On April 18, 2001, Raymond Butler was indicted in connection with two bank robberies in Omaha, Nebraska. On July 3, 2001, as part of a plea agreement, the defendant pleaded guilty to two of the three counts in the indictment, robbery of the Great Western Bank (Count I) and brandishing a firearm during the robbery of the Union Pacific Streamliner Federal Credit Union (Count III). 1 Before the sentencing hearing, the defendant filed a motion for a downward departure. He argued that application of the career-offender guideline was inappropriate because one of the two prior felonies that brought him within that guideline was not serious enough to warrant subjecting him to the career-offender enhancement.
On November 6, 2001, a sentencing hearing was held. The District Court granted the defendant’s motion for a downward departure. The defendant received a seven-year sentence of imprisonment (84 months) for the robbery and a mandatory seven-year consecutive sentence for the firearm offense. See 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(l)(A)(ii). The government appeals, arguing that the downward departure was not justified. According to the government, the career-offender guideline should have been applied, resulting in a sentence of at least 12 years and seven months (151 months) for the robbery. U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1.
I.
We review a departure from the Sentencing Guidelines for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Ross,
To receive the career-offender enhancement, a defendant must be at least eighteen years old at the time that the instant offense was committed, the instant offense must be a crime of violence, and the defendant must have at least two prior felony convictions for crimes of violence.
United States v. Peters,
II.
A district court has authority to depart downward from the applicable sentencing range if a “defendant’s criminal history category significantly overrepresents the seriousness of the defendant’s past criminal conduct.”
United States v. Gayles,
In United States v. McNeil, supra, we held that a district court abused its discretion when it granted a defendant a downward departure because the career-offender guideline overstated the defendant’s criminal history. Though the District Court correctly determined that the defendant qualified for the enhancement, the Court emphasized the fact that the defendant was only seventeen when he committed the requisite felonies. In vacating the sentence imposed, we stated that the decision of the District Court to depart downward must “accurately reflect the entire record of the defendant’s erimi- , nal history.” Mat 301. The presentence investigation report in that case revealed that -the defendant’s criminal activity began when he was only eight years old. Since that time his criminal record had grown to include multiple convictions for breaking and entering and assault, as well as felony convictions for taking indecent liberties with children, breaking and entering into an automobile, and sexual abuse. We concluded that nothing about the defendant’s “long and continuing criminal career was overstated by the application of the career offender guideline.” Id. We believe that the same is true in the instant case.
Here, the defendant contends that the McNeil decision is inapplicable because the defendant in that case committed more than the two felony convictions necessary for the career-offender enhancement. We disagree. Though the defendant has been convicted of only two felonies, these alone are sufficient to support the career-offender sentencing enhancement. Moreover, while the District Court focused on the non-violent nature of one of the defendant’s convictions, his conviction for robbery, it did not mention the defendant’s conviction for sexual abuse when he was nineteen years old. We cannot ignore the details of such a heinous crime. The offense was described in the defendant’s Presentence Report (PSR) (to which both parties agreed) as follows:
Offense reports indicate the victim ... advised officers that she heard a noise downstairs at her residence on 10/20/90. When she went downstairs she saw a black male moving her stereo. The suspect put a knife to her throat and forced her upstairs where he sexually assaulted her. The victim was sexually assaulted three times. The defendant forced her to perform oral sex and anal sex. The victim was led to believe that the defendant would possibly kill her. Butler made three trips in and out of her home taking various items. While he was gone the victim untied herself and called *725 her brother and the police. Medical reports indicated sperm was found in the victim’s vagina and rectal area.
PSR 13. The nature of this offense must be considered when determining whether the career-offender enhancement overstates the seriousness of defendant’s past criminal history. If, as the District Court thought, the robbery was not serious, even though technically a crime of violence, the subsequent offense of sexual assault in the first degree, a legalistic way of saying rape, was so serious, threatening, and violent as to compensate, so to speak, for any mitigating aspects of the robbery.
Additionally, the defendant has a long and continuous history involving numerous other crimes. Beginning when the defendant (age thirty when the instant offenses were committed) was thirteen years old, he has been convicted of numerous offenses. In fact, the PSR reveals that the only break in the defendant’s criminal history occurred when he was incarcerated for the commission of the sexual assault, between November 1990 and June 1999. Though his criminal history includes few felonies, it does contain a violent sexual assault in which the victim was raped and sodomized, as well as a large number of other offenses that indicate a pattern of serious criminal activity.
Defendant argues that we should consider only the nature of the two felony offenses that qualify him for the career-offender enhancement. We should disregard, he says, the rest of his criminal history, because the question on appeal is not whether the criminal history as a whole overstates the seriousness of defendant’s past conduct, but whether application of the career-offender guideline overstates the effect of the two prior felonies that were crimes of violence. In support of this position, the defendant cites
United States v. Smith,
III.
We applaud the District Court’s recognition that the Guidelines contain some element of flexibility. We conclude, however, in the instant case that the Court abused its discretion in not giving sufficient weight to the prior offense of sexual assault in the first degree. The judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the case is remanded for resentencing in a manner not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The charge of brandishing a firearm during the commission of the robbery of the Great Western Bank (Count II) was dismissed pursuant to the plea agreement.
