United States v. Kise ( 2004 )


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  •                            PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,              
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                             No. 02-4693
    WILLIAM KISE, a/k/a Bill,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of South Carolina, at Columbia.
    Dennis W. Shedd, District Judge.
    (CR-01-375)
    Argued: December 5, 2003
    Decided: June 2, 2004
    Before LUTTIG and GREGORY, Circuit Judges,
    and HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Gregory wrote
    the opinion, in which Senior Judge Hamilton joined. Judge Luttig
    wrote a separate opinion concurring in the judgment.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Allen Bethea Burnside, Assistant Federal Public
    Defender, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellant. Dean Arthur
    Eichelberger, Assistant United States Attorney, Columbia, South Car-
    olina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: J. Strom Thurmond, Jr., United
    States Attorney, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee.
    2                       UNITED STATES v. KISE
    OPINION
    GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
    William "Bill" Kise pled guilty to two counts of sexual exploitation
    of children. At sentencing, the district court applied multiple sentenc-
    ing enhancements and sentenced the defendant to 365 months’
    imprisonment. On appeal, Kise’s counsel filed a brief in accordance
    with Anders v. California, 
    386 U.S. 738
    (1967), stating that, in his
    view, there were no meritorious issues for appeal, but raising three
    issues related to sentencing: (1) whether the district court erred in
    denying Kise credit for acceptance of responsibility; (2) whether the
    district court abused its discretion in departing upward on the ground
    that Kise’s criminal history significantly under-represented his past
    criminal conduct; and (3) whether the district court abused its discre-
    tion in departing upward for extreme conduct. Having reviewed the
    entire record in accord with Anders, we scheduled the case for oral
    argument and directed counsel to focus on the first issue. At oral
    argument, Kise’s counsel stated that despite his filing of an Anders
    brief, his further review of the first issue in preparation for argument
    led him to conclude that it is, in fact, a meritorious claim. We agree.
    While we find the last two Anders issues lack merit, we conclude that
    the district court erred in denying Kise credit for acceptance of
    responsibility.
    I.
    A.
    Bill Kise is a 63-year-old pedophile who admits that he has had
    sexual contact with "several hundred" children throughout his life-
    time. Kise has acknowledged his mental illness and has stated that he
    does not believe his condition is curable. Following his arrest and
    subsequent three-count indictment, charging him with two counts of
    sexual exploitation of children and one count of interstate transmis-
    sion of child pornography, Kise pled guilty to one count of use of
    minors in the production of visual depictions of sexually explicit con-
    duct and one count of permitting a minor over whom he had custody
    and control to be used in the production of visual depictions of crimi-
    nally explicit conduct. 18 U.S.C. §§ 2251(a), 2251(b). After imposing
    UNITED STATES v. KISE                           3
    various sentencing enhancements under the United States Sentencing
    Guidelines, the district court determined Kise had a total offense level
    of 39 and criminal history category of I, and sentenced Kise to 240
    months’ imprisonment on count one and 125 months on count two,
    with the sentences to run consecutively for a total of 365 months, the
    upper limit of the applicable Guideline range. Additionally, the court
    sentenced Kise to a term of three years of supervised release.
    Federal authorities began investigating Kise after the United States
    Secret Service received information from a confidential informant
    ("CI"), who had been arrested for receipt and possession of child por-
    nography in January 2001. On April 30, 2001, federal agents con-
    ducted a search of Kise’s home with his consent. Kise also engaged
    in voluntary discussions with the authorities in which he admitted that
    he had exchanged child pornography over the internet with the CI.
    Furthermore, Kise identified himself and two prepubescent boys
    (hereinafter "Child A" and "Child B") depicted in photos the govern-
    ment received from the CI. Kise knew each child’s respective fami-
    lies, and Child B had been left alone in Kise’s custody for extended
    periods during school vacations, while Child A had been left in Kise’s
    custody on numerous occasions for shorter spans of time — typically
    evenings and weekends.1
    During his conversation with the agents, Kise admitted having
    molested Child A and Child B, who were nine to ten years old during
    the period of abuse. He told the agents that he had taken thousands
    1
    Indeed, Child B’s mother admitted that she had participated in bond-
    age acts with Kise, had observed child pornography pictures on his com-
    puter, and had been aware that Kise stored an assortment of chains,
    whips, ropes and other sexual toys in his home. Child B’s mother was
    even aware that Kise tied up her son, which she referred to as "innocent
    child’s play." Despite such knowledge and the fact that the mother main-
    tains that her child is autistic, she allowed Kise to sleep with her son in
    her home, and granted Kise continuous access to her son, who traveled
    from the Midwest to visit Kise on three separate occasions from 1999-
    2001.
    Kise admitted that between August 2000 and February 2001, he spent
    115 days with Child A, having sexual contact with the boy between
    twenty and thirty times.
    4                       UNITED STATES v. KISE
    of pictures of the children, depicting his sexual abuse of the children,
    as well as photos of Child A and Child B engaged in sexual activity
    with each other. Kise told the agents that he stored the images in his
    computer, and also had three web sites on which he posted photos of
    the children. Kise proceeded to describe each of the photos presented
    to him by the federal agents which had been recovered from the CI’s
    computer.
    The photos themselves are extremely graphic and exploitive; as the
    district court recognized at sentencing, they depict humiliating and
    degrading conduct toward children. Kise photographed the boys while
    they engaged in oral sex with one another, or performing oral sex on
    him. In some photos, Kise was shown touching and penetrating
    the children’s rectums. In other photos, Kise showed the boys
    bound or tied up in intricate knot patterns ("dcsn1773.jpg" and
    "dcsn1772.jpg"), or wearing other devices associated with bondage
    and sadomasochism such as chain collars or small metal rings through
    which the boys’ penises and scrotums passed. Specifically, photos
    submitted at sentencing showed, a child’s penis and scrotum tightly
    bound with twine ("tie up [child], age 9.jpg"), a child with duct tape
    applied to his buttocks so as to expose his rectum ("ducktape.jpg"),
    a child with red marks from spanking on his bare buttocks
    ("northwestern.jpg"),2 a child with a bite mark on his buttocks ("clear
    hole and bite.jpg"). In yet another photo, Kise wrote a message in
    marker to one of his pedophile friends on the child’s buttocks
    ("himikey.jpg"), while in another he wrote "my little hole" on the
    child’s buttocks with arrows pointing toward the boy’s anus. Kise dis-
    tributed these and other photographs to various friends in electronic
    format.
    B.
    Following Kise’s entry of his plea, a Presentence Investigation
    Report ("PSR") was prepared. The Probation Officer ("PO") calcu-
    lated a base offense level of 27, U.S.S.G. § 2G2.1(a), for each count.
    The PSR recommended that these bases be increased four levels
    because the victims were younger than twelve years old, see U.S.S.G.
    2
    One of the children reported that Kise spanked him with a paddle cal-
    led "Northwestern."
    UNITED STATES v. KISE                          5
    § 2G2.1(b)(1), and recommended two-level increases because the
    minors were in Kise’s supervisory control, see U.S.S.G.
    § 2G2.1(b)(2). In addition, the PSR recommended two-level increases
    pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3A1.1(b)(1) because Child B was unusually
    vulnerable. Thus, the PSR calculated the adjusted offense level for
    each count as 35, and the total offense level increased to 37 because
    there were multiple-counts. See U.S.S.G. § 3D1.4. Additionally, the
    PSR recommended that, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a)-(b), Kise
    receive a three-level reduction in offense level for his acceptance of
    responsibility. Finally, the PO found that Kise had zero criminal his-
    tory points, giving him a criminal history category of I.
    Thus, the PSR recommended that Kise be sentenced using a total
    offense level of 34 and a criminal history category of I, which would
    have yielded a guideline range of 151-188 months’ imprisonment.
    However, the PSR detailed two factors which could warrant depar-
    ture. First it stated that, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3(e), upward
    departure could be warranted because Kise’s criminal history cate-
    gory under-represents the seriousness of his criminal history and the
    likelihood that he would commit further crimes.3 Additionally, it
    3
    The PSR detailed that in 1966, Kise had been charged with four
    counts of "lewd assault" in Florida, and in November 1966, Kise was
    committed to a state hospital as a "sexual psychopath," meaning that he
    "appeared to be suffering from a mental disorder." He was released from
    the hospital in August 1967, on the ground that he had recovered from
    the psychopathic conditions. In 1971, Kise was admitted to the State
    Hospital in South Carolina pursuant to a court order to undergo a psycho-
    logical examination stemming from a charge of contributing to the delin-
    quency of a minor. The conduct in question was that Kise had attempted
    to sodomize his neighbor’s son, and the investigation of that crime
    revealed that Kise had sodomized other boys in the neighborhood.
    Further, the report stated that Kise enlisted in the Army in 1961, and
    during his enlistment and after his discharge in 1964, Kise abused chil-
    dren while involved in the Boy Scouts. Kise stated that he enjoyed being
    a scoutmaster because it gave him power over children. He described
    being sexually active with several children entrusted to his care while
    affiliated with the organization, and estimated that he took advantage of
    hundreds of boys. The PSR details that his 1971 psychological report
    related that Kise "voluntarily talks about his pederastic incarnations and
    his involvement with little boys" and stated that he engaged in such
    activities while supervising scouts and while serving in the Army in Ger-
    many.
    6                        UNITED STATES v. KISE
    noted the possibility of an enhancement pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 5K2.8,
    governing conduct that is "unusually heinous, cruel, brutal or degrad-
    ing to the victim."
    At sentencing, the district court imposed both the departure and the
    enhancement. Despite the PO’s recommendation and the govern-
    ment’s lack of objection, the district court did not apply the three-
    level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. Therefore, the district
    court imposed sentence by using a total offense level of 39 and a
    criminal history category of II, yielding a sentencing range of 292-
    365 months. The district court sentenced Kise to 240 months on count
    one and 125 months on count two, to run consecutively, with a term
    of three years of supervised release thereafter. This appeal followed.
    II.
    At oral argument, Kise’s counsel contended that the district court
    erred in denying his client a three-level reduction of offense level for
    acceptance of responsibility under the United States Sentencing
    Guidelines § 3E1.1(a)-(b) (2001). The Guidelines provide for a two-
    level reduction in offense level where the defendant "clearly demon-
    strates acceptance of responsibility." U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a). If a defen-
    dant qualifies under § 3E1.1(a), his or her offense level is 16 or
    greater, and the defendant has assisted authorities by (1) timely pro-
    viding complete information to the government concerning his or her
    involvement in the offense; or (2) timely notifying authorities of his
    intention to plead guilty, thus allowing the government to conserve
    resources that would be expended on trial, the offense level is to be
    decreased by one additional level. 
    Id. § 3E1.1(b).
    We review the district court’s decision to deny a reduction in the
    offense level based on the defendant’s acceptance of responsibility for
    clear error. United States v. Pauley, 
    289 F.3d 254
    , 261 (4th Cir.
    2002), cert. denied, 
    123 S. Ct. 1007
    (2003); see also United States v.
    Holt, 
    79 F.3d 14
    , 17 (4th Cir. 1996) (per curiam).
    A guilty plea does not automatically entitle a defendant to a reduc-
    tion for acceptance of responsibility. See United States v. Harris, 
    882 F.2d 902
    , 906 (4th Cir. 1989) ("A district court is not obligated to
    grant an unrepentant criminal a two-step reduction in return for
    UNITED STATES v. KISE                         7
    grudgingly cooperating with authorities or merely going through the
    motions of contrition."). Rather, the district court is to evaluate the
    defendant’s acts and statements to determine whether the defendant
    has accepted responsibility for his or her criminal conduct. See United
    States v. Gordon, 
    895 F.2d 932
    , 936 (4th Cir. 1990); United States v.
    White, 
    875 F.2d 427
    , 431-32 (4th Cir. 1989). "[I]n order to receive a
    reduction under § 3E1.1 for acceptance of responsibility, the defen-
    dant must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he has
    clearly recognized and affirmatively accepted personal responsibility
    for his criminal conduct." United States v. May, 
    359 F.3d 683
    , 693
    (4th Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The
    commentary to the guideline at issue notes that "[t]he sentencing
    judge is in a unique position to evaluate a defendant’s acceptance of
    responsibility. For this reason, the determination of the sentencing
    judge is entitled to great deference on review." U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1, cmt.
    n.5 (2001); accord 
    White, 875 F.2d at 431
    .
    In this case, the PSR recommended that Kise receive a three-level
    reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The PO detailed that Kise
    readily and immediately confessed to the federal authorities in April
    2001. As detailed above, Kise admitted to his life history as a criminal
    sexual predator, rather than merely confessing to the crimes for which
    he was being investigated. Furthermore, the PSR reported that Kise
    remarked, "I feel terrible. This has ruined my life. I went through this
    when I was a kid. I didn’t intend to harm them, but I am sure I did."
    Finally, the PSR detailed that Kise was admitted to the residential sex
    offender treatment program ("SOTP") of the Federal Correctional
    Institution at Butner, North Carolina for a psychiatric evaluation, and
    that Kise sought treatment of his pedophilia.4 The government did not
    object to the recommendation for acceptance of responsibility.
    Despite the fact that Kise’s post-offense conduct substantially con-
    formed to many of the factors listed as "appropriate considerations"
    in determining whether an individual qualifies for the acceptance of
    4
    In 1990, the Butner SOTP for men was established. The program’s
    goal "is to reduce risk of recidivism by teaching offenders to manage
    their sexual deviance through cognitive-behavioral, self-management,
    and relapse prevention techniques." Federal Judicial Center, Special
    Needs Offenders Bulletin No. 3, Sex Offenders 14 (Sept. 1998).
    8                        UNITED STATES v. KISE
    responsibility reduction under the guidelines, the district court did not
    grant the reduction. See, e.g., U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1, cmt. n.1(a)
    ("truthfully admitting the conduct comprising the offense(s) of con-
    viction"); 
    id. cmt. n.1(b)
    (voluntary withdrawal from criminal conduct
    or associations); 
    id. cmt. n.1(d)
    ("voluntary surrender to authorities
    promptly after commission of the offense"); 
    id. cmt. n.1(e)
    ("voluntary assistance to authorities in the recovery of the fruits and
    instrumentalities of the offense"); 
    id. cmt. n.1(g)
    ("post-offense reha-
    bilitative efforts (e.g., counseling or drug treatment)"). Instead, during
    the sentencing colloquy, the district court questioned Kise regarding
    what he had told prison psychologists regarding his pedophilic
    beliefs. Consistent with Kise’s past mental health evaluations, supra
    note 3, the Butner psychiatrists diagnosed Kise as a pedophile and
    concluded that he suffered from depression. The evaluation revealed
    that Kise "identified a system of beliefs which are commonly seen in
    individuals engaged in sexual activity with minors." Specifically,
    Kise told the psychiatrist that he believed that "children had a sexual-
    ity and should be able to consent to sexual activity. He expressed a
    belief that a child’s ability to consent to sexual activity began around
    the age of 10."5
    During the plea colloquy, in turning to the issue of acceptance of
    responsibility, the district court seized upon Kise’s statements from
    his psychiatric sessions at Butner and stated: "Now, on acceptance of
    responsibility, Mr. Kise, do you believe that a child at age ten has the
    ability to give consent to an adult to have sex with him?" J.A. 72. This
    exchange followed:
    5
    The PSR also notes that during the Butner evaluation, Kise expressed
    "he did not feel that he had harmed the children ‘that much’ by his sexual
    activity with them." Kise expressed that the harm to the children "came
    not from his involvement in sexual activity, but from his being caught
    and involving them in the legal proceeding, subsequent counseling and
    having that part of their lives exposed." However, the PSR also details
    that during a subsequent interview with a PO in September 2001, Kise
    claimed the Butner psychologist misconstrued his explanation, and
    "[Kise] acknowledged that he did believe that the children had been
    harmed by his sexual activity with them and that he was not justifying
    his sexual activity with them in any way."
    UNITED STATES v. KISE                         9
    The Defendant:      Your Honor, I just—
    The Court:          Yes or No?
    The Defendant:      Yes, Your honor.
    The Court:          You think that a ten year old child can
    consent with an adult to have sex?
    The Defendant:      As our society knows it, no.
    The Court:          As you know?
    The Defendant:      Within me, yes, I know. I believe it.
    The Court.          You lose acceptance of responsibility. It
    is clear to me you have not accepted the
    illegality of what you were doing. Let me
    say, your comment right there is com-
    pletely consistent with what you say in
    the report. You lose acceptance of
    responsibility. You do not get acceptance
    of responsibility.
    J.A. 72.
    From this colloquy, it is clear that because Kise believed that chil-
    dren could consent to sexual conduct, the district court found, ipso
    facto, that Kise had not accepted responsibility for his conduct. We
    find that determination clearly erroneous. To hold otherwise would
    punish defendants like Kise for acknowledging their disorders and for
    seeking the very counseling and rehabilitation they require. Essen-
    tially, it would establish a per se rule that individuals similarly situ-
    ated to Kise who suffer from, but are not yet cured of, mental
    disorders cannot qualify for the acceptance of responsibility reduc-
    tion; we cannot square such a determination with the guideline. See
    U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1, cmt. n.1(g) (stating that an appropriate consider-
    ation in determining whether a defendant should receive the reduction
    is whether he or she has engaged in "post-offense rehabilitative
    efforts" such as counseling).
    10                         UNITED STATES v. KISE
    The district court presented Kise with what was ultimately a Hob-
    son’s choice: answer honestly and in accord with the psychiatrist’s
    report and be denied acceptance of responsibility, or answer dishon-
    estly and in a manner contrary to the report and be denied acceptance
    of responsibility and possibly incur an enhancement for obstruction
    of justice. The same scenario would confront any pedophile similarly
    situated to Kise, and is thus akin to a categorical bar against any such
    individual receiving the acceptance of responsibility reduction. The
    Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV ("DSM")
    defines pedophilia as a paraphilia — that is, a disorder causing "clini-
    cally significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or
    other important areas of functioning." American Psychiatric Associa-
    tion, DSM-IV-TR 535 (4th ed. 2000). It notes that individuals with
    pedophilia "generally report an attraction to children of a particular
    age range," and — completely consistent with Butner’s diagnosis of
    Kise — it states that when pedophiles act on their urges with children,
    they commonly rationalize the sexual experience, reasoning "that they
    have ‘educational value’ for the child, that the child derives ‘sexual
    pleasure’ from them, or that the child was ‘sexually provoca-
    tive’—themes that are also common in pedophilic pornography." 
    Id. § 302.2
    at 571; see also J.A. 120 (during allocution, Kise stated "in
    talking to my psychiatrist about [pedophilia], he brought out the fact
    that generally people who are pedophiles have a tendency to place the
    age of consent on what they are attracted to.").
    In short, the district court punished Kise for admitting to and
    attempting to remedy his mental disorder. Kise did not challenge the
    fact that what he did was legally wrong,6 rather he repeatedly
    expressed guilt and remorse.7 In frank terms, Kise admitted the deep
    6
    To be clear, Kise’s belief that the children could and did consent did
    not rest on the legal definition of consent. See J.A. 76-80. Rather, Kise
    was referring to a more abstract philosophical issue — regardless of how
    warped or perverse the philosophy — of whether he believed the boys
    had the capacity to willingly choose to participate in, or object to, the
    sexual conduct in which they engaged.
    7
    See, e.g., J.A. 117 ("I’m terribly sorry for what I have done.
    [Pedophilia] is not something in my life that I ever wanted. It is some-
    thing I hated. It accelerated. For 26 years[,] I did work and fight the urge
    to control it and I was able to control it. . . . I don’t believe there is a cure
    UNITED STATES v. KISE                          11
    scope and hold of his mental illness — the PSR noted that he fought
    against and wanted to seek help for the disorder throughout his lifetime,8
    and actively sought help at Butner and elsewhere to remedy the con-
    dition. Kise’s response to the district court’s question regarding chil-
    dren’s ability to consent, though undeniably perverse to objective
    individuals without his paraphilia, was an honest response in accord
    with his disorder. In this light, even Kise’s alarming declarations that
    children can consent to sexual activity amount to "statements regard-
    ing his motivation [that] are relevant in that they shed light on the sin-
    cerity of an asserted acceptance of responsibility." United States v.
    Greene, 
    71 F.3d 232
    , 235 (6th Cir. 1995).
    While we find Kise’s statements regarding consent objectively mis-
    guided and disturbing, they do not mean that Kise failed to accept
    responsibility for his offenses. To the contrary, Kise’s statements and
    actions in this case following his investigation by the federal govern-
    ment and eventual detention demonstrate his willingness to assist law
    enforcement and to submit to mental health treatment. On this record,
    it is clear that Kise actively took the initial steps to control, if not
    wholly eradicate, his disorder thereby minimizing the possibility of
    recidivism.9 See Federal Judicial Center, Special Needs Offenders
    for pedophilia."); 
    id. ("I blame
    myself for every bit of [my conduct].");
    
    id. at 118
    (stating he had suffered from "terrible judgment"); 
    id. at 120
    ("I am attracted to nine and ten year olds. I’m sorry for that. I don’t know
    how I could — you know, why me? I asked that question many times.
    I would be happy to be anything else."); 
    id. at 123
    ("I am the blame for
    whatever I do. I still question my own mind. They said I am sane. I don’t
    believe I’m sane when it comes to those things [pedophilia and molesta-
    tion]. I do believe I am a psychopath."); 
    id. at 123
    ("I’m guilty and I will
    take whatever you want to do to me. I do that here today because I
    deserve it."); 
    id. at 124
    ("I was truly and deeply sorry for these criminal
    acts that I have committed. I am especially sorry as well as deeply
    ashamed for the terrible embarrassment and the great sadness I brought
    upon these special boys."); 
    id. at 129
    ("I do accept responsibility totally.
    I have already asked God to forgive me and he has. I will deal with what
    I have to deal with as a criminal for the rest of my life.").
    8
    The record indicates that Kise’s pedophilic conduct stopped for a
    period of approximately 25 years and resumed in 1999.
    9
    As the Seventh Circuit has remarked, per Judge Posner, the purpose
    of § 3E1.1 is not simply to induce guilty pleas and spare government
    12                        UNITED STATES v. KISE
    Bulletin No. 3, Sex Offenders 6 (Sept. 1998) (stating sexual deviance
    is treatable and that "offenders can learn to control, if not eradicate,
    their deviant interests and behavior," but for treatment to work "the
    offender must be an active participant in identifying risky behavior
    and in developing coping strategies to address them"). Without dis-
    puting that Kise’s criminal conduct is of the most abhorrent type soci-
    ety knows, we also recognize that Kise immediately admitted to the
    wrongfulness of his conduct when approached by the authorities and
    has continued to do so, he turned over the instrumentalities of his
    criminal conduct, and he has sought help to take steps toward reform-
    ing his behavior in the future. All of these facts support our view that
    the district court clearly erred in finding that Kise did not accept
    responsibility for his crime. While we understand the district court’s
    expression of repugnance at Kise’s statements that he believes chil-
    dren can consent (though Kise admits that they cannot legally consent
    to sexual contact), to deny Kise and similarly situated pedophiles the
    acceptance of responsibility reduction in such an instance would ren-
    der § 3E1.1 wholly inapplicable to an entire class of criminals. Such
    a categorical bar cannot be reconciled with the above-discussed pur-
    poses of the guideline, and moreover such a result would ironically
    serve to discourage honesty and full disclosure from pedophiles as
    they take the first step toward rehabilitation and possible reintegration
    into society — thus also undermining the very purposes and goals of
    the Butner SOTP, see supra note 4. As Kise’s counsel persuasively
    queried at oral argument, if such a bar were in place, how could a
    competent attorney implore a client suffering from a mental disorder
    to go to Butner or another correctional institution for a mental evalua-
    tion if the attorney knows that his client’s attempts to comply with the
    authorities and conform to the full disclosure policies in § 3E1.1 will
    only be used against the client?
    Were we to hold that it is not clear error to deny acceptance of
    responsibility in this instance, it would create a perverse incentive
    within our case law. We would unintentionally encourage pedophiles
    expenses, but is also aimed "to reflect the reduced risk of recidivism of
    a defendant who by facing up to the wrongfulness of his conduct takes
    the first step to better behavior in the future." United States v. Lopinski,
    
    240 F.3d 574
    , 575 (7th Cir. 2001) (citations omitted).
    UNITED STATES v. KISE                         13
    similarly situated to Kise to refrain from telling authorities about their
    past crimes and predilections and from seeking the mental health care
    they severely require. Instead, they would be motivated to take their
    chances at trial, thus increasing administrative costs, preventing the
    offenders from obtaining the mental help they require — which, in
    turn, should translate into lower incidents of recidivism and greater
    protection of society as a whole — and, perhaps most importantly,
    putting great strain on the victims who have already suffered so
    deeply. This we cannot do.
    III.
    For these reasons, we hold that the district court’s denial of a three-
    level reduction for Kise’s acceptance of responsibility pursuant to
    U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a)-(b) was clearly erroneous.10 Accordingly, we
    vacate the district court’s sentence and remand for resentencing in a
    manner not inconsistent with this opinion.
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    LUTTIG, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
    I do not join the majority opinion, because I do not believe that the
    rationale for its holding is one that is permissible under the guidelines.
    I do, however, believe that it was error for the district court to deny
    Kise the acceptance of responsibility reduction, given Kise’s post-
    arrest conduct. In my view, that conduct satisfied the legal require-
    ments set forth in the guidelines for the acceptance of responsibility
    reduction. I do not believe that Kise’s responses to the court’s ques-
    tions during the plea colloquy and sentencing, made under the partic-
    10
    We find no merit in the other two issues raised in the Anders brief.
    The court did not abuse its discretion in departing upward from Criminal
    History Category I to Criminal History Category II on the basis that Cat-
    egory I under-represented Kise’s admitted history of child molestation
    and predatory conduct. Likewise, we find no error in the district court’s
    upward departure for extreme conduct under U.S.S.G. § 5K2.8. Kise’s
    conduct in this case is the very epitome of that which is "unusually hei-
    nous, cruel, brutal, or degrading to a victim." U.S.S.G. § 5K2.8. Accord-
    ingly, we otherwise affirm the district court’s imposition of sentence.
    14                     UNITED STATES v. KISE
    ular circumstances of contrition and remorse here, evidence a failure
    to accept responsibility within the meaning of the guidelines.