US v. Barrett: Barrett was sentenced for drug offenses in 2019. At that time, her final offense level was 33 and Criminal History Category II. She was given two criminal history “status” points for being on probation when committing the instant offense, plus one point for a prior sentence. She received a sentence of 168 months, in the middle of the resulting Guideline range.
In 2023, when the amendment to the status points provision of the Guidelines was made retroactive, the probation office determined that Barrett was eligible for a reduced sentence, as without the two status points she was now in Criminal History Category I with a reduced Guideline range. The Government agreed. Barrett agreed that she was eligible, but argued that her new Guideline range was even lower because now that she only had one criminal history point she was eligible for a two-level offense level reduction under the “safety valve” provision. The district court disagreed and reduced her sentence to 150 months (the middle of the new Guideline range it calculated) rather than 120 months (the middle of the new range Barrett had calculated).
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit vacated the district court’s decision and remanded for additional proceedings. It rejected the Government’s argument that the only thing the district court could do with a retroactive Guideline amendment was look at that particular change in the Guideline calculus. In situations like this, where the retroactive Guideline change has knock-on effects to other calculations, those must be applied as well. The court remanded to allow the district court to make findings as to whether Barrett satisfied the other safety valve requirements.
Congrats to the Defender office in WDVA on the win!