The defendant pleaded guilty to one count of distributing methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The government moved under section 5K1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines for a downward departure in sentencing. Although the government explained that the defendant had rendered critical and timely assistance that would enable it to indict two other criminals, the judge refused to' grant the motion — whether he actually denied it is the issue — and sentenced the defendant to 60 months in prison. He said he could not “evaluate the significance of the defendant’s cooperation at this time.... The Court ... partially denies the government’s motion for departure based upon substantial assistance_ The Court is also concerned with the defendant’s reliability based upon his chronic alcoholism. The motion has, however, been recognized for the purpose of sentencing the defendant near the lower end, rather than at the top of the guideline range, the Court being of the opinion that this significant and serious criminal activity in the distribution of a controlled substance has been mitigated by the defendant’s good faith efforts to provide assistance to the government concerning other proposed defendants.” Emphasizing “at this time” and “partially denies,” the defendant argues that it is Judge Sha-baz’s practice to deny 5K1.1 motions as a matter of course, remitting defendants to their remedies under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(b), which authorizes a judge to reduce sentence upon motion made within a year (sometimes more) of sentencing. The government’s lawyer confirmed Judge Sha-baz’s reluctance to grant 5K1.1 motions, and in a recent case we described the judge as having “explained that ... the significance or usefulness of [the defendant’s] assistance could not be ascertained at that time [i.e., sentencing],” and “stated that the nature and extent of [the defendant’s] assistance could be better addressed later in a proceeding pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35(b).”
United States v. Hayes,
United States v. Franz,
If this is what the judge believes, it is a grave misconception. As is plain from the text of Rule 35(b) (which allows a reduction of sentence only “to reflect a defendant’s subsequent, substantial assistance”), and has been held by several courts, the rule is designed to recognize assistance rendered
after
the defendant is sentenced.
United States v. Howard,
Sentencing credit for assisting the government is a valuable tool of law enforcement that can be rendered useless by a judge who disagrees with the thinking that underlies such a credit. But even if we thought that Judge Shabaz had abused his discretion in refusing to grant the government’s motion in this case, we could not reverse. The discretion is his; we can intervene only if because of some error of law or otherwise he refuses to exercise it, and we are not convinced that this is what happened here. The appeal is therefore dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
APPEAL DISMISSED.
