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Table of Contents

500 – Criminal History, Generally (§4A1.1)

500 – Criminal History, Generally (§4A1.1)
  • 504 Prior Convictions (§4A1.2)
  • 508 Departures for Criminal History (§4A1.3)
  • 525 Career Offenders, “Prior Violent Felony”
  • 530 Criminal Livelihood (§4B1.3)
  • 540 Armed Career Criminal Act (§4B1.4)
  • 520 Career Offenders (§4B1.1)

Back to main table of contents

§530 Criminal Livelihood

(U.S.S.G. 4B1.3)

Second Circuit
Third Circuit
Fourth Circuit
Fifth Circuit
Sixth Circuit
Seventh Circuit
Eighth Circuit
Ninth Circuit
Tenth Circuit
Miscellaneous

10th Circuit upholds “criminal livelihood” finding. (530) Defendant was convicted at trial of drug traffick­ing. The evidence showed that he was unem­ployed during a multi-year relationship with a former girlfriend and that he passed $360,000 through another friend’s bank account. At sentencing, the district court found under §§ 2D1.1 and 4B1.3 that he was “engaged in a livelihood” as “part of a pattern of criminal conduct.” According to the commen­tary to § 4B1.3, a person is considered “engaged in a [criminal] livelihood” if (i) income derived from the criminal activity in any twelve-month period exceeded 2,000 times the then-existing minimum wage, and (ii) the totality of the circumstances indicates the criminal conduct was defendant’s primary occupation in that 12-month period. Defendant argued that the evidence at trial showed that he had other employment and that the district court relied on incon­sistent accomplice testimony. The Tenth Circuit found sufficient evidence to support the district court’s finding. U.S. v. Cortes-Gomez, __ F.3d __ (10th Cir. June 12, 2019) No. 18-3052.

8th Circuit approves criminal livelihood increase. (240)(430)(530) The drug guideline provides for a two-level enhancement in § 2D1.1(b)(15)(E) if the defendant played an aggravating role in the offense, such as organizer or leader, and “committed the offense as part of a pattern of criminal conduct engaged in as a livelihood.” Defendant received an aggravating role adjustment, and the Eighth Circuit held that he also properly received the criminal livelihood adjustment. A government investigator testified that defendant had no reported income. Other trial evidence established that he was selling large quantities of methamphetamine every week, always paid his rent on time, purchased a car for $13,300 in cash, paid cash for $14,000 worth of repairs and improvements on his home, and purchased several businesses. U.S. v. Morris, __ F.3d __ (8th Cir. July 2, 2015) No. 14-2406. XE “U.S. v. Morris, __ F.3d __ (8th Cir. July 2, 2015) No. 14-2406.”

2nd Circuit says criminal livelihood enhancement does not require current offense to produce income. (530) Israeli authorities arrested defendant attempting to enter Israel using a stolen U.S. passport. Defendant had estab­lished a lifestyle based upon fraud. He acquired numerous fraudulent documents which he used to establish multiple identities; he then used the false identities to conceal his true identity as he fraudulently obtained money at various financial institutions. The § 4B1.3 criminal livelihood en­hancement applies when a defendant commits “an offense as part of a pattern of criminal conduct engaged in as a livelihood.” The Second Circuit held that § 4B1.3 does not require the current offense to be a crime committed for pecuniary gain. The current offense must simply be “part of a pattern of criminal conduct engaged in as a livelihood.” The passport offense, while not itself an income-producing crime, was part of a larger and sustained pattern of criminal conduct. There was sufficient evidence that defendant obtained more than $10,300 from criminal activity over a 12-month period. He submitted a personal financial statement to the probation department listing $3,000 as his monthly income, and $2,000 as his monthly expenses. He also had a considerable amount of money stored in foreign banks, and no legitimate income. U.S. v. Burgess, 180 F.3d 37 (2d Cir. 1999).

3rd Circuit holds that criminal livelihood sec­tion re­quires that annual income from illicit activity be 2000 times mini­mum wage. (530) The district court increased defendant’s offense level based on the criminal liveli­hood guide­lines § 4B1.3 after finding defendant de­rived a substantial por­tion of his income from crimi­nal conduct.  The 3rd Circuit reversed, holding that the guideline in effect on the date de­fendant was sentenced did not apply to som­eone whose in­come from illicit ac­tivity during any 12 month period was below 2000 times the hourly mini­mum wage then in effect.  The court noted that this defi­nition was derived from a November 1, 1989 amendment to the old guideline.  The old guide­line could not be ap­plied solely on the basis of defen­dant’s pre­sent offenses but the guideline might be appli­cable if the present and past offense consti­tuted a single pattern of conduct, the past of­fenses exceeded the 2000 times minimum and that profit amounted to more than half his gross income or the conduct was his primary oc­cupation during that pe­riod.  However the government conceded the livelihood pro­vision did not apply to the facts of the instant case.  U.S. v. Cianscewski, 894 F.2d 74 (3rd Cir. 1990).

4th Circuit permits criminal history depar­ture despite criminal livelihood enhance­ment. (530) Defendant argued that an upward criminal history departure under § 4A1.3 and a criminal livelihood enhancement under § 4B1.3 was improper double counting. The Fourth Circuit found no double counting. Although both guide­line sections examine past criminal conduct, each provision is designed to penalize a different type of criminal behavior. Section 4B1.3 attempts to ensure adequate punishment for those who prey on society for their livelihood. Section 4A1.3 is designed to deal with defendants who possess an “extensive record” that is not adequately reflected by their criminal history category or those whose criminal background shows them to “pose a greater risk of serious recidivism.” Moreover, double counting is not a problem unless the guidelines expressly prohibit it. U.S. v. Blake, 81 F.3d 498 (4th Cir. 1996).

5th Circuit includes amount of uncashed stolen checks as income from criminal livelihood. (530) There are two crite­ria that define whether a defendant engaged in a pat­tern of criminal conduct as a livelihood under guideline section 4B1.3:  (1) the defendant must have derived in­come from his pattern of criminal con­duct that in any 12-month period ex­ceeded 2000 times the then-existing mini­mum wage, and (2) the criminal conduct must be the defendant’s primary occu­pation in that 12-month period.  Defendant con­tended that the income from his criminal conduct was $2394.  The 5th Circuit found that defendant neglected to include as in­come $6587.81 worth of stolen checks which authori­ties recovered from him.  The court rejected defen­dant’s implicit argument that only actual cash amounts received by him could be counted as income.  The court also rejected defen­dant’s claim that his criminal con­duct was not his primary occupa­tion.  Al­though defen­dant claimed to have been self-em­ployed as a roofer, he was unable to pro­vide any records of his employment be­cause he was always paid in cash.  Others testified that de­fendant told them that he lived off the pro­ceeds of the stolen mail.  U.S. v. Quert­ermous, 946 F.2d 375 (5th Cir. 1991).

5th Circuit upholds consideration of entire value of stolen rental car to determine crimi­nal in­come. (530) Four months after escaping from a halfway house, de­fendant was arrested in possession of stolen checks and credit cards, and a stolen rental car valued at $15,000.  The district court enhanced his sentence under guideline § 4B1.3 for criminal liveli­hood.  Defendant claimed he did not meet the crimi­nal livelihood re­quirements because (a) he did not earn at least $6,700 from his pattern of crimi­nal behavior, and (b) the crimi­nal conduct was not his “primary occupation” during the prior 12-month period.  The 5th Circuit re­jected both of these arguments.  The district court could have properly treated the entire market value of the stolen rental car as in­come for the year in which defendant stole it.  Sec­ond, a defendant need not engage in criminal activity for 12 months to qualify for this enhance­ment; it need only be his pri­mary oc­cupation during the 12-month period.  U.S. v. Cryer, 925 F.2d 828 (5th Cir. 1991).

 

6th Circuit says defendant who obtained jobs through fraud did not engage in criminal livelihood. (530) For over ten years, defendant assumed false identities and used phony credentials to obtain jobs as a physician’s assistant. The Sixth Circuit rejected a criminal livelihood enhancement, since although his jobs were obtained through fraud, the criminal activity was not his primary occupation. Defendant’s primary occupation, and his earning, were from the positions that he held, not from the fraud itself. U.S. v. Greene, 71 F.3d 232 (6th Cir. 1995).

 

6th Circuit permits consideration of any 12-month period to determine criminal livelihood. (530) From November 1, 1991 to June 30, 1992, defendant fraudulently obtained $15,917.41 from various local governments. The district court enhanced his sentence under the criminal livelihood provisions of § 4B1.3. This enhancement applies if the defendant derived income from a pattern of criminal conduct that in any 12-month period exceeded 2,000 times the then existing hourly minimum wage under federal law. Defendant argued that either calendar year 1991 or calendar year 1992 should have been chosen as the applicable 12-month period. The 6th Circuit held that the plain language of application note 2 entitled the trial court to consider any 12-month period in its calculation, including the period from November 1, 1991 to October 30, 1992. The 15,917.41 earned by defendant during this period was considerably in excess of 2,000 times the then existing minimum wage ($8500). U.S. v. Kellams, 26 F.3d 646 (6th Cir. 1994).

 

6th Circuit affirms criminal livelihood enhance­ment. (530) Defendant used an unauthorized credit card to fraud­ulently ob­tain $17,000 worth of mer­chandise.  The 6th Cir­cuit affirmed the district court’s ruling that defen­dant en­gaged in a pattern of criminal conduct as a liveli­hood under section 4B1.3.  A pattern of criminal conduct” is defined to include independent offenses occurring over a substantial pe­riod of time.  This implies that a pattern may contain gaps or lull pe­riods.  Defendant’s conduct began in August, 1989, and continued until his arrest in De­cember, 1989.  He then continued it again in March 1990.  The seven-month period from August 1989 to March 1990 was long enough to constitute “a sub­stantial period of time.” The court also found that defendant engaged in his fraud as a livelihood: during the seven-month period, he realized over $17,000 worth of merchandise, while his legiti­mate in­come was only $350.  U.S. v. Reed, 951 F.2d 97 (6th Cir. 1991).

 

6th Circuit holds that criminal livelihood guideline does not violate equal protection clause. (530) A con­victed credit card swindler argued that the criminal livelihood section (4B1.3), violates the equal protection clause be­cause an indi­gent defendant would receive a more severe sentence than someone who has other sources of in­come.  The 6th Circuit re­jected his argu­ment.  Relying upon the com­missions pro­posed amend­ment to § 4B1.3, the court held that the section does not unconsti­tutionally penalize a defendant based upon his or her wealth.  The § is not based upon financial status alone, but upon a pattern of criminal conduct from which a de­fendant de­rives a substantial portion of his in­come, which is indica­tive that the crimi­nal ac­tivity is the defendant’s primary source of in­come.  That the guide­line falls more heavily on indigents is but an ‘incidental effect’ of a le­gitimate scheme designated to “prevent re­cidivism by im­posing heavier penalties on criminals who make their living from crime.”  U.S. v. Luster, 889 F.2d 1523 (6th Cir. 1989).

 

6th Circuit holds that criminal livelihood sec­tion does not violate due process. (530) The 6th Circuit held that it is not unconstitutional under the due process clause for the guide­lines to consider a defendant’s financial back­ground under the criminal livelihood § (4B1.3).  Congress may ratio­nally conclude that a person who de­pends upon criminality for a living and has no other vo­cation is more likely to con­tinue his criminal ways than one for whom crime is an avo­cation.  There is nothing “arbitrary or unfair” in this sen­tencing scheme.  U.S. v. Lus­ter, 889 F.2d 1523 (6th Cir. 1989).

 

6th Circuit finds that credit card swindler was properly sen­tenced under the criminal liveli­hood section. (530) The 6th Circuit held that the application of the criminal livelihood sec­tion is a factual inquiry.  Here, it was not clearly erro­neous for the District Court to con­clude that the prior crimi­nal offense record of a credit card swindler constituted a pattern of criminal conduct.  Un­der appli­cation note 1, a pattern may be a single course of conduct or independent offenses.  In this case, the lat­ter existed.  Secondly, the Dis­trict Court’s findings that the defendant “derived a substan­tial por­tion of his in­come” from crimi­nal activity was not clearly erroneous.  The defendant had been able to docu­ment only that he made $500 dur­ing two months of 1988, in contrast to the $8,223,58 worth of goods and services he ob­tained as a result of credit card fraud.  Thus, both prongs of the criminal livelihood sec­tion were met and the defendant’s sentence was proper.  U.S. v. Luster, 889 F.2d 1523 (6th Cir. 1989).

 

7th Circuit finds criminal livelihood where defendant regularly stole from mail to support heroin habit. (530) Defendant stole mail to support a $100-$150 a day heroin habit. He challenged a § 4B1.3 criminal livelihood enhancement on the grounds that the government did not prove that he had stolen more than $8500 (2000 times the minimum wage) in the 12 months before his arrest. The Seventh Circuit upheld the enhancement based on evidence that defendant (a) had a heroin habit that cost between $100 and $150 per day, (b) had no legitimate income for the 12 months before his arrest and had held a job for only three months in the prior 11 years, and (c) had an extensive history in the mail theft business. The district court properly relied on this evidence to conclude that defendant stole the required amount from the mails that year to live and feed his drug habit. U.S. v. Taylor, 45 F.3d 1104 (7th Cir. 1995).

 

7th Circuit reviews criminal livelihood determina­tion un­der clearly erroneous standard. (530) The 7th Circuit found that whether defendant en­gaged in illegal gam­bling as a criminal livelihood is a finding of fact.  Therefore, it would accept a district court’s finding on appeal unless it was clearly erro­neous.  U.S. v. Rosengard, 949 F.2d 905 (7th Cir. 1991).

 

7th Circuit affirms that defendant engaged in ille­gal gam­bling as a criminal liveli­hood. (530) Defen­dant ad­mitted to his pro­bation officer that he had been in­volved in or­ganized gambling periodically throughout his life.  During his best year, he earned $40,000, and in some years he lost money.  His tax re­turns for 1984 through 1988 re­flected an adjusted gross income in ex­cess of $24,000 for each year.  He held a nongambling job prior to 1984, but eventually quit, and be­cause “really didn’t know anything else [he] could do,” he went back into organized gam­bling in 1985.  The 7th Circuit affirmed a de­termination under guideline section 4B1.3 that defendant engaged in criminal conduct as a liveli­hood.  Given defen­dant’s income tax re­turns and job history from the years 1984 to 1988, the dis­trict judge could have rea­sonably found that defendant de­rived a sub­stantial portion of his income from illegal gam­bling or that his income from gambling ex­ceeded $6,700 in any 12-month period.  In addition, defen­dant admitted that he hoped to be successful enough to re­tire.  U.S. v. Rosengard, 949 F.2d 905 (7th Cir. 1991).

 

7th Circuit holds criminal livelihood determi­nation must be based on net income. (530) In this habeas corpus action, de­fendant claimed ineffective assistance of counsel because coun­sel failed to present evi­dence at the sentencing hearing that during defendant’s five-month crime spree, he had le­gitimate gross income of $400 per month, rather than $150 as the court believed.  Defendant had received a two-level en­hancement under guideline § 4B1.3 for de­riving a sub­stantial portion of his income from a pattern of criminal conduct.  Defendant fraudulently used a credit card to obtain $8178 worth of merchandise, which he sold for $1000.  The 7th Circuit held that under guideline § 4B1.3, the de­fendant’s net income, rather than gross income, is the rele­vant figure for both legitimate and criminal sources of in­come.  The object of § 4B1.3 is to distin­guish the pro­fessional from the amateur crimi­nal on the basis of the ex­tent to which a defen­dant derives his livelihood from his criminal as opposed to his legal activities.  “And livelihood is a matter of net rather than gross income.”  Lee v. U.S., 939 F.2d 503 (7th Cir. 1991).

 

8th Circuit applies criminal livelihood provision to possessor of numerous fraudu­lent credit cards. (530) The 8th Cir­cuit affirmed the application of sec­tion 4B1.3, the criminal livelihood provision, to in­crease defendant’s base offense level.  It was evident from the vast number of credit cards, cash cards and driver’s licenses in defendant’s pos­session that he had devised an extensive scheme to use these cards to fraudulently ob­tain money.  De­fendant’s previous convictions for forgery, possession of stolen property and theft by check dated back to 1981, thus estab­lishing a long pattern of fraudulent ac­tivity.  There was sufficient evidence that de­fendant earned $8,500 (2,000 times the $4.25 hourly minimum wage) from his scheme during the last year.  The PSR de­tailed numerous transactions that totaled losses over $20,000.  Even without the $8,000 transaction con­tested by defendant, $12,000 could be attributed to him.  Finally, defendant had no steady source of in­come, and admitted he had a gam­bling addiction.  U.S. v. Morse, 983 F.2d 851 (8th Cir. 1993).

 

8th Circuit reaffirms that criminal livelihood guideline ap­plies only if defendant earns over federal minimum wage. (530) Following its opinion in U.S. v. Nolder, 887 F.2d 140 (8th Cir. 1990), the 8th Circuit found that in order for the criminal livelihood § 4B1.3 to ap­ply, the defendant must earn more than the federal mini­mum wage, $6,700 over the course of a year, from his criminal activity.  U.S. v. Manuel, 912 F.2d 204 (8th Cir. 1990).

 

8th Circuit reverses criminal livelihood find­ing for lack of “pattern of prior criminal ac­tivity.” (530) The bulk of defen­dant’s criminal history related to prostitution and theft-re­lated offenses, not to forgery, which was the pre­sent offense.  The 8th circuit pointed out that “[s]ection 4B1.3 was not in­tended to punish in­dividuals who are merely frequent of­fenders; rather, it was designed to punish the defendant whose current crime was part of a larger pat­tern of illegal pecuniary activities.”  Thus the court said that “even if the defendant has en­gaged in a life of crime to earn her liveli­hood, there must be a link between her present of­fense and her prior activity for § 4B1.3 enhancement to be war­ranted.  The court re­manded the case to allow the district court to reex­amine the evidence in light of its opinion.  U.S. v. Oliver, 908 F.2d 260 (8th Cir. 1990).

 

8th Circuit holds that substantial involvement in activ­ity made it criminal livelihood. (530) The district court con­cluded that defendant engaged in a pattern of crimi­nal con­duct from which she made her livelihood.  On appeal, the 8th Circuit rejected defendant’s arguments that the phrase “pattern of criminal conduct” was am­biguous, that she was not a professional criminal, and that the section for criminal livelihood should not apply since the criminal activity oc­curred over a short period of time.  The 8th Circuit noted that the criminal activity lasted 8 months and took substan­tial planning, the de­fendant provided substantial assistance in the planning and that the defen­dants made approximately $16,000 per month from the criminal activity.  U.S. v. Hearrin, 892 F.2d 756 (8th Cir. 1990).

 

9th Circuit holds that phrase “substantial portion of his in­come” must be de­fined in rela­tive terms. (530) The criminal livelihood sec­tion of the guidelines, § 4B1.3, requires an offense level of not less than 13 if the de­fendant commit­ted an offense “as part of a pattern of criminal conduct from which he de­rived a substantial portion of his income.”  The Ninth Circuit held that the plain meaning of § 4B1.3 indicates that the phrase “a sub­stantial portion of his income” must be defined in relative terms.  Here the defendant’s 22 criminal history points established that he was involved in a “pattern of criminal conduct” for profit, with little or no le­gitimate in­come from employment.  Thus the money he re­ceived from transporting illegal aliens was a substan­tial por­tion of his in­come.  Judge Nelson agreed that substantial por­tion should be de­fined in relative terms but dissented on the ground that the income must at least reach the level of the minimum wage in or­der to qualify as “substantial.”  U.S. v. Munster-Ramirez, 888 F.2d 1267 (9th Cir. 1989).

 

9th Circuit holds “criminal livelihood” section does not apply where income is below mini­mum wage. (530) The 8th Circuit held that the phrase “substantial portion of his income” was adopted from the Dangerous Special Of­fender statutes, 18 U.S.C. § 3575(e)(2) and 21 U.S.C. § 849(e)(2).  These statutes define “substantial source of income” as an amount which ex­ceeds the yearly minimum wage and which exceeds half of the defendant’s declared adjusted gross income.  Accord­ingly, the same definition applies to the provision in the Criminal Livelihood guideline, § 4B1.3.  Here the de­fendant earned only $1,525 in the past year, in­cluding $450 from his criminal ac­tivities.  The court held, and the govern­ment agreed, that the Criminal Livelihood guideline should not have been applied in this case.  The sentence was re­versed.  U.S. v. Nolder, 887 F.2d 140 (9th Cir. 1989.

 

10th Circuit uses uncharged conduct to de­termine that de­fendant engaged in criminal conduct as a livelihood.  (530) Defendant en­tered into plea agree­ment under which the government agreed not to bring any fur­ther charges based on acts committed prior to De­cember 31, 1988.  Defendant argued it consti­tuted “further charges” for the government to advise the court at his sentencing hearing that defendant had committed the same crime al­most 100 times during a seven-to-eight month period prior to prose­cution.  The 10th Circuit found that this did not violate the plea agree­ment, and that it was proper for the district court to use this information to determine that defendant was en­gaged in a pattern of criminal conduct from which he made his livelihood.  The 10th Circuit also found that such seven-to-eight month period constituted “a substantial period of time.”  U.S. v. Salazar, 909 F.2d 1442 (10th Cir. 1990).

 

10th Circuit holds that criminal income of $6,700 is re­quired for criminal livelihood guideline. (530) Effective November 1, 1989, the application notes to U.S.S.G. § 4B1.3 define the term “engaged in as a liveli­hood” to mean that the defendant’s criminal income in any twelve-month period exceeded 2,000 times the hourly minimum wage, i.e. $6,700.  The 10th Circuit held that this amendment clarified, rather than altered the existing guide­line.  Ac­cordingly, for this and three addi­tional reasons, the 10th Circuit rejected rulings by the 6th and 9th Circuits, and agreed with the 3rd and 8th Circuits, that the $6,700 mini­mum is required even un­der the 1988 version of the crimi­nal livelihood guideline.  since the defendant here earned only $4,894.72 from his criminal activ­ity, it was improper to enhance his sen­tence under the criminal livelihood guide­line.  U.S. v. Irvin, 906 F.2d 1424 (10th Cir. 1990).

 

10th Circuit upholds “criminal livelihood” finding where de­fendant engaged in credit card fraud for 5 to 7 months. (530) The 10th Circuit held that “defendant’s well-organized criminal venture continuing for a period of ap­proximately five to seven months .ÿ.ÿ. fits within the definition of a pat­tern of criminal conduct” for purposes of the criminal liveli­hood section, 4B1.3.  The court pointed out that the appli­cation note to § 4B1.3 “explains that a pattern of criminal conduct may involve only a single course of con­duct.”  The sentence was va­cated on other grounds, however.  U.S. v. Irvin, 906 F.2d 1424 (10th Cir. 1990).

 

Pennsylvania District Court holds criminal livelihood provision does not deprive an indi­gent defendant of equal protection. (530) An indigent defendant chal­lenged the criminal livelihood provision of the guide­lines (§ 4B1.3) claiming that its reliance on a de­fendant’s lack of wealth rendered him sub­ject to a higher sentence than richer defen­dants would have re­ceiv­ed.  Even though poverty is not a suspect classifi­ca­tion, courts have a duty to scrutinize criminal statutes which penalize indi­gent defendants.  Applying a “funda­men­tal unfairness” test, the court held that this provi­sion did not deprive the defen­dant of equal protection.  Courts have always been free to consider a defendant’s financial re­sources in set­ting a sentence.  When that is viewed against a defen­dant’s pat­tern of crimi­nality and likeli­hood of committing future crimes, the provi­sion sur­vives.  Courts have no constitu­tional duty to strike down all statutes which fall more heavily on the indigent, espe­cially if the statute serves Congress’ goal of more severe sentences for recidi­vist criminals.  U.S. v. Kerr, 686 F.Supp. 1174 (W.D. Pa. 1988).

 

New York District Court holds guideline en­hancement for “professional crim­inal” not ap­plicable even when de­fendant admitted that he was one. (530) Section 4B1.3 provides for en­hancement of a sentence when a defen­dant commits an offense as part of a pattern of criminal conduct from which he de­rives a sub­stantial portion of his income.  The court held that the section was not applica­ble here.  Al­though the defendant’s small income from drug selling was a large (unspecified) portion of his tiny overall income, the govern­ment never in­troduced evi­dence that the de­fendant derived substantial income from his activities.  The defendant had $2.00 in his pos­session when ar­rested and admitted that he made most of his money sell­ing drugs.  But he also stated that he begged as well.  Because there was no evidence of “substantial in­come” in absolute terms, the enhancement was not war­ranted.  U.S. v. Rivera, 694 F.Supp. 1105 (S.D.N.Y. 1988).

Browse Contents

  • 100 Pre-Guidelines Sentencing, Generally
  • 110 Guidelines Sentencing, Generally
  • 150 Application Principles, Generally
  • 200 Offense Conduct, Generally
  • 400 Adjustments, Generally
  • 500 Criminal History, Generally
  • 550 Determining the Sentence
  • 700 Departures, Generally
  • 750 Sentencing Hearing, Generally
  • 780 Plea Agreements, Generally
  • 800 Violations of Probation and Supervised Release
  • 840 Sentencing of Organizations
  • 850 Appeal of Sentence (18 U.S.C. §3742)
  • 880 Habeas Corpus / 28 U.S.C. 2255 Motions
  • 900 – Forfeitures, Generally

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