United States v. Sriram

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
United States v. Sriram, 274 F. App'x 493 (7th Cir. 2008)

United States v. Sriram

Opinion of the Court

ORDER

In our opinion reported at 482 F.3d 956 (7th Cir. 2007), we remanded for resentenc-ing after determining that the district court had miscalculated Sriram’s guidelines range and that any loss estimate of less than $1.4 million would be clearly erroneous. Before Sriram was resen-tenced, however, the Supreme Court granted his petition for a writ of certiorari, vacated our decision, and remanded the case to us (— U.S.-, 128 S.Ct. 1134, 169 L.Ed.2d 946 (2008)) for reconsideration in light of Gall v. United States, — U.S.-, 128 S.Ct. 586, 169 L.Ed.2d 445 (2007). Sriram insists that Gall precludes this court from rejecting the district court’s loss calculation, while the government argues that our ruling is consistent with Gall.

Just a few days before the Supreme Court remanded the case to us, we explained our understanding of Gall, stating that the Court had “held that a sentence outside the guidelines range must not be presumed unreasonable by the appellate court, which also may not hogtie sentencing judges with a rigid formula for determining whether the justification for an out-of-range sentence is ‘proportional’ to the extent of the sentence’s deviation from that range.” United States v. McIlrath, 512 F.3d 421, 426 (2008). We further explained that our decisions prior to Gall (and thus the decision vacating the sentence imposed on the defendant in the present case) had been consistent with the standard laid down by the Court in that case.

The defendant’s Rule 54 statement makes clear that he is challenging only our reversal of the district judge’s loss estimate. That issue is unrelated to the scope of a district judge’s sentencing discretion or of appellate review of the exercise of that discretion, the issues in Gall. Nothing in that case entitles a judge to calculate the guideline range erroneously, though once he has calculated it correctly he has discretion to sentence above or below it as well as within it. It is the initial step at which the district judge stumbled, and we cannot find anything in the Gall decision (nor does the defendant suggest anything) that would allow us to overlook the stumble and affirm the sentence. We therefore reinstate our previous opinion.

Reference

Full Case Name
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee v. Krishnaswami SRIRAM, Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant
Cited By
2 cases
Status
Published