Two 15-Year Sentences Illustrate the Ugly Interaction of Drug and Gun Laws
The Supreme Court mulls how to apply a mandatory minimum for gun possession by people convicted of drug felonies.

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court heard two cases, Brown v. United States and Jackson v. United States, involving men who were each sentenced to 15 years in federal prison for possessing a firearm. Although the oral arguments focused on an arcane issue of statutory interpretation, the cases nicely illustrate how gun laws and drug laws interact to magnify the injustice of each.
In 2016, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit noted last year, police in York County, Pennsylvania, "conducted a series of controlled cocaine buys" from Justin Brown. They later obtained a search warrant for Brown's apartment, where they found cocaine, scales, money, and "a loaded .38 caliber Ruger LCR revolver tucked under the couch cushion where Brown had been sitting." Brown's prior drug offenses made his gun possession a violation of 18 USC 922(g)(1), which at the time was punishable by up to 10 years in prison. But when he was sentenced in 2021, Brown received an enhancement under 18 USC 924(e), a.k.a. the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA), which transformed a 10-year maximum into a 15-year minimum.
That mandatory minimum applies when a defendant has at least three prior convictions for a "violent felony" or a "serious drug offense." Brown had five prior Pennsylvania convictions, all of which fell into the latter category: a 2008 cocaine conviction and four marijuana convictions from 2009 through 2014.
Something similar happened to Eugene Jackson, a Florida man who was caught with a gun in 2017. He pleaded guilty to violating Section 922(g)(1) and received the same ACCA enhancement. Jackson's qualifying priors in Florida were a mixture of violent and nonviolent offenses: armed robbery (2003), aggravated assault with a deadly weapon (2012), and two cocaine offenses (1998 and 2004).
While Jackson's criminal record suggests he posed a threat to public safety, none of Brown's priors was violent. And in both cases, the crime that triggered the mandatory minimum did not involve violence. Merely possessing the guns, regardless of how they were used, was enough to earn Brown and Jackson 15 years in prison.
Or was it? Here is where the ACCA's complicated details come into play. As relevant here, the statute defines a "serious drug offense" to include a state offense that carries a maximum sentence of 10 years or more and involves the manufacture or distribution of a federally listed "controlled substance." The meaning of "serious drug offense" therefore changes when Congress or the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) removes substances from the schedules of the Controlled Substances Act.
In 2015, the DEA descheduled ioflupane I, a medically promising cocaine derivative previously listed in Schedule II. At that point, Florida's definition of cocaine still included ioflupane I, which remained true until 2017. At the time of Jackson's cocaine convictions, in other words, Florida defined the substance to include a derivative that was no longer a federally controlled substance when Jackson was caught with a gun or when he was sentenced under the ACCA.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit initially held that the relevant version of the federal drug schedules was the one that existed when Jackson committed his federal firearm offense. But after a round of supplemental briefs, the court reversed itself, saying the version that existed when Jackson committed his state drug offenses was the one that mattered.
The same sort of wrinkle complicated Brown's ACCA sentence. In 2018, Congress amended the federal definition of marijuana, a Schedule I substance, to exclude hemp. At the time of Brown's marijuana offenses, Pennsylvania's definition of the substance included hemp, meaning it did not correspond with the federal definition when he was sentenced under the ACCA in 2021. But since the two definitions did correspond in 2016, when Brown committed his federal firearm offense, the 3rd Circuit upheld the enhanced sentence.
During oral arguments in the two combined cases on Monday, the justices seemed to favor the 3rd Circuit's understanding of the statute. That interpretation would relieve Jackson but not Brown of the 15-year mandatory minimum.
Andrew Adler, a federal public defender representing Jackson, argued that the timing of the firearm offense is what matters because that offense triggers the ACCA sentence. "If Congress amended ACCA's criteria to delete burglary and someone then committed a 922(g) offense," he said, "all agree that a prior burglary conviction would not be an ACCA predicate, even if it was one at the time it occurred. The only question here, then, is whether ACCA's controlled substance criterion somehow warrants different treatment. And it does not. That criterion expressly incorporates the substances on the federal schedules. Under basic rules of statutory construction, that means the substances are effectively written into ACCA itself. So where a substance is removed from the schedules before the 922(g) offense, it is also removed from ACCA's coverage, no less than burglary in the hypothetical."
Several justices seemed to find that argument compelling. When Assistant to the Solicitor General Austin Raynor argued that scheduling changes after the commission of drug crimes do not affect their relevance under the ACCA, Justice Clarence Thomas wondered whether his analysis would be the same "if the statute itself was amended." Raynor said no, prompting Justice Sonia Sotomayor to say, "I think this is the most serious weakness in your argument because it doesn't make much sense to me."
Justice Neil Gorsuch noted that "normally when we have a cross-reference, we look at the contemporaneous version of the cross-reference." He added that "the statutory text here says 'as defined in,' which suggests we look at the present law, just as we normally would."
Justice Elena Kagan likewise called the distinction drawn by Raynor "perplexing" and "a little bit mysterious." She wondered "why you would have a different rule than you would if Congress had just listed the substances" in the ACCA text and subsequently changed it.
Jeffrey Green, the lawyer representing Brown, advocated the third position: that judges should consult the schedules as they exist at the time of sentencing. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, a former member of the U.S. Sentencing Commission, thought that made sense. "Isn't that the sort of way it's ordinarily done in the sentencing world?" she said. "Under the sort of normal federal sentencing process, a federal judge applies the sentencing law at the time of sentencing."
But Justice Amy Coney Barrett was skeptical. "Why would it make sense for Congress to say that two defendants who were convicted at the exact same time should be sentenced differently simply by virtue of when their sentencing happened?" Barrett asked Green. "If we're not going to choose the government's approach, it just seems to me like the time-of-federal-offense approach makes more sense of the scheme." Green conceded that the interpretation he favored would "create some arbitrariness."
Speaking of arbitrariness, the interaction between drug laws and gun laws exemplified by these cases shows how legislators transform peaceful conduct into crimes and then rely on those decrees to manufacture more crimes. Brown's prior felonies, which were created by drug prohibition, were the justification for revoking his Second Amendment rights, which in turn was the justification for charging him with violating Section 922(g)(1). Those same drug felonies were also the reason his firearm offense triggered a 15-year sentence.
Under the statutory interpretation that the Supreme Court seems inclined to endorse, Brown would have avoided that sentence if Congress had descheduled marijuana before he was caught with a gun. Given the ongoing collapse of pot prohibition, which most states have partly or entirely repudiated, Congress may eventually take that step, which 70 percent of Americans favor. But it will be too late to save Brown from a decade and a half in prison.
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The nazgul need to weed through this issue carefully.
Merry and Pippin were WAY too excited when they found mushrooms on the side of the road for them to just be boring, common white mushrooms you'd buy at the grocery.
Or when they found that stash of longbottom leaf at Isengard.
True. Pipe weed was a major crop for the Shire. And they were basically teenagers into their 30s... No wonder they were all so happy all the time!
I also realize why Led Zeppelin was always singing about LOTR!
Andy worhal dropped into obscurity when the "elites" quit drugs
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning 16,000 US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply.
Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome9.com
Reason told us that MJ would be descheduled when unrepentant drug warrior Joe Biden took office. Based only on irrational wishful thinking. But now the Democrats in the Senate will make it happen. Someday. Fuck off Jacob. Reason has endorsed this regime. You own it's drug war. And now the Koch libertarians are endorsing a lunatic neocon for president. You own that too.
Trumpster-to-the-dumpster threatens to ELIMINATE democracy in the USA! And YOU are the proud owner of THAT!
PLEASE name me just ONE, one-party state that has EVER led to long-term peace and prosperity? Just ONE, please?
Der TrumpfenFuhrer ***IS*** responsible for agitating for democracy to be replaced by mobocracy!
https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/24/politics/trump-election-warnings-leaving-office/index.html
A list of the times Trump has said he won’t accept the election results or leave office if he loses.
Essential heart and core of the LIE by Trump: “ANY election results not confirming MEEE as Your Emperor, MUST be fraudulent!”
September 13 rally: “The Democrats are trying to rig this election because that’s the only way they’re going to win,” he said.
Trump’s constant re-telling and supporting the Big Lie (any election not electing Trump is “stolen”) set up the environment for this (insurrection riot) to happen. He shares the blame. Boys will be boys? Insurrectionists will be insurrectionists, trumpanzees gone apeshit will be trumpanzees gone apeshit, so let’s forgive and forget? Poor Trump was misunderstood? Does that sound good and right and true?
It really should immediately make us think of Krystallnacht. Hitler and the NAZIs set up for this by constantly blaming Jews for all things bad. Jew-haters will be Jew-haters, so let’s forgive and forget? Poor Hitler was misunderstood? Does that sound good and right and true?
Oh really?
I keep hearing this claim.
Hoew exactly does this work? How does saying the 2020 election was stolen cause people to riot?
I mean, that assertion is completely nonsensical!
Still the man hears what he wants to hear, and disregards the rest!
Try this one on for size! THIS is how it works!
https://www.salon.com/2021/04/11/trumps-big-lie-and-hitlers-is-this-how-americas-slide-into-totalitarianism-begins/
Trump's Big Lie and Hitler's: Is this how America's slide into totalitarianism begins?
The above is mostly strictly factual, with very little editorializing. When I post it, the FACTS never get refuted… I only get called names. But what do you expect from morally, ethically, spiritually, and intellectually bankrupt Trumpturds?
Totalitarians want to turn GOP into GOD (Grand Old Dicktatorshit).
I don't remember such a claim. Do you have a link? Anyone?
Truth is optional around here.
Instead, we have "truth".
And the "truth" is, Reason was so disgusted and repulsed by Trump that they openly cheerleaded and supported Biden, and totally excused and defended every one of his policy proposals right up until the moment that Biden won the election - and then and only then did the Reason writers say "hey, wait a minute, this Biden fellow isn't very libertarian after all".
That is the "truth".
Brown had five prior Pennsylvania convictions, all of which fell into the latter category: a 2008 cocaine conviction and four marijuana convictions from 2009 through 2014. ... involves the manufacture or distribution of a federally listed "controlled substance"
So, the guy is a drug dealer and he owns unregistered guns. He has been convicted of several felonies.
the cases nicely illustrate how gun laws and drug laws interact to magnify the injustice of each
Can you elaborate where the "injustice" is supposed to be?
You call yourself a libertarian? Can you elaborate on how that supports gun control and the war on drugs? Tell us how you feel about j6 while you're at it.
You call yourself a libertarian?
No he calls himself THE libertarian.
he shouldnt have to register guns (no one should) and just because the government made up a crime and convicted you of it (selling drugs) doesnt mean you lose your constutional rights.
It is illegitimate to limit someone's freedom of speech, or right to assemble, or right to an attorney, or right to remain silent as a result of being convicted of a crime. Same principle applies here with the guns. He has a right to own and bear those arms.
It's a travesty.
When the police come to seize a conservatives guns they will claim it was a drug arrest and the rest of the conservatives won't complain one little bit.
Those are non-violent “crimes.” His 2A rights should not have been stolen from him by government.
His 2nd amendment rights weren't taken by the government. They were taken by conservatives who figure a drug criminal shouldn't have any rights.
Who would be enforcing those 2A restrictions? Government. That 1994 crime bill that Biden helped author should be enough to burn that strawman.
There Democrats were, minding their own business when... ALL OF A SUDDEN!
You people. As soon as MrBuyavowel points something out you just pounce.
Let me fact check this. In the first google hit for 1994 crime bill:
See Clinton! umm... and Biden... ummm Well, still. Its conservatives, not the government.
Where do I apply for my 50 cents?
One injustice is the length of the sentence - he was a felon in possession of a firearm, but was he more dangerous than Hunter Biden?
The other injustice is losing the right to keep and bear arms over any number of _nonviolent_ crimes.
Brown had five prior Pennsylvania convictions, all of which fell into the latter category: a 2008 cocaine conviction and four marijuana convictions from 2009 through 2014.
I wonder if it ever occurred to Brown that his life might go smoother if he just got a job at Home Depot, stocking shelves, or Krispy Kreme, serving donuts.
We need these laws to deal with the crook and the mugger and the carjacker and the gang member!
Z Crazy 7 days ago Flag Comment Mute User
Gun control laws make it easier to put away the crook and the mugger and the carjacker and the gang member. Is that so hard to understand?
https://reason.com/2023/11/22/the-4th-circuit-says-marylands-handgun-licensing-law-is-unconstitutional/?comments=true#comments
Dembot?