We consider here the third appeal of a sentence imposed in the captioned case. On February 11, 2003, defendant-appellant Timothy J. Toohey pleaded guilty to one count of making a willful false statement as to income on a 1994 federal tax return in violation of 26 U..S.C. .§ 7206(1). The United States District Court for the Western District of New York (John T. Elfvin, Judge) initially sentenced Toohey principally to two year’s probation based on a downward departure from the then-mandatory Sentencing Guidelines range of 15-21 months’ incarceration. By summary order dated January 15, 2004, this Court vacated and remanded Toohey’s sentence on the ground,
inter alia,
that the District Court’s departure decision “lacked the [specific] explanation required by 18 U.S.C. § 3553(c).”
United States v. Toohey,
On remand, the District Court imposed the same probationary sentence, supporting its departure decision by “citing the case of United States versus Joseph DiNardo, 97-CR-88E” — another sentencing proceeding conducted before Judge Elf-vin — “as showing [a] situation where the heinousness of the crime was much more gross than anything Mr. Toohey was involved in, and Mr. DiNardo was not put in prison.” Sentencing Tr., July 9, 2004, at 26. By summary order dated May 23, 2005, we again vacated and remanded for resentencing, holding that the District Court’s sentence “lack[ed] the specificity necessary to permit appellate review even under the more deferential reasonableness standard identified” by the Supreme Court in
United States v. Booker,
In a hearing conducted on August 5, 2005, Judge Elfvin heard arguments from the parties and then announced his sentence, in its entirety, as follows:
Well, I paid serious attention to the [a]ppellate[ ] [court’s] decision, and on that basis I am going to impose a period of incarceration. It will be fifteen months, Mr. Toohey, and then you’ll be on supervised release for one year. They will be testing you to see if you’re over using alcohol; treating you if you are. I’m not going to impose any monetary fíne, except there’s a special assessment of one hundred dollars, and I wish you the best.
Sentencing Tr., Aug. 5, 2005, at 4-5. Too-hey filed a motion to correct the sentence under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(a), and an additional hearing then was held on August 15, 2005. At the hearing, Toohey’s counsel suggested that the District Court had “erroneously read the Second Circuit’s decision as requiring a sentence of incarceration,” Sentencing Tr., Aug. 15, 2005, at 3, and argued that a non-Guidelines sentence of probation was warranted. See id. at 5 (“The court explicitly, Judge, gave you the option of imposing a non-guideline sentence, and it simply said that you should consider all the factors and give reasons. That means that this Court had more discretion, not less discretion, to impose a sentence of probation the third time around.”). The District Court, however, declined to alter the fifteen-month sentence, which was at the bottom end of the advisory Guidelines range, stating that the prior sentences of probation, which had been vacated by this Court, had been the product of personal sympathy towards Toohey:
Those first two sentences really go back to a lot of the relationship that you and I had when I was practicing law. You were a great friend, a good guy, and you bent over backwards, and I apologize to the prosecution. I really bent over backwards on your behalf in that regard. That explains those two sentences.
Id. at 14; see also id. at 17 (“We had an attorney-to-attorney relationship. He was a great guy, is a great guy.”); id. at 22 (“I was mistaken originally, and I have corrected that. The sentence will stand, and Mr. Toohey knows he has my entire sympathy, and I will be happy to hear from him at any time in the future.”); id. at 23 (“It hurts me as much as it does you, Tim.”). When asked why he had not imposed a non-incarceratory sentence, Judge Elfvin responded, “S.G., sentencing guidelines. I follow them. I don’t — I don’t abuse them.” Id. at 15. At the end of the hearing, however, the District Court eliminated Toohey’s one-year term of supervised release, which the Court had imposed during the August 5, 2005 proceedings, apparently in order to account for the two years of probation that Toohey already had served while the prior appeals in this case were pending. Id. at 22-23.
On appeal, Toohey argues that the District Court failed to (1) give adequate consideration to the factors listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) in deciding whether to impose a Guidelines or a non-Guidelines sentence on remand,
see
Def.’s Br. at 19-20; (2) “articulate in open court and in writing the specific reasons for imposing a sentence of incarceration and renouncing its previous sentence of probation,”
id.
at 17, which allegedly resulted, according to Toohey, in
*545
an unjustified “enhanc[ement]” of his sentence,
id.
at 20; and (3) give “sufficient[ ] credit[ ]” for the time Toohey already had served on probation, thus running, afoul’of the principles articulated by our Court in
United States v. Carpenter,
We need only address the first argument listed above in order to resolve this appeal. We have emphasized before that “no robotic incantations are required to prove the fact of consideration, and we will not conclude that a district judge shirked [his] obligation to consider the § 3553(a) factors simply because [he] did not discuss each one individually or did not expressly parse or address every argument relating to those factors that the defendant advanced.”
United States v. Fernandez,
In this case, the District Court appears to have rested its sentencing decision on three grounds: (1) the analysis contained in our summary order of 'May 23, 2005, see Sentencing Tr., Aug. 5, 2005, at 4-5 (“I paid serious attention to the [a]ppellate[ ] [court’s] decision, and on that basis I am going to impose a period of incarceration.”) (emphasis added); (2) the Court’s need to “correctf]” its prior “mistaken” in sentencing Toohey to probation on the basis of personal sympathy, see Sentencing Tr., Aug. 15, 2005, at 22; and (3) the Court’s desire not to “abuse” the Sentencing Guidelines, id. at 15.
These reasons, under the facts presented, do not reflect an adequate consideration, either implicitly or explicitly, of the factors listed in § 3553(a). Most' significantly, our May 2005 summary order in this case did not mandate a particular outcome on remand, but 'instead required that a resentencing be conducted in which the District Court was to “consider all [of the] § 3553(a) factors in deciding whether to impose a Guidelines
or non-Guidelines
sentence.”
Toohey,
132 Fed:Appx. at 887 n. 3 (emphasis added). Accordingly, the District Court’s, selection of a
particular
sentence’on rqmand could not have rested’ with any specificity “on th[e] basis” of our prior summary order. Second, the “correction]” of the District Court’s' prior “mistaken” in sentencing Toohey to probation on the basis of personal sympathy could not itself have provided a basis for reaching a particular sentence on remand, whether under the Guidelines or through the imposition of a non-Guidelines sentence. Finally, although the District Court’s statement that it would not “abuse” the Guidelines may in somé sense be taken to reflect an appropriate recognition of the continuing relevance of the Guidelines after
Booker, see Crosby,
Although we ordinarily remand for resentencing to the same district judge who conducted the initial sentencing proceedings, see
United States v. Robin,
On remand, the newly assigned judge “must become fully familiar with the prior proceedings” and the record developed in this case,
see United States v. Garcia,
if: ;jí s}; ;j{ >}: ¿fc
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is hereby Vacated and the cause is Remanded for resentenc-ing consistent with this opinion. We direct that on remand, the case shall be Reassigned to another district judge sitting in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
. We note that our May 2005 summary order in this case, as well as our decision in
United States v. Joyner,
Recently, in
United States v. Fernandez,
. As part of this resentencing, the District Court should ensure that Toohey is provided appropriate "credit” for .any sentence he has already served — in particular, the two years’ probation initially imposed by Judge Elfvin— consistent with the principles articulated by our Court in
United States v. Carpenter,
