In June 1996, Lloyd Bryson pled guilty to one count of conspiring to distribute and possess with intent to distribute crack cocaine. The applicable Sentencing Guidelines, when combined with Bryson’s criminal history, provided for a sentence of 135 to 168 months imprisonment for this crime (Guidelines offense level 31). The district court (Weinstein, J.) downwardly departed from offense level 31 to offense level 23, sentencing Bryson to 60 months imprisonment.
The United States appealed the sentence. In December 1998, this Court vacated the district court’s decision on the ground that the downward departure was not within the district court’s discretion.
See United States v. Bryson,
On remand, the district court stated:
[T]he remand is very precise. It doesn’t give me any discretion at all. It says “31.” I think myself it’s a mistake for the Court of Appeals to be so rigid. Among other reasons, every time a man or woman is resentenced, particularly after the passage of a number of years, that person is a different person and may have rehabilitated or had changes in relationships and so on.... However, in this case, the Court of Appeals in its wisdom has, in effect, handcuffed me. I don’t see how I can avoid the sentence under 31, Category III.
Citing this limitation, the district court sentenced Bryson to 135 months imprisonment, with credit for time served.
The district court understandably over-read our mandate. We concluded that the record and the findings in the district court were wholly insufficient to support a downward departure for an extraordinary rehabilitation.
See Bryson,
This does not, however, change our holding in
Bryson:
absent specific findings of fact demonstrating “extraordinary” rehabilitation consistent with the established caselaw of this Circuit, downward departure is an abuse of discretion.
See Bryson,
The district court’s judgment resentenc-ing Bryson is Vacated and the case is remanded to the district court for further consideration consistent with this opinion.
