OPINION
Thе government appeals the sentence received by defendant Melvin Lancaster after he pled guilty to bank robbery. We find no error in the sentence and affirm.
I
Defеndant Lancaster and three other individuals robbed a Pinkerton truck outside a bank in Statesville, North Carolina. During the robbery, they sprayed mace into the eyes of John Gentle, а security guard who was present with the truck. The mace stunned Gentle and caused severe burning in his eyes and cheeks. Gentle was examined by an optometrist after the incident аs a precautionary measure but presented no evidence that the mace created any lasting health problems.
Lancaster pled guilty to bank robbery and сame before the district court for sentencing. The government asked the district court to enhance his sentence under U.S.S.G. § 2B3.1(b)(3) because he had committed a crime in which a victim sustained a significant injury. The district court received evidence on the extent of Gentle’s injury and refused to give the enhancement, finding that “the injury appears to have been insignificant.”
II
The only issue raised by the government in this appeal is whether the district court’s refusal to enhance Lancaster’s sentence was proper. We conсlude that it was.
U.S.S.G. § 2B3.1(b)(3) requires that a defendant receive a two-level sentencing enhancement if a victim sustained “bodily injury.” Application Note 1(b) to U.S.S.G. § 1B1.1 defines “bodily injury” as “any significant injury; е.g. an injury that is painful and obvious, or is of a type for which medical attention ordinarily would be sought.”
See Stinson v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
The surest guide in interpreting “significant injury” is the context in which it is used in the Sentencing Guidelines.
See Conroy v. Aniskoff,
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We find this context to indicate that to be “significant” an injury need not interfere completely with the injured person’s life but cannot be wholly trivial and, while it need not last for months or years, must last for some meaningful period.
See United States v. Isaacs,
We recognize that this definition of “significant injury” provides only general guidance, and this is by design. The term “significant injury,” by its open-ended nature, cannot be defined with exactitude. Whethеr an injury is “significant,” thus, should not be determined by a precise standard meted out at the appellate level and mechanically applied by the district court. Rather, it should bе determined by a very factually-specific inquiry which takes into account a multitude of factors, some articulable and some more intangible, that are observable in hеaring the evidence presented on the injury. Because the district court hears this evidence, it is by far best-situated to assess these myriad factors and determine whether a “significant injury” has occurred. We, as the court of appeals, are in a far less advantageous position to make this determination as we have before us only the written record and this record is often inadequate in conveying many of these factors. As a result of our position, our ability to review the district court’s determination of whether a “significant injury” has occurred is quite limited and we will disturb it only when the record reveals that the district court clearly erred. Isaacs, 947 F.2d at 114-15.
We have no trouble finding that the district court did not clearly err in determining that Gentle’s injury was not “significant.” While the burning in Gentle’s eyes and cheeks caused by the mace was undoubtedly unpleasant, and could not be described as wholly trivial, it was only momentary and the mace produced no lasting harm. The examination by an optometrist that Gentle sought afterwards was not the type of “medical attention” that the Guidelines contemplate as being sought after significant injuries because it was precautionary only and, in any event, an optometrist is not a medical doctor. On these facts, wе find it quite reasonable that the district court, after hearing the evidence on the extent of Gentle’s injury, decided that Gentle’s injury was not “significant.”
3
Moreover, even if the district cоurt, after hearing the evidence here, found that the issue of whether Gentle’s injury was “significant” was “subject to some doubt,” it would properly have applied the rule of lenity to сonclude that the injury was not “significant” and refused to enhance Lancaster’s sentence.
Adamo Wrecking Co. v. United States,
Isaacs
is easily distinguished. There the defendant struck a victim in the face, causing the victim’s face to be red and puffy and his ears to ring for hours.
Isaacs,
III
For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court’s refusal to enhance Lancaster’s sentence.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The term "insignificant injury" is somewhat confusing to interpret and should not be misconstrued. To bе an "insignificant injury," the effect of the defendant’s contact with the victim has to be "insignificant" but, at the same time, must still be sufficient to constitute an "injury.” For example, had Lancaster mеrely pushed Gentle aside, causing him no injury, rather than spraying him with mace, Gentle would not have sustained an "insignificant injury;” he would have sustained no injury at all. All of this is important in defining "significant injury” because the effect on a victim that we consider sufficient to be a "significant injury” must not only be greater than the effect on a victim who has sustained no injury at all, but must also be greater than the effect on a victim who has only sustained an injury that would be characterized as "insignificant.”
. This classification scheme is consistent with Application Note l(b)'s description of "significant injury” as one that is "painful and obvious.” Trivial injuries are not noticeably painful nor are they normally obvious to an observer. A momentary injury may be immediately "рainful,” but it is not "obvious” as we feel that term is intended in this context because it disappears quickly.
It is also consistent with Application Note 1(b)'s elaboration of "significant injury" as being an injury “of a type for which medical attention ordinarily will be sought.” Medical attention is not ordinarily sought for wholly trivial injuries. And while people who have sustained purely momentary injuries may often choose to be examined by a doctor as a precautionary measure to ensure that they have sustained no lasting harm, we do not understand such рrecautionary examinations to be the type of "medical attention” that the Guidelines contemplate to make an injury "significant."
. In fact, we would have had some reservations had the district court found that Gentle's injury was “significant.” Mace is used quite commonly in law enforcement, especially in prisons. The momentary effects of the mace on Gentle were the same effects that the mace has on persons when it is used by law enforcement officials. To find that these effects constitute a "significant injury” wоuld invite an unnecessary increase in the already-considerable number of actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against these officials.
. In its brief, the government argued in the alternative that evеn if the Guidelines do not dictate that Lancaster’s sentence be enhanced, the district court should depart from the Guidelines and enhance Lancaster’s sentence because his co-defendants received this enhancement. Lancaster’s co-defendants made plea agreements with the government that stipulated as to thеir sentences, and these sentences included enhancement for causing Gentle bodily injury. At oral argument, however, the government abandoned this argument and, as a result, we express no opinion on it.
