On appeal from a conviction for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, Carpenter contends: [1] that the district court erred by denying his motion to suppress statements made after counsel was appointed for him in an unrelated state court case; [2] that the district court should have excluded all references to a “crack pipe” discovered next to the firearm in question; and [3] that the district court erred in making an upward departure of his sentence. We affirm.
I. THE CONFESSION
Arrested on an outstanding warrant for a burglary charge, Carpenter was placed in the back seat of a police cruiser and transported to the county jail. Later that day, an officer discovered a firearm and crack pipe on the back seat floorboard of the police cruiser and notified a supervisor. Carpenter, the only arrestee transported in the police cruiser on that day, was the prime suspect.
Two officers approached Carpenter in the jail to inquire about the firearm. According to Carpenter, the officers promised him that if he provided information about the firearm, they would try to get the burglary charges dropped. The officers testified that they never made such a promise. 1
Three days later, counsel was appointed for Carpenter in connection with the state burglary case, but the authorities did not notify his lawyer of the appointment for several days. In any event, Carpenter’s appointed attorney did not speak with him until weeks later. In the interim, Carpenter was visited twice by Claire Redman, an agent with the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms. Agent Redman had received a report from the police department which indicated that Carpenter qualified as an armed career criminal. During her first visit with Carpenter, Agent Redman identified herself as a federal agent and informed Carpenter that she was there to speak with him about the firearm discovered in the police cruiser. Agent Redman advised Carpenter of his Miranda rights and obtained a signed waiver of his rights. Carpenter then confessed that the gun and crack pipe belonged to him. He explained that while he was handcuffed in the back seat of the police cruiser, he maneuvered his cuffed hands around his waist to remove the gun and pipe, and then kicked them under the front seat of vehicle.
Four days later, Agent Redman visited Carpenter a second time. She had reduced Carpenter’s verbal statement to writing and asked him to make any corrections and sign it. He refused, claiming that he had fabricated the confession because the police officers had promised to get the burglary charges dropped if he confessed to possessing the firearm. He confirmed that the written statement prepared by Agent Redman accurately reflected what he had *739 told her four days earlier, but declined to sign, it because it simply was not true.
Carpenter was eventually charged in federal court with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He moved the district court to suppress the confession on the ground that the appointment of counsel in the state burglary ease precluded Agent Redman from interrogating him about the firearm. The district court denied the motion.
A.
The question presented in this appeal is whether the appointment of counsel under the
Sixth Amendment
in connection with the charged burglary offense constituted an invocation by Carpenter of his
Fifth Amendment
right to have counsel present during the custodial interrogation about the firearm. Guided by the Supreme Court’s decision in
McNeil v. Wisconsin,
— U.S. —,
In
McNeil
the Supreme Court held that the invocation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, which attaches only “after the initiation of adversary judicial criminal proceedings,” does not amount to a
per se
invocation of the Fifth Amendment right to have counsel present during custodial interrogations about uncharged offenses.
McNeil,
Unlike the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, which applies only to the charged offense, the Fifth Amendment right to the assistance of counsel during custodial interrogations is not offense-specific. Once a suspect indicates that he wants the assistance of counsel during a custodial interrogation—a constitutional right guaranteed to him by the Fifth (not Sixth) Amendment,
Miranda v. Arizona,
In
United States v. Cooper,
In the case at bar, as in Cooper,
although [Carpenter] accepted representation in state court on the specific charge of [burglary], he did not request that counsel represent him in unrelated future custodial interrogations. He did not even make a statement that can be reasonably construed as a desire for such representation. Neither did [he] request the presence of counsel when the federal agent advised him of his constitutional rights before commencing the custodial interrogation.
Cooper,
B.
McNeil
and
Cooper
leave open one avenue for challenging the admissibility of a confession when a defendant has invoked his Sixth Amendment right to counsel with respect to a charged offense but has not expressly invoked his Fifth Amendment right to have counsel present during custodial interrogations. If the charged and uncharged offenses are “so inextricably intertwined” or "extremely closely related,” then the Sixth Amendment (not the Fifth Amendment) prohibits interrogation about the uncharged offense.
See Cooper,
Contrary to Carpenter’s suggestion, however, we do not find the firearm of *741 fense and the state burglary offense to be “inextricably intertwined” or “extremely closely related.” The state burglary charge predated the federal firearm charge; a warrant was issued for his arrest on the burglary charge before the events leading up to the firearm charge. In fact, the only connection between the two crimes is that Carpenter possessed the firearm when he was arrested on the warrant for the burglary charge. To be sure, Carpenter does not even argue that the firearm was in any way linked to the burglary. Accordingly, we hold that Agent Redman did not infringe upon Carpenter’s Fifth or Sixth Amendment rights when she interrogated Carpenter about the firearm. The district court correctly denied the motion to suppress.
II. THE CRACK PIPE
When the officers discovered the firearm on the back seat floorboard, they found a crack pipe beside it. The pipe had recently been used to smoke crack, and there was fresh residue on it. Carpenter moved to exclude the pipe or any reference to it. The district court granted the motion in part and denied it in part. The district court excluded the pipe itself, concluding that the prejudicial effect of its admission—in light of the fact that it had residue on it, had been recently used to smoke crack, and came from Carpenter’s pocket— outweighed its value to the government. However, the court allowed the government witnesses to testify that they discovered the pipe and that Carpenter confessed to having placed it on the back seat floorboard. The district court also admitted into evidence a photograph of the back seat floorboard of the police cruiser depicting the pipe along side of the firearm.
Carpenter attacks the district court’s ruling in two ways. First, he argues that the prejudicial impact of that evidence substantially outweighed its probative value, and second, that the evidence constituted extrinsic evidence which should have been excluded under Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. In support of affirmance, the government contends that the crack pipe was intrinsic evidence, so intertwined with the possession and recovery of the firearm as to be part of a single criminal episode, and that evidence concerning the crack pipe was admissible to corroborate the confession that Carpenter later recanted.
A.
The district court wisely decided to exclude the actual pipe, recognizing that its prejudicial effect outweighed its probative value. The pipe had no evidentiary value other than to corroborate Carpenter’s later recanted confession. Yet admitting the actual pipe into evidence would have created the substantial risk that the jury would have inferred that Carpenter had smoked crack cocaine on the day of his arrest, a fact clearly not relevant to the firearm offense with which Carpenter was charged. Indeed, the government appreciated the risk that the evidence would be considered by the jury as a reflection of Carpenter’s bad character. It advised the court that it had no intention to offer the pipe into evidence “for any purpose to show that [Carpenter] smoked ‘crack’ cocaine or anything, but that this item is a corroborative tool that corroborates the statement that he made about the firearm.”
We agree with the government that evidence that a crack pipe was discovered along side of the firearm on the back seat floorboard was relevant insofar as it corroborated Carpenter’s recanted confession.
Cf. United States v. Blake,
B.
Evidence that the crack pipe was discovered beside the firearm was plainly intrinsic, not extrinsic, evidence, because Carpenter’s possession of it was “inextricably intertwined” with his possession of the firearm; both were part of the “single criminal episode” involving his arrest.
See United States v. Torres,
III. SENTENCING
A separate sentencing enhancement information was filed with the court, pretrial, alleging that Carpenter was an “armed career criminal” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). His guideline range for the offense was 33-41 months taking into account his criminal history (category 5), but as an armed career criminal, Carpenter was subject to a mandatory minimum sentence of 180 months.
The government moved the court for an upward departure on the ground that Carpenter’s criminal history score under the guidelines did not adequately depict the severity of Carpenter’s criminal past. Although Carpenter objected generally to an upward departure, Carpenter did not lodge any objections to the matters presented in the Presentence Investigation Report or otherwise contest the accuracy of its contents. Carpenter did argue that the government had failed to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he had committed the burglary offense for which he was arrested and which led to the firearm charge.
In imposing sentence, the district court concluded that an upward adjustment from the mandatory minimum 180 months was appropriate in light of Carpenter’s extensive criminal history:
The Guideline range in this case, in the Court’s view, because of the statute, is 180 months to 180 months, in effect. It would be the Court’s determination that the Defendant’s criminal history is not adequately reflected and that a — an upward departure would be appropriate. To depart across the chart in the criminal history category does not really seem applicable, since the criminal history category doesn’t extend. So the Court would determine that the 180-month range under a Category 5 would be a Level 30. A departure would be appropriate upwards two levels to a 32, where the range would then be 188 to 235 months.
R. 6 at 16. The district court imposed a sentence of 230 months incarceration.
A.
Carpenter first challenges the upward departure on the ground that the district court erred in enhancing his sentence based on the alleged burglary offense for which he was arrested. He argues that the government failed to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he committed that offense. 4 We have re *743 viewed the sentencing transcript and find no merit in that claim.
B.
Carpenter submits that the upward departure was “cruel and unusual” because it resulted in a double penalty for the same conduct. He observes that his sentence was already enhanced under the armed career criminal statute, which imposes a mandatory minimum 180 month sentence on a defendant who, with three prior convictions, is convicted of carrying a firearm. In Carpenter’s view, the district court was penalizing him twice based on the seriousness of his criminal history: once by enhancing his guideline sentence to 180 months pursuant to § 924(e), and a second time by departing upward from 180 to 230 months.
Carpenter’s argument is foreclosed by this circuit’s decision in
United States v. Fields,
The guidelines themselves acknowledge that a departure is in order when a defendant’s criminal history score “does not adequately reflect the seriousness of the defendant’s past criminal conduct or the likelihood that the defendant will commit other crimes.”
Id. (quoting U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3). We observed that § 924(e) authorizes a mandatory minimum sentence of 180 months, but allows a maximum sentence of life in prison. Thus, a district court has the discretion to impose a sentence in excess of 180 months when the circumstances warrant it.
Carpenter’s reliance on
United States v. Munoz-Romo,
C.
“Since [Carpenter’s] maximum sentence in the guideline range was 41 months, and the minimum sentence called for by § 924(e)(1) is fifteen years (180 months), 180 months became [Carpenter’s] guideline sentence.”
Fields,
A district court has the discretion to impose a sentence in excess of the recommended guideline range provided: (1) that the court articulates acceptable reasons justifying the upward departure, and (2) that the departure is reasonable.
Fields,
At Carpenter’s sentencing, the government argued that an upward departure was warranted on this basis. Relying on the Presentence Investigation Report, the government explained that two convictions, a juvenile adjudication for burglary and a misdemeanor conviction for theft, were not counted against Carpenter because they were outside the limitations period. The theft conviction was a violent purse snatching which would have qualified as a felony but was instead filed as a misdemeanor. Carpenter pled guilty to the offense and received a probationary sentence, but because of subsequent misconduct, his probation was revoked. That saved him from other criminal charges: A purse snatching (theft) charge and a drug possession charge were dropped by the state once Carpenter’s probation was revoked. The guidelines also did not account for Carpenter’s burglary offense which, as we have indicated in Part III.A. of this opinion, the government proved by a preponderance of the evidence. Finally, the government pointed out that Carpenter had been charged with murder and pled guilty to the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter, receiving an 18 year sentence of which he served six before being paroled.
From the context of the court’s sentencing decision, it is abundantly clear that the district court agreed with the government that an upward departure was warranted based on Carpenter’s criminal history. Critically, Carpenter’s criminal history was the only matter considered by the court at sentencing, and Carpenter did not contest the government’s position. True, the district court did not expressly adopt the government’s arguments.
See United States v. Lange,
91-8147, slip op. at 6-7 (5th Cir. Dec. 4, 1991) (unpublished disposition) [
all of [the defendant’s] prior convictions of any significance were considered in calculating his Criminal History Category. The only prior conviction outside the limitations periods of § 4A1.1 was a petty shoplifting conviction in 1976. While we have previously stated that offenses outside the limitations period may be considered in the district court’s decision to depart from the Guidelines, [the defen *745 dant]’s one long-past misdemeanor conviction is hardly sufficient justification for departure.
Id.
at 1025. In Carpenter’s case, as the government illustrated and the district court agreed, Carpenter’s criminal history score did not adequately portray his criminal past. Two convictions were unaccounted for because of the limitations period, he had several more prior convictions than needed to qualify as an armed career criminal, he had committed offenses while on probation and parole, and he had received especially lenient treatment for killing a man, all reasons enough to justify an upward departure. Yet these aggravating factors were not considered in ascertaining the applicable Criminal History Category. The district court was justified, therefore, in relying on these factors to support the upward departure.
6
See Fields,
We also believe that the 50 month upward departure was reasonable. In selecting a 230 month sentence, the district court first considered, in line with our case law, an adjustment of Carpenter’s Criminal History Category from a category 5 to a category 6.
See Jones,
Unable to follow the directive of Lopez and Jones, the district court extrapolated a formula of its own. It turned to the Guidelines “Sentencing Table,” and under category 5, located the range within which a sentence of 180 months would fall. That corresponded to an offense level of 30 (which provided for a guideline range of 151 to 188 months). The court then reasoned that Carpenter’s criminal history warranted a two point upward adjustment to an offense level of 32, providing for a guideline sentencing range of 188 to 235 months. The court chose a sentence of 230 months, comfortably within its newly formulated guideline range.
We know of no authority sanctioning the district court’s methodology. Likewise, we know of no authority condemning it. Because guideline sentencing ranges recommended by the Sentencing Table do not account for the § 924(e) enhancement, the district court was left to improvise. Although we do not ratify the methodology employed by the district court, we nevertheless affirm the sentence because, ultimately, the departure reflected a reasonable upward adjustment.
See United States v. Webb,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The officers did not advise Carpenter of his Miranda rights prior to questioning him. However, none of the statements made by Carpenter during that interrogation were used against him.
. We elaborate later on the prohibition of interrogations about uncharged, but extremely closely related offenses. See infra at 740-41.
. Nor did Carpenter's counsel demand that Carpenter not be interrogated in counsel’s absence. Arguably, if counsel had done so, that might, depending on the circumstances, constitute an invocation of Carpenter's Fifth Amendment right to the assistance of counsel during custodial interrogations about any subject matter.
Compare McNeil,
. The burglary charge was dismissed by the state because of insufficient evidence. That fact is of no moment for sentencing purposes, however;
see United States v. Lee,
. We make no effort to catalog all of the potential bases for concluding that a defendant’s criminal history score is inadequate.
. We would certainly have preferred that the district court restate the reasons why Carpenter's criminal history score was not an accurate portrayal of his criminal past. Ordinarily, we would vacate and remand. We need not do so in this case, however, because Carpenter did not contest the government’s arguments and the Presentence Investigation Report's factual assertions concerning his criminal history.
. We simply decide the case before us today. Nothing in this opinion should be read to intimate that a 50 month upward departure from a 180 month guideline sentence is reasonable per se.
