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State of Minnesota v. Bryan Blocker ( 2016 )


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  •                           This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A15-1607
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Bryan Blocker,
    Appellant.
    Filed December 12, 2016
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded
    Schellhas, Judge
    Dakota County District Court
    File No. 19HA-CR-14-827
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    James C. Backstrom, Dakota County Attorney, Heather D. Pipenhagen, Assistant County
    Attorney, Hastings, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Stan Keillor, Special Assistant
    Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Stauber, Presiding Judge; Schellhas, Judge; and Reyes,
    Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    SCHELLHAS, Judge
    Appellant challenges his conviction and sentence for kidnapping, arguing that
    (1) the evidence is insufficient to prove that the victim suffered great bodily harm, (2) the
    evidence is insufficient to prove the existence of the eight aggravating facts found by the
    jury in regard to the kidnapping count, (3) the district court erred in calculating appellant’s
    criminal-history score, and (4) the district court abused its discretion by sentencing
    appellant to the statutory maximum for kidnapping. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and
    remand.
    FACTS
    The evening of March 7, 2014, H.B. went out with friends instead of going to work.
    H.B. did not disclose to her husband, appellant Bryan Blocker, that she had not gone to
    work and was concerned that he might learn her whereabouts. Blocker had put monitoring
    software on H.B.’s phone and often took her phone away from her. That night, Blocker
    repeatedly called H.B.’s phone and asked her to hurry home. At about 2:00 a.m. on
    March 8, H.B. told Blocker that she was not coming home and was staying at a friend’s
    house. Blocker reacted to the news with shock because H.B. had never before refused to
    come home. Thinking that he could smooth over the conflict, one of H.B.’s male friends
    took the phone from H.B. and invited Blocker to stay the night, also. Although Blocker
    lived in Apple Valley and H.B. was in Burnsville, Blocker arrived within five minutes
    while H.B. and her friends were exiting their vehicle.
    Blocker arrived with a baton and asked to speak with H.B. alone. He approached
    H.B. and hugged her, but she rebuffed him and told him to leave her alone. H.B.’s friend,
    M.G., attempted to intervene, and Blocker grabbed H.B. and struck her in the head with
    the baton. H.B. remembers being on the ground; her ears were ringing, a warm liquid was
    pouring down her face, and she could not see. While H.B. was on the ground, Blocker
    2
    repeatedly struck her in the head with the baton and hit her body and back. He also struck
    M.G. with the baton on the head and back. Blocker then picked up H.B., dragged her to his
    truck, and put her in the driver’s seat. H.B. attempted to flee through the passenger door
    but had difficulty seeing because of the blood on her face and ran into something and fell.
    One of H.B.’s friends attempted to scare Blocker away by firing a gun in the air, but
    the gun jammed. Blocker then grabbed H.B. by the roots of her hair, held her in front of
    his face like a shield, forced her into his truck, and left. The time was about 3:30 a.m.
    Blocker continued to hold H.B. by her hair and forced her head down next to his leg, almost
    in his lap. He removed the batteries from his phone and H.B.’s phone. Blocker stopped his
    truck someplace and got H.B. on the floor of the truck with her head beneath the driver’s
    side. H.B.’s back was lying across the hump. Blocker emptied H.B.’s purse and forced a
    prescription bottle from her purse into her mouth, past her tongue, and down her throat.
    H.B. couldn’t breathe and thought she would die but dislodged the pill bottle using her
    throat muscles and twisted away from Blocker. He next attempted to strangle H.B. with a
    cable or cord and his hands.
    The temperature was freezing outside. Blocker took H.B.’s jacket from her, saying
    that because he had bought it, he did not want H.B. to wear it around other guys. He also
    told H.B. that “if he couldn’t have [her], nobody [could].” Blocker refused to allow H.B.
    out of the truck to go to the bathroom, forcing her to urinate in her clothes while on the
    passenger-side floor of the truck. He randomly hit H.B. in the same spots on her face,
    telling her at one point to find the baton and that, if she did not find it in ten seconds, he
    would snap her neck. He then stepped on H.B.’s neck and counted down from ten. H.B.
    3
    thought that she was dying and asked Blocker to take her to a hospital, and he responded,
    “You don’t seem to understand what’s going on here.” After many hours, Blocker asked
    H.B. why they got married. When H.B. said that she did not know, Blocker punched her in
    the nose, breaking it and causing it to bleed profusely.
    Around sunrise, Blocker saw that one of H.B.’s eyes was swollen shut and tried to
    pry it open, causing H.B. great pain. Blocker then said, “I can’t believe what I did. I’m so
    sorry,” and told H.B. that he would drive her to a hospital. After stopping for gas, Blocker
    took H.B. to a Shakopee hospital and left her there. H.B. told hospital staff that Blocker
    had caused her injuries. H.B.’s scalp was split open in two places, requiring two sets of
    staples. Her right eye was swollen shut and she had two cuts between her eyes and one
    under her right eye that required stitches. Her tongue and lips were swollen and she had no
    feeling in her tongue. Her nose was broken in two places, and she had a ring-shaped bruise
    from the cord on her neck. Within a few days, H.B. experienced extreme neck, shoulder,
    and upper back pain. Her throat was sore and she could not eat solid foods for more than
    two weeks. The knuckle on her right index finger was smashed and pushed back and her
    left index finger was shattered. H.B. also had an abrasion on one of her knees.
    When discharged from the hospital, H.B. was unable to walk and was almost too
    dizzy to sit in the wheelchair. She stayed at a friend’s house for a few days because she did
    not want her children to see her with a black eye and blood on her face and in her hair that
    the hospital was unable to remove. Clumps of her hair fell out when she washed it. At
    home, H.B. needed help caring for herself, including feeding. She had frequent headaches
    and fevers for six to eight weeks and was unable to return to work until mid-May 2014. At
    4
    the time of Blocker’s trial, H.B. still experienced headaches and memory problems, the tip
    of her tongue was still numb, and the shape of H.B.’s right eye and her tear duct function
    were changed. The assault also left her with a scar between her eyebrows. Her right
    knuckle is permanently pushed back and her left index finger doesn’t bend on its own—it
    sticks out when she make a fist. H.B. is left handed and has difficulty holding a pen.
    Blocker had a long history of violent and abusive behavior toward H.B. during their
    ten-year marriage. Blocker usually assaulted H.B. at night when they were alone in their
    bedroom, frequently used strangulation to hurt her, and kept a baton by the bed, often
    displaying it during arguments.
    A jury convicted Blocker of first-degree assault (great bodily harm), two counts of
    second-degree assault (dangerous weapon), third-degree assault (substantial bodily harm),
    kidnapping to facilitate felony or flight, and domestic assault by strangulation. The jury
    also found that H.B. suffered great bodily harm during the course of the kidnapping.
    Respondent State of Minnesota moved for an upward sentencing departure, and the district
    court submitted a special verdict form to the jury with ten questions to find the existence
    of aggravating facts. The jury found that eight aggravating facts existed.
    The district court concluded that the aggravating facts found by the jury constituted
    particular cruelty, explaining that there were “severe, substantial and compelling
    aggravating factors in this case,” and that “in particular with the kidnapping . . . the facts
    found by the jury constitute particular cruelty. And those factors are severe. They’re
    beyond anything this court has ever seen in a domestic assault.” The court opined that,
    “This case is extreme in just about every nature. The torture that [H.B.] went through both
    5
    physically and mentally was so horrendous.” The district court sentenced Blocker to
    concurrent sentences of 132 months’ imprisonment for first-degree assault, 54 months’
    imprisonment for second-degree assault, 32 months’ imprisonment for domestic assault by
    strangulation, and the statutory maximum of 480 months’ imprisonment for kidnapping.
    This appeal follows.
    DECISION
    I.
    Blocker concedes that H.B. suffered great bodily harm but argues the evidence is
    insufficient to prove that he inflicted the great bodily harm during the course of the
    kidnapping. Blocker argues that he inflicted great bodily harm on H.B. before she entered
    his truck and that the kidnapping did not occur until after H.B. entered his truck.
    Great bodily harm during kidnapping
    When kidnapping occurred
    Kidnapping requires (1) confinement or removal of another person from one place
    to another, (2) without that person’s consent, and (3) for one of four enumerated purposes,
    including to commit great bodily harm or terrorize the victim. 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.25
    , subd.
    1 (2012). Confinement means, “The act of imprisoning or restraining someone; the quality,
    state, or condition of being imprisoned or restrained.” Black’s Law Dictionary 362 (10th
    ed. 2014). “[C]onfinement or removal must be criminally significant in the sense of being
    more than merely incidental to the underlying crime, in order to justify a separate criminal
    sentence.” State v. Earl, 
    702 N.W.2d 711
    , 722 (Minn. 2005) (quotation omitted). “In
    Minnesota, there is no requirement that the person be detained for a ‘substantial’ period of
    6
    time or transported a ‘substantial’ distance.” State v. Budreau, 
    641 N.W.2d 919
    , 929 (Minn.
    2002).
    A court may sentence a defendant for a kidnapping conviction in one of two ways
    under 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.25
    , subd. 2 (2012). “[I]f the victim is released in a safe place
    without great bodily harm” imprisonment is limited to 20 years. 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.25
    , subd.
    2(1) (emphasis added). “[I]f the victim is not released in a safe place, or if the victim suffers
    great bodily harm during the course of the kidnapping” a court may sentence a defendant
    for kidnapping to 40 years of imprisonment. 
    Id.,
     subd. 2(2) (emphasis added). Great bodily
    harm is “bodily injury which creates a high probability of death, or which causes serious
    permanent disfigurement, or which causes a permanent or protracted loss or impairment of
    the function of any bodily member or organ or other serious bodily harm.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.02
    , subd. 8 (2012).
    Relying on State v. Smith, Blocker argues that any confinement of H.B. before she
    entered the truck was merely incidental to his assault of her and therefore not criminally
    significant. 
    669 N.W.2d 19
    , 32 (Minn. 2003), overruled on other grounds by State v. Leake,
    
    699 N.W.2d 312
     (Minn. 2005). In Smith, the court held that momentarily blocking a
    doorway during an assault leading to a murder that was already underway was not
    criminally significant. 
    Id. at 23, 32
    . But the facts in Smith are easily distinguished from the
    facts in this case, which are more like the facts in State v. Earl.
    In Earl, the supreme court held that although removing a family to the kitchen and
    binding the victims with electrical tape while the house was burglarized “may have been
    necessary to commit the burglary, it was not merely incidental” to the burglary but was
    7
    “purposeful behavior in its own right . . . distinct from the burglary.” 702 N.W.2d at 723.
    We similarly conclude that Blocker’s confinement of H.B. during his assault outside his
    truck was criminally significant in its own right and distinct from the assault.          He
    approached H.B. and her friends and stated that he wanted to speak to H.B. alone, hugged
    her and pulled on her, restraining her even after H.B. asked him to leave her alone. He
    restrained H.B. because she did not wish to be with him, and then he assaulted her. When
    viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the record evidence supports a reasonable
    jury’s finding that H.B.’s confinement or removal was criminally significant during the
    assault outside the truck. We conclude that Blocker has not met his heavy burden of proving
    that no jury could reasonably find beyond a reasonable doubt that his kidnapping of H.B.
    occurred when he restrained her against her will before she entered the truck.
    Sufficiency of great-bodily-harm evidence while in truck
    In addition to arguing that he did not kidnap H.B. until she entered his truck, Blocker
    argues that the evidence is insufficient to prove that he inflicted great bodily harm on H.B.
    while she was in the truck—during Blocker’s acknowledged kidnapping. And Blocker
    asserts that we should apply a circumstantial-evidence standard to our review of the
    evidence, arguing that no direct evidence proves the infliction of great bodily harm while
    H.B. was in the truck. We disagree.
    “Direct evidence is [e]vidence that is based on personal knowledge or observation
    and that, if true, proves a fact without inference or presumption.” Bernhardt v. State, 
    684 N.W.2d 465
    , 477 n.11 (Minn. 2004) (quotations omitted). H.B.’s testimony about
    Blocker’s assault of her while she was held in his truck against her will and her resulting
    8
    injuries was direct evidence of the great bodily harm that she sustained in the truck. See
    State v. Williams, 
    337 N.W.2d 387
    , 389 (Minn. 1983) (noting that the testimony of a person
    who perceived a fact through her senses or physical evidence of the fact itself is direct
    evidence); see also State v. Horst, 
    880 N.W.2d 24
    , 40 (Minn. 2016) (observing that state
    proved each of disputed elements through witness testimony, which is direct evidence
    when it reflects witnesses’ personal observations and allows jury to find defendant guilty
    without having to draw any inferences).
    “Under the traditional standard, [appellate courts] limit [their] review to a
    painstaking analysis of the record to determine whether the evidence, when viewed in a
    light most favorable to the conviction, was sufficient to permit the jurors to reach the
    verdict which they did.” Horst, 880 N.W.2d at 40 (quotation omitted). Appellate courts
    “assum[e] that the fact-finder disbelieved any evidence that conflicted with the verdict.”
    State v. Barshaw, 
    879 N.W.2d 356
    , 363 (Minn. 2016). Appellate courts will not disturb a
    jury verdict “if the jury, acting with due regard for the presumption of innocence and for
    the necessity of overcoming it by proof beyond a reasonable doubt, could reasonably
    conclude [the] defendant was proven guilty of the offense charged.” Bernhardt, 684
    N.W.2d at 476–77. “A defendant bears a heavy burden to overturn a jury verdict.” State v.
    Vick, 
    632 N.W.2d 676
    , 690 (Minn. 2001).
    During Blocker’s kidnapping of H.B. in the truck, he forced a pill bottle down
    H.B.’s throat so that she could not breathe; struck her repeatedly in the face; attempted to
    strangle her with a cable or cord and his hands; and broke her nose. We conclude that the
    jury could reasonably find that H.B. suffered a high probability of death during the
    9
    kidnapping and assault by Blocker, particularly in her weakened state after the assault
    outside the truck.
    The jury could reasonably conclude that great bodily harm occurred during the
    course of the kidnapping in the truck if the jury found that H.B. suffered a high probability
    of death, serious permanent disfigurement, permanent or protracted loss or impairment of
    any bodily member, or other serious bodily harm while in the truck. See 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.02
    , subd. 8. Under State v. Dye, we must “focus on the injury to the victim rather
    than the actions of the assailant.” 
    871 N.W.2d 916
    , 922 (Minn. App. 2015). When viewed
    in a light most favorable to the conviction, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to
    permit the jury to reasonably conclude that H.B. suffered great bodily harm during the
    kidnapping in the truck.
    II.
    The state gave Blocker notice of an intent to seek an aggravated sentence on
    March 28, 2014, based on particular cruelty. See Minn. Sent. Guidelines 2.D.3.b.(2)
    (2014). At a hearing to determine if there were aggravating facts to support an upward
    departure, the district court submitted ten questions to the jury. “[A]ny fact (other than a
    prior conviction) which is necessary to support a sentence exceeding the maximum
    authorized by the facts established by a . . . guilty verdict must be admitted by the
    defendant or proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Rourke, 
    773 N.W.2d 913
    , 919 (Minn. 2009) (citing Blakely v. Washington, 
    542 U.S. 296
    , 301, 303–04, 
    124 S. Ct. 2531
    , 2537 (2004)). Any aggravating factor can be used as the basis for an upward
    sentencing departure. State v. Fleming, 
    883 N.W.2d 790
    , 797 (Minn. 2016). “[T]he
    10
    Minnesota Rules of Evidence apply in jury sentencing trials.” State v. Rodriguez, 
    754 N.W.2d 672
    , 684 (Minn. 2008). We conduct the same review of the sufficiency of the
    evidence in a jury sentencing trial as we do in any other criminal trial. We undertake a
    painstaking review of the record to determine whether a fact-finder could reasonably find
    the existence of an aggravating fact submitted to the fact-finder for its consideration. See
    Barshaw, 879 N.W.2d at 362. We review “the evidence presented in the light most
    favorable to the verdict, and assum[e] that the fact-finder disbelieved any evidence that
    conflicted with the verdict.” Id. at 363. “A defendant bears a heavy burden to overturn a
    jury verdict.” Vick, 632 N.W.2d at 690. We will not disturb the jury’s verdict if the jury,
    acting with due regard for the requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, could
    reasonably find the existence of the aggravating fact. See Bernhardt, 684 N.W.2d at 476–
    77.
    Here, the jury found that the following eight aggravating facts were proved beyond
    a reasonable doubt:
    (1) Blocker grabbed H.B.’s hair after he caused an injury to her
    head with the [baton]; (2) Blocker used a pill bottle on [H.B.]
    as a form of strangulation; (3) Blocker counted down from ten
    while H.B. looked for the [baton]; (4) Blocker randomly struck
    H.B. as his anger increased and decreased; (5) H.B.’s belief
    that she would die for nearly six hours; (6) H.B. was held in an
    isolated location for nearly six hours; (7) Blocker did not let
    H.B. leave the truck to urinate, forcing her to urinate on herself;
    (8) Blocker made H.B. lie/sit on the floor of the truck in her
    own blood and wet clothing for almost six hours.
    11
    Blocker attempts to assign error to the district court for its reliance on these aggravating
    facts on various bases, including insufficiency of the evidence. We will attempt to address
    Blocker’s arguments.
    (1) Blocker grabbed H.B.’s hair after he injured her head with the [baton]
    Blocker concedes that the state proved this fact but argues that the conduct did not
    happen in the course of the kidnapping because it took place before H.B. was confined in
    the truck. Blocker’s argument is irrelevant to the jury’s finding about the existence of this
    aggravating fact. Even if it is somehow relevant, we conclude that the evidence was
    sufficient for the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Blocker grabbed H.B.’s hair
    during the course of the kidnapping, whether that occurred before H.B. got into Blocker’s
    truck, after she got into Blocker’s truck, or both.
    (2) Blocker used a pill bottle on [H.B.] as a form of strangulation
    Relying on State v. Spaeth, Blocker argues that this fact cannot support a departure
    on kidnapping because Blocker was charged and convicted of domestic assault by
    strangulation. 
    552 N.W.2d 187
    , 196 (Minn. 1996). We disagree. In State v. Edwards, the
    supreme court rejected this argument based on Spaeth by clarifying that “Spaeth do[es] not
    prohibit the district court from using ‘overlapping’ facts to depart upward when a defendant
    is convicted of multiple offenses arising out of a single behavioral incident, if those facts
    show that the defendant committed the offense being sentenced in a particularly serious
    way.” 
    774 N.W.2d 596
    , 604 (Minn. 2009). And in State v. Fleming, the supreme court
    further clarified that any aggravating factor can be used as the basis for an upward
    sentencing departure, as follows:
    12
    We conclude that under 
    Minn. Stat. § 244.10
    , subd. 5a(b), an
    aggravating factor is conduct that renders the sentenced
    offense significantly more serious than typically involved in
    the commission of the sentenced offense. The statute allows a
    court to base an upward sentencing departure on any
    aggravating factor, even if the aggravating factor relates, or
    arises in connection with another offense committed during the
    same course of conduct.
    883 N.W.2d at 797. Blocker’s argument therefore fails.
    (3) Blocker counted down from ten while H.B. looked for the [baton]; (4) Blocker
    randomly struck H.B. as his anger increased and decreased; and (5) H.B.’s belief that she
    would die for nearly six hours
    Blocker challenges these facts on the basis that they “significantly overlap.” He
    concedes that he counted down from ten while making her look for the baton, that he struck
    her, and that H.B. feared for her life, but argues that these facts are not distinct facts because
    they all relate to H.B.’s fear. Blocker cites no authority to support his argument. Because
    Fleming clearly allows a court to base an upward departure on any aggravating factor, even
    if it arises in connection with another offense committed during the same course of conduct,
    Blocker’s argument fails. Id.
    (6) H.B. was held in an isolated location for nearly six hours
    Relying on State v. Strommen, Blocker argues that H.B. was not kept in an isolated
    location because she testified that she could see a road, headlights through the trees, and a
    pole barn with a business sign on it. 
    411 N.W.2d 540
     (Minn. App. 1987), review denied
    (Minn. Oct. 28, 1987). In Strommen, the victim was left naked in a ditch by a cornfield
    after a kidnapping and sexual assault. 
    Id. at 544
    . But Blocker’s reliance on Strommen is
    misguided because the Strommen court did not discuss the meaning of “an isolated
    13
    location,” it merely mentioned where the victim was left at the conclusion of the
    kidnapping. Here, the facts in the record are sufficient for a jury to find that H.B. was in an
    isolated location because the truck was parked in a long driveway that led to a pole barn
    and woods, H.B. could not escape and get to the road, and police were unable to find her.
    Moreover, H.B. clearly was isolated in the truck.1
    We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the jury’s finding that all
    eight aggravating facts were proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
    III.
    Blocker argues that the district court abused its discretion by using a criminal-
    history score of five to calculate his presumptive guidelines sentence for kidnapping.
    “Interpretation of the sentencing guidelines is a legal question that [this court] review[s] de
    novo.” State v. Campbell, 
    814 N.W.2d 1
    , 6 (Minn. 2012). “We review the district court’s
    determination of a defendant’s criminal-history score for an abuse of discretion.” State v.
    Drljic, 
    876 N.W.2d 350
    , 353 (Minn. App. 2016) (citing State v. Stillday, 
    646 N.W.2d 557
    ,
    561 (Minn. App. 2002), review denied (Minn. Aug. 20, 2002)). Blocker argues that the
    court should have used a criminal-history score of three. The state concedes that the district
    court erred by using Blocker’s first-degree-assault conviction to increase his criminal-
    history score. We agree.
    1
    Blocker also argues in error that the jury found that the state had proved that Blocker
    grabbed H.B.’s hand and acted as if he was going to rip each nail off of her hands. But the
    jury did not find that this fact was proved beyond a reasonable doubt and checked “no” for
    that question on the special verdict form, so it is not necessary to address his argument on
    this fact.
    14
    The 2014 Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines provide that:
    When multiple current convictions arise from a single course
    of conduct and multiple sentences are imposed on the same day
    under Minn. Stats. §§ 152.137, 609.585, or 609.251, the
    conviction and sentence for the “earlier” offense does not
    increase the criminal history score for the “later” offense.
    Minn. Sent. Guidelines 2.B.1.e.(1) (2014). The district court calculated Blocker’s criminal-
    history score as a five based upon two points for the first-degree-great-bodily-harm-assault
    conviction (victim H.B.) and one and one-half points based on the second-degree-
    dangerous-weapon-assault conviction (victim M.G.). The court erred by including the first-
    degree-great-bodily-harm-assault conviction (victim H.B.) to increase Blocker’s criminal-
    history score for the kidnapping conviction because the Sentencing Guidelines prohibit
    using “the conviction and sentence for the earlier offense [to] increase the criminal history
    score for the later offense.”2 Id. (quotations omitted). We therefore remand to the district
    court for a correction of Blocker’s criminal-history score and recalculation of his
    presumptive guidelines sentence for kidnapping.
    IV.
    Blocker argues that the district court abused its discretion by sentencing him to 480
    months, the statutory maximum sentence for kidnapping. The district court sentenced
    Blocker to the statutory maximum of 480 months, after determining his presumptive
    guidelines sentence to be 125–175 months based upon a criminal-history score of five and
    2
    Blocker does not challenge the district court’s use of the second-degree-dangerous-
    weapon-assault conviction related to a separate victim, M.G., to increase his criminal-
    history score.
    15
    an offense severity level of nine. The court therefore imposed an upward durational
    departure that is approximately 2.74 times the presumptive sentence. The presumptive
    sentence for a criminal-history score of three with a severity level of nine is 104–146
    months, which makes the departure approximately 3.28 times the presumptive sentence, a
    more than triple upward departure. Minn. Sent. Guidelines 4.A (2014). Blocker concedes
    that the district court has grounds to depart from the presumptive guidelines sentence but
    argues that the aggravating factors do not support a finding of severe aggravating
    circumstances necessary to support a departure of more than double the presumptive
    sentence.
    “Generally, [appellate courts] review an upward departure from the presumptive
    guidelines sentence for an abuse of discretion.” Tucker v. State, 
    799 N.W.2d 583
    , 585−86
    (Minn. 2011). “An upward departure will be reversed if the sentencing court’s articulated
    reasons for the departure are improper or inadequate and the evidence in the record is
    insufficient to justify the departure. 
    Id. at 586
     (quotation omitted). “[F]or the district court
    to impose a greater-than-double-durational sentence, there must be severe aggravating
    factors.” State v. Stanke, 
    764 N.W.2d 824
    , 828 (Minn. 2009). “[I]n such cases the only
    absolute limit on duration is the maximum provided in the statute defining the offense.”
    State v. Shattuck, 
    704 N.W.2d 131
    , 140 (Minn. 2005). “There remains ‘no easy-to-apply
    test’ of severity” and “the inquiry [into severity] is unstructured.” Dillon v. State, 
    781 N.W.2d 588
    , 597 (Minn. App. 2010), review denied (Minn. July 20, 2010). The outcome
    of the inquiry can depend on many factors, including,
    16
    the extent of a victim’s vulnerability, the shocking nature of a
    victim’s degradation, the permanence of the victim’s injury,
    the number of separate attacks on the same victim, the
    concealment of a victim’s body, the presence of multiple
    aggravating factors, or the exposure of the victim to an
    incurable disease.
    
    Id.
     But “there is no clear line that marks the boundary between ‘aggravating circumstances’
    justifying a double departure and ‘severe aggravating circumstances’ justifying a greater
    than double departure.” State v. Norton, 
    328 N.W.2d 142
    , 146 (Minn. 1982). In light of our
    remand for a redetermination of Blocker’s criminal-history score, we also remand for the
    district court to reconsider Blocker’s sentence for his kidnapping conviction.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    17