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Petitioner Daniel Rutherford was convicted of two counts of using and carrying a firearm during a crime of violence, in violation of 18 U. S. C. §924(c). Petitioner Johnnie Carter was convicted of three §924(c) violations. At the time each was sentenced, a defendant convicted of two §924(c) counts was subject to a mandatory 25-year sentence for the second offense that would be "stacked" upon (i.e., run consecutively to) the first offense's mandatory penalty. That sentencing scheme resulted in a 32-year minimum sentence for Rutherford's §924(c) violations and a 57-year minimum sentence for Carter's violations. Years later, Congress passed the First Step Act of 2018, which eliminated the 25-year stacking requirement for first-time offenders. Rutherford and Carter do not qualify for the Act's reduced penalties because the amendment to §924(c) does not apply to defendants sentenced before the Act. In separate proceedings below, however, Rutherford and Carter each invoked the nonretroactive change to §924(c) as a basis for a sentence reduction under §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). Section 3582(c)(1)(A)(i) (commonly referred to as the "compassionate release" provision) allows a court to reduce a prisoner's term of imprisonment if the court finds, after considering the §3553(a) factors, that "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction" and that "such a reduction is consistent with applicable policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission." The courts below held that the nonretroactive change to §924(c) cannot serve as an "extraordinary and compelling" reason for a reduced sentence. The Third Circuit explained in Rutherford's case that the Commission's 2023 amended policy statement--which adds "Unusually Long Sentence" to the list of "extraordinary and compelling" reasons that might warrant compassionate release under certain circumstances, see USSG App. C, Amdt. 814--"conflicts with the will of Congress" expressed in the statute and thus "cannot be considered in determining a prisoner's eligibility for compassionate release." 120 F. 4th 360, 376. The Court granted certiorari in these consolidated cases to resolve the split of Circuit authority over whether the disparity created by a nonretroactive change to sentencing law is an "extraordinary and compelling reaso[n]" that warrants compassionate release.
Held: When Congress declines to make a sentencing amendment retroactive--as with the change to §924(c)--the resulting sentencing disparity cannot serve as an "extraordinary and compelling" reason that warrants a sentence reduction under 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). Pp. 8-17.
(a) The plain text of §3582(c)(1)(A)(i) empowers a district court to "reduce the term of imprisonment" if it finds, among other things, that "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction." §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). Under the ordinary meaning of the terms, "extraordinary and compelling" reasons are those that are especially unusual and convincing.
The disparity created by Congress's amendment to §924(c) does not satisfy this definition. Far from "extraordinary," nonretroactive amendments to criminal penalties are the norm. Changes to statutory penalties usually benefit only future offenders. When Congress deviates from the default by extending the revised penalties to defendants not yet sentenced, the "ordinary practice" is to "withhol[d] that change from defendants already sentenced." Dorsey v. United States,
As for "compelling": It is hard to see how Congress's deliberate decision not to extend newly reduced penalties to those already sentenced could be a convincing reason that warrants a sentence reduction. Congress decided to apply the lower prison sentences to some violators of §924(c) but not others, "reinforc[ing] its interest in finality and avoid[ing] burdening district courts with additional litigation." Hewitt v. United States,
(b) Petitioners' arguments to the contrary lack merit. While the terms "extraordinary" and "compelling" leave room for judgment, they are not so flexible as to encompass any consideration. Their meaning depends on context: A reason is "extraordinary" and "compelling" only if it is sufficiently unusual and convincing to "warrant" compassionate release. The disparity resulting from Congress's amendment to §924(c) is neither "extraordinary" nor "compelling"--rather it tracks ordinary sentencing practice and reflects Congress's deliberate choice to extend relief to some prisoners and not others.
Petitioners argue that because Congress empowered the Sentencing Commission to describe the grounds for compassionate release with only one express limitation--"[r]ehabilitation of the defendant alone shall not be considered an extraordinary and compelling reason," 28 U. S. C. §994(t)--Congress impliedly authorized the district court to consider all other relevant information. That argument fails because " '[t]he force of any negative implication . . . depends on context.' " NLRB v. SW General, Inc.,
Petitioners also note that courts ordinarily enjoy broad discretion to consider all relevant information when imposing or modifying a sentence. But petitioners skip a step. Before determining the extent of a reduction based on the §3553(a) factors, a court must first ensure that a movant is part of the "limited class of prisoners" who are "eligibl[e]" for such a reduction. Dillon v. United States,
Concepcion v. United States,
Finally, petitioners downplay the conflict between the Act and their interpretation of §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). The Act reflects Congress's choice not to extend relief on a categorical basis, but on their approach, a district court could treat the disparity between a pre- and post-Act sentence as one of at least two considerations that, taken together, warrant compassionate release. The implications of petitioners' argument are sweeping. Under the same logic, could a judge who believes that a mandatory minimum is unduly harsh treat the severity of the sentence as an "extraordinary and compelling reason" for compassionate release? Petitioners declined to rule out this possibility. Yet "[i]t is the legislature, not the Court, which is to define a crime, and ordain its punishment." United States v. Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76, 95. Treating the severity of a mandatory penalty as a reason for compassionate release rejects Congress's judgment that the punishment fits the crime. Petitioners' proposal--injecting other factors into the mix of extraordinary and compelling reasons--does not solve the problem. Pp. 11-15.
(c) Petitioners' contention that the Court's interpretation of §3582(c)(1)(A)(i) must yield to the Sentencing Commission's 2023 policy statement misunderstands the Commission's role. Congress empowered the Commission to "give meaning" to the compassionate release provision by identifying the circumstances that constitute "extraordinary and compelling" reasons for release. Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,
120 F. 4th 360, No. 24-860, affirmed.
Barrett, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Roberts, C. J., and Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, and Kavanaugh, JJ., joined. Sotomayor, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Kagan and Jackson, JJ., joined.
Opinion of the Court
608 U. S. ____ (2026)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
Nos. 24-820 and 24-860
DANIEL RUTHERFORD, PETITIONER 24-820 v. UNITED STATES JOHNNIE MARKEL CARTER, PETITIONER 24-860 v. UNITED STATESon writs of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[May 28, 2026]
Justice Barrett delivered the opinion of the Court.
A prison sentence, once imposed, usually cannot be modified by the district court. 18 U. S. C. §3582(b). But Congress has established several narrow exceptions to this rule. One exception--commonly referred to as "compassionate release"--permits the court to reduce a term of imprisonment if it finds, among other things, that "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction." §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). We consider whether the sentencing disparity created by Congress's nonretroactive change to §924(c)'s mandatory penalties can serve as an "extraordinary and compelling reaso[n]" that "warrant[s]" a reduction. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). We hold that it cannot.
I
A
Daniel Rutherford, petitioner in one of these consolidated cases, committed two separate robberies at gunpoint in 2003. A jury convicted him of several crimes, including two counts of using and carrying a firearm during a crime of violence, in violation of §924(c). At the time, a defendant convicted of two §924(c) counts was subject to a mandatory 25-year sentence of imprisonment for the second offense that would be "stacked" upon--that is, run consecutively to--the first offense's mandatory penalty (which, for Rutherford, was 7 years). See Deal v. United States,
Johnnie Carter, petitioner in the other case, received an even longer mandatory minimum under §924(c). In 2007, Carter participated in a string of armed bank robberies. Among other offenses, he was convicted of three §924(c) counts. Carter was sentenced to 70 years of imprisonment--57 of which came from his stacked §924(c) convictions.
Years after Rutherford and Carter were each sentenced, Congress passed the First Step Act of 2018, 132 Stat. 5194, "a landmark piece of legislation that changed the federal criminal-sentencing system in numerous respects," Hewitt v. United States,
Obviously, Rutherford and Carter--not to mention the many other similarly situated prisoners--would like the benefit of the Act's amendment to §924(c). As a rule, however, changes to sentencing statutes apply only to offenses committed after the statute's effective date. See Hewitt,
Rutherford and Carter acknowledge that they do not qualify for the reduced penalties. Nonetheless, each has invoked the Act as a ground for compassionate release under §3582(c)(1)(A)(i).
B
At this point, some background on the compassionate release provision is helpful. This provision, which was part of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, allows a district court to reduce a prison term "after considering the factors set forth in section 3553(a) to the extent that they are applicable" if the court finds that "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction" and that "such a reduction is consistent with applicable policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission." 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A). Congress did not specify what "extraordinary and compelling" reasons might warrant compassionate release. It did, however, authorize the Commission to promulgate policy statements that "describe what should be considered extraordinary and compelling reasons for sentence reduction, including the criteria to be applied and a list of specific examples." 28 U. S. C. §994(t). The Commission first issued an applicable policy statement in 2006 and amended it the following year to identify several " 'extraordinary and compelling' " reasons for compassionate release: " 'terminal illness' "; " 'permanent physical or medical condition' "; " 'deteriorating physical or mental health because of the aging process' "; " 'death or incapacitation of the defendant's only family member capable of caring for the defendant's minor child or minor children' "; and a catchall category for " 'other' " reasons not specifically enumerated, " '[a]s determined by the Director of the Bureau of Prisons.' " United States Sentencing Commission, Guidelines Manual Supp. to App. C, Amdt. 698 (Nov. 2011) (USSG). In 2016, the Commission streamlined the statement to recognize four categories of reasons: " 'Medical Condition of the Defendant,' " " 'Age of the Defendant,' " " 'Family Circumstances,' " and " 'Other Reasons.' " Id., Amdt. 799.
When Congress passed the First Step Act in 2018, it amended the compassionate release provision. While it left the "extraordinary and compelling" standard untouched, it opened a new procedural route for seeking a reduction. Originally, only the Bureau of Prisons could ask a district court to reduce a prisoner's sentence. The Act gives the prisoner greater agency: He may request that the Bureau file a motion on his behalf, and, if it declines or fails to do so within 30 days, he may file a motion himself. 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A). The Act also obligates the Bureau to take certain steps when a prisoner is diagnosed with a terminal illness or is mentally or physically unable to file his own motion. §§3582(d)(2)(A)-(B). For example, the Bureau must inform "the defendant's attorney, partner, and family members" about the defendant's condition and that they can file a sentence-reduction request on his behalf. Ibid.
The Commission lost a quorum shortly after the Act went into effect and did not update its policy statement to address these changes. Most Circuits held that the existing statement--which mentioned only motions filed by the Bureau--did not apply to motions filed by prisoners. See United States v. Andrews, 12 F. 4th 255, 259 (CA3 2021) (collecting cases); but see United States v. Bryant, 996 F. 3d 1243, 1247-1248 (CA11 2021) (applying the policy statement). So for this new class of motions, most courts interpreted the statute without input from the Commission.
They were soon forced into uncharted territory. Relevant here, courts faced a surge of motions from prisoners who invoked the Act's nonretroactive sentencing amendments as grounds for compassionate release. Most Courts of Appeals held that a nonretroactive amendment to a mandatory minimum cannot serve as an "extraordinary and compelling" reason for a reduced sentence.2 A minority, however, concluded that the disparity produced by such an amendment can justify a reduced sentence--at least when considered in combination with other factors.3
The Commission eventually regained a quorum, entered the fray, and sided with the minority. In 2023, it amended its policy statement to add a new category to the list of "extraordinary and compelling" reasons: "Unusually Long Sentence."4 See USSG App. C, Amdt. 814. Under this category:
" 'If a defendant received an unusually long sentence and has served at least 10 years of the term of imprisonment, a change in the law (other than an amendment to the Guidelines Manual that has not been made retroactive) may be considered in determining whether the defendant presents an extraordinary and compelling reason, but only where such change would produce a gross disparity between the sentence being served and the sentence likely to be imposed at the time the motion is filed, and after full consideration of the defendant's individualized circumstances.' " Ibid.
Three Commissioners voted against the amendment and accused the Commission of making "a seismic structural change to our criminal justice system without congressional authorization or directive." United States Sentencing Commission, Public Meeting Tr. 60 (Apr. 5, 2023).
C
Back to the cases at hand. After the First Step Act became effective, Rutherford moved for compassionate release. He argued that "extraordinary and compelling" reasons warrant a reduction because he had received an "unusually long sentence under a statutory provision that Congress has since found too punitive but has not made retroactively applicable." 2 App. in No. 23-1904 (CA3), p. 58. In addition, he noted that he suffered from obesity and hypertension, which rendered him more vulnerable to the COVID-19 virus.
While Rutherford's motion was pending, the Third Circuit held that the nonretroactive change to §924(c) cannot serve as an "extraordinary and compelling" reason for compassionate release. See Andrews, 12 F. 4th, at 260-262. The District Court then denied Rutherford's motion, and Rutherford appealed that ruling to the Third Circuit. While his appeal was pending, the Commission amended its policy statement, and Rutherford asked the Court of Appeals to consider the effect of this statement in the first instance.
The Third Circuit affirmed the District Court's denial of Rutherford's motion. See 120 F. 4th 360, 363 (2024). The court acknowledged that Congress had authorized the Commission to issue a policy statement fleshing out the meaning of " 'extraordinary and compelling' " reasons under §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). Id., at 375. But that statement, the court said, cannot "go beyond what Congress intended." Id., at 376. And as the Third Circuit had already explained in Andrews, it makes no sense to " 'construe Congress's nonretroactivity directive as simultaneously creating an extraordinary and compelling reason for early release.' " 120 F. 4th, at 376 (quoting Andrews, 12 F. 4th, at 261). Because the Commission's amended policy statement "conflicts with the will of Congress," the court held, it "cannot be considered in determining a prisoner's eligibility for compassionate release." 120 F. 4th, at 376.
Carter's case is similar. After the Commission amended its policy statement, he moved for a reduction under §3582(c)(1)(A)(i), arguing that his sentence is "unusually long" and that the Act created a " 'gross disparity' " between his original sentence and the one he would receive under the amended §924(c). 2 App. in No. 24-1115 (CA3), pp. 206-207. He also pointed to his strong family ties, rehabilitation, and good conduct while incarcerated as additional reasons for a reduction. Bound by Andrews, the District Court denied Carter's motion, and Carter appealed. While the appeal was pending, the Third Circuit decided Rutherford's case. Shortly thereafter, it summarily affirmed the denial of Carter's motion. See 2024 WL 5339852, *1 (Dec. 2, 2024).
The Circuits remain divided over whether the disparity created by a nonretroactive change to sentencing law, like the Act, can constitute an "extraordinary and compelling reaso[n]" that "warrant[s]" compassionate release.5 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). We granted certiorari in these consolidated cases to resolve the split.
II
Petitioners argue that the Third Circuit's decisions depart from the plain text of §3582(c)(1)(A)(i) and ignore binding guidance from the Sentencing Commission. We disagree. When Congress declines to make a sentencing amendment retroactive, the fact that a preamendment sentence is longer than it would have been postamendment is not an "extraordinary and compelling reaso[n]" that "warrant[s]" a sentence reduction. 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). Insofar as the Commission's amended policy statement maintains otherwise, it conflicts with the statute.
A
The compassionate release provision empowers a district court to "reduce the term of imprisonment" if it finds, among other things, that "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction." Ibid. The term "extraordinary" means "most unusual," "far from common," or "having little or no precedent." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 807 (1976); see 5 Oxford English Dictionary 614 (2d ed. 1989) ("[o]ut of the usual or regular course or order"). "Compelling," meanwhile, means "tending to convince or convert by or as if by forcefulness of evidence." Webster's Third New International Dictionary, at 463; see 3 Oxford English Dictionary, at 600 ("irresistible; demanding attention, respect"). Putting these definitions together, "extraordinary and compelling" reasons for compassionate release are those that are especially unusual and convincing.
The disparity created by Congress's amendment to §924(c) does not satisfy this definition. Far from "extraordinary," nonretroactive amendments to criminal penalties are the norm. "Ordinarily," we have explained, "statutory changes to federal penalties only benefit future offenders." Hewitt,
As for "compelling": It is hard to see how Congress's deliberate decision not to extend newly reduced penalties to those already sentenced could be a convincing reason that "warrant[s]" a reduction. 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). As we have explained, Congress decided to apply the lower prison sentences to some violators of §924(c)--those for whom a sentence had not yet been imposed--but not others. §403(b), 132 Stat. 5222. In doing so, Congress "reinforced its interest in finality and avoided burdening district courts with additional litigation." Hewitt,
It would also fall well outside the heartland of compassionate release, which has long been defined by a prisoner's personal circumstances. After Congress enacted §3582(c)(1)(A)(i), the Bureau of Prisons explained that the standards for compassionate release mirrored those of a prior sentence-reduction statute and that "[r]eleases have been most often applied in cases where the inmate is terminally ill." 59 Fed. Reg. 1238 (1994); see 28 CFR §572.40(a) (1984) (providing that the Bureau would move for a sentence reduction under 18 U. S. C. §4205(g) (1982 ed.) "in particularly meritorious or unusual circumstances," such as "if there is an extraordinary change in an inmate's personal or family situation or if an inmate becomes severely ill"). The Act's heightened procedural requirements are similarly tied to personal circumstances: The Bureau must provide extra assistance to a movant diagnosed with a terminal illness or who is physically or mentally unable to submit a request on his own. §3582(d)(2) (2018 ed.). And from 2007 until 2023, the Sentencing Commission highlighted essentially three grounds for compassionate release: (1) medical condition, (2) age, and (3) family circumstances.6 See USSG §1B1.13, comment., n. 1 (Nov. 2021).
We need not decide whether there are reasons beyond personal circumstances that could qualify as "extraordinary and compelling." Until very recently, no one thought that nonretroactive sentencing amendments were among them.7 They are not.
B
Petitioners, echoed by the dissent, insist that our reading artificially limits the text. The terms "extraordinary and compelling," they say, are " 'comprehensive and flexible,' " requiring a " 'case-by-case' inquiry into the 'totality of the circumstances.' " Brief for Petitioner Rutherford 15, 17; see Brief for Petitioner Carter 41. And under this " 'flexible, all-things-considered approach,' " a judge may consider the disparity resulting from Congress's amendment to §924(c). Brief for Petitioner Rutherford 17; see post, at 7-8 (opinion of Sotomayor, J.).
While the terms "extraordinary" and "compelling" leave room for judgment, they are not so flexible as to encompass any consideration. Their meaning depends on context: A reason is "extraordinary" and "compelling" only if it is sufficiently unusual and convincing to "warrant" compassionate release. 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i); see Fernandez v. United States, ___ U. S. ___, ___, and n. 4 (2026) (slip op., at 10, and n. 4). As we have explained, the disparity resulting from Congress's amendment to §924(c) tracks ordinary sentencing practice and reflects Congress's deliberate choice to extend relief to some prisoners and not others. Thus, the disparity is neither an "extraordinary" nor a "compelling" reason that warrants a reduction in sentence.
Both petitioners and the dissent note that when Congress empowered the Sentencing Commission to describe the grounds for compassionate release, it included only one express limitation: "Rehabilitation of the defendant alone shall not be considered an extraordinary and compelling reason." 28 U. S. C. §994(t). By ruling out just one reason, they argue, Congress impliedly authorized the district court to consider all other relevant information. Post, at 11-12.
This argument fares no better. We have repeatedly emphasized that " '[t]he force of any negative implication . . . depends on context.' " NLRB v. SW General, Inc.,
So too with §994(t). By addressing rehabilitation, Congress did not impliedly bless all other considerations. Instead, it had a particular reason--namely, past sentencing practice--to single out this factor. Before the Sentencing Reform Act, "[b]oth indeterminate sentencing and parole were based on concepts of the offender's possible, indeed probable, rehabilitation, a view that it was realistic to attempt to rehabilitate the inmate and thereby to minimize the risk that he would resume criminal activity upon his return to society." Mistretta v. United States,
And in petitioners' telling, the list is long. They emphasize that when imposing or modifying a sentence, a district court ordinarily enjoys "broad discretion to consider all relevant information" unless prohibited by the Constitution or by Congress. Concepcion v. United States,
Petitioners skip a step. Before determining the extent of a reduction based on the §3553(a) factors, a court must first ensure that a movant is part of the "limited class of prisoners" who are "eligibl[e]" for such a reduction. Dillon v. United States,
Concepcion v. United States,
Finally, petitioners downplay the conflict between the Act and their interpretation of §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). True, Congress chose not to reduce §924(c) penalties on a categorical basis for already sentenced defendants. But petitioners' approach is not categorical: The disparity between a pre- and post-Act sentence would serve as just one of at least two considerations that, taken together, warrant compassionate release. And reducing a sentence based on an all-things-considered judgment, petitioners argue, does not contradict Congress's decision to leave a class of offenders ineligible for a sentencing reduction. See also post, at 15-16.
The implications of this argument are sweeping. Indeed, its logic extends well beyond nonretroactive sentencing amendments to disagreement with the length of any punishment on the books. Take a judge who believes that a mandatory minimum is unduly harsh. Could she treat the severity of the sentence as an "extraordinary and compelling reason" for compassionate release? Petitioners refused to rule out this possibility at oral argument. Tr. of Oral Arg. 11-15, 44-49. Yet "[i]t is the legislature, not the Court, which is to define a crime, and ordain its punishment." United States v. Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76, 95 (1820). Treating the severity of a mandatory penalty as a reason for compassionate release rejects Congress's judgment that the punishment fits the crime.8 And petitioners' proposal--injecting other factors into the mix of extraordinary and compelling reasons--does not solve the problem. The Sixth Circuit put it well: "[A]dding a legally impermissible ground to three insufficient factual considerations does not entitle a defendant to a sentence reduction." United States v. Jarvis, 999 F. 3d 442, 444 (2021).
C
This brings us to the Sentencing Commission. Recall that Congress authorized the Commission to promulgate policy statements that "describe what should be considered extraordinary and compelling reasons for sentence reduction," 28 U. S. C. §994(t), and provided that any grant of compassionate release must be consistent with the Commission's policy statements, 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A). Recall, too, that the Commission's current policy statement allows consideration of nonretroactive legal changes in certain circumstances. Petitioners contend that our interpretation of the statute must yield to the policy statement.
Petitioners misunderstand the Commission's role. Congress has empowered the Commission to "give meaning" to the compassionate release provision by identifying the circumstances that constitute "extraordinary and compelling" reasons for release. Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,
We need not nail down the precise boundaries of the phrase "extraordinary and compelling" to conclude that "with regard to the particular dispute in [this] case," the statute's language "has a plain and unambiguous meaning." Robinson v. Shell Oil Co.,
* * *
Compassionate release is available only when a court finds that "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant" a sentence reduction. 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). The disparity that results from Congress's decision to leave a sentence untouched cannot serve as one of those reasons. The judgments of the Third Circuit are affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Sotomayor, J., dissenting
608 U. S. ____ (2026)
Nos. 24-820 and 24-860
DANIEL RUTHERFORD, PETITIONER 24-820 v. UNITED STATES JOHNNIE MARKEL CARTER, PETITIONER 24-860 v. UNITED STATESon writs of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[May 28, 2026]
Justice Sotomayor, with whom Justice Kagan and Justice Jackson join, dissenting.
Congress directed the United States Sentencing Commission, not this Court, to define what constitutes "extraordinary and compelling reasons" for incarcerated individuals to receive a sentence reduction under the compassionate-release statute. In 2023, the Commission exercised its statutory authority and issued a policy statement that permitted district courts to consider sentencing disparities created by changes in law. Such disparities, the Commission specified, should be considered rarely and only as part of an inquiry into whether the totality of the circumstances warrant a reduction in a person's sentence.
Properly framed, the question presented by these cases is whether the Commission acted unreasonably when it issued that guidance. It did not. The Commission's policy statement is consistent with Congress's commands and centuries of legal practice in which courts look to the totality of the circumstances when deciding whether to modify a sentence. Because the Court concludes that the policy is unlawful, and that courts may never consider nonretroactive changes in law when deciding whether someone is eligible for compassionate release, I respectfully dissent.
I
A
In 2003, when he was 25 years old, petitioner Daniel Rutherford committed two armed robberies in which no one was hurt and during which he took a watch and roughly $1,300 worth of other jewelry and cash. He was convicted of two violations of 18 U. S. C. §924(c)(1). At the time, those violations together carried a mandatory minimum sentence of 32 years, to run consecutive to his sentence for the robberies. In total, Rutherford was sentenced to 42.5 years in prison. As two judges noted in Rutherford's direct appeal of his conviction, that sentence "would be unthinkable in many state systems." 236 Fed. Appx. 835, 845 (CA3 2007) (Ambro, J., joined by McKee, J., concurring).
In 2007, petitioner Johnnie Markel Carter and others robbed several banks and stole about $250,000. As with Rutherford's robberies, no one fired a gun and no one was hurt. Carter, who opted to go to trial, was convicted of three violations of §924(c) and later sentenced to a term of 70 years in prison, 57 of which were from mandatory minimums for the §924(c) violations. (Carter's co-conspirators, by contrast, took plea deals and received sentences ranging from 10 to 23 years.) For Carter, who was 29 years old at the time, the 70-year sentence was a de facto life sentence.
In the two decades since their convictions, both Rutherford and Carter have turned their lives around. Rutherford has completed over 50 educational courses and received only two minor infractions in the past decade. He also secured a job for after he is released, which would enable him to help support his deceased sister's five children.
Carter has, as the District Court put it, "become the kind of model prisoner that our system tries, but too often fails, to produce." 711 F. Supp. 3d 428, 440 (ED Pa. 2024) (case below). While in prison, Carter obtained a GED, completed vocational training programs, took parenting classes to improve his relationship with his adult children, maintained a perfect disciplinary record for the last eight years, and provided counseling and spiritual guidance to his fellow inmates.
B
In 2018, Congress passed the First Step Act and greatly reduced the mandatory minimum for first-time §924(c) offenders like Rutherford and Carter. Had the amendments been in effect when Rutherford was sentenced, he would have faced a 14-year mandatory minimum, less than half of the 32-year mandatory minimum he received. Carter would have been subject to a 21-year mandatory minimum, 36 years shorter than the 57-year mandatory minimum he received. Because Congress did not make its changes retroactive, Rutherford and Carter were not automatically eligible for sentence reductions based on those changes.
In the wake of the First Step Act, the United States Sentencing Commission in 2023 adopted §1B1.13(b)(6), a policy statement allowing courts, in limited circumstances, to consider sentencing disparities created by nonretroactive changes in law. Specifically, courts may grant relief based on such a change in law only when four requirements are met: (1) the defendant received an "unusually long sentence"; (2) the defendant has served at least 10 years of that sentence; (3) the disparity is "gross"; and (4) the district court has taken "full consideration of the defendant's individualized circumstances." USSG §1B1.13(b)(6) (Nov. 2025). Outside of those circumstances, "a change in the law . . . shall not be considered" for purposes of determining whether an "extraordinary and compelling reason exists" to reduce the sentence. §1B1.13(c).
Invoking this policy statement, Rutherford and Carter moved for compassionate release under 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A), which allows a district court to reduce an individual's term of imprisonment "if it finds that" "extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction" "after considering the factors set forth in section 3553(a) to the extent they are applicable." Rutherford and Carter argued that there are extraordinary and compelling reasons to reduce their sentences based on a combination of their remarkable personal circumstances as well as the fact that they would have received much shorter sentences under today's law. The District Courts, however, held that the Commission's policy statement is invalid and denied petitioners relief, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
II
The question now before the Court is whether the Commission permissibly exercised its delegated authority to permit courts to consider sentencing disparities created by nonretroactive changes in law, among other factors, in deciding compassionate release motions. Answering that question properly begins with Congress's express delegation of authority to "[t]he Commission" to define, in the first instance, "what should be considered extraordinary and compelling reasons for sentence reduction, including the criteria to be applied and a list of specific examples" through the "promulgati[on]" of "policy statements." 28 U. S. C. §994(t). This provision could hardly be clearer that the Commission has primary say over what qualifies as "extraordinary and compelling reasons for sentence reduction." Ibid.
A
Before 1984, federal judges had broad discretion when sentencing defendants. Statutes provided minimums and maximums for judges to work between, but within those ranges, judges could determine for themselves what sentence was appropriate. See Mistretta v. United States,
To address those disparities, Congress passed the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984. The Act created the United States Sentencing Commission, which Congress tasked with studying federal sentencing and promulgating the Sentencing Guidelines. 28 U. S. C. §994(a). The Guidelines instruct judges on how to sentence defendants, including how to account for different factual circumstances like the defendant's background, the seriousness of the defendant's conduct, and more, within the context of the considerations set forth in 18 U. S. C. §3553(a). See 28 U. S. C. §§991(b), 994(f ), 994(m).1
Congress gave the Commission an important policymaking role in the compassionate-release context as well. Under the statute, district courts can grant compassionate release and reduce a defendant's sentence if they find that there are "extraordinary and compelling reasons" for doing so. 18 U. S. C. §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). Congress neither specified what constitutes "extraordinary and compelling reasons" for relief nor told district courts how to determine if such reasons exist. It entrusted the Commission with those responsibilities instead, instructing district courts that any grant of relief must be "consistent with applicable policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission." §3582(c)(1)(A).
Congress tasked the Commission with issuing "general policy statements regarding . . . the appropriate use of " compassionate release. 28 U. S. C. §994(a)(2)(C). Congress also required the Commission to "describe what should be considered extraordinary and compelling reasons for sentence reduction, including the criteria to be applied and a list of specific examples." §994(t). The only limit Congress imposed was that "[r]ehabilitation of the defendant alone shall not be considered an extraordinary and compelling reason." Ibid.
B
Congress's express delegation of authority to the Commission limits this Court's role in these cases. Congress often "authorize[s]" agencies "to exercise a degree of discretion." Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,
The Sentencing Reform Act does all those things. It instructs the Commission to issue guidance on the "appropriate use of " compassionate release. §994(a)(2)(C). It also directs the Commission to give meaning to statutory terms and fill up the details of the statutory scheme by "describ[ing] what should be considered extraordinary and compelling reasons for sentence reduction," identifying "the criteria to be applied," and providing "a list of specific examples." §994(t).
When a statute expressly delegates authority to an agency in this way, "[a] reviewing court is not free to set aside" the agency's actions "simply because it would have interpreted the statute in a different manner." Batterton,
In short, under the statutory scheme that Congress created, the Commission has the leading role of defining the words "extraordinary and compelling" and thus setting the scope of compassionate release. This Court, by contrast, has the more modest role of ensuring that the Commission does not act unreasonably.
III
With that division of labor in mind, the Court should have upheld the Commission's policy statement because the Commission acted reasonably when it construed the terms "extraordinary and compelling" to permit courts to consider sentencing disparities caused by changes in law only in narrow circumstances and only as part of a holistic inquiry. The Commission's policy statement falls well within the expansive scope of the terms "extraordinary" and "compelling" and is consistent with longstanding judicial practices, which Congress did not alter here.
A
Start with the terms "extraordinary" and "compelling." Rather than imposing any bright-line limits on courts' discretion to consider or weigh information, these terms invite open-ended, fact- and context-specific inquiries into the totality of the circumstances in individual cases to determine whether they rise to an unusual level. In other words, whether a given set of reasons is "extraordinary and compelling" as applied to a particular defendant's case is a question of degree, not of kind.
This Court's cases interpreting similarly broad terms across different contexts support this understanding. This Court has opined that it is "impossible to anticipate and define every situation that might" qualify as involving "extraordinary circumstances" that warrant federal interference with an ongoing state criminal prosecution. Kugler v. Helfant,
Given the difficulty in defining with precision what makes something "unusual," this Court has held, in the sentencing context, that such determinations fall within district courts' discretion. In Koon v. United States,
The Commission's policy statement fits comfortably within these capacious parameters. To start, the Commission requires courts to take "full consideration of the defendant's individualized circumstances." USSG §1B1.13(b)(6). Individuals also must meet three other discrete criteria, including that they are serving an "unusually long" sentence and are facing a "gross" (i.e., unusually large) sentencing disparity. Ibid. Even if all those criteria are met, the Commission's policy statement does not require courts to grant relief. A court can grant relief only if it concludes that there are extraordinary and compelling reasons after taking in all relevant information about a defendant's specific circumstances. Ibid.
The majority's chief rejoinder is that nonretroactive changes in law are "the norm." Ante, at 9. True, but so too are many of the other developments that the majority agrees may support compassionate release. Everyone ages. Everyone falls ill. Everyone loses family members and loved ones. These realities are, unfortunately, also "the norm." Yet all agree that courts may properly consider a defendant's age, physical health, and family circumstances when determining whether to grant compassionate release. See ante, at 10. That concession reflects the basic reality that facts which are ordinary in isolation can nonetheless combine to form an extraordinary whole. Accordingly, the key question is not whether any one reason for granting relief is extraordinary or compelling on its own or in the abstract, but whether a defendant's circumstances, taken together, are so extraordinary and compelling as to warrant reducing his sentence. Because answering that question calls for a full assessment of the totality of the circumstances and all relevant information, the words "extraordinary and compelling" do not themselves bar district courts from ever considering nonretroactive changes in law.
Statistics also undercut the majority's suggestion that the Commission's policy statement permits relief in ordinary cases. Almost no one has received relief under the Commission's criteria. There are currently over 130,000 individuals serving sentences for federal convictions. United States Sentencing Commission, QuickFacts: Individuals in the Federal Bureau of Prisons (May 2025), https:// www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/research-and-publications/ quick-facts/BOP_2025.pdf (archived at https://perma.cc/ K2QS-JCR5). In Fiscal Year 2024, defendants moved for compassionate release 3,015 times nationwide. United States Sentencing Commission, Compassionate Release Data Report, FY 2024, Table 2 (Mar. 2025), https://www. ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/research-and-publications/ federal-sentencing-statistics/compassionate-release/FY24Compassionate-Release.pdf (archived at https://perma.cc/ FQE2-W57L). District courts granted relief under §1B1.13(b)(6) for sentencing disparities caused by any change in law (not just the changes to 18 U. S. C. §924(c)) just 98 times. Compassionate Release Data Report, Table 10. That small number suggests that §1B1.13(b)(6) has not opened the floodgates to sentence reductions in unexceptional cases.
B
Longstanding tradition, which Congress has not disturbed, also supports the Commission's policy statement.
For centuries, courts have enjoyed "broad discretion to consider all relevant information at an initial sentencing hearing, consistent with their responsibility to sentence the whole person before them." Concepcion v. United States,
In light of this centuries-old tradition, if Congress wishes to restrict what courts may consider at sentence-modification proceedings, it must say so expressly. "The only limitations on a court's discretion to consider any relevant materials at an initial sentencing or in modifying that sentence are those set forth by Congress in a statute or by the Constitution." Id., at 494. (All agree that the Constitution does not expressly bar consideration of nonretroactive changes in law.) When Congress is silent, this Court infers that Congress did not intend to limit sentencing courts' discretion because "Congress is not shy about placing such limits where it deems them appropriate" and has " 'shown that it knows how to direct sentencing practices in express terms.' " Id., at 494, 497 (quoting Kimbrough v. United States,
A compassionate-release proceeding, in which a court decides whether to reduce a defendant's sentence (and if so, by how much), is obviously a sentence-modification proceeding. Changes in law are also plainly relevant to a court's determination: The fact that a defendant would be eligible for a significantly lower sentence for the same conduct today due to a change in law undoubtedly could inform a court's decision as to whether it should reduce his sentence. Allowing courts to consider this information, then, is consistent with courts' traditional discretion.
Congress's words here do not limit courts' discretion as to what they may consider. As explained, the words "extraordinary and compelling" do not foreclose the approach the Commission adopted in §1B1.13(b)(6). Congress's delegation to the Commission, moreover, contained just one express restriction: "Rehabilitation of the defendant alone shall not be considered an extraordinary and compelling reason." 28 U. S. C. §994(t). That restriction, however, does not bar courts from considering rehabilitation in conjunction with other facts and evidence. Nor does it bar the Commission from allowing courts to consider evidence of rehabilitation alongside other facts, as the Commission has done. See USSG §1B1.13(d). That specific restriction thus poses no limit on what evidence courts may consider, and in fact confirms that Congress knows how to limit compassionate-release practices explicitly when it wants to.
The majority tries to downplay Congress's treatment of rehabilitation by analogizing to a conversation with a dietitian. Ante, at 12. An instruction from a dietitian not to eat pasta alone, the majority says, is not a "license" to eat unhealthy food, so Congress's express limit on rehabilitation, the majority reasons, "did not impliedly bless all other considerations" either. Ibid. This analogy misses the mark. Unlike a judge who enters a sentence-modification proceeding assuming she may consult all relevant information not expressly excluded by law, see Kimbrough,
Congress's instructions to the Commission are much the same. An instruction not to grant compassionate release based on rehabilitation alone is not a prohibition against considering any other type of evidence. Instead, courts may consider all relevant information, as they have always done, see Concepcion,
IV
The majority disagrees with the Commission's judgment, forgetting that this Court "is not free to set aside" the Commission's policy statement "simply because it would have interpreted the statute in a different manner," Batterton,
A
First, the majority argues that considering nonretroactive changes in law was, "[u]ntil very recently," unprecedented. Ante, at 10. Far from it. Again, courts have for centuries considered all relevant evidence at sentence-modification proceedings, and sentencing disparities like those created by nonretroactive changes in law are relevant information. See Concepcion,
The majority offers a counter-tradition, claiming that the "the heartland of compassionate release" "has long been defined by a prisoner's personal circumstances," such as his physical health. Ante, at 10. It is certainly true that personal circumstances feature prominently in compassionate-release proceedings. Even so, nothing in the statute's text confines courts to considering only personal circumstances, and "[t]he only limitations on a court's discretion to consider any relevant materials" in a sentence-modification proceeding "are those set forth by Congress in a statute or by the Constitution." Concepcion,
Nor does historical practice supply a personal-circumstances limit. The parties have identified only two published opinions in which district courts reduced a sentence under the predecessor to the compassionate-release statute, which was in effect from 1976 to 1984. In one of those two decisions, the District Court reduced a defendant's sentence not based on the personal circumstances of the defendant, but rather because of the disparity between the defendant's sentence and those of his codefendants. See United States v. Diaco, 457 F. Supp. 371, 372, 376 (D NJ 1978); see also United States v. Banks, 428 F. Supp. 1088, 1089-1090 (ED Mich. 1977) (granting relief under predecessor statute "upon careful review of the prisoner's record," including evidence of rehabilitation).
Further, this Court has also acknowledged that, apart from a defendant's personal circumstances, compassionate release might be appropriate to reduce a sentence to account for later legal developments. In fact, in Setser v. United States,
B
Without a foothold in the compassionate-release statute or its history, the majority looks for one in the First Step Act instead. According to the majority, Congress's decision not to make its changes to §924(c) retroactive means that it intended to preclude consideration of those changes in all cases as part of an individualized compassionate-release determination. That argument badly overreads the First Step Act.
To start, Congress's decision not to make its changes retroactive simply means that Congress did not intend for every person who committed §924(c) offenses prior to the First Step Act's passage to be automatically eligible for relief. See ante, at 14 ("True, Congress chose not to reduce §924(c) penalties on a categorical basis"). By making that one choice, however, Congress did not also decide that sentencing disparities created by those changes should never be considered in deciding compassionate-release motions. Indeed, Congress amended the compassionate-release statute in the First Step Act as well, so Congress easily could have specified that its nonretroactive changes should not be considered in compassionate-release determinations, just as it previously limited consideration of rehabilitation. See Concepcion,
The majority would have a point if the Commission instructed courts to grant relief based solely on a nonretroactive change in law; such an approach would amount to granting relief on a categorical basis, which would be in tension with the categorical nonretroactive nature of Congress's amendments here. The Commission's guidance, however, permits consideration of changes in law only when the disparity is "gross," the sentence is "unusually long," and the defendant has served at least 10 years of his sentence. §1B1.3(b)(6). It also requires courts to give "full consideration of the defendant's individualized circumstances" while weighing any change in law. Ibid. That individualized approach is consistent with Congress's judgment that prior §924(c) offenders are not automatically entitled to relief, and in no way countermands Congress's more general decision not to make the First Step Act's amendments retroactive for each and every §924(c) offender.
Take petitioners as examples. Neither is seeking relief based solely on Congress's nonretroactive changes to §924(c). Instead, they argue that they are entitled to a reduction because of the change in law in addition to their remarkable changed personal circumstances. To be clear, it may well be that neither Rutherford nor Carter would be found by a district court to be entitled to compassionate release even after taking account of sentencing disparities. Nevertheless, they are at least entitled to full consideration of their cases in view of all relevant information. Affording them that individualized analysis is fully consistent with Congress's judgment that a change in law does not automatically entitle them to relief.
Even the Government agrees that individualized analysis is consistent with Congress's intent at least at one step of the compassionate-release analysis. Once a defendant establishes extraordinary and compelling reasons, the Government concedes that courts may consider a sentencing disparity created by nonretroactive changes in law when weighing the §3553(a) factors to decide how much to reduce a defendant's sentence. See Brief for United States 37; see also 18 U. S. C. §3553(a)(6) (listing "the need to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities" as one factor the court "shall consider"). The majority maintains that considering sentencing disparities is impermissible at the first step because it is a "distinct analytical step that imposes independent and ascertainable limits on access to compassionate release." Ante, at 14.
This attempt at statutory surgery does not cure the problem. For one thing, §3582(c)(1)(A)(i) does not clearly mandate that the two steps be hermetically sealed off from one another. It specifies only that a court "may reduce [a] term of imprisonment . . . , after considering the factors set forth in section 3553(a) to the extent that they are applicable, if it finds that . . . extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant such a reduction." §3582(c)(1)(A)(i). This text in no way dictates the majority's precise, two-step sequencing in which courts undertake two different inquiries while feigning ignorance of the other. That text just as easily means that courts should decide if there are extraordinary and compelling reasons for relief "after considering" the §3553(a) factors. Indeed, it is obvious, and conceded, that at least some of the §3553(a) factors are salient at both stages. For instance, one of the §3553(a) factors is "the history and characteristics of the defendant," §3553(a)(1), which includes the defendant's personal circumstances. If courts can consider personal circumstances at both steps of the analysis, see ante, at 10 (describing "personal circumstances" as "the heartland of compassionate release"), it is not clear why they cannot also consider sentencing disparities at both steps as well.
In any event, even assuming Congress intended to impose a rigid, two-step process, it is hard to "see how a court may be thought to subvert congressional intent by considering nonretroactive changes to the law at the 'extraordinary and compelling' stage of the analysis but not while weighing the §3553(a) factors." United States v. Ruvalcaba, 26 F. 4th 14, 32 (CA1 2022) (Barron, J., concurring). "[I]f Congress truly intended to bar district courts from considering [the First Step Act's] changes to mandatory minimums in the compassionate release context by making the changes non-retroactive, then it is doubtful those changes should be considered at all." United States v. Chen, 48 F. 4th 1092, 1099 (CA9 2022). It also remains that, no matter how the Court may try to slice it, a compassionate-release proceeding is a "sentence-modification proceeding," and courts have long enjoyed broad discretion to consider relevant information in such proceedings unless Congress expressly says otherwise. Concepcion,
In the end, the majority is unable to explain why exactly the Commission's case-by-case approach is inconsistent with Congress's categorical nonretroactivity decision. See ante, at 14-15. After acknowledging that it is "[t]rue" that Congress merely made a judgment about categorical retroactivity, the majority takes aim at something different altogether: mandatory minimums. See ibid. In the majority's view, permitting holistic consideration of all relevant evidence, including changes in law, would also permit judges to grant relief based on their personal view that a mandatory-minimum sentence is too harsh. Ante, at 15.
Those fears are unfounded. A judge's policy disagreement with a statutory mandatory minimum is not, and has never been, a relevant consideration at sentencing. Although district courts may disagree with the nonbinding Sentencing Guidelines " 'based solely on policy considerations,' " they are "constrained by the mandatory minimums Congress prescribed" by statute regardless of their policy views. Kimbrough,
Reflecting that norm, §3553(a) does not permit judges to consider their own personal policy preferences when imposing an initial sentence or reducing a sentence through a compassionate-release motion. Nor does it allow judges to weigh whether they think that Congress mandated the right punishment for a given crime. It does, however, instruct judges to consider sentencing disparities, §3553(a)(6), including those created by nonretroactive changes in law. That instruction is perfectly consistent with courts' longstanding discretion to consider all relevant information, including changes in law, when resentencing a defendant. See Concepcion,
In addition, no evidence supports the specter that the majority invokes. District judges around the country routinely impose mandatory-minimum sentences in tens of thousands of cases every year, as it is their oath-bound duty to apply the laws of the United States. See 28 U. S. C. §453. There is no evidence that these same district judges are routinely granting compassionate release as an end run around mandatory minimums. In Fiscal Year 2024, the Commission received information regarding 61,678 cases in which a criminal defendant was sentenced. United States Sentencing Commission, QuickFacts on Mandatory Minimums 1 (2024), https://www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/ research-and-publications/quickfacts/Quick_Facts_Mand_ Mins_FY24.pdf (archived at https://perma.cc/5Q4L-9G3Z). Of all individuals sentenced that year, 15.9% faced a mandatory minimum at sentencing. That same year, judges granted compassionate release just 481 times in total on any ground (including under §1B1.13(b)(6)) and denied it 2,534 times. Compassionate Release Report, Table 20. Compassionate release is not the loophole to mandatory minimums that the majority fears.
Even if a district court were to start using compassionate release as an opportunity to usurp Congress's role and elevate its own policy preferences, the Government could appeal those outlier grants of compassionate release to the courts of appeals and, if necessary, to this Court. If a systemic solution were necessary, the Commission could issue another policy statement or Congress could enact legislation to prevent misuse of the compassionate-release statute. The solution is not, however, for this Court to conjure categorical limitations on courts' discretion that neither Congress nor the Commission imposed.
* * *
The majority is right on one point: The extraordinary-and-compelling analysis is indeed subject to "independent and ascertainable limits." Ante, at 14. Yet one need only read the Commission's policy statement to determine those limits. The majority nevertheless searches high and low for other statutory limits on what courts may consider when deciding compassionate-release motions. Because the Commission's narrow, limited guidance is consistent with what Congress has previously said and with what courts have previously done, I respectfully dissent.
*Together with No. 24-860, Johnnie Markel Carter v. United States, on certiorari to the same court.
See Andrews, 12 F. 4th, at 260-262; United States v. McMaryion, 2023 WL 4118015, *2 (CA5, June 22, 2023); United States v. Jarvis, 999 F. 3d 442, 443-444 (CA6 2021); United States v. Thacker, 4 F. 4th 569, 573-575 (CA7 2021); United States v. Crandall, 25 F. 4th 582, 583 (CA8 2022); United States v. Jenkins, 50 F. 4th 1185, 1197-1200 (CADC 2022).
See United States v. Ruvalcaba, 26 F. 4th 14, 24-28 (CA1 2022); United States v. McCoy, 981 F. 3d 271, 284-288 (CA4 2020); United States v. Chen, 48 F. 4th 1092, 1094-1101 (CA9 2022); United States v. McGee, 992 F. 3d 1035, 1045-1048 (CA10 2021).
In addition, the Commission added the fact that a prisoner was a victim of abuse while in custody as an "extraordinary and compelling" reason. See USSG App. C, Amdt. 814 (Nov. 2023). This change is not at issue in today's cases.
Most Courts of Appeals that previously answered this question in the negative have determined that they are not bound by the Sentencing Commission's contrary amendment to its policy statement. See 120 F. 4th 360, 378-380 (CA3 2024) (case below); United States v. Austin, 125 F. 4th 688, 692 (CA5 2025); United States v. Bricker, 135 F. 4th 427, 435 (CA6 2025); United States v. Black, 131 F. 4th 542, 545-546 (CA7 2025); United States v. Johnson, 2025 WL 1949738, *2 (CA8, July 16, 2025). But see United States v. Wilson, 77 F. 4th 837, 841-842 (CADC 2023) (reserving this question because the amendment had not yet gone into effect).
The Commission also recognized that "[o]ther [r]easons" could qualify, "[a]s determined by the Director of the Bureau of Prisons." USSG §1B1.13, comment., n. 1. The Bureau is responsible for the housing and care of prisoners, 18 U. S. C. §4042(a), so it is well positioned to identify "other reasons" based on a prisoner's personal circumstances. By contrast, it plays no role in the sentencing process and lacks expertise in that area. See Fernandez v. United States, ___ U. S. ___, ___ (2026) (slip op., at 12).
Petitioners argue otherwise, but the cases they cite do not involve nonretroactive sentencing amendments. See United States v. Diaco, 457 F. Supp. 371, 372 (NJ 1978) (reducing a prisoner's sentence under 18 U. S. C. §4205(g) (1982 ed.) after his codefendants received significantly lower sentences); Setser v. United States,
The dissent tries to escape this dilemma by arguing that the severity of a mandatory minimum is not a "relevant consideration" under §3553(a). Post, at 18. But the dissent is conspicuously silent about why, on its logic, a district court could not credit this fact as an "extraordinary and compelling" reason why a prisoner is eligible for a reduction. If there is no restriction on the "kind[s]" of reasons that qualify, post, at 8, then the severity of a mandatory penalty should be fair game too. And whether district courts will ever "routinely" rely on this consideration is beside the point. Post, at 19. A district court is never free--even in an individual case--to reject a punishment that Congress has required.
Although this Court later held that the Guidelines are not mandatory, see United States v. Booker,
The majority points out that these examples "do not involve nonretroactive sentencing amendments." Ante, at 11, n. 6. True, but the point is that these past examples undercut any argument that historical practice confined "extraordinary and compelling" reasons to those involving a defendant's personal circumstances.
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No. 24-820
Argued: November 12, 2025
Decided: May 28, 2026
Court: United States Supreme Court
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