OPINION AND ORDER
LETTS, District Judge.
The issue presented by this case is whether the Sentencing Guidelines, 18 U.S. C.A. §§ 3551-3742 (West 1985 & Supp. 1989) and 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 991-998 (West Supp.1989) (the “Guidelines”), can be applied without violating the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. This court holds that they cannot.
FACTS
On October 25,1988, a federal jury found defendant Greg Davis and three co-defendants, Alfredo Chavaria-Castaneda, Robert Acevedes-Ramirez and Moisés Negron, Jr., guilty of conspiracy and other crimes arising out of their attempt to purchase cocaine.
None of the defendants testified at trial. The Government’s evidence included testimony that the attempt was made in the course of a “sting” operation in which a special agent of the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency (“the Agent”) agreed to supply the cocaine and the defendants agreed to bring money to a specified place of exchange. When the defendants later attempted to make the exchange, they were arrested.
Pursuant to the Sentencing Guidelines, the probation office prepared a Presen-tence Investigation Report (the “Presen-tence Report”) prior to sentencing. Davis refused to discuss the offense with the probation officer, first because he could not reach his counsel,
and then on advice of counsel.
Davis was arrested, tried and convicted under the name “Greg Davis.” According to the Presentence Report, fingerprint identification indicated that Davis’ true name is “David Preston Hollier.”
While no criminal record was found under the name of “Greg Davis,” “David Preston Hollier” has a substantial criminal history.
Under the Guidelines, the specific drug offenses for which Davis was convicted requires confinement for periods ranging from 10 months
to life imprisonment. In the Presentence Report, the probation officer determined that the applicable guideline range within which Davis should be incarcerated was from 360 months to life. The total offense level upon which this determination was made was calculated as follows: (1) Base Level Offense—36 points; (2) Adjustment for Role in the Offense—plus four points; (3) Obstruction of Justice— plus two points; (4) Acceptance of Respon
sibility — no reduction. Davis received one point each for three vehicle code violations, which placed him in Criminal History Category II.
Davis now challenges the Sentencing Guidelines on Fifth Amendment due process grounds.
OVERVIEW
The Guidelines require courts to apply certain factors in determining the term of incarceration to be imposed upon defendants convicted in criminal cases. To determine which of the factors are applicable, a court must decide numerous questions of fact. The available information upon which a court must rely in making these determinations is often by necessity sparse, biased or otherwise inadequate. The court is nevertheless
required
to apply the factors found to be applicable in accordance with fixed predetermined weights.
See generally
United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual,
§§ 1B1.-1-1B1.9, at 1.13 (hereinafter
“Guidelines Manual”).
The Guidelines provide no means for altering these weights to reflect relative uncertainties of the underlying facts.
It is important to distinguish the issue decided here from the much larger issues which have tended to dominate the general discussion of the Guidelines.
The issue here is not whether due process requires that every criminal sentence be imposed individually through the exercise of judicial discretion. This issue is significant, but it need not be addressed here. The issue also is not whether Congress has the power to limit the scope of judicial discretion in sentencing or even to eliminate such discretion completely.
The court here assumes, without deciding, that Congress does have the Constitutional power to eliminate judicial discretion as an element of sentencing. It could accomplish this simply by providing mandatory fixed periods of incarceration applicable equally to all who are convicted of specified crimes. The court also assumes,
a fortio-ri,
that Congress has the power to limit the scope of judicial discretion without completely eliminating it. This could be accomplished lawfully by establishing maximum and minimum penalties applicable to specific crimes. In this regard, the court further assumes that Congress would have absolute discretion in fixing the spread between such penalties. Finally, the court assumes that Congress has the power to direct any discretion left to courts for sentencing purposes by requiring judges to consider certain sentencing factors, if determined to be applicable, and to require imposition of at least a minimum period of incarceration for the underlying offense.
The general discussion surrounding the Guidelines has suggested that the Guidelines limit a court’s discretion in sentencing no further than the court here assumes Congress may. The suggestion is that the Guidelines merely narrow the previously unfettered discretion of judges by forcing them to adopt a more structured mode for their decision-making.
This suggestion, while accurate to a point, hides a far more harsh reality. It is
true that the Guidelines leave room for the exercise of unfettered judicial discretion. It is also true that the Guidelines mandate a structured mode of decision.
What is hidden, however, is that the range of sentencing discretion left to the sentencing judge is very narrow.
Before this range is even reached, the Guidelines establish vastly disparate yet
mandatory
periods of incarceration. These periods are based on factors which, for the most part, the sentencing judge is required to apply on the basis of any available information, whether or not that information was introduced at trial or proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
The weight assigned to each factor determined to be applicable is the preassigned weight established by Congress through the Guidelines. These weights, however, may not be adjusted to reflect any relative uncertainty in the underlying facts. Instead, the weighted factors found to apply are added mechanically, one on top of the other. The cumulation of these factors results in mandatory and substantial periods of incarceration that frequently bear
no relation
to the severity of the crime for which the defendant was convicted.
Indeed, the dominant portion of the sentence received by the defendant may be comprised of sentencing factors, and not the proven elements of the crime of conviction.
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OPINION AND ORDER
LETTS, District Judge.
The issue presented by this case is whether the Sentencing Guidelines, 18 U.S. C.A. §§ 3551-3742 (West 1985 & Supp. 1989) and 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 991-998 (West Supp.1989) (the “Guidelines”), can be applied without violating the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. This court holds that they cannot.
FACTS
On October 25,1988, a federal jury found defendant Greg Davis and three co-defendants, Alfredo Chavaria-Castaneda, Robert Acevedes-Ramirez and Moisés Negron, Jr., guilty of conspiracy and other crimes arising out of their attempt to purchase cocaine.
None of the defendants testified at trial. The Government’s evidence included testimony that the attempt was made in the course of a “sting” operation in which a special agent of the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency (“the Agent”) agreed to supply the cocaine and the defendants agreed to bring money to a specified place of exchange. When the defendants later attempted to make the exchange, they were arrested.
Pursuant to the Sentencing Guidelines, the probation office prepared a Presen-tence Investigation Report (the “Presen-tence Report”) prior to sentencing. Davis refused to discuss the offense with the probation officer, first because he could not reach his counsel,
and then on advice of counsel.
Davis was arrested, tried and convicted under the name “Greg Davis.” According to the Presentence Report, fingerprint identification indicated that Davis’ true name is “David Preston Hollier.”
While no criminal record was found under the name of “Greg Davis,” “David Preston Hollier” has a substantial criminal history.
Under the Guidelines, the specific drug offenses for which Davis was convicted requires confinement for periods ranging from 10 months
to life imprisonment. In the Presentence Report, the probation officer determined that the applicable guideline range within which Davis should be incarcerated was from 360 months to life. The total offense level upon which this determination was made was calculated as follows: (1) Base Level Offense—36 points; (2) Adjustment for Role in the Offense—plus four points; (3) Obstruction of Justice— plus two points; (4) Acceptance of Respon
sibility — no reduction. Davis received one point each for three vehicle code violations, which placed him in Criminal History Category II.
Davis now challenges the Sentencing Guidelines on Fifth Amendment due process grounds.
OVERVIEW
The Guidelines require courts to apply certain factors in determining the term of incarceration to be imposed upon defendants convicted in criminal cases. To determine which of the factors are applicable, a court must decide numerous questions of fact. The available information upon which a court must rely in making these determinations is often by necessity sparse, biased or otherwise inadequate. The court is nevertheless
required
to apply the factors found to be applicable in accordance with fixed predetermined weights.
See generally
United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual,
§§ 1B1.-1-1B1.9, at 1.13 (hereinafter
“Guidelines Manual”).
The Guidelines provide no means for altering these weights to reflect relative uncertainties of the underlying facts.
It is important to distinguish the issue decided here from the much larger issues which have tended to dominate the general discussion of the Guidelines.
The issue here is not whether due process requires that every criminal sentence be imposed individually through the exercise of judicial discretion. This issue is significant, but it need not be addressed here. The issue also is not whether Congress has the power to limit the scope of judicial discretion in sentencing or even to eliminate such discretion completely.
The court here assumes, without deciding, that Congress does have the Constitutional power to eliminate judicial discretion as an element of sentencing. It could accomplish this simply by providing mandatory fixed periods of incarceration applicable equally to all who are convicted of specified crimes. The court also assumes,
a fortio-ri,
that Congress has the power to limit the scope of judicial discretion without completely eliminating it. This could be accomplished lawfully by establishing maximum and minimum penalties applicable to specific crimes. In this regard, the court further assumes that Congress would have absolute discretion in fixing the spread between such penalties. Finally, the court assumes that Congress has the power to direct any discretion left to courts for sentencing purposes by requiring judges to consider certain sentencing factors, if determined to be applicable, and to require imposition of at least a minimum period of incarceration for the underlying offense.
The general discussion surrounding the Guidelines has suggested that the Guidelines limit a court’s discretion in sentencing no further than the court here assumes Congress may. The suggestion is that the Guidelines merely narrow the previously unfettered discretion of judges by forcing them to adopt a more structured mode for their decision-making.
This suggestion, while accurate to a point, hides a far more harsh reality. It is
true that the Guidelines leave room for the exercise of unfettered judicial discretion. It is also true that the Guidelines mandate a structured mode of decision.
What is hidden, however, is that the range of sentencing discretion left to the sentencing judge is very narrow.
Before this range is even reached, the Guidelines establish vastly disparate yet
mandatory
periods of incarceration. These periods are based on factors which, for the most part, the sentencing judge is required to apply on the basis of any available information, whether or not that information was introduced at trial or proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
The weight assigned to each factor determined to be applicable is the preassigned weight established by Congress through the Guidelines. These weights, however, may not be adjusted to reflect any relative uncertainty in the underlying facts. Instead, the weighted factors found to apply are added mechanically, one on top of the other. The cumulation of these factors results in mandatory and substantial periods of incarceration that frequently bear
no relation
to the severity of the crime for which the defendant was convicted.
Indeed, the dominant portion of the sentence received by the defendant may be comprised of sentencing factors, and not the proven elements of the crime of conviction.
Invariably, these non-proven and highly individualized factors vary from defendant to defendant, even among those convicted of the same crime. The result is that through the Guidelines, Congress has
required
that different persons convicted of the
same
crime receive disparate sentences based upon facts not made elements of that crime or proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
In this court’s view, Congress
cannot require such disparities without also requiring that the specific lengths of the sentences turn on facts determined at trial according to a common standard of proof based upon information meeting a common standard of reliability.
DUE PROCESS CONCERNS
In no area of law is a higher degree of certainty required than in the determination of the facts upon which an individual is to be deprived of personal liberty. The Due Process Clause commands that Congress may not require that any person be incarcerated for a fixed period directly attributable to a specific fact determination unless proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
In re Winship,
397 U.S. 358, 364, 90 S.Ct. 1068, 1073, 25 L.Ed.2d 368 (1970);
Mullaney v. Wilbur,
421 U.S. 684, 704, 95 S.Ct. 1881, 1892, 44 L.Ed.2d 508 (1975);
see also McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
477 U.S. 79, 106 S.Ct. 2411, 91 L.Ed.2d 67 (1986).
The Government has argued that a distinction is drawn when the issue is not
whether
one will be deprived of personal liberty, as in the determination of guilt or innocence, but rather for
how long
one will be deprived, as in sentencing. The Government points out that in fixing sentencing lengths, judges have always taken into account factors which were not elements of the crime, and as to which the relevant facts were not shown with any articulated degree of certainty.
The Government has not argued — nor could it — that judges have ever applied these factors with fixed weights applicable to all cases without adjustment to reflect differing degrees of certainty. By necessity, the exercise of discretion in sentencing requires the sentencing authority to weigh and balance various factors.
United States v. Wilkins,
659 F.2d 769, 773 (7th Cir.1981),
cert. denied,
454 U.S. 1102, 102 S.Ct. 681, 70 L.Ed.2d 646 (1981). It requires an equation between the cumulative weight of the factors deemed relevant for sentencing and the length of sentence imposed. Sentencing judges do not assign the same weight to facts deemed more likely than not on the basis of a poorly educated guess as they would to facts proved beyond a reasonable doubt. In the exercise of sentencing discretion, judges adjust the weights of the sentences to reflect the differences in the relative certainty of information on which the sentences are based.
Determinations of fact made by proof beyond a reasonable doubt and based upon evidence presented at a jury trial cannot be said to have the same weight as determinations deemed simply more likely than not on the basis of sparse or unreliable information. If Congress desires to fix specific sentencing lengths in advance of the commission of crimes, it must also fix the standard of proof.
For that purpose there is only one Constitutional standard: proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Mullaney,
421 U.S. at 698, 95 S.Ct. at 1889.
This court has not found or been directed to any case which suggests that Congress may effect any other result.
McMillan v. Pennsylvania
does not go nearly so far.
McMillan
provided that reduced standards of proof may be appropriate in sentencing when the fixed period of incarceration that follows from the application of a “yes or no” sentencing factor is proportionate to the sentence likely to follow from the underlying conviction. It did not sanction a lesser standard, however, where the portion of the sentence that follows from the application of the sentencing factor is the “tail that wags the dog of the substantive offense.”
On the contrary, by distinguishing without overruling
Mullaney
and
Winship,
and acknowledging that there is no “bright line” between those two cases and it,
McMillan
lends support to the proposition that in the extreme case, when application of sentencing factors may overwhelm the sentence that would otherwise be imposed on the basis of proven elements, the statute cannot be constitutional. The Guidelines therefore fail to withstand constitutional scrutiny.
Case Analysis
The probation office has proposed that the Guideline range applicable to Davis is 360 months to life imprisonment. The Government has urged the court to sentence Davis to life.
Under the Guidelines, the specific offense for which Davis was convicted requires confinement for periods ranging from ten months to life imprisonment. Where the actual sentencing range will fall depends entirely upon factors to be determined in connection with sentencing.
None
of the factors that will determine whether Davis will be incarcerated for one
year
or for the rest of his life were submitted to the jury or proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The information upon which many of the relevant facts must be determined is extremely sparse. Most of it comes solely from biased or otherwise unreliable sources.
1. Offense Conduct.
The probation office has assigned a base offense level of 36 to Davis’ offense conduct. This assignment rests upon the conclusion that defendants intended to purchase more than 50 kilograms of cocaine. The offense level of 36 requires that Davis be incarcerated for a minimum of
Yllk
years, unless the Guidelines provide some separate basis for increasing or reducing the offense level, or for making a departure.
Testimony of the Agent at trial indicated that the agreed-upon cocaine transaction was for the purchase of 100 kilograms at a price of $12,500 per kilogram.
In addition, the jury determined that the defendants brought more than $1,148,000 to the meeting place and that that amount should be forfeited.
A transaction involving 50 kilograms or more calls for an offense level of 36 under the Guidelines.
Although the court believes that the information on which the probation office made its determination is adequate, this determination is nevertheless worthy of discussion. The amount of money brought to the scene by the defendants was insufficient to carry out the alleged bargain. Presumably to avoid this problem, the Government asked for and received a special instruction from the court that the amount of cocaine alleged in the Indictment was not an element of the charged crime and need not be established beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Guidelines now require that the court determine whether more than 50 kilograms was involved in the transaction. If it makes such a determination, the court must impose precisely the same penalty as if the fact had been submitted to the jury and established beyond a reasonable doubt. The penalty may not be altered to reflect
any concern held by the court for the degree of certainty.
The court has little doubt that the jury would have found beyond a reasonable doubt that more than 50 kilograms of cocaine were involved in the attempted purchase. But this is only by chance. The same determination would have been required if the Indictment had alleged no specific amount and the testimony had indicated that the agreed transaction involved the sale of only 50 kilograms at $12,500 per kilogram.
In such a case, if the defendants had arrived at the scene with only $600,000— enough to purchase only 48 kilograms at the agreed price — the court would have been required to select an explanation for the discrepancy in order to determine how much cocaine was involved in the transaction.
This determination could not reasonably be made on the basis of the information available. It certainly could not have been made beyond a reasonable doubt or by any other articulated standard of proof. It also could not have been avoided.
2. Role in the Offense.
The information upon which Davis’ role in the offense must be assessed is even more problematic. The Guidelines provide that the total offense level may be increased or decreased by as much as four points depending on this determination.
The probation office has recommended a four point increase, based upon its determination that Davis was an “organizer or leader” of the criminal activity.
For the four point enhancement recommended by the probation office to be applicable, however, the “criminal activity” in which the defendant was a participant must involve at least five participants or be “otherwise extensive.” The charged offense involved only four persons. The probation office recommendation therefore reflects
its
conclusion, unsupported by any substantial evidence introduced at trial, that Davis was an organizer or leader in an extensive criminal activity which goes considerably beyond the charged offense.
The information relied upon by the probation office appears to have consisted entirely of statements attributed to the Agent.
These were to the effect that Davis admitted that the money brought to the scene was “his own” and that he was involved in extensive drug dealing in and around Oakland, California.
Such statements are demonstrably contrary to the consistent testimony offered in
this court in other cases. Such testimony has suggested that it is highly unusual for major drug dealers to personally carry large amounts of money to the scene of out-of-town cocaine exchanges, particularly when dealing with strangers whom they have neither met nor done business with before. Indeed, on several occasions, expert testimony offered in this court by the Government has suggested that it is more usual for major dealers
not
to be present. Instead, the testimony has suggested that major drug dealers tend to employ others to carry the money to the meeting place in exchange for relatively small cuts or payments.
Testimony in other cases also has suggested that it is
not
usual for major drug dealers to have long and continuing arrest records for petty street crimes. Such an arrest record is more consistent with the pattern known to be associated with low level drug dealers who actually do their business in the streets and who might be available to serve as money carriers for others who are “leaders” or “organizers.”
In the court’s view, the available information is inadequate to make a fair determination concerning Davis’ role in the offense as required by the Guidelines. The question thus becomes how the court can rationally apply this factor in the instant case even when the relevant evidence shows little “indicia of reliability.”
Some courts have suggested that the Guidelines factors should be applied according to a preponderance of the evidence standard.
The rationale underlying these decisions, however, is misleading. These courts suggest that the preponderance of the evidence standard is a known and accepted legal standard of proof and, therefore, may be considered fair and reliable. In fact, “preponderance of the evidence” has no consistent definition for Guideline purposes. It appears the standard is no more than that the relevant fact is deemed more likely true than not on the basis of the available information — no matter how limited or unreliable.
But, in this case, there is
no
reliable “evidence” upon which to apply the factors required by the Guidelines.
3. Departures.
In response to the general due process concerns regarding the coercive nature of Guidelines sentences, the Government argues that by virtue of the means provided in the Guidelines for sentencing departures, the court “continues to be able to insure a just sentence.”
While the Government acknowledges that sentences outside the applicable guideline range may be called for occasionally, it urges that “[njothing prevents a court from imposing
such a sentence; the only difference is that the reasons for the departure must be articulated and the parties can appeal.”
This statement reflects the view, apparently held by many, that if the Guidelines are upheld they will not prove overly pernicious. Simply stated, the view is that if the Guidelines produce what the trial judge sees as an unjust result, that judge should simply depart. In effect, this view suggests that, if the Guidelines are upheld, courts will rationalize away their mandatory nature by liberally interpreting the departure rules. It also assumes the difficult proposition that courts should and will simply ignore, in departure cases, the clear statutory intent of Congress in passing the Guidelines legislation.
The general departure provision is taken by the Guidelines directly from 18 U.S.C. § 3553(b).
It provides that the court may impose a sentence outside the Guideline range if it finds “that there exists an aggravating or mitigating circumstance of a kind or to a degree not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the Guidelines.” 18 U.S.C. § 3553(b).
The Sentencing Commission acknowledges that the circumstances which may warrant departure “by their very nature” cannot be listed and analyzed in advance.
Guidelines Manual,
§ 5K2.0, at 5.36. It is clear, however, that the Sentencing Commission intended to leave the departure window open only a crack.
Section 5K2.0 is the only acknowledgment in the Guidelines that relevant sentencing factors may not have been adequately taken into account.
To the court’s knowledge, the Guidelines do not contain any hint that a sentencing judge may refuse to consider or may alter the weight given to an identified guideline factor based upon the inadequacy of the information upon which the determination of that factor must be made. If that is the case, it is folly to suggest that the Guidelines do not prevent sentencing judges from insuring that their verdicts are just. It is equal folly to suggest that reasoned application of the departure rules can save the Guidelines from their basic unconstitutionality.
It is true, of course, that the pernicious effects of the Guidelines may be minimized if judges simply rationalize them away, and appeals courts permit them to do so. In fact, the long term effect of the Guidelines might well be reduced to the mere nuisance of requiring the production of writings purporting to reconcile decisions made subjectively with the objective mandates of the Guidelines.
In this court’s view, this cannot be the law nor can it be defended by legal principle. Eliminating the unconstitutional effects of the Guidelines by rationalizing them away is not the answer. In any event, such a result would be a long time coming and inevitably incomplete. Over time, the Guidelines would alter the conduct of many judges in those cases where the resulting injustice does not seem too great, and of some judges even when the resulting injustice is disproportionate but the basis for changing it by departure is unclear. To this court, the effort made in the Guidelines to narrow the disparity resulting from the exercise of judicial discretion by identifying and quantifying the factors to be considered is therefore both self-contradicting and self-defeating.
CONCLUSION
The very nature of discretion is that it requires the exercise of judgment as to factors too numerous to identify, too interrelated to be considered separately and
too indefinite to be assigned specific weights. Any attempt to control the basic nature of discretion by quantification and separation of the factors to be considered and preassignment of the weights to be given is ultimately doomed to failure. The range within which discretion may operate can be narrowed, but its basic nature cannot be altered. The attempt to do so through the Sentencing Guidelines can only lead over time to greater and more obviously unjust disparity than already exists.
This is not to say that Congress can do nothing to guide or narrow the range of judicial sentencing discretion. Both of these objectives are legitimate and achievable. What is not legitimate is to require sentencing judges to make fact determinations according to unconstitutional standards, and then mandate application of these factors in ways which force sentencing judges to choose between their oaths of office and their consciences.
Based on the foregoing, and good cause appearing therefore,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion to Declare the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 Unconstitutional is GRANTED.