Quid Pro Quo Risk: This site is built to separate ordinary public-service activity from the kind of quid-pro-quo theory federal prosecutors like to overread. This page, penalties and sentencing, keeps the focus on bribery so the site does not read like a recycled template.
This site is centered on public office, official-act evidence, and the federal-public-corruption lens that prosecutors use to reframe normal conduct.
Calendars, emails, meetings, and public records are the usual starting point for the government's theory.
The case gets stronger only when prosecutors can tie an exchange to a specific benefit and a specific act.
You want a defense lawyer who can separate lawful advocacy from the corruption story the government wants to tell.
Federal public corruption convictions carry severe penalties. Understanding the sentencing exposure — and the factors that determine the actual sentence — is essential to making informed decisions about your defense.
Under 18 U.S.C. § 201, 666, 1343, 1346, a conviction for public corruption carries: up to 15 years for bribery, up to 20 years for honest services fraud, plus fines and forfeiture.
But the statutory maximum is only the ceiling. The actual sentence is determined by the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.
The Guidelines calculate a recommended sentencing range based on two factors:
The intersection of these two numbers produces a range — for example, 57-71 months, 78-97 months, etc. While the Guidelines are technically "advisory" after United States v. Booker, they remain the starting point for every federal sentence.
| Enhancement | Impact |
|---|---|
| Loss amount exceeding thresholds | Significant offense level increases at $6,500, $15,000, $40,000, $95,000, $150,000, $250,000, $550,000, $1.5M, $3.5M, $9.5M, $25M, $65M, $150M, $250M, $550M |
| Leadership/organizer role | +2 to +4 levels |
| Sophisticated means | +2 levels |
| Obstruction of justice | +2 levels |
| Abuse of position of trust | +2 levels |
| Number of victims / vulnerable victims | +2 to +6 levels |
The decisions made in the first weeks of a case — what you say, what you agree to, what strategy you pursue — directly affect your sentencing exposure. Get experienced counsel now.
Contact Kirby Law →Facing federal public corruption charges? Contact Kirby Law for a confidential consultation with a former federal prosecutor. Free case evaluation.
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Legal Disclaimer: This website provides general information about federal criminal defense. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this content. Every case is different. Consult a qualified federal criminal defense attorney about your specific situation.
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