UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus ALFRED WAYNE LEE, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 99-4240
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
(April 13, 2000)
D. C. Docket No. 98-00117-CR-ASG [PUBLISH]
Before COX, Circuit Judge, HILL, Senior Circuit Judge, and NESBITT*, Senior District Judge.
PER CURIAM:
Two of the three predicate convictions, one for strong-arm robbery and the other for burglary, resulted from conduct occurring on the same day in 1993. On that day, Lee first robbed a credit union at gunpoint. Having collected $300, he made a successful getaway in a Dodge Omni. An officer responding at the scene immediately issued a bulletin with a description of Lee and the Omni. Within a few minutes, another officer in a nearby jurisdiction spotted the Omni, now rolling with a flat tire, about two miles from the credit union. The officer stopped the car, but Lee fled on foot. Officers surrounded the area and finally caught Lee as he exited a backyard storage shed where he had broken in and hidden.
The district court concluded, on these facts, that there was enough of a break between the robbery and the burglary for the two to be “committed on occasions
Two cases from this circuit come very close to interpreting
We reject both of these contentions. The rule stated in Pope comports with the result in Sweeting, which was reached without extended discussion. Pope held that
The Sweeting and Pope panels’ different conclusions simply reflect the panels’ judgment on the degree of break between the first and second crimes. The Sweeting court evidently concluded (its recitation of the facts of the predicate crimes is not detailed enough to tell for sure) that Sweeting, being under the pressure of hot pursuit after the commission of his first crime, had no meaningful opportunity to avoid his second crime, which was part of the same aggressive conduct, and in the same area, as his first burglary. In Pope, on the other hand, the panel observed that Pope had time to stop his criminal activity rather than undertake a second crime. See id. at 692.
This case comes closer to Pope than Sweeting because of the significant separation between the credit union robbery and the shed burglary. It is true that the crimes represent one course of criminal conduct, but so did the burglaries in Pope. The more important point is that as in Pope, Lee here successfully completed his first crime. He got away. Only after he was spotted some two miles away based on a
AFFIRMED.
