Lead Opinion
OPINION
Leonard Overmyer pled guilty to transporting child pornography and received an 87-month prison sentence. The district court addressed all of Overmyer’s arguments for a lower sentence and reasonably imposed a bottom-of-the-guidelines sentence. We affirm.
I.
In 2008, an Internet service provider reported several transfers of suspected child pornography. Investigators traced the files to an automobile-parts manufacturer in Kentwood, Michigan. An internal investigation revealed that Overmyer, an employee of the company, had used the computer network to access hundreds of pornographic web sites, including many with names like “preteenonline.” The company fired Overmyer, but prosecutors never filed charges, apparently due to the way the company handled the investigation.
Less than one year later, authorities received a similar tip. This time they traced the activity to Overmyer’s home, where they executed a search warrant. The officers found two computers, but they did not contain any pornography and Overmyer disclaimed owning any other computers. Overmyer asked to take his SUV to the repair shop while the search continued. The request prompted the officers to examine the vehicle, which contained a hidden laptop, one with thousands of pornographic images, including at least 90 that involved children. Some of the images involved sexualized depictions of children in pain and bondage. Records on the laptop showed that Overmyer had visited child pornography web sites repeatedly during the past year.
Overmyer pled guilty to one count of transporting child pornography, an offense that comes with a statutory minimum of 60 months and a statutory maximum of 240 months. See 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(l), (b)(1). The guidelines range was 87-108 months.
Overmyer moved for a downward variance, requesting a sentence near the statutory minimum on three grounds: he sought therapy on his own initiative; he expressed remorse for his actions; and he suffered from depression over the impact of the crime on his family. The court imposed an 87-month sentence, explaining that it agreed with the severity of the child-pornography sentencing guidelines— “that the guidelines themselves measure the appropriate harms” — and that it would not exercise its authority to vary downward based on a policy disagreement with them. R.39 at 14.
II.
District courts have broad discretion to impose sentences within the statutory range, see United States v. Booker,
Overmyer first raises a procedural-reasonableness objection — that the process
Overmyer next raises a substantive-reasonableness objection — that his sentence is too long. A within-guidelines sentences is presumptively reasonable, Vonner,
Our colleague does not dispute any of this. He instead submits that, “as an appellate judge,” he is “permitted to disagree respectfully with the sentencing judge about the fairness of the guidelines policy and its application to this case.” Infra at 867. In this instance, because the guidelines call for a sentence that is “unconscionably harsh,” id. at 867, he would authorize a sentence no longer than the statutory minimum, making a 60-month sentence the floor and ceiling of a “reasonable” sentence. Id. at 867 (“I would limit the sentence in such cases to the mandatory minimum of 5 years.”).
We respectfully disagree. Overmyer has not sought what our colleague proposes — a five-year sentence. He claims that his 87-month sentence is too long and that we should remand his case for re-sentencing, not that we should require the district court to impose a five-year sentence in this case and in similar child-pornography cases.
This proposal also overlooks a key change in federal sentencing law. In the aftermath of United States v. Booker,
In cases where the district court and the sentencing commission independently agree about an appropriate sentencing range, as happened here, it will be difficult to establish that the sentence is unreasonable. As Kimbrough explained, sentencing courts and the sentencing commission possess “discrete institutional strengths.”
Neither Overmyer nor our colleague has rebutted that presumption. Overmyer received and possessed at least 90 images (89 more than necessary for the imposition of the five-year minimum), including images that are more sadistic than the “ordinary” child pornography sufficient to trigger the mandatory minimum. He persisted in his criminal conduct even after it cost him his job, and he lied to investigators when they came looking for evidence of the crimes. Nor does anything in the record show that Overmyer is fully rehabilitated; it shows only that he sought treatment and made commendable progress in addressing his addiction. Whatever we might have done in sentencing Overmyer, it is difficult to say that the district court acted unreasonably in sentencing him to more than the statutory minimum.
United States v. Grober,
In contrast to Grober, Overmyer asks us to hold that this within-guidelines sentence is too long based on a substantive disagreement with it, an argument that carries a burden he simply has not met. And in contrast to Grober, our colleague asks us to hold that a five-year sentence necessarily balances the § 3553(a) factors in a
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The problem in this pornography case is the gross disparity, inequality, and unfairness that exists in sentencing generally, but even more so in these child pornography viewer cases. It illustrates the continued sad dependence of federal judges on a harsh sentencing grid created by a distant bureaucracy. To illustrate the gross disparity and the unfairness of the sentencing guidelines dealing with pornography, we should read carefully the recent ease of United States v. Grober,
Here the defendant also asserts that “a sentence in the 60 month range would be sufficient but not greater than necessary to punish him for his offense behavior.” (Appellant brief, p. 9.) My colleagues do not even discuss, much less take seriously, the parsimony provision. The judge in the instant case stated during the sentencing hearing that he was aware of “a very significant debate going on across the country regarding the advisory guidelines”
As an appellate judge required by law to review and consider the sentence in this case, I assume I am permitted to disagree respectfully with the sentencing judge about the fairness of the guidelines policy and its application in this case. Like the judges in Grober, I would limit the sentence in such cases to the mandatory minimum of 5 years, as requested by defendant. Although sentencing law is filled with a vast combination of presumptions, sentencing jargon and efforts by the Sentencing Commission to make judges adhere to their harsh view of fairness, we should remember that in sentencing what is most important is the result: how many years will the defendant spend in prison, how long will his liberty be foreclosed. The Guidelines in this case, as in many cases, are too harsh, here “unconscionably” harsh, as the Third Circuit says. For the last 30 years the grid has had a massive effect on incarceration: there has been a 10-fold increase in the federal prison population which has grown from 20,000 to 216,000. The Department of Justice is now bringing about 2,000 of these pornography cases a year with a mean sentence of 10 years in prison for a total of approximately 20,000 prison years for a cost to the taxpayer of approximately $800 million. See 2010 Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics at 29. In the end it is still supposed to be the Article III sentencing judges at the trial and appellate levels who are responsible for the sentence imposed, even though the grid system has given the prosecutor, a party to the case, a dominant role, as the Third Circuit district and appellate judges discussed in Grober.
My colleagues’ response to this line of argument is that it is irrelevant and unworthy of serious consideration: They say clearly that if a district court and the grid system are together on a sentence within the grid, a reviewing judge has no business interfering. Presumably, that is the reason my colleagues refuse to discuss the harshness of the sentence, the addictive and nonviolent nature of the crime, the parsimony provision of the Sentencing Act or the validity of the grid policy that the district judge discusses and accepts. No effort is made to rebut the views expressed in the Grober case or in the many opinions and articles discussed there which strongly disagree with the guideline policy, and no effort is made to discuss the elemental fact that most of the guidelines enhancements are inherent in the crime itself for which Congress established a mandatory minimum of five years. The only argument that persuades my colleagues is that the district court and the grid are in agreement. When that is the case, the policy and the sentence must be right and no further analysis or commentary is needed. The grid becomes a biblical command for the reviewing judges. I do not agree.
