At sentencing after his plea of guilty to bank robbery, the defendant, Atwater, was given a five-level boost in his sentence on the grоund that he knew or should have known that a firearm would be used in the robbery. Atwater’s codefendant, Cagle, was the one who hаd actually entered the bank and brandished a gun, but he claimed that he and Atwater had planned the robbery together and indeed that Atwater had supplied the gun. Atwater admitted that he had driven Cagle to and from the bank but denied that he had supplied the gun or knew that Cagle had one and planned to use it in the robbery. U.S.S.G. § 2B3.1(b)(2)(C) imposes a five-level enhancement for use of a gun during a bank robbery and U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a)(l)(B) makes a defendant accountable for all “reasonably foreseeable” acts and omissions of others in furtherance of a jointly undertaken criminal activity. If Atwater knew that Cagle planned to use a gun in the robbery, then obviously that use was “reasonably foreseeable” by him, was in fact actually foreseen. And even if he didn’t know, it might still havе been reasonably foreseeable by him.
On these vital questions (what he knew and what he should have known), all the sentencing judge said was that Atwater “either knew or should have known that a firearm would be involved in this case. I have never heard of a bank robbery without a firearm. That is sort of a given. And there is testimony from more than one person that a firearm was involved here.” We have italicized the key sentence in the judge’s statement — the only reason he gave for thinking that Atwater either knew or should have known that Cagle had a gun: namely that all bank robberies are committed with a gun. But that is false. Although the government’s lawyer could not furnish us with any statistics, a call to his employer, thе Department of Justice, produced the following FBI statistics for 1999: of the 6,599 robberies that year of banks and related finanсial institutions, firearms were used in only 1,988, which is 30 percent; and — confirming our own impression that many bank robberies are committed by unarmed persons who hand threatening notes to tellers — 3,590 of the robberies were indeed committed by note. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Bank Crime Statistics Jan. 1-Dec. SI, 1999, 1, 4 (2000).
If
all
bank robberies were committed with the aid of a gun, then Atwater should have foreseen that Cagle would use оne. But since fewer than a third are, a more discriminating analysis was called for, the sort of thing we find in
United States v. Dixon,
The judge’s reasoning process in the present case is unclear. Cagle had said that Atwater had supplied the gun, and the judge could have chosen to believe him rather than Atwater. But we cannot tell whether he did believe Cagle. He gave Atwatеr a sentencing discount for acceptance of responsibility, which he would not, or at least should not, have done if he thought Atwater was lying in denying that he had furnished Cagle with the gun or even knew Cagle was planning to use a gun in the robbery. U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1, Applicatiоn Note 1(a);
United States v. Brack,
The line between what is actually foreseen and whаt is reasonably foreseeable is the line between what the defendant knew and what he should have known.
United States v. LaCroix,
