*205 OPINION OF THE COURT
Rangi Knight appeals from his sentence as a career offender, asserting that the District Court based his sentence on non-includable offenses. We hold that under the plain error doctrine, application of an incorrect Federal Sentencing Guidelines range presumptively affects substantial rights, even if it results in a sentence that is also within the correct range. Accordingly, we hоld that the District Court committed plain, error when it selected Knight’s sentence from within the wrong range and we will vacate Knight’s sentence and remand for sentencing so that the District Court may apply the correct Guidelines range in the first instance. 1
I.
Knight’s presentence investigation report contained a recommended sentence based on the Guidelines. The report concluded, inter alia, that Knight should be assigned to Criminal History Category VI based on either (a) his total of 14 criminal history points or (b) his classification as a “career offender”. This criminal history category produced a Guidelines sentencing range of 151 to 188 months. No objection was raised to the PSI in court. At the sentencing hearing, at which time sentence was rendered in accordance with the Guideline rangе which all parties believed to be correct, the District Court stated: “Due to the nature and severity of the defendant’s prior criminal history, a sentence at the middle of the range is appropriate.” 2 The District Court sentenced Knight to 162 months of imprisonment.
The government now concedes that Knight’s criminal history score was erroneously calculated as Category VI because thаt classification included (a) offenses which should properly have been excluded under U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2 (d)(2)(B) 3 and (b) a finding of “career offender” which was improperly premised on the inclusion of convictions for possession with intent to deliver cocaine and reckless endangerment, which are not includable. 4 Because three of the criminal history points attributed to Knight should not have been, аnd because he should not have been classified as a career offender, Knight should have been sentenced based on Criminal History Category V, rather than Category VI. Thus, the correct Guideline range for Knight was 140 to 175 months, rather than the range of 151 to 188 months applied by the District Court.
II.
As we explained above, Knight’s sentence was selected from the wrong Guideline range, but it also falls within the correct Guideline range. Upon review, we are required under the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3551
et seq.
(the “Act”), to determine not only whether the sentence “is outside the applicable guide
*206
line range” but also whether it “was imposed as a result of an incorrect application of the sentencing guidelines”. 18 U.S.C.A. § 3742(e)(2), (3).
See Williams v. United States,
Notwithstanding this mandatory and unconditional statutory language, our sister Courts of Appeals have held that where a defendant has failed to object to a purported error before the sentencing court, our review on appeal is оnly to ensure that plain error was not committed.
See
Fed. Rule Crim. P. 52(b).
5
Under this standard we must find that (1) an error was committed, (2) the error was plain,
ie.,
clear or obvious, and (3) the error affected the defendant’s substantial rights. In addition, even where plain error exists, our discretionary authority to order correction is to be guided by whether the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial рroceedings.
See, e.g., United States v. Nappi,
There is no question that error was committed and that it was plain because, under the Guidelines, Knight should have been charged with three fewer criminal history points and should not have been classified as a “career offender”. The Government concedes that the first two elements of our plain error test are met, and further, that if we determine that Knight’s substantial rights were affeсted, it would not be appropriate to argue that we should not exercise our discretion to correct the error. 7 Nonetheless, the gov *207 ernment contends that remand is unnecessary because Knight cannot show that his sentence would have been different had the sentencing range been properly calculated. Thus, this appeal turns on whether application of an incorrect guideline range resulting in a sentence that is also within the correct range affects substantial rights. We hold that it presumptively does.
Ordinarily, a defendant who failed to object to an error before the trial court must demonstrate prejudice by showing that the outcome — in this context, the sentence — was affected, in the sense that it likely would have been different but for the error. However, we hаve recognized that in some circumstances, such prejudice may be presumed. As we recently explained:
Normally, in order for an error to “affect substantial rights” under the third prong of the [plain error] test, the error must have been “prejudicial” — in other words, '“[i]t must have affected the outcome of the district court proceedings.” It is the defendant who bears the burden of persuasiоn with respect to prejudice. However, the Supreme Court has. cautioned that some errors to which no objection was made should be “presumed prejudicial” if the defendant cannot make a specific showing of prejudice.
United States v. Adams,
Both of these factors also support our recognition of presumptive prejudice from application of the wrong Guidelines range. First, it is beyond cavil that the Guidelines are intended to, and do, affect sentencing. 8 Indeed, that is their very raison d’etre. Second, absent a fortuitous comment by the sentencing judge on the reсord, it is very difficult to ascertain the impact of an erroneous Guidelines range. We therefore conclude that an error in application of the Guidelines that results in use of a higher sentencing range should be presumed to affect the defendant’s substantial rights.
Although we have not previously had occasion to address the element of prejudice where a sentence falls within both the correct and incorrect Guidelines ranges, our holding today is in keeping with our
*208
prior cases that have recognized the potentially prejudicial nature of Guideline calculation errors.
See United States v. Pollen,
The practical effect of the presumption we recognize today is that a sentence based upon a plainly erroneous Guideline range will ordinarily be remanded so that the District Court may exercise its discretion to choose an appropriate sentence based upon the correct range, unless the record shows that the sentence was unaffected by the error. This approach effectuates the intent of the Act that “it [be] the prerogative of the district court, not the court of appeals, to determine, in the first instance, the sentence that should be imposed in light of certain factors properly considered under the Guidelines.”
Williams,
In
Pollen
we considered remand necessary despite the government’s assertion that the district court had “intimated” that it would have imposed the same sentence under a lower Guideline range.
Our holding today is in accord with decisions of several of our sister Courts of Appeals, which effectively (albeit not explicitly) apply a similar presumption. For example, the Seventh Circuit has held:
Because it ... sentеnced [defendant] on the basis of the wrong Guidelines range, the district court committed plain error. .... Although the sentence that the district court selected in this case is within the correct as well as the incorrect
*209 Guidelines range, we must remand unless we have reason to believe that the error did not affect the district court’s selection of a particular sentence.
United States v. Wallace,
If the range the court used resulted from an incorrect application of the guidelines, an after-the-fact determination that the sentence actually imposed happened to be within the proper range does not cure the court’s error. The actual sentence imposed in such a case is not material because it is the district court’s application of the guidelines to arrive at the sentencing range that is at issue, not that court’s discretionary choice of sentence within that range.
United States v. Lavoie,
*210
We recognize that other cоurts have found that sentencing errors do not affect a substantial right where, because the sentence fell within both the right and the wrong range, the same sentence could have been imposed without error.
See, e.g. United States v. Leonard,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the District Court’s judgment and order of sentence and remand with instructions for the District Court to resen-tence Knight within the correct Guidelines range.
Notes
. Our jurisdiction is pursuant to 28 U.S.C. '§ 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a)(2).
. See District Court's July 27, 1999 Judgement and Commitment Order at 6. In addition, in sentencing Knight, the Court noted that "when a judge is confronted with a history of criminal like this ... [he is] stuck in the guidelines that have been plаced on [defendant] .... ” Appendix at 64.
. More specifically, the score included points for probationary sentence offenses committed while Knight was under 18 years of age and which occurred more than five years prior to the offenses for which Knight was being sentenced.
. Under a proper reading of U.S.S.G. § 4B 1.2(3), neither of these convictions should have been considered for сareer offender purposes.
.
But see United States
v.
Young,
. See generally Michael O’Shaughnessy, Appellate Review of Sentences, 88 Geo. L.J. 1637, 1643 (May 2000) ("If the defendant ... fails to raise an alleged sentencing error at sentencing ... the claim will only bе reviewed on appeal for plain error. Even if the alleged sentencing error is plain error, an appellate court may still affirm the sentence on the ground that the error was harmless.”) (citing cases).
.The government’s concession aside, we believe that a sentence resulting from a plainly erroneous misapplication of the Guidelines gives rise to at least a presumptively appropriate occasion for exercise of our discretionary power to correct the error.
Cf. United States v. Ford,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Thayer,
. Although the errors at issue in Pollen and Felton involved miscalculation of the offense level rather than of the criminal history, we can see no reason to treat one type of misapplication of the Guidelines differently from another. Choosing a sentence from the wrong range has the same propensity to affect a defendant’s substantial right tо receive a fair sentence no matter what the source or nature of the error.
. The Second Circuit expressly rejected the government’s reliance on
United States v. Bermingham,
. In
Weaver,
the Eighth Circuit noted the District Court's indication at sentencing that it would sentence the defendant "at the. bottom” of the applicable range, and observed that because "the court might well have sentenced [defendant] to a lesser term ... under the range that [should] have been applied”, it was "unwilling to say that [defendant's substantial rights were not affected”.
.
See
S. Report 86, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 1984, p. 3269 ("The provisions fоr appellate judicial review of sentences in section 3742 are designed to reduce materially any remaining unwarranted disparities by giving the right to appeal a sentence outside the guidelines
and by providing a mechanism to assure that sentences inside the guidelines are based on correct application of the guidelines.")
(emphasis added).
See also, e.g., United States v. Knobloch,
. The Act recognizes these distinct rights in providing separately for correction of sentences "outside the applicable guideline range” and sentences "imposed as a result of an incorrect application of the sentencing guidelines”. 18 U.S.C.A. § 3742(e)(2), (3).
