Defendant-Appellant Jose Gonzalo Rodriguez appeals his sentence of 27 months imprisonment and three years of supervised release for illegal reentry after deportation. We affirm.
Jose Gonzalo Rodriguez pleaded guilty without the benefit of a plea agreement to illegal reentry after deportation. He argues that the 27-month sentence he received is substantively unreasonable because it improperly considered a “stale” prior conviction, and because the sentencing judge failed to give sufficient consideration to his cultural assimilation.
At sentencing, the probation officer assigned Rodriguez a total offense level of 18, reflecting a 12-level enhancement for a 1990 felony drug trafficking conviction under § 2L1.2(b)(l)(B). At trial, Rodriguez filed objections to the Pre Sentencing Report (PSR) and requested a downward variance or departure based on his cultural assimilation and the staleness of the 1990 conviction. At the sentencing hearing, defense counsel stated that the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines calculations in the PSR were correct and reiterated the request for a sentence below 27 months due to the age of Rodriguez’s prior drug conviction and his cultural assimilation. Rodriguez was allowed to speak in mitigation of sentence.
The district court stated that it had reviewed “all the information” in the PSR and observed that Rodriguez came to the United States when he was ten years old. The court expressed concern about the rapidity of Rodriguez’s return to the United States after having been deported for his drug conviction. The court sentenced Rodriguez to 27 months of imprisonment and three years of supervised release. Following the imposition of sentence, defense counsel objected that the court had not adequately considered the factors under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) and that the sentence was greater than was sufficient or necessary in Rodriguez’s case. The court responded that it had considered all the factors but “specifically believe[d] that the sentence is necessary in this case to reflect the seriousness of the offense [and] to afford adequate deterrence to future criminal conduct. And even those factors that the court didn’t specifically touch on the court did consider.”
Jose Gonzalo Rodriguez now appeals a 27-month within-guidelines sentence, arguing that it is substantively unreasonable. As . a threshold matter, Rodriguez argues that the presumption of reasonableness should not apply to his within-guidelines sentence on appellate review because the guideline upon which it is based, U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2, is penologieally flawed and not the result of empirical evidence or study. These arguments are foreclosed by this court’s decisions in
United States v. Mondragon-Santiago,
Rodríguez further asserts that, even if the presumption of reasonableness applies, it is rebutted by the facts and circumstances of this case. Specifically, he argues that (1) the 12-level increase in his offense level was excessive because he committed the felony drug offense in 1990 and (2) the district court failed to accord sufficient weight to his cultural assimilation. This court reviews sentences for reasonableness in light of the sentencing factors in § 3553(a), engaging in a bifurcated analysis of the sentence imposed by the district court.
Gall v. United States,
Rodriguez does not contend that the district court’s decision is procedurally unsound. When there are no procedural errors, this court will then “consider the substantive reasonableness of the sentence imposed under an abuse-of-discretion standard” and will “take into account the totality of the circumstances.”
Gall,
Rodriguez cites
United States v. Amezcua-Vasquez,
Other circuits have confronted the same argument, but have not used
AmezcuarVasquez
or its reasoning to overturn a sentence as substantively unreasonable. The Second Circuit distinguished
Amezcuar-Vasquez
from the facts of the case in
United States v. Montague,
and found that the sentence imposed was not substantively unreasonable despite the age of the defendant’s prior convictions.
This court has never considered in a published opinion whether the staleness of a prior conviction used in a guidelines calculation renders the sentence imposed substantively unreasonable. However, in an unpublished opinion, this circuit declined to adopt or apply
Amezcua-Vasquez’s
reasoning.
United States v. Gonzalez-Valencia,
Rodriguez also avers that the district court erred in failing to accord proper weight to his cultural assimilation. Although cultural assimilation can be a mitigating factor and form the basis for a downward departure, nothing requires “that a sentencing court must accord it
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dispositive weight.”
See
§ 2L1.2, comment. (n. 8) (2010);
United States v. Lopez-Velasquez,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED.
