Justice Alito exposed a Supreme Court majority’s push to rewrite Donald Trump’s First Step Act, accusing them of a “thinly veiled desire to march in the parade of sentencing reform” beyond the law’s text.
Story Snapshot
- Alito’s dissent blasts Jackson’s majority opinion for “disfiguring” the 2018 bipartisan FSA with atextual interpretation.
- Petitioners Duffey, Ross, and Hewitt won resentencing after their pre-FSA sentences were vacated, applying FSA’s anti-stacking leniency retroactively.
- 5-4 ruling favors purposivism over textualism, joined by liberals and one swing vote against Alito, Thomas, Kavanaugh, and Barrett.
- Decision expands reform Trump signed, potentially freeing thousands while sparking conservative backlash on judicial overreach.
Alito’s Dissent Defends Statutory Text
Justice Samuel Alito dissented in Duffey v. United States, joined by Justices Thomas, Kavanaugh, and Barrett. He argued the majority’s view unravels the First Step Act’s retroactivity limits in section 403(b). Original sentences imposed in 2010 on petitioners Corey Duffey, Jarvis Ross, and Tony Hewitt predated the 2018 law. Vacating those sentences post-enactment does not erase their pre-FSA imposition, Alito wrote. The dissent rejects boundless retroactivity for any vacatur reason.
Alito pinpointed the majority’s “atextual interpretation” driven by reform enthusiasm. He mocked their “thinly veiled desire to march in the parade,” prioritizing policy over Congress’s words. Facts support Alito’s textualism: FSA explicitly ties leniency to sentences “imposed” before enactment unless vacated beforehand. Common sense aligns with preserving legislative finality against judicial rewrite.
First Step Act’s Origins and Stacking Problem
President Trump signed the First Step Act in December 2018, curbing mandatory minimum “stacking” under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). Pre-FSA, multiple firearm counts triggered consecutive 25-year terms after the first, yielding life sentences for single episodes. Cases like Deal v. United States (2000) permitted this. FSA section 403(b) offered relief but limited retroactivity. Lower courts split post-FSA on vacatur effects.
Petitioners’ 2010 convictions involved drug and firearm offenses. The 11th Circuit vacated Duffey’s sentence, prompting resentencing bids. Government urged pre-FSA status persisted. Supreme Court granted certiorari in early 2025 to resolve the circuit split amid a polarized 6-3 conservative bench.
Jackson’s Majority Opinion Prevails
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s majority held vacated pre-FSA sentences count as “not imposed” for section 403(b) purposes. This triggers FSA’s reduced penalties. Jackson emphasized Congress’s intent to end draconian stacking, citing the Act’s reform goals. She rebutted Alito, insisting fidelity to anti-stacking purpose over rigid text. The 5-4 split likely included liberals plus a swing vote.
Precedents like Dean v. United States (2017) and United States v. Davis (2019) shaped FSA litigation. Gorsuch, Sotomayor, and Jackson previously warned narrow readings harm thousands. Jackson’s view aligns with bipartisan backers like Jared Kushner and Van Jones who championed Trump’s law.
Stakeholders and Power Shifts
Petitioners sought cuts from 50-plus-year terms. DOJ defended text for finality, echoing Trump-era prosecutions. Reform groups like #Cut50 backed Jackson. Alito positioned his bloc as guardians of Trump’s legacy against overreach. Despite conservative majority, purposivists won on this statutory call.
Biden sure can pick 'em.
Justice Alito Goes OFF on Auto-Pen Justice KBJ for 'Baseless and Insulting Dissent' and We're Here FOR IThttps://t.co/oU0fvpy9Vv pic.twitter.com/dFtSjOntSA
— Twitchy Team (@TwitchyTeam) May 5, 2026
Alito noted majority sections drew only three votes, “giving the game away” on weak consensus. Conservative outlets amplified his parade quip, framing it as originalism’s stand.
Impacts Reshape Sentencing Landscape
Hundreds face immediate resentencings; DOJ updates guidelines. Long-term, over 5,000 qualify per estimates, slashing prison populations and costs by $80 million yearly. Disproportionately aids Black and Latino drug-firearm offenders. Politically, Trump claims credit amid divides; signals Court’s reform openness.
May 2025 ruling sets textualism-purposivism precedent. Lower courts apply it; no rehearings filed. Reform groups celebrate, conservatives decry activist bench.



