United States v. Mirna Rivera ( 1993 )


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  • June 23, 1993
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 92-1749
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,
    v.
    MIRNA RIVERA,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    No. 92-2167
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellant,
    v.
    ROBERT ADAMO,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    ERRATA SHEET
    Please make the following corrections in the opinion in
    the above case released on June 4, 1993:
    Page 13,  2nd  line  from  bottom:    Insert  the  following
    language after the word "state":
    that "lack of guidance  as a youth" cannot justify
    departure, U.S.S.G.   5H1.12, p.s.,
    Page  14, lines 4 &  5: insert the  following language after
    "  5K2.12" and after "  4A1.3":
    ,p.s.
    Page 14, line 10:  change the word "eight" to "nine"
    Page 16, last line:  change "Guideline" to "Guidelines"
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 92-1749
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,
    v.
    MIRNA RIVERA,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, U.S. District Judge]
    No. 92-2167
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellant,
    v.
    ROBERT ADAMO,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
    [Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    Campbell and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges.
    John M. Cicilline for appellant, Mirna Rivera.
    Margaret E.  Curran, Assistant United  States Attorney, with  whom
    Lincoln  C.  Almond, United  States  Attorney,  and Zechariah  Chafee,
    Assistant  United States  Attorney,  were on  brief for  appellee, the
    United States of America in No. 92-1749.
    Margaret E.  Curran, Assistant United  States Attorney, with  whom
    Lincoln  C.  Almond,  United  States  Attorney,  and  Seymour  Posner,
    Assistant  United States  Attorney, were on  brief for  appellant, the
    United States of America in No. 92-2167.
    Eugene V. Mollicone with whom William  A. Dimitri, Jr. and Dimitri
    & Dimitri were on brief for appellee, Robert Adamo.
    June 4, 1993
    BREYER, Chief  Judge.   Each of these  two appeals
    concerns  the district  court's power  to impose  a sentence
    that departs from the Sentencing Guidelines.  The first case
    involves  Mirna  Rivera,  a  single mother  of  three  small
    children.   Ms.  Rivera was  convicted of  carrying about  a
    pound of cocaine from  New York to Providence.   She appeals
    her thirty-three month sentence of imprisonment.  She argues
    that the  district court  would have departed  downward from
    the minimum  thirty-three month  Guidelines prison term  but
    for the court's view that it lacked the legal "authority" to
    depart.   She says that this view is legally "incorrect," 18
    U.S.C.    3742(f)(1),  and she  asks  us  to set  aside  her
    sentence.
    The second case involves a union official,  Robert
    Adamo, who embezzled about  $100,000 from his union's Health
    and Welfare Fund.  The district court departed downward from
    the  fifteen  to  twenty-one  month  prison  term  that  the
    Guidelines  themselves would  have required.   Instead,  the
    court imposed a term of probation  without confinement.  The
    court  said that it was departing downward so that Mr. Adamo
    could  continue to work and to make restitution to the Fund.
    The  Government   appeals.      It   argues   that   Adamo's
    circumstancesare insufficientlyunusualtowarrantthedeparture.
    -4-
    4
    We agree with  the appellants in  both cases.   In
    our view, the  district court sentencing Ms. Rivera  held an
    unduly narrow  view of its  departure powers.   The district
    court sentencing Mr.  Adamo failed to  analyze the need  for
    departure in the  way that  the law requires.   We  consider
    both  cases in this single opinion because doing so may help
    to    illustrate   an   appropriate   legal   analysis   for
    "departures."   We  shall first  set forth  our view  of the
    portion  of the law here applicable; and we shall then apply
    that law to the two appeals.
    I
    Departures
    The basic theory of the Sentencing Guidelines is a
    simple  one.   In  order  to  lessen  the  degree  to  which
    different judges  imposed different sentences  in comparable
    cases,   an   expert  Sentencing   Commission   would  write
    Guidelines,   applicable   to   most   ordinary   sentencing
    situations.  See S. Rep.  No. 225, 98th Cong., 2d Sess.  38,
    51, 161  (1984), reprinted in 1984  U.S.C.C.A.N. 3182, 3221,
    3234, 3344.  In an ordinary situation, the statutes, and the
    Guidelines themselves, would require  the judge to apply the
    appropriate guideline  -- a  guideline  that would  normally
    cabin,  within fairly  narrow limits,  the judge's  power to
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    5
    choose  the  length  of   a  prison  term.    18   U.S.C.
    3553(a),(b).  Should the judge face a situation that was not
    ordinary,  the  judge  could   depart  from  the  Guidelines
    sentence,  provided  that  the  judge then  sets  forth  the
    reasons for departure.   18 U.S.C.   3553(b),(c).    A court
    of appeals would review the departure  for "reasonableness."
    18  U.S.C.   3742.  And, the Commission itself would collect
    and study both the district courts' departure determinations
    and the courts of appeals' decisions, thereby learning about
    the Guidelines' actual workings  and using that knowledge to
    help revise or clarify  the Guidelines for the future.   See
    S. Rep. No. 225, 98th Cong.,  2d Sess. 80, 151, reprinted in
    1984 U.S.C.C.A.N.  at 3263,  3334;  U.S.S.G. Ch.  1, Pt.  A,
    intro. comment 4(b).
    This  basic   theory  is  embodied   in  statutory
    provisions and in  the Guidelines themselves.  We believe it
    important to refer to this theory in explaining our own view
    of the  legal provisions  concerning departures, and  of how
    both  district  courts and  courts of  appeals are  to apply
    them.
    A
    The Statute
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    6
    The Sentencing Statute itself sets forth the basic
    law  governing departures.   It  tells the  sentencing court
    that it
    shall impose a sentence of the kind, and
    within the range  . . .  established for
    the   applicable  category   of  offense
    committed by the applicable  category of
    defendant as set forth in the guidelines
    . . . .
    18 U.S.C.    3553(b) (incorporating 18  U.S.C.   3553(a)(4))
    (emphasis added).  The statute goes on immediately to create
    an exception  for departures  by adding that  the sentencing
    court shall "impose" this Guidelines sentence
    unless the court 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  that should
    result in a sentence different from that
    described.
    18  U.S.C.   3553(b) (emphasis  added).    If the sentencing
    court  makes   this  finding  and  sentences   "outside  the
    [Guidelines] range," it must
    state in  open court . .  . the specific
    reason for the  imposition of a sentence
    different  from  that described  [in the
    guidelines].
    18  U.S.C.    3553(c).   The  defendant  may then  appeal an
    upward departure,  and the Government may  appeal a downward
    departure.    18  U.S.C.    3742(a),(b);  United  States  v.
    -7-
    7
    Pighetti,  
    898 F.2d 3
    ,  4 (1st  Cir. 1990)  (beneficiary of
    departure  decision  lacks  standing "to  complain  that the
    deviation should have been greater").  On appeal, if
    the court of appeals determines that the
    sentence . . . is unreasonable, . . . it
    shall  state  specific  reasons for  its
    conclusions  and  .  . .  set  aside the
    sentence and remand the case for further
    sentencing    proceedings   with    such
    instructions  as   the  court  considers
    appropriate.
    18 U.S.C.   3742(f) (emphasis added).
    The upshot, as  we have said, is  that in ordinary
    cases  the district  court  must apply  the Guidelines.   In
    other cases,  the court  may depart  provided that it  gives
    reasons for the departure and that the resulting sentence is
    "reasonable."  The statute refers to those "other cases," as
    those  where  "there  exists an  aggravating  or  mitigating
    circumstance of a kind, or to a degree, not adequately taken
    into consideration  by the Sentencing Commission."   But, as
    we  shall  see in  a moment,  in  many cases  this statutory
    limitation, as a practical matter, will have limited impact,
    because  the  Commission  itself  admits  that  it  has  not
    adequately considered "unusual" cases.
    B
    The Guidelines
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    8
    The  Guidelines deal with departures in four basic
    ways.
    1.    Cases  Outside the  "Heartland."    The
    Introduction to the Guidelines (which the Commission calls a
    "Policy Statement") makes an important distinction between a
    "heartland case"  and an  "unusual case."   The Introduction
    says that the
    Commission intends the sentencing courts
    to treat each guideline as carving out a
    "heartland,"  a  set  of  typical  cases
    embodying   the    conduct   that   each
    guideline describes.
    U.S.S.G.  Ch.  I,  Pt.  A,  intro.  comment.  (4)(b).    The
    Introduction goes on to say that when
    a  court finds an  atypical case, one to
    which     a     particular     guideline
    linguistically   applies,    but   where
    conduct  significantly differs  from the
    norm, the  court may consider  whether a
    departure is warranted.
    
    Id.
      The Introduction  further adds that, with a  few stated
    exceptions,
    the Commission does not intend  to limit
    the  kinds  of factors,  whether  or not
    mentioned    anywhere   else    in   the
    guidelines,   that    could   constitute
    grounds  for  departure  in  an  unusual
    case.
    
    Id.
    -9-
    9
    The Introduction thus makes clear that (with a few
    exceptions)  a case  that falls  outside  the linguistically
    applicable  guideline's  "heartland"   is  a  candidate  for
    departure.  It is,  by definition, an "unusual case."   And,
    the sentencing court may then go on to consider, in light of
    the sentencing  system's purposes, see 18  U.S.C.   3553(a),
    (and the Guidelines themselves) whether or not the "unusual"
    features of the case justify departure.
    It  should  now be  apparent  why  we believe  the
    statutory  language  "adequately  taken into  consideration"
    sometimes has little practical importance.  The statute says
    that the  sentencing court considering a  departure must ask
    whether the Sentencing Commission has "adequately taken into
    consideration"  the  aggravating or  mitigating circumstance
    that  seems to  make a  case unusual.   But,  the Commission
    itself  has explicitly said that  (with a few exceptions) it
    did    not   "adequately"    take   unusual    cases   "into
    consideration."    Of course,  deciding  whether  a case  is
    "unusual"  will  sometimes  prove  a  difficult  matter  (in
    respect  to which particular  facts, general experience, the
    Guidelines  themselves, related  statutes,  and the  general
    objectives of sentencing  all may be  relevant).  But,  once
    the  court, see  pp. 15-17,  infra, has  properly determined
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    10
    that  a  case  is, indeed,  "unusual,"  the  case becomes  a
    candidate  for departure,  for  the  Commission  itself  has
    answered the statutory "adequate consideration" question.
    The initial version of the Guidelines, at the risk
    of redundancy, made this fact absolutely clear.  It stated:
    The new  sentencing statute permits
    a  court  to  depart  from  a guideline-
    specified  sentence  only when  it finds
    "an     aggravating    or     mitigating
    circumstance   .  .   .  that   was  not
    adequately  taken into  consideration by
    the Sentencing Commission. . . ."  Thus,
    in   principle,   the   Commission,   by
    specifying   that   it  had   adequately
    considered  a  particular factor,  could
    prevent a court from using it as grounds
    for departure.   In this initial  set of
    guidelines, however, the Commission does
    not  so  limit  the   courts'  departure
    powers.
    U.S.S.G. Ch.  I, Pt. A,  intro. comment. (4)(b)  (Oct. 1987)
    (emphasis added)  (citation omitted).  In  later versions of
    the  Guidelines, the  Commission eliminated  the underscored
    language.   But, since  the "unusual case"  statement (i.e.,
    the statement  that the "Commission does not intend to limit
    the kinds of factors . . . that could constitute grounds for
    departure in  an unusual case") expresses  the same thought,
    the  excision  presumably  reflected  an  intent  to   avoid
    redundancy,  not  to  change  the meaning  of  the  section.
    Indeed,  the  Commission has  not  suggested  any intent  to
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    change its meaning.   See U.S.S.G. App. C, amend.  307 (Nov.
    1990)   ("language  concerning   what  the   Commission,  in
    principle, might have done is deleted as unnecessary, but no
    substantive change is made").  Thus, (with a few exceptions)
    the  law  tells the  judge,  considering  departure, to  ask
    basically, "Does  this case fall within  the 'heartland,' or
    is it an unusual case?"
    2.    Encouraged  Departures.     In  certain
    circumstances,  the  Guidelines  offer the  district  court,
    which is considering whether  to depart, special assistance,
    by  specifically encouraging  departures.   Part 5K  lists a
    host  of  considerations that  may  take  a particular  case
    outside the "heartland" of  any individual guideline and, in
    doing  so, may warrant a  departure.  See  U.S.S.G.   5K2.0,
    p.s.   The individual guidelines  do not  take account,  for
    example,  of  an  offender's  "diminished  capacity,"  which
    circumstance,  in  the  Commission's  view   would  normally
    warrant  a downward departure.  U.S.S.G.   5K2.13, p.s.  Nor
    do  certain guidelines (say, immigration offense guidelines)
    take account of, say, use of a gun, which circumstance would
    remove  the situation  (the  immigration offense)  from that
    guideline's "heartland" and would normally warrant an upward
    departure.    U.S.S.G       5K2.0,  5K2.6,  p.s.    Specific
    -12-
    12
    individual  guidelines may  also encourage departures.   The
    guideline governing transportation of persons for prohibited
    sexual conduct, for example, recommends a downward departure
    of eight  levels where  the offense involves  neither profit
    nor  force.  U.S.S.G.   2G1.1, comment. (n.1).  A sentencing
    court  facing  such  non-heartland  circumstances  can  feel
    confident, because  of this encouragement,  that a departure
    would not be "unreasonable."  18 U.S.C.   3742(f).
    3.   Discouraged Departures.   The Guidelines
    sometimes  discourage departures.    Part  5H, for  example,
    lists  various "specific offender"  characteristics, such as
    age,   education,  employment   record,   family  ties   and
    responsibilities,  mental  and   physical  conditions,   and
    various good works.  The  Guidelines say that these features
    are  "not ordinarily  relevant"  in determining  departures.
    U.S.S.G.  Ch. 5,  Pt. H  (emphasis added).    The Commission
    thereby recognizes that (1)  the individual guidelines (with
    a few exceptions) do not provide adjustments reflecting such
    circumstances, yet (2)  this fact alone  does not make  such
    circumstances  automatically  sufficient   to  transform   a
    "heartland"  case   into  an  "unusual"   case  outside  the
    heartland.
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    13
    At the same  time, the Commission  recognizes that
    such circumstances  could remove a case  from the heartland,
    but only if they are present  in a manner that is unusual or
    special,  rather  than "ordinary."    See  United States  v.
    Merritt, No. 91-1637,  slip op.  at 25-26 (2d  Cir. Feb.  9,
    1993).  It  may not be unusual, for example,  to find that a
    convicted  drug  offender is  a  single  mother with  family
    responsibilities,   but,  at  some  point,  the  nature  and
    magnitude  of family  responsibilities (many  children? with
    handicaps?  no  money? no  place  for children  to  go?) may
    transform the  "ordinary" case of such  circumstances into a
    case that is not at all ordinary.
    Thus, a sentencing  court, considering whether  or
    not  the presence  of  these "discouraged"  factors warrants
    departure, must  ask  whether  the  factors  themselves  are
    present  in  unusual kind  or  degree.   The  Commission, in
    stating that those factors do  not "ordinarily" take a  case
    outside the heartland, discourages,  but does not absolutely
    forbid, their use.   See, e.g., Merritt, slip op.  at 25-26;
    United States  v. Deigert,  
    916 F.2d 916
    ,  918-19 (4th  Cir.
    1990).  But see United States v. Thomas, 
    930 F.2d 526
    , 529-
    30   (7th  Cir.)  (forbidding  departures  based  on  family
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    responsibilities, except  where probation  or  fines are  at
    issue), cert. denied, 
    112 S. Ct. 171
     (1991).
    4.  Forbidden Departures.  The Commission has
    made several explicit exceptions to the basic principle that
    a sentencing court can consider any "unusual case" (any case
    outside the  heartland) as a  candidate for departure.   The
    Guidelines  state that "lack of  guidance as a youth" cannot
    justify   departure,  U.S.S.G.      5H1.12,  p.s.,   that  a
    sentencing court  "cannot take  into account as  grounds for
    departure" race, sex, national  origin, creed, religion, and
    socio-economic  status.    U.S.S.G.     5H1.10,  p.s.    The
    Guidelines  also state that drug  or alcohol abuse  is not a
    reason for  imposing a sentence below  the Guidelines range,
    U.S.S.G      5H1.4,  p.s.,  and   that  personal   financial
    difficulties and economic pressure  upon a trade or business
    do  not warrant a decrease  in sentence.  U.S.S.G.   5K2.12,
    p.s.; cf. Williams v.  United States, 
    112 S. Ct. 1112
    , 1117
    (1992)  (under U.S.S.G.    4A1.3,p.s.,  prior arrest  record
    cannot provide reliable  evidence of prior criminal  conduct
    warranting upward  departure).  Thus, even  if these factors
    make  a  case "unusual,"  taking  it  outside an  individual
    guideline's heartland,  the sentencing court is  not free to
    consider departing.   But,  with these nine  exceptions, the
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    15
    sentencing court is  free to consider,  in an unusual  case,
    whether or  not  the factors  that  make it  unusual  (which
    remove it from the heartland) are present in sufficient kind
    or degree to warrant  a departure.  See U.S.S.G. Ch.  I, Pt.
    A,  intro. comment. 4(b).  The court retains this freedom to
    depart whether such departure is encouraged, discouraged, or
    unconsidered by the Guidelines.
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    16
    C
    The Sentencing Court's Departure Decision
    Given the  statutory provisions, and  the relevant
    Guidelines statements,  we suggest  (but we do  not require)
    that, as  an initial matter, a  sentencing court considering
    departure analyze the case along the following lines:
    1)   What   features   of   this   case,
    potentially,   take   it   outside   the
    Guidelines' "heartland" and make of it a
    special, or unusual, case?
    2)   Has    the   Commission   forbidden
    departures based on those features?
    3) If not, has the Commission encouraged
    departures based on those features?
    4)   If   not,   has    the   Commission
    discouraged  departures  based on  those
    features?
    If no special features  are present, or if  special features
    are also "forbidden" features, then the sentencing court, in
    all likelihood, simply would apply the  relevant guidelines.
    If the special features are "encouraged" features, the court
    would likely  depart,  sentencing  in  accordance  with  the
    Guidelines'  suggestions.    If  the  special  features  are
    "discouraged"  features, the  court  would go  on to  decide
    whether  the  case  is  nonetheless  not  "ordinary,"  i.e.,
    whether  the case  differs from  the ordinary case  in which
    those  features are present.   If the case  is ordinary, the
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    17
    court would  not depart.  If  it is not ordinary,  the court
    would go on to consider departure.
    Of course, this analysis, by itself, does not help
    the district court decide what to do in situations where the
    Guidelines   do   not   expressly   forbid,   encourage,  or
    discourage, departures.  The Guidelines themselves recognize
    that the  "[c]ircumstances that may  warrant departure  from
    the  guidelines .  .  . cannot,  by  their very  nature,  be
    comprehensively listed and analyzed in advance."  U.S.S.G.
    5K2.0, p.s.   When such unforeseen  circumstances arise, the
    district  court will decide  whether to depart  (and, if so,
    how much  to depart)  by examining  the "unusual"  nature of
    these  circumstances and  making  a judgment  about what  is
    appropriate.   The  structure  and theory  of both  relevant
    individual guidelines  and the  Guidelines taken as  a whole
    may inform that judgment.  The sentencing statute also lists
    generally relevant sentencing factors, including the "nature
    and  circumstances   of  the  offense,"  the   "history  and
    characteristics of the defendant," and the basic purposes of
    sentencing,    namely,    just    punishment,    deterrence,
    incapacitation  and rehabilitation.    18 U.S.C.    3553(a);
    United States  v. Merritt, slip op. at  18-19, 25-26 (citing
    Daniel  J.   Freed,  Federal  Sentencing  in   the  Wake  of
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    18
    Guidelines:  Unacceptable  Limits   on  the  Discretion   of
    Sentencers,  
    101 Yale L.J. 1681
    ,  1700,  1730-31  (1992)).
    Ultimately,  however,  the  Guidelines  cannot  dictate  how
    courts should  sentence in  such special, unusual  or other-
    than-ordinary circumstances.  And, that  is as it should be.
    As we have said, see pp.  4-5, supra, the very theory of the
    Guidelines  system   is  that  when   courts,  drawing  upon
    experience and  informed judgment  in such cases,  decide to
    depart, they will explain  their departures.  The courts  of
    appeals, and  the Sentencing  Commission, will  examine, and
    learn  from, those  reasons.   And, the  resulting knowledge
    will  help  the Commission  to  change,  to refine,  and  to
    improve, the  Guidelines themselves.  That is  the theory of
    partnership that the Guidelines embody.
    D
    Review on Appeal
    If  the  district  court decides  to  depart,  the
    defendant may appeal (an upward departure) or the Government
    may appeal (a downward departure).  18 U.S.C.   3742(a),(b);
    see also  United States  v. Pighetti,  
    898 F.2d at 4
    .   The
    statute then provides the appellate court with two important
    instructions.  First,  the court of  appeals must decide  if
    the resulting  sentence is "unreasonable, having regard for"
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    19
    the sentencing  court's reasons  and  the statute's  general
    sentencing  factors.  18  U.S.C.   3742(e)(3).   Second, the
    court of appeals must (as it ordinarily does) give "specific
    reasons" for its decision.   18 U.S.C.   3742(f)(2).   These
    two  instructions,  taken  together,  help assure  that  the
    courts  of appeals,  with their  more distant,  yet broader,
    perspective, will  also play an important  indirect (as well
    as  the obvious direct)  role in the  further development of
    Guidelines.     They  play  this  "indirect   role"  as  the
    Commission  examines the  courts of  appeals' decisions  and
    reacts, through revision, or reiteration, of the Guidelines.
    The result is a  partnership in which each partner
    enjoys  a different  institutional  strength.   The district
    court may best understand the relation of the  Guidelines to
    case-specific, detailed  facts.   Its experience permits  it
    directly  to form  a judgment  as to  when certain  kinds of
    circumstances seem better handled by judicial discretion and
    how  courts ought to exercise that discretion.  At the other
    end of the spectrum, the Sentencing Commission, by gathering
    information produced by many individual courts, can view the
    sentencing  process   as  a   whole,   developing  a   broad
    perspective on  sentencing, which will help  it produce more
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    20
    consistent  sentencing  results  among   similarly  situated
    offenders  sentenced by  different  courts.   The courts  of
    appeals see  sentences from  an intermediate  vantage point.
    They  devote  considerable time  and  effort  to a  district
    court's determination  in a  particular case, while,  at the
    same time, placing that case within a broader perspective of
    sentencing law.
    Recognizing  this relationship, we  have held that
    appellate courts  must recognize a degree  of district court
    autonomy when  they review certain aspects  of the departure
    decision.  In  United States v. Diaz-Villafane, 
    874 F.2d 43
    (1st Cir.) cert. denied, 
    493 U.S. 862
     (1989), we pointed out
    that appellate review  of a decision  to depart may  involve
    three  subsidiary questions:  1)  review of  the  departure-
    related circumstances  to determine  "whether  or not"  they
    "are  of a  kind or  degree that  they may  appropriately be
    relied  upon  to  justify  departure;"    2) review  of  the
    evidence  to  see  if   it  supports  the  departure-related
    findings  of fact; and 3) review of the "record support" for
    "the direction  and degree" of  departure.   Id. at 49.   We
    held that in the second, and the third, instance, an appeals
    court must allow  the district court  a degree of  "leeway."
    Review of factfinding is for "clear  error."  Id.  Review of
    -21-
    21
    departure "direction and degree"  will take place with "full
    awareness  of,  and  respect  for"  the  sentencing  court's
    "superior 'feel' for the case." Id. at 50; see also Bruce M.
    Selya  &  Matthew  R.   Kipp,  An  Examination  of  Emerging
    Departure   Jurisprudence   Under  the   Federal  Sentencing
    Guidelines, 
    67 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1
    , 39-40 (1991).
    We also  stated, however,  that in respect  to the
    first matter ("whether or not"  the circumstances "are of  a
    kind  or  degree" to  warrant  a  departure), our  appellate
    review was "essentially plenary." Diaz-Villafane 874 F.2d at
    49.   This phrase suggested review that provides no "leeway"
    for the district  court.   We now consider  it necessary  to
    elaborate   our  meaning  and   to  modify,   somewhat,  our
    application of  Diaz-Villafane in  later cases.   See United
    States  v. Carr, 
    932 F.2d 67
    , 72 (1st  Cir.), cert. denied,
    
    112 S. Ct. 112
     (1991); United States v. Pozzy, 
    902 F.2d 133
    ,
    138 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    498 U.S. 943
     (1990).  (Through
    circulation of a draft opinion, we have obtained approval of
    all active judges for  doing so.  See, e.g.,  Trailer Marine
    Transport Corp. v.  Rivera Vasquez, 
    977 F.2d 1
    , 9  n. 5 (1st
    Cir. 1992)).  Our elaboration, and modification, consists of
    distinguishing  certain decisions  in  this  category  where
    review  should take  place  without  "leeway,"  from  others
    -22-
    22
    where, despite the technically legal nature of the question,
    we nonetheless should review  with "full . . .  respect for"
    the  sentencing  court's  "superior 'feel'  for  the  case."
    Diaz-Villafane,  874   F.2d  at  50.     We  recognize  that
    application of our  elaboration and modification to  earlier
    decided cases might have meant different results.
    Plenary review is  appropriate where the  question
    on  review is simply  whether or  not the  allegedly special
    circumstances (i.e.,  the reasons for departure)  are of the
    "kind"  that  the  Guidelines,   in  principle,  permit  the
    sentencing  court to consider at all.  As we have previously
    pointed out, departures  for some  reasons are  "forbidden,"
    see  pp.  13-14, supra,  and  departures  for certain  other
    reasons  are "discouraged"  unless the  case is  out of  the
    ordinary, see pp. 12-13,  supra.  Were a district  court (1)
    to try to depart for a "forbidden" reason, or were it (2) to
    try to depart for a "discouraged" reason without recognizing
    that it must explain  how the case (compared to  other cases
    where the reason is present) is special, its departure would
    not  be lawful.  The district court has no special expertise
    in   deciding   whether   a   factor   is   "forbidden"   or
    "discouraged."  Hence, there  is no reason to review  such a
    decision with any "leeway" or "deference."
    -23-
    23
    Plenary  review  is  also  appropriate  where  the
    appellate court, in deciding  whether the allegedly  special
    circumstances are  of a "kind" that  permits departure, will
    have to  perform the "quintessentially legal"  function, see
    Diaz-Villafane, 874  F.2d at  49, of  interpreting a  set of
    words,  those of an individual guideline,  in light of their
    intention or purpose, in order to identify the nature of the
    guideline's "heartland"  (to see  if  the allegedly  special
    circumstance falls  within it).  Is  the "child pornography"
    guideline,  for example,  aimed  only  at child  pornography
    consumers  who are also child molesters, so that a purchaser
    who is  not also a  molester falls outside  its "heartland?"
    See  United States v. Studley,  
    907 F.2d 254
    ,  258 (1st Cir.
    1990) (the fact that recipient  of child pornography was not
    also a child  molester does  not make the  case unusual  nor
    remove  it  from  the  heartland of  the  child  pornography
    guideline);  United States v.  Deane, 
    914 F.2d 11
    ,  14 (1st
    Cir. 1990)  (following Studley).  Here,  again, the district
    court has no special  competence in performing this  kind of
    classical  textual  analysis.    Hence,  a reviewing  court,
    deciding  whether   the  district  court   has  "incorrectly
    applied" a  guideline, 18  U.S.C.   3742(f)(1);  Williams v.
    United States, 
    112 S. Ct. 1112
    , 1120 (1992), need  not give
    -24-
    24
    the  district court's  answer to  a question  involving this
    kind of analysis any special weight.
    In many other instances,  not anticipated by Diaz-
    Villafane,  the district court's decision that circumstances
    are of  a "kind," or  "degree," that warrant  departure will
    not involve a "quintessentially legal" interpretation of the
    words of a guideline,  but rather will amount to  a judgment
    about  whether the  given  circumstances, as  seen from  the
    district court's unique vantage point, are usual or unusual,
    ordinary  or not ordinary, and  to what extent.   A district
    court may well have a special competence in making this kind
    of determination,  because it may  have a better  "feel" for
    the unique  circumstances of the particular  case before it.
    A district court is  also likely to have seen  more ordinary
    Guidelines   cases,  for  appellate  courts  hear  only  the
    comparatively  few cases  that  counsel  believe  present  a
    colorable appeal.  See The Federal Sentencing Guidelines:  A
    Report on  the Operations of  the Guidelines System  49, 245
    (December 1991) (85% of Guidelines  sentences not appealed).
    To ignore  the district court's special  competence -- about
    the "ordinariness" or "unusualness"  of a particular case --
    would   risk  depriving  the  Sentencing  Commission  of  an
    important source  of information,  namely, the reactions  of
    -25-
    25
    the trial  judge to  the fact-specific circumstances  of the
    case,  which  reactions,  reduced  to  written  reasons  for
    departure, can  help the  Commission determine  whether, and
    how,  Guidelines  revision should  take  place.   See  p. 5,
    supra; U.S.S.G. Ch.1,  Pt. A intro. comment.  (4)(b).  Thus,
    appellate   courts  should   review  the   district  court's
    determination of "unusualness" with "full awareness of,  and
    respect  for, the  trier's  superior 'feel'  for the  case,"
    Diaz-Villafane, 874  F.2d at 50, not  with the understanding
    that review is "plenary."  Contra United States v. Carr, 932
    F.2d at 72; United States v. Pozzy, 902 F.2d at 138.
    As we have said, Diaz-Villafane mandated appellate
    court "respect" for sentencing court determinations  of fact
    and of "direction and degree."  We now extend that "respect"
    to sentencing  court  determinations  of  whether  (and  the
    extent to  which) given circumstances make  a case "unusual"
    or "not ordinary."  We believe this view consistent with the
    Supreme Court's recent statement that,
    except   to   the  extent   specifically
    directed by statute, "it is not the role
    of an appellate court to  substitute its
    judgment  for  that  of  the  sentencing
    court  as to  the  appropriateness of  a
    particular sentence."
    Williams v. United States, 
    112 S. Ct. at 1121
     (quoting Solem
    v. Helm, 
    463 U.S. 277
    , 290 n.16 (1983));  see also Wiliam W.
    -26-
    26
    Wilkins, Jr.,  Sentencing Reform  and  Appellate Review,  46
    Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 429, 443 (1989) (it is  not "appropriate
    for the appellate court to simply substitute its judgment de
    novo for that of  the sentencing court").  Our view  is also
    consistent  with Congress'  instruction that  appeals courts
    "shall   affirm"  reasonable  departures.     18   U.S.C.
    3742(f)(2)-(3).  And, it  is consistent with appellate court
    efforts  generally to  conduct judicial  review in  light of
    comparative institutional  competence.  Cf. United States v.
    Wright,  
    873 F.2d 437
    ,  444  (1st  Cir. 1989)  (deferential
    review  under Guidelines where issue is "one that is founded
    'on   the  application   of   the  fact-finding   tribunal's
    experience with the mainsprings of human conduct'") (quoting
    United States v.  McConney, 
    728 F.2d 1195
    ,  1202 (9th Cir.),
    cert.  denied  
    469 U.S. 824
      (1984))  (citation  omitted);
    Mayburg v. Secretary of Health & Human Servs., 
    740 F.2d 100
    ,
    105-07 (1st Cir. 1984); see also INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 
    480 U.S. 421
    , 445-48  (1987)  (citing Chevron  U.S.A., Inc.  v.
    Natural Resources Defense Council,  Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 843,
    n.9 (1984)).
    II
    Applying the Analysis
    -27-
    27
    We now  apply  our  "departure"  analysis  to  the
    circumstances  of the two cases before us, the appeal of Ms.
    Mirna Rivera, and that of Mr. Robert Adamo.
    -28-
    28
    A
    Mirna Rivera
    For purposes of this appeal, we take Ms. Rivera to
    have transported  about one pound of cocaine,  from New York
    to Providence, with intent to distribute it, in violation of
    21 U.S.C.   841(a)(1), (b)(1)(B).  The Guidelines  provide a
    sentence  of 33 to 41  months imprisonment for  a first time
    offender who  has  engaged in  this conduct.   See  U.S.S.G.
    2D1.1(a)(3)(c)(10)  (base offense  level of  24); U.S.S.G.
    3B1.2(a)    (reduction   of    4   points    for   minimal
    participation); U.S.S.G.  Ch. 5,  Pt. A  (sentencing table).
    Ms.  Rivera argued  to  the district  court  that it  should
    depart  downward  from  this  Guidelines  sentence  for  the
    following reasons:
    1)  she has  three small  children, ages
    three,   five,  and  six,   who  need  a
    mother's care;
    2)   she   lives   solely  on   welfare,
    receiving  no  financial  aid  from  her
    former husband;
    3) she has virtually no contact with any
    other  family  member   (except  for   a
    sister,  with  five  children,  also  on
    welfare);
    4) she  has never before engaged  in any
    criminal activity;
    and,
    -29-
    29
    5)  she  committed  this single  offense
    because  of  an  unwise wish  to  obtain
    money  for  Christmas  presents for  her
    children.
    The  district court decided  not to  depart.   Rivera claims
    that this  decision reflects  the  court's incorrect  belief
    that it lacked the legal authority to depart.  And, she asks
    us  to order  a  new  proceeding.    See  United  States  v.
    Castiello, 
    915 F.2d 1
    , 5-6 (1st Cir.  1990) (new proceeding
    needed where district court  wrongly thought it lacked legal
    power  to depart,  but  not where  it  simply chose  not  to
    exercise  this  authority), cert.  denied,  
    111 S. Ct. 787
    (1991).
    After  reviewing  the  record  of  the  sentencing
    proceeding,  we  conclude  that  Rivera  is  correct.    The
    district  court's  analysis of  the nature  of its  power to
    depart is not consistent with the view of departures that we
    set  forth  in this  opinion.    We recognize  a  difference
    between "forbidden  departures," see pp.  13-14, supra,  and
    "discouraged  departures," see  pp. 12-13,  supra.   And, we
    believe  that the district court did not realize that it had
    the legal  power to  consider departure, where  departure is
    discouraged (but not forbidden), if it finds features of the
    case that show it is not ordinary.  See pp. 12-13, supra.
    -30-
    30
    At  the sentencing  hearing,  the  district  court
    said:
    With  respect  to  Defendant's  argument
    that  the Defendant's  family situation,
    economic    situation,    warrants     a
    departure,   I   must   say   that   the
    guidelines   are   drawn  to   apply  to
    everyone in exactly  the same way,  that
    it is clear from the guidelines that the
    economic   situation   and  the   family
    situation  of the  Defendant  is  not  a
    consideration.    There  are  those  who
    certainly would disagree with  that, but
    that is the  principle that is  embodied
    in the  guidelines.  They are age blind,
    they  are sex blind,  they are  blind to
    family circumstances, and can  result in
    their application in a certain amount of
    cruelty.   But, that  isn't a  basis for
    making  a departure.   It's  a situation
    where somebody tries  to draw a straight
    line  that  applies  to every  situation
    that can possibly  arise and this  Court
    is without discretion to take what might
    well  be  thought  by  most  people,  at
    least,    legitimate    concerns    into
    consideration.   Simply put, I  can't do
    that  because  the  guidelines   do  not
    permit  me   to  do   that.    So   that
    Defendant's objection or request to make
    a downward departure is denied . . . .
    Your Counsel says that a court somewhere
    observed that these guidelines are not a
    straightjacket  for  a  District  Court.
    Well, I don't agree  with that.  Here is
    a circumstance where I'm  satisfied that
    the reason you did  this was to buy toys
    for your children at Christmas.  It  was
    a  serious  mistake.   The  pre-sentence
    report says this:
    There   is    no   information
    suggesting that Ms. Rivera had
    -31-
    31
    any previous participation  in
    a   similar    type   criminal
    activity.     The  Defendant's
    lifestyle is not indicative of
    that of a  drug dealer who has
    profited from ongoing criminal
    activity.   Rather she appears
    destitute,  relying on  public
    assistance to  support herself
    and her children.
    . . . If I had the authority to do it, I
    would not impose the sentence that I  am
    about  to  impose.   I  would  impose  a
    lesser  sentence  because  I think  that
    these guidelines  simply are unrealistic
    when  applied  to  real life  situations
    like  this.    They  may  work  in  many
    circumstances, but  they certainly don't
    work here.
    (Emphasis added).
    In these  statements,  the court  repeatedly  said
    that it lacked the  legal power to depart; it  characterized
    the   case   before  it   as   different   from  the   "many
    circumstances"  where  the Guidelines  might work;  it added
    that  it  would depart  if it  could;  it set  forth several
    circumstances that might make the case a special one; and it
    described  as identical  ("sex blind"  and "blind  to family
    circumstances")   guidelines   that,    in   fact,    differ
    significantly, the former involving a "forbidden" departure,
    and the latter a  "discouraged" departure.  Compare U.S.S.G.
    5H1.10, p.s. with    5H1.6, p.s; compare  also pp. 13-14,
    supra with pp. 12-13, supra.  Taken together, these features
    -32-
    32
    of the  case warrant a new  sentencing proceeding, conducted
    with the district court  fully aware of its power  to depart
    in "unusual cases" and where family circumstances are out of
    the "ordinary."
    Of course, we  should not (and would  not) order a
    new proceeding  were  the proceeding  pointless, i.e.,  were
    there  no   significant  possibility  that   the  facts  and
    circumstances  would permit  the district court  lawfully to
    order  a departure.  See  United States v.  Rushby, 
    936 F.2d 41
    , 42 (1st Cir. 1991).  Yet, we cannot say this is so.   We
    have  examined   the  case  law  and   found  several  cases
    permitting departure in  similar, or even less  sympathetic,
    circumstances.  See United States v. Johnson, 
    964 F.2d 124
    ,
    128-30 (2d Cir. 1992)  (sole responsibility for raising four
    children); United  States v. Alba,  
    933 F.2d 1117
    ,  1122 (2d
    Cir. 1991)  (twelve-year marriage, two children, living with
    disabled,  dependent father and  grandmother); United States
    v.  Pena, 
    930 F.2d 1486
    ,  1494-95 (10th Cir.  1991) (single
    parent  of  infant and  sole  supporter  of sixteen-year-old
    daughter and daughter's infant);  United States v. Big Crow,
    
    898 F.2d 1326
    , 1331-32  (8th Cir.  1990) (solid  family and
    community ties and "consistent efforts to lead a decent life
    in [the] difficult environment"  of an Indian  reservation).
    -33-
    33
    See also United States  v. Gaskill, No. 92-5588, slip op.(3d
    Cir.  April  16,  1993)  (defendant's  responsibilities  for
    mentally ill wife might justify departure).
    We   have   also  found   many   cases  forbidding
    departures  for reasons related  to family responsibilities,
    but they seem to  involve circumstances less compelling than
    those before us.   See  United States v.  Chestna, 
    962 F.2d 103
    , 107 (1st  Cir.), cert.  denied, 
    113 S. Ct. 334
      (1992)
    (defendant  was single  mother  of  four  children);  United
    States v. Mogel, 
    956 F.2d 1555
    ,  1565 (11th Cir.) (defendant
    supported  two minor  children  and  live-in mother),  cert.
    denied, 
    113 S. Ct. 167
     (1992); United States v.  Cacho, 
    951 F.2d 308
    , 311  (11th Cir. 1992)  (defendant had  four small
    children);  United States  v. Berlier,  
    948 F.2d 1093
    , 1096
    (9th Cir. 1991) (defendant  sought to keep family together);
    United   States  v.  Carr,  
    932 F.2d 67
    ,  72  (1st  Cir.)
    (codefendants were  parents of  young child),  cert. denied,
    
    112 S. Ct. 112
     (1991);  United States v.  Shoupe, 
    929 F.2d 116
    , 121 (3d Cir.) (defendant was  father who regularly made
    child support  payments and frequently spoke  with young son
    living with ex-wife),  cert. denied, 
    112 S. Ct. 382
     (1991);
    United  States  v.  Brand,  
    907 F.2d 31
    ,  33  (4th   Cir.)
    (defendant was sole custodial parent of two children), cert.
    -34-
    34
    denied, 
    498 U.S. 1014
     (1990);  United States  v. Neil,  
    903 F.2d 564
    , 566  (8th Cir. 1990) (defendant had  stable family
    life);  United States v. Pozzy, 
    902 F.2d 133
    , 139 (1st Cir.)
    (defendant pregnant and  husband imprisoned), cert.  denied,
    
    498 U.S. 943
     (1990); United States v. Brewer, 
    899 F.2d 503
    ,
    508-09 (6th Cir.) (defendant  was mother of young children),
    cert. denied, 
    498 U.S. 844
     (1990).
    The upshot is a  difficult departure decision.  On
    the  one hand  lie  a host  of  quite special  circumstances
    (though  many  are of  the "discouraged"  sort), and  on the
    other  hand lies the simple  fact that Ms.  Mirna Rivera did
    transport a  pound of cocaine  from New York  to Providence.
    This is the  kind of case  in which, if  the district  court
    departs,  its informed views as  to why the  case is special
    would seem  especially useful  and  would warrant  appellate
    court "respect."  See pp. 23-24, supra.
    We remand the case for further proceedings.
    B
    Robert Adamo
    Mr.  Adamo  was  convicted  of   embezzling  about
    $100,000 belonging to  the union Health and  Welfare Fund of
    which he was a fiduciary,  in violation of 18 U.S.C.    664.
    He accepted responsibility for  the crime, U.S.S.G.   3E1.1.
    -35-
    35
    It was his first offense.  The Guidelines provided a minimum
    prison term  of  fifteen months.    See U.S.S.G.      2E5.2,
    2B1.1,  3B1.3 (base offense level of 4; increase of 8 points
    for  amount of  loss;  2  level  enhancement for  more  than
    minimal  planning;  2  level  enhancement   for  fiduciary);
    U.S.S.G.  Ch. 5,  Pt.  A (sentencing  table).   The district
    court, departing downward from the Guidelines, sentenced Mr.
    Adamo to probation alone, without any imprisonment.
    The  court gave  the  following  reasons  for  its
    downward departure:
    When  I  look  at  these  cases  of
    sentencing, the first thing I ask myself
    is,  "What sentence  would  I impose  if
    there were no guidelines?"   That's what
    I did for more than 20 years.  And  then
    I ask myself, "What's a just sentence in
    these circumstances?   Am I  going to be
    limited  by these  artificial guidelines
    made by people who  have no idea of what
    kind  of a  case  I'm going  to have  to
    decide?"  No two cases are the same. . .
    .
    So  that's where justice is in this
    case,  having  restitution made  to this
    Health &  Welfare Fund.  If  I send this
    defendant   to   prison  I   think  it's
    foreordained  that restitution  will not
    be  made.    It  may  be  made  in  some
    respect,  but  I'm  sure  the  defendant
    would lose both his jobs and would  find
    it  very  difficult  to have  employment
    which   would   allow   him    to   make
    restitution.  And a time in prison would
    serve  no useful  purpose in  this case.
    The  only  factor  in  sentencing  which
    -36-
    36
    would be accomplished is punishment, but
    the defendant has  been punished just by
    being here -- just  being here and  what
    he's gone through in the last  6 months,
    and   the  notoriety   of  this.     So,
    imprisonment serves no useful purpose in
    this case.  It  certainly isn't a matter
    of deterrence.   I'm sure  the defendant
    will never do anything like this again.
    Here is  a  man who  has  lived  an
    exemplary life, he's worked two  jobs to
    take care  of his family.   His wife has
    worked, and although they were making in
    the range of $70,000 a year, the problem
    of educating two children came up.  It's
    a problem  that everyone faces.  This is
    where  the error  of judgment  comes in.
    He took  this money,  not out  of greed,
    not out of desire to own a fancy  car or
    a  palatial  home  and a  boat,  but  to
    educate his children.   He didn't  think
    about  the  other  alternatives.     His
    daughter  wanted to  go to  an expensive
    private  school, instead  of going  to a
    local state school of  some sort, and he
    thought that's what she should have.  He
    didn't consider loans and other types of
    programs.  This  money was available, he
    took  it  -- a  terrible  mistake.   But
    that's the only mistake that he seems to
    have made,  and  I just  don't think  he
    should  spend time in  prison because of
    this one mistake.
    I  want  restitution  made, so  I'm
    going  to exercise  my best  judgment in
    these circumstances.   My best  judgment
    is to  have as long a  term of probation
    as possible so  that restitution can  be
    made with the  guidance of the probation
    office.
    So,  I'm  going to  depart downward
    and  impose  a  term of  probation  of 5
    years.   That's the  maximum that  I can
    -37-
    37
    impose.   And  one of the  conditions of
    probation  will  be,  and is,  that  the
    defendant shall pay  restitution in  the
    amount  of  $91,125.62 to  the  Health &
    Welfare  Fund  of  the Building  Service
    Employees  International Union,  AFL-CIO
    Local 334.
    The court's explication of its  reasons is useful,
    for  it produces understanding  and permits evaluation, both
    by  appellate courts and by  the Commission.  We nonetheless
    believe the  analysis does  not permit the  departure before
    us.
    First, we believe (deciding the question as a pure
    matter of law,  see pp. 21-22, supra) that  the embezzlement
    guidelines encompass, within their "heartland," embezzlement
    accompanied by normal  restitution needs and  practicalities
    (i.e., the  simple facts  that restitution is  desirable and
    that a prison term will make restitution harder to achieve).
    It  would  seem   obvious,  and  no  one  denies,  that  the
    embezzlement guidelines  are written  for ordinary  cases of
    embezzlement, that  restitution is  called for in  many such
    cases, and that prison terms often make restitution somewhat
    more  difficult  to  achieve.    Moreover, the  embezzlement
    guideline  reflects  the  Commission's  intent  to  equalize
    punishments for "white collar" and "blue collar" crime.  See
    United States Sentencing Commission, Supplementary Report on
    -38-
    38
    the Initial Sentencing  Guidelines and Policy  Statements 18
    (1987); Hearings  Before the Senate Comm.  on the Judiciary,
    100th  Cong., 1st Sess. 54-55  (October 22, 1987).   Yet, as
    the Sixth Circuit has pointed out,
    a  rule  permitting greater  leniency in
    sentencing  in  those  cases   in  which
    restitution  is   at  issue  and   is  a
    meaningful possibility  (i.e., generally
    white collar crimes) would . . . nurture
    the  unfortunate  practice of  disparate
    sentencing   based   on   socio-economic
    status,   which   the  guidelines   were
    intended to supplant.
    United States v. Harpst,  
    949 F.2d 860
    , 863 (6th  Cir. 1991)
    (citing U.S.S.G.    5H1.10, p.s. (socio-economic  status not
    relevant  in  determination  of  sentence)).   Further,  the
    district court itself, stating  that it did not wish  "to be
    limited by  these artificial  guidelines," and that  "no two
    cases are alike," seemed to disregard, rather than  to deny,
    the scope of the embezzlement guideline.  For these reasons,
    we join  the  Fourth and  Sixth  Circuits, in  holding  that
    ordinary restitution circumstances of  this sort do not fall
    outside  the  embezzlement   guideline's  "heartland,"   and
    therefore  do not warrant a downward departure.  See Harpst,
    
    949 F.2d at 863
    ; United  States v. Bolden,  
    889 F.2d 1336
    ,
    1340 (4th Cir. 1989).
    -39-
    39
    Second,  we recognize  that  a special  need of  a
    victim for restitution, and the  surrounding practicalities,
    might, in an  unusual case,  justify a departure.   But,  we
    cannot review a district  court determination to that effect
    here,  for the  district court  made no  such determination.
    (Although,  had  it  done  so,  we  would  have treated  its
    determination with "respect."   See pp.  23-24, supra.)   We
    mention this fact because the  defendant has pointed to  one
    unusual  feature of the case.  The record before us contains
    a  suggestion  that  Mr.  Adamo  could  keep  his  job  (and
    therefore remain  able to make restitution)  were his prison
    term only one year, but he  could not keep his job (and thus
    would  lose  his  ability   to  make  restitution)  were  he
    sentenced  to the  Guidelines prison  term of  one year  and
    three  months.   We  can imagine  an argument  for departure
    resting  upon a  strong need  for restitution,  an important
    practical advantage to the  lesser sentence, and a departure
    limited to three months.
    We are not urging such a  departure or saying that
    we  would eventually find it lawful.  We mention the special
    circumstance to  underscore the need  for reasoned departure
    analysis, sensitive to the way in which the Guidelines  seek
    to structure departure  decisions and to the  role that such
    -40-
    40
    departures, and their accompanying  reasons, can play in the
    continued development of the Sentencing Guidelines.  We have
    explained why  the district court's analysis,  about how the
    features  of a case make it unusual, can help both reviewing
    courts  and the  Commission  itself.   See  pp. 4-5,  18-19,
    supra.  The district court, in Mr. Adamo's case, may wish to
    conduct such an analysis in light of the special features of
    the case to which the defendant has pointed.
    We therefore remand this  case for new  sentencing
    proceedings.
    The sentences  in both  cases are vacated  and the
    cases are remanded to the district court for resentencing.
    So ordered.
    -41-
    41
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 92-1749

Filed Date: 6/24/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (22)

United States v. Dana Pighetti , 898 F.2d 3 ( 1990 )

United States v. Bertie Alexander Wright , 873 F.2d 437 ( 1989 )

6 soc.sec.rep.ser. 142, Medicare&medicaid Gu 34,082 Rose ... , 740 F.2d 100 ( 1984 )

United States v. James Studley , 907 F.2d 254 ( 1990 )

United States v. Robert P. Deane , 914 F.2d 11 ( 1990 )

Trailer Marine Transport Corp. v. Carmen M. Rivera Vazquez, ... , 977 F.2d 1 ( 1992 )

United States v. Cynthia Johnson , 964 F.2d 124 ( 1992 )

United States of America, Cross-Appellant v. Irma Pena, ... , 930 F.2d 1486 ( 1991 )

United States v. Millard E. Bolden , 889 F.2d 1336 ( 1989 )

United States v. Didier Alba John Gonzalez Marizol Vasquez, ... , 933 F.2d 1117 ( 1991 )

United States v. Giovanni Castiello , 915 F.2d 1 ( 1990 )

United States v. John Rushby , 936 F.2d 41 ( 1991 )

United States v. Vivian Cacho , 951 F.2d 308 ( 1992 )

united-states-v-david-michael-deigert-united-states-of-america-v-donald , 916 F.2d 916 ( 1990 )

United States v. David Joseph Berlier , 948 F.2d 1093 ( 1991 )

United States v. David Big Crow, United States of America v.... , 898 F.2d 1326 ( 1990 )

United States v. Johnnie R. Neil, United States of America ... , 903 F.2d 564 ( 1990 )

United States v. Jack A. Harpst , 949 F.2d 860 ( 1991 )

Immigration & Naturalization Service v. Cardoza-Fonseca , 107 S. Ct. 1207 ( 1987 )

Williams v. United States , 112 S. Ct. 1112 ( 1992 )

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