Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Robert A. Beckham was convicted of possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine and of aiding and abetting the distribution of crack. He appeals his convictions on two grounds: he argues that hearsay testimony was improperly introduced at his trial and that he was entitled to a jury instruction on the lesser-included offense of simple possession. Beckham also claims that the district court erred in sentencing him, because the court mistakenly believed that it lacked authority under the Sentencing Guidelines to make a downward departure from the indicated guideline range. We affirm Beckham’s conviction but agree that the district court misunderstood its authority to depart downward. We therefore remand the case to the district court for resentencing.
I.
Several undercover police officers on patrol late one evening in August, 1990, noticed what appeared to be several persons engaged in drug transactions in the backyard of a house located at 5036 F Street, S.E., in Washington, D.C. Crossing the street to get a better look, one of the officers, Officer Dunston, saw two people in the yard: Robert Beckham was in a chair in the walkway leading up to the rear door of the house, and Monica Monroe sat on a bench approximately two feet away. 1 As Officer Dunston approached the yard, Monroe inquired, “Are you looking?” Officer Dunston said that he was, and Monroe asked if he wanted “a fifty,” which the officer took to mean a fifty dollar rock of crack.
Officer Dunston replied yes, walked into the yard, and stood directly in front of Monroe, who reached into her pants pocket and produced a clear ziplock bag containing a single rock of crack. Beckham remained seated two feet away. Officer Dunston inspected the rock and asked Monroe if he could purchase another fifty. Monroe replied, “I only had one, but you can get another from my buddy.” At that moment, Beckham got up from his chair, walked past Dunston and Monroe to the far end of the bench on which Monroe tyas seated, and removed a large plastic bag, which contained numerous smaller ziplock bags, from underneath the bench. As Beckham began to open the bag, Officer Dunston identified himself as a police officer and arrested both Monroe and Beck-ham. The large plastic bag was found to contain slightly more than 13 grams of 89% pure crack, packaged in 34 smaller, $50 bags. A government drug expert testified that this packaging and amount was consistent with drug distribution and inconsistent with personal consumption.
The defense had an entirely different version of events. According to the appellant, this was “the ease of the mysterious glove.” Appellant’s Br. at 20. Beckham had come to 5036 F Street the night of his arrest to visit his friend Monica Monroe and her sister, Marie Ward, who lived there. He brought over a six-pack of beer, which he placed in Ward’s refrigerator. He began the evening by drinking a beer in the backyard with Monroe. As he sat in the yard chatting with her and several other friends — drugs were never exchanged or even mentioned — he noticed Officer Dun- *50 ston approach the yard, sweating and tired. According to Beckham, Monroe asked Officer Dunston several times if he was all right, but Dunston never responded. Instead, Dunston walked into the backyard and began talking in low tones with Monroe. Beckham claimed that he never saw Monroe and Dunston exchange anything and that he did not hear what was said.
Beckham testified that while Monroe and Dunston were conversing, he finished his first beer and got up from his chair to get another one from the refrigerator. As he walked to the back door of the house, he noticed an object lying between the walkway and the bench. He knelt down to examine it and discovered that it was a dirty, tannish, suede man’s glove. He had never seen it before. When he picked it up, intending to ask whether anyone in the house might have lost it, he felt something bulky in its palm. Intrigued, he turned it upside down, and a plastic bag, about the size of a golf ball, fell into his hand. He held the plastic bag for several seconds, trying to figure out what was inside of it, but before he could, he noticed a movement over his left shoulder. This turned out to be Officer Dunston with his gun drawn. Beckham dropped the bag and the glove and put his hands in the air. Although several other defense witnesses testified that they had noticed the glove lying in the yard or had seen it in the hands of the arresting officers, the officers denied having ever seen a glove, and the glove did not appear at trial.
The jury, obviously disbelieving the story of the mysterious glove, convicted Beck-ham of possession with intent to distribute and of aiding and abetting Monroe. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); 18 U.S.C. § 2. Beck-ham received a sentence of 30 years in prison and eight years of supervised release, largely because he was classified as a career offender under § 4B1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines based on two prior felony convictions. Beckham was only 18 years old at the time he committed one of the two offenses upon which his career offender designation was predicated. That armed robbery occurred 15 years ago, and for most of the intervening time, Beckham has apparently not been convicted of other crimes. The only other offense supporting the career offender designation, attempted possession with intent to distribute cocaine, occurred 13 years after the robbery conviction, in 1988. For the past decade, Beck-ham has been steadily employed doing auto body work. Appellant requested a downward departure from the guidelines range, but the district judge, although he felt that the 30 year sentence was “extraordinarily harsh,” denied the request. The judge said that he had no discretion to make a downward departure.
II.
Beckham first challenges his conviction on the ground that it was obtained through use of impermissible hearsay, in violation of the Confrontation Clause of the Constitution. See U.S Const. amend VI. Beck-ham argues that the district court erred in denying a motion in limine and permitting the prosecution to introduce through Officer Dunston Monica Monroe’s statement, “I only had one, but you can get another from my buddy.” It is asserted that this statement was the most important evidence of Beckham’s intent to distribute. Monroe failed to appear for trial and was therefore unavailable to testify and to be cross-examined. If he had cross-examined Monroe, Beckham tells us, she would have said, as she apparently did later at her own trial, that her statement had been “you can get another from anybody,” not from “my buddy.” The government’s case would have been correspondingly weaker.
The district court admitted Monroe’s statement against Beckham under the hearsay exception for statements of a co-conspirator.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). But the only evidence relied on by the district court in making the necessary predicate finding that Beckham and Monroe were engaged in a conspiracy,
see Bourjaily v. United States,
Even if we were to take Monroe’s statement into account, the evidence tends to show at most that Monroe turned to Beckham as an alternative source of supply; it provides scant basis for inferring that Monroe and Beckham were joint venturers in a criminal enterprise or had any sort of prior agreement — the essence of a conspiracy.
See Iannelli v. United States,
Nonetheless, we do not reverse Beckham’s conviction, because we agree with the government that Monroe’s statement was properly admitted under a different exception to the hearsay rule, the exception for adoptive admissions set forth in Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(B).
3
This exception is firmly rooted in American jurisprudence.
See Berrisford v. Wood,
When Monroe told Officer Dunston that he could get another rock of crack from “my buddy,” Beckham immediately got up from his chair, walked over to a stash of crack that was packaged for distribution, and began to open it. By that action, Beckham indicated his endorsement of Monroe’s statement.
See, e.g., United States v. Rollins,
Beckham’s second claim is that the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the lesser-included offense of simple possession. The district judge is obliged to give a lesser-included offense instruction when “a jury could rationally find the defendant guilty of the lesser offense, yet acquit him of the greater.”
Schmuck v. United States,
Here, however, there was no evidence from which a jury could rationally have concluded that Beckham possessed crack without intending to distribute it. No aspect of the government or defense cases — not even a combination of aspects of each — supports a simple possession theory. Beckham argues that the jury could have believed him guilty of simple possession if it believed his glove story: he picked up the dirty glove out of curiosity, felt something bulky inside of it, turned it upside down, and stuck out his hand as the plastic bag fell out; upon inspecting. the bag, he realized that it contained crack but failed to drop it in the couple of seconds before Officer Dunston arrested him. As a matter of law, however, these facts, if true, would not support a conviction. Inadvertent or accidental possession does not satisfy the statutory requirement that possession be knowing or intentional. See 21 U.S.C. § 844(a).
Alternatively, Beckham contends that the jury might rationally have concluded that he “just happened to pick up the plastic bag of crack near the bench at an inopportune moment” for some reason totally unrelated to Officer Dunston’s purchase
*53
from Monica Monroe (but presumably not by accident). Even if that were so — if there were no direct evidence of an actual drug transaction — Beckham was guilty of more than simple possession. The bag Beckham picked up contained 34 individually wrapped rocks of crack of a uniform size typical of street distribution. The street value of the more than 13 grams involved was $1,700. That amount of crack so packaged indicates an intent to distribute and not to possess for personal consumption.
Cf. United States v. Gibbs,
III.
Beckham asserts that he is entitled to resentencing, because the district court, by holding that it had no discretion to depart downward in Beckham’s case, misunderstood its authority under the Sentencing Guidelines. For Beckham’s crime, the base offense level was 26, and his criminal history category was V. This would ordinarily have yielded a sentencing range of 110 to 137 months in prison. His sentence was tripled to 360 months (or 30 years) to life, however, because he was classified as a career offender, see U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1, which increased his offense level to 37 and his criminal history category to VI. His classification was based upon a 1988 conviction for attempted possession with intent to distribute cocaine and on a 1975 armed robbery Beckham had committed at the age of 18.
The district judge said at sentencing that he felt the sentence was “extraordinarily harsh” and “excessive” in light of Beckham’s criminal record, his family involvement, and his employment history. Beckham urged several possible grounds for departure, including his youth, his family responsibilities, his contrition, and the “grossly disproportionate” nature of the penalty. But the district court thought that none of these provided the necessary authority. “I do not see that I have any discretion in the matter. Congress and the Sentencing Commission have taken that away from me.”
Although a refusal to depart downward
where there is authority to do so
is within the unreviewable discretion of the district court,
see United States v. Hazel,
We agree with the government that disproportionality does not,
in itself,
provide an appropriate basis for a downward departure. Unless the disproportionality between crime and punishment is so extreme that it violates the Eighth Amendment,
cf. Harmelin v. Michigan,
- U.S. -,
We also agree, however, with the unanimous judgment of the other circuit courts to have considered the issue that § 4A1.3 authorizes a downward departure when criminal history category VI, assigned pursuant to the career offender guideline, significantly overrepresents the seriousness of a defendant’s past criminal conduct and the likelihood of recidivism.
See United States v. Bowser,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. At trial, Officer Dunston did not state that he had observed Beckham or Monroe in the yard prior to crossing the street.
. Beckham was never charged with the crime of conspiracy; the issue arose only as part of the evidentiary dispute. The government need not charge the defendant with conspiracy in order to admit hearsay statements into evidence under the co-conspirator exception.
See United States v. Perholtz,
. Although the adoptive admission exception was raised only tangentially before the district court — and then only by defense counsel — we are entitled to consider it when raised by the government on appeal as part of the harmless error inquiry. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b) directs that "[a]ny error ... which does not affect substantial rights shall be disregarded." If evidence erroneously allowed in under one rule would nonetheless have been admissible under another, no substantial, right of the defendant has been affected.
See, e.g., United States v. Wiggins,
. Although § 4A1.3 is technically a “policy statement” rather than a "guideline,” it is “an authoritative guide” to making departures under the Guidelines.
Williams v. United States,
- U.S. -,
. Although this refinement of the disproportion-ality argument was not raised below, the government failed to object to it, or even to comment upon it, in its brief, thus waiving any waiver argument it may have had.
See United States v. McNeil,
