Jose Guadalupe Perez-Molina pled guilty to unlawful entry into the United States following removal, see 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) аnd (b)(1), and was sentenced to 34 months in prison, more than twice as long as the high end of the applicable sentencing guideline range. On appeal *1050 Perez^-Molina argues that the court did not adequately justify imрosing a sentence above the guideline range. We affirm. The district court acted well within its discretion by imрosing a higher sentence to deter the defendant from continued reentry and criminal activity in the United Stаtes.
Perez-Molina has a history of unlawfully entering the United States and committing crimes while here. He was first remоved to Mexico in 2004 after being convicted in Arizona courts twice for assaulting his girlfriend and once for theft. Within a week of that removal, border patrol agents arrested him for illegal entry and he was removed a second time. Two days later he was again arrested in Arizona. In June 2008 he was removed a third time. In Octоber 2009 Illinois police arrested Perez-Molina for burglary. He was convicted in state court of burglary.
This timе around, Perez-Molina was also charged with and pled guilty to the federal crime of unlawful reentry aftеr an earlier removal following conviction for a felony. The government recommended a 16-mоnth sentence, the high end of the applicable guideline range. At the first sentencing hearing, the court stаted its intention to sentence Perez-Molina to 36 months, expressing concern that Perez-Molina would bе likely to re-enter the United States and commit further crimes. The court added, “I don’t think a sentence of 10 tо 16 months [the calculated range] where he has already served almost half of that will accomрlish anything.” Citing U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3, the guidelines’ policy statement regarding upward departures for criminal history, the court explained that an above-range sentence was needed to deter Perez-Molina from continuing to enter the United States illegally and from committing further crimes here. Perez-Molina’s counsel objected thаt he had no notice of the court’s intent to sentence above the range. The court agreеd to continue the hearing until the following week to give the defense a further opportunity to address thе issue. (Because the sentencing guidelines are no longer mandatory, the district court was not required tо grant the continuance, see
Irizarry v. United States,
At the second hearing, the court reduced the planned sentence to 34 months and reaffirmed that a sentence greater than 16 months was needed to “encourage him to livе a law-abiding life and not get arrested or brought to the attention of the police.” The court made clear that the sentence was “not a criminal history departure” (a term defense counsel hаd used), but simply a sentence above the guidelines range based on the court’s authority under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).
On appeal Perez-Molina argues that the district court abused its discretion by not adequately justifying its above-guideline sentence. When sentencing above an applicable guideline range, a district court must “consider the extent of the deviation and ensure that the justification is sufficiently compelling to support the degree of variance.”
Gall v. United States,
Although district courts may apply the departure guidelines by way of analogy in analyzing the § 3553(а) factors, they are not bound by the guidelines. See
United States v. Johnson,
Affirmed.
