United States v. Herrerra Pena, No. 12-2289 (1st Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseDefendant was indicted for two counts of distribution of heroin. The indictment alleged that “death and serious bodily injury resulted from the use of such substance.” In federal prosecutions, under Alleyne v. United States, if the distribution of drugs is proven beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury to have been “death resulting,” a defendant will face a twenty-year mandatory minimum sentence. In this case, Defendant admitted all of the facts relevant to each count other than the “death resulting” allegations. Although the government did not prove to a jury that Defendant’s distribution of drugs resulted in death, the district court imposed the twenty-year mandatory minimum sentence, in violation of Alleyne. However, Alleyne was decided after sentencing and while the case was on appeal. The government asked the First Circuit Court of Appeals to depart from the usual practice of remanding for resentencing and instead to permit the prosecution on remand to empanel a sentencing jury to allow the government to prove that a death resulted from Defendant’s drug dealing. The First Circuit vacated the district court’s sentencing order and remanded for resentencing in the customary manner, holding that the government’s proposed course of action was foreclosed on the facts of this case.
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