July 9,1994, was not a good day for Lester O’Neal Gilleylen. To start with, police in Carbondale, Illinois, stopped his 1995 Mustang for a traffic violation. After the stop, a loаded semi-automatic pistol was discovered on the floor of the car. Trumping these events, the police discovered that Gilleylen (he first told the police his name was “Gilley” but later changed that to “Gillen”) had a conviction for burglary, a felony, on his record. This mix earned Gilleylen a one-count indictmеnt charging possession of a firearm by a felon, to which he plead guilty in the United States District Court for the South- *71 em District of Illinois. His appeal to this court raises two sentencing issues. Neither issue requires much comment, but we’ll talk about one because its a pretty good example of how not to present an issue for appellate review.
Gilleylen’s base offense level under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines was twenty. He was tagged with a two-point enhancement for obstruction of justice, but he was also given three points off for timely acceptance of responsibility. This put his adjusted offense level at 19, аnd his criminal record spotted him in criminal history category III. His guideline range, accordingly, was 37 to 46 months. He was sentenced to serve a term of 40 months.
Gilleylen сhallenges the two-point enhancement for. obstruction of justice. If he wins on this point, he moves down to level 17 under the guidelines and his sentencing range drops to 30-37 months. Gilleylen also advances a backup argument; that only a one-point obstruction enhancement should have been ordered. If the obstruсtion enhancement is halved, Gilleylen moves to level 18 and a range of 33 to 41 months.
The sentencing guidelines call for a two-level increase in offense level if a defendant obstructs justice. Section 3C1.1 provides:
Obstructing or Impeding the Administration of Justice
If the defendant willfully obstructed or impeded, or attempted to obstruct or impede, the administration of justice during the investigation, prosecution, or sentencing of the instant offense, increase the offense level by two levels.
The commentary оn obstruction contains a “non-exhaustive” list of examples of conduct to which the enhancement applies. One of the examples is “escaping or attempting to escape from custody before trial or sentencing; or willfully failing to appear, as ordered, for a judicial procеeding.” Gilleylen received his enhancement because he failed to show up in court for a scheduled pretrial conference. His failure to аppear resulted in an issuance of an arrest warrant. Nine days after he failed to appear, but before the arrest warrant was actually еxecuted, Gilley-len self-surrendered to the police in Carbon-dale, and they turned him over to the United States Marshal.
Neither side to this appeal has рresented the obstruction issue very well. Gilleylen relies on an Eighth Circuit decision,
United States v. Crumb,
In his brief, Gilleylen tells us “the question of whether a defendant can mitigate the two-level enhancement for obstruction of justice has previously been addressed.” He then citеs the following passage from Crumb:
[W]e agree that [the defendant’s] voluntary surrender a little more than a week after his failure to appear for serviсe of his sentence is a circumstance not taken into account by the Guidelines. Because nothing in the Guidelines forbids the district court from considering the voluntariness of a defendant’s surrender or the length of a defendant’s delay in surrendering, the district court was free to consider these facts as mitigating circumstanсes.
Gilleylen then goes on to tell us that the court in Crumb “clearly recognized the deficit in the Guidelines in terms of application of the obstruction of justice enhancement.” Not even a distorted rеading of Crumb can support this claim. Let’s look at what Crumb was really about.
The defendant in Crumb, who of course was Mr. Crumb, had his federal probation revoked and was ordered to self-surrender at a federal correctional institution for the service of his sentence. He didn’t show up, and a warrant for his arrest was issued. Nine days after his surrender date, but before he *72 was apprehended on the warrant, Crumb presented himself at the institution. Crumb’s failure to appear resulted in a new charge of failing to surrender for service of sentence in violation оf 18 U.S.C. § 3146(a)(2). At sentencing, the court granted a downward departure of two levels because Crumb voluntarily appeared at the institution and that, in the view of the district court, mitigated the seriousness of the underlying offense of failure to appear. An obstruction of justice enhancement under § 3C1.1 of the guidelines was never at issue in the Crumb case. Crumb does not come close to being relevant authority in this case. The government should have told us that in its brief.
Whether a defendant obstructed justice is normally a fact-specific determination. For that reason, it’s not always helpful to review other eases, but we note, however, in
United States v. Teta,
Gilleylen also raises a question regarding his placement in criminal history category III rather than II. The placement in III is appropriate if a conviction in Minnesota bn November 11, 1994, is counted. We believe it was properly counted and Gilleylen’s placement in criminal history category III was correct. There being no other issues in this case, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
