MEMORANDUM AND ORDER RE: RE-SENTENCING
GORTON, District Judge.
This case involves the re-sentencing of the defendant, John Thompson, in the light of the First Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Thompson,
234 F.3d 74 (1st Cir.2000)
(“Thompson II”).
Mr. Thompson pled guilty to Count Five of a multi-count indictment, charging him with the distribution of cocaine base on February 11, 1997 in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
The charges grew out of a joint federal-state investigation of crack cocaine trafficking at the Bromley Heath Housing Development in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts.
On November 9, 1999, Mr. Thompson was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of sixty months, representing a downward departure of 17 months. The departure was based on Mr. Thompson’s extraordinary family circumstances (under the authority of U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6).
See United States v. Thompson,
74 F.Supp.2d 69 (D.Mass.1999)
(“Thompson I
”).
Central to
Thompson I
was a question: If this category of departure pivots on a finding of “extraordinary” family circumstances, what set of facts comprises “ordinary” family circumstances? To answer the question, I compared this defendant to defendants similarly situated with respect to the offense of conviction, evaluating the presentenee reports (“PSRs”) of fifty-four defendants. That group included code-fendants in Mr. Thompson’s case and, more generally, all defendants convicted of crack distribution in the District of Massachusetts.
Thompson I,
74 F.Supp.2d at 76-79. In addition, I raised another question: What was the underlying purpose of this departure — to reward a defendant for a good life, or to address the impact of incarceration on innocent third parties?
I concluded that based on either standard, relative to Mr. Thompson’s codefend-ants in the Bromley Heath investigation, or all other defendants convicted of a like offense, Mr. Thompson’s family circumstances were extraordinary. I outlined the reasons in detail in
Thompson I,
and more generally here:
Mr. Thompson grew up in the Bromley Heath projects of Jamaica Plain. He barely knew his own father, who was in and out of jail throughout his life. Mr. Thompson was twenty-four years old at the time of the first sentencing, and he had never before been incarcerated. Indeed, his record — one conviction for assault and
battery — reflected few encounters with law enforcement of any sort.
See Thompson I,
74 F.Supp.2d at 71 n. 6. He left high school when his girlfriend, Breii Murray, became pregnant. Unlike many in his peer group, he was determined to provide for her and their daughter, Jabria, despite his youth and lack of education. He became a member of Union Local 223 and maintained steady employment until his arrest on these charges.
Whatever role drug dealing played in Mr. Thompson’s life, it was minor. He supported his fiancee, and his daughters (a second daughter, Johnaiya, was born shortly after Jabria) both financially and emotionally. He took his eldest daughter to school each day and participated in his daughters’ care each day. He was determined to be the father that he had never had. In addition, Mr. Thompson was embraced by Ms. Murray’s family. He took his fiancee’s 80-year-old aunt to church each Sunday, and contributed to her household expenses. Released pending trial, Mr. Thompson continued to live his life along these lines. When he was released pending trial, the defendant continued to live the life of a responsible parent, friend, worker. He did not experience a sudden conversion just because the federal authorities were at his heels.
While I departed downward, the defendant’s final sentence was severe, particularly for a young man who had never before been in prison. He was sentenced to the mandatory minimum of 60 months.
On December 8, 2000, the First Circuit vacated the defendant’s sentence and remanded for re-sentencing.
United States v. Thompson,
234 F.3d 74 (1st Cir.2000)
(“Thompson II").
It answered the first question concerning the scope of comparison by holding that the proper approach is to compare any given defendant, regardless of the offense of which he has been convicted, to all defendants and not those similarly situated with respect to the offense of conviction. It did not answer the second question — the purpose of this departure.
Between the time of
Thompson II
and the instant re-sentencing, the First Circuit decided
United States v. Pereira,
272 F.3d 76 (1st Cir.2001), which apparently answered that question. The Court implied that the only issue of relevance in evaluating family departures under U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6 is the impact that a given sentencing can have on innocent third parties, not what family circumstances reflect about the defendant’s culpability.
On re-sentencing, Mr. Thompson raised the same issue as before: a downward departure for extraordinary family circumstances. In addition, the defendant raised two new issues: He sought the benefit of the “safety valve” under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(f) and U.S.S.G. § 5C1 .2, and he argued for a departure based on his extraordinary post-sentencing rehabilitation.
With respect to the application for “safety valve” treatment, while I have concluded that the defendant should be given an opportunity to meet the requirements, I cannot conclude that he has in fact qualified for it. The government has raised questions concerning the completeness of the defendant’s proffer that the defendant could not adequately rebut. With respect to the departure for extraordinary family obligations, while I remain concerned about the validity of the First Circuit’s approach, I have, of course, followed it. I have reviewed every departure for ex
traordinary family circumstances given to every single identifiable defendant in this District for the past ten years regardless of the crime of conviction. In applying the
Pereira
standard to the analysis, I cannot say that Mr. Thompson’s “family circumstances” meet these standards.
However, I have come to a different conclusion in connection with Mr. Thompson’s motion for departure based on post-sentencing rehabilitation. His record at Ft. Devens has been extraordinary. He has taken advantage of literally every program that the institution has offered. And notwithstanding his limited income in prison, he continues to support his family and his church even making a contribution to the American Red Cross after the tragedy of September 11, 2001. Accordingly, on January 24, 2002, I again departed downward to level 25 and sentenced Mr. Thompson to 60 months imprisonment.
A.
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MEMORANDUM AND ORDER RE: RE-SENTENCING
GORTON, District Judge.
This case involves the re-sentencing of the defendant, John Thompson, in the light of the First Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Thompson,
234 F.3d 74 (1st Cir.2000)
(“Thompson II”).
Mr. Thompson pled guilty to Count Five of a multi-count indictment, charging him with the distribution of cocaine base on February 11, 1997 in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
The charges grew out of a joint federal-state investigation of crack cocaine trafficking at the Bromley Heath Housing Development in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts.
On November 9, 1999, Mr. Thompson was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of sixty months, representing a downward departure of 17 months. The departure was based on Mr. Thompson’s extraordinary family circumstances (under the authority of U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6).
See United States v. Thompson,
74 F.Supp.2d 69 (D.Mass.1999)
(“Thompson I
”).
Central to
Thompson I
was a question: If this category of departure pivots on a finding of “extraordinary” family circumstances, what set of facts comprises “ordinary” family circumstances? To answer the question, I compared this defendant to defendants similarly situated with respect to the offense of conviction, evaluating the presentenee reports (“PSRs”) of fifty-four defendants. That group included code-fendants in Mr. Thompson’s case and, more generally, all defendants convicted of crack distribution in the District of Massachusetts.
Thompson I,
74 F.Supp.2d at 76-79. In addition, I raised another question: What was the underlying purpose of this departure — to reward a defendant for a good life, or to address the impact of incarceration on innocent third parties?
I concluded that based on either standard, relative to Mr. Thompson’s codefend-ants in the Bromley Heath investigation, or all other defendants convicted of a like offense, Mr. Thompson’s family circumstances were extraordinary. I outlined the reasons in detail in
Thompson I,
and more generally here:
Mr. Thompson grew up in the Bromley Heath projects of Jamaica Plain. He barely knew his own father, who was in and out of jail throughout his life. Mr. Thompson was twenty-four years old at the time of the first sentencing, and he had never before been incarcerated. Indeed, his record — one conviction for assault and
battery — reflected few encounters with law enforcement of any sort.
See Thompson I,
74 F.Supp.2d at 71 n. 6. He left high school when his girlfriend, Breii Murray, became pregnant. Unlike many in his peer group, he was determined to provide for her and their daughter, Jabria, despite his youth and lack of education. He became a member of Union Local 223 and maintained steady employment until his arrest on these charges.
Whatever role drug dealing played in Mr. Thompson’s life, it was minor. He supported his fiancee, and his daughters (a second daughter, Johnaiya, was born shortly after Jabria) both financially and emotionally. He took his eldest daughter to school each day and participated in his daughters’ care each day. He was determined to be the father that he had never had. In addition, Mr. Thompson was embraced by Ms. Murray’s family. He took his fiancee’s 80-year-old aunt to church each Sunday, and contributed to her household expenses. Released pending trial, Mr. Thompson continued to live his life along these lines. When he was released pending trial, the defendant continued to live the life of a responsible parent, friend, worker. He did not experience a sudden conversion just because the federal authorities were at his heels.
While I departed downward, the defendant’s final sentence was severe, particularly for a young man who had never before been in prison. He was sentenced to the mandatory minimum of 60 months.
On December 8, 2000, the First Circuit vacated the defendant’s sentence and remanded for re-sentencing.
United States v. Thompson,
234 F.3d 74 (1st Cir.2000)
(“Thompson II").
It answered the first question concerning the scope of comparison by holding that the proper approach is to compare any given defendant, regardless of the offense of which he has been convicted, to all defendants and not those similarly situated with respect to the offense of conviction. It did not answer the second question — the purpose of this departure.
Between the time of
Thompson II
and the instant re-sentencing, the First Circuit decided
United States v. Pereira,
272 F.3d 76 (1st Cir.2001), which apparently answered that question. The Court implied that the only issue of relevance in evaluating family departures under U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6 is the impact that a given sentencing can have on innocent third parties, not what family circumstances reflect about the defendant’s culpability.
On re-sentencing, Mr. Thompson raised the same issue as before: a downward departure for extraordinary family circumstances. In addition, the defendant raised two new issues: He sought the benefit of the “safety valve” under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(f) and U.S.S.G. § 5C1 .2, and he argued for a departure based on his extraordinary post-sentencing rehabilitation.
With respect to the application for “safety valve” treatment, while I have concluded that the defendant should be given an opportunity to meet the requirements, I cannot conclude that he has in fact qualified for it. The government has raised questions concerning the completeness of the defendant’s proffer that the defendant could not adequately rebut. With respect to the departure for extraordinary family obligations, while I remain concerned about the validity of the First Circuit’s approach, I have, of course, followed it. I have reviewed every departure for ex
traordinary family circumstances given to every single identifiable defendant in this District for the past ten years regardless of the crime of conviction. In applying the
Pereira
standard to the analysis, I cannot say that Mr. Thompson’s “family circumstances” meet these standards.
However, I have come to a different conclusion in connection with Mr. Thompson’s motion for departure based on post-sentencing rehabilitation. His record at Ft. Devens has been extraordinary. He has taken advantage of literally every program that the institution has offered. And notwithstanding his limited income in prison, he continues to support his family and his church even making a contribution to the American Red Cross after the tragedy of September 11, 2001. Accordingly, on January 24, 2002, I again departed downward to level 25 and sentenced Mr. Thompson to 60 months imprisonment.
A.
Can the defendant can take advantage of the “safety valve” under U.S.S.G. §
5C1.2?
Mr. Thompson, who declined to make use of the “safety valve” under U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2 (“ § 5C1.2”) at his first sentencing, changed his mind at re-sentencing.
The government claims that he may not take advantage of § 5C1.2 because the district court lacks the power to review Mr. Thompson’s sentencing
de novo.
I disagree. Nothing in the mandate from the Court of Appeals in this case bars Mr. Thompson from taking advantage of § 5C1.2.
See United States v. Maldonado,
242 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir.2001) (“it is hard to find an appeals court forbidding
de novo
re-sentencing, unless the mandate has affirmatively restricted the remand.”)
Second, the government argues that Mr. Thompson, because of his refusal to take advantage of § 5C1.2, waived his right to avail himself of that provision. Plainly, a defendant cannot be held to have waived issues he did not bring up at an earlier proceeding. In
Maldonado,
for example, the defendant raised issues in his re-sentencing which had not been raised at the earlier sentencing without objection by the First Circuit.
Maldonado,
242 F.3d at 3-4.
Citing to
United States v. Ticchiarelli,
171 F.3d 24 (1st Cir.1999), the government suggests that the instant case is different because of defendant’s affirmative conduct: his express refusal to avail himself of § 5C1.2. But
Ticchiarelli
is inapposite. In
Ticchiarelli,
the district court made an explicit finding at the first sentencing that the defendant was a
manager,
supervisor, or leader of the conspiracy under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1. The defendant’s initial appeal did not challenge the court’s manager/leader finding. Applying the “law of the case” doctrine, the First Circuit held that the district court could not reopen the issue. Significantly, however,
Maldonado
does not cite
Ticchiarelli.
In
Maldonado,
the defendant was permitted to raise issues on re-sentencing as to which there had been no previous findings by the court.
Here, there was no prior finding on the safety valve issue. Indeed, the only reason the issue was even mentioned in the first sentencing was because of the Court’s inquiry. If the Court had remained silent, Mr. Thompson would have been in exactly the same position as Maldonado.
In any event, the government’s position is disingenuous. As I noted at re-sentencing, if the defendant suddenly decided to come forward with information on a major fugitive in order to receive a departure on the basis of substantial assistance or the safety valve, surely no one would wag his finger and say, “sorry, too late,” no matter what position the defendant had taken at the first sentencing.
Nothing in the language of the safety valve, its legislative history, or its rationale suggests a different result. The safety valve was designed to give low-level drug offenders who played only supporting roles in drug trafficking schemes an opportunity to mitigate the harsh effects of mandatory minimum sentences, even when their cooperation is not sufficient for the government’s U.S.S.G. § 5K1 motion. They are to be given an opportunity for a truthful rendition of the events, whether or not the government actually receives any beneficial information.
The fact that Mr. Thompson did not take advantage of the safety valve in the first sentencing cannot be held against him in the re-sentencing. In this country, we
do not assume that defendants must confess and “tell” on friends and neighbors, even though we reward them when they do. We do not — or should not — regard the decision to incriminate oneself and/or others as an easy one. The fact that the defendant changed his mind about giving a proffer after spending some time in a federal prison does not mean that his earlier decision should somehow count as a waiver of his right to claim safety valve benefits.
But while Mr. Thompson had the right to try to qualify for the safety valve, I agree with the government that he has not done so here. The statute makes it clear that no weight should be placed on the value of the proffer to the government, but only on its truthfulness.
The government argued that Mr. Thompson’s account failed to meet this standard.
It is extremely difficult for the Court to evaluate the government’s position. Defense counsel plainly wanted to limit the proffer to the specific sale to which the defendant pled guilty, and the other sales referred to in the counts the government agreed to drop — and little more. The government had a broader view, seeking to question the defendant about drug dealing on other occasions. From the government’s perspective, Mr. Thompson seemed to be hiding information. Moreover, they believed his answers were implausible based on their analysis of his demeanor and on information gleaned from other sources, including cooperating witnesses.
Mr. Thompson may well have been holding back, based on his counsel’s advice about the appropriate scope of questioning. His account of his drug activities may well have been different from that of the cooperating witnesses. The problem is that on this record I have no way of knowing who is telling the truth, and the salience of the information that Mr. Thompson supposedly left out. Under these circumstances, the party with the burden of proof — here the defendant — has failed. I cannot conclude that defendant met the requirements of the safety valve.
B.
Does the defendant qualify for a departure based on extraordinary family circumstances?
In
United States v. Lacarubba,
184 F.Supp.2d 89 (D.Mass.2002), I dealt in detail with the standard for evaluating a defendant’s eligibility for a departure based on extraordinary family circumstances after the First Circuit’s decision in
Thompson II
and
United States v. Pereira,
272 F.3d 76 (1st Cir.2001). I will not revisit that discussion except to outline the following general principles.
The Commission’s language in U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6 that family ties are “not ordinarily relevant” is hardly clear. U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6. While other Guidelines — for example, the base offense level for a given quantity of drugs — are precise, this Guideline is vague. While other Guidelines pro
vide a rationale or even specific examples,
this Guideline does not. Nor did the Commission publish evidence to support its conclusion that “offender characteristics are not ordinarily relevant.”
U.S.S.G. § 5H1.6. It never made available to courts and advocates the data supporting the “typical case,” from which to judge the atypical.
There is no legislative history and no public hearings to which a trial court can refer.
The logical conclusion is this: Congress and the Commission wanted
courts
to interpret these provisions as they sought to individualize sentences, to create a common law of sentencing defining the boundaries of typicality and atypicality. And in that enterprise, the district court plays a unique and important role.
How does a court go about this task? I described it in
Lacarubba:
The enterprise is in part empirical. How does this human being compare to others the trial court has seen? But it necessarily involves more than simply counting noses. How atypical does he or she
have
to be — one in a million, five in a million, five percent of all defendants, etc.? This kind of line-drawing involves the exercise of normative judgments: What kind of punishment do human beings facing these situations
deserve
given the purposes of the SRA? Where
ought
the line between typical and atypical be? No bright line rule was announced by the Commission; none can be announced by a court.
Lacarubba,
184 F.Supp.2d at 93-94.
1.
Scope of review under Thompson
In
Thompson II,
234 F.3d at 77-78, the First Circuit indicated that family circumstances must be measured against the population of all federal defendants regardless of offense, rather than, in the statute’s language, defendants “with similar records who have been found guilty of similar criminal conduct.” 28 U.S.C. § 991(b)(1)(B).
I have made that comparison. I have reviewed all PSRs of all identifiable defendants who received downward departures for family circumstances, and made those
PSRs — with appropriate protections— available to counsel.
The results were troubling. The legislative history of the provision authorizing the “family circumstances” guideline, suggests that Congress’s goal was to discourage courts from considering family ties in order to keep them from departing upward in the case of disadvantaged defendants. Congress warned the Commission to “guard against the inappropriate use of incarceration for those defendants who lack education, employment and stabilizing ties.” S.Rep. No. 98-225 at 175,
reprinted in
1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 3358.
See also
Susan E. Ellingstad,
The Sentencing Guidelines: Downward Departures Based on a Defendant’s Extraordinary Family Ties and Responsibilities,
76 Minn. L.Rev. 957, 973 (1992).
Yet, it appears from my review of the records, that the situation Congress was concerned about has, to a degree, continued. Of the 48 cases in which downward departures were given, just over 60% were in white collar cases, largely involving defendants with advantaged backgrounds. By contrast, over the last five years, only 27% of the sentencings in this District were for white collar offenses.
And those observations underscore the problems with the First Circuit’s directive about the scope of comparison for determining departures — that any given defendant is to be compared to all defendants to determine if he is “typical” or “atypical” with respect to the trait being considered. The Court’s holding in
Thompson II
is not consistent with the express language of the Sentencing Reform Act (“SRA”),
the Guidelines,
and the scholarly commen
tary.
Moreover, although
Thompson II
cites to earlier First Circuit precedent,
United States v. DeMasi,
40 F.3d 1306 (1st Cir.1994), that case never dealt with the express language of the SRA or the Guidelines. In
DeMasi,
the district court gave the defendant the benefit of a downward departure for his good works and community activities after comparing him, a well-heeled bank robber, to other bank robbers with fewer economic advantages. The First Circuit was rightfully concerned that economic situation had wrongly skewed the trial court’s decision. But here, comparing a disadvantaged defendant to all defendants, including the most advantaged ones, has had precisely the opposite impact. The circumstances of Mr. Thompson’s life that seem remarkable in context, that demonstrate extraordinary stability and responsibility relative to those similarly situated with respect to this offense, may not be so remarkable when compared to middle income or upper class offenders.
But while there are problems with either approach, the overwhelming weight of authority supports the approach of
Thompson I.
Congress focused only on “unwarranted disparity” between individuals who were similarly situated with respect to the offense of conviction, it made no effort to harmonize all sentences, to somehow rank all offenses in a single grid. Nor did the Commission.
In any case, the issues that the Court was concerned about in
DeMasi
can be addressed under the Guidelines, even if Mr. Thompson is compared to those convicted of similar offenses. Because of the philanthropy made possible by his income, a departure may have been improper on other grounds—for example, under U.S.S.G. § 5H1.11 (“Military, civic, charitable, or public service; employment-related contributions; and similar good works are not ordinarily relevant in determining whether a sentence should be outside the applicable guideline range”)
Nevertheless, so long as
Thompson II
stands, I am obviously obliged to apply it. And even when I do, when I compare Mr. Thompson to all other defendants, he continues to stand out. The next question is whether he does so in the fashion and to the degree required by
United States v. Pereira.
2.
Impact of Pereira
In
Pereira,
the defendant pled guilty to subscribing false tax returns and using the mails for commercial bribery. The trial court found Pereira’s offense level to be 16 but departed downward to a level 10,
based on his extraordinary responsibilities for the care of his parents. The court sentenced Pereira to three years of probation with six months’ home confinement. The First Circuit, concluding that the district court had erred, reversed the sentence and remanded the case. The Court first concluded that the defendant must show that the care he or she rendered was “irreplaceable” to qualify for this departure.
United States v. Pereira,
272 F.3d 76, 82-83 (1st Cir.2001).
In an “errata” sheet, issued after the Court denied en banc review, the Court seemed to alter the standard to a showing of “irreplaceable or otherwise extraordinary.”
Pereira,
272 F.3d at 82 (citation to passage in amended opinion reflecting changes as ordered by “errata” sheet).
Many questions remain. Given the
Per-eira
standard, even as amended,.it would seem that the departure is only available to effect a sentence of probation. Once someone is in jail for a period of time, he has presumably already been “replaced.”
Cf. United States v. Canoy,
38 F.3d 893, 906 (7th Cir.1994).
Mr. Thompson has spent a number of years in prison under his original sentence. His children — and in particular his eldest daughter now seven — are suffering. But the family is coping. The extended family that embraced Mr. Thompson continues to stand by him and care for his children. Whatever the costs of their adjustment, and whatever their continuing pain, which I do not mean to minimize, they cannot be characterized as “extraordinary” under the applicable First Circuit law.
C.
Should the defendant receive a downward departure on account of extraordinary post offense rehabilitation?
In
Maldonado,
242 F.3d at 5, the Court reaffirmed the appropriateness of a downward departure on re-sentencing because of “extraordinary circumstances reflecting rehabilitation after an earlier (now vacated) sentence for the same crime.” Although the ground is no longer available to defendants,
all parties agree that it is available to Mr. Thompson because of the timing of his plea and sentencing.
In
United States v. Bradstreet,
207 F.3d 76, 81-84 (1st Cir.2000), the Court found that a departure was permissible based on post-sentence rehabilitation if this rehabilitation is present to such an exceptional degree beyond the normal “rehabilitation” which is accounted for under the standard “acceptance of responsibility.”
Between the first sentencing and the remand, Mr. Thompson was in jail. The opportunities for rehabilitation for a detained defendant are more limited than for one on bail pending appeal. Mr. Thompson could not demonstrate to me that he had resumed his life with his family and his union work, this time without drug dealing or other illegal activities. Moreover, while Mr. Thompson had problems
with drugs, they had not disabled him from functioning as a father or a worker. As a result, he could not show the kind of profound changes that addicts demonstrate when they “kick their habit” and begin to live responsible lives.
Rather, the building blocks of a responsible life were already in place before Mr. Thompson went to prison. As I found in
Thompson I,
long before his encounter with the criminal justice system, he was caring for his children and for his girlfriend’s family. Long before the first sentencing, he showed his attachment to his church and his community.
What makes Mr. Thompson’s record in prison extraordinary is that he has done virtually every single thing that it is possible to do in prison — every course, every program, every opportunity.
And he has done all of this while still seeing his children regularly, writing to them, sending money to his family, his church, and after the tragedy of September 11, 2001, even to the Red Cross. His girlfriend of over eight years and her family continue to support him. His commitment is unfailing. In a letter to the Court, he writes:
I have read statistics that indicate 70% of black families in the United States do not have a father figure, and the mother is the head of the household. In my personal life, my father has been in jail for many years. I have known how important it is for children to have both a father and a mother. I do not want to be doomed to mistakes of the past, nor do I want my children to be doomed.
His record warrants departure on this ground. - Accordingly, I depart downward to level 25 and sentence Mr. Thompson to 60 months.
SO ORDERED.