Kendel McKinney is no stranger to the penal system. He has three drug convictions and one conviction for aggravated robbery, plus nine pending charges in state court and twenty-one traffic violations. Although he was sentenced to eight years in prison on one of his drug convictions, he served 18 months in a “boot camp” program before he found himself facing the current federal charges for distribution of crack cocaine. As the Government tirelessly points out, by the time he faced sentencing in this case, McKinney had accumulated twice the number of convictions he needed for career criminal status — and he did it all by the age of 24.
On April 12, 2007, McKinney pleaded guilty to two counts of crack distribution in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) & 841(b)(1)(C). Relying on the rap sheet we have just summarized, the presentence report (PSR) concluded that McKinney was a career offender subject to a sentence enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1. Taking into account a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility, the PSR recommended a Guidelines range of 188 to 235 months.
At the sentencing hearing, the Government introduced into evidence a DVD depicting one of the vehicle chases involving McKinney that had been recorded on the police car’s video camera. The video shows that when the officer signaled that McKinney should pull over, McKinney instead drove through a neighbor’s yard, just missing a tree stump, zoomed through a residential area, ran a stop sign, and pulled into his mother’s driveway. He then fled on foot, with the police in pursuit, while family members removed items from his car. McKinney did not have much to say for himself when the district court invited him to speak: he said only “I never knew it would come to this.”
In pronouncing its sentence, the district court commented that every single factor mentioned in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) “calls for a lengthy incarceration to protect the public.” The court addressed some of the arguments in mitigation that McKinney had offered, including his claim that he has a learning disability, but it found that this did not excuse McKinney’s behavior. The district court then invoked its discretion under
United States v. Booker,
McKinney recognizes that he must persuade us that his final sentence was unreasonable. The only reason he offers in support of such a finding is that the district court did not provide an adequate justification for how it arrived at its “up *913 ward departure.” The use of pre-Booker, pre-Rita vocabulary gives away the game: McKinney is overlooking the discretion that district courts now possess to choose a sentence outside the applicable Guidelines range.
If the Guidelines are properly calculated, this court reviews a criminal sentence for reasonableness.
Rita,
Gall
has more bearing on McKinney’s case. It said that “a district judge must give serious consideration to the extent of any departure from the Guidelines and must explain his conclusion that an unusually lenient or an unusually harsh sentence is appropriate in a particular case with sufficient justifications.”
In reviewing the reasonableness of a sentence outside the Guidelines range, appellate courts may therefore take the degree of variance into account and consider the extent of a deviation from the Guidelines. We reject, however, an appellate rule that requires “extraordinary” circumstances to justify a sentence outside the Guidelines range. We also reject the use of a rigid mathematical formula that uses the percentage of a departure as the standard for determining the strength of the justifications required for a specific sentence.
Id. at 594-95.
Taking these two passages from
Gall
together, we deduce that we must simply satisfy ourselves that the district court (1) calculated the advisory Guidelines range correctly (something that is not in dispute here), (2) gave serious consideration to sentences both within and outside that recommended range, and (3) explained why it selected “an unusually lenient or unusually harsh sentence,” if it did so. The Court did not change the rule that we have followed since
Booker,
under which “the fact that the district court did not establish a precise link between the degree of the departure and the structure of the Guidelines, as was required pre
Booker,
is not a basis for disturbing the district court’s sentence.”
United States v. Valle,
Seen in this light, the district court’s explanation is adequate. The court considered both sentences within the advisory Guidelines range and sentences outside the range, and it explained why it thought that a significantly harsher sentence was needed for someone with as deplorable a record as McKinney. The district court explained that McKinney’s history did not bode well for his future prospects, and that the public would be safer with him off the streets. In the end, it concluded that it “[wa]s not sure that [McKinney was] ever going to be able to adjust to the rules and laws of society.” The district court then explicitly found that a within-Guidelines sentence would not suffice to punish McKinney and deter future crimes. That was enough under both Gall and Booker.
We find nothing unreasonable in the sentence the district court chose for McKinney. As
Gall
confirmed, we cannot put a “thumb on the scale favoring a guideline sentence,”
United States v. Sachsenmaier,
Affirmed.
