Defendant-Appellant Edwin A. Kane appeals from a judgment entered in the District Court for the Western District of New York sentencing him principally to 24 months’ imprisonment upon a plea of guilty to one count of equity skimming in violation of 12 U.S.C. § 1709-2. He contends that the District Court violated his First Amendment rights by weighing his prior published writings against the mitigating character evidence he offered at sentencing. He further maintains that his below-Guidelines sentence is unreasonable.
For seven years, Kane defrauded the Federal Housing Administration (“FHA”) and the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”). He purchased homes carrying mortgages guaranteed by FHA or HUD, rented those properties to unsuspecting tenants, and then fraudulently transferred *142 the properties, along with the mortgage obligations, to third parties via fabricated warranty assumption deeds. After the false transfers, Kane continued to collect rent while the third parties defaulted on the mortgage obligations, causing HUD or FHA to foreclose on the homes and throwing into chaos the existing leaseholds. Through his scheme, Kane caused FHA and HUD to lose at least $700,000.
Although the Sentencing Guidelines established an advisory range of 30 to 37 months’ imprisonment, Kane requested a probationary sentence. In support of his request, he submitted more than 35 letters from family, friends, and acquaintances attesting to the many aspects of his good character, including that he was a “fair and honest man, true to his word.” Those letters, defense counsel asserted in Kane’s sentencing submission, “provide an informative answer to the question: Who is Andy Kane?” Defense counsel also took the opportunity to answer the question himself, describing Kane as “a good friend” given to “random acts of kindness,” who “accepted full responsibility for his fraudulent actions” and is “truly sorry for his actions.” Kane further justified his request for probation by citing his need to care for his ailing wife, his own imperfect health, his age, and the corresponding slim chance that he would recidivate.
In response, the government submitted excerpts of books that Kane had authored. In those excerpts, Kane penned how-to advice on topics ranging from wife “training” to illegal real estate transactions. Specifically, he described how to convert “single-family dwellings into rooming houses without it being legal,” a scheme that generated enough cash to fund his annual purchase of a new Cadillac Eldorado. He also gave advice on how to manipulate financial records so as to appear to qualify for subsidized housing, described running a fraudulent mail order scheme in which he “offered a service that didn’t exist,” provided tips on how to avoid a sexual harassment suit while displaying photographs of topless women in the office, and in a work titled “Mastering the Art of Male Supremacy: Training Techniques for the Home Front,” set forth his philosophy of “training a wife,” which eschewed “real violence” but endorsed the use of “a rolled up newspaper on the rump once in a while....”
The District Court acknowledged that the numerous character reference letters portrayed Kane’s “acts of kindness[ and] acts of responsibility” and weighed those letters against Kane’s writings. Ultimately, the Court concluded that Kane’s published advice on running real estate and mail order schemes undercut his professed honesty, and his guide to “Mastering the Art of Male Supremacy” tempered the sincerity of his spousal devotion. For these and other reasons, the District Court rejected Kane’s request for a probationary sentence. However, the Court imposed a non-Guidelines sentence of 24 months’ imprisonment, six months below the bottom of the advisory range.
On appeal, Kane contends that the District Court violated the First Amendment by considering his expressive activity as part of its sentencing calculus, and that even in the absence of a constitutional violation, his sentence is unreasonable.
The First Amendment “does not erect a
per se
barrier” to the admission at sentencing of evidence regarding the defendant’s beliefs or associational activity.
Dawson v. Delaware,
Here, the District Court considered Kane’s writings only to the extent that they rebutted his mitigating evidence. The First Amendment does not bar the government from putting the lie to a defendant’s proof at sentencing.
See generally id.
at 167,
Kane also claims that the books constituted a series of jokes and were meant only for entertainment purposes. The District Court determined otherwise, and we see no clear error in that finding.
See United States v. Snype,
Kane next contends that his sentence is unreasonable. The government urges that we lack jurisdiction to consider the reasonableness of Kane’s sentence, and
*144
that if we possess such jurisdiction, Kane’s below-Guidelines sentence is a reasonable one. We recently rejected the government’s jurisdictional argument in
United States v. Fernandez,
In
Colon,
we held that “a decision not to depart from the applicable Guidelines range is not appealable.”
As we reaffirm our recent conclusion in
Fernandez
against the government’s reliance on
Colon,
we note that our position is consistent with every court of appeals to have considered the question.
2
See, e.g., United States v. Jimenez-Beltre,
Having rejected the government’s jurisdictional argument based on
Colon,
we now must determine whether the sentence is reasonable. In
Fernandez,
we explained that “[r]easonableness review does not entail the substitution of our judgment for that of the sentencing judge. Rather, the standard is akin to abuse of discretion.”
Fernandez,
The District Court committed no such error here. The Judge considered the relevant sentencing factors in careful and reasoned fashion, premised his conclusions on a sound view of the facts, and understood the applicable legal principles. Kane merely renews the arguments he advanced below — his age, poor health, and history of good works — and asks us to substitute our judgment for that of the District Court, which, of course, we cannot do. See id.
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
Notes
. Because we find no error, we need not decide whether Kane preserved his objection below, and if so, whether we should employ the harmless error standard of review.
See Dawson,
. We note that in
Fernandez
and the numerous opinions penned by our sister circuits, the question presented was slightly different. In those cases, the question was whether there existed appellate court jurisdiction to review a within-Guidelines sentence for reasonableness. Although in this case Kane appeals from a below-Guidelines sentence, we find the distinction to be immaterial, particularly in light of
Booker’s
parenthetical that the Sentencing Reform Act provides for appellate review "irrespective of whether the trial judge sentences within or outside the Guidelines range....”
Booker,
