get no benefit from it. Read up on Guideline § 1B1.10 for how this works.
USSC, Amendments to the Sentencing Guidelines (Preliminary) (April 5, 2023)
Sentencing Law and Policy, Highlighting US Sentencing Commission’s significant amendments to federal guidelines’ criminal history rules (April 9, 2023)
– Thomas L. Root