United States v. Lori Wisecarver
Opinion
Lori Ann Wisecarver pled guilty to second-degree murder in violation of
In 2014, Wisecarver and her husband received custody of J.L., then about two years old, based on a distant family relationship. J.L. and his siblings had been removed from their mother's custody due to her drug abuse. In the months that followed, Wisecarver physically abused J.L., motivated largely by frustration over toilet-training issues. Wisecarver's physical abuse of J.L. culminated on February 24, 2015 when an ambulance brought the boy to the Pine Ridge Indian Health Services Hospital. J.L. was pronounced dead shortly after arrival. The boy's autopsy revealed that he had been abused for some time; he was covered in old and new injuries, including bruises, burn-like injuries to his face, and injuries to his genitals. He died from multiple blunt trauma injury, including catastrophic injuries to the head and abdomen. When interviewed about J.L.'s death, Wisecarver initially denied killing the child, claiming he had fallen due to a seizure. The subsequent investigation contradicted this claim. Several individuals, including J.L.'s pediatrician, denied that the child had seizures, and witnesses familiar with the family reported seeing Wisecarver hit J.L.'s head against a concrete floor, duct tape the child to a toilet, rub the child's face in urine, and put the child in a washing machine. In September 2015, the government charged Wisecarver and her husband with first-degree murder and several counts of child abuse. To avoid a mandatory life sentence, Wisecarver pled guilty to second-degree murder and signed a statement admitting to repeated physical abuse of J.L. that resulted in his death.
Wisecarver's presentence investigation report (PSR) generated a United States Sentencing Guidelines range of 210-262 months imprisonment due, in part, to Wisecarver's lack of criminal history. At sentencing, the government sought an upward departure or upward variance to 480 months, contending that the PSR's calculation of the appropriate Guidelines range failed to consider the "exceptionally heinous, cruel, brutal, or degrading" nature of the crime and the original dismissed charges. United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual
, §§ 2A1.2, comment. (n.1) (stating "an upward departure may be warranted" in second degree murder cases involving heinous conduct), 5K2.8 (noting a court may depart upward to reflect the "unusually heinous" nature of the offense conduct), 5K2.21 (stating a "court may depart upward to reflect the actual seriousness of the offense based on conduct ... dismissed as part of a plea agreement ...."). The district court granted both the upward departure and the upward variance. It cited U.S.S.G. § 5K2.0 -the Guidelines' policy statement for grounds for departure, including aggravating or mitigating circumstances-as additional support for its decision. The district court found that both the Guidelines' departure provisions and the
We review the substantive reasonableness of a sentence using "a deferential abuse of discretion standard," considering "the totality of the circumstances, including the extent of any variance from the Guidelines range."
Gall v. United States
,
One of the seven § 3553(a) factors requires that the court consider "the need to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct."
Wisecarver argues that her sentence is disproportionately severe compared to the sentences given in other cases involving the deaths of children. She therefore contends that outrage, rather than proper balancing of the § 3553(a) factors, primarily drove the district court's analysis. However, the district court was explicit in its reasoning. It emphasized that it "thought about [the sentence] long and hard," Sent. Tr. 30, Dist. Ct. Dkt. 157, and stressed that Wisecarver's case was unusual compared to other child death cases because J.L.'s autopsy demonstrated that he "sustained repeated and over a period of time really brutal and heinous and cruel injuries which finally resulted in the child's death." Sent. Tr. 31. The court described its struggle to find comparable cases involving such severe and sustained child abuse; it stated it had seen only one other case that "would even come close to being more horrific than this homicide of an infant." Sent. Tr. 33. All of the cases cited by Wisecarver are distinguishable from
her own, involving neglect rather than violent abuse, single incidents rather than prolonged mistreatment, or multiple abusers rather than one.
2
In addition to clearly considering potential sentence disparity, the district court expressly weighed other statutory considerations justifying the sentence imposed including the seriousness of the offense, Wisecarver's need for treatment, the interest in deterring similar criminal conduct, and the need to protect the public from further crimes.
See
Finally, Wisecarver fails to allege any specific error in the district court's application of the Guidelines' departure provisions. Instead, she broadly contends that its use of the departure provisions resulted in a substantively unreasonable sentence. Rather than identifying a sole source for its enhanced sentence, the district court framed a Guidelines departure based on "heinous" conduct and a variance based on the § 3553(a) factors as alternative bases for arriving at the same 40-year sentence. In such instances, if "the district court did not abuse its substantial discretion in varying upward ... , any error in alternatively imposing an upward departure [is] harmless because 'the district court would have imposed the same sentence absent the error.' "
United States v. Grandon
,
Because the district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing Wisecarver's sentence, we affirm.
The Honorable Jeffrey L. Viken, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of South Dakota.
Though the government also charged Wisecarver's husband with J.L.'s death, it is undisputed that he was away from the home at the time Wisecarver fatally harmed J.L. and that Wisecarver was the primary abuser of the child.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- UNITED STATES of America Plaintiff - Appellee v. Lori Ann WISECARVER Defendant - Appellant
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published