United States v. Centariczki
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Summary

In this federal case, the First Circuit upheld an 18-month sentence for repeated violations of supervised release. Despite treatment opportunities, Centariczki’s ongoing cocaine use and domestic violence justified the upward variance.

2024 | Federal Juristiction

United States v. Centariczki

Keywords First Circuit; supervised release; 18-month sentence; upward variance; cocaine use; domestic violence; repeated violations; Centariczki; federal case; treatment opportunities
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Case Summary

The First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed an eighteen-month sentence for a defendant's repeated breaches of supervised release conditions. The court found that the defendant's continued cocaine substance use and perpetration of domestic violence warranted an upward departure from the sentencing guidelines, notwithstanding the availability of treatment programs.

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Case Summary

The First Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed an 18-month sentence for a defendant's repeated supervised release violations. The court found that the defendant's continued cocaine use and history of domestic violence, despite access to treatment, warranted an upward departure from the standard sentencing guidelines.

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Case Summary

A federal appeals court approved an 18-month prison sentence for Centariczki due to repeated violations of his supervised release. Even though treatment was available, his continued cocaine use and history of domestic violence led the judge to impose a harsher penalty than usual.

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Summary

A court decided that a person named Centariczki should go to jail for 18 months. This is because Centariczki broke the rules of their release from jail multiple times. Even though Centariczki had chances to get help, they kept using cocaine and hurting their family. Because of this, the judge gave them a longer sentence than usual.

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Footnotes and Citation

Cite

98 F.4th 381 (2024)

Highlights