Oglesby v. State , 441 Md. 673 ( 2015 )


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  • Dominik Oglesby v. State of Maryland
    No. 23, September 2014 Term
    Criminal Law - Sentencing - Rule of Lenity. To construe a sentencing provision
    of a criminal statute, a court looks to the text of the statute and applies the tools of
    statutory construction. If that effort does not resolve any ambiguity in the statute and
    the court is unable to discern the intent of the Legislature, it chooses between
    competing constructions by applying the rule of lenity and selects the interpretation
    more favorable to the defendant. When the statutory text is clear, or when the tools
    of statutory construction favor one reading of the statute, there is no occasion to apply
    the rule of lenity in derogation of legislative intent.
    Criminal Law - Firearms Offenses - Prosecutorial Discretion - Sentencing.
    The General Assembly has created two overlapping, but not identical, criminal offenses
    prohibiting individuals previously convicted of certain drug-related crimes from
    possessing certain types of firearms. One statute – the narrower and more recently
    created one – provides for a mandatory minimum period of five years incarceration,
    without the possibility of a suspended sentence or parole. The other statute provides
    for a maximum period of five years incarceration with the possibility of a suspended
    sentence and parole. Where a prosecutor has exercised discretion to charge the offense
    carrying the mandatory minimum penalty and the defendant is convicted of that
    offense, the defendant is subject to the penalty provided by that statute – the
    mandatory minimum sentence. Maryland Code, Public Safety Article, §5-133;
    Criminal Law Article, §5-622.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 111306016
    Argued: November 7, 2014
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 23
    September Term, 2014
    DOMINIK OGLESBY
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Barbera, C.J.
    Harrell
    Battaglia
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts,
    JJ.
    Opinion by McDonald, J.
    Filed: February 23, 2015
    When a court construes a criminal statute, it may invoke a principle known as
    the “rule of lenity” when the statute is open to more than one interpretation and the
    court is otherwise unable to determine which interpretation was intended by the
    Legislature. Instead of arbitrarily choosing one of the competing interpretations, the
    court selects the interpretation that treats the defendant more leniently. The rule of
    lenity is not so much a tool of statutory construction as a default device to decide which
    interpretation prevails when the tools of statutory construction fail.
    In this case, Appellant Dominik Oglesby1 was charged and convicted of a
    violation of a statute that prohibits a person who has previously been convicted of a
    drug-related offense (as Mr. Oglesby had) from possessing certain types of firearms.
    That statute carries a mandatory minimum sentence of five years incarceration, no
    part of which may be suspended and without the possibility of parole. Following his
    conviction and sentencing under that statute, Mr. Oglesby contended that the sentence
    was illegal because, on the same facts, he could have been charged and convicted under
    a different statute that does not carry a mandatory minimum sentence and that does
    allow for the possibility of a suspended sentence, as well as parole. He argues that the
    rule of lenity requires that his sentence be imposed under the second statute.
    We hold that the State’s Attorney had the discretion to charge Mr. Oglesby with
    an offense under the statute carrying the mandatory minimum sentence and that the
    Legislature’s intent to authorize that penalty for that violation is clear from the text
    1
    The Appellant’s first name appears in the record spelled variously as
    “Dominick,” “Dominic,” and “Dominik.” We use the spelling used by the Appellant’s
    counsel in filings on the Appellant’s behalf.
    of the statute and confirmed by its legislative history. There is no need to resort to the
    rule of lenity. Application of that concept in these circumstances would effectively
    negate legislative intent and intrude on prosecutorial discretion conferred on the
    State’s Attorney by the State’s constitution and criminal laws.
    I
    Background
    In the early morning hours of October 6, 2011, two Baltimore City police officers
    attempted to make a traffic stop of a car that had a headlight out. After a brief chase
    that ended when the car collided with several parked cars, the three individuals who
    had been in the car got out and fled. Mr. Oglesby, who had been a passenger in the
    back seat, was apprehended shortly after he threw a handgun to the ground. Pertinent
    to the issue in this case, at that time Mr. Oglesby had a criminal record that included
    prior convictions for drug-related crimes.
    Mr. Oglesby was charged with various firearms offenses. At his trial in the
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City, it was undisputed that Mr. Oglesby, at the time of his
    arrest, was barred from possessing a regulated firearm by virtue of a 2009 felony
    conviction for distribution of a controlled dangerous substance, in violation of Maryland
    Code, Criminal Law Article (“CR”), §5-602. Nor was there any dispute that the gun
    in question fit the definition of “regulated firearm,” as defined in Maryland Code,
    Public Safety Article (“PS”), §5-101(r). The only issue at trial was whether he had
    possessed the firearm.
    2
    Mr. Oglesby was convicted of possession of a regulated firearm by a person with
    a disqualifying drug conviction, in violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii).2 For this offense, Mr.
    Oglesby was sentenced to the five-year mandatory minimum term of imprisonment
    without parole provided in the statute. See PS §5-133(c)(2).
    Mr. Oglesby appealed, arguing that the five-year mandatory minimum period
    of incarceration for his conviction under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) was an illegal sentence. He
    notes that another statute – CR §5-622(b) – proscribes the same conduct that supports
    his conviction, but carries a more lenient sentence.3 Before the Court of Special
    Appeals considered his appeal, we granted certiorari on our own motion.
    II
    Discussion
    Mr. Oglesby does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence that he violated
    PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). Rather, he argues that the “rule of lenity” mandates that his
    2
    Mr. Oglesby was also found guilty of possession of a regulated firearm after
    having been convicted of a disqualifying misdemeanor in violation of PS §5-133(b)(1).
    This conviction was merged with the violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) for purposes of
    sentencing.
    Mr. Oglesby was also convicted of wearing, carrying or transporting a handgun
    in violation of CR §4-203. For this offense, Mr. Oglesby received a suspended three-
    year sentence with three years probation upon release. He has not appealed this
    conviction or sentence.
    The jury acquitted Mr. Oglesby on a charge of wearing, carrying, or transporting
    a handgun in the vehicle.
    3
    At the time of his arrest, Mr. Oglesby was charged with violations of both PS
    §5-133(c)(1)(ii) and CR §5-622(b). The latter charge, however, was not included in the
    subsequent indictment.
    3
    sentence be no more than the five-year maximum period of incarceration with
    eligibility of parole provided for a violation of CR §5-622(b), even though he was neither
    charged with, nor convicted of, a violation of that statute. Mr. Oglesby reasons that
    because the two statutes could apply to the same conduct in his case, but neither
    statute refers to the other, “it is not at all clear as to how he should be sentenced.”
    From that premise, he concludes that, under the rule of lenity, the ambiguity must be
    resolved in his favor – i.e., his sentence for a conviction of a violation of PS §5-
    133(c)(1)(ii) is capped by the maximum penalty allowed by CR §5-622 – five years
    imprisonment with the possibility of a suspended sentence and parole. He also argues
    that this Court’s prior decision in Waye v. State, 
    231 Md. 510
    , 
    191 A.2d 428
    (1963)
    supports the same result. In short, Mr. Oglesby argues that the imposition of the five-
    year mandatory minimum without possibility of parole under PS §5-133(c)(2) was an
    illegal sentence because it exceeded the penalty authorized by law.4
    The State argues that the rule of lenity is not applicable because the prosecutor
    had the discretion to choose which violation to charge, and the penalty provided in the
    statute under which Mr. Oglesby was charged and convicted is not ambiguous. The
    State similarly argues that the reasoning of Waye has no application here.
    Accordingly, in the State’s view, Mr. Oglesby was properly sentenced to the five-year
    4
    An illegal sentence may be challenged at any time, including for the first time
    on appeal. Stubbs v. State, 
    406 Md. 34
    , 48 n.1, 
    956 A.2d 155
    (2008). Thus, the failure
    of Mr. Oglesby’s counsel to object to the five-year mandatory minimum during
    sentencing would not bar his appeal on this issue.
    4
    mandatory minimum because this sentence corresponds to the statute under which he
    was charged and convicted.
    A.     Prosecutorial Discretion, the Rule of Lenity, and Prior Decisions
    As indicated above, there is some dispute as to whether the overlapping offenses
    defined by PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) and CR §5-622(b) are simply an occasion for the exercise
    of prosecutorial discretion in the charging decision or whether the “interplay” of the
    two statutes creates ambiguity that requires resort to the rule of lenity. We begin with
    a brief review of the concepts of prosecutorial discretion and, in the context of statutory
    construction, the rule of lenity. We then briefly review the several Maryland appellate
    decisions over the past decade that have considered those concepts in connection with
    these two statutes.
    1.   Prosecutorial Discretion
    It is not uncommon for the same facts to support potential convictions under a
    number of statutes or common law offenses, which may carry different penalties. A
    prosecutor is not required to charge all applicable offenses. A prosecutor thus exercises
    discretion as to what offenses to charge in a particular case – a decision that may
    greatly affect the potential penalty imposed by a sentencing court if a conviction
    results. This is a well-recognized part of our criminal justice system and is perfectly
    appropriate so long as the discretion is not exercised in an unconstitutional or illegal
    manner. Evans v. State, 
    396 Md. 256
    , 298, 
    914 A.2d 25
    (2006) (“State’s Attorneys
    retain the broad discretion ... in determining which cases to prosecute, which offenses
    5
    to charge, and how to prosecute the cases they bring”); see also Beverly v. State, 
    349 Md. 106
    , 121, 
    707 A.2d 91
    (1998); Brack v. Wells, 
    184 Md. 86
    , 90, 
    40 A.2d 319
    (1944).
    While prosecutorial discretion is subject to oversight by the courts to ensure that
    it is exercised within constitutional and statutory constraints, “the office of State’s
    Attorney is not a branch of the judiciary, nor is it directly subject to its supervision.”
    State v. Hunter, 
    10 Md. App. 300
    , 305, 
    270 A.2d 343
    (1970) (Murphy, C.J.), cert.
    improvidently granted and remanded, 
    263 Md. 17
    (1971). The prosecutor’s discretion
    in the selection of charges derives ultimately from the separation of powers in the
    Maryland Constitution. State v. Lykins, 
    43 Md. App. 472
    , 473, 
    406 A.2d 289
    (1979)
    modified, 
    288 Md. 71
    , 
    415 A.2d 1113
    (1980) (separation of powers “compels that we
    brook no lightly assumed interference by the judicial branch with the function of [the
    State’s Attorney] ... and ... not arrogate unto our branch supervisory powers which the
    Constitution does not bestow”).
    2.    The Rule of Lenity
    The “rule of lenity” is not a rule in the usual sense, but an aid for dealing with
    ambiguity in a criminal statute. Under the rule of lenity, a court confronted with an
    otherwise unresolvable ambiguity in a criminal statute that allows for two possible
    interpretations of the statute will opt for the construction that favors the defendant.
    For a court construing a statute, the rule of lenity is not a means for determining – or
    defeating – legislative intent. Rather, it is a tie-goes-to-the-runner device that the
    court may turn to when it despairs of fathoming how the General Assembly intended
    that the statute be applied in the particular circumstances. It is a tool of last resort,
    6
    to be rarely deployed and applied only when all other tools of statutory construction fail
    to resolve an ambiguity. See Gardner v. State, 
    420 Md. 1
    , 17, 
    20 A.3d 801
    (2011). This
    follows from the fact that our goal in construing statutes is always to ascertain and
    carry out the legislative purpose of the statute and not to seek out an interpretation
    that necessarily favors one party or the other. Id.5
    3.    Prior Decisions Concerning the Rule of Lenity, PS §5-133, and CR §5-622
    The argument that CR §5-622 might limit a sentence imposed for a violation of
    PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) first came before Maryland appellate courts in Alston v. State, 
    159 Md. App. 253
    , 
    858 A.2d 1100
    (2004), rev’d on other grounds, 
    433 Md. 275
    , 
    71 A.3d 13
    (2013), opinion withdrawn in part, 
    433 Md. 302
    (2013). In that case, which involved
    facts substantially similar to this case, the defendant was convicted of a violation of PS
    §5-133(c)(1)(ii) and the trial court imposed the mandatory minimum sentence provided
    for that violation.6 Like Mr. Oglesby, the defendant argued on appeal that the rule of
    5
    See also Tapscott v. State, 
    343 Md. 650
    , 656-57, 
    684 A.2d 439
    (1996) (language
    and history of statute resolved ambiguity and thus, rule of lenity was not applicable);
    Briggs v. State, 
    413 Md. 265
    , 286, 
    992 A.2d 433
    (2010) (even if statute was ambiguous,
    rule of lenity would not apply because indicia of intent, including statute’s plain
    language and history, strongly tipped towards only one interpretation); State v. Weems,
    
    429 Md. 329
    , 344-45, 
    55 A.3d 921
    (2012) (when statutory language was ambiguous and
    legislative history and other similar provisions “d[id] not shed conclusive light,” the
    court applied the rule of lenity); Jones v. State, 
    336 Md. 255
    , 261-62, 
    647 A.2d 1204
    (1994) (rule of lenity is applied at the end of the process of statutory construction when
    there remains a “grievous ambiguity or uncertainty”); Randall Book Corp. v. State, 
    316 Md. 315
    , 327, 
    558 A.2d 715
    (1989) (rule of lenity is applied when “legislative intent
    cannot be determined”).
    6
    At the time of the conviction in Alston, the offense described in PS §5-
    133(c)(1)(ii) was codified in Maryland Code, Article 27, §449(d)(1)(ii). See Part II.B.2
    of this opinion.
    7
    lenity required that he should have received the more lenient sentence provided in CR
    §5-622. The Court of Special Appeals rejected that argument. It held that there is no
    ambiguity in the statutes and therefore no reason to invoke the rule of lenity and apply
    the sentencing provision of CR §5-622 for a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). 159 Md.
    App. at 273.
    The Court of Special Appeals reiterated that conclusion in two subsequent
    decisions, noting in each case that the prosecutor had discretion to charge an offense
    under the statute with the more severe penalty and that there was no ambiguity that
    triggered the rule of lenity. State v. Lee, 
    178 Md. App. 478
    , 484-91, 
    943 A.2d 14
    (2008)
    (rule of lenity did not authorize trial judge to amend the indictment, in the face of the
    prosecution’s objection, to replace a charge under PS §5-133 with one under CR §5-622
    and to sentence the defendant under the latter statute); State v. Smoot, 
    200 Md. App. 159
    , 169-73, 
    26 A.3d 1002
    , cert. denied, 
    423 Md. 452
    (2011) (rule of lenity did not
    permit court to sentence defendant convicted of violation of PS §5-133 to probation
    before judgment simply because the defendant could have been charged under CR §5-
    622).
    In the meantime, the Court of Appeals had granted a writ of certiorari in Alston.
    This Court reversed one of the convictions in that case for reasons not pertinent here.
    Although the Court conceded that the sentencing issue with respect to the conviction
    under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) was moot (as the defendant had completed the sentence in its
    entirety), the Court’s opinion went on to discuss whether the rule of lenity affected the
    maximum sentence for a violation of that statute. In a holding initially joined by four
    8
    members of the Court, this Court reached a different conclusion than the Court of
    Special Appeals. It held that when two statutes proscribe the same conduct but
    prescribe different penalties and the legislative intent as to “how the statutes are to
    be applied and operate together is unclear,” the rule of lenity requires that the more
    lenient sentencing provision 
    prevail. 433 Md. at 301
    . The Court also suggested that
    the reasoning of Waye v. State, 
    231 Md. 510
    , 
    191 A.2d 428
    (1963), although that case
    did not construe the firearms statutes and was not based on the rule of lenity,
    supported the same conclusion. Shortly after issuing its decision in Alston, however,
    the Court withdrew that portion of its opinion on the ground of 
    mootness. 433 Md. at 302
    .
    The issue is not moot in this case as Mr. Oglesby is currently serving the
    mandatory minimum sentence imposed under PS §5-133(c)(2). Thus, we consider anew
    whether we agree with the conclusion reached in the several opinions of the Court of
    Special Appeals on this subject or whether the imposition of the mandatory minimum
    sentence set forth in PS §5-133(c)(2) for a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) is an illegal
    sentence. We also consider whether the decision in Waye affects that conclusion.
    B.     Whether the Rule of Lenity Requires that a Defendant Convicted of a
    Violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) be Sentenced under CR §5-622(c)
    As indicated above, there is no need to apply the rule of lenity unless there is an
    unresolvable ambiguity in the statute in question. A careful review of the statutory
    text and legislative history must come first.
    9
    1.   Statutory Text
    PS §5-133(c)
    Mr. Oglesby was convicted of a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) – in particular,
    possession of a regulated firearm by a person with a prior conviction for distribution
    of a controlled substance. At the time of the offense in this case,7 that statute read in
    relevant part:
    (c)(1)   A person may not possess a regulated firearm if
    the person was previously convicted of:
    ...
    (ii) A violation of §5-602, §5-603, §5-604, §5-605, §5-
    612, §5-613, or §5-614 of the Criminal Law Article.
    A “regulated firearm” is defined as a “handgun” or “any of the [listed] specific assault
    weapons or their copies, regardless of which company produced and manufactured that
    assault weapon....” PS §5-101(r).
    The sentence for a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) is as follows:
    (2) (i) Subject to paragraph (3) of this subsection,
    a person who violates this subsection is guilty of a felony and
    on conviction is subject to imprisonment for not less than 5
    years and not exceeding 15 years.
    (ii) The court may not suspend any part of the
    mandatory minimum sentence of 5 years.
    7
    As noted in the text, the offense occurred on October 6, 2011. Subsequently,
    in 2012, the General Assembly amended PS §5-133(c) to add a subparagraph that
    prohibits the possession of regulated firearm by a person who had been previously
    convicted of “[a]n offense under the laws of another state or the United States that
    would constitute one of the crimes listed in item (i) or (ii) of this paragraph if
    committed in this State.” PS §5-133(c)(1)(iii), as enacted by Chapters 276, 277, Laws
    of Maryland 2012.
    10
    (iii) Except as otherwise provided in §4-305 of
    the Correctional Services Article, the person is not eligible for
    parole during the mandatory minimum sentence.
    PS §5-133(c)(2).   The sentencing provision is qualified in paragraph (3) of the
    subsection. It provides that if, at the time of possession, at least five years had passed
    since the person completed serving the sentence, including all mandatory supervision,
    probation, and parole for the most recent disqualifying conviction, the court has
    discretion not to impose the mandatory minimum and the State’s Attorney must give
    a special notice of an intent to seek the mandatory minimum sentence. PS §5-133(c)(3).
    This provision did not pertain to Mr. Oglesby, as his disqualifying conviction was only
    two years old.
    CR §5-622
    Mr. Oglesby notes that he “could have been charged” under CR §5-622(b), which
    states in relevant part:
    A person may not possess, own, carry, or transport a
    firearm if that person has been convicted of:
    (1) A felony under [Title 5 of the Criminal Law
    Article, Controlled Dangerous Substances, Prescriptions, and
    Other Substances]
    For purposes of CR §5-622, a “firearm” is defined to include a “regulated firearm” as
    defined in PS §5-101(r); in addition, the term includes a machine gun (as defined in CR
    §4-401), as well as a “handgun, antique firearm, rifle, shotgun, short-barreled shotgun,
    and short-barreled rifle” (as defined in CR §4-201). CR §5-622(a). A person who
    11
    violates §5-622(b)(1) is “guilty of a felony and on conviction is subject to imprisonment
    not exceeding 5 years or a fine not exceeding $10,000 or both.” CR §5-622(c).
    Mr. Oglesby’s observation that he could have been charged with a violation of
    CR §5-622 on the facts of his case appears to be correct. The jury found that he was
    in possession of a “regulated firearm” which is included in the definition of “firearm”
    in CR §5-622. His prior conviction for a violation of CR §5-602 was a felony under the
    controlled substances title of the Criminal Law Article.
    Textual Analysis
    The prohibitions in the two statutes overlap substantially, although the two
    statutes are not identical. The offense defined by CR §5-622(b) is somewhat broader
    than the one defined by PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). For example, an individual with a prior
    drug conviction who possessed a machine gun, rifle, or shotgun not described in the
    definition of “regulated firearm” could be convicted of a violation of CR §5-622(b), but
    not a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). In another example, a person who had been
    previously convicted of possessing a counterfeit prescription for a controlled substance
    for the purpose of distributing that substance and who came into possession of a
    regulated firearm could be convicted of a violation of CR §5-622(b), but not PS §5-
    133(c)(1)(ii). But it remains true that, in general, an individual previously convicted
    of a felony drug offense who possesses a regulated firearm may be found guilty of
    violations of both PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) and CR §5-622(b). Although the statutes are not
    precisely identical in their reach, it is likely the case that most individuals convicted
    under one of these statutes could also be convicted under the other.
    12
    The fact that the statutes overlap does not render them ambiguous. While
    neither statute refers to the other, there is no “interplay” or conflict between these two
    statutes that must be harmonized. It is not as though one statute required or
    authorized Mr. Oglesby to have a firearm in some circumstances and the other statute
    forbade it.
    If Mr. Oglesby were correct that the more lenient of the two sentencing
    provisions always prevails, it would appear to render PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) completely
    ineffective. Given that CR §5-622 is the broader statute, if the sentencing provision of
    CR §5-622(c) were applied to any conviction under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii), a defendant
    convicted of a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) could never be sentenced in accordance
    with the sentencing provision of PS §5-133(c)(2), despite the plain language of the
    statute. In other words, the mandatory minimum sentence that the Legislature
    created in PS §5-133(c)(2) would virtually never apply to an individual in possession
    of a regulated firearm and with a prior conviction under CR §5-602, §5-603, §5-604, §5-
    605, §5-612, §5-613, or §5-614. This would render PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) superfluous
    because the felony drug crimes enumerated in that subparagraph would never trigger
    the mandatory minimum of PS §5-133(c)(2).
    Such a reading of the statutes is contrary to basic tenets of statutory
    construction. “Our canons of statutory interpretation, however, forbid us to ‘construe
    a statute ... so that [a] word, clause, sentence, or phrase is rendered surplusage,
    superfluous, meaningless, or nugatory.’”        Reier v. State Dep’t of Assessments &
    Taxation, 
    397 Md. 2
    , 28, 
    915 A.2d 970
    (2007) (quoting Blake v. State, 
    395 Md. 213
    , 224,
    13
    
    909 A.2d 1020
    (2006)). Rather, when two statutes cover similar subject matter, even
    if neither makes reference to the other, we must construe the statutes to give as full
    effect to each other as possible. Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning
    Comm’n v. Anderson, 
    395 Md. 172
    , 183, 
    909 A.2d 694
    (2006); Prince George’s County
    v. McBride, 
    263 Md. 235
    , 240-41, 
    282 A.2d 486
    (1971). As noted above, this effort to
    construe the statutes in accordance with legislative intent precedes any application of
    the rule of lenity.
    A previous case involving a conviction of a violation of CR §5-622 illustrates the
    need to construe sentencing provisions in a way that does not render one of them
    superfluous. In Collins v. State, 
    383 Md. 684
    , 688, 
    861 A.2d 727
    (2004), the defendant
    was convicted of a violation of CR §5-622(b), for possession of a firearm by a person
    with a prior felony drug conviction.8 The defendant was sentenced under CR §5-622(c)
    which, as noted above, authorizes a maximum of five years imprisonment. The
    sentencing court, however, doubled the sentence to 10 years, pursuant to a statute now
    codified as CR §5-905, which permits a court to double the statutory sentence when the
    violation is a second or subsequent offense under Title 5 of the Criminal Law Article.
    The defendant appealed, arguing that it was clear the Legislature intended to provide
    for a maximum five-year sentence for violation of CR §5-622 or, in the alternative, that
    8
    At the time of that case the statute was codified as Article 27, §291A. See Part
    II.B.2 of this opinion. The other sentencing provision at issue in Collins was codified
    at that time as Article 27, §293. For ease of reference, we refer to the statutes in
    Collins by their current designation in the Criminal Law Article.
    14
    the application of the two sentencing provisions was ambiguous and that the rule of
    lenity mandated that the ambiguity be resolved in his favor.
    The Court first noted that, when read in isolation, the sentence enhancement
    of CR §5-905 appeared to apply. In order to violate CR §5-622(b), a defendant must
    have a prior disqualifying felony conviction under Title 5 of the Criminal Law Article,
    which concerns criminal offenses related to controlled substances. Therefore, a single
    violation of CR §5-622(b) would be, by definition, a second or subsequent offense under
    the controlled dangerous substances law, indicating that the sentence enhancement
    would apply.     This Court concluded, however, that when the sentence enhancement
    was read in conjunction with the sentencing provision in CR §5-622(c), it became clear
    that the General Assembly intended that the enhancement not apply. If the sentence
    enhancement were to apply, the five-year maximum specified in CR §5-622(c) would
    never be the maximum sentence because every violation of CR §5-622(b) would trigger
    the sentence enhancement under CR §5-905, resulting instead in a 10-year maximum
    sentence. The application of the sentence enhancement would thereby render CR §5-
    622(c), and its five-year maximum sentence, meaningless. Accordingly, the Court
    concluded that an initial conviction under CR §5-622(b) did not trigger the sentence
    enhancement even though it was by definition a subsequent offense under Title 5 of the
    Criminal Law 
    Article. 383 Md. at 690
    , 692. The Court reached this conclusion by
    examining the text and legislative history of the relevant statutes to discern legislative
    intent; it did not need to resort to the rule of lenity.
    15
    Similarly, here, if the sentencing provision of CR §5-622(c) applied to every
    violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii), the latter provision would serve no purpose in the
    statute and would never trigger the five-year mandatory minimum sentence. For the
    same reason we conclude that the Legislature did not intend that the lesser sentence
    of CR §5-622(c) would apply to a conviction under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). Rather, the
    appropriate penalty for a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) is the penalty the Legislature
    prescribed in PS §5-133(c)(2).
    2.   Legislative History
    A review of the legislative history of these statutes – their back story – confirms
    this conclusion.9 The two statutes, which both seek to keep guns out of the hands of
    individuals involved in the illicit drug trade, are at the intersection of the regulation
    of firearms and the regulation of controlled dangerous substances.              Perhaps
    unsurprisingly, one statute derives from legislative efforts to regulate firearms; the
    other, from refinements of the laws concerning controlled dangerous substances.
    Firearms Regulation – 1941 – Creating a Firearms Disqualification for Persons
    Convicted of Certain Crimes
    Maryland state law has prohibited the possession of various types of firearms
    by persons convicted of certain crimes since at least 1941, when the General Assembly
    enacted a law prohibiting the possession of a pistol or revolver by any person who had
    9
    See Higginbotham v. Public Service Comm’n, 
    412 Md. 112
    , 119, 
    985 A.2d 1183
    (2009) (in the interest of completeness, courts may consider the legislative history of
    even an unambiguous statute to confirm the meaning of a statute derived from its
    language).
    16
    been convicted of a crime of violence or who was a fugitive from justice. Chapter 622,
    Laws of Maryland 1941 enacting Maryland Code, Article 27, §531D. That provision
    was eventually recodified as Article 27, §445.10 The statute originally provided for a
    maximum penalty of one year incarceration and a $300 fine11 which, in 1966, was
    increased to three years incarceration and a $1000 fine.12
    Firearms Regulation – 1989 – Adding Felony Drug Convictions to the List of
    Disqualifying Convictions
    The definition of “crime of violence” – as originally enacted in 1941 – did not
    include drug crimes.13 The Legislature enlarged the definition of “crime of violence”
    over the years and added other categories of disqualifying crimes and types of
    disqualification.14 In 1989, a bill was introduced in the Legislature to add certain drug-
    related crimes as another category of disqualifying convictions. See House Bill 654
    10
    It was recodified as Article 27, §541 in the 1951 Maryland Code and became
    §445 with the adoption of the 1957 Code.
    11
    See Maryland Code, Article 27, §531G (1941).
    12
    Chapter 502, Laws of Maryland 1966, amending Article 27, §448.
    13
    See Maryland Code, Article 27 §531A(4) (1941) (defining “crime of violence” as
    “murder, manslaughter, rape, mayhem, kidnaping, burglary, housebreaking; assault
    with intent to kill, commit rape, or rob; assault with a dangerous weapon, or assault
    with intent to commit any offense punishable by imprisonment for more than one
    year”).
    14
    See, e.g., Chapter 502, Laws of Maryland 1966 (adding abduction, arson,
    escape, robbery, sodomy, and attempts to commit those offenses to the list in the
    definition of “crime of violence”); Chapter 480, Laws of Maryland 1982 (adding robbery
    with a deadly weapon to the definition of “crime of violence”). In addition, in the 1966
    law, the Legislature added firearms offenses as a separate category of disqualifying
    convictions.
    17
    (1989). Testimony before the Legislature “indicated that the inclusion of convicted
    drug sellers and dealers in the list of persons specifically prohibited from purchasing
    and possessing handguns is necessary and overdue, especially since drug wars
    involving guns have grown more commonplace.” House Floor Report to House Bill 654
    (1989) at p. 2. As a result of the enactment of that bill, it became a crime for a person
    previously convicted of those drug-related crimes15 to possess a pistol or revolver.
    Chapter 428, Laws of Maryland 1989 amending Article 27, §445(c)(1)(iii). The 1989
    law also increased the potential fine. As of the effective date of that law, the maximum
    penalty was three years imprisonment and a $5,000 fine. Article 27, §448.
    Thus, as of 1989, the prohibition against possession of a firearm by a person
    convicted of certain drug-related crimes, and the criminal penalty for a violation,
    appeared as part of the subtitle of Article 27 concerning firearms regulation.
    Controlled Dangerous Substances Crimes - 1991 - Addition of an Offense
    Concerning Possession of a Firearm
    Two years later, in the course of amending the subtitle of Article 27 concerning
    controlled dangerous substances, the General Assembly added to that subtitle a similar
    but broader prohibition on the possession of a firearm with a potentially tougher
    penalty. This new provision prohibited a person with any prior felony drug conviction
    15
    The listed offenses were Article 27, §286 (the unlawful manufacture,
    distribution, counterfeiting, dispensing, or possession, of controlled dangerous
    substances), Article 27, §286A (bringing into the state excess of certain amounts of
    controlled dangerous substances), or Article 27, §286C (using minors to manufacture,
    deliver, or distribute controlled dangerous substances) or the conspiracy to commit any
    of these crimes.
    18
    (or conviction of an attempt or conspiracy to commit such a crime)16 not only from
    possessing, but also from owning, carrying or transporting a firearm. House Bill 978
    (1991), first reader. “Firearm” was defined more broadly to include not only pistols and
    revolvers, but also other handguns, rifles, shotguns, assault weapons, and machine
    guns.        A violation of this prohibition was designated a felony punishable by
    imprisonment up to five years and a $10,000 fine.
    While the bill establishing this provision was pending in the Legislature, it was
    amended to repeal the existing narrower crime in the firearms regulation subtitle (then
    codified at Article 27, §445(c)(1)(ii)), with the express intent that only the more
    expansive criminal provision in the controlled dangerous substances subtitle that
    carried the potentially greater penalty would remain.         See Judicial Proceedings
    Committee, Explanation of Floor Amendment to House Bill 978 (1991).                 The
    amendment was adopted and the bill was enacted as amended. Chapter 613, Laws of
    Maryland 1991 enacting Article 27, §291A (1957, 1991 Supp.). Although the criminal
    penalty for possession of a firearm by one with a drug-related conviction had been
    deleted from the firearms subtitle, that subtitle still forbade – and made a criminal
    16
    The bill prohibited possession of a firearm by a person with any felony
    conviction under the controlled dangerous substances subtitle of Article 27 or any
    offense committed under the laws of the United States or any other state if it would be
    a drug felony if it had been committed in Maryland. In contrast, the existing
    prohibition in Article 27, §445(c) only prohibited possession by persons with prior
    convictions of one of three drug-related provisions (Article 27, §§286, 286A, or 286C).
    19
    offense – the sale or transfer of a pistol or revolver to a person convicted of the listed
    drug offenses. See Article 27, §§445(b), 448 (1992).
    Thus, as of the effective date of the1991 law, under the subtitle of the criminal
    statutes concerning controlled dangerous substances, the possession of a firearm – now
    more broadly defined – by a person with any prior conviction of a felony drug offense
    (or of conspiracy or attempt to commit such an offense) was a felony punishable by up
    to a maximum of five years and a $10,000 fine.17            This statute has not been
    substantially amended since that time. In 2002, it was re-codified in the controlled
    substances title of the new Criminal Law Article as CR §5-622.18 This is the statute
    that Mr. Oglesby asks to be applied in his case, although he was not charged or
    convicted under that statute.
    Firearms Regulation - 1996 - Restoring the Violation in the Firearms Subtitle
    In 1996, as part of the Maryland Gun Violence Act of 1996, the General
    Assembly amended the statutes regulating firearms. Among other things, it expanded
    the disqualification for prior convictions in the firearms subtitle in a way that
    encompassed drug-related offenses, effectively restoring the criminal penalty in that
    subtitle for possession of a firearm by one with a prior drug-related conviction. It was
    17
    At the same time, the possession of a pistol or revolver following a conviction
    for a crime of violence (or other non-drug convictions enumerated in Article 27, §445)
    remained a misdemeanor and continued to be subject to a maximum of three years
    imprisonment.
    18
    See Chapter 26, §2, Laws of Maryland 2002.
    20
    now unlawful for any person to possess a “regulated firearm” if that person had been
    previously convicted of “any violation classified as a felony in this State” (as well as a
    misdemeanor that carried a statutory penalty of more than two years imprisonment).
    See Chapters 561, 562, Laws of Maryland 1996.19 A new term, “regulated firearm,”
    replaced the reference to pistols and revolvers and was defined to also include
    handguns generally and certain listed assault weapons or copies of those weapons. See
    Article 27, §441(r) (1957, 1996 Supp.). Additionally, the maximum sentence for a
    violation of the revised criminal provision was codified in Article 27, §449(e) and set
    at five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine – the same as provided for the similar
    violation in the controlled substances subtitle – i.e., Article 27, §291A (later recodified
    as CR §5-622).
    Firearms Regulation - 2000 - Creation of Mandatory Minimum Sentence
    In 2000, the General Assembly returned again to the firearms regulation
    subtitle of Article 27 in the Responsible Gun Safety Act of 2000 and, as one of the many
    measures in that bill,20 created a new five-year mandatory minimum sentence
    19
    As part of that law, Article 27, §445(c) & (d) were recodified in Article 27,
    §445(d) & (e).
    20
    The bill included numerous provisions concerning improvements in gun
    technology, gun safety, the disposition of weapons seized by law enforcement,
    enhancements to the enforcement of existing gun laws, and other provisions regulating
    the use and possession of firearms that were generally based on the 1999 report of the
    Governor’s Task Force on Childproof Guns. Among other things, the Task Force had
    suggested that criminal laws generally be enforced with the ultimate goal of protecting
    children from gun violence and that, in particular, any juvenile who had committed a
    violent act should be denied the right to possess a firearm.
    21
    applicable to a defendant with a prior disqualifying conviction who possessed a
    regulated firearm. The mandatory minimum sentence was specifically applicable to
    “[a] person who was previously convicted of a crime of violence as defined in §441(e) of
    this article or convicted of a violation of §286 or §286A of this article, and who is in
    illegal possession of a firearm as defined in §445(d)(1)(i) and (ii).” Chapter 2, Laws of
    Maryland 2000 amending Article 27, §449(e).21 Possession of a regulated firearm
    following a disqualifying conviction other than those listed in Article 27, §449(e)22
    continued to be misdemeanors subject to a maximum prison sentence of five years.
    21
    The definition of regulated firearm in Article 27, §441(e) later was recodified
    as PS §5-101(c). Article 27, 445(d)(1)(i) forbade possession of a regulated firearm by
    anyone convicted of a crime of violence; §445(d)(1)(ii) forbade possession by anyone
    convicted of “any violation classified as a felony in this State.”
    This Court later concluded that the language of Article 27, §449(e)
    unambiguously required that a person have a felony conviction and either a prior
    conviction for a crime of violence or a drug-related conviction under Article 27, §286 or
    §286A in order for the five-year mandatory minimum to apply. Stanley v. State, 
    390 Md. 175
    , 183, 
    887 A.2d 1078
    (2005). This Court recognized that the legislative history
    indicated that the mandatory minimum would be triggered by either a crime of
    violence conviction or a prior conviction under Article 27, §286 or §286A, but concluded
    the legislative history could not trump the unambiguous language of Article 27,
    §449(e). When it recodified this provision in the new Public Safety Article, the General
    Assembly revised it so that the text of the statute matched what appeared to be the
    original intent, as will be seen in the next section of this opinion.
    22
    For example, under the 2000 amendments, a person may not possess a
    regulated firearm if the person has been convicted of any violation classified as a
    misdemeanor in Maryland that carries a statutory penalty of more than 2 years; or any
    violation classified as a common law offense where the person received a term of
    imprisonment or more than 2 years; or if the person is a fugitive from justice, a
    habitual drunkard, or addicted to or a habitual user of any controlled dangerous
    substance. Article 27, §449(d) (1957, 2000 Supp.).
    22
    Article 27, 449(f) (1957, 2000 Supp.). The bill did not affect the existing offense defined
    in Article 27, §291A (the predecessor of CR §5-622).
    When the bill was before the General Assembly, the Legislature was advised
    that the “stiffer incarceration penalties” in the bill – the mandatory minimum sentence
    without possibility of parole – would likely “increase significantly” the State’s
    expenditures on incarceration, but reduce to some extent expenditures on parole
    supervision. See Fiscal Note (Revised) for Senate Bill 211 (March 30, 2000). The
    legislative bill files for the measure indicate that there was significant public interest
    and public input concerning the 2000 bill. Many of the bill’s provisions were quite
    controversial, but its provision for stiffer penalties for possession of a firearm by a
    person with a prior conviction – the provision that was ultimately codified in PS §5-
    133(c)(1) – was not.
    Firearms Regulation – Recodification of the Mandatory Minimum
    In 2003, portions of Article 27 were codified in the new Public Safety Article. As
    part of this process, the revisers redrafted the five-year mandatory minimum penalty
    provision originally contained in Article 27, §449(e). Chapter 5, §2, Laws of Maryland
    2003; Chapter 17, Laws of Maryland 2003. The revised provision was codified as PS
    §5-133(c) and stated in relevant part:
    (c) (1) A person may not possess a regulated firearm if
    the person was previously convicted of:
    (i)   A crime of violence; or
    23
    (ii) A violation of §5-602, §5-603, §5-604, §5-605,
    §5-606, §5-607, §5-608, §5-609, §5-612, §5-613, or §5-614 of the
    Criminal Law Article.
    (2) A person who violates this subsection is guilty of
    a felony and on conviction is subject to imprisonment for not
    less than 5 years, no part of which may be suspended.
    (3) A person sentenced under paragraph (1) of this
    subsection may not be eligible for parole.
    PS §5-133(c) (2003).23 The 2003 version of PS §5-133(c) differed from Article 27, §449(e)
    in that PS §5-133(c) specified that the mandatory minimum was triggered following a
    conviction of possession of a regulated firearm by a person with a prior conviction for
    a crime of violence or a conviction under the re-codified versions of Article 27, §286 or
    §286A.24 The General Assembly chose to retain the conjunction “or” relating the
    23
    Article 27, §286 and §286A had been re-codified into CR §§5-602, 5-603, 5-604,
    5-605, 5-606, 5-607, 5-608, 5-609, 5-612, 5-613, and 5-614.
    24
    In making these revisions, the revisers noted:
    The Public Safety Article Review Committee notes, for
    consideration by the General Assembly, that the meaning of
    the reference in former Art. 27, §449(e) to a person “who is
    in illegal possession of a firearm as defined in §445(d)(1)(i)
    and (ii) of [Art. 27]” is unclear. Former Art. 27, §445(d)(1)(i)
    and (ii) prohibited a person who has been convicted of a
    crime of violence or any violation classified as a felony in
    this State from possessing a regulated firearm. The
    General Assembly may wish to clarify the meaning of
    former Art. 27, §449(e), which is revised in subsection (c) of
    this section.
    Chapter 5, §2, Laws of Maryland 2003 at 250. The recodification originally would have
    extended the mandatory minimum penalty to anyone who possessed a regulated
    firearm and who had previously been convicted of “any other violation classified as a
    (continued...)
    24
    subparagraphs of PS §5-133(c)(1) with the result that possession of a regulated
    firearm, coupled with either a prior conviction of a crime of violence or a prior
    conviction under the enumerated provisions of the Criminal Law Article, was a
    violation of PS §5-133(c)(1), and would trigger the five-year mandatory minimum
    sentence in PS §5-133(c)(2).25
    Lessons from the Legislative History
    We can make several observations as a result of our journey through the
    legislative history of these two provisions.
    First, since the General Assembly first made a prior drug conviction a firearms
    disqualification, it has consistently enhanced the available sentences on each occasion
    that it has returned to the subject, particularly for individuals with prior convictions
    related to the manufacturing, distributing, or importing of illicit drugs. These offenses
    were first identified in 1989 as the type of drug-related convictions that disqualified
    a person from possessing a pistol or revolver. In 1991, all felonies under the controlled
    dangerous substances subtitle of Article 27 (plus conspiracy and attempt to commit
    such crimes) were included in the new felony provision that authorized a higher
    maximum sentence compared to other types of disqualifying convictions that were
    24
    (...continued)
    felony in the State.” That provision was deleted in a corrective bill passed the same
    year. Chapter 17, Laws of Maryland 2003.
    25
    In 2011, the General Assembly deleted from the list of disqualifying
    convictions in PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) a violation of CR §5-606, the possession of a fake
    prescription for a controlled dangerous substance. Further amendments to PS §5-133
    were made in 2010 and 2012 and are not relevant to this case.
    25
    listed in pistols subtitle. In 2000, felonies related to the distribution, manufacturing,
    and importing of controlled substances were once again singled out in what is now PS
    §5-133(c)(1)(ii), along with crimes of violence, as triggering the newly created five-year
    mandatory minimum sentence. This reflects a consistent intent by the General
    Assembly to authorize stringent penalties for a person with a prior drug-related
    conviction who is convicted of possession of a handgun, particularly when that
    individual has a prior conviction for distributing, manufacturing, or importing
    controlled substances.
    Second, the 2003 amendment that clarified that either a prior conviction for a
    crime of violence or a prior conviction under one of the enumerated drug-related
    provisions in PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) would, on its own, trigger the mandatory five-year
    mandatory minimum sentence is particularly indicative of the General Assembly’s
    intent. After the revisers noted the potential confusion regarding what would trigger
    the mandatory minimum, the General Assembly recodified the statute in a way that
    unambiguously prescribed the mandatory minimum for a person who possesses a
    regulated firearm after having previously been convicted of one of the listed drug-
    related offenses.
    Finally, the General Assembly’s decision in 2000 to retain the similar, but not
    identical, prohibition in CR §5-622 (and its predecessor provision) when enacting the
    five-year mandatory minimum is significant. The General Assembly is presumed to
    have considered the existing offense in CR §5-622 when enacting the five-year
    mandatory minimum. See GEICO v. Insurance Com’r, 
    332 Md. 124
    , 132, 
    630 A.2d 713
    26
    (1993) (Legislature is presumed to be aware of an earlier enacted statute). The
    General Assembly’s decision not to amend CR §5-622 suggests that it intended to allow
    a prosecutor the discretion to charge a violation of CR §5-622(b) instead of a violation
    of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii), and leave open the possibility that a sentencing court might
    impose something less than a sentence of five years incarceration in the circumstances
    of the particular case.26 See Frazier v. State, 
    318 Md. 597
    , 615, 
    569 A.2d 684
    (1990)
    (absence of an amendment to an existing statute when Legislature passes an
    overlapping proscription indicates that the Legislature intended for both statutes to
    co-exist).
    3.    Summary
    The two criminal statutes at issue in this case each describe with some precision
    the conduct that constitutes a violation.27 On the facts of this case, the State’s Attorney
    had discretion to charge Mr. Oglesby with a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) or of CR §5-
    622(b), or both. Absent an allegation that the decision was exercised contrary to some
    constitutional or legal norm, it is not subject to judicial oversight as to whether the
    statute with the more stringent or the more lenient penalty should have been charged.
    26
    This is in contrast to the Legislature’s decision when it enacted the 1991 law
    to delete the overlapping provision with the more lenient sentencing provision.
    27
    The Court has found ambiguity – and applied the rule of lenity – on the
    question of the unit of prosecution under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). See Melton v. State, 
    379 Md. 471
    , 
    842 A.2d 743
    (2004) (unit of prosecution relates to act of possession, not
    number of prior qualifying offenses). In this case, there is no issue as to the provision
    that defines the offense; rather the issue is whether the penalty provision is
    ambiguous.
    27
    There is no ambiguity in either statute as to the penalty that the Legislature has
    authorized for a conviction. The legislative history confirms that the General Assembly
    intended to provide for a mandatory minimum sentence for a violation of PS §5-
    133(c)(1)(ii). The fact that a violation of CR §5-622(b) carries a different penalty does
    not mean that either penalty provision is ambiguous. There is no occasion to apply the
    rule of lenity to cap the sentence for a violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) with that of a
    more lenient potential offense that could have been charged.28 In the context of a
    merger of sentences, where the prosecution has actually charged two overlapping
    offenses and a court determines that two counts on which a defendant was convicted
    were based on the same factual elements, the conviction that carries the lesser penalty
    is merged into the conviction that carries the greater penalty for purposes of
    sentencing. See, e.g., Brooks v. State, 
    439 Md. 698
    , 736-42, 
    98 A.3d 236
    (2014).29
    The Supreme Court considered a similar argument concerning two overlapping
    federal statutes that prohibited possession of a firearm by a convicted felon but carried
    different maximum penalties, and declined to apply the rule of lenity to negate the
    more stringent sentencing provision. As Justice Thurgood Marshall, on behalf of a
    28
    Taken to its logical conclusion, a rule of lenity that operated in that fashion
    would require a sentencing court to canvas the various statutory offenses that might
    have been charged in a particular case, select the one with the most lenient sentencing
    provision, and cap the sentence accordingly.
    29
    Had the prosecution charged both offenses in Mr. Oglesby’s case, it might well
    be that a conviction under CR §5-622(b) would merge into the conviction under PS §5-
    133(c)(2) for sentencing purposes, see State v. Lee, 
    178 Md. App. 478
    , 490 n.5, 
    943 A.2d 14
    (2008), although we need not decide that issue under the circumstances of this case.
    28
    unanimous Court, observed: “That [one statute] provides different penalties for
    essentially the same conduct is no justification for taking liberties with the unequivocal
    statutory language. ... Where, as here, Congress conveyed its purpose clearly, ... we
    decline to manufacture ambiguity where none exists.” United States v. Batchelder, 
    442 U.S. 114
    , 121-22 (1979) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).30
    Accordingly, when, as here, the conduct at issue is proscribed by both statutes,
    the prosecutor may choose whether to pursue a conviction under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) or
    CR §5-622(b) and the appropriate sentence will be a sentence corresponding to the
    statute under which the defendant is convicted.31
    30
    In Batchelder, the defendant had been charged and convicted under a federal
    statute that prohibited a felon from receiving a firearm that had traveled in interstate
    commerce. The defendant was sentenced to five years imprisonment, the maximum
    under that statute. As in the instant case, another federal statute criminalized the
    same conduct, but provided for a lesser maximum penalty – two years incarceration.
    Like Mr. Oglesby, the defendant argued that the rule of lenity required that he be
    sentenced in accordance with the more lenient statute, even though he had not been
    charged or convicted of a violation of that statute.
    31
    Although not raised in this case, we note that the potential for varying
    punishments based on the same conduct does not violate the United States
    Constitution or Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. Stubbs v. State, 
    406 Md. 34
    , 50-53, 
    956 A.2d 155
    (2008).
    Additionally, there is no concern here that the statutes did not give proper notice
    of the potential penalty. See 3 Sutherland Statutory Construction §59:4 (7th ed.)
    (noting the rule of lenity developed based on “a belief that one should not be punished
    by loss of liberty unless the law has provided a fair warning of what conduct is
    considered criminal”). PS §5-133(c)(2) imposes a mandatory minimum for violation of
    paragraph (c)(1), which is sufficient to give notice to any potential defendant that the
    possession of a regulated firearm after a disqualifying conviction specified in paragraph
    (c)(1) is subject to a mandatory minimum penalty.
    29
    C.     Whether the Reasoning of Waye v. State Requires that a Defendant
    Convicted of a Violation of PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii) be Sentenced under CR §5-
    622(c)
    We briefly address the significance of Waye v. State, 
    231 Md. 510
    , 
    191 A.2d 428
    (1963). In the withdrawn portion of this Court’s Alston opinion, the Court’s initial
    majority relied heavily on Waye, although Waye did not involve an application of the
    rule of lenity.32 Indeed, in Waye, the Court’s decision was based on an assessment of
    the Legislature’s intent underlying the pertinent statutes and there was therefore no
    need to resort to the rule of lenity.
    In Waye, the defendant was charged and convicted of a violation of the False
    Pretenses Act,33 which carried a maximum sentence of 10 years incarceration. A
    statute that criminalized a particular type of theft by false pretenses – the Worthless
    Check Act34 – had provided for a similar penalty, but had recently been amended to
    provide a maximum period of 18 months incarceration if the value obtained by means
    of the worthless check was less than $100. The Court held that the Legislature had
    not intended to retain the greater penalty for violation of the False Pretenses Act when
    the violation of that statute involved a worthless check used to obtain a value less than
    $100. The Court thus construed the relatively recent amendment of the sentencing
    provision of the narrower statute – the Worthless Check Act – to also apply to the
    32
    Although Mr. Oglesby did not cite Waye in his brief, his counsel invoked the
    decision at oral argument.
    33
    At the time of the Waye decision, that law appeared at Article 27, §140.
    34
    At the time of the Waye decision, that law appeared at Article 27, §142.
    30
    broader statute – the False Pretenses Act – in those 
    circumstances. 231 Md. at 516
    .35
    Waye does not appear to be pertinent to Mr. Oglesby’s case. If the reasoning of
    Waye were applied to analyze the statutes in this case, it would mean that the
    sentencing provision of the narrower, more recently enacted statute – here, the
    mandatory minimum sentence in PS §5-133(c)(2) – would be read into the older and
    broader statute – here, CR §5-622 – when a conviction under the latter statute was
    supported by facts that would have permitted a prosecution under the former statute.36
    But we are not dealing with a conviction under CR §5-622 and no one is arguing that
    the mandatory minimum sentence for certain convicted drug offenders found in
    possession of regulated firearms should be imported into the existing provisions of CR
    §5-622.37
    In light of the Legislature’s clear intention to establish a mandatory minimum
    sentence for certain convicted drug offenders found in possession of regulated firearms,
    35
    The Court concluded that the Legislature did not intend to confer discretion
    on a prosecutor to create the possibility of a more severe sentence simply by charging
    an offense under the False Pretenses Act: “we do not believe that the Legislature
    intended to create such an anomalous and incongruous situation ... simply because
    someone decides to bring the prosecution under [the False Pretenses 
    Act].” 231 Md. at 516
    .
    36
    Similarly, had the General Assembly created the two sentencing provisions
    in the same statute, PS §5-133(c)(2), as the later enacted provision, would prevail over
    CR §5-622(c) to the extent there was an irreconcilable conflict between the two.
    Maryland Code, General Provisions Article, §1-207.
    37
    For a variety of reasons, it is unlikely that the Court would apply the
    reasoning of Waye to construe CR §5-622 in that manner, although we need not address
    that question in this case.
    31
    it would frustrate legislative intent and thus be quite at odds with the governing
    principle of Waye – fidelity to legislative intent – to hold that the mandatory minimum
    sentence provision is a nullity. Indeed, those convicted of serious drug offenses would
    be treated more leniently than other individuals convicted of crimes listed in PS §5-
    133(c)(1). The bottom line is that the reasoning in Waye does not support a conclusion
    contrary to the one we have reached.
    A more analogous case to Mr. Oglesby’s situation is Stubbs v. State, 
    406 Md. 34
    ,
    50, 
    956 A.2d 155
    (2008). In Stubbs, the defendant had been convicted and sentenced
    under a provision of the consolidated theft statute pertaining to thefts involving a
    value less than $500. On appeal, the defendant argued, among other things, that
    because the evidence at trial did not show a value greater than $100, his sentence
    should not have exceeded the lesser sentence provided for a charge of theft of an item
    with a value less than $100. After reviewing the statutory text and legislative history
    of the consolidated theft statute, this Court concluded that the Legislature intended
    to allow a prosecutor the discretion to charge either offense and relied on the passage
    from Batchelder quoted above. See Part II.B.3 of this opinion. In our view, the
    Legislature conferred similar discretion upon the prosecutor in this case.
    III
    Conclusion
    The fact that two criminal statutes overlap to some extent – or to a great extent
    – and provide for different penalties upon conviction does not alone create an
    32
    ambiguity that must be resolved by application of the rule of lenity. When the
    language of the statute under which a defendant is charged is clear, and the legislative
    history confirms that the Legislature intended to establish the penalty set forth in that
    statute, there is no occasion to apply the rule of lenity. The application of the rule in
    the circumstances of this case would effectively repeal the General Assembly’s most
    recent enactment penalizing gun possession by those convicted of serious drug crimes.
    Accordingly, the rule of lenity did not require that Mr. Oglesby be sentenced under CR
    §5-622(c) for his conviction under PS §5-133(c)(1)(ii). Nor does the reasoning of Waye
    v. State require such an outcome.
    One may legitimately question whether a mandatory minimum sentence is ever
    a good idea, as it strips the sentencing judge of the discretion to fit the sentence to the
    particular case and may transfer power over the disposition from the court to the
    prosecution.38 But that is a decision for the Legislature, as the courts have generally
    rejected constitutional challenges to such sentencing provisions.39
    38
    See, e.g., Eric Holder, Testimony before United States Sentencing Commission
    on March 13, 2014, 26 Fed. Sent. R. 246, 
    2014 WL 4745522
    (April, 2014), available at
    ; Erik Luna & Paul G. Cassell, Mandatory
    Minimalism, 32 Cardozo L.Rev. 1, 3 (2010) (summarizing arguments against
    mandatory minimum sentences).
    39
    See, e.g., United States v. Chapman, 
    500 U.S. 453
    , 467 (1991) (statute that
    required a mandatory minimum for certain drug crimes did not impose an arbitrary
    sentence and thus did not violate due process); State ex rel. Sonner v. Shearin, 
    272 Md. 502
    , 513, 
    325 A.2d 573
    (1974) (trial court not authorized to suspend part of a
    mandatory minimum sentence as the legislature may limit the court’s discretion to
    impose a sentence); United States v. Hughes, 
    632 F.3d 956
    , 962 (6th Cir. 2011)
    (continued...)
    33
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    BALTIMORE CITY AFFIRMED . COSTS TO BE
    PAID BY APPELLANT .
    39
    (...continued)
    (rejecting due process, Eighth Amendment, and separation of powers challenges to the
    imposition of a mandatory minimum); but cf. Alleyne v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
    ,
    2162 (2013) (mandatory minimums violate the Sixth Amendment unless any fact that
    increases the mandatory minimum is submitted to the jury for determination).
    34