OPINION OF THE COURT
In this sеntencing appeal, the District Court granted a downward departure on account of Bennae Floyd’s substantial assistance to the government, but sentenced her within the originally calculated Guidelines range. In doing so, the Court departed from a previously imposed sentence that we vacated in a prior appeal. For the reasons that follow, we will again vacate and remand for resentencing.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
In 2004, Floyd was indicted on various counts arising from a conspiracy to distribute at least 50 grams of crack cocaine and 5 kilograms of cocaine powder. 1 Pursuant to a plea agreement, Floyd pleaded guilty to just one count of traveling interstate or causing others tо travel interstate to facilitate drug trafficking, which carried a maximum sentence of 60 months in prison. 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(3). In exchange for pleading guilty, the government agreed to dismiss the remaining charges and to request a downward departure based on Floyd’s substantial assistance with the government’s prosecution of her co-defendants. 2
Floyd appealed, arguing that the government breached its promise to move for a downward departure.
Floyd I,
At Floyd’s resentencing, the District Court incorporated its prior rulings that established a Guidelines range of 41 to 51 months. With respect to the government’s motion to depart, it ruled:
Assessing all the factors enumerаted in section 5K1.1, and giving weight to the government’s evaluation of the defendant’s assistance, the court concludes that this case marginally meets the criteria for a downward departure from the original sentence of 48 months. Therefore the court will grant the motion.
(App.47-48.) As a result, the Court reduced the original sentence of 48 months by 6 months. The Court then stated that the sentence “satisfie[d] the purposes” of the factors outlined in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), and, without altering Floyd’s sentence further, imposed the sentence of 42 months. (App.52-53.)
Floyd’s attorney objected, arguing that despite having granted the government’s departure motion, the Court had “in essence ... imposed a guideline sentence, just downward from the initial sentenсe.” (App.56.) Defense counsel asked whether the Court had intended to “not downwardly depart ... from the guideline but simply depart downward from the initial sentence?” (Id.) The Court responded that it had, in fact, granted a downward departure, explaining:
The decision of 42 months does reflect a downward departure, and we have the benefit of an original sentеnce, and rather than go through the calculation of what my offense level arrived at in terms of a guideline, I thought it better just to give you the specific sentence departure. So I don’t think it’s accurate to say that the departure doesn’t reflect the court’s assessment of the guideline range.
(App.56-57.) 4
On appeal, Floyd asks us to remand for resentenсing because the District Court never provided her thé benefit of the departure it granted.
A
The Supreme Court rendered the Sentencing Guidelines advisory in
United States v. Booker,
(1) Courts must continue to calculate a defendant’s Guidelines sentence precisely as they would have before Booker.
(2) In doing so, they must formally rule on the motions of both parties and state on the record whether they are granting a departure and how that departure affects the Guidelines calculation, and take into account our Circuit’s pre-Booker case law, which continues to have advisory force.
(3) Finally, they are required to exercise their discretion by considering the relevant § 3553(a) factors in setting the sentence they impose regardless whether it varies from the sentence calculated under the Guidelines.
United States v. Gunter,
Under the advisory Guidelines regime, we have distinguished between two types of sentence that diverge from the original Guidelines range.
See United States v. Vampire Nation,
B.
The District Court sentenced Floyd without the benefit of our reсent decisions distinguishing between variances and departures, and clarifying the preferred
Floyd argues that a downward departure under the Guidelines must result in a sentence below the otherwise applicable range and that the District Court “misunderstood the definition of a downward dеparture.” Floyd’s Br. at 9. In our view, her challenge relates to whether the Court properly determined, at step 2 of the
Gunter
process, how its departure “affect[ed] the [original] Guidelines calculation.”
Gunter,
For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the manner by which the District Court reduced Floyd’s sentence — that is, from a prior sentence of 48 mоnths to a new sentence of 42 months — was inconsistent with proper sentencing procedure. 6
c.
The parties agree that the Guidelines define the phrase “downward departure” but dispute whether the § 5K1.1 “departure” granted by the District Court falls within that definition. 7 The Application Notes to Guideline § 1B1.1 define a “[d]e-parture” as the “imposition of a sentencе outside the applicable guideline range or of a sentence that is otherwise different from the guideline sentence.” U.S.S.G. § 1B1.1 cmt. n. 1(E) (2003). 8 The Notes offer two definitions of a downward departure: either (1) a “departure that effects a sentence less than a sentence that could be imposed under the applicable guideline range” or (2) “a sentence that is otherwise less than the guideline sentence.” Id.
Under the first definition, the sentence reached after granting a departure motion
The government argues, however, that the District Court’s reduction in Floyd’s sentence falls within the second definition, under which a downward departure is “otherwise less than the guideline sentence.” It contends that the original 48-month sentence was “the guideline sentence,” and that the Court’s 42-month sentence wаs therefore “otherwise less than the guideline sentence.” We do not agree. The government cites no authority for departing from a previously-imposed, vacated sentence, and we do not believe the second definition was intended to enable such a procedure.
Presumably, the government’s basis for considering the 48-month sentencе to be “the guideline sentence” is that it falls within the applicable Guidelines range and was imposed pursuant to the Guidelines. Under such a view, however, every sentence that is lower than a within-range sentence can be considered “otherwise less than the guideline sentence” (and thus a downward departure), even when it is within the applicable range. This reading would effectively nullify any distinction between simply reducing a sentence within a range and formally departing from it.
Moreover, this reading would conflict with what we stated in our first opinion in this case. In remanding to the District Court, we remarked that the government’s motion for a downward departure under § 5K1.1 “offered Floyd the hope of a downward departurе
from the sentencing guideline range.” Floyd I,
Furthermore, we observe that by departing from a previously imposed sentence, rather than from the calculated Guidelines range, the District Court effectively inverted the sentencing procedure laid out in
Gunter.
Under the three-step process, district courts are asked to rule on departure motions before balancing the § 3553(a) factors, and just after calculating the applicable Guidelines range. Here, the District Court departed from the sentence it originally imposed and therefore effectively depаrted
after
balancing the factors (assuming the 48-month sentence resulted from statutory balancing). This inversion of the sentencing process makes it impossible for us to review effectively the basis for the sentence.
Cf. King,
This is not to say that a 42-month sentence is necessarily unreasonable, or that the Court could not have reached that sentence. The Court, for example, could have departed below the 41 to 51 month range (at step 2), and then varied upward within the range by balancing the § 3553(a) factors (at step 3). We wоuld review for reasonableness. Moreover, as we noted in
Faulks,
the Court could have “denied the motion for a departure and then gone on to acknowledge [Floyd’s] substantial assistance by sentencing lower in the guideline range than it would otherwise have done.”
Here, after assessing the factors under § 5K1.1, the Court stated that Floyd’s assistance “marginally [mеt] the criteria for a downward departure from the original sentence of 48 months.” (App.48.) From this statement, it is unclear whether the Court meant that Floyd’s assistance satisfied the requirements for a § 5K1.1 departure (thereby warranting consideration of a sentence below the Guidelines range), or if Floyd’s assistance warranted only a reduction within the range (but not a departure below it). Without speculating about the Court’s preferred course of action, we cannot determine which option it intended.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated, we vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
Notes
. We previously recited a more detailed procedural history of this case in
United States v. Floyd,
. Guidelines Section § 5K1.1 prоvides that the government may move for a downward departure when a defendant has provided "substantial assistance in the investigation or prosecution of another person who has committed an offense.” U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 5K1.1 (2003). The day before entering her plea, Floyd met with a co-defendant to persuade him to plead guilty. That сo-defendant, as well as two others, decided to plead guilty shortly thereafter.
. Had Floyd been convicted of all charges set forth in the indictment, she would have faced a potential Guidelines range of 292 to 365 months, as compared to the 60-month statutory maximum she faced on the drug trafficking charge.
. The District Court also stated that "I departed downward approximately 12.5 percent from the original sentence, and that also reflects a departure in the offense level. A departure of 10 percent results in a guideline range of 36.9 to 45.9 months. 12 percent would be slightly more than that.” (Id. at 56.)
. For example, in
United States v. Colon,
.We note that Floyd does not challenge the District Court's specific method for reducing her sentence on account of the departure motion.
'Post-Booker,
§ 5K1.1 continues to set out the considerations relevant to the “appropriаte reduction.”
See United States v. Torres,
. The Guidelines definitions cited by the parties were added by amendment in 2003 pursuant to the Prosecutorial Remedies and Tools Against the Exploitation of Children Today Act of 2003 (“the PROTECT Act”), Pub.L. No. 108-21, § 401(m), 117 Stat. 650, 675. The stated purpose of this amendment was simply to “provide uniform definitions of departure, upward dеparture, and downward departure.” U.S.S.G. app C, vol II, amend. 651, at 366 (2003).
. A separate definition is provided for departures under § 4A1.3, a provision that addresses departures from the applicable criminal history category. A departure under that provision is the "assignment of a criminal history category other than the otherwise applicable сriminal history category, in order to effect a sentence outside the applicable guideline range.” Id.
. We note that the phrase "the guideline sentence” also appears in § 5G1.1. Under that provision, a statutory minimum becomes "the guideline sentence” when it is greater than the top of the applicable Guidelines range. U.S.S.G. § SGI.1(b) (2003).
See United States v. Booth,
The second definition encompasses a downwаrd departure from such a statutory minimum.
See United States v. Cordero,
. The District Court mentioned, as an alternative way to view its reduction in Floyd's sentence, that the sentence "also re£lect[ed]” a departure in the applicable range. (App.56-57.) This statement, however, does not make clear that the District Court was actually considering below-range sentences on account of the departure motion, particularly because the Court repeatedly stated that it was departing from the original sentence.
. We recognized in Faúlles that failing to engage in this procedure — i.e., granting a § 5K1.1 motion but arriving at an in-range sentence — tends to raise questions about, for example, "what sentence the judge actually intended” Id.
