Roberto Gonzalez appeals his sentence of seventy months in custody and four years of suspended release, contending that the trial court misapplied the Federal Sentencing Guidelines (“the Guidelines”) and that, as applied, the Guidelines are unconstitutional. We affirm.
Gonzalez was convicted of violating 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. At the sentencing hearing, Gonzalez requested that the court reduce his base offense level under the Guidelines by two points in recognition of his “acceptance of responsibility.” The trial court denied the request.
Whether or not a defendant has accepted responsibility for his crime is a factual determination. We agree with the other circuits which have decided to apply the “clearly erroneous” standard to such questions.
See United States v. Barrett,
Gonzalez’s fifth and sixth amendment challenges to Guidelines’ Section 3E1.1 raise questions of law.
A. Sixth Amendment Claim
Gonzalez claims that the two-point reduction for acceptance of responsibility under Section 3E1.1 effectively has been made available only to defendants who plead guilty. Therefore, he argues, defendants who choose to go to trial are penal
*1020
ized for exercising their rights under the sixth amendment. It is settled in this and other circuits that “[a]n accused may not be subjected to more severe punishment for exercising his constitutional right to stand trial.”
United States v. Carter,
Section 3E1.1 provides for a reduction in sentence if the defendant “clearly demonstrates a recognition and affirmative acceptance of personal responsibility” for his wrongdoing. Section 3E1.1. Contrary to Gonzalez’s assertions, 3E1.1 authorizes reductions in sentences of defendants who are tried
as well as
of those who plead guilty.
1
There is in fact no guarantee that a defendant who pleads guilty will receive the two-point reduction.
See
Application Note 3, § 3E1.1. Of course, as the Fifth Circuit pointed out in
Thomas:
“A defendant who maintains her innocence at trial, and then purports to accept responsibility afterward, may have a difficult time persuading the trial judge that her later position is sincere rather than merely convenient.”
The legal process triggered with the filing of criminal charges presents an accused with a variety of choices. The fact that risks and consequences may differ among the alternatives available is not a ground for assigning constitutional error. Since long before the enactment of the Guidelines, district courts have been permitted to consider a defendant’s acceptance of responsibility in making sentencing determinations.
United States v. Henry,
In denying Gonzalez a sentence reduction for acceptance of responsibility, the district judge stated explicitly that his decision was based upon Gonzalez’s conduct at trial, and not upon Gonzalez’s choice to exercise his sixth amendment right to go to trial. We agree with the conclusion of the Fifth Circuit considering this issue in
United States v. White,
We also find no error in the district court’s application of section 3E1.1. Gonzalez admits that his strategy at trial was to protest his innocence steadfastly: He states in his brief that he “never once swayed from this conviction and even told the probation officer that he was not involved.” In addition he acknowledges that he “never showed any contrition except to ‘beg for the opportunity to prove that I’m a good man.’ ” Yet he complains that the denial of the two-point reduction was unjust because his acceptance of responsibility was fully manifested in his “appearing for sentencing, accepting the judgment of the jury and the sentence of the judge, and serving his time.” We conclude that the district court’s finding that Gonzalez had not accepted responsibility for his crime was not clearly erroneous.
B. Fifth Amendment Claim
Gonzalez also contends that Section 3E1.1 chills the exercise of his fifth amend *1021 ment right against self-incrimination. He argues that the only way a defendant could receive the two-point reduction for acceptance of responsibility after having gone to trial is to retract his sworn trial testimony, contritely admit guilt, and confess perjury. Under this view Section 3E1.1 is unconstitutional because its practical effect is to encourage confessions to perjury by those who withstand the inducement to plead guilty.
We begin by observing that the reduction provided for in Section 3E1.1 is merely a benefit which may be accorded to a defendant if he is able to make the necessary showing. The possibility of leniency in the statute does not make denial of lenient treatment impermissible where the district court determines that the defendant has failed to exhibit the requisite contrition.
In
Henry
the Eleventh Circuit (so far the only other circuit to rule on this issue) rejected a defendant’s fifth amendment challenge to Section 3E1.1, concluding that “[while] Section 3E1.1 may add to the dilemmas facing criminal defendants, ... no good reason exists to believe that 3E1.1 was intended to punish anyone for exercising rights.”
The
Belgard
court found instead that, in addition to encouraging judicial and law enforcement economy, the Guidelines recognize “societal interest in the reduction of crime, restitution, early withdrawal from criminal activity, ... and the increased potential for rehabilitation among those who feel and show true remorse for anti-social conduct.”
Again, Gonzales is correct in noting that it may be more difficult for a defendant who has protested his innocence throughout trial to convince the sentencing judge that he accepts responsibility for his crime without appearing to contradict his previous stance. But that difficulty does not suggest any constitutional infirmity in Section 3E1.1. As the court in
Belgard
pointed out, “[t]he courts of this circuit [the Ninth] have refused to invalidate, as punishment for the exercise of constitutional rights, the practice of imposing stiffer sentences where defendants have not fully accepted responsibility for their actions.”
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. According to the terms of 3El.l(b):
A defendant may be given consideration under this section without regard to whether his conviction is based upon a guilty plea or a finding of guilt by the court or jury or the practical certainty of conviction at trial.
