We consolidate these two cases for decision because they raise the same issue. In the first case, Alejandro Galicia-Cardenas was charged in a single-count indictment alleging that he entered the United States without permission after having previously been deported following a 1994 conviction for an aggravated felony — second degree robbery in Los Angeles. Galicia-Carde-nas entered a guilty plea to the charge in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. Vega-Lopez was charged with the same offense, but his aggravated felony was a 1997 conviction for possession of marijuana for sale, ironically (we assume) also in Los Angeles. He entered a guilty plea to the charge in the Western District of Wisconsin. Vega-Lopez appeals his sentence. The government appeals the sentence Galicia-Carde-nas received.
Both judges in these post-Booker cases appropriately consulted the guidelines and treated them as advisory. Vega-Lopez’s properly calculated guideline range was 27 to 33 months. The court imposed a sentence of 30 months. Galicia-Cardenas, who had a prior conviction for a crime of violence, fared worse under the guidelines *555 as his properly calculated advisory range was 41 to 51 months. His sentence, however, was 27 months, 3 months less than the term Vega-Lopez received.
In sentencing Mr. Galicia-Cardenas, the judge concluded that because the Eastern District of Wisconsin has not implemented a fast-track program to prosecute illegal reentry cases, the use of such programs in other districts created an unwarranted sentencing disparity between Galicia-Cardenas and other immigration offenders. As a result, the judge adjusted Galicia-Cardenas’s sentence downward the equivalent of 4 levels and arrived at the 27-month sentence. In sentencing Mr. Vega-Lopez, the district court declined to bestow a similar benefit on him because a fast-track program is not used in Wisconsin.
In 1994, the Southern District of California — a district which saw more than 600,-000 arrests annually at its border with Mexico in the early 1990s — adopted an early disposition or “fast-track” program. See Alan D. Bersin, Reinventing Immigration Law Enforcement in the Southern District of California, 8 Fed. Sentencing Rep. 254 (1996). Soon, other “border” states followed suit with fast-track programs of their own.
In 2003, Congress formally approved the use of fast-track programs. As part of the “Prosecutorial Remedies & Other Tools to End the Exploitation of Children Today Act” (the “PROTECT Act”), Congress granted the Attorney General the sole authority to create and implement fast-track programs. See Pub.L. No. 108-21, § 401(m)(2)(B), 117 Stat. 650, 675 (2003).
Although the general goal of the PROTECT Act was to reduce downward departures, Congress directed the Sentencing Commission to promulgate a policy statement authorizing a departure of not more than 4 levels when a defendant resolved his case through a fast-track program authorized by the Attorney General.
In a recent decision,
United States v. Martinez-Martinez,
It Is So Ordered.
