Barrett v. United States
Decision
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Opinion of the Court
The Facts
Dwayne Barrett participated in an armed robbery that left a man dead. Federal prosecutors charged him under two overlapping firearm statutes: 18 U.S.C. §924(c), for using a firearm during a crime of violence, and §924(j), for causing death through that violation. He was convicted on both counts, creating the question of whether a single act can support two separate convictions.
The Issue
Whether Congress clearly authorized separate convictions under 18 U.S.C. §924(c)(1)(A)(i) and §924(j) for a single act that violates both provisions.
The government argued the statutes are separate offenses with different focuses, allowing cumulative punishments. Barrett argued that because the statutes share essential elements and describe the same conduct, the Blockburger presumption against multiple punishments applies unless Congress plainly expressed intent to override it, which he contended it did not.
The Rules
Criminalizes using, carrying, or possessing a firearm in connection with a federal crime of violence or drug trafficking crime. Triggers a mandatory minimum sentence of at least five years.
Prescribes different penalties when a §924(c) violation causes death. Authorizes the death penalty or life imprisonment when the underlying violation is murder. Contains no mandatory minimums.
Congress ordinarily does not intend to punish the same offense under two different statutes. The presumption against multiple convictions applies unless Congress plainly expressed a contrary intent.
When enacted, §924(c) made it a discrete offense to use or carry a firearm in connection with a predicate crime.
Interpreted §924(c) and §924(j) as separate offenses for which Congress authorized cumulative punishments. The Second Circuit relied on Lora to uphold dual convictions.
The Application
Section 924(c) has long been its own crime: using or carrying a firearm in connection with a drug trafficking offense or crime of violence triggers a mandatory five-year sentence. When Congress later added §924(j), it provided a different regime for fatal violations—no mandatory minimums, but the possibility of death or life imprisonment. The statute sits in two separate locations in the U.S. Code and operates independently. To understand whether Congress intended dual convictions, the Court had to interpret this structure against Blockburger.
The Blockburger test asks whether each statute requires proof of a fact the other does not. By that test, §924(c) and §924(j) define the same offense. The Court treats this as a presumption: Congress ordinarily does not intend multiple convictions for the same conduct. The presumption can be overcome, but only by plain language. Twice within §924(c) itself, Congress used "in addition to" language to make clear that some convictions were meant to stack. For example, §924(c)(1) says a conviction must be "in addition to the punishment provided for" the predicate offense. §924(c)(5) says the same. This "in addition to" language is clear evidence of intent to overcome Blockburger. But nowhere in §924 does Congress say §924(j) convictions can be imposed "in addition to" §924(c) convictions.
The government worried that if prosecutors chose §924(j), they might end up with lighter sentences than §924(c) would guarantee. But §924(j) was designed differently on purpose. Congress authorized maximum sentences instead of mandatory minimums, giving judges flexibility to account for the circumstances of each case. If prosecutors feared a §924(j) sentence would fall below §924(c)'s five-year floor, they could choose §924(c) instead. The statute gives prosecutors a menu, not a buffet. Allowing dual convictions would defeat that careful design.
The Conclusion
**The Supreme Court unanimously held that Congress did not clearly authorize two separate convictions for a single act violating both §924(c) and §924(j).** One act may spawn only one conviction. The Second Circuit's judgment allowing dual convictions was reversed.
The decision reaffirms Blockburger as a bedrock rule against punishing the same conduct twice. Congress can override it, but the Court will not infer that intent from silence or structural differences alone. If Congress wants cumulative punishments, it must say so plainly, the way it did elsewhere in §924. This case shows that federal criminal law still has rules, even when the government wants to stack charges.
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