DISSENT UPON IMPOSITION OF SENTENCE
The Court imposes a sentence of 41 months upon the defendant. The Court bows to the intent and authority of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, but respectfully disagrees with its decision in
United States v. Dyck,
At the time of the original sentencing, the Court found, and still believes, that the case against Pedro Dyck falls outside the heartland of cases contemplated by § 2L1.2 of Federal Sentencing Guidelines. See Findings for Departure under 5K2.0,
United States v. Pedro Dyck,
C2-02-45,
I. Facts
In October of 2001, the defendant, a 19 year old Mennonite with a fourth grade education, was convicted of a federal drug trafficking offense for attempting to smuggle approximately 85 pounds of marijuana into the United States. At his sentencing, the district court in Texas recognized that he played a mitigating role in the offense, in essence the defendant acted as a mule. The court sentenced him to twelve months and one day imprisonment. After his release from prison in February of 2002, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) ordered him permanently removed from the United States.
The defendant, a naturalized Canadian citizen, returned to Rosendale, Manitoba to live with his brothers. At some point, the defendant decided to travel to Toronto, Ontario to visit friends. In July of 2002, he paid John Fehr to drive him to Toronto. John Fehr decided the best route from Manitoba to Toronto was through the *1018 United States as he believed the highway-system in the United States is far superior to the highway system in Canada. John Fehr, however, did not inform the defendant of his intentions to travel through the United States. The defendant was sleeping in the vehicle and awoke as the vehicle approached the border station near Pembi-na, North Dakota. The defendant informed the driver that he was not allowed in the United States, but Mr. Fehr told the defendant to remain silent and let him do the talking. At the port of entry, the border patrol officer became suspicious of the car’s occupants. The defendant was subsequently arrested and charged with attempted reentry of a previously deported or removed alien, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a).
The defendant proceeded to trial contending that he did not “willfully” violate the law. The Court rejected this defense and refused to instruct the jury on it. After a short trial, the jury convicted the defendant. The Court initially calculated the Guideline as a Net Offense Level 20, Criminal History Category III, dictating a 41 to 51 month sentence. At sentencing, the Court found that the case fell significantly outside the heartland of cases contemplated by § 2L1.2 and departed, imposing a sentence of 6 months upon the defendant. The United States appealed and the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit vacated the sentence and remanded for re-sentencing, mandating a sentence within the 41-51 month range as initially calculated by this Court.
II. Discussion
A. Part One — Usurping of Discretion
Congress and the Sentencing Commission created the Sentencing Guidelines for file purpose of providing “reasonable uniformity in sentencing by narrowing the wide disparity in sentences imposed for similar criminal offenses committed by similar offenders.” USSG ch. 1, Pt. A (2002). The complete elimination of sentencing disparity is a noble task, but an impossible task due to the differing nature of every crime and every criminal. Sentencing is necessarily subjective and must be based on the individual and his or her crime. In fact, Congress recognized the necessity of individualized sentencing when it passed the legislation that prompted the Guidelines.
Koon v. United States,
The Sentencing Commission recognized the inherent impossibility of completely objective sentencing and did not attempt to totally eliminate subjectivity in sentencing. For instance, the application of Guidelines such as § 3E1.1, § 4A1.3 and § 5K2.0 is subjective and calls for the exercise of sentencing discretion. The subjectivity of the Guidelines is no more evident than in the present case. This Court made a sincere attempt to sentence the defendant within the bounds of the Guidelines and believes each departure was a fact-based judgment call within its discretion.
United States v. Kapitzke,
The lack of deference frustrates this Court and the frustration is not limited to
*1019
the facts of this case. Before the Guidelines, district courts enjoyed almost unbridled discretion in sentencing.
Larson v. United States,
The Guidelines sacrifice on the alter of uniformity traditionally successful sanctions of the criminal justice system. The Guidelines rarely permit a sentence of probation, a sanction recognized to reduce recidivism. Substance abuse treatment as an alternative to incarceration likewise is not permitted by the Guidelines in any but minor cases. Drug courts, which have worked in some state jurisdictions, simply are not available in most Guideline cases. The Attorney General and the Bureau of Prisons no longer recognize half-way house or community confinement placements whenever incarceration is required by the Guidelines. In too many cases, the Court’s only option is incarceration at a facility designated by the Bureau of Prisons.
As a result, record numbers of inmates reside in our prisons, in proportions embarrassing to a modern democratic society. Of course, Guidelines alone are not to blame. The advent of mandatory minimum sentences also divest sentencing discretion away from the sentencing judge. The wisdom of mandatory mínimums has been publicly questioned by Chief Justice Rehnquist, Justice Kennedy and Justice Breyer, among others. “I can accept neither the necessity nor the wisdom of federal mandatory minimum sentences. In too many cases, mandatory minimum sentences are unwise or unjust,” said Justice Kennedy. The recently enacted Protect Act removes nearly all discretion from the district courts by permitting the circuit courts to conduct a de novo review of a district court’s decision to depart. The elimination of discretion at sentencing as dictated by the Protect Act should be worrisome to all interested in the criminal justice system.
For years, the Eighth Circuit and the Supreme Court jealously guarded the right of the district court to exercise sentencing discretion. See, e.g., Koon,
*1020 B. Part Two — In Re: Pedro Dyck
In the matter of the sentencing of Pedro Dyck, this Court enjoys the exact advantages over the appellate court the Supreme Court was referring to in Koon. The Court is located in an agricultural border state and regularly sentences defendants involved in immigration and drug crimes. The sentencing judge has over forty years experience in criminal law as a defense attorney, prosecutor, and judge; and as a judge, has sentenced hundreds of defendants under the direction of the Guidelines. The Court participated in all aspects of the case from pre-trial matters to trial to sentencing. The Court has met the defendant, conversed with the defendant, and peered into the'whites of the defendant’s eyes. The district court is therefore in the better position to determine if this case falls outside the heartland of cases.
The present case falls outside the heartland of cases contemplated by § 2L1.2 because there is no just reason for a 41-51 month sentence. While there is no question the defendant broke the law by attempting to reenter the United States after having been previously deported subsequent to a conviction for a felony drug offense, there is also no question that the defendant played a mitigating role in his underlying conviction. The defendant was a mule, nothing more. The circuit court rejected consideration of the defendant’s role in the prior offense as a basis for departure pursuant to § 5K2.0.
Dyck,
As for the current offense, the defendant’s attempt to reenter the United States was done for the purpose of using our superior highway system, not to distribute drugs or for some other illegal purpose as the Guideline range clearly contemplates. The circuit court stated in its opinion, Congress intended to establish a
mala prohibita
offense, therefore consideration of the purpose for which the defendant entered the country is improper.
Dyck,
The lack of discretion granted to the district court to apply Guidelines in a manner it deems just prevents the defendant from being sentenced as an individual as required by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
5
The concept of individualized sentencing is deeply rooted in our legal tradition and is a fundamental liberty interest. See
Williams v. New York,
In
United States v. Brittman,
Ill.Conclusion
By this dissent, the Court submits that the pendulum for sentencing within the criminal justice system has moved too far to the right in favor of harsh sentences. We must adopt sentencing goals beyond retribution and deterrence. Our current system costs too much and we are in danger of losing a substantial portion of a whole generation of young men to drugs as their futures rot within our prisons. A society can be tough on crime without being vindictive, unjust or cruel. We must encourage flexible and innovative sentencing such as drug courts, drug treatment and supervised probation as an alternative to prison. Change is hard, but change is not impossible. Judges and others involved in the criminal justice system must speak out against unjust and unwise mechanisms of justice such as strict guidelines and mandatory minimum sentences. The Feeney Amendment can be changed by appealing to our congressional delegation. Perhaps this opinion, as an appeal for a restoration of individualized sentencing, will provoke some thoughtful discussion on these important issues and help restore the traditional sentencing discretion of the *1023 district courts usurped by the legislative and executive branches of our government.
For all the above-mentioned reasons, the Court respectfully dissents from the opinion of the circuit court that mandates the sentence it must impose upon Pedro Dyck.
Notes
. Appointed by President Ronald Reagan, 1981, United States Attorney for the District of North Dakota; Appointed by President Ronald Reagan, 1987, United States District Court for the District of North Dakota.
. Judge Gerald Heaney reveals disturbing statistics indicating that since May of 2000, 23/25 downward departures were overturned by the circuit court, while 44/46 upward departures were upheld by the same circuit court.
United States v. Yirkovsky,
. One long serving federal judge recently resigned his position lamenting the distress he felt "at being part of a sentencing system that is unnecessarily cruel and rigid ... I no longer want to be part of our unjust criminal justice system.” Judge John S. Martin, Jr., Let Judges Do Their Jobs, N.Y. Times, June 24, 2003.
. As the circuit court stated, prior to November 1, 2001, & sect; 2L1.2 provided for only two enhancements for a person convicted of a felony drug offense, an 8 level and a 16 level enhancement. Id. at 741. However, district courts across the nation recognized the inequity of the limited choices provided in § 2L1.2 and granted departures, encouraged within the Guidelines, to remedy the unfairness. Id. The Sentencing Commission, recognizing the need for an additional category, added an additional enhancement, a 12 level enhancement. Id. However, even three enhancement levels (8, 12, 16) are inadequate to sufficiently categorize the range of circumstances surrounding the prior offenses which are used to justify the enhancement.
. In the absence of guidance from the Supreme Court in
Mistretta v. United States,
. The court was careful to add, citing a nonbinding plurality opinion in
Lockett v. Ohio,
