We journey into the twilight zone, of the Sentencing Guidelines and explore the outer limits of the district court’s authority to depart downward on account of aberrant behavior.
I
Defendant Michael Thomas Colace committed at least twelve separate bank robberies over a two-month period.
1
He entered a plea to seven counts of armed robbery which, given his lack of criminal history, resulted in a sentencing guideline range of 87 to 108 months. The district court, however, found that Colace’s behavior was aberrant and departed downward to five years probation, community service and no time in custody. The government appealed and, in an unpublished memorandum, we noted that Colace was convicted of a Class B felony, and that under the “plain terms of 18 U.S.C. § 3561(a),” Class B felons must be sentenced to a term of imprisonment.
United States v. Colace,
On remand, the district court continued sentencing for some two-and-a-half years, all that time allowing Colace to remain at liberty. Colace eventually fled and a bench warrant was issued for his arrest. Eight months later, Colace was arrested entering the United States from Mexico and was finally brought before the district court for resentencing. The court still felt that Colace only merited probation:
I still believe that this is a case of aberrant behavior, and I do it on the basis that these were his first criminal convictions. He never harmed any of the tellers. He was under extreme pressure from losing his job, his wife and his children. He was not thinking clearly due to heavy drug use. I received numerous letters expressing shock at Mr. Colace’s behavior. He immediately returned to normal after being arrested and his track record certainly from at least upon his arrest and at least up until the time of this sentence has been exemplary.
Sentencing Tr., July 1, 1996, p. 8. Acknowledging there was, after all, a small blemish on defendant’s exemplary record, the district court exonerated the defendant: “I also feel that his flight [to Mexico] was due to, I think, pressures that were put on him by the Government’s position in the case from the very beginning.” Id. The district court again decided to depart downward and reinstated its earlier noncustodial sentence.
Two days later, Colace’s able lawyer, Guy C. Iversen, submitted Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. Pursuant to this document, which the district court signed, defendant was sentenced to six months in prison (time served) and five years probation, which worked out to be a nineteen level departure from the Sentencing Guidelines. The government again appeals.
II
We must first consider which sentence to review. The government insists *1231 that Colace’s second sentenee-the one described in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law-is invalid and irrelevant because the oral sentence pronounced in open court must prevail over a later written one. Co-lace admits he was sentenced in open court but argues that the written document entered a few days later was a sentence correction authorized by Fed.R.Crim.P. 35.
It is true that once a sentence is imposed, the district court may only modify it in very limited circumstances.
See United States v. Portin,
Citing
United States v. Hicks,
Ill
The Sentencing Guidelines allow district courts to depart from the suggested sentencing range in order to account for factors not adequately addressed within the Guidelines themselves. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(b). One such factor is a determination that the defendant’s behavior was aberrant. See United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines Manual, Ch.l, Part A, Introduction para. 4(d).
The district court here plummeted a dizzying nineteen levels below the floor of the applicable sentencing range based entirely on its determination that Colace’s behavior was aberrant. In justifying this massive departure, the court relied on a number of factors, such as Colace’s heavy drug use, marital problems, unemployment and lack of criminal record. The court also looked to the numerous letters it received expressing shock at Colace’s behavior and the (pre-flight) psychiatric report indicating that Colace was unlikely to repeat his criminal conduct. We have held that there is an “aberrant behavior spectrum” in determining when the aberrant behavior departure should apply.
United States v. Takai,
We have approved aberrant behavior departures when the criminal conduct in ques
*1232
tion lacked planning or reflection.
See id.
Colace, by contrast, had plenty of opportunity to reflect on his criminal conduct during the two months he flouted the law. He chose banks in different counties because, by his own admission, he was too well known in his home town, a decision that reflects planning and forethought. He did not withdraw from his criminal life-style until he was arrested. He committed the separate crime of fleeing probation and, again, did not cease his lawlessness until he was arrested eight months later. As we said in
United States v. Green,
A single episode of criminal conduct, normally a single crime, is another sign that an aberrant behavior departure may be warranted. Only very rarely do we permit aberrant behavior departures when the defendant committed more than one criminal act.
See Lam,
IV
Colace was first arrested in July 1992. More than five years, two appeals and a long visit to Mexico later, the time is long past when he should have begun serving the sentence the law requires. We therefore order as follows: (1) The sentence imposed by the district court is vacated. (2) This case is remanded for assignment to another district judge for resentencing consistent with our opinion. (3) The mandate shall issue forthwith.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Colace was initially indicted on-and confessed to-ten counts of bank robbery. He pled guilty to seven; charges were dropped on the other three. Two other bank robberies were never charged, but Colace conceded in his plea agreement that “the Court may consider these two unindicted counts of armed bank robbery in determining the sentence.”
See United States v. Saldana,
. Factors have included: (1) the singular nature of the criminal ac.t, (2) spontaneity and lack of planning, (3) the defendant’s criminal record, (4) psychological disorders the defendant was suffering from, (5) extreme pressures under which the defendant was operating, including the pressure of losing his job, (6) letters from friends and family expressing shock at the defendant's behavior, and (7) the defendant’s motivations for committing the crime.
See Fairless,
