Barbara Ann Williams appeals her sentence for bank robbery. After a careful examination of her arguments, we affirm.
I. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
On April 13, 1990, Williams entered the Eagle National Bank and presented a teller with a note which stated that unless the teller gave Williams all the money in the teller’s drawer the teller would be shot. The teller gave Williams the money; however, the bank’s security guard immediately apprehended Williams while she was trying to leave. One week later, a federal grand jury indicted Williams for violating the federal bank robbery statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2113(a) (West Supp.1991). Based on evidence that Williams was a “crack” addict, the district court ordered that Williams undergo treatment pending trial. On May 16, 1990, Williams entered the Spectrum residential drug rehabilitation program. Two and one-half months later, on August 1, 1990, Williams pled guilty to the bank robbery charge. On October 4, 1990, Williams, nearing the end of her fifth month at Spectrum, moved for a downward departure from the applicable sentencing guideline range on the ground that she had made extraordinary progress while in treatment for her addiction.
At the sentencing hearing on October 15, 1990, a full five months after her admission *708 into the Spectrum program, Williams’s primary drug treatment counsellor, Mr. Brandon Grogan, testified on behalf of Williams. Grogan testified that, although Williams presented a “really tough case,” she had done “exceptionally well” in the program. Grogan also testified that Williams had become a “coordinator,” which he described as “one of the highest offices at Spectrum, ... kind of a top honorary trustee.” Apparently in order to recognize Williams’s rehabilitation, the government recommended a two-level reduction in the offense level pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 8El.l(a) for acceptance of responsibility, which the district court adopted. The district court refused, however, to make a downward departure from the applicable guideline range of 41 to 51 months’ incarceration, ruling that it had no discretion to make a downward departure for recovery from drug addiction. The district court did, however, sentence Williams to the minimum 41 months’ incarceration explicitly because of her progress at Spectrum. The district court also recommended that Williams’s incarceration be served at a facility with a drug rehabilitation program and imposed three years of post-incarceration supervised release, which was conditioned on her participation in a drug treatment program, to begin after her term of incarceration.
II. ANALYSIS
Williams contends that the district court erred in ruling that it had no discretion to make a downward departure on the basis of progress toward recovery from drug addiction. A challenge to a district court’s ruling that it had no authority to depart downward “presents a cognizable claim on appeal.”
United States v. Fossett,
Normally, district courts must impose sentences within the range prescribed by the Sentencing Guidelines. However, the district court would have possessed discretion to make a downward departure in this case if recovery from drug addiction was a factor “of a kind, or to a degree not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the guidelines that should result in a sentence different from that described.” 18 U.S.C.A. § 3553(b) (West Supp.1991); U.S.S.G. § 5K2.0. Moreover, in determining if the Commission adequately considered recovery from drug addiction, this Court can “consider only the sentencing guidelines, policy statements, and official commentary of the Sentencing Commission.” 18 U.S.C.A. § 3553(b).
This issue is one of first impression in this Circuit; however, it has been decided by four other Circuit Courts of Appeals.
1
The First Circuit has held that district courts possess discretion to depart downward on the basis of post-arrest, pre-sen-tence recovery from addiction, but only in extraordinary cases.
United States v. Sklar,
In
Sklar,
the First Circuit initially stated the proposition that “Congress largely re
*709
jected rehabilitation as a direct goal of criminal sentencing under the guidelines.”
2
Thus, on facts quite similar to those in the case at bar,
4
the First Circuit declined to authorize a downward departure. The First Circuit’s reasoning in
Sklar
is persuasive, and the facts in
Sklar
are almost exactly on all fours with the case
sub judi-ce.
If the
Sklar
court had not failed to analyze U.S.S.G. § 5H1.4, an important and relevant source of law, we would be inclined to adopt the First Circuit’s reasoning in deciding the case at bar. As has already been noted, however, three other circuits have espoused a rule contrary to the one announced in
Sklar.
These circuits, the Third, the Fourth, and the Ninth, have held that district courts possess no discretion whatsoever to make a downward departure on the basis of a recovery from addiction. In other words, they have adopted a rule that recovery from drug addiction is a factor of a kind that the Sentencing Commission adequately considered in framing the guidelines regardless of the degree to which it is present in any given case. Ironically, several of the reasons relied upon by the First Circuit in fashioning the rule in
Sklar
have also been cited for support in some of the cases espousing the majority rule.
Martin,
The majority rule purportedly finds further support from U.S.S.G. § 5H1.4, the one relevant source of law overlooked by the First Circuit in Sklar. In pertinent part, section 5H1.4 provided at the time of Williams’s criminal conduct:
Drug dependence ... is not a reason for imposing a sentence below the guidelines. Substance abuse is highly correlated to an increased propensity to commit crime. Due to this increased risk, it is highly recommended that a defendant who is incarcerated also be sentenced to supervised release with a requirement that the defendant participate in an appropriate substance abuse program.
U.S.S.G. § 5H1.4.
Relying on only the first sentence of the quoted passage, the Third Circuit held that recovery from drug dependence “is not a proper basis for a downward departure.”
Pharr,
Nevertheless, based on the remainder of the language quoted from section 5H1.4, the Ninth Circuit held that “it is clearly the Commission’s intent that rehabilitation from drug abuse be factored into post-sentencing supervised release and not be recognized as a ground for departure.”
Martin,
We therefore agree with the First Circuit, notwithstanding the government’s arguments based on section 5H1.4, that post-arrest, pre-sentence recovery from addiction is a mitigating factor of a kind that the Commission adequately considered in fashioning the two-level reduction in offense level for acceptance of responsibility in section 3E1.1; nevertheless, a truly extraordinary post-arrest, pre-sentence recovery may exceed the degree of recovery contemplated in section 3E1.1 and there
*711
fore justify a downward departure. In the case
sub judice,
however, we need not define the precise contours of a recovery that would merit a downward departure. Suffice it to say that Williams’s “exceptional” progress toward partial recovery during five months in a court-ordered treatment program in which she earned a position of trust fails to take her case out of the heartland.
7
See Sklar,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On a related issue the Sixth Circuit has held that district courts possess discretion to depart downward on the basis of
pre-arrest
recovery from drug addiction.
United States v. Maddalena,
. This Court substantially agrees with this proposition.
See United States v. Scroggins,
. The court continued:
Some degree of [post-arrest and] pre-sentence rehabilitation is usually to be expected from a penitent defendant, or one who genuinely shoulders responsibility, or even from one who simply wants to put his best foot forward at sentencing, hopeful of lightening the load.... Yet such predictable reactions, while laudable, fall well shy of what we believe is necessary to take cases out of the heartland. It is only the occasional instance, where time and circumstances permit and the accused takes full advantage of both, that will produce rehabilitation so dramatic as to cross the boundary. Thus, we recognize that departures will always remain — as well they should — "the exception, not the rule."
Id. at 116-17 (citation omitted).
.The pretrial release agreement in Sklar required the defendant to complete a detoxification program, to abstain from drug use, and to obtain employment. Id. at 117. Furthermore, Williams’s argument is even weaker than Sklar’s because, unlike Sklar, Williams produced no evidence that she actually completed the program at Spectrum.
. This is because one may not benefit from a downward departure for recovery if one has not already suffered from drug dependence.
. The government also raises an argument made in the Martin case based on equality:
[T]o permit departure for post-arrest drug rehabilitation would provide a benefit to defendants with a drug problem that is unavailable to defendants without one.... This would unduly credit those defendants who comply with one type of condition (to stay drug free), to the detriment of similarly situated defendants who also comply with all conditions of their pretrial release but who have no drug problem to treat. To do so would thwart the congressional mandate that courts avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct. 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6).
Martin,
. We do, however, wish to make clear that we do not espouse a per se rule against downward departures on the basis of recoveries that are the product of court-ordered treatment. We merely hold that the degree of recovery achieved by Williams in a court-ordered treatment program is not unusual enough to merit a downward departure.
