A few weeks after I got out of federal prison, I started showing up at sentencing hearings in downtown Los Angelesβnot because I had to, but because I needed to learn what actually influenced judges.
Iβd take my halfway house pass, toss a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, an apple, and a Coke in a brown paper bag, and go sit in the back row of a federal courtroom. No phone. No distractions. Just a legal pad and a pen.
I wasnβt there to watch lawyers. I was there to study defendants.
And one thing kept showing up, again and again.
π― When You Talk Like a Resume, Judges Tune Out
At one sentencing, a defendant stood in front of the judge and spent several minutes talking about his education, his career achievements, the nonprofit work heβd done, and the people he had helped. His message was basically:
βDonβt send me to prisonβIβm doing too much good out here.β
Hereβs the problem:
He never once talked about the victims.
Not once.
And you could see the judgeβs posture shiftβshoulders back, chin up, zero patience. Then he delivered the line Iβll never forget:
βIβm not sentencing your resume. Iβm sentencing you. You broke the law. You hurt people. Iβm going to hold you accountable. Youβre going to prison.β
It didnβt matter how many degrees he had. It didnβt matter how many lives he claimed to have changed.
He skipped the one thing that mattered most: the harm he caused.
π¨ Itβs a Red Flag to Ignore the Victims
I get it. No one wants to relive what they did wrong. You want to focus on the person youβve become since the crimeβespecially if youβve paid restitution or cooperated with the government. But skipping over the victims is a red flag to a federal judge.
And Iβm not guessingβIβve watched it happen, and Iβve seen the results.
Hereβs how a judge sees it:
- If you donβt talk about the victims, youβre not accepting responsibility.
- If you center yourself in the story, youβre still minimizing.
- If you act like your resume should excuse your crime, you havenβt learned a thing.
Thatβs not leniency material. Thatβs someone who still doesnβt get it.
π§ The Right Role: Lawyer Sells, Defendant Reflects
Hereβs what that defendant should have done:
Let the lawyer talk about the resume. Let the lawyer pitch the cooperation, the repayment, the degrees, the community work.
Thatβs their job.
Your job is to reflect.
That means humility. It means deference. And it means naming the people who were harmed and showing the judge that you understand how your actions affected them.
Iβve helped people do this well. Iβve also seen people blow itβand the difference in sentencing outcomes is real.
π Real-World Example: Resume vs. Remorse
There was a healthcare fraud case I followed closely. Two defendantsβsimilar charges, similar loss amounts. Both paid restitution. Both had support letters. One gave a statement focused on βhow far heβd come.β The other talked about the trust heβd broken with patients, the emotional toll on his family, and how he would carry the shame for the rest of his life.
Same courtroom. Same judge.
One got 41 months.
The other got 24.
Guess which one skipped the victims?
π¬ What Judges Actually Want to Hear
Judges arenβt expecting perfect words. But they are expecting real ones. They want to see that youβve done the hard workβemotionally, not just legally.
Hereβs what matters in a personal statement:
- Acknowledge the victims by name or category
- Be specific about the harm you caused
- Show what youβve learned from the experience
- Explain how youβll avoid ever going back there again
- Donβt try to convince them youβre a good personβshow them you understand what happened
Skip all that, and the sentencing becomes much simpler for the judge:
Youβre still justifying.
Youβre still in denial.
Youβre still a risk.
π The Resume Pitch Is a Losing Strategy
If you’re preparing for sentencing, take a step back. Look at your statement. If it reads like a LinkedIn profile or a press release, you’re in trouble.
The judge doesnβt care how impressive you were.
They care what you didβand what youβve learned from it.
You donβt have to be perfect. But you have to be honest. And that starts with putting the victims front and center.
Justin Paperny
P.S. If this resonates, join our team this Monday at 1 p.m. Pacific, 4 p.m. Eastern. We host a free webinar to answer questions, share lessons from real cases, and help you avoid the most costly mistakes people make during a government investigation. Bring questions. Come ready to learn.