Court Opinion

ID: 6341639
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-05-17 21:00:44.949351+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:06.958746
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                     For the First Circuit
No. 19-2204

                    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                            Appellee,

                               v.

               EMILIANO EMMANUEL FLORES-GONZÁLEZ,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

         [Hon. Francisco A. Besosa, U.S. District Judge]

                             Before

                       Barron, Chief Judge,
              Thompson and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.

     Ivan Santos-Castaldo, Research and Writing Attorney, with
whom Eric Alexander Vos, Federal Public Defender, Franco L. Pérez-
Redondo, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Supervisor, Appeals
Division, and Liza L. Rosado-Rodríguez, Research and Writing
Specialist, were on brief, for appellant.
     Gregory B. Conner, Assistant United States Attorney, with
whom W. Stephen Muldrow, United States Attorney, and Marina E.
Bauzá-Almonte, Assistant United States Attorney, Chief, Appellate
Division, were on brief, for appellee.

                          May 16, 2022
           THOMPSON,   Circuit Judge.      Emiliano Emmanuel Flores-

González ("Flores") thinks his 48-month prison sentence entered

after he pled guilty to illegally possessing a machine gun (a

modified Glock pistol) is too long — in legal lingo, he believes

his incarcerative term (which is well below the 10-year statutory

maximum)     is   procedurally    and    substantively   unreasonable.

Reviewing for abuse of discretion — a multidimensional standard

that requires us to inspect fact findings for clear error and legal

rulings de novo (with fresh eyes, to use plain English), see United

States v. Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d 130, 133-34 (1st Cir. 2020) —

we agree with one of his many arguments and so vacate his sentence

and remand for resentencing consistent with this opinion.

                                   I

           Criminal sentencing might be the hardest thing district

judges do.    See, e.g., United States v. Vixamar, 679 F.3d 22, 34-

35 (1st Cir. 2012).     What was once a system of "total judicial

discretion" (letting judges pick whatever sentence they wished,

unless Congress reined in that discretion with statutes setting

minimum or maximum penalties) and then one of "virtually no[]"

discretion   "with   mandatory   [sentencing]   guidelines"   is   now   a

regime of "advisory guidelines with discretion for variances and

policy disagreements with the guidelines" (though judges must

                                 - 2 -
still, of course, stay within statutory bounds).1      See Mark W.

Bennett, Addicted to Incarceration:      A Federal Judge Reveals

Shocking Truths About Federal Sentencing and Fleeting Hopes for

Reform, 87 UMKC L. Rev. 3, 22 (2018).2   Appellate decisions on the

subject fill volumes of the United States Reports and the Federal

Reporter series.

          Developed by the federal sentencing commission — a non-

elected body created by Congress that sits within the judicial

branch, see 28 U.S.C. § 991(a); see also id. § 994(a) — the

guidelines set up a matrix-like regime.3 Roughly speaking, a judge

scores the crime's "base offense level," making adjustments for

certain aggravating or mitigating factors to get the "total offense

level."   See United States v. Martínez-Benítez, 914 F.3d 1, 2 n.2

     1 "The allowable band of variance is greater" under the new
system than under the old ones, though
          intellectual discipline remains vital. "[A]
          motion to [a court's] discretion is a motion,
          not to its inclination, but to its judgment;
          and its judgment is to be guided by sound legal
          principles."
See United States v. Kirkpatrick, 589 F.3d 414, 416 (7th Cir. 2009)
(quoting United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas. 30, 35 (C.C.D. Va. 1807)
(Marshall, C.J.)) (alterations by Kirkpatrick).
     2 Former Judge Bennett was a district judge in the Northern
District of Iowa from 1994 to 2019. See Biographical Directory of
Article III Federal Judges — Bennett, Mark W., Federal Judicial
Center, https://www.fjc.gov/history/judges/bennett-mark-w.
     3 For more general background on the sentencing commission,
see Mistretta v. United States, 488 U.S. 361, 363-70 (1989).
                               - 3 -
(1st Cir. 2019).   Next the judge scores the defendant's criminal

record to get the "criminal history category" (I through VI).

Turning then to the guidelines' sentencing table, the judge marks

(with his or her fingers, for example) the total offense level on

the table's vertical line and the criminal history category on the

horizontal line, id. — "[w]here the judge's finger[s] stop[], he

or she finds" the defendant's advisory sentencing range, see Albert

W. Alschuler, The Failure of the Sentencing Guidelines:     A Plea

for Less Aggregation, 58 U. Chi. L. Rev. 901, 907 (1991).    And —

as will become relevant    —   the judge (while still respecting

statutory limits) can opt to vary from that range based on reasons

tied to a categorical policy disagreement with the guidelines, see

Spears v. United States, 555 U.S. 261, 264 (2009) (per curiam)

(discussing Kimbrough v. United States, 552 U.S. 85, 109 (2007));

United States v. Stone, 575 F.3d 83, 89 (1st Cir. 2009), or to a

"case-specific" appraisal of any applicable sentencing factors in

18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), see Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at 136 (quoting

United States v. Flores-Machicote, 706 F.3d 16, 23 (1st Cir.

2013)).4

     4 So although advisory, the guidelines remain the "lodestone"
of federal sentencing. See Peugh v. United States, 569 U.S. 530,
541-44 (2013).
                               - 4 -
          Staying with the § 3553(a) factors, we point out (if you

will forgive a longish quote) that "[t]here are seven" of them:

          Factor one is "the nature and circumstances of
          the    offense    and    the    history    and
          characteristics of the defendant." 18 U.S.C.
          § 3553(a)(1). Factor two is

               the need for the sentence . . . (A)
               to reflect the seriousness of the
               offense, to promote respect for the
               law, and to provide just punishment
               for the offense; (B) to afford
               adequate deterrence to criminal
               conduct; (C) to protect the public
               from    further    crimes   of   the
               defendant; and (D) to provide the
               defendant with needed educational
               or vocational training, medical
               care,    or     other   correctional
               treatment in the most effective
               manner.

          Id. § 3553(a)(2). Factor three is "the kinds
          of sentences available."      Id. § 3553(a)(3).
          Factor           four           is          the
          guidelines. Id. § 3553(a)(4). Factor five is
          "any pertinent policy statement . . . issued
          by     the     [s]entencing      [c]ommission."
          Id. § 3553(a)(5). Factor six is "the need to
          avoid   unwarranted    sentence   disparities."
          Id. § 3553(a)(6).    And factor seven is "the
          need to provide restitution to any victims."
          Id. § 3553(a)(7).

United States v. Correa-Osorio, 784 F.3d 11, 28 n.24 (1st Cir.

2015).5   After picking a sentence, the judge must adequately

     5 The judge can also make departures:    unlike variances —
which, as we have just seen, result from a judge's assessment of
the § 3553(a) factors — departures "refer[] only to non-
[g]uidelines sentences imposed under the framework set out in the
                              - 5 -
explain it — identifying the main factors that drove it.               See,

e.g., Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at 134.           And if the judge gives a

variant   sentence,   he   or   she       must   offer   a   more   thorough

justification:   "the greater the deviation," our cases say, "the

greater the burden of justifying the sentence imposed."               United

States v. Montero-Montero, 817 F.3d 35, 37 (1st Cir. 2016).

                                  II

          Now back to Flores's situation.6

                                      A

          Puerto Rico police agents obtained an arrest warrant for

Flores on domestic violence and weapons charges.              Having heard

that he would be at a local McDonald's, they stopped him after he

went through the restaurant's drive-thru.            Arresting him, they

found a Glock pistol altered to fire automatically, 63 rounds of

ammunition, and a spent shell casing (among other items).               And

this incident led to his being charged federally with unlawfully

[g]uidelines." See Irizarry v. United States, 553 U.S. 708, 714
(2008). Because departures play no role here, we leave it at that.
     6 Because this appeal follows a guilty plea, we pull the
background information from the probation office's presentence
report and the transcripts of the relevant court proceedings. See,
e.g., Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at 132-33.

                                 - 6 -
possessing a machine gun, to which he pled guilty.                      See 18 U.S.C.

§ 922(o).

                                          B

            We skip straight to sentencing.                 Adopting probation's

presentence report, the judge (using the November 2018 edition of

the   guidelines)        set   Flores's   base       offense   level       at       20   for

possessing the machine gun as a "prohibited person" because of his

self-admitted drug use, see USSG § 2K2.1(a)(4)(B), but subtracted

3 levels because of his acceptance of responsibility, see USSG

§ 3E1.1(a) — for a total offense level of 17.                       The judge then

pegged   Flores's        criminal   history      category      at   I     (the      lowest

category).     This left Flores with an advisory prison range of 24

to 30 months.

            The    defense      requested       24   months.        The    government

proposed 30 months.            We will have lots to say later about the

judge's sentence selection.           But for now we need only note the

following points.         After directing the parties' attention to the

"sentencing factors" in "[§] 3553(a)," the judge discussed how

gun-related "crime in Puerto Rico far exceeds the known limits on

the mainland" and how "[t]he impact of" Flores's "particular

offense is more serious than that considered by the [s]entencing

[c]ommission      when    it   drafted    the    guidelines";       mentioned            some

biographical      information       (e.g.,       Flores's      earning          a    "GED"

                                      - 7 -
certificate and his "history of using marijuana"); and recounted

some details about the offense (e.g., the police's confiscating

the Glock, the 63 rounds of ammo, and the spent casing).               Convinced

that neither party's suggested sentence "reflects the seriousness

of the offense, promotes respect for the law, protects the public

from further crimes by . . . Flores," or "address[es] the issues

of deterrence and punishment," the judge then imposed a variant

sentence of 48 months — 18 months more than the top of the

recommended sentencing range.

              The    "Statement   of   Reasons"   form    —   which   sentencing

judges complete under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(c)(2) — included the judge's

comment that "the impact of this [kind of weapon] on the Island is

more       serious    tha[n]   that    considered    by       the   [s]entencing

[c]ommission."7        And under the heading "18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) and

       Section 3553(c)(2) pertinently says that judges picking
       7

sentences "outside the [guidelines] range" must provide the
reasons for the picks "with specificity in a statement of reasons
form." The sentencing commission uses the information in these
documents "to make recommendations to Congress." See United States
v. Morales-Negrón, 974 F.3d 63, 68 (1st Cir. 2020). See generally
United States v. Murchison, 865 F.3d 23, 26 (1st Cir. 2017) (noting
that the bureau of prisons also uses this data to "classif[y] and
process[] sentenced offenders"). A standing order of the district
court provides that probation shall fill out these forms based on
the judges' in-court comments and send them to the judges for final
approval, see Morales-Negrón, 974 F.3d at 68 — apparently as a way
to "streamline" the process, see Standing Order No. 17-205 (Apr.
28, 2017) (adding as well that judges "shall" give the parties
sealed copies of these documents on request).
                                       - 8 -
other reason(s) for a variance (Check all that apply)," three boxes

were checked:           to protect the public, to deter others from copying

the crime, and to reflect how serious the crime was.                    Among the

boxes left unchecked was one labeled "Policy Disagreement with the

Guidelines (Kimbrough v. U.S., 552 U.S. 85 (2007)."8

                From this sentence Flores appeals.

                                            III

                Of the many arguments Flores makes, only a couple require

discussion.         We begin with a losing contention and end with a

winning one.

                                            A

                                            1

                Flores insists that the judge procedurally erred with

the prohibited-person finding. As he correctly notes, a prohibited

person in this context is someone "who engages in . . . regular

use"       of   drugs    "over   a   long   period   .   .   .   proximate   to   or

contemporaneous with the possession of the firearm."                   See United

States v. Caparotta, 676 F.3d 213, 216 (1st Cir. 2012) (quotation

marks omitted).             Focusing on the "long period" language, he

       Granting Flores's request for access to the statement of
       8

reasons, the judge's electronic order says that "the transcript of
the sentencing hearing is the official document and sets forth the
[c]ourt's reasoning for the sentence imposed."       But the fact
remains that the judge left the box blank, despite having had the
opportunity to check it.
                                        - 9 -
contends that because he admitted only to "a few months of drug

use," his situation does not fit this definition.             The government

counters that the record readily supports the judge's finding.

                                       2

             The government has the better of the argument.             During

pretrial interviews, Flores — who was 19 when nabbed — copped to

smoking 4 or 5 marijuana joints daily since he was 17 and to having

smoked before his arrest.          On the eve of sentencing, however, he

claimed in a presentence interview that he only smoked regularly

during the three months before his arrest.             Probation suggested,

at least implicitly, that Flores did this about-face only because

he now realized that he could get a prohibited-person increase to

his sentence.       The judge accepted probation's position, thus

triggering clear-error review.

             It is seldom easy to establish clear error.            See, e.g.,

United States v. Rivera-Carrasquillo, 933 F.3d 33, 42 (1st Cir.

2019), cert. denied, 140 S. Ct. 2691 (2020).           So it is here.     That

is because even assuming — without granting — that using marijuana

for three months is not enough for prohibited-person status and

that   the   late-in-the-game      comment    about   the   three   months   of

marijuana use turns on a plausible view of the record, we think

the    judge's   view   is   not   implausible    given     Flores's   earlier

admissions about toking daily for years.              See United States v.

                                     - 10 -
Marceau,   554   F.3d   24,   30-31       (1st   Cir.   2009)   (upholding   a

prohibited-person increase where, "even after [a] stay at a drug

treatment facility," the defendant "was unable to remain drug-

free" and where he admitted to "smok[ing] marijuana daily in the

days before" his crime).      And if "there is more than one plausible

view of the circumstances, the [judge's] choice among supportable

alternatives cannot be clearly erroneous."              See United States v.

Dunston, 851 F.3d 91, 101-02 (1st Cir. 2017) (quoting United States

v. Ruiz, 905 F.2d 499, 508 (1st Cir. 1990)).

                                      B

                                      1

           We move then to Flores's next claim of procedural error,

which is that in saying the § 3553(a) factors justified the upward

variance, the judge gave too much weight to the prevalence of gun

violence in Puerto Rico and failed to custom tailor the sentence.

In support, he points to the judge's repeated reference to guns in

Puerto Rico — highlighting some of the following statements (we

mentioned a couple already), all pulled from a section of the

sentencing transcript where the judge brought up § 3553(a):

  •   "[C]rime in Puerto Rico far exceeds the known limits on the
      mainland.   Even the [First] Circuit . . . has recognized
      that."

  •   "Violent crime and murders are occurring at all hours of the
      day, in any place on the island, even on congested public
      highways, in shopping centers, public basketball courts, and
      at cultural events."
                               - 11 -
  •   "Machine guns, like the one . . . Flores possessed in this
      case, are present everywhere, obtained by persons, like . . .
      Flores, who have had no training in the proper use of weapons
      and who appear not to have the means to purchase them."

  •   "The [First Circuit] has stated that a District Court may
      take into consideration, for sentencing purposes, the
      community and geographic factors where the offense took
      place. In this District, for this type of weapon crime, the
      community that the [c]ourt takes into consideration is the
      entire island of Puerto Rico because weapons crimes are not
      limited to one particular area or region of the Commonwealth."

  •   "The impact in Puerto Rico of this particular offense is more
      serious than that considered by the [s]entencing [c]ommission
      when it drafted the guidelines."

  •   "Deterrence is an important factor in the sentencing
      calculus, and [§] 3553(a) requires the [c]ourt to consider
      preventing criminal behavior by the population at large, not
      just by the defendant being sentenced."

  •   "The [c]ourt does not purport to establish that . . .
      Flores'[s] crime itself was more harmful than others similar
      to his, but that his crime falls within a category of
      offenses, gun crimes, that the [c]ourt, considering the
      particular situation in Puerto Rico, views as more serious
      here than if they had occurred in a less violent society."

  •   "A modern machine gun can fire more than a thousand rounds
      per minute which allows a shooter to kill dozens of people
      within a matter of seconds."

  •   "A machine gun is unusual. And outside of a few [g]overnment-
      related uses, machine guns largely exist on the black market."

Flores then talks up Rivera-Berríos (the district judge there and

the one here are the same, by the way).    Rivera-Berríos held that

the judge's concerns about machine guns "are universal in their

application" and already worked "into the mix when the [s]entencing

                               - 12 -
[c]ommission set the base offense level," and that he focused too

much on the community and too little on the individual in trying

to explain why the defendant's situation differed from the usual

case covered by the guidelines (a deeper dive into Rivera-Berríos

is coming).   See 968 F.3d at 136-37.    Putting all this together,

Flores contends that because the guidelines already accounted for

the factor his judge depended on (that the crime involved a machine

gun) and because the record lacks any basis for giving that factor

added weight, we must vacate his sentence.

          Trying to shift the focus of the debate, the government

principally argues that the judge varied from the guidelines

because he disagreed with them on policy grounds — something (we

repeat) the Supreme Court has said district judges can do.     See,

e.g., Kimbrough, 552 U.S. at 109-11.    This phenomenon — a variance

based on a categorical policy disagreement with the sentencing

commission, rather than on a case-specific assessment of the

§ 3553(a) factors — is known as a "Kimbrough variance." See United

States v. Santiago-Colon, 918 F.3d 223, 227 (1st Cir. 2019)

(quoting Stone, 575 F.3d at 93).        To bolster its theory, the

government spotlights the judge's statements that "[t]he impact in

Puerto Rico of this particular offense is more serious than that

considered by the [s]entencing [c]ommission when it drafted the

guidelines" and that "the particular situation in Puerto Rico" is

                              - 13 -
"more serious" than if the offense "had occurred in a less violent

society."    Wrapping up, the government writes that because Rivera-

Berríos did not involve a Kimbrough variance, we must "reject

Flores's outsized reliance on that case."

                                        29

            The government's argument touches on an interesting

issue.       To   resay   (for    convenience),    district       judges   can

discretionally vary sentences in two ways:                  by categorically

disagreeing with the suggested guidelines range — i.e., by balking

on a basis applicable to all defendants, "Eagle Scout[s]" and

"street     thug[s]"   alike     (for    example);10   or    by   making    an

individualized appraisal of the § 3553(a) factors — i.e., by

considering the particular characteristics of the defendant and

the particular offense conduct.         See generally Kimbrough, 552 U.S.

at 108-10 (noting that judges can vary from the commission's

recommendations categorically, as well as in particular cases);

see also Spears, 555 U.S. at 264 (emphasizing that Kimbrough

recognizes the "authority" that district judges have "to vary from

the [at-issue guidelines] based on policy disagreement with them,

and not simply based on an individualized determination that they

     9As a heads up, Chief Judge Barron does not join this section,
III.B.2.
     10See United States v. Gully, 619 F. Supp. 2d 633, 643 (N.D.
Iowa 2009).
                                   - 14 -
yield an excessive sentence in a particular case").                 But judges

too often "blend" these "different types of variances together,"

see   Scott   Michelman      &   Jay    Rorty,   Doing      Kimbrough    Justice:

Implementing Policy Disagreements with the Federal Sentencing

Guidelines, 45 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 1083, 1084 (2012), "masking their

categorical         policy       disagreements         as       'individualized

determinations,'" to quote the Supreme Court — a routine condemned

by the Court as "institutionalized subterfuge" (strong words,

indeed), see Spears, 555 U.S. at 266.11          A possible reason for this

blending might be that Supreme Court caselaw occasionally divides

sentence selection into two steps:          calculating the advisory range

(which lays the foundation for the sentence), then reviewing the

§ 3553(a) factors (some of which mention policy, e.g., the need to

consider      the    sentencing         commission's        "pertinent    policy

statement[s]"; others of which mention offender-based concerns,

e.g., the need to ponder the defendant's characteristics and

history, plus the seriousness of the crime), see Gall v. United

States, 552 U.S. 38, 49-50 (2007) — without explicitly including

a step for Kimbrough variances.            See Doing Kimbrough Justice, 45

Suffolk U. L. Rev. at 1087, 1097-1101.

      11For simplicity's sake, the remainder of the opinion will
refer to the just-cited article — a studied and thoughtful
treatment of the subject, penned by authors who live and breathe
these issues — as "Doing Kimbrough Justice."
                                       - 15 -
               But   whatever   the    reason   (or    reasons),     the    problems

caused by blending discretionary variances cannot be exaggerated.

Blending makes it harder for district judges "to exercise fully

each    type    of    discretion      available"      under    modern   sentencing

practices (for example), see id. at 1084 — in other words, when

judges apply "policy . . . and individualized considerations" at

the same time, a defendant gets "only one" shot at "a variance,

and so all of the factors may be thrown together in a way that

does not allow full expression of each," see id. at 1112.                     Also,

and as previously noted, judges must adequately explain why they

chose a sentence to promote "meaningful appellate review" and "the

perception      of   fair    sentencing."       See    Gall,   552   U.S.    at   50.

Blending masks the judges' sentencing reasoning (as we just said),

thus frustrating these all-important reviewability and fairness

goals. See Doing Kimbrough Justice, 45 Suffolk U. L. Rev. at 1108-

09.    Critically too, because judges must take the guidelines "into

account when sentencing," see United States v. Booker, 543 U.S.

220, 264 (2005), the sentencing commission continually updates

them to "encourag[e] . . . better sentencing practices" and

"uniformity in the sentencing process," see id. at 263; see also

Kimbrough, 552 U.S. at 108 (emphasizing that "Congress established

the    [c]ommission     to    formulate   and    constantly      refine     national

sentencing standards").         And the commission does this by reviewing

                                       - 16 -
"empirical" data reflecting the combined experiences of judges

across the country.            See Rita v. United States, 551 U.S. 338, 349-

50 (2007); see also Neal v. United States, 516 U.S. 284, 291 (1996)

(emphasizing that "Congress . . . charged the [c]ommission with

the duty to measure and monitor the effectiveness of various

sentencing, penal, and correctional practices").                   But masking the

"grounds     for     [a]       variance"   (unsurprisingly)          keeps     "vital

information"       from    the     sentencing    commission       "about     how   the

[g]uidelines can be improved."             See Doing Kimbrough Justice, 45

Suffolk U. L. Rev. at 1084.

           Consider this example of how a "large-scale sentencing

reform[]   gr[e]w     organically       from     seeds   sown   by    the    district

courts."     See id. at 1109.           The guidelines once had a 100-to-1

ratio for crack to powder cocaine — meaning the guidelines treated

each gram of crack as 100 grams of powder cocaine.                   See Kimbrough,

552 U.S. at 91. Kimbrough said that district judges can drop below

the guidelines in crack cases (provided they do not drop below a

statutory minimum sentence) based on a policy beef with the

crack/powder ratio.            See id. at 102-11.    Judges and the sentencing

commission    have    "discrete        institutional      strengths,"       Kimbrough

explained.     Id.        at    109.   Judges    better    know    the     particular

defendants before them "than the [c]ommission or the appeals

court[s]" and so are better positioned to apply the § 3553(a)

                                        - 17 -
factors "in each particular case."      Id. (quoting Rita, 551 U.S. at

357-58).      The   sentencing   commission's       expertise   is   mainly

"empirical," having as it does the knowledge, experience, and

workforce to make estimates about the reasonable punishment ranges

for the at-issue crimes. See id. (quoting United States v. Pruitt,

502 F.3d 1154, 1171 (10th Cir. 2007) (McConnell, J., concurring)).

And these differences affect the degree of respect due a judge's

decision to vary: in cases "outside" the guidelines's "heartland,"

decisions to vary "may attract greatest respect" — but in "mine-

run" cases, Kimbrough noted, "closer review" may be necessary if

the judge varies "based solely on" a policy disagreement with the

guidelines.    See id.   Importantly too, though, when the sentencing

commission settles on a policy choice for reasons beyond its

expertise, the resulting guideline may be attacked on that basis.

See id.    That is precisely what happened in Kimbrough, where the

crack/powder ratio did not reflect the commission's usual method

of relying on "empirical data and national experience," see id. —

the commission had cribbed the ratio from an inapplicable statute

and so the ratio could not even be ascribed to Congress, see id.

at 102-03, 109.

            After Kimbrough, some judges chose to vary from the crack

guidelines for policy reasons.      See generally Spears, 555 U.S. at

264-66     (upholding    a   district     judge's    categorical     policy

                                 - 18 -
disagreement with the 100-to-1 ratio and use of a substitute 20-

to-1 ratio).       And their objections — e.g., that this ratio had

racially discriminatory effects — helped bring about statutory and

guidelines changes.       See Doing Kimbrough Justice, 45 Suffolk U. L.

Rev. at 1109-10.         But had they "kept their concerns about the

fairness of [the crack/powder ratio] swaddled in the language of

individual offender characteristics, a powerful and empirically

based voice for reform would have been muted and the momentum for

[these changes] might not have materialized."            See id. at 1110.

See generally Rita, 551 U.S. at 358 (noting a judge's explanation

"can provide relevant information to both the court of appeals and

ultimately    to   the   [s]entencing   [c]ommission,"    which   will   aid

appellate review and will "help the [g]uidelines constructively

evolve over time").

          With that in mind, and as a general antidote to masking,

some judges and criminal-law experts propose "separat[ing] the two

types of variances" into distinct steps where appropriate (more on

that next):        after calculating the advisory guidelines range,

judges would recalculate it based on any Kimbrough policy variance

and then (using the recalculated range, if any there be) decide

whether to vary up or down based on a case-specific analysis of

the § 3553(a) factors.      See Doing Kimbrough Justice, 45 Suffolk U.

L. Rev. at 1108.

                                  - 19 -
                                           3

                The point to decide up front is whether the judge varied

based      on   a   Kimbrough-sanctioned       objection   to    the    guidelines

categorically.        Again, the government says the judge did; Flores

says the judge did not.             The government's basic position boils

down to this syllogism:             (1) Judges varying from a commission-

suggested range based solely on a community characteristic of the

crime's locale are exercising their authority to disagree with the

range itself.         (2) Kimbrough says that judges can disagree with

the   commission       (but   not   with   a    statute,   and   they    must   act

reasonably in using that power).               (3) Therefore, Kimbrough means

— contrary to Rivera-Berríos — that judges can vary based solely

on a community characteristic of the crime's locale (subject to

the caveats listed in the preceding parenthetical).12                    We, like

Flores, are unconvinced.

                To be fair, a recent case of ours dropped a footnote

suggesting the possibility that a variant sentence driven solely

by this kind of community characteristic might be a Kimbrough

       For what it is worth, the government insists that the judge
      12

made a Kimbrough variance even though (as we said above) the judge
left the "Policy Disagreement with the Guidelines (Kimbrough v.
U.S., 552 U.S. 85 (2007)" box blank on the written statement of
reasons.
                                      - 20 -
variance.   See United States v. Carrasquillo-Sánchez, 9 F.4th 56,

61 n.2 (1st Cir. 2021).       But the answer to that suggestion is no.

            Concerned about disparate sentences on like facts under

the old regime, Congress tasked the sentencing commission with

"establish[ing]       sentencing   policies   for   the   Federal   criminal

justice system."      See 28 U.S.C. § 991(b)(1) (emphases added).         The

commission knows that any actual crime will be committed only in

a particular place, at a particular time, in a particular way, and

by a particular offender with a particular background.                But a

commission-endorsed range for a crime is generally meant to apply

in any case involving that crime.             See Rita, 551 U.S. at 350

(stating that "it is fair to assume that the [g]uidelines, insofar

as practicable, reflect a rough approximation of sentences that

might   achieve   §    3553(a)'s   objectives").      Which    is   why   the

sentencing commission expects judges "to treat each guideline as

carving out a 'heartland,' a set of typical cases embodying the

conduct that each guideline describes," see USSG Ch. 1 Pt. A,

introductory cmt. 4(b) (emphasis added) — to view the guidelines

as a judgment about the mine-run way of committing the crime, not

as a judgment about the right range for every case.             Cf. United

States v. Aguilar-Peña, 887 F.2d 347, 351 (1st Cir. 1989) (noting

that "[b]ecause the grounds for departure derived their essence

from the offense itself, not from [idiosyncratic] circumstances

                                   - 21 -
attendant to a particular defendant's commission of a particular

crime, the grounds, virtually by definition, fell within the

heartland").

           So a sentence that varies from a commission-proposed

range based solely on a community characteristic of the crime's

locale does not reflect any disagreement with the commission's

policy-based reasons for setting the range itself.                It merely

reflects a decision that the case at hand is not mine-run and thus

is not the kind of case for which that baseline range was set.

Otherwise, one could describe any variant sentence as resting on

an exercise of authority under Kimbrough.

           Nor do we see how a judge using Kimbrough can highlight

a   guideline's   nationwide   focus   as   the   sole   reason   for   not

employing the guidelines as a starting point for applying the

§ 3553(a) factors to the specific case at hand — especially given

our long-held view "that the birth of the Sentencing Commission

was to some extent reflective of Congress's ardent desire to

dispense   with    inequalities    based    on    localized   sentencing

responses." See Aguilar-Peña, 887 F.2d at 352; see also 28 U.S.C.

§ 991(b)(1)(B).

           The net result is that the government is mistaken in

thinking that a judge can avoid Rivera-Berríos's precedential

reach simply by invoking the authority that Kimbrough blesses to

                                  - 22 -
reject a guideline on policy grounds.     To us, the authority to

vary a sentence that each of those cases addresses is simply too

distinct for that to be so.13   And Rivera-Berríos makes clear that

judges act arbitrarily and capriciously by varying upward from the

advisory range based solely on the characteristics of the broader

community where the defendant's conduct took place.

                                  4

          Drawing on long-standing precedent, Rivera-Berríos (as

we hinted above) held that when judges "rel[y] on" a § 3553(a)

     13 In a post-briefing letter, see Fed. R. App. P. 28(j), the
government writes that "to the extent Flores" believes that the
judge "could not vary based on a policy disagreement with the
[g]uidelines," United States v. Politano, 522 F.3d 69 (1st Cir.
2008) — which, the letter adds, "cit[es]" Kimbrough — holds that
he could. This is because, in the government's view, the Politano
judge made a Kimbrough variance when he remarked, "I think any
reader of the daily newspapers is aware that the illegal
trafficking of firearms at the street level is a significant
contributing factor in what, without exaggeration I think, can be
called an epidemic of handgun violence in communities within th[e]
district" of Massachusetts. The argument does not persuade us,
however.    The district court there did not base the upwardly
variant 24-month sentence (which exceeded the top end of the range
by 6 months) solely on community characteristics. Actually, in
mentioning the community characteristics, the district court did
not say that they supported an upward variance in any amount.
Instead, the district court simply said that they showed the
defendant did a very serious crime, requiring a correspondingly
serious sentence. And then the district court pinpointed another
aggravating circumstance — "the likelihood of recidivism" that the
"[g]uidelines somewhat underestimate[d] or undercount[ed]" in that
defendant's case. 552 F.3d at 74. So ultimately we read Politano
as rejecting the same theory that Flores-Machicote rejected — that
a sentencer cannot consider community characteristics at all (more
about Flores-Machicote shortly).
                                - 23 -
consideration "already accounted for by the . . . guidelines to

impose a variant sentence," they "must indicate what makes that

factor worthy of extra weight," see 968 F.3d at 136 (quotation

marks omitted) — i.e., they "must articulate specifically the

reasons" why the "defendant's situation is different from the

ordinary situation covered by the guidelines calculation," see

United States v. García-Pérez, 9 F.4th 48, 53 (1st Cir. 2021)

(quotation marks omitted).14   The factor the Rivera-Berríos judge

relied on — that the crime involved a machine gun — was already

figured into the "guideline[s] calculus."     See 968 F.3d at 136.

"And," Rivera-Berríos added, "the record" lacked "any basis for

giving that factor extra weight."       Id.   The judge there did

emphasize crime trends in Puerto Rico.    But he did not — as the

     14 By way of another after-briefing missive, the government
claims that the "different from the ordinary situation covered by
the guidelines calculation" requirement clashes with Supreme Court
precedent — including Gall, which rejected "an appellate rule that
requires 'extraordinary' circumstances to justify a sentence
outside the [g]uidelines range." See 552 U.S. at 47. We question
whether this letter relates to any previously briefed issue in
this case (the government does not direct us to "the page of the
brief," as 28(j) commands). See Hernandez Lara v. Barr, 962 F.3d
45, 52 n.10 (1st Cir. 2020) (stating that a party cannot use the
28(j) process "to introduce new arguments that [it] failed to raise
in its brief").     And even if we resolved our doubts in the
government's favor, the government articulates no theory for how
we as a panel can undo that oft-repeated requirement (repeated, by
the way, in cases that also cite Gall (for example)). See, e.g.,
Carrasquillo-Sánchez, 9 F.4th at 59. Either way, the government's
claim is not a difference-maker here.
                               - 24 -
caselaw requires — specifically tie this concern to "the nature of

the defendant's conduct beyond his possession of a machinegun."

See   Carrasquillo-Sánchez,    9    F.4th    at   61   (discussing   Rivera-

Berríos); see also García-Pérez, 9 F.4th at 53-54 (ditto).

           We can match up some of the key words the judge used at

Rivera-Berríos's   sentencing       and     Flores's,    almost    precisely

(remember the same judge sentenced both men) — for instance (a few

alterations added; others in original):

  Rivera-Berríos's Sentencing                  Flores's Sentencing

 "A modern gun can fire more              "A modern machine gun can fire
 than one thousand round[s]               more than a thousand rounds
 a[] minute allowing a shooter            per minute which allows a
 to kill dozens of people                 shooter to kill dozens of
 within a matter of seconds."             people within a matter of
                                          seconds."

 "[M]achine guns largely exist            "[M]achine guns largely exist
 on the black market."                    on the black market."

 "[V]iolent crimes and murders            "Violent crime and murders
 are occurring at all hours of            are occurring at all hours of
 the day in Puerto Rico, in any           the day, in any place on the
 place on the island, even on             island, even on congested
 congested public highways, in            public highways, in shopping
 shopping    centers,    public           centers, public basketball
 basketball courts, and at                courts,   and   at   cultural
 cultural centers."                       events."

           As for the concerns expressed in the first two boxes

(involving   the   lethality       and    illegality     of   machine   guns

generally), the guidelines already capture them.                  See, e.g.,

                                   - 25 -
Carrasquillo-Sánchez, 9 F.4th at 59; Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at

136.   And as for the concerns expressed in the third box (involving

the frequency of machine-gun violence in Puerto Rico), while they

"may be relevant at sentencing," the judge still had to consider

Flores's individual circumstances — i.e., he still had to make a

"case-specific nexus" between the community-based characteristics

and the circumstances of Flores's situation beyond his machine-

gun possession.      See Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at 136.    But this

the judge failed to do.

           Despite     the   government's   claim   that   the   judge

"conduct[ed] an individualized assessment of Flores's personal

characteristics and the details of his offense," nothing in the

judge's brief synopsis of those points — including the amount of

ammo recovered, plus the spent casing — shows that the judge relied

on them in varying so drastically from the suggested prison range.

Said otherwise, to borrow from Carrasquillo-Sánchez, "[t]here is

no sense in which the [judge], by considering" specific personal

factors, "was offering an individualized basis for the upward

variance that [she] imposed."     See 9 F.4th at 60.

           Citing to the presentence report, the government plays

up how agents arrested Flores after he went through a McDonald's

drive-thru with the Glock.       But the judge did not mention this

fact in explaining his chosen sentence.      And to borrow again from

                                 - 26 -
Carrasquillo-Sánchez,       even    though    the   presentence      report

referenced "certain facts," they could not "be used to supplement

the    [judge's]   explanation"    because   "nothing   in   the   [judge's]

summary of the facts and weighing of the sentencing factors

indicates that [he] relied on" them for the "variant sentence."

See id. at 62; see also García-Pérez, 9 F.4th at 55 (making a

similar point in a similar situation).

              While admittedly the judge did say that the sentence had

to reflect the crime's seriousness, promote respect for the law,

and provide adequate deterrence and public protection, "[t]hese

concerns" are too "generic:        they apply to any defendant in any

machine gun possession case."         See Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at

137.    In coming up with the upward variance, the judge — as we

keep saying — had to link these interests to Flores's circumstances

and behavior independent of his mere machine-gun possession.             See

id.     But we know the judge did not because (and here is the

clincher) he (as the government admits) said that "[t]he [c]ourt

does not purport to establish that . . . Flores'[s] crime itself

was more harmful than others similar to his" — meaning that (other

than    the   community   characteristic)    "the   nature"   of   Flores's

"firearm" provided "the driving force behind the upward variance."

See id. at 135.      The government tries to explain away the judge's

comment by arguing that he said it while making a Kimbrough-style

                                   - 27 -
policy    disagreement.    But   our     rejection      of     the    government's

Kimbrough theory makes this argument a nonstarter too.

            The government's brief might be read as suggesting that

Rivera-Berríos conflicts with our earlier decision in Flores-

Machicote, thus requiring us to follow Flores-Machicote.                   If so,

the government is wrong.

            Flores-Machicote     rejected      a     defendant's       categorical

claim that a sentencing judge could not consider a community-based

characteristic of the offense, namely, "the incidence and trend

lines of particular types of crime in the affected community."

Id. at 23. Such a characteristic, we explained, may "appropriately

inform[] and contextualize[] the relevant need for deterrence,"

id. — a consideration made relevant by § 3553(a)(2)(B).                         But

Flores-Machicote did not address how much weight a judge could

give to that kind of characteristic in making a variant sentence.

And that is probably because the defendant there did not ask us to

address that question:      again, he argued categorically that a

community-based    characteristic        of    the     crime     could    not   be

considered at all under § 3553(a) and so could not be given any

weight seemingly for any purpose, including even presumably in

setting a within-guidelines sentence.

            Rivera-Berríos, however, gave us a chance to address

whether     sentencers    can     rely        exclusively        on      community

                                  - 28 -
characteristics in varying upward from the guidelines.           See 968

F.3d    at   136   (declaring   that    "even   though   such   community

characteristics may be relevant at sentencing," district judges

must still tie their sentencing decisions to "'individual factors

related to the offender and the offense'" (quoting United States

v. Rivera-González, 776 F.3d 45, 50 (1st Cir. 2015), plus relying

on Flores-Machicote as well)).         And faced with that question, we

— after saying that this characteristic could be a factor —

answered with an emphatic no.      See id.15

             The bottom line is that Rivera-Berríos does not clash

with Flores-Machicote.16

       Our concurring colleague claims that our vacating Flores's
       15

sentence conflicts with decisions from "at least two of our sister
circuits." His critique is true only if our decision clashes with
Flores-Machicote (his unstated premise is Flores-Machicote's
analysis mirrors the analysis in the sibling-circuit cases). But
because we see no conflict between Flores-Machicote and this case,
we disagree with our friend's circuit-split charge.
        Paraphrasing this part of our opinion as saying "that
       16

community-based considerations calling for greater deterrence can
only be relied on in combination with other factors," our
concurring co-panelist then seemingly suggests he thinks our take
is explanation-free or made up. But our citing and quoting circuit
caselaw shows otherwise. We note too that Flores-Machicote itself
recognized "that a sentencing court's emphasis on factors that are
specifically tied to either the offender or the offense of
conviction — say, the perceived shortcomings of local courts or
the incidence of particular crimes in a given locale — may . . .
go too far."    See 706 F.3d at 23 (adding that "[a] sentencing
judge's resort to community-based characteristics does not relieve
him or her of the obligation to ground sentencing determinations
in case-specific factors" (citing Politano, 522 F.3d at 74)). And
today's case is a case of a sentencer going too far, given Rivera-
                              - 29 -
                                      IV

           To continue quoting Rivera-Berríos — and as a matter of

helpful repetition as we bring this opinion to a close — when, as

here, neither the judge nor the record identifies a "special

characteristic       attributable    either    to    the    offender"    or   the

circumstances of "the offense" that "remove[s]" the "case from the

mine-run," the "upwardly variant sentence cannot endure."                 See 968

F.3d at 137.     Having so ruled — after spying no error with the

judge's prohibited-person finding — we need not tackle Flores's

other    sentencing     challenges     (including,         for   example,     his

substantive-unreasonableness claim).            See, e.g., Carrasquillo-

Sánchez, 9 F.4th at 62; Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at 137.                      And

taking   our   cue    from   Rivera-Berríos,    we    vacate     the    contested

Berríos (authored by the same judge who authored Flores-
Machicote):    Just as in Rivera-Berríos, because the judge
considered Puerto Rico's high rate of gun violence "unmoored from
any individual characteristics of either the offender or the
offense of conviction," his community-based concerns "cannot serve
as building blocks for an upward variance," see 968 F.3d at 137
(citing Flores-Machicote, 706 F.3d at 21); accord Carrasquillo-
Sánchez, 9 F.4th at 61. And as our colleague acknowledges, Rivera-
Berríos and Carrasquillo-Sánchez compel the result reached by us.
                              - 30 -
sentence and remand for resentencing within the advisory prison

range of 24 to 30 months.   See 968 F.3d at 137.

                 - CONCURRING OPINION FOLLOWS -

                              - 31 -
            KAYATTA, Circuit Judge, concurring.          Flores possessed a

machine gun.       In that sense, he was the "mine-run" defendant

charged under 18 U.S.C. § 922(o) with possessing such a firearm.

Flores,   however,    possessed    that    machine     gun   in   a   community

rationally viewed by the sentencing judge as atypically plagued by

machine-gun carnage.       In that sense, he was not the mine-run

individual charged under section 922(o).

            We have previously said that "a sentencing judge may

consider community-based and geographic factors" because "the

incidence    of    particular     crimes    in   the    relevant      community

appropriately informs and contextualizes the relevant need for

deterrence."      United States v. Flores-Machicote, 706 F.3d 16, 22–

23 (1st Cir. 2013).     Although we cautioned that a sentencing judge

"may not go too far" in emphasizing factors not specifically tied

to the given offender or offense, id. at 24, we nevertheless upheld

an upwardly variant sentence of 60 months (19 months over the high

end of the range recommended by the Guidelines).             In so doing, we

expressly held that "it is permissible for a sentencing court to

consider the incidence and trend lines of particular types of

crimes in the affected community."          Id. at 23.       Accordingly, if

"violent crime is running rampant" in a particular community, a

"judge reasonably may conclude that the need for deterrence is

great -- and this may translate into a stiffer sentence."                Id.

                                   - 32 -
              Here,   with   the   district      court's   explanation     of    the

community's need for added deterrence at least as developed as

that   in     Flores-Machicote,     we     nevertheless     vacate   a    variant

sentence of 48 months (18 months over the high end of the range

recommended by the Guidelines).            In so doing, we effectively part

company     with   our   past   decision    in    Flores-Machicote       and    with

decisions of at least two of our sister circuits.                    See United

States v. Cavera, 550 F.3d 180, 195–96 (2d Cir. 2008) (en banc)

(holding that locality-based factors, such as the severity of local

gun control laws and its impact on the profitability of the black

market for illegal firearms, can justify an upward variance from

the Guidelines); United States v. Hatch, 909 F.3d 872, 874–75 (7th

Cir. 2018) (citing Cavera and Flores-Machicote to hold that a

sentencing judge may consider community-specific factors, such as

an increase in local gun violence and the need to deter illegal

gun trafficking, when imposing an upward variance).

              How did we get to this point?         The answer resides in two

intervening decisions.          The first is United States v. Rivera-

Berríos, 968 F.3d 130 (1st Cir. 2020).              In that case, we claimed

to   follow     Flores-Machicote     by     acknowledging     that   "community

characteristics may be relevant at sentencing."               Id. at 136.       But

then -- even though the defendant there (unlike the mine-run

defendant) possessed a machine gun in a community the sentencing

                                     - 33 -
judge perceived as beset by violence, id. at 135 -- we concluded

that there was no "case-specific nexus" between those community-

based considerations and the individual defendant or offense.         Id.

at 136–37.

           Next came our decision in United States v. Carrasquillo-

Sánchez.     See 9 F.4th 56 (1st Cir. 2021).       There, the district

court explained that Puerto Rico was "in a state of siege" due to

machine-gun possession, and it pointed to nine examples of recent

machine-gun shootings from the preceding months.       Id. at 61.    With

Rivera-Berríos in the driver's seat, we left Flores-Machicote in

the dust by declaring this community-based concern "unmoored" from

the defendant's individual characteristics, and even from the

offense. Id. (quoting Rivera-Berríos, 968 F.3d at 137). In short,

we deemed the possession of a machine gun in Puerto Rico, without

more, to be the mine-run machine-gun possession case, even in the

face of the district court's apparently uncontested assertion that

machine-gun    possession   posed   a    greater   problem   there   than

elsewhere.

           That leads us to today's decision, where we now for a

third time reject a district court's attempt to vary upward based

on the conditions in Puerto Rico.        The majority opinion suggests

that our more recent precedent can be reconciled with Flores-

Machicote (and thus with the decisions of our sister circuits).

                                - 34 -
But it is difficult to see how.       Flores-Machicote gave a full-

throated endorsement for the ability to enhance a sentence when

the sentencing judge concludes that "violent crime is running

rampant" in a particular community, 706 F.3d at 23, while Rivera-

Berríos and Carrasquillo-Sánchez held that a judge cannot rely on

that perceived need for greater deterrence to justify an upwardly

variant sentence.   The majority tries to explain away the tension

between   these   precedents   by   reasoning    that   community-based

considerations calling for greater deterrence can only be relied

on in combination with other factors.           The majority does not

explain how a factor can add months to a sentence when added to

other factors that themselves support an enhancement, yet support

no enhancement at all on its own.    And while the majority suggests

that it is simply holding that the variance went "too far," its

explanation of its holding makes clear that any upward variance

based solely on community characteristics is too far.17       Maj. Op.

at 29 n.16.   Simply put, any straightforward comparison of page 23

of our opinion in Flores-Machicote with the holding in this case

     17  Hence, the majority does not attempt to explain why the
19-month variance over the Guideline range in Flores-Machicote was
not too far, yet the 18-month variance over the Guideline range in
this case is too far. Nor does it attempt to explain what variance
would not be too far.
                                - 35 -
makes clear that our circuit has flip-flopped along the way, and

we have likely landed wrong side up.

           The end result seems hard to square with real-world

scenarios.   Consider, for instance, a defendant who unlawfully

possesses a machine gun in a densely populated neighborhood in

Boston compared with a defendant who possesses a machine gun in a

rural town in Western Massachusetts.           Presumably, a sentencing

judge could vary upward in the first context because the possession

of a machine gun in a crowded city presents dangers that would not

otherwise be accounted for in the mine-run circumstance.             But if

that is true, it is not clear why a defendant's unlawful possession

of a machine gun in a community the sentencing judge views as

atypically impacted by the specific offense would not also present

a case that is distinct from the mine-run case.            Cf. United States

v. Politano, 522 F.3d 69, 72–74 (1st Cir. 2008) (approving a

district court's variance based on its conclusion that "community-

specific   characteristics   in    the     District   of    Massachusetts,"

including a perceived "epidemic of handgun violence," made "the

impact of [firearms trafficking] . . . more serious than that

reflected by the Sentencing Commission").

           The majority is even unclear about how it views the

community-based considerations present in this case. At one point,

the majority explains that a variant sentence "based solely on a

                                  - 36 -
community    characteristic         of    the     crime's    locale . . .    merely

reflects a decision that the case at hand is not mine-run."                      Maj.

Op. at 22.      And yet, later on, the majority admonishes the

sentencing    judge        for    not    "link[ing]      [the     community-based]

interests to Flores's circumstances and behavior" in a way that

takes this out of the mine-run of gun-possession cases.                    Maj. Op.

at 27.      In essence, the majority seems to conclude that the

district court's community-based rationale was too case-specific

to be justified as a policy disagreement with the Guidelines under

Kimbrough v. United States, 552 U.S. 85 (2007), yet too unmoored

from the specific case to justify a variance in accord with

section 3553(a).

            As a result, my colleagues have effectively deprived

district    judges    of    the    ability      to   align   sentences    with   the

perceived level of crimes in their communities, and hence with the

requisite    need    for    deterrence.           And   because    the   Sentencing

Commission pays no heed to such local variations, that leaves no

one able to raise (or lower) sentences based on the needs of those

who are most directly affected by the crimes at issue.

            To me, this all points strongly toward the conclusion

that Flores-Machicote was correct in holding that an increased

need for deterrence in a given community should be able to justify

a variant sentence, at least to some extent.                      And, as I read

                                         - 37 -
section 3553(a), Congress has agreed by expressly calling for

sentencing judges to consider (in addition to the Guideline range)

"the   need . . .    to   afford     adequate    deterrence   to    criminal

conduct."   18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(2)(B).       Given this direction, it is

difficult to understand how our court can hold that a district

court in Puerto Rico cannot conclude that a Guideline sentence

adequate to deter machine-gun possession in Portland, Maine may

not be adequate to do so in San Juan.           And one can fairly ask, if

there were a sharp increase of high-profile machine gun shootings

in Boston, would we really say that district judges could not under

section 3553(a)     decide   that   an   increased   need   for    deterrence

called for stiffer sentences in machine-gun possession cases in

Boston?

            That said, I must agree that our most recent precedent

under Rivera-Berríos and Carrasquillo-Sánchez precludes us from

affirming what would otherwise seem to be a properly justified

upward variance aimed at deterring an offense more serious than

the mine-run version precisely because of the increased threats

faced by the community in which it occurred.            Whether that most

recent precedent need itself be revisited is a question to be

addressed after this panel's opinion is issued.

                                    - 38 -