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No. 10732117
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Gregory Bonnie v. Warden Dunbar
No. 10732117 · Decided November 5, 2025
No. 10732117·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
November 5, 2025
Citation
No. 10732117
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 24-6665
GREGORY ALLEN BONNIE,
Petitioner - Appellant,
v.
WARDEN DUNBAR,
Respondent - Appellee.
-------------------------------------------------------
DUE PROCESS INSTITUTE; NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CRIMINAL
DEFENSE LAWYERS,
Amici Supporting Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at Florence.
David C. Norton, District Judge. (4:23-cv-01215-DCN)
Argued: September 10, 2025 Decided: November 5, 2025
Before NIEMEYER, WYNN, and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge
Quattlebaum joined. Judge Wynn wrote a dissenting opinion.
ARGUED: Patricia Louise Richman, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC
DEFENDER, Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellant. Kimberly Varadi Hamlett, OFFICE OF
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THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Charleston, South Carolina, for Appellee. ON
BRIEF: John L. Warren III, LAW OFFICE OF BILL NETTLES, Columbia, South
Carolina, for Appellant. Adair F. Boroughs, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee. Timothy W.
Grinsell, HOPPIN GRINSELL LLP, New York, New York, for Amici Due Process Institute
and National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
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NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
To promote the release of prisoners who possess a reduced risk of recidivism and
thus reduce the federal prison population, Congress enacted Title I of the First Step Act of
2018 (“FSA”), which incentivizes qualified federal prisoners to participate in and complete
“recidivism reduction programs or productive activities” and thereby earn various benefits,
including generous jail-time credits. 18 U.S.C. § 3632. The FSA, however, denies the
particular benefit of jail-time credits to any prisoner “serving a sentence for a conviction
under” 68 specified laws, including 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), which punishes “possession or use
of a firearm during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime.” Id.
§ 3632(d)(4)(D)(xxii); id. § 924(c).
Gregory Bonnie is serving a 144-month sentence in a federal prison camp in South
Carolina, 120 months of which is attributable to convictions for drug trafficking offenses,
which are not disqualifying crimes for FSA time credits, and 24 months of which is
attributable to a conviction under § 924(c), which is a disqualifying crime. The Bureau of
Prisons (“BOP”) denied Bonnie’s request for FSA time credits as to his 120-month
sentence, treating his multiple prison terms “as a single, aggregate term of imprisonment,”
as required by 18 U.S.C. § 3584(c), and finding him ineligible because that aggregate
sentence includes imprisonment for violating § 924(c).
In his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, Bonnie
challenged the BOP’s decision, arguing that he is eligible to earn FSA time credits during
his service of the 120-month component of his sentence attributable to his convictions for
drug trafficking, even though he acknowledges that he cannot earn FSA time credits during
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his service of the 24-month component attributable to his § 924(c) conviction. The district
court denied his petition, concluding that Bonnie’s position is not supported by the texts of
the FSA and § 3584(c), and Bonnie appealed.
Because Bonnie’s multiple-term sentence includes a sentence for a disqualifying
conviction and is, by reason of § 3584(c), to be treated as a single aggregate sentence, we
conclude that Bonnie is ineligible for FSA time credits. We therefore affirm.
I
After Bonnie pleaded guilty in 2005 to drug trafficking, in violation of 21 U.S.C.
§§ 841 and 846, and possession of a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking
crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), the district court sentenced him on November 5,
2005, to 120 months’ imprisonment for his drug trafficking conviction and a consecutive
60 months’ imprisonment for his § 924(c) conviction, for a total of 180 months’
imprisonment. The court also required him to serve eight years of supervised release —
an eight-year term for his drug trafficking conviction and a concurrent five-year term for
his § 924(c) conviction.
Bonnie was released from prison in June 2017 and then began serving his terms of
supervised release.
While on supervised release, however, Bonnie again engaged in drug trafficking,
and he pleaded guilty to two drug trafficking crimes, as well as to violating the conditions
of his supervised release. On May 27, 2021, the district court sentenced him to 120 months’
imprisonment for his new drug trafficking convictions, revoked his November 5, 2005
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terms of supervised release, and sentenced him on the revocation to a consecutive term of
24 months’ imprisonment, for a total of 144 months’ imprisonment. The court committed
him to the custody of the BOP, which assigned him to serve his sentence at the Satellite
Prison Camp at FCI Williamsburg in Salters, South Carolina.
Several months later, while serving his sentence, Bonnie requested that the BOP
classify him as eligible to receive FSA time credits with respect to the 120-month portion
of his sentence, at the same time recognizing that the 24-month portion of his sentence for
violating supervised release on his 2005 convictions, including one under § 924(c), made
him ineligible for FSA time credits when serving that sentence. The BOP denied Bonnie’s
request, noting that “[m]ultiple terms of imprisonment ordered to run consecutively or
concurrently shall be treated for administrative purposes as a single, aggregate term of
imprisonment,” which, because he was sentenced in connection with his violation of
§ 924(c), required that Bonnie’s 144-month sentence be treated as ineligible for FSA time
credits. Bonnie thereafter exhausted his administrative remedies.
Bonnie filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the
district court, and the respondent Warden R.S. Dunbar filed a motion for summary
judgment, seeking dismissal of the petition. In a thorough 25-page opinion, the district
court granted Warden Dunbar’s motion and denied Bonnie’s petition. The court identified
the relevant question as whether the “24-month § 924(c) revocation sentence tainted the
separately imposed 120-month drug sentence such that Mr. Bonnie is ineligible to earn
FSA time credits for the entire 144-month sentence.” After conducting an analysis of 18
U.S.C. §§ 3623(d)(4)(D) and 3584(c), the district court concluded:
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In sum, the court finds that the plain text and statutory context of the FSA
indicate Congress’s intention that an inmate convicted of multiple offenses,
at least one of which is ineligible to earn time credits under the FSA, is
ineligible to earn time credits under the FSA because the BOP is statutorily
mandated to aggregate the sentence.
The court added, “Bonnie has offered no statute or caselaw to support a contrary
interpretation,” and it cited numerous decisions nationwide that have uniformly rejected
Bonnie’s interpretation.
From the district court’s judgment dated May 10, 2024, Bonnie filed this appeal.
II
Bonnie contends that, while he is concededly ineligible for FSA time credits when
serving his 24-month revocation sentence for violating § 924(c), he is nonetheless eligible
for the credits when serving his consecutive 120-month sentence for drug trafficking. As
he argues:
While Mr. Bonnie “is serving” the § 924(c) revocation sentence, he is
ineligible to earn time credits under the plain language of the FSA. But after
completion of that sentence, he will no longer be “serving a sentence” for an
ineligible conviction.
He asserts that the statutory text is clear, directing the “BOP to calculate credits on any
permitted sentence, and consecutive sentences are different sentences.” (Emphasis added).
Thus, he argues that § 3632(d)(4)(D) disqualifies “a sentence” and that the components of
a multiple-term sentence are to be treated distinctly, each as “a sentence.” He therefore
concludes that the district court erred in disqualifying him from FSA time credits during
his entire 144-month sentence. To make that argument, he relies mainly on the portion of
the FSA’s text referring to a single disqualifying sentence — “if a prisoner is serving a
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sentence for a conviction,” 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D) (emphasis added) — which, he
argues, requires that each sentence be assessed and applied separately.
Bonnie’s argument presents a question of statutory interpretation, which we review
de novo. See Rosemond v. Hudgins, 92 F.4th 518, 523 (4th Cir. 2024); United States v.
Thomas, 32 F.4th 420, 423 (4th Cir. 2022). And in construing a statute, we read it in the
context of its overall statutory scheme. See West Virginia v. EPA, 597 U.S. 697, 721
(2022). Thus, our focus is “to construe statutes, not isolated provisions.” King v. Burwell,
576 U.S. 473, 486 (2015) (cleaned up). With these principles in hand, we turn to the FSA.
Title I of the First Step Act of 2018, entitled “Recidivism Reduction,” requires the
Attorney General to develop a “risk and needs assessment system” to be used by the BOP
(1) to determine each federal prisoner’s “recidivism risk” and “risk of violent or serious
misconduct”; (2) to assign the prisoner to “appropriate evidence-based recidivism
reduction programs or productive activities”; and (3) to assess “when a prisoner is ready to
transfer into prerelease custody or supervised release.” 18 U.S.C. § 3632(a). And as an
incentive to induce prisoners to participate in and complete the programs, the FSA
authorizes the BOP to grant numerous benefits, including, among others, phone privileges,
additional visitation time, and, as relevant here, “time credits” to reduce prison time. Id.
§ 3632(d). The FSA time credits, which are awarded in addition to good time credits
earned pursuant to § 3624, are generous, giving prisoners “10 days of time credits for every
30 days of successful participation” in the programs and an “additional 5 days of time
credits for every 30 days of successful participation” for prisoners assessed to be “at a
minimum or low risk for recidivating.” Id. § 3632(d)(4)(A).
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The FSA is thus designed to identify prisoners with a lower risk of recidivating and
to reward them with time credits for completing programming, and also to identify
prisoners with a higher risk, who are not similarly rewarded. In line with these purposes,
the FSA categorically disqualifies any prisoner from receiving time credits if the prisoner
is serving a sentence for a conviction on any of 68 disqualifying crimes, including, as
relevant to this appeal, a § 924(c) conviction. 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D)(xxii).
Specifically, § 3632(d)(4)(D) provides: “A prisoner is ineligible to receive time credits . . .
if the prisoner is serving a sentence for a conviction under . . . § 924(c).” Id. (emphasis
added).
Bonnie parses the language of § 3632(d)(4)(D) to argue that his disqualification is
limited to the time he is serving his disqualifying sentence and that he should receive FSA
time credits when serving time for his non-disqualifying sentence. He reasons that the
disqualifying language is linked to “a sentence” for a particular disqualifying crime,
allowing him to earn credits for service of “a sentence” on any non-disqualifying crimes.
He reasons further that the “a sentence” language limits the disqualification to the time
while he is serving the disqualifying sentence. As he summarizes, “The FSA’s text is clear.
It directs BOP to calculate credits on any permitted sentence, and consecutive sentences
are different sentences.” Thus, he claims that while he “is serving” the § 924(c) revocation
sentence, he is ineligible to earn time credits under the plain language of the FSA. But
after the completion of that sentence, he will no longer be “serving a sentence for an
ineligible conviction.” (Internal quotation marks omitted).
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At the outset, we note that the provision categorically disqualifies a prisoner, not a
sentence, from receiving FSA time credits, defining such prisoner as one who is serving a
sentence for a disqualifying crime. The text provides that the “prisoner is ineligible to
receive time credits under this paragraph if the prisoner is serving a sentence for a
conviction under [§ 924(c)].” 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D). Thus, when the only sentence
that a prisoner is serving is for conviction of a disqualifying crime, he is categorically
ineligible to receive FSA time credits because Congress has determined that the conduct
underlying the crime predicts a high risk of recidivism.
Bonnie does not disagree with this understanding. Rather, he focuses on when a
prisoner is serving multiple terms of imprisonment, whether consecutive or concurrent, and
argues that each sentence must be treated separately. He thus reasons that he can receive
FSA time credits when he is serving the sentence for the drug trafficking crime, even as he
agrees that he cannot receive such credits when serving the sentence for the § 924(c)
conviction. This argument, however, overlooks 18 U.S.C. § 3584(c), which precludes
treating multiple-term sentences separately for administrative purposes. That statute,
enacted as part of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, provides:
Multiple terms of imprisonment ordered to run consecutively or concurrently
shall be treated for administrative purposes as a single, aggregate term of
imprisonment.
18 U.S.C. § 3584(c) (emphasis added). Both the BOP and the district court relied on the
mandate in that provision to reject Bonnie’s argument that his sentences should be assessed
individually. They concluded that because § 3584(c) requires that the BOP treat Bonnie’s
multiple sentences as components of a single aggregate sentence, his 144-month sentence,
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which, in part, is for a conviction under § 924(c), disqualified Bonnie. We agree, as the
language of § 3584(c) is clear.
Bonnie does not argue otherwise. Rather, he argues that § 3584(c) does not apply
at all because it is only applicable for “administrative purposes,” and, as he argues, the
BOP is not acting for administrative purposes in awarding FSA time credits. He maintains
that discretion is necessary for “administrative purposes” and explains that the award of
credits does not include a “broad delegation to the BOP to manage prisoners’ sentences”
so as to give it discretion. In this regard, he points to the FSA’s mandatory language that
the Attorney General must create the system for assessing prisoners, that the BOP must
assign prisoners to programs, and that the BOP must grant FSA time credits for prisoners
participating in and completing the programs.
This, however, reads “administrative purposes” far too narrowly. “Administration”
does not define only acts of discretion. Rather, it can cover any acts that execute
Congress’s will. After a court imposes a sentence, it must commit the defendant “to the
custody of the Bureau of Prisons until the expiration of the term imposed.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3621(a). And the BOP is then charged with selecting the place to incarcerate the
defendant and carrying out the incarceration and supervising it, which includes detaining
him, providing treatments for various conditions, providing programs, giving access to
medical care as needed, and, of course, implementing the risk and needs assessment
system. See id. § 3621(b), (e), (f), (h), (i). While all these requirements for implementing
the sentence and supervising custody of the prisoner are mandatory, they also involve
judgment and decisionmaking to give effect to the court’s sentence. But, regardless of the
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level of discretion involved, all are administrative functions. Indeed, what the BOP does
goes to the very heart of what is administrative — “to manage or supervise the execution,
use, or conduct of” something, here, a sentence. “Administrate, administer,” Merriam-
Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 16 (11th ed. 2020); see also United States v. Wilson, 503
U.S. 329, 335 (1992) (noting that the BOP is tasked with “the responsibility for
administering the sentence[s]” of federal offenders (emphasis added)). And indeed, the
Wilson Court held that the BOP determines good time credits as an administrative matter:
Because the offender has a right to certain jail-time credit . . . and because
the district court cannot determine the amount of the credit at sentencing, the
[BOP] has no choice but to make the determination as an administrative
matter when imprisoning the defendant.
Id. (emphasis added); see also United States v. LaBonte, 520 U.S. 751, 758 n.4 (1997).
Finally, we note that § 3632, which includes the BOP’s management of the FSA time
credits, is contained in Title 18, Chapter 229 of the United States Code, which is
denominated “Postsentence Administration.” See INS v. Nat’l Ctr. for Immigrants’ Rights,
Inc., 502 U.S. 183, 189 (1991) (recognizing that “the title of a statute or section can aid in”
textual interpretation); Project Vote/Voting for Am., Inc. v. Long, 682 F.3d 331, 337 (4th
Cir. 2012) (same).
We have no difficulty in concluding that the BOP’s implementation of the FSA time
credits system is “administrative,” as used in § 3584(c), and therefore that that provision
applies to Title I of the FSA.
Bonnie also argues that § 3584(c) should not apply to FSA time credits because
Congress did not explicitly quote the § 3584(c) language in the FSA while it did so in the
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Second Chance Act of 2007, which authorizes a home detention pilot program. He reasons
that because Congress chose to include such language in the Second Chance Act, its
omission from the FSA indicates Congress’s intent that § 3584(c) not apply to the FSA.
Thus, under Bonnie’s reading, § 3584(c) should be ignored unless it is explicitly quoted in
a statute to which it would otherwise apply, rendering § 3584(c) useless.
More indicative, however, is that a comparison of the FSA’s recidivism reduction
programs to the Second Chance Act of 2007’s home detention pilot program is quite inapt.
The Second Chance Act does not include a jail-time credit program based on a prisoner’s
conduct, as does the FSA. Indeed, sentences are not assessed and reduced with time credits
under the Second Chance Act, and the purpose and implementation of the home detention
program are not the same. Rather, it is a compassionate response program in which elderly
or terminally ill prisoners may be transferred to home confinement to complete their
sentences. See 34 U.S.C. § 60541(g).
Moreover, the original text of the Second Chance Act was drafted at a different time
— in 2007 — by a different Congress with different considerations in mind. And its
disqualifying language is of a different style. For instance, the Second Chance Act applies
to “an offender . . . who is serving a term of imprisonment that is not life imprisonment
based on conviction for an offense or offenses that do not include any crime of violence
. . . , sex offense . . . , or [other designated offenses].” 34 U.S.C. § 60541(g)(5)(A)(ii)
(emphasis added). On the other hand, the FSA, which was drafted in 2018, provides that
a “prisoner,” not an “offender,” is “ineligible if the prisoner is serving a sentence for a
conviction under any of the following provisions of law,” not for “offense or offenses.” 18
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U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D) (emphasis added). And while the Second Chance Act explicitly
provides that multiple terms of imprisonment are to be treated as a single aggregate term,
quoting the exact language of § 3584(c), see 34 U.S.C. § 60541(g)(5)(C), it does so in light
of the fact that § 3584(c), as a regulation relating to sentences, might not otherwise be
applicable because the Second Chance Act does not assess or change sentences. Rather, it
leaves the offender’s sentence in place and only authorizes a different location to serve it.
The FSA, on the other hand, does change sentences, and therefore § 3584(c)’s regulation
of sentences for administrative purposes would clearly apply.
Finally, even were we to take both the Second Chance Act and the FSA to be
comparable, the fact that Congress chose in 2007 to quote § 3584(c) within the provisions
of the Second Chance Act and did not do so in 2018 in the FSA cannot fairly lead to the
conclusion that Congress therefore intended that § 3584(c) not apply to the FSA, when its
terms are clearly applicable.
Making a similar argument, Bonnie contends that the BOP’s treatment of sentences
under a 1976 bilateral treaty with Mexico “is instructive.” The Treaty on the Execution of
Penal Sentences provides for the transfer of Mexican nationals serving certain sentences in
the United States to serve out their sentences in Mexico, and vice versa. See U.S.-Mex.,
Nov. 25, 1976, 28 U.S.T. 7399, art. I. The Treaty, however, does not apply to any “offense
under the immigration or the purely military laws of a party.” Id. art. II(4). In
implementing the Treaty when multiple offenses are involved, the BOP lets a Mexican
national serve the sentence for an immigration violation in the United States and then
transfers the Mexican national to Mexico to fulfill the remainder of his sentences. See BOP
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Program Statement 5140.42 (April 10, 2015). This practice simply implements the terms
of the Treaty, however, and is hardly relevant to a program for awarding good time or FSA
time credits, where the BOP is administering the sentence and to which § 3584(c)’s
aggregation provision is clearly applicable. Moreover, apart from the disqualified offenses,
the BOP does indeed aggregate sentences in implementing the Treaty, as required by the
implementing statute. See 18 U.S.C. § 4105(c)(4). That hardly helps Bonnie’s argument
that the BOP should not treat multiple sentences as a single aggregate sentence under
§ 3584(c).
In short, we conclude that § 3584(c) applies when construing § 3632 and thus directs
the BOP to treat multiple sentences as a single aggregate sentence for administrative
purposes, including the computation of FSA time credits. Bonnie is thus “serving a
sentence” in connection with his § 924(c) conviction, defined by § 3584(c) to be his
aggregate 144-month sentence. As such, he is ineligible for FSA time credits under
§ 3632(d)(4)(D).
Our interpretation of § 3632(d)(4)(D) also conforms, we believe, to the overall
purpose of Title I of the FSA, which is designed to identify certain prisoners for early
release — prisoners whom Congress has determined to be at low risk for recidivism and
violence — and to provide them benefits, while detaining high-risk prisoners based on their
elevated threat to recidivate. In distinguishing prisoners who are serving sentences for
convictions of crimes predicting a high risk of recidivism from prisoners who are serving
sentences for convictions of crimes not predicting a high risk of recidivism, the statute lists
68 crimes, any one of which, Congress has found, disqualifies the prisoner. Because
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recidivism is predicted by the nature of the crime, the conduct inherent in the crime is
critical to the FSA’s operation. Thus, in a case where the defendant has been convicted of
a multi-term sentence, if the defendant is incarcerated for conduct disqualifying him for
FSA credits, whether supporting his entire sentence or only a part, that conduct predicts,
as Congress has determined, that he has a high risk of recidivism and therefore is
disqualified from receiving FSA time credits. And that high risk is not eliminated by the
fact that the prisoner also committed a nondisqualifying crime. In short, the fact that the
prisoner committed a disqualifying crime predicts a high risk of recidivism, which is the
whole underlying basis for the FSA’s denial of FSA time credits.
Bonnie nonetheless urges us to apply the rule of lenity against BOP’s aggregation
of his sentences. But that rule does not fit here. It only applies when courts “can make no
more than a guess as to what Congress intended” and there is a “grievous ambiguity or
uncertainty in the statute.” Muscarello v. United States, 524 U.S. 125, 138–39 (1998)
(cleaned up). And we conclude that there is no such degree of doubt. Section
3632(d)(4)(D) disqualifies any prisoner who is serving a sentence for a conviction under
§ 924(c), and for determining whether Bonnie’s multiple-term sentence is such a
disqualifying sentence, § 3584(c) directs the BOP to treat such a multiple-term sentence
“as a single, aggregate term of imprisonment.” And we also conclude that there is no
grievous ambiguity or uncertainty that would render the rule of lenity applicable.
Finally, we note that every court that has considered the issue has reached the
conclusion that we reach here today. See Giovinco v. Pullen, 118 F.4th 527, 529 (2d Cir.
2024) (holding that inmate serving concurrent sentences for eligible and ineligible offenses
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was ineligible for FSA time credits); Teed v. Warden Allenwood FCI Low, No. 23-1181,
2023 WL 4556726, at *2 (3d Cir. July 17, 2023) (per curiam) (holding that BOP properly
aggregated multiple sentences for the administrative purpose of determining an inmate’s
FSA eligibility and term of imprisonment); Martinez v. Rosalez, No. 23-50406, 2024 WL
140438, at *4 (5th Cir. Jan. 12, 2024) (per curiam) (holding that inmate transferred under
bilateral treaty with Mexico was ineligible for FSA credit, where one of his multiple
sentences was ineligible under the FSA); Keeling v. Lemaster, No. 22-6126, 2023 WL
9061914, at *1 (6th Cir. Nov. 22, 2023) (holding that prisoner’s § 924(c) conviction
rendered him ineligible for his aggregate sentence); Sok v. Eischen, No. 23-1025, 2023 WL
5282709, at *1 (8th Cir. Aug. 17, 2023) (per curiam) (holding that BOP properly
aggregated multiple sentences under § 3584(c) for the purpose of calculating FSA time
credits). Were we to accept Bonnie’s interpretation, we would thus create an unfortunate
circuit split.
* * *
Because Bonnie is serving a revocation sentence for a conviction under 18 U.S.C.
§ 924(c) as a component of his single, aggregate 144-month sentence, he is ineligible for
FSA time credits under 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D)(xxii). We therefore affirm the district
court’s judgment denying Bonnie’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
AFFIRMED
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WYNN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Can a prisoner “serve” a 24-month sentence for 144 months? Of course not. The
proposition refutes itself. That obvious “no” answer should resolve this case. Yet to the
extent inventive judicial minds might conjure some uncertainty, Congress wisely
anticipated that far-fetched possibility. The text and purpose of the First Step Act—to enact
criminal justice reform, particularly by incentivizing prisoners to participate in recidivism
reduction programs—makes clear that Gregory Bonnie is entitled to accrue First Step Act
time credits for the eligible portion of his sentence.
I.
In 2004, Bonnie pleaded guilty to a drug-distribution-conspiracy offense under 21
U.S.C. § 841 and a related firearms-possession offense under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). In 2005,
he received a 120-month sentence on the drug conviction and a consecutive 60-month
sentence on the firearms conviction, along with a total eight-year term of supervised
release. He earned good-time credits while serving his sentences, which allowed him to be
released on supervision in June 2017.
In January 2019, Bonnie was again indicted on drug-related charges. He pleaded
guilty to two of the charges and, in April 2021, was sentenced to the mandatory minimum
of 120 months on both, with the sentences to run concurrently. That same month, the
district court revoked Bonnie’s supervised release for his 2005 convictions in light of the
new criminal charges and imposed two revocation sentences of 24 months each, to be
served concurrently with each other but consecutively to the 2021 drug sentences. He is
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currently in prison serving these 2021 sentences. With good-time credits, Bonnie’s
anticipated release date falls in January 2029.
The question posed by this case is whether Bonnie is eligible to potentially be
released even sooner by taking advantage of an additional category of “time credits”
available under the First Step Act of 2018. 1 The district court concluded that he is not. Our
review is de novo. Valladares v. Ray, 130 F.4th 74, 80 (4th Cir. 2025).
II.
“The First Step Act established a system of mandatory time credits for incarcerated
individuals who participate in recidivism reduction programming, with limited
exceptions.” Id. at 77. These “time credits can be applied toward earlier placement in pre-
release custody or supervised release.” Id. at 79 (citing 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(C)).
Specifically, the First Step Act states that “[a] prisoner, except for an ineligible prisoner
under [§ 3632(d)(4)(D)], who successfully completes evidence-based recidivism reduction
programming or productive activities, shall earn time credits” as prescribed in the statute.
18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(A). Section § 3632(d)(4)(D) clarifies that “[a] prisoner is ineligible
to receive time credits . . . if the prisoner is serving a sentence for a conviction under any
of the following provisions of law,” including, as relevant here, § 924(c). Id.
§ 3632(d)(4)(D), (d)(4)(D)(xxii).
1
It is undisputed that a prisoner can earn both First Step Act time credits and good-
time credits. See 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(6) (“The incentives described in this subsection
[including First Step Act time credits] shall be in addition to any other rewards or incentives
for which a prisoner may be eligible.”); id. § 3624(b) (describing good-time credits).
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It is undisputed in this case that Bonnie’s 24-month revocation sentence is ineligible
under § 3632(d)(4)(D) because the underlying 2005 case included a § 924(c) conviction. It
is also undisputed that his 120-month 2021 drug sentence would not, on its own, be
ineligible. The question is whether one ineligible conviction “taints” the total effective
sentence, such that Bonnie cannot earn First Step Act time credits during any of the 144
months he is currently serving. The district court joined a significant number of other courts
in concluding that it does. 2
With great respect for my colleagues on this panel and elsewhere on the bench, I
cannot agree. In my view, the text of the statute favors Bonnie’s interpretation. So I would
reverse and remand with instructions to grant Bonnie’s habeas petition and order the
Warden to allow Bonnie to earn First Step Act time credits while he is serving the eligible
120-month portion of his total effective sentence.
2
E.g., Giovinco v. Pullen, 118 F.4th 527, 529 (2d Cir. 2024), cert. denied, 145 S.
Ct. 1947 (2025); Colotti v. Peters, No. 25-1191, 2025 WL 1321386, at *2 (3d Cir. May 7,
2025) (per curiam); McNeill v. Ramos, No. 23-6488, 2023 WL 6442551, at *1 (4th Cir.
Oct. 3, 2023) (per curiam); Martinez v. Rosalez, No. 23-50406, 2024 WL 140438, at *3
(5th Cir. Jan. 12, 2024); Oiler v. LeMaster, No. 24-5033, 2025 WL 1864875, at *1 (6th
Cir. Jan. 10, 2025) (per curiam); Sok v. Eischen, No. 23-1025, 2023 WL 5282709, at *1
(8th Cir. Aug. 17, 2023) (per curiam). But cf. Hill v. King, No. 23-CV-1365, 2024 WL
5690795, at *1 (D. Minn. Oct. 7, 2024) (accepting the petitioner’s argument), report and
recommendation rejected, No. 23-CV-1365, 2025 WL 1020604, at *4, *6 (D. Minn. Apr.
7, 2025) (stating that if the court “were writing on a truly blank slate, it would likely accept
the [magistrate judge]’s recommended disposition and grant [the] petition,” but that it felt
constrained by circuit precedent and “the weight of the case law” to conclude otherwise);
Grigsby v. Gutierrez, No. 22-16180, 2023 WL 8711819, at *1 & n.2 (9th Cir. Dec. 18,
2023) (per curiam) (declining to resolve the question).
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A.
“When conducting statutory analysis, we must first determine whether the meaning
of the statute is ascertainable through the text alone. The plainness or ambiguity of statutory
language is determined by reference to the language itself, the specific context in which
that language is used, and the broader context of the statute as a whole. Employing various
grammatical and structural canons of statutory interpretation helps guide our reading of the
text. Our inquiry must cease if the statutory language is unambiguous and the statutory
scheme is coherent and consistent.” Valladares, 130 F.4th at 80–81 (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted).
As noted, the First Step Act provides that “[a] prisoner, except for an ineligible
prisoner under [§ 3632(d)(4)(D)], who successfully completes evidence-based recidivism
reduction programming or productive activities, shall earn time credits.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3632(d)(4)(A). But, per § 3632(d)(4)(D), “[a] prisoner is ineligible to receive [such] time
credits . . . if the prisoner is serving a sentence for a conviction under any of the
[enumerated] provisions of law.”
My colleagues make much of the fact that § 3632(d)(4)(D) speaks of “ineligible
prisoners,” asserting that “the provision categorically disqualifies a prisoner, not a
sentence.” Maj. Op. at 9. For support, they explain that “[t]he text provides that the
‘prisoner is ineligible to receive time credits under this paragraph if the prisoner is serving
a sentence for a conviction under [§ 924(c)].’” Maj. Op. at 9 (citing 18 U.S.C.
§ 3632(d)(4)(D)). Of course, the emphasis in that quotation of the statutory language is the
majority’s, not the statute’s. Indeed, the definition of an ineligible prisoner focuses on
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whether he “is serving a sentence for a[n ineligible] conviction,” pointing us right back to
the question of what sentence is being served. 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D). Simply declaring
that the statute “categorically disqualifies a prisoner” does not make it so. Maj. Op. at 9.
And if, under the majority’s view, a prisoner as an individual is categorically
disqualified from earning time credits, does that categorical disqualification persist in
perpetuity? Surely a prisoner who serves a sentence for a disqualifying crime is not
disqualified from earning First Step Act credits for any future criminal sentences for the
rest of his life; rather, he is disqualified if he “is serving” that sentence.
Before the Second Circuit, the Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) “acknowledge[d] that the
most natural reading of § 3632(d)(4)(D), standing alone, might render ineligible only the
individual sentence applicable to the ineligible offense.” Giovinco v. Pullen, 118 F.4th 527,
530 (2d Cir. 2024), cert. denied, 145 S. Ct. 1947 (2025). I agree: to state the obvious, a
prisoner is only “serving” a sentence for as long as the sentence may be served. Bonnie,
therefore, will only “serve” his revocation sentence for 24 months; for the other 120 months
of his total effective sentence, he will not be “serving a sentence for a conviction under”
an ineligible statute.
The Warden argues, however, that the First Step Act was enacted against the
background of another statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3584, which was enacted in 1984. Specifically,
§ 3584(c) states that “[m]ultiple terms of imprisonment ordered to run consecutively or
concurrently shall be treated for administrative purposes as a single, aggregate term of
imprisonment.” So, the Warden reasons, the BOP must treat Bonnie’s consecutive
sentences “as a single, aggregate term of imprisonment”—and thus Bonnie is “serving a
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sentence” for an ineligible conviction under the First Step Act for the entire 144 months.
Courts have generally adopted this view in rejecting similar challenges brought by other
prisoners.
That position, however, runs headlong into basic logic. A prisoner who receives
both a 24-month sentence and a 120-month sentence (whether consecutively or
concurrently) is not serving the 24-month sentence for the entirety of the period of
imprisonment, 3 regardless of whether the sentences are “aggregate[d]” “for administrative
purposes.” 18 U.S.C. § 3584(c). This is most apparent with a consecutive sentence like
Bonnie’s: even if the 24-month sentence is broken up into pieces throughout the aggregate
144-month sentence, at any given moment, Bonnie can legally only be serving one or the
other. But this logic holds true for a concurrent sentence, too, because—to state the
obvious—24 is less than 120. So, again, even if the 24 months are spread throughout the
120-month aggregate sentence, at any given moment of the concurrent sentences, the
prisoner is either serving both sentences (which he could only do for 24 months total) or
only the remaining 96 months of the longer sentence. How a sentence is treated for
administrative purposes might alter when a prisoner is serving one portion of his sentence
3
To be sure, the Dictionary Act provides that, “[i]n determining the meaning of any
Act of Congress, unless the context indicates otherwise[,] . . . words used in the present
tense include the future as well as the present.” 1 U.S.C. § 1. So, although § 3632(d)(4)(D)
refers to a prisoner who “is serving a sentence for” an ineligible conviction—using a form
of the present tense—that reference might be read to include a prisoner who will serve a
sentence for an ineligible conviction, such that if he has even one day left of the ineligible
sentence, he is ineligible. I am persuaded, however, that this is a situation where “context
indicates otherwise.” For one thing, the statute does not use the simple present tense, but
instead uses the present progressive tense, indicating an action that is occurring now. And
I think context otherwise supports that reading for all the reasons explained in this dissent.
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or another, but it does not change the fundamental fact that, on each specific day, he is
either serving a particular sentence, or he is not. Put simply, it is impossible to “serve” a
24-month sentence for 144 months.
The majority rejects Bonnie’s argument that § 3584(c) applies only for
“administrative purposes” and that awarding FSA time credits does not fall within that
category. Maj. Op. at 10. It explains that the BOP is tasked with “selecting the place to
incarcerate the defendant and carrying out the incarceration and supervising it,” tasks
which are comprised of “administrative functions.” Maj. Op. at 10–11. But even if we
accept that premise for the moment, why should that mean that the eligibility provision in
§ 3632—enacted years later, in the context of a major recidivism-reduction effort by
Congress—could not specify that sentences should be viewed differently to effectuate the
goals of that program? Particularly when that result seems the most natural from the text
of the statute, I am not convinced that we should reject that straightforward reading in favor
of applying a more general preexisting provision. Cf. D.B. v. Cardall, 826 F.3d 721, 735–
36 (4th Cir. 2016) (explaining the canon of statutory construction providing that the
specific terms of a statute defeat the general, absent indications of contrary legislative
intent).
Further, the Warden has not disputed Bonnie’s assertion—supported by a citation
to a BOP record—that BOP has the ability to “parse” prisoners’ sentences, and related
“period[s] of ineligibility and eligibility,” “down to the day.” J.A. 144; see J.A. 145. And
notably, First Step Act time credits are earned based on days of participation in applicable
programming. See 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(A) (providing that “[a] prisoner shall earn 10
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days of time credits for every 30 days of successful participation in evidence-based
recidivism reduction programming or productive activities,” and that certain low-risk
offenders “shall earn an additional 5 days of time credits for every 30 days of successful
participation” in such programming); Gonzalez v. Herrera, 151 F.4th 1076, 1082 (9th Cir.
2025) (“[E]arned time credits are an amount placed at a prisoner’s disposal—a store of
value (measured in days) that incarcerated individuals receive as a return for their
participation in qualified programs.”). There is thus no apparent reason why BOP could
not designate periods as eligible or ineligible for purposes of First Step Act time credits,
and then apply days of successful participation in relevant programming toward the 30-day
requirement during eligible periods.
B.
In addition to the basic logic of what it means to serve a sentence, the statutory
structure and the use of different language in another section of the First Step Act persuade
me that Bonnie has the stronger textual argument.
The structure of the statute supports reading it to favor greater eligibility. “The First
Step Act of 2018 may be the most significant criminal justice reform bill in a generation.”
Pulsifer v. United States, 601 U.S. 124, 155 (2024) (Gorsuch, J., dissenting) (cleaned up)
(quoting Brief for Sen. Richard J. Durbin et al. as Amici Curiae at 9, Terry v. United States,
593 U.S. 486 (2021)); accord Gonzalez, 151 F.4th at 1078 (describing the First Step Act
as a “transformative law with far-reaching implications that have yet to all be realized”).
As relevant to this case, the First Step Act created “a system to incentivize incarcerated
individuals to complete programs intended to reduce their risk of recidivism,” with a
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variety of incentives, including “the big one—time credits.” Gonzalez, 151 F.4th at 1078–
79.
Specifically, Title I of the First Step Act, which includes § 3632, is labeled
“Recidivism Reduction.” First Step Act of 2018, Pub. L. No. 115-391, § 101, 132 Stat.
5194, 5195. Section 3632 itself is labeled “[d]evelopment of risk and needs assessment
system” and requires the development of such a system to, among other things, “determine
the recidivism risk of each prisoner.” 18 U.S.C. § 3632(a)(1). It also mandates that this
system “provide incentives and rewards for prisoners to participate in and complete
evidence-based recidivism reduction programs,” including the time credits at issue here.
Id. § 3632(d).
Given the goal of reducing recidivism and incentivizing participation in recidivism
reduction programs, the structure of the statute supports reading it to favor greater
eligibility. See Gonzalez, 151 F.4th at 1088 (noting that, in light of the time-credits
provision’s purpose, “time credits should maintain utility as an incentive for prisoners to
continue programming, thereby reducing recidivism and the cost of managing the nation’s
incarcerated and supervised population,” but that the BOP’s “interpretation allows for
earned time credits to lose their worth as an incentive”).
We held as much in our recent decision in Valladares v. Ray. Rejecting an overly
stringent BOP interpretation of the time-credits provision, we explained that “Congress
passed the First Step Act to reform our criminal legal system and expand opportunities for
those who are incarcerated. But instead of granting [the petitioner] the opportunities for
which he was eligible, BOP adopted an untenable interpretation of the statute to bar [him],
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and others similarly situated, from earning time credits for participation in recidivism
reduction programming. In contravention of Congress’ command, BOP’s interpretation
strips defendants of the incentive to participate in these programs to better themselves and
attain the skills they need to be productive members of society. That contradicts the text of
the First Step Act.” Valladares, 130 F.4th at 85; see also Gonzalez, 151 F.4th at 1078
(rejecting yet another harsh BOP interpretation of the time-credits provision).
The same is true here: the full context of the First Step Act emphasizes leniency,
and the structure of the particular section at issue emphasizes reducing recidivism. The
Warden’s stingy interpretation of the time-credits provision undermines both statutory
goals.
“The interpretive canon that Congress acts intentionally when it omits language
included elsewhere” also strongly supports Bonnie’s interpretation in this case. Dep’t of
Homeland Sec. v. MacLean, 574 U.S. 383, 392 (2015). The First Step Act modified a
preexisting home-detention program to include “eligible terminally ill offenders,” which it
defined in 34 U.S.C. § 60541(g)(5)(D) as “an offender in the custody of the [BOP] who
. . . is serving a term of imprisonment based on conviction for an offense or offenses that
do not include” certain enumerated crimes. First Step Act, § 603, 132 Stat. at 5238–39
(codified at 34 U.S.C. § 60541(g)(1)(A), (5)(D)) (emphasis added). This definition
explicitly removes from eligibility someone with multiple offenses if even one of them is
disqualifying. Thus, the same Congress that enacted the First Step Act time-credits
program knew how to limit eligibility in a program if a prisoner had any disqualifying
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convictions—but chose not to use the same language in § 3632(d)(4)(D). 4 Because
“Congress knows how to write a law” limiting eligibility if a prisoner has any disqualifying
convictions—after all, “it did so with [§ 60541(g)(5)(D)]”—“Congress’s choice of words”
in § 3632(d)(4)(D) “necessarily indicates that earned time credits” are to be understood
differently. Gonzalez, 151 F.4th at 1084 (applying this rule in a different context); accord
Valladares, 130 F.4th at 83 (“Where ‘Congress includes particular language in one section
of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that
Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion.’”
(quoting Barnhart v. Sigmon Coal Co., 534 U.S. 438, 452 (2002)).
And it bears noting that, although the majority opinion correctly states that the
Second Chance Act was enacted in 2007, Maj. Op. at 12, including the eligibility provision
for elderly offenders, the eligibility provision disqualifying certain terminally ill offenders
from taking advantage of the home-detention program was added through the First Step
Act of 2018—that is, the same law that created the recidivism reduction program at issue
here. So the same Congress that excluded from the home-detention program a terminally
ill offender who “is serving a term of imprisonment based on conviction for an offense or
offenses that do not include” certain enumerated crimes, 34 U.S.C. § 60541(g)(5)(D)
(emphasis added), chose to exclude from the recidivism-reduction credits program a
4
Notably, this highly compelling difference in language does not appear to have
been discussed in any other case considering the question before us, limiting those cases’
persuasive force.
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prisoner who “is serving a sentence for a conviction under” enumerated laws, 18 U.S.C.
§ 3632(d)(4)(D) (emphasis added).
Moreover, the First Step Act’s divergent definitions in § 60541(g)(5)(D) and
§ 3632(d)(4)(D) were enacted against the backdrop of a preexisting definition in
§ 60541(g)(5)(C). That provision explicitly defines “term of imprisonment” as used in that
section using the same definition as § 3584(c), stating that it “includes multiple terms of
imprisonment ordered to run consecutively or concurrently, which shall be treated as a
single, aggregate term of imprisonment for purposes of [§ 60541].” 34 U.S.C.
§ 60541(g)(5)(C). If, as the Warden argued below, “[t]here was no reason for Congress to
say anything within [§ 3632(d)(4)(D)] about how consecutive sentences were to be
regarded by the BOP, because Congress had already said everything it needed to say within
§ 3584(c),” then the same would presumably be true for § 60541(g)(5)(C), and the
definition provided in that statute was superfluous. J.A. 258 (quoting Walton v. Fikes, No.
22-CV-1998 (JWB/TNL), 2023 WL 6283298, at *2 (D. Minn. Aug. 10, 2023), report and
recommendation adopted, No. CV 22-1998 (JWB/TNL), 2023 WL 6282897 (D. Minn.
Sept. 26, 2023)). Because “a competing interpretation would avoid superfluity,” “[t]he
canon against surplusage” may “be meaningful” here. Bufkin v. Collins, 604 U.S. 369, 387
(2025).
My colleagues urge that Congress included § 60541(g)(5)(C) to make explicit that
multiple terms of imprisonment are to be treated as a single aggregate term there, reasoning
that § 3584(c) might not otherwise apply to the home-detention program: “the Second
Chance Act does not assess or change sentences,” the majority explains, but rather
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“authorizes a different location to serve” a sentence. Maj. Op. at 13. So, the logic goes,
there is no superfluity even without accepting Bonnie’s interpretation of the statute. That
distinction is irrelevant. The crux of the matter is that both programs look at crimes of
conviction to determine eligibility. While one program explicitly makes an ineligible
conviction a total disqualifier, the other program does not. So even if that interpretive
distinction were compelling, it could not overcome the fact that the First Step Act Congress
enacted two different eligibility provisions with divergent language excluding different
individuals from taking advantage of statutory benefits. We must not assume that Congress
did so haphazardly.
The distinction between § 60541(g)(5)(D) and § 3632(d)(4)(D) is further
strengthened by Congress’ use of different terminology. In enacting the First Step Act,
Congress used “term of imprisonment” in the definition of “prisoner” (“a person who has
been sentenced to a term of imprisonment pursuant to a conviction for a Federal criminal
offense,” 18 U.S.C. § 3635(4)) as well as in § 60541(g)(5)(D) (“[a prisoner who] is serving
a term of imprisonment based on conviction for an offense or offenses that do not include
[certain offenses]”). But it used “sentence” in the time-credit provision in § 3632(d)(4)(D)
(“the prisoner is serving a sentence for a conviction under [certain offenses]”). As Bonnie
argues, this suggests that “Congress expressly distinguished between ‘a sentence’ for a
particular conviction and the overall ‘term of imprisonment.’” Opening Br. at 17.
True, the Second Circuit correctly pointed out that Congress itself used the terms
interchangeably in 1984 when it enacted § 3584(c), noting that “[t]he heading of § 3584 is
‘Multiple sentences of imprisonment’ and the caption of § 3584(c) is ‘Treatment of
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multiple sentence as an aggregate’ while § 3584(c) itself refers to ‘terms of
imprisonment.’” Giovinco, 118 F.4th at 532 n.2. And “[t]he title of a statute and the heading
of a section are tools available for the resolution of a doubt about the meaning of a statute.”
Yates v. United States, 574 U.S. 528, 540 (2015) (quoting Almendarez-Torres v. United
States, 523 U.S. 224, 234 (1998)).
Still, it is notable that these terms appear to be used differently across different
sections of the First Step Act of 2018, which of course was enacted decades later by a
different Congress. Typically, where a statute “has used one term in one place, and a
materially different term in another, the presumption is that the different term denotes a
different idea.” Sw. Airlines Co. v. Saxon, 596 U.S. 450, 457–58 (2022) (quoting A. Scalia
& B. Garner, Reading Law 170 (2012)). So the fact that § 3584(c) used the terms
interchangeably does not mean that the First Step Act—enacted 34 years later—also did.
Finally, the Second Circuit focused on the aggregation provision and “precedent
holding that the aggregation provision applies to other sentencing credit programs”—
specifically, “time-served credits (§ 3585), good-time credits (§ 3624), and residential
drug-abuse program credits (§ 3621).” Giovinco, 118 F.4th at 531–32. However, those
other programs are inapposite. Time-served credits are available to all prisoners, so there
is no need to evaluate the impact of different components of the sentence. 18 U.S.C.
§ 3585(b). Good-time credits are available to all prisoners serving “a term of imprisonment
of more than 1 year” unless their sentence is life, so aggregating sentences actually benefits
prisoners. Id. § 3624(b)(1).
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Further, that provision explicitly uses the phrase “term of imprisonment,” like the
aggregation provision, and explicitly falls under BOP’s administrative control. Id.
(“[Credits are] subject to determination by the Bureau of Prisons that, during that year, the
prisoner has displayed exemplary compliance with institutional disciplinary regulations.”).
And the residential drug-abuse program uses discretionary language (the period of custody
“may be reduced by the [BOP]”) that leaves eligibility determinations to BOP. Id.
§ 3621(e)(2)(B). Thus, none of the case law interpreting any of those provisions is relevant
to the question at hand.
At bottom, Bonnie’s view of the statute is much more persuasive. The statutory
emphasis on promoting rehabilitation, the use of different language in the terminally-ill-
offender provision, and the basic logic of what it means to “serve a sentence” counsel in
favor of agreeing with Bonnie that he will only “serve” the ineligible sentence for 24
months out of the aggregate 144 months.
C.
While the text and structure of the relevant statutory provisions compel the
conclusion that Bonnie’s interpretation is the sound one, it bears noting the peculiar—if
not outright absurd—consequences that flow from the majority’s reading. Under that
interpretation, Bonnie would be barred from earning First Step Act credits for his
otherwise-eligible 120-month sentence, while serving a mere 24-month ineligible
revocation term. This disparity is so illogical that it strains credulity to suggest Congress
intended it.
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And Bonnie’s case is hardly the outer limit of the absurdity: another court recently
found that a 2-month sentence for possession of a contraband cell phone in prison
disqualified an individual from earning First Step Act credits for the entirety of his separate
132-month sentence for drug conspiracy. See Hill v. King, No. 23-CV-1365, 2025 WL
1020604, at *6 (D. Minn. Apr. 7, 2025). So, a minor two-month offense rendered ineligible
a sentence sixty-six times longer—precisely the kind of irrational result Congress could not
have intended.
Those examples are troubling enough. But the majority’s interpretation threatens
consequences still more untenable. Consider a case in which an individual is sentenced to
decades in prison for an eligible offense, and only days for an ineligible one.
Worse still, the majority invites manipulation that undermines the very purpose of
the First Step Act recidivism reduction program. One district court, for example, recently
increased the sentence it imposed to account for potential reductions in prison time served
due to earned First Step Act credits—which the Second Circuit rejected as a stand-alone
sentence justification. United States v. James, 151 F.4th 28, 40–43 (2d Cir. 2025). Now,
the majority opens the door to similar gamesmanship by prosecutors, who may pursue
minor ineligible charges to preclude defendants from obtaining recidivism reduction
credits for substantial portions of their sentences. It is inconceivable that the Congress
which drafted the First Step Act—legislation designed to encourage rehabilitation—
intended its core incentive to be so easily nullified.
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III.
Great respect is due to the many judges—including my distinguished friends in the
majority—who have confronted this question and reached a different conclusion. But to be
sure, many of those judges did not have the benefit of counseled briefing for the petitioner,
and many considered the question under the now-displaced regime of Chevron deference.
In that pre-Loper Bright world, courts often yielded to agency interpretations that
strayed from statutory text. But when viewed anew—free of such deference and guided by
the words Congress actually enacted—the statute admits to one sensible reading: Bonnie’s
interpretation best accords with the text, structure, and purpose of the First Step Act.
For that reason, and with due respect to my colleagues, this opinion must part
company with the majority. I dissent.
33
Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 24-6665 Doc: 62 Filed: 11/05/2025 Pg: 1 of 33 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 24-6665 Doc: 62 Filed: 11/05/2025 Pg: 1 of 33 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
02DUE PROCESS INSTITUTE; NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CRIMINAL DEFENSE LAWYERS, Amici Supporting Appellant.
03(4:23-cv-01215-DCN) Argued: September 10, 2025 Decided: November 5, 2025 Before NIEMEYER, WYNN, and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges.
04Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge Quattlebaum joined.
Frequently Asked Questions
USCA4 Appeal: 24-6665 Doc: 62 Filed: 11/05/2025 Pg: 1 of 33 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
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