Federal Defense

Federal Sentencing Departures and Variances Explained

Todd Spodek, Managing Partner

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You’ve heard your lawyer mention “departures” and “variances” like they’re interchangeable terms. Two ways to say the same thing. Two paths to the same destination – a sentence below what the guidelines recommend. That’s wrong. These are two completely different legal mechanisms with different requirements, different triggers, and critically different implications for appeal. Understanding the distinction could determine whether your reduced sentence survives appellate review or gets sent back for resentencing.

Welcome to Federal Lawyers. Our goal is to explain the difference between departures and variances, why that difference matters more than most defendants realize, and what you can actually control when you’re fighting for a sentence below the guidelines.

Here’s what most people get wrong from the start. They think getting a below-guideline sentence is one unified process. Cooperate with the government, show remorse, present mitigating factors, and the judge reduces your sentence. Simple. But federal sentencing doesn’t work that way. There are two separate mechanisms – departures and variances – and they operate under completely different legal frameworks. The departure you probably want most – credit for helping the government – isn’t even controlled by the judge. The prosecutor holds that key. And they can refuse to use it.

Departures and Variances Are Not the Same Thing

OK so heres where most people get confused. A departure is a deviation from your sentencing range thats specifically authorized by the Federal Sentencing Guidelines Manual. The Guidelines themselves identify certain circumstances – like your age, your physical condition, or your cooperation with the government – that justify moving away from the calculated range. When a judge grants a departure, they’re saying “the Guidelines recognize this situation warrants a different sentence.”

A variance is completley different. After the Supreme Courts decision in United States v. Booker, the Guidelines became advisory rather than mandatory. A variance allows the judge to impose a sentence outside the guideline range based on the factors in 18 USC § 3553(a) – the nature of the offense, your personal history, the need for deterrence, the need for rehabilitation, and avoiding unwarranted sentencing disparities. The judge dosent need guideline authorization. They just need to explain why the § 3553(a) factors support a different sentence.

Heres the part that makes this distinction matter in practice: departures require the case to be “outside the heartland” – meaning your situation must be unusual enough that the Sentencing Commission didnt anticipate it when drafting the guidelines. Thats a high bar. Variances have no such requirement. The judge simply has to beleive, after considering all the § 3553(a) factors, that a different sentence is appropriate.

Think about what this means for your case. If your defense attorney argues only for a departure, they need to fit your situation into one of the specific categories the Guidelines recognize. If they argue for a variance, they have much more flexibility to present your individual circumstances – your family situation, your employment history, your mental health, anything that makes your case unique.

The procedural requirements differ too. The court must give advance notice before granting a departure that neither party requested. For variances, no advance notice is required. The judge can simply announce at sentencing that they’re varying from the guidelines based on their independent assessment of the § 3553(a) factors. This procedural difference actualy matters for trial strategy and timing.

This is the critical distinction that experienced federal defenders understand: departures are constrained by what the Guidelines permit; variances are constrained only by what the judge considers reasonable under § 3553(a). One path is narrow and well-defined. The other is broader but requires convincing the judge that your individual circumstances warrant deviation.

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The 5K1.1 Trap: When Cooperation Doesnt Guarantee Anything

Heres the departure that every cooperating defendant wants: the 5K1.1 substantial assistance departure. Section 5K1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines allows the judge to impose a sentence below the guideline range – even below mandatory minimums – when a defendant has provided “substantial assistance” to authorities in investigating or prosecuting another person.

Sounds perfect, right? Help the government, get a reduced sentence. Theres just one problem that blindsides almost every cooperating defendant: the judge cannot grant a 5K1.1 departure on their own. Only the prosecutor can file the motion requesting it. Without that motion, the judge’s hands are tied. Even if you provided genuinly valuable cooperation. Even if the judge personaly believes you deserve credit. No prosecutor motion means no 5K1.1 departure.

The prosecutor decides wheather to file a 5K1.1 motion. This gives them enormous leverage in plea negotations. “Cooperate or we wont ask for departure” is standard operating procedure. The defendant who dosent understand this dynamic walks into cooperation thinking the judge will eventualy reward them. They dont realize the prosecutor holds the only key that unlocks the 5K1.1 door.

our lead attorney tells every cooperating client the same thing about this trap: “If you dont have it in writing, you dont have it. The prosecutors promise to ‘consider’ filing a 5K1.1 motion means nothing. The only thing that counts is whether they actualy file it.”

Think about the leverage this creates. The prosecutor controls access to the most powerful sentencing reduction mechanism available to cooperating defendants. They can use that control during plea negotiations. “Cooperate and we’ll consider a 5K1.1 motion” is standard language – but “consider” isnt a commitment. Defendants who help the government based on vague promises often discover at sentencing that no motion gets filed.

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Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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And heres the worst part: theres almost no legal recourse when the prosecutor refuses to file. Courts have recognized only narrow categories where they’ll override a prosecutors 5K1.1 decision. Punishment for exercising a constitutional right – like refusing to waive your trial rights. Bad faith in fulfilling a cooperation agreement. Unconstitutional discrimination based on race or sex. Thats essentialy it. “I cooperated and they didnt reward me” is not grounds for judicial intervention.

Clients come to Federal Lawyers after making exactley this mistake. They provided substantial assistance. They testified at trial. They risked their safetly by informing on dangerous people. And then the prosecutor decided their cooperation wasnt “substantial” enough to warrant a 5K1.1 motion. The judge symaptheticaly explained that without the motion, they couldnt grant the departure. The defendant served their full guideline sentence.

This is why every cooperation agreement should specifiy – in writing – the circumstances under which the government will file a 5K1.1 motion. Not “consider filing.” Not “evaluate your cooperation.” Will file. The difference between these phrases can mean years of your life.

Theres one more thing most defendants dont know about: Rule 35(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. This rule allows sentence reductions for post-sentencing cooperation. Even after your already in prison, you can still provide assistance that leads to a reduced sentence. The government has one year after sentencing to file a Rule 35(b) motion – or longer if the information wasnt reasonably availible before. This isnt a do-over for failed 5K1.1 attempts, but it is a lifeline for defendants who discover valuable information after their sentencing hearing. Most defendants never learn this exists untill its to late.

How Variances Actually Work

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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