On January 15, 1999, Graciela Ortiz was convicted of violations of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), & 846. The district court (McKenna, J.) sentenced Ortiz on June 14, 2000 to ninety-seven months’ imprisonment. We subsequently vacated that sentence and remanded, holding that the district court had exceeded its authority under the Sentencing Guidelines when it applied a two-level downward departure on the ground that Ortiz’s perjury (for which she had received a two-level upward enhancement pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1) was “aberrant.”
United States v. Ortiz,
Ortiz finished serving her term of imprisonment on September 26, 2002 and was deported to Ecuador on December 10, 2002. While Ortiz has already been deported, the issue is not moot.
See United States v. Suleiman,
We apply a “clearly erroneous” standard to a district court’s factual findings and review its decision to depart from the applicable Guidelines range for abuse of discretion.
1
United States v. Carpenter,
The government, citing
United States v. Carrasco,
After reviewing the facts, however, we conclude that, whether or not Ortiz was likely to be deported upon release, the district court abused its discretion in granting the downward departure for family circumstances. At the time of Ortiz’s resentencing, only one of her six children was under eighteen. In support of a downward departure based on family circumstances, the district court cited the “very serious problems” faced by Ortiz’s three youngest children, namely that her youngest child, who had a learning disability, was having difficulty in school, that her eighteen-year-old son had cut classes and failed to graduate, and that her youngest daughter, who was then twenty-two years old, had suffered from major depressive disorder with psychotic features and had attempted suicide. Although the district court concluded that there was a “causal connection” between these problems and “the absence of a mother,” the court also noted that it still thought that this “is a family of children [who] still care for each other.” The district court apparently concluded that Ortiz’s parents and her oldest daughter were struggling to care for the three youngest children, and that Ortiz would be better able to care for the children than any of the other available caretakers, but the court did not conclude that Ortiz was the only person capable of providing adequate care for the youngest children. There was also evidence that the family as a whole remained cohesive, that Ortiz’s three older children were doing well and were available to care for their younger siblings, and that Ortiz’s extended family was also available for caregiving.
Unfortunate as the circumstances described by the court are, they are not “extraordinary.” They are the common collateral damage of imprisonment and are far enough removed from those circumstances that existing case law has found exceptional that we must conclude that the district court acted outside of permissible limits in granting the downward departure for family circumstances.
See, e.g., United States v. Johnson,
Because Ortiz has been deported and cannot now be present for resentencing, we VACATE Ortiz’s sentence and ORDER that, should Ortiz reenter the country, the government shall have 90 days after such time as the Government knows or reasonably should know that Ortiz is in this country and available for resentencing, see Fed.R.Crim.P. 43, to apply to the district court for a new sentence. In the event that Ortiz is resentenced a second time (her third sentencing), the district court’s consideration of any downward departure for family circumstances should be made on the basis of Ortiz’s family circumstances at the time of that resentencing proceeding.
Notes
. Before the district court, the government argued that a downward departure based on family circumstances exceeded the mandate of our court. The district court rejected this argument and the government does not appeal that ruling.
