The three defendants whose appeals are before us were convicted along with others of a variety of federal offenses, including mail fraud, RICO, and money laundering,
*478
arising out of a massive and protracted scheme to defraud the Town of Cicero, Illinois. We affirmed the convictions but on the government’s cross-appeal ordered the defendants resentenced.
On remand the judge corrected his error but imposed the same sentences. The defendants again appeal.
Spano had been found guilty not only of fraud and RICO violations but also of tax offenses. The judge treated the fraud and RICO offenses as one group of offenses and the tax offenses as another. The offense level for the first group under the federal sentencing guidelines was 27, and for the second 30, and the guidelines’ grouping rules produced a combined offense level of 32. See U.S.S.G. § 3D1.4. This put Spano in the 135-months to 168-months guidelines range, and the judge sentenced him to 151 months for the RICO violation and gave him shorter concurrent sentences for the other offenses. Spano complains that while it was the tax offenses that drove him to level 32, the statutory maximum sentence for those offenses was only 60 months. But that is irrelevant to calculating his guidelines range. The highest guidelines range of the grouped offenses is the defendant’s guidelines range even if the top of the range exceeds the statutory maximum for the offense in question, provided that his sentence does not exceed the statutory maximum for the count or counts of conviction on which it was imposed. U.S.S.G. § 3D1.3(a) and Application Note 2; § 3D1.4; § 5G1.2(d) and Application Note 1;
United States v. De la Torre,
Spano argues that this scheme is irrational. The argument misses the mark. Even though the guidelines are no longer mandatory, the judge must compute the guidelines range. He is not bound to sentence within it, but if he does the sentence is presumed by us (that is, by the appellate court) to be reasonable.
United States v. Gama-Gonzalez,
Schullo received a sentence of 71 months, which was the top of the guidelines range applicable to him. He argued at sentencing that he should receive a lower sentence because “life in prison for a police officer [he is a former police chief of Cicero] ... is very difficult,” as the other criminals don’t like police. The judge rejected the argument, saying that the sad lot of a policeman inmate “is not something that in my view should be considered by way of reducing the sentence that would otherwise be appropriate. There should be no favorable treatment of a dishonest policeman simply because his prison time might be harder than average.”
In effect Schullo is arguing that the severity of a prison sentence has two dimensions: its length, and the harshness of the conditions, and that the harsher the conditions the shorter the sentence should be. There is enough merit to the argument to allow a sentencing judge to take it into account,
Koon v. United States,
And though an endangered prisoner might find himself in a segregation unit, he might instead find himself in a minimum-security prison where he would face fewer threats from the other prisoners. Minimum-security prisons tend to house white-collar offenders, who are less likely either *480 to be violent or to harbor animosity toward police officers, who probably had little to do with their apprehension. Schullo is a white-collar criminal, so there is no reason to think him ineligible for such a prison.
We come finally to Loren-Maltese, the former Town President (i.e., mayor) of Cicero. She complains because the $10.6 million loss attributed to her as to the other defendants occurred in part before she joined the conspiracy, and also because the judge made a four-level upward departure in her guidelines range, from 57 to 71 months to 87 to 108 months, for what he considered her extraordinary abuse of trust. The judge thought her to blame for the earlier loss because when she joined the conspiracy she helped to cover up the earlier loss. Generally, the sentence of a late-joining conspirator is not enhanced because of the crimes that other conspirators committed before he joined. U.S.S.G. § IB 1.3, Application Note 2;
United States v. Diamond,
The four-level upward departure was an error, but a harmless one. The proper procedure under
Booker,
as we have explained in a number of cases, is for the sentencing judge first to compute the guidelines range and then to apply the sentencing factors in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) in order to decide whether the sentence should be inside or outside the range. E.g.,
United States v. Robinson,
Departures were an essential safety hatch in the
pre-Booker
world because the guidelines were mandatory then, so that every sentence (except statutory maximum and minimum sentences) had to be fitted into the guidelines scheme. With the guidelines advisory, the departure safety hatch, constrained as it was by the requirement that departures be consistent with the structure of the guidelines, e.g.,
United States v. Castro-Juarez,
But the judge’s error was harmless; for that matter, if he erred in thinking Loren-Maltese responsible for the entire $10.6 million loss, that was harmless too. It is apparent that he thought she should be punished severely for corrupting the office of mayor and that she was blameworthy for having covered up the malefactions of the earlier joiners of the conspiracy. These judgments were proper, sensible exercises of discretion, well within the boundaries set by section 3553(a). The judge has made abundantly and persua *481 sively clear why he thinks a guidelines sentence made without consideration of LorenMaltese’s egregious abuse of trust would fail to comply with the statute. No more is required.
AFFIRMED.
