Unreported / Non-Citable
Background
Lonnie Everill pleaded guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi to receipt of child sexual-abuse material in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2) and (b)(1). The district court sentenced him to 120 months’ imprisonment.
At sentencing, the district court applied a two-level enhancement under U.S. Sentencing Guidelines § 2G2.2(b)(3)(F) for knowing distribution of child pornography. Everill challenged that enhancement on appeal, arguing the district court erred in applying it to his case.
The Court’s Holding
The Fifth Circuit affirmed the 120-month sentence. Writing per curiam, the panel assumed without deciding that the district court clearly erred in applying the § 2G2.2(b)(3)(F) distribution enhancement, but concluded that any such error was harmless. The court found that the government had met its burden of demonstrating harmlessness on the record before it.
The court relied on its prior decision in United States v. Ibarra-Luna, 628 F.3d 712 (5th Cir. 2010), which governs the harmless-error standard for Guidelines calculation mistakes in the Fifth Circuit. Because any error did not affect the ultimate sentence in a meaningful way, reversal was not warranted.
Key Takeaways
- The Fifth Circuit declined to resolve whether the § 2G2.2(b)(3)(F) knowing-distribution enhancement was properly applied, instead disposing of the appeal on harmless-error grounds.
- Under Ibarra-Luna, a Guidelines calculation error requires reversal only if the government cannot show the error was harmless — here, the government carried that burden.
- A guilty-plea conviction for receipt of child sexual-abuse material under 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2) resulting in a 120-month sentence was left undisturbed.
Why It Matters
This decision is a reminder that even colorable Guidelines calculation challenges will not automatically result in resentencing in the Fifth Circuit. When the record supports a finding that the disputed enhancement did not drive the ultimate sentence, appellate courts can affirm without reaching the merits of the enhancement’s applicability.
For defense practitioners, the case underscores the importance of building a clear record at sentencing showing that a contested enhancement was outcome-determinative — otherwise, harmless-error doctrine may foreclose relief on appeal regardless of whether the enhancement was correctly applied.