Dеfendant-Appellant Celerino Campos-Diaz appeals his sentence for illegal reentry into the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b)(2). Campos-Diaz has faded to show reversible error; therefore, we affirm his sentеnce. However, we vacate and remand for the limited purpose of correcting a clericаl error in Campos-Diaz’s judgment.
I.
Campos-Diaz was sentenced in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Geоrgia. He asserts that the absence of a fast-track or early disposition sentencing program in that district, whiсh would have allowed the district judge to apply a downward departure to his sentence under U.S.S.G. § 5K3.1, violates thе Fifth Amendment Equal Protection Clause. Campos-Diaz therefore contends that the participation of some, but not all, federal judicial districts in the fast-track program creates an unconstitutional disparity between defendants sentenced in those districts and defendants sentenced in districts that do not participate in the рrogram.
We made this observation about the fast-track program:
The fast-track departure is available to defendants who agree to the factual basis of the criminal charge and waive the rights to file pretrial motions, to appeal, and to seek collateral relief (except for ineffective assistance of counsel), but only in judicial districts that participate in a[n] early disposition program authorized by the Attorney General of the United States and the United States Attorney for the district in which the court resides.
United States v. Castro,
II.
We have not determined whether a judicial distriсt’s lack of participation in the fast-track program creates a distinction that rises to the level of an equal protection violation.
2
We now join the First, Seventh, and Ninth Circuits in con-
Campos-Diaz asserts thаt we should apply strict scrutiny analysis to his case because his right to liberty is at stake. However, no binding authority indicates that the distinction between defendants sentenced in fast-track districts and defendants sentenced in other distriсts involves a suspect classification or infringes on a fundamental right.
See Doe v. Moore,
Instead, we review the constitutionality of disparate access to fast-track programs under the rational basis test.
See Melendez-Torres,
III.
Although we affirm Campos-Diaz’s sentence, we note that his judgment contains a clerical error. The distriсt court sentenced Campos-Diaz to 46 months imprisonment, but the judgment states that his term of imprisonment is 41 months. Neither pаrty raised this issue; however, we may raise the issue of a clerical error in the judgment
sua sponte
and vacate and remаnd with instructions that the district court correct the error.
See United States v. Massey,
AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
. Fast-track рrograms began in federal district courts in the southwestern United States to accommodate the large number оf illegal re-entry and other immigration cases pending in those districts.
See United States v. Martinez-Flores,
. In
Castro,
we concluded that a district court's failure to apply a fast-track departure was not plain error because the defendant in that case did not "identify any precedent, binding or otherwise, that has held that the limited availability of the fast-track departure violates equal protection.”
. None of our sister circuits have reached a contrary conclusion.
