Bеrnard Christopher Costales was convicted on one count of receiving child pornography through the mail and sentenced to twelve months in prison. Costales appeals his conviction and the United States cross-appeals his sentence. We affirm the conviction. Because we find that the district court misapplied the Sentencing Guidelines and undermined the jury verdict in granting Cos-tales’ motion for a downward departure for playing a minor role in the offense, we vacate the sentence.
I.
A 1988 joint investigation by the United States Customs Service and the United States Postal Inspection Service revealed that the National Motion Picture Corporation (NMPC) of Miami, Florida, was engaged in the business of advertising and distributing sexually explicit material appealing to persons interested in bizarre erotica. Even though the investigation of NMPC did not reveal that the company had distributed child pornography, parts of its catalog did suggest to customers that it dealt in such material. NMPC agreed to аssist the government agencies in further investigation involving the distribution of obscene materials.
Because NMPC had received letters from current customers requesting child pornography, the government agents decided to use NMPC’s mailing list, consisting of the names and addresses of 5700 individuals who had ordered some type of pornography in the past, to begin an undercover operation directed at purchasers of child pornography. 1 Costales’ name was on NMPC’s mailing list.
In the fall of 1989, the Customs Service and Postal Inspection Service established an undercover business name, Ariste Internationale. NMPC mailed a new catalog to its customers that was accompanied by a flyer, prepared by a Customs agent, indicating NMPC’s association with Ariste. The flyer stated that Ariste specialized in difficult-to-obtain erotica and instructed prospective customers to respond directly to Ariste at a post office box in Brussels, Belgium for more information.
Early in 1990, Costales contacted the undercover agents at the Brussels address. He rеquested information and prices on videos, including “Young Girls Videos.” The agents mailed Costales an Ariste advertisement containing listings and short descriptions of child pornography videos being offered for sale. Costales responded with a letter stating that he wished to purchase eight named tapes, all of which had been described in the advertisement as depicting children under age fourteen engaged in sexually explicit activity; he also enclosed a credit card number for payment. The undercover agents copied the requested segments onto a videotape, marked the tape for identification, and prepared it to be sent to Costales in a controlled mail delivery.
Meanwhile, an undercover postal inspector wrote an unsolicited letter to Costales, stating that he was a distributor of hard-to-find pornographic materials and had acquired Costales’ name as a potential customer. The letter was accompanied by a questionnairе, 'which Costales completed and returned to the undercover inspector. In his response, Costales did not check the blank requesting that his name be removed from the undercover agent’s mailing list. Instead, he indicated that he was interested in receiving, inter alia, sexually explicit videos involving “Young Girls in Hard Core.” Following this expression of interest in child pornography, the Government again sent Costales a list of videos for sale with clear descriptions. Cos-tales sent a handwritten note, along with a personаl check, to the undercover postal inspector stating that he wished to purchase one of the tapes described as depicting chil *483 dren ages ten to twelve engaging in sexual activities. The- inspector then prepared a marked copy of the tape for delivery to Cos-tales.
On May 17, 1990, the undercover agents turned the two packages containing the requested videotapes over to a postal service employee for the controlled mail delivery to Costales. After they had been informed that Costales had accepted delivery of the packages, the agents obtained a search warrant for Costales’ residence and seized the tapes and mailing packages, along with the original Ariste advertisement and numerous other items. Costales was then indicted and convicted of violating child pornography laws, 18 U.S.C. § 2252 (1988), which make it a federal offense for a person knowingly to receive through the mail materials containing visual dеpictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. We summarily affirm the conviction. 2 See Fed.R.App.P. 11th Cir.R. 36-1.
The district court sentenced Costales to twelve months in prison to be followed by supervised release for a term of three years. Appellant’s sentence is subject to the provisions of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 and the guidelines promulgated thereunder. The district court determined that the appellant’s total offense level under the guidelines was 15. United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual,
§ 2G2.2 (Nov. 1, 1992). The court then granted Costales’ motion for a departure from the applicable guideline range, reasoning by analogy to section 3B1.2 which prescribes an adjustment for a mitigating role in the offense. In granting the departure, the district court relied upon
United States v. Bierley,
We are asked by the Government to review the district court’s application of the Sentencing Guidelines in granting a downward departure by analogy to section 3B1.2. 3
II.
We have jurisdiction over the Government’s appeal from Costales’ sentence, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3742(b).
See United States v. Yesil,
A.
The Sentencing Guidelines provide for adjustments to the offense level for the role the defendant played in committing the offense, based upon an examination of all relevant conduct. The mitigating role provision allows for a two or fоur-point decrease, respectively, in the offense level if the defendant was á “minor” or “minimal” participant in the criminal offense. U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2. As the Commission explained in the application notes, this section applies “to a defendant who plays a minimal role in concerted activity. It is intended to cover defendants who are plainly among the least culpable of those involved in the conduct of a group.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2, comment: (n. 1). The Commission goes on to state that “a minor participant means any participant who is less culpable than most other participants, but whose role could not be described as minimal.”
Id.
at n. 3.
See United States v. Cacho,
Section 3B1.2 is. clearly inapplicable in this case of its own force because there was only one “participant,” as the term has been construed in the Sentencing Guidelines, in the criminal receipt of child pornography materials. First, “participation” under the aggravating and mitigating role guidelines implies criminal liability and intent, that the individual be an actuál mеmber of the plan or conspiracy. The Commission clearly contemplated that participation requires criminal culpability:
A “participant” is a person who is criminally responsible for the commission of the offense, but need not have been convicted. A person who is not criminally responsible .for the commission of the offense (e.g., an undercover law enforcement official) is not a participant.
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1, comment, (n. 1);
United States v. Markovic,
In arriving at an appropriate sentence, a district court is not necessarily cabined by the precise nature of the crime for which the defendant was convicted.
5
Section 3B1 allows the sentencing judge to look to the contours of the underlying scheme itself and not merely the elements of the offense charged.
United States v. Rodriguez,
Costales was the sole participant in the crime of receipt of child pornography because only he was criminally culpable. All of the persons from whom he ordered and received the child pornography were government agents acting without any intent to violate the law. The term “participant” must necessarily be defined to encompass only those persons involved in criminal activity or all receipt crimes would be denominated concerted activity because of the involvement of innocent enablers such as mail carriers. As the district court correctly concluded, guideline 3B1.2 is not directly applicable in this ease.
B.
Even when an
adjustment
in a defendant’s offense level is not appropriate based upon the defendant’s role in the offense, some circuits have held that a
departure
may be available on that ground. The district court followed the reаsoning of the Third Circuit in
United States v. Bierley,
The Sentencing Reform Act allows a sentencing court to depart from the recommended range prescribed by the Sentencing Guidelines only in limited situations. Indeed, “[a] sentencing court may impose a sentence outside the applicable guideline only if ‘the court finds that there exists an aggravating or mitigating cirсumstance 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).”
United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez,
1..
Two circuits have held that downward departures may be available by analogy to section 3B1.2 even when an adjustment under that provision is not available. Their rationale is that “in view of the limited application of the section 3B1.2 minimal participant
adjustment,
the Sentencing Commission had failed to consider adequately the role of the defendant in conduct surrounding the offense of conviction.”
United States v. Valdez-Gonzalez,
If the Guidelines authorize departure in “an atypical case, one to which a particular1 guideline linguistically applies but where conduct significantly differs from the norm,” Ch. 1, Pt. A, 4(b), a fortiori they authorize departure in an atypical case where an adjustment would otherwise be authorized for the same conduct but, for *486 linguistic reasons, the adjustment Guideline does not apply.... Indeed, it makes little sense to authorize departure for a defendant who procured material from a nationwide child pornography ring but not for a defendant whose supplier was an undercover postal inspector.
Bierley,
The threshold issue for our inquiry is whether, in formulating the adjustment for a minor role in the offense, the Commission considered or accounted for the possibility that all of the actors in a particular criminal situation aside from the defendant would be government agents. If the Commission fully considered a factor in formulating the Guidelines, a sentencing court may not depart from the Guidelines -even if it disagrees with the Commission’s determinations.
United States v. Alpert,
When the Commission decided to limit Sections 3B1.1 and 3B1.2 to offenses committed by more than one criminally responsible participant, the Commission necessarily decided that no sentence adjustment should be allowed based on a defendant’s role relative to other participants if none of those other participants is “criminally responsible.” This limitation on the applicability of Sections 3B1.1 and 3B1.2 was not “fortuitous,” ... but was necessarily the result of a deliberate choice.
Bierley,
*487 2.
Furthermore, the departure granted by the district court in this case was unreasonable and inconsistent with the overall intent of the Guidelines because it implicitly undermined the verdict returned by the jury. The reasoning behind the departure by analogy implies that, while others involved in the crime may not technically be participants within the meaning of the guidelines because of their status as government agents, their conduct is factually indistinguishable from that which would make a “nоrmal” person a participant, thereby entitling the defendant to an adjustment. A necessary predicate to this conclusion is a determination that the government agents were themselves wrongdoers, the actors bearing the largest share of responsibility for the appellant’s offense. A court must provide some convincing justification in order to treat a non-liable, non-defendant as a participant.
The law mitigates conduct of a defendant where the government engages in оverreaching or outrageous misconduct that “violates fundamental fairness and shocks the universal cause of justice.”
Walther,
In this case, the court denied appellant’s motion to dismiss the indictment for outrageous governmental misconduct, and the jury rejected Costales’ claim of entrapment. In fact, the jury found full blown criminal intent on the pаrt of the defendant — criminal disposition along with a corresponding lack of inducement or coercion by the government.
By granting the downward departure by analogy to section 3B1.2, the district court suggests that the Government contributed to the criminal enterprise, and that the wrongdoing in this case was not limited to the. defendant. Costales could not be a “minor participant” if the court considered him to be the sole criminal participant, the only malefactor. The message of the sentenсe is that, while the Government’s conduct was not so outrageous as to require that the indictment be dismissed, it was nevertheless wrong in some sense. If Costales was a minor participant, then the Government by definition had to be the major participant. This implication flies directly in the face of the jury finding that Costales was not entrapped, a finding which necessarily means that there was no causal relationship between the Government’s involvement in the case and the defendant’s commission of the crime. The jury concluded that Costales was predisposed to purchase child pornography and that he *488 made his own decisions without governmental coercion.
The effect on the public of the district court’s actions in this case is to imply in sentencing that the judge had doubt as to whether the case should have gone forward at all, or alternatively, whether there was sufficient evidence for the jury to convict. By finding Costales’ role in the offense to be minor in comparison with that of the Government, the court suggests reasonable doubt as to whether appellant’s predisposition overrode the activity of the government agents. Where a court truly believes that the defendant was a minor participant in such a situation, it should evaluate whether a new trial is in order. But a district court cannot use the post-trial sentencing process to call the jury’s verdict into question. We are confident that the Commission did not intend the Sentencing Guidelines as an instrument for undermining confidence in a jury verdict. A departure from the recommended sentencing rаnge which has such an effect is neither reasonable nor consistent with the Guidelines.
III.
We affirm Costales’ conviction. Because we find that the district court misapplied the Sentencing Guidelines in granting Costales’ motion for a downward departure, however, we vacate his sentence and remand this case to the district court for resentencing.
AFFIRMED in part; VACATED and REMANDED in part.
Notes
. The investigation used the entire mailing list because, in the interests of customer confidentiality, NMPC had destroyed most of the letters it received specifically requesting child pornography.
. Costales’ direct challenges to his conviction do not merit extended discussion. Appellant contends that the district court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment on the ground that his Fifth Amendment due process, rights were violated by outrageous governmental misconduct during the course of the investigation. We find nothing in the record, however, to indicate official action that violates fundamental fairness.
See United States v. Walther,
. Costales suggests that the Government did not formally object to the findings and conclusions of the district court after sentence was imposed as mandated by the rule аnnounced in
United States v. Jones,
.
See also United States v. Belletiere,
. The United States Sentencing Commission amended the Guidelines Manual in 1990 to make it clear that "[t]he determination of a defendant’s role in the offense is to be made on the basis of all conduct within thе scope of § 1B1.3 (Relevant Conduct) ... and not solely on the basis of elements and acts cited in the count of conviction.” U.S.S.G. Ch. 3, Pt. B, intro, comment.
. The Ninth Circuit arrived at the same conclusion in
United States v. Valdez-Gonzalez,
. Significantly, the instant case is not an atypical case of receipt of child pornography but would more likely be considered a "heartland” case than one "where conduct signifiсantly differs from the norm.”
. The
Bierley
court appears to have been in search of a specific mention of the possibility of a departure by analogy. The
Guidelines Manual
admittedly includes no such mention. As the Ninth Circuit remarked, "Guidelines section 3BÍ.4, which indicates that sections 3B1.1-.3 provide the exclusive basis for
adjustments
based on 'role in the offense,’ says nothing about
departures
based upon similar considerations."
Valdez-Gonzalez,
. In
United States v. Crawford,
. This case differs significantly from the Supreme Court's recent child pornography entrapment case,
Jacobson v. United States,
— U.S. —,
