Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
In March 1994 appellant Rohan White was arrested and charged with two counts of possessing with intent to distribute both cocaine base (crack) and cocaine hydrochloride (cocaine) in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1). He faced a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years.
See
21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(A)(iii). Pursuant to a plea agreement he pled guilty in May 1994 to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute at least 50 grams of cocaine and at
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least 50 grams of crack in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. That statute provides a maximum sentence of 60 months and no mandatory minimum. Thus, as a result of his plea White faced a maximum sentence of 60 months under the United States Sentencing Guidelines.
See
U.S.S.G. § 5Gl.l(a). The district court gave him a 6-month downward departure because he was a deportable alien.
See generally United States v. Smith,
White appeals his sentence on four grounds. First, he argues that the district court erred in denying his request for a substantial assistance departure pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1, notwithstanding the government’s failure to make the required motion to depart. Second, he contends that the court erred in not granting him a downward departure pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 5K2.0 based on his alleged extraordinary assistance to the government. Third, he argues that the court erred in not granting him a downward departure pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 5K2.13 based on his alleged diminished mental capacity. Fourth, he asks that we remand to let the district court consider a section 5K2.0 departure based on the alleged irrationality of the crack/eocaine sentencing disparity. We address these claims in turn and conclude they are without merit.
I. Alleged Substantial Assistance
We first address White’s claim that the district court erroneously concluded it lacked authority to depart under section 5K1.1, which provides “Upon motion of the government stating that the defendant has provided substantial assistance in the investigation or prosecution of another person who has committed an offense, the court may depart from the guidelines” based on various enumerated factors. Our review is
de novo. United States v. Williams,
A.
Immediately after his arrest White provided no timely or valuable information in connection with the offense of which he was convicted and the government was unable to nab his alleged coconspirator. 1 Two months after his arrest White signed a plea agreement which said nothing about his cooperation with the government or the possibility of a substantial assistance motion. While jailed and awaiting sentencing, White began cooperating with the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia and other authorities in their investigation of certain criminal activity in Virginia. He began cooperating with the hope he would receive a favorable sentencing adjustment but without the government’s agreement to that end. The United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, who was prosecuting White, did not learn of his cooperation until shortly before sentencing. The district court postponed sentencing so the Departure Committee could consider the possibility of a section 5K1.1 motion. (In the District of Columbia a departure committee decides whether a defendant’s assistance warrants a substantial assistance motion.)
The Departure Committee contacted an Assistant United States Attorney from the Eastern District of Virginia and received in return a letter highlighting the nature of White’s assistance. The letter said White had provided valuable information but did not say whether his assistance had been “substantial” or whether a section 5K1.1 motion was warranted. The letter concluded that White’s cooperation was not then complete. The United States Attorney for the District of Columbia then filed with the district court a response to White’s request for a section 5K1.1 motion and explained that the Departure Committee had denied White’s request because it was incomplete and that White ultimately might benefit from a rule *923 35(b) motion. 2 At the deferred sentencing hearing White asserted that his assistance was substantial and that he deserved a departure. The court explained that it had no authority to depart in the absence of a government motion.
White contends that the government violated his right to due process by arbitrarily refusing to file a section 5K1.1 motion to reward his substantial, albeit incomplete, assistance. The thrust of White’s claim is that the government must at the time of sentencing make a good faith determination whether a defendant has provided substantial assistance and cannot be influenced by the availability of a rule 35(b) motion once the defendant completes his post-sentencing assistance. He seeks a remand to give the district court the opportunity to depart, if it chooses, under section 5K1.1. He has preserved the issue for appeal by protesting below that the government arbitrarily and in bad faith refused to file a section 5K1.1 at sentencing based on his assistance at that time.
Cf. Wade v. United States,
B.
Our analysis of White’s claim centers on the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Wade v. United States, supra.
Defendant Wade pled guilty without the benefit of a plea agreement. He cooperated with the authorities after his arrest but the government made no promise regarding a substantial assistance motion. At sentencing the prosecutor, without explanation, refused to move for a downward departure pursuant to either section 5K1.1 or 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e).
3
The district court did not let Wade question the prosecutor as to why he refused to make a motion. On appeal Wade argued that such an inquiry was necessary to determine whether the prosecutor had acted arbitrarily or in bad faith.
United States v. Wade,
The Court began by noting that in the absence of a motion by the government a district court has no authority to depart on the basis of a defendant’s cooperation with the government.
Wade,
As for the scope of judicial review, the Court concluded that the prosecutor’s deei
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sion not to file a substantial assistance motion should be treated like other prosecutorial decisions that are “subject to constitutional limitations that district courts can enforce.”
Id.
The Court held that “federal district courts have authority to review a prosecutor’s refusal to file a substantial-assistance motion and to grant a remedy if they find that the refusal was based on an unconstitutional motive.”
Id.
at 185-86,
White does not contend the government failed to make a section 5K1.1 motion based on an unconstitutional motive. Instead he seizes on the portion of the
Wade
opinion in which the Court addressed Wade’s request for a remand to develop a claim based on the prosecutor’s alleged “arbitrary” or “bad faith” withholding of a substantial assistance motion. The Supreme Court said “Wade would be entitled to relief if the prosecutor’s refusal to move was not rationally related to any legitimate Government end,
cf. Chapman v. United States,
We disagree. The government has a legitimate interest in having a defendant provide more assistance than less. The difference between incomplete and complete assistance can be the difference between an unsuccessful and successful criminal prosecution. And the government could rationally conclude that the premature filing of a substantial assistance motion might remove the very incentive driving the defendant’s cooperation in the first instance, thereby frustrating the government’s ability to obtain the remaining assistance it might need for a successful prosecution. It is also rational for the government to assume that if it keeps the carrot dangling in front of the defendant, the defendant vrill continue to cooperate and complete his assistance even after sentencing, at which point (within one year after sentencing) the government can file a rule 35(b) motion and let the court consider the totality of the defendant’s cooperation, both pre- and post-sentence.
See United States v. Drown,
The core of White’s argument is that it is unfair for the government to keep the carrot dangling in front of him. Fair or not, it is not unconstitutional; no more so than the government’s initial dangling of the carrot. This brings us full circle:
Wade
simply does not endorse, in the absence of a plea agree
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ment that includes a substantial assistance provision, a “fairness” or “bad faith” review other than within the constitutional context.
United States v. Kaye,
We acknowledge that White has some authority for the proposition that the due process clause prevents the government from withholding a section 5K1.1 motion and relying instead on the availability of a rule 35(b) motion in order to secure the completion of a defendant’s assistance.
See United States v. Drown,
In
United States v. Drown
— which was decided before
Wade
— the defendant had entered into a plea agreement which included a promise to cooperate with the government but apparently no section 5K1.1 provision.
United States v. Martin
— a post-Wade case which remarkably never cited Wade— involved a defendant whose plea agreement provided he would cooperate with the government and the government would advise the district court at sentencing of his cooperation but did not commit the government to make a section 5K1.1 motion.
[I]f at the time of sentencing, the government deems the defendant’s assistance substantial, the government cannot defer its decision to make a U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 motion on the ground that it will make a Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(b) motion after sentencing. Instead, the government at that time must determine — yes or no — whether it will make a U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 motion. If the government defers making a U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 motion on the premise that it will make a Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(b) motion after sentencing, the sentence that follows deprives a defendant of due process....
Id. at 216.
Neither
Drown
nor
Martin
explained how the due process clause figured in the picture. Were they talking about procedural or substantive due process? They never said. White insists they were not talking about procedural due process and he does not assert a procedural due process claim here (his request for a section 5K1.1 motion was considered and rejected by the Departure Committee). Rather, White reads
Drown
and
Martin
as substantive due process cases but he is unable to shed light on how those courts found a substantive due process violation. We do not read the First and Fourth Circuits to suggest there is a “fundamental right” to require the government to decide at sentencing whether it will make a section 5K1.1 motion, a proposition that warrants little comment.
See Beo v. District of Columbia,
White, it appears, contends that
Drown
and
Martin
suggest that the temporal distinction between section 5K1.1 and rule 35(b) creates a liberty interest protected against deprivation by the substantive component of the due process clause. If so, his theory is flawed on several fronts. First, in the procedural due process context, the Supreme Court has noted the “crucial distinction between being deprived of a liberty one has, as in parole, and being denied a conditional liberty that one desires.”
Greenholtz v. Nebraska Penal Inmates,
We suspect that
Drown
and
Martin
may have been driven by equitable rather than constitutional concerns. After all, had those courts not intervened, Drown risked getting no credit for his pre-sentencing assistance and Martin would have received no credit for his pre-sentencing assistance. But even if equity concerns were relevant here, we would not lose sight of the fact that “[a]ll the prosecutor can do by withholding a § 5K1.1 motion is insist that [the defendant] be treated according to law, the same as others who committed the same acts and were unlucky enough to have no information of value.”
United States v. Smith,
In conclusion, absent either (1) a plea agreement committing the government to file a section 5K1.1 motion if it determines that the defendant provided substantial assistance or (2) a substantial threshold showing that the government’s decision not to file a substantial assistance motion was based on an unconstitutional motive or, improbably, unconstitutional in the sense the decision was not rationally related to a legitimate government end, Wade makes clear that a federal court has no authority to conduct an “arbitrary and capricious” or “abuse of discretion” or “bad faith” review of the government’s decision. Consequently, White’s section 5K1.1 claim fails.
II. Alleged Extraordinary Assistance
As noted, in the absence of a government motion the district court has no authority to depart under section 5K1.1. Consequently, White asked the district court, in the alternative, to depart under section 5K2.0 to recognize his alleged extraordinary assistance. The district court refused and White complains the court underestimated the full extent of its authority to depart. White says the court had authority to depart under section 5K2.0 because his assistance was both “of a kind” and “to a degree” not adequately considered by the United States Sentencing Commission (Commission) when it drafted section 5K1.1.
See
section 5K2.0 (court may depart if it finds “that ‘there exists an aggravating or mitigating circumstance of a kind, or to a degree, not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the guidelines’” (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3553(b))). First, he argues that by cooperating with the government he confronted a risk of danger “to a degree” not adequately considered by the Commission. Second, he contends he provided substantial assistance “of a kind” not taken into account by the Commission insofar as he substantially assisted the “administration of justice” by the judicial branch. We review
de novo
whether a district court has authority to depart under section 5K2.0 and look to see whether the Commission adequately accounted for the circumstances at issue.
United States v. Harrington,
We first reject White’s claim that a district court has authority to depart under section 5K2.0 if a defendant exposed himself to an extraordinary degree of risk or danger by cooperating with the government in its
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investigation or prosecution of others.
See United States v. Watson,
White’s other section 5K2.0 theory fares no better. White argues that section 5K1.1 does not adequately contemplate that a defendant’s assistance might benefit not the executive branch but instead the “administration of justice” by the judicial branch. We disagree. First, White did assist the executive branch (the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation) and therefore his assistance was of a kind contemplated by the Commission regardless of the potential downstream beneficiaries of his assistance.
See United States v. Dorsey,
We thus conclude that the circumstances of White’s assistance were of a kind and to a degree contemplated by section 5K1.1 and therefore the district court did not err in declining White’s request for a section 5K2.0 departure. More fundamentally, our analysis of section 5K1.1 leads us to conclude that the circumstances surrounding a defendant’s cooperation with the government can
never
be of a kind or degree not adequately contemplated by the Commission. “Cooperation with the prosecutors simply cannot be sufficiently extraordinary to warrant a departure under § 5K2.0 absent a government motion under § 5K1.1.”
United States v. Aslakson,
III. Alleged Diminished Mental Capacity
U.S.S.G. § 5K2.13 generally authorizes a downward departure if the defendant suffered from significantly reduced mental capacity which contributed to the commission of his offense. 5 At the request of White’s counsel, the court appointed a psychologist to examine White. The psychologist determined that White had an IQ of 67 (according to the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test) and thus concluded that White was mildly retarded and had a reduced mental capacity. The psychologist also noted that White was “able to think and reason rationally and logically,” showed “no indications of any significant mental or emotional impairment,” and displayed adequate judgment considering his cultural differences (he emigrated from Jamaica a few years before his offense). Government’s Brief at 5. Having had the opportunity to observe and interact with White at the plea and sentencing proceedings, the district court disregarded the significance of the IQ score and decided not to depart downward under section 5K2.13. White argues that the district court erred in rejecting the psychologist’s conclusions.
“We will not review the decision of a sentencing judge not to provide a downward departure in sentencing a defendant absent a mistake of law or an incorrect application of the sentencing guidelines.”
United States v. Johnson,
IY. Alleged Irrationality of Crack/Cocaine Disparity
White seeks a remand so the district court can also consider a section 5K2.0 departure on the basis of the Commission’s proposed amendment abolishing the sentencing disparity between crack and cocaine set out in section 2D1.1 of the guidelines, equating 1 gram of crack to 100 grams of cocaine. 60 Fed.Reg. 25074 (May 10, 1995). After oral argument in this case, Congress disapproved the proposed amendment, leaving the crack/cocaine ratio in place. P.L. 104r-38,109 Stat. 334 (Oct. 30, 1995) (ordering Commission to conduct further studies and present new recommendations to Congress). The district court has no authority to override Congress and “enact”
(via
section 5K2.0) the Commission’s proposed amendment.
See United States v. Thompson,
For the foregoing reasons White’s sentence is
Affirmed.
Notes
. White was arrested on a Greyhound bus after the police searched a radio in his possession and found a bag of crack and a bag of cocaine. At first White did not tell the arresting officers whether he was traveling with a companion. He later disclosed he was traveling from New York to Virginia with another man who had paid him $1,000 to deliver the drugs to Roanoke. White told the government his companion's name was "Ray” but did not tell the government how to contact Ray, where the drugs came from or any other useful information.
. Rule 35(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides in relevant part: "The court, on motion of the Government made within one year after the imposition of the sentence, may reduce a sentence to reflect a defendant's subsequent, substantial assistance in the investigation or prosecution of another person who has committed an offense....”
. 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e) provides: "Upon motion of the Government, the court shall have the authority to impose a sentence below a level established by statute as minimum sentence so as to reflect a defendant's substantial assistance in the investigation or prosecution of another person who has committed an offense....” Some courts have held that a section 5K1.1 motion authorizes the district court to depart only from the guidelines and not below a
statutory
mandatory minimum. They conclude that a section 3553(e) motion is necessary to authorize the latter.
Compare, e.g., United States v. Rodriguez-Morales,
. The plea agreement in
Jones, supra,
contained a provision committing the government to file a section 5K1.1 motion if the Departure Committee determined that the defendant had provided substantial assistance.
. U.S.S.G. § 5K2.13 states in full: "If the defendant committed a non-violent offense while suffering from significantly reduced mental capacity not resulting from voluntary use of drugs or other intoxicants, a lower sentence may be warranted to reflect the extent to which reduced mental capacity contributed to the commission of the offense, provided that the defendant's criminal history does not indicate a need for incarceration to protect the public."
