Naomi B. Hawkman pled guilty to assault with a firearm with intent to do bodily harm and to use of a firearm to commit a crime of violence, and she was sentenced by the district court 1 to 228 months. Hawkman appeals, arguing that the district court erred by departing upward and imposing an unreasonable sentence. We affirm.
On August 8, 2004, Naomi Hawkman and her boyfriend Quentin Charging Elk drove to the residence of his sister in law Diane after they had been drinking throughout the day. Hawkman and the women in Charging Elk’s family did not get along, and Hawkman had been attacked by some of them the previous month resulting in her being taken to the hospital by ambulance for treatment of cuts and a closed head injury. After Hawkman got into a heated argument with Diane during the August 8 visit, she and Charging Elk left.
Hawkman and Charging Elk returned to Diane’s residence later that evening with a .22 caliber rifle. Hawkman was sitting in the passenger seat of their car holding the rifle. There were a number of people outside in Diane’s yard. Hawkman yelled for Diane’s thirteen year old son to move, then fired between three and seven shots toward the house. One of the bullets struck Diane’s three year old daughter Felecia. The bullet severed her spinal cord, paralyzing her from the chest down and confining her to a wheelchair and body jacket.
Hawkman and Charging Elk drove away after the shooting with Hawkman in the driver seat. When they realized their car was being followed by police, they attempted to flee and led the police on a thirty mile chase at high speeds. The chase ended in Nebraska when the tires of their car were punctured by road spikes which had been laid out by the authorities. Hawkman and Charging Elk were arrested, and Hawkman readily admitted that she had fired the shot which injured Felecia and gave a full confession. Hawkman claims that she attempted suicide when she found out about the extent of Felecia’s injuries.
Hawkman and Charging Elk were indicted on four counts. They were charged with assault with intent to commit murder, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1153, 113(a)(1), and 2 (Count I); assault with a dangerous weapon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1153, 113(a)(3), and 2 (Count II); assault resulting in serious bodily injury, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1153, 113(a)(6), and 2 (Count III); and using a firearm to commit an assault, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 924(c) *881 and 2 (Count IV). Hawkman pled guilty to Counts II and IV pursuant to a plea agreement under which the other two counts were to be dismissed. The agreement also preserved Hawkman’s-right to appeal if there were an upward departure.
At the sentencing hearing in April 2005, the government called an FBI agent who testified about her investigation of the shooting and about Felecia’s condition and injuries. She stated that Felecia was living at the Children’s Care Hospital Center, that she had undergone a tracheotomy, that she basically had no functionality below the mid chest level and wore a body jacket to hold herself up in a wheelchair; and that she had acted out in frustration over her physical limitations. 2 She also testified that all of Diane’s children had been removed from her custody.
Hawkman offered details about her family history through her great aunt. The aunt told about the poverty of Hawkman’s family when she was growing up, her early responsibilities because her parents were alcoholics, her removal from the parental home, her cohabitation with an adult male when she was fifteen, the prior assault on her by women of the Charging Élk family, and her lack of prior convictions for violent conduct. Hawkman testified that before the incident she had tried to obtain custody of Felecia because she felt Diane was not an adequate parent.
The district court substantially adopted the recommendations of the presentence investigation report. On Count II it set a base offense level of 14, added 7 levels for permanent or life threatening bodily injury to the victim and 2 levels for obstruction of justice, then deducted 3 levels for acceptance of responsibility. This resulted in a total offense level of 20. With a criminal history category of III, the guideline range for Count II was 41 to 51 months, and the court sentenced Hawkman to 51 months on that count. The guideline sentence for Count IV was a statutorily required. consecutive 10 years, the mandatory minimum under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). See U.S.S.G. § 2K2.4. The court found that a,sentence within, the advisory guideline range would not be sufficient under the facts of the case, including the extent and permanence of Felecia’s injuries and . Hawkman’s “knowing risk” of shooting “out of the window of a moving car multiple times into a yapd full of people”, while intoxicated. The court noted that “[t]here could be no more significant physical injury other than the death of the child” and that injuries like Felecia’s result in a shortened life expectancy; it also distinguished Felecia’s injuries from typical injuries stemming from ah assault with a dangerous weapon. It discussed Hawkman’s use of a firearm after drinking alcohol and stated that “it would be hard to imagine a greater case of recklessness in the face of all common sense.” The court then departed upward on Count IV under § 5K2.2, the guideline section dealing with departures for physical injury, and imposed a sentence of 177 months. Since the sentence on Count IV was consecutive to that on Count II, the total sentence was 228 months. The court also imposed supervised release and restitution of $143,955.83.'
Hawkman appeals, asserting that the district court erred in departing upward on Count IV for the same, injury which was the basis for the 7 level enhancement on Count II. She also contends that her sentence was unreasonable, that it was great *882 er than necessary, and that it contributes to sentencing disparity. The government responds that the departure was permissible and appropriate and that the sentence is reasonable.
Hawkman was sentenced after
United States v. Booker,
Hawkman asserts that the district court’s upward departure on Count IV was double counting in violation of the application note to U.S'.S.G. § 5K2.0 (the general policy statement discussing the grounds for upward departure) because it was based on the same physical injury which had been the basis for the 7 level increase on Count II for permanent or life threatening bodily injury under § 2A2.2(b)(3)(C) (the aggravated assault guideline). She relies on
United States v. Myers,
The government responds that neither the extent nor the permanence of Felecia’s injuries or her age were adequately accounted for in the guidelines and that the court’s departure was appropriate. The government relies on
United States v. Evans,
In reply, Hawkman argues that the cases cited by the government are inappo-site since none had a § 5K2.2 departure for physical injury to a single victim and departures for psychological injury come under § 5K2.3, which has different language than the applicable guideline here. She urges instead that we follow cases decided by other circuits under § 5K2.1 (departures involving death) since § 5K2.2 states that the same considerations should generally apply under both provisions.
See, e.g., United States v. Roston,
We review the district court’s decision to depart upward for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Fogg,
The record indicates that Felecia suffered psychological or emotional injury as well as physical, and her physical injuries were compounded by sustaining them at the young age of three, thus affecting the length and quality of her whole life span. This case is unlike
Myers,
where the court failed to find that the enhancement for physical injury under the robbery guideline was inadequate and committed harmless error.
Myers,
Hawkman also challenges the reasonableness of her sentence. She argues that the sentence violates 18 U.S.C. § 3553 because it was greater than necessary, creates an unwarranted sentencing disparity, and was imposed without sufficient detail in the judgment as required by § 3553(c)(2). She also argues that the court erred in its calculation of the number of assaults when it found that each shooting constituted an assault rather than finding that the shootings were the- result of one impulse and consequently a single offense. See United States v. Chipps, 410 *884 F.3d 438, 448 (8th Cir.2005). Hawkman further asserts that the court failed to consider the nature and circumstances of the case and her history and characteristics and that there is a disparity between her sentence and those affirmed by this court in recent aggravated assault cases involving intentional infliction of brutal harm. The government responds that the sentence is reasonable.
The district court discussed the reasoning behind its sentence and the upward departure both during the sentencing hearing and in its statement of reasons and noted in each instance that it had considered the factors in § 3553. The explanation in the court’s statement of reasons complied with § 3553(c)(2).
See United States v. Wheeler,
The district court recognized during the sentencing hearing that Hawkman was remorseful and had not intended to shoot Felecia, but it also found that her acts had been reckless and that her warning to Diane’s son showed an awareness that someone could be injured by the gunshots. The court found that Felecia would suffer the effects of Hawkman’s action her entire life and that the advisory guideline range would not be “a sufficient sentence under the facts here.” The judge distinguished more typical assaults, whose effects are temporary, from the assault in this case and determined that the risk of great injury had been knowingly taken by Hawk-man. After examining the record and the district court’s thorough consideration of all of the facts and circumstances of the offense, including mitigating and aggravating factors, we conclude that the sentence imposed was not unreasonable.
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable Charles B. Kommann, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.
. The agent described Felecia’s behavior after being mainstreamed into a school outside the hospital: "she has become more aware of what she does not have so she has had tantrums or hits her legs and been upset about what she doesn’t have or what she now knows she doesn't have.”
