Travis Robinson pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The day he was arrested, Robinson also may have fired the gun several times while standing on his front porch. He did not admit this conduct, though — at least not in court— and the indictment did not charge it.
At sentencing, which occurred after
United States v. Booker,
Discussion
The district judge offered the following explanation for his refusal to make a finding on whether Robinson fired his gun: “[I]n the post-Booker world, [the court] has the discretion to sentence outside the Guideline range as long as the sentence is reasonable.... [But] in the interest of caution, the Court is reluctant to grant a four level enhancement based on facts not charged in the indictment, proven to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt, or admitted by the defendant.” That was error.
Our cases since
Booker
have explained the steps in criminal sentencing now that the sentencing guidelines are advisory. There are two: 1) calculate the appropriate advisory guidelines range;
*701
and 2) decide whether to impose a sentence within the range or outside it, by reference to the factors set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). The first step is no different now than it was before
Booker. See United States v. Cunningham,
Step two is the discretionary decision whether to sentence the defendant within the advisory range or outside it. If the judge is inclined to impose a sentence outside the advisory guidelines range, or if a sentence within the range is challenged as unreasonable, the judge must explain why the sentence imposed is appropriate in light of the statutory factors specified in § 3553(a).
Cunningham,
We then review sentences for reasonableness.
Booker,
When a judge does not properly calculate a guidelines sentence, our review for reasonableness is forestalled.
United States v. Bokhari,
The directive to properly calculate the advisory guidelines sentence is not only for the defendant’s benefit. The government, too, has an interest in a proper calculation. We have said before, mandatory or advisory, the sentencing guidelines represent eighteen years of careful thought about appropriate sentences for federal criminal offenders.
Mykytiuk,
Here, the district judge was concerned that because the firing of the gun was not charged, admitted, or found by a jury, he would run afoul of the Sixth Amendment by finding facts. True,
Booker
holds that judges may not find facts that increase the maximum punishment and that a mandatory sentencing guidelines scheme violates that rule. But
Booker
resolved the problem by making the guidelines advisory; judicial fact-finding in
*702
sentencing is acceptable because the guidelines are now nonbinding.
Dean,
In an overabundance of Sixth Amendment caution, the district judge declined to determine whether Robinson fired his gun. By sidestepping this determination, the district judge erred as a matter of law by failing to resolve a disputed sentencing fact essential to a properly calculated guidelines range.
Accordingly, we VaCate Robinson’s sentence and Remand the case to the district judge for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
