Pedro Mezas de Jesus was convicted in 1998 of being an undocumented immigrant in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5). At sentencing, the government argued that Mezas de Jesus committed this offense during a purported, uncharged kidnaping. The sentencing court applied the preponderance of the evidence standard and found that Mezas de Jesus possessed a firearm in connection with a kidnaping. On this basis, the court sentenced him under the kidnaping guideline, U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual *640 (“U.S.S.G.”) § 2A4.1 (1998), instead of the guideline governing possession of a firearm, U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(a)(6). As a result, Mezas de Jesus received a nine-level upward adjustment in offense level and was sentenced to 57 months of imprisonment. On appeal, he argues that the district court erred in applying the preponderance of the evidence standard in finding that he used a firearm in connection with the uncharged kidnaping because that sentencing factor had an extremely disproportionate affect on his sentence. We agree.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mezas de Jesus was arrested, along with Antonio Cruz-Baires, and charged with kidnaping for ransom by the State of California. After the state dropped the kid-naping charges against both defendants, the federal government jointly tried and convicted each of them for unlawful possession of a firearm by an undocumented immigrant in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5). Cruz-Baires and Mezas de Jesus filed separate appeals. 3 At sentencing, Mezas de Jesus was sentenced to 57 months of imprisonment on the basis of the district court’s finding that he possessed the firearm in connection with the uncharged kidnaping. Had the district court applied only the Sentencing Guideline for possession of a firearm by an undocumented immigrant, U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(a)(6), his base offense level would have been 14, which, with a criminal history category of III, would have produced a sentencing range of 21 to 27 months.
The federal probation office in its Pre-sentence Report (PSR) recommended the 57-month sentence based on the following Sentencing Guidelines calculations. First, probation cross-referenced the firearm possession offense to the base offense level for kidnaping (24 points), see U.S.S.G. §§ 2K2.1(c)(l)(A) (cross-reference); 2X1.1 (attempt, solicitation, or conspiracy); 2A4.1(a) (kidnaping); then probation decreased the offense level by one point for the release of the victim within 24 hours (23 points), see U.S.S.G. § 2A4.1(b)(4)(C); and then probation established a criminal history category of III. The sentencing range for offense level 23 and criminal history category III is 57 to 71 months.
Probation applied the kidnaping provision largely on the basis of hearsay contained in the police report of the investigating officers. Specifically, probation relied on the investigating officers’ notes of statements purportedly made by the alleged kidnap victim, Pancho Aragon (Aragon), and his wife at various times during the investigation, and statements that Aragon and his wife claimed that the defendants made to them. In preparing the PSR, probation did not interview Aragon or his wife, and neither of them testified at trial because the district court precluded the government from presenting any testimony about the alleged kidnaping due to its potential prejudicial effect.
The record indicates that Aragon was a drug dealer and an associate of the defendants. According to the PSR, Aragon initially told the police that he and his wife had voluntarily gotten into a defendant’s car to attend a wedding. Later he told the police that he was separated from his wife and kidnaped because he did not have the money to pay for the 3 kilos of the “boss’s” cocaine that he had lost. His wife told the police that, although she was initially fearful of the defendants, she asked to go with them and that defendants agreed. She also told the police that her husband subsequently left her in one car and voluntarily went off with the defendants in another car. At no time did she suggest that the defendants were armed. Aragon, on the other hand, claimed that the defendants were armed and forcibly took him. Ara- *641 gon, who had bruises on the left side of his face and “burn” marks on both wrists when he spoke with the police, claimed that he was bound and beaten, and that his life was threatened if he did not pay back the “boss” by the following week. 4 Thereafter, Aragon told the police that the defendants untied him, disposed of their weapons, and started to drive him home when the police stopped the vehicle. 5
Mezas de Jesus, through defense counsel, filed a sentencing memorandum in which he objected to the application of § 2A4.1 (kidnaping) because (1) the kid-naping was not supported by a preponderance of the evidence, and (2) he had not had an opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses to the alleged kidnaping. In the sentencing memorandum, Mezas de Jesus also demanded an evidentiary hearing so that he could cross-examine these witnesses.
At the sentencing hearing, the district court determined that Mezas de Jesus was entitled to an evidentiary hearing to determine whether a kidnaping had occurred. But the government reported that the whereabouts of Aragon and his wife were unknown and that they were unavailable to testify at an evidentiary hearing. The record does not indicate why the government could not locate the alleged victim and his wife or when they disappeared.
Because the alleged kidnap victim and his wife were unavailable, Mezas de Jesus withdrew his request for the hearing. He argued instead that the hearsay statements made by Aragon and his wife that were contained in the police report and recounted in the PSR should not be con-sidéred by the court because they were inherently unreliable 6 and insufficient to show by even a preponderance of the evidence standard that a kidnaping had in fact taken place. Mezas de Jesus further argued that because the uncharged and unproved kidnaping would have an extreme effect on his sentence, its use as a sentencing factor would become the “tail which wags the dog of the substantive offense.” 7
*642 After expressing some concern about the limited reliability of -the “untested” hearsay testimony of the. alleged victim and his wife, the inability of the government to produce these witnesses for cross-examination at an evidentiary hearing, and the absence of defense evidence rebutting the alleged victim’s “story,” the district court nonetheless accepted the probation office’s recommendation and sentenced Mezas de Jesus to 57 months imprisonment.
On appeal, Mezas de Jesus argues, inter alia, that under the circumstances of his case, the district court should have applied a standard of proof higher than mere preponderance of the evidence before using the alleged kidnaping as a sentencing factor. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo the constitutionality of a sentence imposed under the Sentencing Guidelines.
See United States v. Estrada-Plata,
B. Standard of Proof
“[A]s a general rule [at sentencing] due process does not require a higher standard of proof than preponderance of the evidence to protect a convicted defendant’s liberty interest in the accurate application of the Guidelines.”
Restrepo II,
In
Hopper,
a jury convicted the defendants of,
inter alia,
conspiring “to obstruct the due and proper proceedings of law before the [Internal Revenue Service].”
In reversing the district court, we recognized the general rule that “ ‘a jury’s verdict of acquittal does not prevent the sentencing court from considering conduct underlying the acquitted charge, so long as that conduct has been proved by a preponderance of the evidence.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
United States v. Watts,
Here, Mezas de Jesus’s sentence was enhanced wme-levels on the basis of an uncharged kidnaping. As a result, his sentencing range increased from 21-27 months to 57-71 months, which exposed him to a 36- to 44-month increase in imprisonment. Although Mezas de Jesus was sentenced at the low end of the enhanced sentencing range, he went from a “relatively short” sentence of less than two years to nearly five years based on an offense for which he was never even charged.
Thus on appeal even the government concedes that “the impact on [Mezas de Jesus’s] sentence of the uncharged kidnap-ing may be reasonably viewed as similar to the impact of the acquitted conduct in Hopper.” Appellee’s Letter Brief at 3. Moreover, Hopper requires the evidence of the uncharged kidnaping to be established by clear and convincing evidence before it may be used to increase Mezas de Jesus’s sentence. The district court failed to do so here.
In fact, it appears that the district court erred in finding that the government had established the uncharged kidnaping even by a preponderance of the evidence. We have previously emphasized “that the preponderance of the evidence standard is a meaningful one that requires the judge to be
convinced
by a preponderance of the evidence that the fact in question exists.”
Restrepo II,
“[i]t is a misinterpretation [of the preponderance test] that it calls on the trier of fact merely to perform an abstract weighing of the evidence in order to determine which side has produced the greater quantum, without regard to its effect in convincing his mind of the truth of proposition asserted.”
*644
Id.
(quoting
In re Winship
And yet, here it appears that the district court focused on the quantum of evidence — not on the convincing force of the evidence — in finding that a kidnaping was proved by a preponderance of the evidence. The judge stated that
[i]n my view, based on the evidence I have so far, the government’s evidence preponderates because there isn’t any on the other side. So .it’s easy for the government’s evidence to preponderate as long as it’s a little bit of evidence and I think there is, at minimum, a little bit of evidence.
Thus, in concluding that a kidnaping had taken place, the district court was apparently not convinced by the force of the evidence, but merely by the abstract weight of the evidence.
During the colloquy with counsel at sentencing, the district court had expressed doubts about the reliability of the government’s “limited evidence”: “All I have-the only thing I have is the statement of the victim [that is contained in the police reported and incorporated into the PSR].... And so I have that limited evidence, and it is ... untested in the sense that it hasn’t been cross-examined and it’s given ... by the gentleman who is a drug dealer.” But the evidentiary hearing was never held— not because of the convincing force of the evidence already before the court, but rather because the defense withdrew its request for the hearing when the government advised the court that it could not produce the alleged kidnap victim and his wife for cross-examination.
In contrast, where we have found that the preponderance of the evidence standard sufficiently protected a defendant’s due process interests at sentencing, the evidence considered by the sentencing court was reliable and thoroughly “tested.”
See, e.g., Restrepo I,
Further, it appears that the district court .implicitly drew an adverse inference from Mezas de Jesus’s silence at sentencing. Specifically, the court questioned whether Mezas de Jesus was even entitled to an evidentiary hearing given his silence: “So if the court is presented with a prima facie case by the government that a kidnaping occurred, wouldn’t I have to see something from you like, for instance, a statement under oath from your client that it didn’t happen, in order to require an evidentiary hearing?”
The Supreme Court, in a case decided
after
Mezas de Jesus was sentenced, held that a sentencing court may not, in determining facts relating to circumstances and details of a crime, draw an adverse inference from a defendant’s silence.
See Mitchell v. United States,
The normal rule in a criminal case is that no negative inference from the defendant’s failure to testify is permitted. We decline to adopt an exception for the *645 sentencing phase of a criminal case with regard to factual determinations respecting the circumstances and details of the crime.... Without question, the stakes are high: Here, the inference drawn by the District Court from petitioner’s silence may have resulted in decades of added imprisonment. The Government often has a motive to demand a severe sentence, so the central purpose of the privilege-to protect a defendant from being the unwilling instrument of his or her own condemnation-remains of vital importance.
Id.
at 327-29,
By focusing on the defendant’s silence at sentencing and quantitatively weighing it against the government’s “untested” evidence, the district court effectively shifted the burden of proof at sentencing to the defendant. In so doing, the district court erred. “The Government retains the burden of proving facts relevant to the crime at the sentencing phase and cannot enlist the defendant in this process at the expense of the self-incrimination privilege.”
Mitchell,
III. CONCLUSION
In sum, the uncharged kidnaping had an “ ‘extremely disproportionate effect on [Mezas de Jesus’s] sentence relative to the offense of conviction.’ ”
Hopper,
Moreover, even assuming that the preponderance of the evidence standard was adequate to protect Mezas de Jesus’s due process interest in “fair sentencing,”
Res-trepo II,
Because we cannot find these constitutional errors to be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, we vacate the district court’s sentence and remand for resen-tencing. REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. We affirmed Cruz-Baires’s conviction in his separate appeal by memorandum disposition.
See United States v. Cruz-Baires,
No. 98-50640,
. The record also indicates that a number of telephone calls were made to Aragon's wife and sister during the alleged kidnaping; some of which were made by Aragon himself. In fact, Aragon’s wife told the police that Aragon made the first telephone call to her in response to her page, and that during that call he told her that he was “ok'' and that he would “be back later.” But she also told police that during a later telephone call a demand for money was made, allegedly as ransom. The government admitted in its sentencing papers that there was no evidence to suggest who made the alleged ransom demand and that it could have been Aragon or one of the defendants. After the alleged ransom demand, Aragon's wife telephoned the police.
. According to the PSR, the police located the car by tracking the cellular telephone calls. The police pulled the vehicle over for a traffic violation. At the time of the traffic stop, the defendants were seated in the front passenger seat, Aragon was seated unbound in the rear passenger seat, and no weapons were present. Aragon told the police that the defendants had disposed of their guns at the banquet hall where they had taken him. Both defendants also told the police that they had guns in their possession on the day of the alleged kidnap-ing. Both guns were later recovered from the banquet hall. After the police learned that both defendants were illegal immigrants, defendants were charged with being illegal aliens in possession of firearms.
. Because of their inherent unreliability, “[plolice reports have generally been excluded [at criminal trials] except to the extent to which they incorporate firsthand observations of the officer.” FED. R. EVID. 803(8)(B) advisory committee's note. The rule’s
legislative history indicates that ... "the reason for this exclusion is that the observations by police officers at the scene of the crime or the apprehension of the defendant are not as reliable as observations by public officials in other cases because of the adversarial nature of the confrontation between police and the defendant in criminal cases.”
United States v. Orozco,
. This metaphor, which derives from
McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
. Six other circuits have indicated that a clear and convincing standard may be required in certain extreme circumstances.
See, e.g., United States v. Gigante,
. The same level of reliability has been true of evidence considered in cases upholding cross-referencing pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(c).
See, e.g., United States v. Mun,
