After defendant Jeffery Laufle pleaded guilty to a marijuana-trafficking conspiracy, the district court ordered him to serve a prison term of 76 months, a sentence within the range specified by the United States Sentencing Guidelines. Anticipating the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
I.
Beginning in or around 1998, Ralph Villegas caused multi-kilogram quantities of marijuana to be shipped from Texas to co-conspirator Gale Kleman in the LaCrosse, Wisconsin area. Kleman distributed marijuana in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, and Villegas had a connection in Texas who could obtain the marijuana for him. (Villegas actually had begun distributing marijuana to Kleman in 1995, but during the first few years of their business relationship, Kleman had taken possession of the marijuana in Texas.) Between 1998 and September 2003, when the conspiracy among Villegas, Kleman, and their associates was exposed, at least 1,433 kilograms of marijuana was dropped off in the LaCrosse area for forwarding to Kleman in Minneapolis.
Laufle owned an industrial coating and painting company that maintained its office and warehouse in Holmen, Wisconsin, near LaCrosse. After he began receiving marijuana in LaCrosse, Kleman recruited Laufle to permit the use of the warehouse as an occasional drop-off point for marijuana shipments. Laufle would later admit that he received and stored two to three shipments annually at the warehouse for a period of four or five years. Laufle arranged for an acquaintance, Steven Lee, to receive and help unload shipments at the *983 warehouse when Laufle was not available to do so. Typically the marijuana was stored at Laufle’s warehouse for only a short period of time before someone retrieved and transported it to its final destination in Minneapolis. Laufle indicated that he drove roughly half of these shipments to Minneapolis himself. Depending on the size of the shipment, Laufle was paid between $5,000 and $7,000 for receiving and storing the marijuana; and he was given another $1,000 for each load that he drove to Minnesota.
In June 2004, the government filed an information charging Laufle with conspiring to possess with the intent to distribute in excess of 50 kilograms of marijuana, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Pursuant to a written plea agreement with the government, Laufle waived indictment and pleaded guilty to the charge. Also pursuant to the plea agreement, the government agreed to move for a downward departure for substantial assistance in the event Laufle cooperated to a sufficient extent.
Laufle appeared for sentencing on November 3, 2004. Employing the November 2003 version of the Guidelines, the probation officer proposed a total offense level of 27 that reflected a base offense level of 32 for a narcotics offense involving 1,000 to 3,000 kilograms of marijuana, see U.S.S.G. § 2Dl.l(c)(4), a two-level reduction pursuant to the safety-value provisions of §§ 2Dl.l(b)(6) and 5C1.2, and a three-level reduction for timely acceptance of responsibility, see § 3E1.1. Coupled with a criminal history category of I, the adjusted offense level called for a sentence in the range of 70 to 87 months. The district court adopted these calculations.
The court rejected Laufle’s contention that he was entitled to an additional two-level reduction in the offense level for having been a minor participant in. the conspiracy. See U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2(b). The court pointed out that Laufle had allowed marijuana to be stored in his warehouse, that he had helped unload the marijuana for storage, that he had transported some of the marijuana to Minnesota, and that he had recruited Lee to provide assistance in receiving the marijuana. R. 24 at 10. The court agreed with Laufle that his role in the offense “was certainly less than that of Kleman and Villegas[,] who appear to be regional middlemen with the large scale suppliers and the local dealers.” Id. at 11. But the court disagreed with Laufle that his lesser role as compared to the two people who organized the conspiracy was insufficient to qualify him as a minor participant.
You don’t look at the two key players and say, Oh, gee, he was less culpable than were the bosses and accordingly he is then a minor participant. It isn’t the way it works. It looks to all of those who were involved in the offense ... and [Laufle] was not substantially less culpable than the average participant.
Id. at 11-12. On comparing Laufle with the entire set of individuals identified as co-conspirators in this case, the court found that his involvement with the conspiracy was “certainly much more substantial” than the complicity of others and that Laufle “was not substantially less culpable than the average participant.” Id. at 12.
The court also denied the government’s section 5K1.1 motion for a downward departure based on the assistance Laufle had provided to the government. The government represented that Laufle’s cooperation had made it less difficult to establish the full extent of the conspiracy, had corroborated the information provided by informants, and had helped tie together the government’s case. However, the court was not persuaded that Laufle’s assistance was so substantial as to warrant a downward departure. R. 24 at 12-13. The court subsequently added that although *984 Laufle had been “cooperative” and “helpful,” the convictions of neither Villegas nor Kleman (who were charged separately) could be attributed to Laufle’s assistance. Id. at 14H5.
Faced with a Guidelines range of 70 to 87 months, the court elected to impose a sentence of 76 months. The court noted that Laufle’s criminal conduct “wasn’t a one-time deal. It wasn’t aberrant. It wasn’t anywhere close to that.” R. 24 at 19. The court also pointed out that in contrast to many defendants, Laufle was not someone who had led a deprived life or who had lacked opportunities to succeed in legitimate ways, but rather had succumbed to greed when presented with a chance to make a substantial amount of money in narcotics trafficking. Id. at 19-20. Finally, the court observed that Laufle, at age 50, was a mature individual who “knows better.” Id. at 19.
The court also considered what sentence it might impose if the Sentencing Guidelines were held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. (By the time Laufle was sentenced, this court had held in
United States v. Booker,
[The Court has] considered the substantial amount of marijuana which was a part of this offense. It has considered the fact that there is responsibility demonstrated by the defendant for his failure to follow the law in this matter. There is also the fact that the transactions occurred over a lengthy period of time and numerous instances were involved. And having considered all relevant facts and circumstances ... the Court then imposes the same sentence as previously announced.
Id.
II.
We begin our review with a few words about the Supreme Court’s decision in
Booker,
which establishes the scope of our review and sets the stage for the particular arguments that Laufle is making in this appeal.
Booker,
of course, deemed the Sentencing Guidelines inconsistent with the Sixth Amendment insofar as they mandated sentences within specified ranges that frequently (although not always) turned on factual findings rendered by the sentencing judge rather than a jury.
When it sentenced Laufle, the district court did so in the first instance treating the sentencing range specified by Guidelines as mandatory. In calculating the Guidelines range, the court had made no factual findings that boosted Laufle’s offense level and the resulting sentencing range. Accordingly, under this court’s 2004 decision in
Booker,
application of the Guidelines did not impinge on Laufle’s Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial.
Nonetheless, the alternative sentence that the district court announced makes clear that Laufle was not prejudiced by the
Booker
error. Anticipating that the Supreme Court might find the Guidelines unconstitutional, the court considered what sentence it would impose if it considered the Guidelines “merely as a reliable indicator” of an appropriate sentence — in other words, treating the Guidelines as advisory rather than binding. R. 24 at 22. Taking into account “all relevant facts and circumstances,” the court concluded that it would still impose a sentence of 76 months.
Id.
This is not a case, then, that raises any doubt as to whether the district court might have imposed a sentence outside the Guidelines range if the court had known that it had the discretion to do so.
See Paladino,
Although sentencing judges enjoy much broader discretion after
Booker,
they remain obliged to consult the Guidelines in determining an appropriate sentence, and we must therefore consider whether the district court properly calculated the (advisory) Guidelines sentencing range.
E.g., Julian,
As for whether Laufle should have been given credit for being a minor participant in the conspiracy, we discern no clear error in the district court’s determination that he was not.
See United States v. Parra,
Laufle also contends that the district judge improperly conditioned a downward departure for substantial assistance on proof that his cooperation with the government was responsible for the conviction of another individual. The way in which Laufle has framed this argument reflects an attempt to fit it within the narrow review framework for departures that we employed prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Booker.
Within that framework, a district court’s refusal to depart downward was not reviewable so long as the district court understood its authority to depart and denied the departure request in the exercise of its discretion.
See, e.g., United States v. Winston,
In the wake of
Booker,
we have concluded that discussion of a district court’s departure decisions has been rendered “obsolete”.
United States v. Arnaout,
Thus, Laufle’s contention that the district court imposed an erroneous standard in denying the government’s motion for a downward departure is a non-starter. The question instead is whether his sentence is reasonable. Departures aside, the nature and degree of his assistance to the government is of course a relevant sentencing factor, and we shall address Laufle’s cooperation below.
There being no error in the calculation of Laufle’s offense level and sentencing range, what remains for us to determine is whether the sentence that the district court imposed is reasonable. In selecting a sentence, a district court is obliged to consider the sentencing factors identified in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).
United States v. Dean,
The district court’s sentencing decision comports with these criteria. This is not, in the first instance, a case in which the court gave little or no rationale for its decision.
Cf. United States v. Cunningham,
The record of the sentencing proceeding also confirms that the parties had a full opportunity to highlight circumstances that might call for a different sentence than the one that the court ultimately chose — including a sentence outside of the Guidelines range — and that the district court took these factors into consideration.
See Cunningham,
Granting due deference to the district judge’s discretion in sentencing, we cannot say that Laufle has rebutted the presumption of reasonableness that attaches to a sentence within the advisory Guidelines range. The court imposed the sentence it did for reasons that “are logical and consistent with the factors set forth in section 3553(a).”
Williams,
III.
The error in treating the Sentencing Guidelines as mandatory was- harmless, given the district court’s determination that it would impose the same sentence even if the Guidelines were deemed advisory rather than mandatory. As the sentence imposed is within the Guidelines range, it is presumptively reasonable, and Laufle has not rebutted that presumption. The district court articulated a rationale for the sentence that is consistent with 18 *989 U.S.C. § 3553(a), and the court neither overlooked nor improperly discounted any mitigating factor that warranted a sentence outside of the Guidelines range.
Affirmed
