United States v. Doe ( 1994 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 92-2331

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    ARTHUR DOE,

    Defendant, Appellant.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Selya and Boudin Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ____________________

    Richard B. Klibaner, by Appointment of the Court, with whom
    ____________________
    Klibaner & Sabino was on brief for appellant.
    _________________
    Ralph F. Boyd, Jr., Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
    ___________________
    A. John Pappalardo, United States Attorney, was on brief for appellee.
    __________________


    ____________________

    March 18, 1994
    ____________________




















    BREYER, Chief Judge. This appeal focuses upon the
    ___________

    decision of the district court, when sentencing Arthur Doe,

    to depart from the Sentencing Guidelines. A jury found Doe

    guilty of possessing a gun after a previous felony

    conviction. 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(1). The Sentencing

    Guidelines specified an imprisonment range of about two

    years (21 to 27 months). The district court, believing that

    the Guideline range did not adequately reflect Doe's prior

    criminal record, departed and imposed a sentence of six

    years imprisonment instead. Doe now appeals. We find the

    departure lawful, and we affirm his sentence.

    I

    Background
    __________

    This is Doe's second sentencing appeal. The first

    time, the district court had found applicable a special

    "mandatory minimum" sentencing statute requiring the court

    to impose at least a fifteen year prison term upon "felons

    in possession" of a gun with three (or more) previous

    convictions for "violent felonies." 18 U.S.C. 924(e)(1)
    _______

    (emphasis added). In that earlier appeal, we focused upon

    one of Doe's three earlier felony convictions, namely a 1984

    conviction for being a "felon in possession" of a gun (a

    different and earlier instance of the present crime). We


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    held that this particular felony -- the "felon in

    possession" crime -- is not itself a violent felony; hence
    _______

    the "mandatory minimum" statute did not apply. See United
    ___ ______

    States v. Doe, 960 F.2d 221 (1st Cir. 1992).
    ______ ___

    On remand, the district court properly referred to

    the 1989 Sentencing Guidelines (in effect in March, 1990,

    when Doe committed the crime) instead of the stricter (1991)

    version in effect at the time of Doe's resentencing. See
    ___

    United States v. Cousens, 942 F.2d 800, 801 n.1 (1st Cir.
    ______________ _______

    1991). Under the 1989 Guidelines, the base offense level

    for the "felon in possession" crime was 12. U.S.S.G.

    2K2.1(a)(2). The Guidelines assigned a total of eight

    criminal history points for Doe's earlier convictions. The

    result, offense level 12 at Criminal History Category IV,

    produced a Guideline sentencing range of 21 to 27 months.

    See U.S.S.G. ch. 5, pt. A (Table).
    ___

    The court, after review of the presentence report

    and after argument at the sentencing hearing, decided that

    Doe's case was an unusual, rather than ordinary, case, in

    four respects:

    1) At least one of Doe's prior convictions, for
    armed bank robbery, was a particularly
    dangerous crime involving use of a gun.

    2) Doe's record revealed a history of serious,
    aggravated assaults.

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    3) Doe's record revealed a history of committing
    crimes while he was free on bail awaiting
    trial (or the like).

    4) At the time of his arrest for the present
    crime, Doe led the police on a high speed
    chase, endangering the lives of others.

    In light of these special features of the case, the court

    departed from the applicable guideline range (approximately

    two years) and instead imposed a prison term of six years.

    Doe now appeals this sentencing departure. 18 U.S.C.

    3742(a).

    II

    Standard of Review
    __________________

    The legal issues before us are typical of the

    kinds of issues raised in sentencing departure appeals.

    They concern (1) the grounds for departure, i.e., whether or

    not the circumstances are of a "kind or degree" upon which a

    district court "may appropriately" rely "to justify

    departure," United States v. Diaz-Villafane, 874 F.2d 43, 49
    _____________ ______________

    (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 862 (1989); and (2)
    _____________

    whether the extent of the district court's departure (from

    about two years to six) was "reasonable." Id.; 18 U.S.C.
    ___

    3742(e)(3). We explained our reviewing approach to these

    kinds of issues in Diaz-Villafane, 874 F.2d at 49, and in
    ______________

    United States v. Rivera, 994 F.2d 942 (1st Cir. 1993). Some
    _____________ ______


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    district court decisions that a particular case is unusual

    enough to warrant departure reflect sentencing experience of

    a sort one typically finds in district, not appellate,

    courts; in our view, the law provides the district court a

    degree of "leeway" in making those "kind or degree"

    judgments. Rivera, 994 F.2d at 951. Other departure
    ______

    decisions reflect a determination of the purpose of, or an

    interpretation of the language in, a guideline or statute;

    in such cases, where a district court has no comparative

    expertise in resolving the "quintessentially legal" issue,

    an appellate court will review the district court's

    determination independently. Id.
    ___

    In this case, when we decide whether the district

    court gave proper legal reasons for departing, we shall

    apply one or the other of these standards of review, as

    appropriate. When we review the degree of departure for its

    "reasonableness," we shall apply a "deferential" standard of

    review. Rivera, 994 F.2d at 950; Diaz-Villafane, 874 F.2d
    ______ ______________

    at 49-50.










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    III

    Grounds for Departure
    _____________________

    A

    The Bank Robbery
    ________________

    The district court's first reason for departing

    consisted of the nature of one of Doe's earlier crimes.
    ______

    That crime was a bank robbery in daylight, committed with

    guns, that put employees and bystanders at risk of serious

    harm. The Guidelines assigned three criminal history points

    for this crime. But the district court, noting, among other

    things, Doe's repeated use of guns, thought that it

    warranted more.

    Doe argues that the Guidelines forbid the district

    court from departing for this reason. He notes that a

    departure reason must, at least in principle, make the case

    "unusual"; it must suggest circumstances that remove the

    case from the "heartland" of the relevant guideline.

    Rivera, 994 F.2d at 947-48. But, he says, the fact that an
    ______

    earlier felony involved use of a gun, or a related risk of

    violence, cannot remove the case from the "heartland" where,

    as here, the instant crime is being a "felon in possession."

    Doe points out that everyone convicted of the "felon in
    ________

    possession" crime must also have been convicted of a prior


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    felony. In his view, so many felonies involve guns and

    risks of violence that an earlier conviction for such a

    crime must be common, not unusual, for a felon in

    possession. Hence, those circumstances must lie at the

    heart of, not on the periphery of or outside, the relevant

    "felon in possession" guideline.

    We can treat Doe's argument as one of pure legal

    principle and consider it independently on review only if we

    treat it as an extreme argument -- an argument that the

    guideline's heartland encompasses all earlier gun-related or
    ___

    risk-of-violence-related prior felonies. See Rivera, 994
    ___ ______

    F.2d at 951 (appellate court will independently perform

    "quintessentially legal" function of deciding what guideline

    means). Phrased in this way, the argument is not

    convincing. The "felon in possession" guideline says only

    that its base offense level of 12 applies when the defendant

    has previously

    been convicted . . . of a crime
    punishable by imprisonment for a term
    exceeding one year.

    18 U.S.C. 922(g)(1) (cited in U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(2)).

    That language, taken literally, covers a vast range of

    behavior, ranging from the totally nonviolent to the most

    heinous. Nothing in this language (or its apparent purpose)


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    says that every (earlier) gun- or violence-related felony
    _____

    must fall within its heartland. To the contrary, the fact

    that Congress has imposed a fifteen-year mandatory prison

    term upon felons in possession with three earlier violent
    _____ _______

    felonies, 18 U.S.C. 924(e)(1), suggests, by extrapolation,

    something special about one or two earlier violent felonies.

    Moreover, whether the violent nature of an earlier crime

    does, or does not, warrant special treatment would seem the

    kind of fact-related circumstance about which the Sentencing

    Commission hoped to learn more, as district courts, on the

    basis of their experience, decided to depart, or not, in

    light of such circumstances. See Rivera, 994 F.2d at 946,
    ___ ______

    949-51 (explaining role of district courts in helping

    Commission revise Guidelines). Thus, even though we find

    some dismal truth in Doe's claim that large numbers of

    felonies involve guns and violence, we do not believe that

    the "felon in possession" guideline automatically rules out
    _____________

    consideration of a departure based on such features.

    To make Doe's argument more convincing, we must

    rephrase it as an argument that here, in this case, the
    ____ ____

    nature of the earlier gun crime is not special enough to

    warrant a departure. Indeed, whether the special facts of

    daytime bank robbery, guns, and risks of violence, make this


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    case unusual enough to permit departing beyond the added

    punishment that accompanies three criminal history points

    presents a close question. But it is the very kind of

    question about which we must listen to the district courts

    with "respect." It

    amount[s] to a judgment about whether
    the given circumstances, as seen from
    the district court's unique vantage
    point, are usual or unusual, ordinary or
    not ordinary, and to what extent.

    Rivera, 994 F.2d at 951. We have recognized the district
    ______

    court's

    special competence in making this kind
    of determination, because it may have a
    better "feel" for the unique
    circumstances of the particular case . .
    . .

    Id. We have also pointed out that, by permitting district
    __

    courts a degree of leeway in making such determinations,

    they become, for the Sentencing Commission, an

    important source of information . . .
    which . . . can help the Commission
    determine whether, and how, Guidelines
    revision should take place.

    Id. As we have just said, how district courts react to the
    ___

    presence of violence as an attribute of one or two prior

    violent felonies could help the Commission decide whether or

    not it should write guidelines that "extrapolate" from the

    mandatory minimum sentencing statute's requirement of three

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    such prior convictions. (In fact, the Commission, in more

    recent guidelines versions, has extrapolated in this way.

    Compare U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(2) (1989) (level 12 for all
    _______

    felons in possession) with U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(2), (4)(A),
    ____

    (7) (1991) (level 24 for felons in possession with two prior

    violent felonies, level 20 for one, level 12 for none).)

    These considerations, along with the obvious fact

    that putting innocent lives at risk, using guns, and robbing

    a bank in daylight, aggravate the prior conduct to some

    degree, lead us to find lawful the district court's decision

    to use these facts as one (of several) bases for departure.
    ___

    We need not decide how much of a departure (over and above

    the ordinary punishment attributable to three criminal

    history points) these facts alone would warrant, for these

    facts were not the district court's sole basis for

    departure. See Part IV, infra (discussing the extent of the
    ___ _____ ______

    departure based on all permissible factors).
    ___

    B

    Repetitive Assaultive Behavior
    ______________________________

    The district court set forth another ground for

    its belief that "reliable information" indicated that the

    Guidelines'




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    criminal history category does not
    adequately reflect the seriousness of
    the defendant's past criminal conduct.

    U.S.S.G. 4A1.3 (p.s.) (encouraging departure where that is

    so). That ground consists of what the district court called

    "a virtually unbroken chain of assaultive behavior." One of

    Doe's earlier convictions involved Doe's having hit someone

    over the head with a pipe; another involved beating two men

    with a handgun and kicking one of them. The Guidelines

    assigned no criminal history points for either of these
    __

    serious crimes, in the first instance because Doe was under

    18 at the time (and the conviction was more than five years

    old); in the second instance because (although the court

    tried the still underage Doe as an adult) the court

    suspended Doe's sentence, perhaps because he was about to be

    sentenced to a lengthy federal prison term for bank robbery.

    See U.S.S.G. 4A1.2(b)(2), (d).
    ___

    Doe cannot deny the rather special nature of these

    circumstances, which resemble those for which the Guidelines

    encourage criminal history departures. U.S.S.G. 4A1.3

    (p.s.); cf. United States v. Aymelek, 926 F.2d 64, 73 (1st
    ___ _____________ _______

    Cir. 1991) (adult convictions not counted in criminal

    history score may serve as basis for departure if they

    evidence "some significantly unusual penchant for serious


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    criminality"). Doe does, however, make one important purely

    legal argument. He points to two federal appeals court

    cases that hold that the Guidelines not only fail to

    encourage, but they forbid, criminal history departures

    where, as here, the departure rests on a juvenile's
    ________

    uncounted criminal conduct (unless the juvenile conduct is

    "similar" to the present crime of conviction). United
    ______

    States v. Samuels, 938 F.2d 210, 214 (D.C. Cir. 1991);
    ______ _______

    United States v. Thomas, 961 F.2d 1110, 1116 (3d Cir. 1992)
    ______________ ______

    (adopting Samuels).
    _______

    We do not accept the argument because these two

    circuits, in these cases, read the Guidelines' approach to

    departures contrary to this circuit's understanding. See
    ___

    Rivera, 994 F.2d at 946-52. In Samuels, the D.C. Circuit
    ______ _______

    reached its conclusion by engaging in a kind of "statutory

    interpretation" of Guideline commentary. It noted that the

    Sentencing Guidelines, when calculating a criminal history

    score, count prior adult crimes up to fifteen years old, but

    they do not count prior juvenile crimes more than five years

    old. U.S.S.G. 4A1.2(d), (e) (setting forth approximately

    this rule, though tying most calculations to prior

    sentences, rather than to prior crimes). It also noted
    _________ ______

    that, in an application note, the Commission explains that


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    this "fifteen versus five" year difference is due to the

    "differential availability" of juvenile records (i.e.,

    sometimes juvenile records are available and sometimes they

    are not). See U.S.S.G. 4A1.2 n.7. It further noted that,
    ___

    in a different application note, the Commission adds that a

    sentencing court might nonetheless want to use an outdated

    adult or juvenile crime (i.e., one more than fifteen years

    old, or more than five years old, respectively) as a basis

    for departure where that crime provides "evidence of similar
    _______

    misconduct" with respect to the present offense. Id. n.8
    ___

    (emphasis added). From these two statements in commentary,

    the Samuels court drew the conclusion that the Guidelines
    _______

    forbid a court to use a pre-cutoff-date juvenile conviction
    ______

    as a basis for a departure, unless that conviction reveals
    ______

    conduct similar to the conduct underlying the present
    ___________

    offense of conviction; in its view, any other rule "would

    plainly exaggerate the sentencing disparities that [the

    five-year cutoff] is meant to curb." Samuels, 938 F.2d at
    _______

    214-16. Thomas basically followed Samuels. Thomas, 961
    ______ _______ ______

    F.2d at 1116.

    Our reason for disagreeing with this analysis has

    two parts. First, the application notes to which the

    Samuels court pointed do not say whether or not it is
    _______ ___________


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    sometimes permissible to depart on the basis of a juvenile

    offense that reflects dissimilar, pre-cutoff-date, conduct.
    ___

    The first application note, referring to the "differential

    availability" of juvenile records, talks about ordinary
    ________

    cases. It explains (in part) why the Commission established

    a five year, rather than a fifteen year, cutoff date for

    juvenile offenses, for purposes of computing the criminal
    ________________________________________

    history score. See U.S.S.G. 4A1.2 n.7. But every
    ______________ ___ _____

    Guideline case requires a criminal history score

    computation. Hence, the rules governing that computation

    affect the outcome of ordinary guidelines cases where
    ________

    uniformity is a major Guidelines goal. The note says

    nothing about departures -- the Guidelines' escape hatch for
    __________

    unusual circumstances -- which by definition create, and are
    _______

    supposed to create, non-uniformity. The second application
    ___

    note refers to a special reason for departing, namely the

    presence of serious similar instances of criminal conduct

    that the Guidelines' calculation system ignores, see id.
    ___ ___

    n.8, and it "encourages" departures for this reason, see
    ___

    Rivera, 994 F.2d at 948. That note, however, does not
    ______ ________

    mention departures for other reasons, such as the presence
    _______ _____

    of uncounted, earlier, dissimilar conduct. See id. at 947-
    ___ ___ ___

    49 (distinguishing among "ordinary," "encouraged,"


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    "discouraged," and "forbidden" departures). Thus, the note

    provides no explicit Commission guidance on this question.
    ___________

    Second, the Samuels court's inference (that the
    _______

    application notes imply an unstated principle that the
    _____ ________

    Guidelines forbid using pre-cutoff-date, dissimilar,

    juvenile conduct as a basis for departure) is directly

    contrary to our understanding of the Guidelines' intentions

    as to whether, and when, courts may depart. See Rivera, 994
    ___ ______

    F.2d at 947-49. The Introduction to the Guidelines says

    expressly that, with a handful of exceptions, the Guidelines

    do not "limit the kinds of factors, whether or not mentioned
    _____________ ________________________

    anywhere else in the guidelines that could constitute
    ___________________________________

    grounds for departure in an unusual case." U.S.S.G. ch. 1,
    __________________

    pt. A(4)(b) (p.s.) (emphasis added); see Rivera, 994 F.2d at
    ___ ______

    947. The handful of explicit listed exceptions includes

    such matters as race, sex, religion, and socio-economic

    status. E.g., U.S.S.G. 5H1.10; Rivera, 994 F.2d at 948-
    ____ ______

    49. The listed exceptions do not include conduct that was
    ___

    the subject of an outdated juvenile conviction. As we have

    said before, the language from the Guidelines' introduction

    that we have just quoted means that a court should not infer

    from inexplicit Guidelines language, or from language that

    authorizes use of a particular factor as a basis for


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    departure in some cases, an absolute barrier in principle
    ____ ________

    against using certain other factors as grounds for departure

    in other unusual circumstances. See Rivera, 994 F.2d at
    ______________ ___ ______

    948-49 (noting that with several "explicit exceptions,"
    ________

    courts are "free to consider, in an unusual case," any

    factors making a case "unusual") (emphasis added).

    We emphasize that the Commission's decision to

    impose very few limits in principle upon potential grounds
    ____________

    for departure does not grant sentencing courts a license to

    treat each case as unique, as in the days of pre-guideline

    sentencing. To the contrary, it is meant to encourage

    sentencing courts (1) to ask whether a particular case is

    truly unusual, i.e., significantly different from the
    _______

    ordinary instance of the offense and, (2) if so, to explain

    precisely why. If the sentencing court wishes to depart, it

    must clearly state just how the case differs from an

    ordinary case, thereby not only permitting appellate courts

    to review the explanation, but also permitting the

    Commission to learn more about how the Guidelines work in

    practice. See Rivera, 994 F.2d at 951-52. That information
    ___ ______

    will help the Commission decide whether, or how, to modify a

    Guideline document, which it sees as organic, evolving over




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    time. U.S.S.G. ch. 1, pt. A(4)(b) (p.s.); Rivera, 994 F.2d
    ______

    at 951-52.

    Departure decisions resting upon prior juvenile

    records, for example, might, after Commission examination,

    lead the Commission to write different guidelines, to

    encourage different kinds of departures, or even to forbid

    all departures based on outdated juvenile records, by

    explicitly saying so. But the decision about whether or not

    to forbid certain categories of departure belongs to the

    Commission, not to the courts. See U.S.S.G. ch. 1, pt.
    ___

    A(4)(b); cf. 18 U.S.C. 3553(b) ("In determining whether a
    ___

    circumstance was adequately taken into consideration, the

    court shall consider only the sentencing guidelines, policy
    ____

    statements, and official commentary of the Sentencing

    Commission.") (emphasis added). Indeed, after considering

    such departure decisions and the Samuels interpretation, the
    _______

    Commission in later Guidelines versions has rejected that

    interpretation, clarifying its prior intent, consistent with

    our views here. See U.S.S.G. App. C 472 (1992); cf.
    ___ ___

    Isabel v. United States, 980 F.2d 60, 62-63 (1st Cir. 1992)
    ______ _____________

    ("clarifications" of Guidelines may be applied

    retroactively; "substantive changes" may not).




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    Since we do not accept Doe's purely legal argument

    against the district court's use of his juvenile record, he

    cannot succeed here. His prior criminal conduct is well

    documented, it took place when he was almost eighteen years

    old, it was serious, and it was repeated. The district

    court, taking these circumstances together, saw in Doe's

    prior (uncounted) juvenile record a "significantly unusual

    penchant for serious criminality" that justified departure.

    See Aymelek, 926 F.2d at 73. Recognizing that the district
    ___ _______

    court has a degree of legal "leeway" in making judgments of

    thissort, Rivera,994 F.2d at951, we findits decision lawful.
    ______

    C

    Criminal Justice Control
    ________________________

    The district court found a further reason for

    departure in the fact that Doe had committed at least five

    earlier crimes while he was on bail, or was awaiting trial,

    or was under some other kind of "court supervision," in

    respect to a different crime. This kind of behavior, when

    not otherwise taken into account by the Guidelines

    themselves, see, e.g., U.S.S.G. 4A1.1(d), (e), is a proper
    ___ ____

    reason for departure. See, e.g., United States v. Fahm, No.
    ___ ____ _____________ ____

    92-2215, slip op. at 4, 7-8 (1st Cir. Jan. 5, 1994); United
    ______

    States v. Diaz-Collado, 981 F.2d 640, 644 (2d Cir. 1992),
    ______ ____________


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    cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 2934 (1993); United States v.
    _____________ ______________

    Madrid, 946 F.2d 142, 143-44 (1st Cir. 1991); United States
    ______ _____________

    v. Fields, 923 F.2d 358, 362 (5th Cir. 1991), overruled on
    ______ ____________

    other grounds, United States v. Lambert, 984 F.2d 658 (5th
    _____________ _____________ _______

    Cir. 1993) (en banc); United States v. Singleton, 917 F.2d
    _____________ _________

    411, 413 (9th Cir. 1990) (all upholding departures based in

    part on the fact that past crimes were committed under court

    supervision or shortly after release); United States v.
    _____________

    Hernandez, 896 F.2d 642, 645 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[A] defendant
    _________

    undermines the integrity of the criminal justice system when

    he commits a crime while he is under its supervision and

    control."). Again recognizing that the district court has a

    degree of legal "leeway" in deciding whether the particular

    circumstances present here are unusual enough to warrant a

    departure, we find its decision lawful.

    D

    Reckless Endangerment
    _____________________

    At the time of Doe's arrest, he led the police on

    a high speed chase through city streets, along the wrong

    side of a divided highway into oncoming traffic, which ended

    when he crashed into other cars and a subway tunnel barrier.

    Endangering the lives of others in this way makes the

    instant case unusual, in principle permitting a departure.


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    Indeed, the 1989 Guidelines encourage a departure where

    "public . . . safety was significantly endangered."

    U.S.S.G. 5K2.14; see, e.g., United States v. Rodriguez-
    ___ ____ _____________ __________

    Castro, 908 F.2d 438, 441 (9th Cir. 1990); United States v.
    ______ _____________

    Chiarelli, 898 F.2d 373, 380-81 (3d Cir. 1990) (both
    _________

    upholding departures for similar conduct under 5K2.14).

    Doe points out that the 1990 Guidelines, not

    applicable to his case, added a new provision specifically
    ____________

    requiring a two-level upward adjustment in such

    circumstances. See U.S.S.G. 3C1.2 (1990). He seems to
    ___

    argue that the new guideline should apply to him, in which

    case the court should have increased his sentence through

    the adjustment and not through departure. We are not

    certain why Doe thinks applying a two-level upward

    adjustment (under the 1990 Guidelines) rather than departing

    upward two levels (as the district court did and the 1989

    Guidelines permit) would have made a difference to his

    sentence. But, regardless, the district court took the

    right approach. To apply the new 1990 Guidelines to Doe's

    case, in this respect, would have required a two-level
    ________

    increase. For that reason, they would seem to have

    heightened the severity of the applicable law, which at the

    time simply permitted such an increase through a departure.
    _________


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    Hence, ex post facto principles would have led the district

    court to the earlier 1989 version, which put the matter in

    its departure-related discretion. Cf. Cousens, 942 F.2d at
    ___ _______

    801 n.1.

    IV

    The Extent of Departure
    _______________________

    The district court departed from a Guideline

    sentence range of 21 to 27 months. It imposed instead a

    sentence of 72 months. The relevant statute instructs us to

    review the length of that sentence for its "reasonableness,"

    18 U.S.C. 3742(e)(3); in doing so we show "full awareness

    of, and respect for" the sentencing court's "superior 'feel'

    for the case." Rivera, 994 F.2d at 950 (quoting Diaz-
    ______ _____

    Villafane, 874 F.2d at 50).
    _________

    The district court determined the extent of the
    ______

    departure as follows:

    1) The court began with the Guideline score,

    offense level 12, criminal history category IV, which

    produced a range of 21 to 27 months.

    2) The court decided that Doe's reckless conduct

    fleeing arrest warranted a two-level increase in the offense

    level, producing a range of 27 to 33 months. Cf. U.S.S.G.
    ___

    3C1.2 (1990).


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    3) The court decided that Doe's criminal history

    warranted, at least, a two-category criminal history score

    departure, placing Doe in criminal history category VI,

    instead of IV, and (taken together with the reckless conduct

    departure) bringing the court to level 14, category VI, with

    a range of 37 to 46 months imprisonment.

    4) Finally, the district court found this range

    "too low . . . because of the criminal history of this

    defendant." The court was struck by Doe's

    virtually unbroken chain of assaultive
    behavior, consistently committed while
    under either supervision or the
    generalized control of the court,
    starting with the juvenile encounters
    with law enforcement and continuing to
    the present offense.

    The court added that the

    criminal history category does not
    reflect the seriousness of his offenses
    nor the likelihood -- which I consider a
    virtual certainty -- that once this
    defendant is returned to the street he
    will commit future crimes,

    and that

    [t]his is a defendant who has been
    permitted to engage in such plea or
    diversionary or ameliorative sentencing
    arrangements because this system has
    assumed that more serious matters await
    him. The classic in this circumstance
    is the [state court] disposition of the
    defendant for assault and battery with a
    dangerous weapon [suspended sentence]

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    shortly after his bank robbery
    conviction [in the federal court].

    The record provides sufficient support for these factual

    conclusions.

    The court then followed the method for calculating

    the kind of departure that the Guidelines recommend "on

    occasion" for a defendant with an "egregious, serious

    criminal record," U.S.S.G. 4A1.3 (p.s.). Starting at

    level 14, category VI, the court in effect moved vertically

    down the sentencing table until it found a range it believed

    appropriate. The court selected a 72 month (i.e., six year)

    sentence, which is analogous to a five-level departure to

    level 19 (at category VI). U.S.S.G. ch. 5, pt. A (Table)

    (level 19 at category VI sets range of 63-78 months). It

    noted the Commission's later decision to increase a felon in

    possession's offense level by eight for one prior violent

    felony, see U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(4), (7) (1991), and it
    ___

    pointed out that its resulting sentence was less severe than

    the sentence would have been if the Commission's later

    Guidelines had applied.

    We can find nothing unreasonable about the extent

    of the district court's departure. Doe's prior criminal

    record does seem "egregious." The fact that his most recent

    violent crime, armed bank robbery, involved guns seems

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    particularly relevant in light of his present gun-related

    crime. His record also reveals, in addition to the two

    serious crimes counted in the criminal history score, four

    other serious crimes; indeed, as the government pointed out

    at oral argument, it reveals Doe's virtually continuous

    commission of crimes, interrupted only by periods of

    incarceration.

    Moreover, the Guidelines themselves seem to see in

    such circumstances the basis for a significant departure.

    Commenting upon criminal history departures, they envision

    as a candidate for departure

    a defendant with an extensive record of
    serious, assaultive conduct who had
    received what might now be considered
    extremely lenient treatment in the past
    . . . . This may be particularly true
    in the case of younger defendants . . .
    who are more likely to have received
    repeated lenient treatment, yet who may
    actually pose a greater risk of
    recidivism than older defendants.

    U.S.S.G. 4A1.3, comment. (backg'd).

    We cannot say that the district court went beyond

    the "leeway" the law provides, Rivera, 994 F.2d at 950
    ______

    (citing Diaz-Villafane, 874 F.2d at 49-50), when it departed
    ______________

    upward by five levels. The defendant's prior crimes were

    extensive, violent, and (like the present crime) involved

    guns. The addition of two levels for the defendant's arrest

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    behavior also seems reasonable. Thus, we cannot find the

    extent of the departure, taken as a whole, "unreasonable."

    18 U.S.C. 3742(e)(3).

    We note Doe's argument that the court, in

    departing, simply applied the Commission's more severe 1991

    Guidelines to him, in violation of the Constitution's ex

    post facto clause. See Cousens, 942 F.2d at 801 n.1. After
    ___ _______

    reviewing the district court's statements, however, we are

    convinced that Doe misinterprets what that court did. The

    court fully understood the ex post facto problem. It wrote

    explicitly that it used the later guidelines not to provide

    a reason for departing, but rather as an analogy, through
    ______

    reference to the Commission's informed judgment, that its

    grounds and extent of departure were reasonable. See United
    ___ ______

    States v. Harotunian, 920 F.2d 1040, 1046 (1st Cir. 1990)
    ______ __________

    (court may look to subsequent Guidelines amendments "for

    partial guidance to corroborate its belief" that particular

    conduct "furnished a proper ground for a discretionary

    departure, and as a means of comparison in fixing the

    departure's extent"); supra pp. 6-17 (departure based on
    _____

    prior bank robbery and on juvenile conduct is permissible).

    The court pointed out that, although it used the new

    guideline to provide an analogy to determine how far down


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    the sentencing table's column VI it should move, its five-

    level upward departure was significantly less than the

    eight-level increase that the 1991 Guidelines specify where

    a "felon in possession" has one prior violent felony
    ___

    conviction. U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(4), (7) (1991). Its final

    six year sentence is one year less than the minimum sentence

    at the guideline range that the 1991 Guidelines would have

    made applicable. The fact that the Commission also (in a
    ____

    later Guideline version) decided that certain conduct

    warrants a higher sentence does not bar the court from

    finding, prior to the Commission's action, that the conduct

    provides a basis for an upward departure. See Harotunian,
    ___ __________

    920 F.2d at 1046.

    Finally, Doe argues that the district court

    increased his sentence because it disagreed with our view

    that the "felon in possession" crime is not a "violent

    felony" that falls within the "mandatory minimum" sentencing

    statute and would (in this case) lead to a fifteen year

    sentence. See Doe, 960 F.2d at 224-26. The district court
    ___ ___

    did mention the fact that other circuits have decided the

    matter differently. But we find nothing in the district

    court's statements that warrant Doe's conclusion. Rather,

    the reasons that led the court to depart are the reasons it


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    mentioned and those we have discussed in this opinion. We

    find no evidence of an intent to subvert this court's

    earlier decision.

    For these reasons, the defendant's sentence is

    Affirmed.
    ________






































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