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Carpenter v. United States

Location: Michigan
Court Type: U.S. Supreme Court
Case Type: Amicus Curiae Brief
Status: Closed (Dismissed)
Last Update: September 12, 2024

What's at Stake

This case concerns the First Step Act of 2018, in which Congress made major reductions to the mandatory minimum sentences for certain federal drug and firearm offenses. These changes result in sentences many decades shorter than were required under the previous laws. The question in this case was whether people who were initially sentenced prior to enactment of the First Step Act, but whose sentences were vacated and remanded for resentencing after enactment of the law, can benefit from its major reductions in applicable mandatory minimums. For defendants like Mr. Carpenter, who was originally sentenced to a draconian 116 years in prison as a result of the pre-First Step Act mandatory minimums, applying the First Step Act can mean the difference between dying in prison and having the opportunity to eventually go free. Unfortunately, although there is a split among federal courts of appeals on this question, the Supreme Court denied cert in this case in February 2024.

In December 2023, the 桃子视频filed an in Carpenter v. United States, in support of Timothy Carpenter鈥檚 cert petition seeking Supreme Court review of an important question of federal sentencing law. The 桃子视频previously represented Mr. Carpenter in an earlier phase of his case, resulting in a landmark Fourth Amendment ruling requiring a warrant for police access to people鈥檚 cell phone location history. The ruling on that issue did not end Mr. Carpenter鈥檚 criminal case, and after further proceedings in the lower courts, he sought Supreme Court review of a question concerning applicability of major sentencing reductions enacted by Congress in 2018.
In the First Step Act of 2018, Congress made major reductions to mandatory minimum sentences for certain federal firearms and controlled substance convictions. The question raised by Mr. Carpenter鈥檚 case is whether someone who was initially sentenced under the draconian mandatory minimums prior to the First Step Act, but whose sentence is vacated and remanded for resentencing after the effective date of the Act, can benefit from its major reductions in applicable mandatory minimums. Resolution of this question is important given the huge reductions in sentences available to defendants if the First Step Act applies. Mr. Carpenter, for example, would have had 80 years taken off of his sentence (dropping from 116 to approximately 36 years) if the First Step Act were applied to him at resentencing.

Although there is a split among federal courts of appeals on this question, the Supreme Court denied cert in this case in February 2024.

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