Defendant Michael Sardin appeals his sentence, contending that information was used in sentencing him in violation of his Fifth Amendment rights and that the guideline range was erroneously computed. We affirm in part and reverse in part, and we remand for resentencing.
I.
Michael Sardin and four co-defendants, Oscar St. Julian, Kelvin Davis, Kevin Harris, and Marcus Denton all were involved in a plan to ship cocaine from California to Oklahoma City from November 1988 to early 1989. Approximately four shipments of cocaine were made to Oklahoma for sale in furtherance of this plan. The district court found that at least thirty-six ounces of cocaine had been imported into Oklahoma from California over this period of time.
Prosecution for these shipments resulted in multiple count indictments against the defendants. Sardin, St. Julian, and Davis 1 *1066 ultimately entered into agreements to plead guilty to maintaining a crack house in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 856 (1988) in return for dismissal of the other counts against them. Each defendant also agreed to cooperate with the Government, and the Government agreed not to use against him any information he disclosed.
II.
Sardin objected at his sentencing to use of information disclosed by his co-defendants as a basis for an upward departure when it was the same information he had disclosed. We recently addressed the identical issue in Davis’ appeal,
United States v. Davis,
Sardin also contends the court impermissibly considered the amount of drugs as a basis for an upward departure when sentencing for the crime of operating a crackhouse. We settled this issue as well in Davis, holding that the quantity of drugs is a valid factor to consider in determining whether an upward departure from the sentence for a premises violation is appropriate. Id. at 1213.
III.
In Davis, we retained jurisdiction and remanded the case to the district court to explain its reasons for the degree of departure from the guideline range. See id. at 1215. The district court has similarly failed to explain the degree of departure in sentencing Sardin. The error here is even more significant, however.
Sardin, like Davis and St. Julian, was convicted and sentenced for maintaining a crack house. The court made an upward departure from each conspirator’s guidelines sentence because of the amount of cocaine, thirty-six ounces, involved in the offense. Sardin’s offense level and criminal history category placed his guideline imprisonment range between thirty and thii'ty-seven months. The court thus made at least an eighty-three month upward departure when it sentenced Sardin to 120 months of imprisonment. The court made significantly lower departures in the cases of both Sardin’s co-defendants, St. Julian and Davis. The court departed from Davis’ sentence range of fifteen to twenty-one months by at least fifteen months when it sentenced Davis to thirty-six months. See id. at 1211. St. Julian’s initial sentencing range of thirty to thirty-seven months was adjusted, at a minimum, by thirty-five months to seventy-two months. See St. Julian Brief, No. 89-6249, at 5. Thus, Sardin’s departure was forty-eight months greater than St. Julian’s and sixty-eight months greater than Davis’, notwithstanding the departure was made in each case for the identical quantity of drugs involved, thirty-six ounces of cocaine.
The basis for Sardin’s apparently disproportionate sentence is unclear. Upward departures must be based on circumstances “not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the Guidelines.” See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(b) (1988). Sardin’s sentencing range, without upward departure, already reflected that he purchased and possessed firearms in the course of his offense (United States Sentencing Comm’n Guidelines Manual § 2D1.8(b)(1) (1989)) (hereinafter Guidelines), and that he played a manager/supervisor role in the criminal activity (id. at § 3Bl.l(a)). See rec., vol. Ill, at 14. Consequently, the court’s upward departure could not have reflected enhanced punishment for this conduct.
The court stated that it departed upward from the guideline range because the conviction did not take into account the amount of drugs distributed. See rec., vol. II, at 77. Given that the quantity of the drugs alone compelled Sardin’s upward adjustment, an unaccounted-for difference ex *1067 ists between the degree of his upward departure and that of Davis and St. Julian.
In order to determine whether the degree of departure was reasonable, we must be able to examine not only the district court’s reasons for a departure from the guidelines, but the reasons the “particular sentence” was imposed. Davis, at 1215. This directive is particularly compelling in Sardin’s ease because the degree of his departure is inexplicable given the facts in the record.
Because of the disparity in the sentence given Sardin as opposed to those given St. Julian and Davis, when each departure was based on the same conduct involving the same quantity of drugs, we must reverse and remand for resentenc-ing.
2
The sentencing guidelines incorporate the principles of equality and proportionality. Their purpose is to narrow the “disparity in sentences imposed ... for similar criminal conduct by similar offenders.” Guidelines Ch. 1, Pt. A.3. The guidelines mandate the sentencing court to consider “the need to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct.” 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6). We have specifically recognized and endorsed this principle.
United States v. Jackson,
The district court’s disproportionate upward departure from Sardin’s guideline sentence range thwarts the very purpose of the guidelines and is therefore invalid. Given that the three defendants here were "similar offenders” engaged in “similar criminal conduct” with respect to the reason given for their upward departure, they should have received equivalent upward departures.
See Jackson,
at 988, n. 1 (noting that to ensure uniformity and proportionality in sentencing offenders under the Guidelines, we must “treat different cases in roughly the same ‘different’ way”);
United States v. Williams,
This case is distinguishable from cases in which disparate sentences were upheld because the disparity was explicable given the facts in the respective record.
See, e.g., United States v. Trujillo,
In consideration of the foregoing, we reverse and remand this case for resentenc-ing not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Charges against Harris were dismissed. Den-ton entered a guilty plea to possession of co *1066 caine base with intent to distribute under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1988). Only Sardin, St. Julian, and Davis have appealed their sentences.
. Although Sardin did not raise this issue as grounds for reversal before the sentencing court, we may exercise our discretion to resolve an issue not passed on below, which, if not addressed, might otherwise result in manifest injustice.
Singleton v. Wulff,
