MEMORANDUM
On Junе 10, 2010, after a four-day trial, Daquawn Jones (“Jones”) was convicted of conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine and distribution of .62 grams of crack cocaine within 1000 feet of a school. A career offender, Jones was sentenced by this Court to 10 years in prison. A routine case? Hardly.
I. IDENTIFICATION
This case turns on the identification of Jones as the person who set up the drug
*272
transaction in question. In the constitutional sense, the identification of Jones could hardly have been more suggestive, but even a suggestive identification does not ipso facto require suppression.
See Manson v. Brathwaite,
Here, defense counsel timely moved for suppression. After a thorough evidentiary hearing, the Court found that, following his standard operating procedure, Massachusetts State Trooper David Patterson (“Patterson”), a white male acting in an undercover capacity and posing as a retail drug purchaser, was roving selected areas of Brockton seeking tо engage in modest drug transactions. Patterson was driving a pick-up truck specially equipped with a hidden video camera to record individuals (such as drug sellers) approaching his open driver’s side window. In order for this scam to work, Patterson naturally did not know the individuals with whom he dealt nor did they know him. On a good day, Patterson could make a number of buys in this fashion. At the end of the day, Patterson toned a copy of the videotape over to Brockton police officers who patrolled the area through which he had driven to see whether, given their familiarity with the area and its inhabitants as well as local law enforcement intelligence, they could identify anyone on the videotape. Thereafter, such officers would show Patterson a single photo and ask him if he could identify the individual as a person he’d seen selling drugs at the specific time and place. Not surprisingly, using this procedure Patterson made affirmative identifications over 90% of the time.
So it was here. On June 19, 2008, Patterson was trolling for prospective drug sellers in Brockton. He set up such a transaction through a discussion with a black male who he observed across a residential street. This individual then entered the passenger side of a nearby sedan that promptly drove away, and a second individual, later identified as Johnny Richmond, approached Patterson’s truck and exchanged .62 grams of crack cocaine for cash through the driver’s side window. What took this transaction out of the routine was the fact that, as the first individual was approaching Patterson’s truck to set up the transaction, Patterson observed another vehicle evidently patrolling this area. Reasoning that this strange vehicle could be that of a citizen vigilante or a rival gang setting him up for robbery of the cash or drugs, Patterson went on high alert. Having completed this transaction, he sped from the area. When the strange vehicle followed him, hе became apprehensive and called for police back-up. 1
The videotape vividly captures Johnny Richmond approaching Patterson’s driver’s side window and completing the exchange. Earlier, it displays a most fleeting and out of focus image of another black male. By pausing the tape, one can discern the clothing of this individual and, based upon all the surrounding circumstances, this Court concluded a knowledgeable local police officer could make an identification of that individual. Trooper Erik Telford (“Telford”), a member of a State Police gang unit surveilling this area of Brockton, identified this individual as Daquawn Jones and later showed a single photo of *273 Jones to Patterson, who likewise identified Jones as the individual who had set up the drug transaction in question. 2
At the conclusion of the hearing of the motion to suppress, after hearing the arguments of counsel and considering all the evidence, this Court, althоugh disapproving the procedure followed here, nevertheless, “unsupported by any literature or social science findings,” reasoned that Patterson’s heightened awareness of his surroundings due to the presence of the strange vehicle, his concentration on the suspects given his mission, his proximity to the black male across the street, the well lit area, and the short time that elapsed between the observation and the identification rendered his identification of Jones reliable and not the product of the suggestive procedures followed here. Accordingly, the Court denied the motion to suppress, and at trial both Patterson and Telford testified to their observations.
At trial, however, defense counsel had sociological evidence — in spades. Defense counsel proffered the testimony of Steven Penrod as an expert in eyewitness testimony-
I have taught evidence for years and have considered this issuе and raised it with my classes ever since I learned of the pioneer in this field, Elizabeth Loftus. The issue, of course, is that the sociology of eyewitness identification constitutes “reliable principles” as that phrase is used in Federal Rule of Evidence 702, but such witnesses (as here) typically have no case-specific knowledge whatsoever and seek to testify about matters upon which we have long relied on the common sense judgment of the American jury.
See generally
William G. Young,
Reflections of a Trial Judge
130-131 (MCLE 1998). The best I could do as a teacher was to highlight the issue and point out that some judges go one way,
see, e.g., United States v. Montas,
Now, after 33 years as a trial judge, I had to resolve the issue. I did so. Here’s how:
*274 A. Legal Standard
Federal Rule of Evidence 702
3
allows the admission of expert testimony where the witness is sufficiently qualified to assist the trier of fact, and his testimony is relevant to the task at hand and rests on a reliable basis.
United States v. Stokes, 388 F.3d
21, 26 (1st Cir.2004), vacated on other grounds,
As such, the First Circuit has refused to adopt a blanket rule that qualified expert testimony on eyewitness identification must routinely be admitted or excluded.
4
United States v. Rodríguez-Berrios,
B. The Merits
In this case, the government does not challenge the qualifications of Dr. Penrod, nor the validity of the research and scientific literature upon which his testimony would be based. Rather, the government argues that the proffered testimony is inadmissible because it is within the common understanding of the trier of fact, Fed. R.Evid. 702, and further, has the potential to confuse or mislead the jury, Fed. R.Evid. 403. Mеanwhile, Jones contends that the probative value of expert identification testimony outweighs concerns of delay and confusion because eyewitness testimony is the sole evidence against Jones and because Penrod’s testimony defies lay perceptions regarding eyewitness identification.
At trial, the defense offered Pen-rod’s testimony regarding the decreased accuracy of cross-racial eyewitness identifications relative to same-race identifica *275 tions, the effect of stress on an individual’s ability to make an accurate identification, the weak relationship between a witness’s confidence in his identification and accuracy, and the suggestive impact that various practices may have on an identification procedure. Through this testimony, the defense sought to show that Patterson’s identification was suspect because: he and Jones are of different races; Patterson wаs subjected to an unusual amount of stress during the buy as a result of the potential danger posed by the unidentified vehicle; and the identification procedure was highly suggestive. While recognizing that the government’s case rests primarily on eyewitness identifications and that the proposed testimony may reflect information outside the common understanding of laypersons, the Court excluded Dr. Pen-rod’s testimony because it did not bear directly on the facts of this case and the same information was conveyed to the jury through instruction. The Court will explain its reasoning using the factors outlined in Brien.
As mentioned above, it is largely undisputed that the government’s case relies primarily on the eyewitness testimony of Patterson and Telford. The evidence against Jones consisted of a blurry video where the suspect’s face is not clearly visible, Telford’s identification of Jones from the same video, and Patterson’s identification of Jones from a single photograph 24 hours after an initial encounter with the suspect. Moreover, the cornerstone of Jones’s defense is misidentifieation. The accuracy of Telford and Patterson’s eyewitness identification is thus an essential issue in this case, favoring the admission of expert testimony on eyewitness identification.
See United States v. Brownlee,
Penrod’s proffered testimony, however, appears to be of limited helpfulness because it does not address directly the particular facts of this case. “[E]xpert testimony must be relevant not only in the sense that all evidence must be relevant, but also in the incremental sense that the expert’s proposed opinion, if admitted likely would assist the trier of fact to understand or determine a fact in issue.”
Ruiz-Troche v. Pepsi Cola of P.R. Bottling Co.,
*276 Moreover, the psychological studies which form the basis of Penrod’s testimony do not appear to address a situation where a trained police officer approaches an encounter with the very purpose of identifying the suspect. The district court’s decision in United States v. Nguyen, 793 F.Supp. 497 (D.N.J.1992), is illustrative. There, a Vietnamese defendant allegedly sold a firearm to an African-American undercover officer, who subsequently identified the defendant from an array of photographs. Id. at 502-03. The defense sought to call Penrod to testify about cross-racial identifications, the correlation between confidence and accuracy, and the effect of stress on identifications. Id. at 507. The court ruled that testimony regarding cross-racial identification impairment was inadmissible because “the facts of [the] case did not fit with the proffered Penrod testimony.” Id. at 516. The court noted that unlike the subjects (Caucasian college students with limited contact with African-Americans) in psychology studies, the officer in the case was familiar with the Vietnamese subjects, had a higher degree of attentiveness, had a much longer time to view the defendant, and knew in advance that he would have to identify the seller. Id. Penrod admitted in voir dire that such factors would promote a significant reduction in cross-racial impairment, and the court thus held that Penrod’s testimony was not relevant to the identification. Id.
Similarly here, Patterson was an undercover agent whose job it was to conduct drug buys and subsequently identify the suspect. Unlike the subjects of the studies that Penrod cites — convenience store workers who were called upon to identify customers to whom they had sold a product or given directions earlier in the day— Patterson went into the encounter with the purpose of making an identification, had ample opрortunity to view the target, and most likely had greater attentiveness. See Penrod Aff. 7. The other study cited by Penrod in his affidavit — a review of the data from thirty-nine research articles, showing that the chance of mistaken identification is 1.56 times greater in other-race than in same-race conditions — does not contain the details of the experiments. See id. On this record, the basis of Pen-rod’s testimony regarding cross-racial impairment does not sufficiently fit the facts of this case.
With respect to Penrod’s proffered testimony that stress impairs one’s ability to make an identification, the
Nguyen
court noted that Penrod testified in voir dire that certain amounts of stress can increase performance, that experience with a stressor will generally decrease the impact of heightened levels of stress, and that the awareness of need to make a subsequent identification would reduce the effect of stress.
Nguyen,
In this case, Patterson was arguably subjected to heightened levels of stress. He admitted feeling surprised and potentially endangered by the unidentified vehicle driving around the block. Like the eyewitness in Nguyen, however, Patterson is an officer with significant undercover experience, who conducted the transaction with the very purpose of identifying the suspect. The subjects of the studies cited in Penrod’s affidavit are perhaps more similar to crime victims than officers engaged in an undercover transaction. The subjects were, one, taken by surprise by *277 the target they were later asked to identify and, two, likely less focused on remembering the target’s appearance as they were unaware of the need to make a future identification. Penrod Aff. 5. Thus, the record does not support the conclusion that Penrod’s testimony would bear directly on this case where Patterson was engaged in a planned buy with the suspect, intended to make a future identification, and has been trained to handle stressful situations during such transactions.
That the bases for Penrod’s testimony do not fit squarely within the facts of this case, however, does not mean that such information is not in any way helpful to the jury. This is especially true in a case such as this where eyewitness identification is a critical issue. The problem of eyewitness misidentification has long been recognized.
See United States v. Wade,
Contrary to the government’s assertion, there is wide consensus that psychological evidence regarding eyewitness testimony is not only outside the common knowledge of juries, but even defies common sense.
See Brownlee,
Recognizing the helpfulness of such information and the limitations of cross-examination, the Court gave instructions in lieu of expert testimony regarding the four areas comprising Penrod’s proposed testi
*278
mony; cross-racial identifications, the effect of stress on identifications, the relationship between a witness’s confidence and the accuracy of his identification, and suggestive identification procedures.
5
The Court’s decision to instruct the jury on these matters diminishes what helpfulness or relevance Penrod’s expert testimony would have had in the “incremental sense.”
Ruiz-Troche,
The costs of expert testimony are especially high in cases such as this, where the proposed opinion involves the trial process itself. Such costs include the potential neutralizing effect of dueling psychological experts, the complicated nature of social science data that may leave jurors more confused than enlightened, and substantial delay in trials.
See United States v. Hall,
Therefore, in light of its limited incremental relevance, the Court’s jury instruction, and the costs of expert testimony regarding the trial process, the Court excluded Penrod’s proffered testimony and instead gave the strong instruction set out in footnote 5.
II. SENTENCING
The sentencing of criminal offenders is governed by 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). In this session of the Court, sentencing proceeds in four steps.
See United States v. Kandirakis,
First, the Court determines, pursuant to the principles of “constitutional
Booker," United States v. Booker,
Here, although he is but 20 years old, Jones is already a career offender. Defense counsel challenges categorizing Jones as a career offender but recognizes
*280
that, in this circuit, as his juvenile convictions count against him,
United States v. Torres,
Second, the Court determines the average sentences imposed on offenders for like offenses. The Court in no sense sentences from such averages, but uses them to determine the weight to be accorded to the advisory sentencing guidelines.
According to the national database maintained by the United States Sentencing Commission and publicly available, the average sentence imposed for drug trafficking nationwide is 82 months and in the First Circuit is 73 months. Sent. Tr. at 9. These averages are helpful in that they include a large number of criminal sentences but unhelpful in that they lump together all types of drug convictions without regard to those who drew mandatory sentences, were career offenders, or were armed career criminals. Sent. Tr. at 9.
The confidential database of the Probation Office of the District of Massachusetts includes a smaller, more focused subset of convictions post -Booker and reveals an average sentence of 60 months within this District. It too does not differentiate among those who received mandatory sentences, career offenders, and armed career criminals.
Donald Womack, the superb court reporter assigned to this session, maintains a fully searchable, publicly available database of all this Court’s post-Booker sentences and the statement of reasons therefor. This database has the great advantage of isolating each individual sentence and informing this Court’s discretion (and I check it before each sentencing hearing), but it сontains so few sentences that it is hardly a meaningful average. 9 In *281 any event, this database reveals an average sentence of 190 months (6 sentences) imposed by this Court upon the conspiracy offense and 153 months (9 sentences) on the distribution offense.
Third, the Court accurately calculates the guideline sentence as continues to be required by the law, even though the guideline calculation itself is advisory.
Booker,
As is evident from the above recital, the first three steps are somewhat arithmetic. In a truly advisory guidelines system, it is the fourth step that is the most important. For it is during this step that a fair, impartial, and individual sentence — mindful both of the needs of society and the circumstances of the individual offender — is hammered out pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).
Defense counsel mounted a direct frontal assault on the career offender guideline, arguing that it lacks any empirical support and, at least as to low-level drug sellers, fails to accomplish its deterrent purpose. Defense counsel therefore urged this Court simply to reject the career offender guideline in a “categorical policy disagreement” as recognized by the First Circuit in
United States v. Boardman,
Respectfully, this Court disagrees. There is nothing conceptually wrong with the career offender guideline. Incarceration is a blunt tool at best. First-time non-violent offenders ought receive the benefit of every rehabilitative program a court can devise. Thirty-three years of judicial experience, however, convinces me that higher sentencеs for repeat offenders are both appropriate and necessary. Regrettably, some offenders “simply don’t get it.” 10
Here, Jones is a prototypical career offender. A member of the Grant Street gang, he has been convicted of various minor offenses, a requisite number of which constitute crimes of violence. Prosecution of the members of the Grant Street gang has resulted in a marked diminution in drug trafficking and drug violence in that area of Brockton. 11
Nevertheless this Court varied downward from the low-end of the advisory career offender sentencing guidelines (232 months) and imposed a sentence of ten years (120 months). While the Court considered every one of the Section 3553(a) factors, two aspects of this sentence were the major determinants.
A. Need for Sentence Similar to Related Cases
All sentencing is local.
See United States v. Rodriguez,
This Court acknowledges and adopts in full the nuanced approach of my distinguished colleague Nancy Gertner as expressed in
Whigham,
If I am to be concerned under the Sentencing Guidelines with similarly situated offenders who have been accused of similar conduct, it seems to me that the best place to look is to the people who have been arrested in the same sweep, in the same place, at the same time, largely charged with doing the same thing. See, e.g., Ryan Scott Reynolds, Equal Justice Under Law: Post-Booker, Should Federal Judges Be Able to Depart From, the Federal Sentencing Guidelines to Remedy Disparity Between Codefendants’ Sentences?, 109 Colum. L.Rev. 538 (2009) (concluding that Booker permits judges to consider codefendant disparity under § 3553(a)(6)).
Id. at 249, *10.
Here, there is no real dispute but that there are eight such relatеd cases. The relevant particulars of each such case are set out in Appendix A. Four of these other offenders are, like Jones, career offenders. Yet only one, Johnny Richmond, received a guideline sentence and Richmond’s prior offenses are far more severe than those of Jones. Moreover, unlike Jones, it is clear that Rodney Galloway is one of the leaders of this gang.
The government properly points out that, but for Jones, everyone else pleaded guilty. This, of course, does not account for the non-guideline sentences in four of these related cases as the discount for sparing the government the time and expense of a trial 13 is factored into the guideline calculation. The government also points out that in certain of these related cases the defendants cooperated. The Court accepts that representation but finds it an excessively weak reed on which to ground a 232 month sentence of Jones (the government’s recommendation) — a sentence which would be significantly higher than that of anyone in these related cases. Given Jones’ lower level involvement in this conduct, such a sentence did not commend itself to this Court.
B. Severity of Career Offender Guidelines
While the career offender guideline concept makes eminent sense, the actual career offender guideline calculation results in sentences which, for offenders like Jones, are breathtakingly severe. Absent his career offender status, Jones advisory guideline sentence would be 27-33 months; with it, his guideline sentence is 232-327 months.
*284 This dramatic increase has caused the career offender guideline to be “widely criticized.” Id. at 241, *1. Moreover, its calculus in this district is especially problematic since in Massachusetts, unlike virtually every other state, a conviction for misdemeanor resisting arrest qualifies as federal felony.
A “prior felony conviction” means a сonviction for an offense punishable for a term exceeding one year regardless whether such offense is specifically designated as a felony by the state statute. U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 4B1.2, Application Note 1 (2009). In Massachusetts, misdemeanor resisting arrest is a federal felony since it carries a sentence of up to two and a half years in the house of correction.
See United States v. Weekes,
If downward departure or variance is appropriate in this case — and I believe it is, how far ought the Court depart? This is the most difficult and offender-specific calculus of all. Is it more appropriate to calculate the departure from the bottom of the 232 month guideline range (the so-called “anchoring” to the guidelines principle of which the courts,
see e.g., United States v. Docampo,
The calculus of averages and ranges at this stage of the analysis is, however, no longer appropriate. What is required is a focus on this particular offender and this particular crime in this particular social setting. This is the focus the Court pursued with counsel over 26 transcript pages as it weighed and balanced the various pertinent considerations. Sent. Tr. 12-38. 16 The transcript transparently illumines the Court’s concerns, its aspirations, and its analysis in sentencing Jones. Here, it suffices to say only that, based on the considerations there discussed and developed, the concern over disparity among similarly situated offenders, and the requirement of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) that a sentence be no longer than necessary to accomplish its statutory purposes, this Court fashioned a fair and just 10 year sentence to be followed by eight years of supervised release. Aged 18 at the time of this offense, Jones will be nearly 36 years old when he is free from supervision. This is sufficient.
Notes
. Although the police apparently stopped this other vehicle and arrested the driver, it was never satisfactorily explained who the driver was, why he was patrolling the area, or why he followed Patterson.
. I defy anyone unfamiliar with Daquawn Jones to identify him from the videotape alone. Since it is now all the rage for appellate courts to review such primary evidence and draw their own conclusions,
Scott
v.
Harris,
. Federal Rule of Evidence 702 states in full: If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if: (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles аnd methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
. While the Third and Sixth Circuits have taken a rather liberal view towards the admissibility of expert eyewitness testimony, the First, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits hold that it is within the district court’s discretion to exclude such testimony. The Second Circuit holds that expert psychological testimony usurps the jury’s role of determining witness credibility. See John P. Rutledge, They All Look Alike: The Inaccuracy of Cross-Racial Identifications, 28 Am. J. Crim. L. 207, 218 (2001) (citing cases).
. In addition to the standard eyewitness instruction recommended in
United States
v.
Telfaire,
You may take into account the strength of the later identification and the circumstances under which the later' identification was made.... Was the photographic identification procedure conducted afterwards suggestive in any way. For example, an identification made when a witness chooses a photo from a group of photos tends to be mоre reliable than an identification made from a single photograph. It is not forbidden by the law to identify from a single photograph. But you heard the stipulation about [sic] we don’t treat police officers any different, or at least there’s nothing in the manuals that say treat police officers any different. And I do tell you that it’s generally believed that an identification of a person made from a group of photographs tends to be more reliable than one made from a single photograph.
You may consider these other things. What was the witness's state of mind at the time of observation. There are studies that show that if a witness is afraid, distracted, under stress, then the witness’s capacity to perceive what he says he perceives and remember it, that's reduced. Were the witness, the eyewitness witness and the person he’s identifying, were they of different races. There are studies that tend to show that when a witness and the person he is identifying are оf different races the identification tends to be less reliable than if both persons are of the same race. These studies reveal that even people with no prejudice against other races and people who have substantial contact with persons of other races will experience some difficulty in accurately identifying members of a different race. And quite often people don’t recognize this difficulty in themselves.
Lastly, or last on this list, you can also consider that studies show that the reliability of an identification doesn't really depend upon how positive the person is. The reliability depends on all the circumstances.
Now, I make mention of studies .... studies are of groups of people, a statistically significant group of people generally. They're not the people in this case. No study has been done or could be conducted about the people in this case. And you see that’s what’s lеft to the jury. It’s up to you decide. I need you to understand the parameters, the strengths and the concerns of eyewitness testimony, but how that applies in this case is left to you under your oath as jurors.
Trial Tr., Jury Instructions 17-19; see Fed. Judicial Ctr., Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions 43-44 (1987); 1A Fed. Jury Prac. & Instr. § 14:10 (6th ed. 2010).
. For example, in the context of cross-racial identification, the American Bar Association recommends the use of jury instructions where a trial judge finds sufficient risk of misidentification based on cross-racial factors.
See
Steven Saltzburg,
American Bar Association Policy 104D: Cross-Racial Identification,
37 Sw. U. L. Rev. 917 (2008) (discussing the usefulness of expert testimony and jury instruction to decreasing erroneous convictions and providing several model cross-racial jury instructions);
see also Telfaire,
. This Court tries all factual sentencing enhancements to the jury upon actual proof beyond a reasonable doubt,
Jones v. United States,
. Recently, when confronted with the issue whether a defendant's youthful offender adjudication counted as a prior felony conviction for career offender status purposes, Judge Boudin noted the court’s obligation to follow
Torres
as controlling law in the First Circuit, but held that the defendant’s "opportunity to seek en banc reconsideration to challenge
Torres is
duly preserved."
United States v. McGhee,
. Sentencing is a core judicial function and, save for the protection of offenders, its every aspect ought be public.
Ex Parte United States,
Imagine the richly nuanced common law of sentencing that would emerge were every judge as well served as is this session by Court Reporter Donald Womack. Alone among 94 district courts, the District of Massachusetts routinely makes public the statements of reasons bеhind its sentences.
United States
v.
Whigham,
It is somewhat ironic (but understandable) that Massachusetts' unique transparency in sentencing enabled Scott's articles even though several other judicial districts (which keep their sentencing data secret) stray more *281 frequently than Massachusetts from the advisory sentencing guidelines. Compare the District of Massachusetts (34.9% of sentences are within the guideline range), with the District of Vermont (30.8%); the Southern District of Ohio (33.3%); the District of Minnesota (32.1%); the Central District of California (32.3%). U.S. Sentencing Comm’n, 2009 Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics, Table 26 (2009), available at http://www.ussc. gov/Data_and_Statistics/Annual_Reports_and_ Sourcebooks/2009/Table26.pdf.
The publication of Scott’s law review article resulted in a surprisingly shаllow lead story in The Boston Globe with the sub-heading “Analyst ... alleges bias risk” and mentioning “politics” as a factor in sentencing. Jonathan Saltzman, Disparity Cited in Sentence Lengths, Boston Globe, Dec. 20, 2010, at Al. The actual Scott article develops neither point. Fox News followed with a far more balanced and nuanced piece, Gene Lavanchy, Legally Speaking: Sentencing Guidelines, Fox25 Morning News (Dec. 21, 2010), http://www. myfoxboston.com/dpp/morning/legallyspeaking-sentencing-guidelines-20101221, and the next day Derrick Jackson opined that “it's a welcome sign that at least some judges are responding in a common-sense way to legal disparities that are enshrined in federal law,” Derrick Z. Jackson, A Trend Toward Fairer Sentences, Boston Globe, Dec. 21, 2010, at A19. See generally Wendy Kaminer, Mandatory Sentences and Myths of Equal Justice, The Atlantic (Dec. 22, 2010, 10:40 AM), http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/ 2010/12/mandatory-sentences-and-myths-of-equal-justice/68399/ (“Advocates for mandatory guidelines ... still argue misleadingly that they limit arbitrariness and discretion in sentencing. They do not. They transfer sentencing discretion from judges to prosecutors.”); Peter B. Krupp, Letter to the Editor, Disparity Among Judges Better Than Forced Lockstep, Boston Globе, (Dec. 27, 2010). Transparency is not so bad after all.
The point is not that judges stray from the sentencing guidelines. That is both expected and unremarkable. Rather, the point is — and this cannot be repeated too often — to ask whether inter-judge sentencing disparities rest on actual case-specific factual differences, such as offense conduct, criminal history, impact on victims and society, and the offender's personal and social history. Judges wrestle with these questions every day. They are hard. There are no definitive answers.
. For example, I once sentenced an individual who was so unclear on the concept that he threatened me with death. I said:
You threaten me? How little you understand us. We are Americans. There are a thousand times a thousand American men and women ready and able to sit here. And every single one of them is younger, stronger, and smarter than I am.
Sadly, today I can no longer use this line. The Judicial Conference of the United States, without discussion or debate, has declared the judicial seat I occupy surplusage. See Report of the Proceedings of the Judicial Conference of the United States 23 (March 17, 2009). Thus today, should that unhappy threat be realized, it is the official position of the Judicial Conference that the courtroom where I have sat for over a quarter century will go dark, and the flag of the United States of America which has flown there so proudly for every day of the Court's sitting will be taken down.
. Defense counsel vigorously challenges the Court’s reliance on any data concerning the Grant Street gang, pointing out that none of this data has been subjected to an adversarial evidentiary hearing. Defense counsel is correct, but her view is beside the point.
Data in the pre-sentence report is hardly evidence. Indeed, frequently it is a melange of multi-level hearsay written up from the government's viewpoint. To talk аbout proof by a preponderance of the evidence, U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 6A1.3, Commentaiy (2004), based on such data,
see e.g., United States
v.
Villareal-Amarillas,
But what of it? This type of raw unfiltered data is what we expect prosecution and defense counsel to proffer at the time of sentencing. True, the probation officer, as a Court employed neutral, applies some filter to this data but, while this is an aid to the Court, it hardly qualifies as fact-finding. This Court continues to do as it has always done — apply its own judgment, experience, and common sense to such data to determine whether to sentence below the highest sentence authorized by the guideline on the basis of facts proven to the jury beyond a reasonable doubt at trial.
. In this District, we expect such data -to be included in every pre-sentence report, both as tо pending and resolved cases that the probation officer considers related. Indeed, some judges go further to obtain additional comparative data about other defendants.
See
e.g.,
United States v. Garrison,
. Calling this discount one for "acceptance of responsibility" is just another example of the unfortunate sophistry woven into our guidelines system.
United States v. Green,
. The comparable Michigan statute, Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.479, carries a term of two years. While it is not a categorical crime of violence justifying career offender sentencing, it may qualify as such where a defendant's actual conduct in resisting arrest was violent.
See United States v. Blomquist,
. I can find no independent corroboration of this figure.
. Sensing that the Court was not prepared to accept defense counsel’s recommended 33 month sentence, she doggedly engaged the Court’s analysis, trying to keep the sentence down. Government counsel, on the other hand, though equally able, felt constrained to stick to the advisory sentencing guidelines and thus was somewhat hamstrung when it appeared the Court was considering a downward departure.
