Wе must decide, in this car-chase criminal appeal, whether double-counting prevents a district judge from enhancing a defendant’s sentence for “endangering members of the public” and separately for endangering a person he knew to be a law enforcement officer.
I
On October 19, 1997, Carlos Hernandez-Sandoval (“Hernandez”) drove a pickup truck laden with 729.95 kilograms of marijuana into the United States from Mexico via the southbound lanes of the port of entry on Interstate 5. A California Highway Patrol (“CHP”) officer traveling south on that freeway turned on his emergency lights upon noting that Hernandez was driving in the wrong direction. Hernandez responded by turning off thе headlamps of his truck and crossing the median to the northbound lanes, nearly causing an accident with a northbound motorist. At this point, the patrol officer activated his siren and called for back-up in his pursuit of Hernandez. Another CHP officer responded to the call, and both officers pursued Hernandez as he exited the freeway and sped through commercial and residential areas of Imperial Beach, California, at rates exceeding 80 miles per hour.
Eventually, Hernandez stopped his truck at an intersection in the town. One CHP officer then stopped his car approximately 25 feet behind Hernandez’s truck, *1117 and the other officer stopped his car to the left and approximately 20 feet in front of Hernandez’s truck. While the officers’ cars were stopped, Hernandez suddenly accelerated his pickup in reverse and rammed the patrol car behind him. Hernandez then changed gears and drove forward and to the left, ramming into the other рatrol car before speeding away. As a result of the impact of Hernandez’s truck against his car, one of the officers complained of pain in his neck, lower back, and left hand and was subsequently transported to a hospital for treatment.
Hernandez, still pursued by the CHP officers whose vehicles he had just rammed, continued to drive through residential and commercial areas of Imperial Beach at speeds reaching approximately 60 miles per hour. After temporarily losing control of his vehicle, Hernandez continued to evade arrest by entering and exiting a major freeway, driving along a surface street in the wrong direction for approximately three blocks, and entering another freeway. When Hernandez attempted a u-turn on that freeway, law enforcement officers rammed his truck with their vehicles and thereby prevented his continued flight.
Hernandez ultimately pled guilty to the importation of marijuana and conspiracy to import marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 952, 960, 963 (1994). After a hearing, the district court sentenced Hernandez to eighty-four months in prison. That sentence included a two-level upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2 for “placing the motoring public and pedestrians at great risk of bodily injury” and a three-level upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3A1.2(b) for “the separate acts of creating a substantial risk of injury to the [CHP] officers.”
Hernandez appeals his sentence.
II
Hernandez argues that the district court’s application of both a three-level upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3A1.2(b) 1 and a two-level upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2 2 constituted impermissible “double-counting” of his offenses in violation of Application Note 1 to U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2. 3 That note provides that courts should “not apply [the enhancement for recklessly endangеring ‘another person’ during flight] where ... another adjustment in Chapter Three[ ] results in an equivalent or greater increase in offense level solely on the basis of the same conduct.”
Neither party disputes the fact that the upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3A1.2(b) for assault on a law enforcement officer is an “adjustment in Chapter Three” or thаt the adjustment results in something other than “an equivalent or greater increase in offense level” than the adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2 for endangering “another person.” Hence, the sole question before us is “whether ‘the same conduct’ was the sole basis for enhancing [the] defendant’s sentence under both § 3C1.2 and § 3A1.2(b).”
United
*1118
States v. Hayes,
In applying both upward adjustments, the district court expressly found that Hernandez’s assaults on known law enforcement officers were “separate acts” from his endangerment of the public, “even though there was only one chase.” The court took pains to comment that “at one point, the truck actually came to a stop[,] [a]nd, rather than getting out of the truck, the defendant ... ran into the offi-eer[s’] cars.” Hernandez contends, however, that the district court ignored relevant case law in characterizing his reckless driving and his ramming of the CHP officers’ patrol cars as “separate acts.” Such a characterization, he argues, is erroneous because it amounts to “an artificial and unrealistic division of a single uninterrupted course of conduct into separate events.”
United States v. Beckner,
We review the district court’s interpretation and application of the Sentencing Guidelines de novo.
See United States v. Bailey,
Ill
Hernandez contends quite simply that the acts providing the basis for the district court’s enhancements of his sentence under U.S.S.G. §§ 3A1.2(b) and 3C1.2 were, in all relevant respects, the “same conduct.”
Our review of the case law persuades us that, where, as here, the defendant could have committed the act that endangered another person or the public at large without committing the act that constituted an assault on someone whom the defendant reasonably knew to be a law enforcement officer, the two acts are not the “same conduct.” We recognize that this requires a fact-sensitive evaluation to determine where one act performed by the defendant ends and the next begins; in some situations, drawing such a bright line may bе hopelessly “artificial and unrealistic.” This case presents no such difficulty, however, for here the defendant’s actions plainly evinced a discrete and specific intent to assault the CHP officers precisely because they were CHP officers and he hoped to deter their continued pursuit of him. The case law suggests that the defendant’s betrayal of a specific intent to assault law enforcement officers because they are law enforcement officers provides sufficient grounds for demarcating the relevant behavior as a discrete act for purposes of “same conduct” analysis. As the district court found in this сase, Hernandez stopped his truck, changed gears, and aimed his vehicle at the officer’s patrol car stopped more than eight yards behind him; he then stopped, changed gears again, and rammed the other officer’s car fourteen yards ahead of him before speeding off. These actions, cabinеd by a specific intent to hobble his pursuers, were clearly “separate conduct” whose commission was wholly irrelevant to the court’s finding that Hernandez had recklessly endangered the general public by leading the police on a high-speed car chase through the streets and freeways of greater San Diegо.
The same logic implicitly undergirded our decision in
United States v. Alexander,
[T]he reckless endangerment provision [of U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2] applied not only bеcause shots were fired during the at *1119 tempted getaway, but also because of the risk of injury to civilians caused by the high-speed chase and by the defendants’ serious violations of other traffic laws. There was no double counting.
Hernandez makes much of the fact that, unlike the defendant in
Alexander,
Hernandez endangered people only by driving recklessly. This argument does not address either of the considerations that, in our view, combine in this case to establish that the acts on which the enhancements under sеctions 3A1.2(b) and 3C1.2 are based are not the “same conduct.” The means by which the defendant endangers law enforcement officers and private individuals is a tangential matter that is relevant only insofar as it informs the issue of whether the defendant could have refrained from the acts endangering the law enforcement officers and nevertheless committed the acts that endangered the private individuals. Put another way, the fact that two persons are endangered by the same
type
of conduct does not imply that they were endangered by precisely the “same conduct.” Hence, upward adjustments both for assaulting law enforcement officers and for recklessly endangering the public have been upheld even when both acts directly involved the reckless use of the same vehicle.
See United States v. Miner,
Hernandez relies on two cases,
United States v. Hayes,
In the first case,
Hayes,
law enforcement officers had stopped their cars on both sides of the defendant’s vehicle and commanded the defendant to exit.
See
CabraL-Castillo
is similarly distinguishable from the instant case. In
CabraL-Castillo
the defendant was carrying a large amount of cocaine when he realized that he was under surveillance.
See
IV
In sum, thе case law does not support Hernandez’s assertion that the district court erred in finding that the acts providing the basis for the enhancements of his sentence under U.S.S.6. §§ 3A1.2(b) and 3C1.2 were not the “same conduct.” Hernandez has not shown, nor could he show, either that the acts forming the basis for the enhancements were not independent or, more fundamentally, that the act that the court characterized as endangering law enforcement officers did not evince a discrete and specific intent to deter or impede the officers’ pursuit and thus was not necessarily a distinct act at all. Absent such a showing, we conclude that there were sufficiеnt grounds for the district court to find that Hernandez’s actions did not constitute the same conduct.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. U.S.S.G. § 3A1.2(b) (1997) provides for a three-level enhancement, if:
during the course of the offense or immediate flight therefrom, the defendant or a person for whose conduct the defendant is otherwise accountable, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that a person was a law enforcement or corrections officer, assaulted such officer in a manner creating a substantial risk of serious bodily injury.
. U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2 (1997) provides:
If the defendant recklessly created a substantial risk of death or serious bodily injury to another person in the course of fleeing from a law enforcement officer, increase by 2 levels.
.In general, the application notes are binding on the courts in their construction of the Sentencing Guidelines.
See Stinson v. United States,
