This appeal challenges the decision of the district judge, upon revoking the defendant’s supervised release, to sentence him to a term of reimprisonment above the range recommended by the Sentencing Commission.
In 1993 the defendant was convicted of growing 228 marijuana plants and was sentenced to 120 months in prison and 8 years of supervised release. In September 2009, just days before his term of supervised release was scheduled to end, police arrested him while he was tending 52 large marijuana plants. The government filed a petition to revoke his supervised release. He admitted the petition’s allegations and *859 later pleaded guilty to a new charge of growing marijuana. The district judge sentenced him to 30 months in prison on the new charge and, consecutive to that term, 34 months as punishment for violation of the terms of supervised release, minus 4 months for time that he had served in a related state case; so the length of the sentence actually imposed was 60 months.
The defendant’s only challenge on appeal is to the length of the term of reimprisonment. We consider whether the district judge failed to explain why this is anything other than a mine-run revocation case for which the term of reimprisonment recommended in the Sentencing Guidelines would be sufficient punishment. The recommended term is only 12 to 18 months, U.S.S.G. § 7B1.4, though the statutory maximum is three years. 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(3); see
United States v. Flagg,
The judge didn’t give a reason for the 34-month term, and made just four, brief remarks that might supply clues to his thinking. The first is that he was “baffled” that the defendant would continue growing marijuana after spending eight years in prison for that crime. The second remark, which followed immediately and merely repeated the first in different words was: “why did you even consider doing this again?” The defendant replied that he had grown marijuana because “he just liked the way the plant looked” and he “liked to smoke it,” whereupon the judge asked him sarcastically whether he had “ever thought about growing gardenias or something legal versus growing marijuana” and added (this was his fourth remark) “you could have grown roses.” Without further explanation the judge stated: “with respect to the revocation, the Court is going to sentence you to 34 months.”
Appellate review of a sentence for violating the terms of supervised release is highly
deferential
— we have suggested that it might be comparable to “the narrowest judicial review of judgments we know,” namely judicial review of sanctions imposed by prison disciplinary boards.
United States v. Kizeart,
But less is not zero. Whatever the precise standard of review, the sentencing judge must consider the statutory sentencing factors, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) — and, the cases say, the policy statements as well,
United States v. Flagg, supra,
In the present case the judge didn’t say enough to indicate that he considered either the statutory sentencing factors or the policy statement. Not that he had to cite chapter and verse. But he didn’t even say that he disagreed with the Sentencing Commission’s policy statement on punishment for violations of supervised release or that he feared that a term shorter than 60 months would fail to deter the defendant from growing marijuana after his release from prison. He also said nothing in response to the defendant’s argument that the statutory sentencing factors favored a lighter sentence because he was 59 years old, had served “99.8%” of his term of supervised release, and had been gainfully employed lawfully throughout that eight-year period. Maybe the argument was too weak to merit discussion, but the judge didn’t say that either.
We cannot brush off the appeal on the ground that
of course
the district judge knows the statutory sentencing factors and the relevant Guideline provisions and so he
must
have had a good reason for imposing a sentence almost twice as long as the maximum recommended by the Sentencing Commission (34 months versus 18 months). If that response to his appeal were proper, a judge would never have to give a reason for a sentence that was within the sentencing range set by Congress. Anyway what a busy judge knows is not always present to his mind. The Supreme Court has told us to “ensure that the district court committed no significant procedural error, such as ... failing to adequately explain the chosen sentence — including an explanation for any deviation from the Guidelines range.”
Gall v. United States,
So just as in
United States v. Thompson,
Vacated and Remanded.
