Defendant-appellant Nelson Rosalio Correa challenges that part of his sentence which depends upon the district court’s allegedly erroneous computation of his criminal history score. We first must resolve an issue that divides the circuits. Once that is behind us, we detect no miscalculation and therefore affirm the sentence.
I
Background
We cull the largely, undisputed facts from the plea colloquy, the presentence investigation report, and the transcript of the sentencing hearing.
See United States v. Garcia,
A native of the Dominican Republic, Correa resided legally in the United States for a short spell. That sojourn ceased on January 5, 1994, when, after having been convicted of various crimes committed between 1989 and 1993, he was deported. We do not chronicle the complete compendium of Correa’s criminal capers, but confine ourselves to conveying the contours of certain crimes that possess particular pertinence for present purposes.
1. The February Offenses. On March 13, 1991, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts issued a criminal complaint (later served by summons) which charged Correa, then 19 years of age, with three counts of breaking and entering and one count of larceny. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, §§ 16A, 30 (1990). The charges arose from a spree that occurred on February 19, 1991; on that date, Correa raided three separate automobiles parked in Danvers, Massachusetts, and absconded with ill-gotten gain from one.
2. The June Offenses. Some months later, Correa, still 19, was charged with falsifying his age to purchase alcoholic beverages, in violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 138, § 34A (1991), and contributing to the delinquency of a child for buying and serving alcohol to two boys, ages 12 and 15, respectively, in violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 119, § 63 (1993). The infractions were alleged to have occurred on June 8, 1991, in Beverly, Massachusetts.
3. The State Court Disposition Hearing. On October 28, 1992, Correa pled guilty in a state district court to all charges arising from both incidents. With respect to the February offenses, the court imposed a nine-month sentence on the three breaking- and-entering counts and filed the larceny conviction. With respect to the June offenses, the court filed all the convictions. 1
In due course, the government deported Correa. Little daunted, he reentered the United States unlawfully in 1995 and found *316 Ms way to Lynn, Massachusetts. The authorities eventually apprehended him and pressed a charge of illegal reentry after deportation. See 8 U.S.C. § 1326 (1994). Correa pled guilty to tMs accusation in federal district court. The sentencing proceeding that followed comprises the cynosure of tMs appeal. 2
We set the stage. In applying the sentencing gmdelines, a nisi prius court, among other things, transposes the defendant’s criminal past into “criminal history points,” thus obtaining a “crimmal history score” which yields a “crimmal history category.”
See United States v. Emery,
This case typifies the phenomenon. In the course of his sentencing calculations, Judge O’Toole treated the February offenses as comprising one crime and the June offenses as comprising another, unrelated crime. Hence, he assigned criminal Mstory points for each. On that basis, Correa garnered a criminal history score of 7, which placed him in crimmal Mstory category IV. Had the judge treated the February and June offenses as related rather than unrelated, or had he deemed the June offenses unworthy of consideration, Correa’s criminal Mstory score would have dropped by one point, placing him in criminal Mstory category III. At Correa’s adjusted offense level (19), the single criminal Mstory point accounted for a substantial increase in his GSR (wMeh rose from 37-46 months to 46-57 months). See USSG ch. 5, Pt. A (sentencing table).
Having added the disputed crimmal history point and fixed the GSR at 46-57 months, the judge then accepted the government’s recommendation, incorporated in the plea agreement, that Correa be sentenced at the nadir of the applicable range. Consequently, the court imposed a 46-month mcarcerative sentence. TMs appeal ensued. In it, the appellant contends that the district court erred in adding the extra criminal history point. He makes two arguments in support of this contention. We treat these arguments sequentially.
II
Related Cases
The gmdelines require the assessment of criminal history points for “each prior sentence.” USSG § 4A1.1. But there are exceptions. One such exception authorizes sentences imposed in what the Sentencing Commission calls “related cases” to be treated as a single sentence. See USSG § 4A1.2(a)(2). Insofar as pertinent here, sentences are considered related “if they resulted from offenses that ... were consolidated for trial or sentenemg.” Id., comment. (n.3). At sentencing, Correa argued unsuccessfully that the February and June offenses fell witMn this safe harbor (and, therefore, should be deemed related) because the state court had in effect consolidated them for sentencing. Judge O’Toole rejected the notion that these disparate offenses constituted a set of related cases. 3 Correa now presses tMs argument on appeal.
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The standard of review in sentencing appeals ordinarily is deferential.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3742(e) (1994);
see also Dietz,
In
United States v. Elwell,
In so holding, we align ourselves with a number of our sister circuits which have reached a substantially similar conclusion.
See, e.g., United States v. Patasnik,
We are cognizant that some may see insistence on a formal indicium of consolidation, such as an order or a docket entry, as arbitrary. But judicial inquiry into a defendant’s criminal past for sentencing purposes, properly conceived, requires only a snapshot of the surface, not an archeological dig. Thus, when a federal court is obliged to tabulate a defendant’s criminal history score for sentencing purposes, limiting the requisite inquiry to the formal record — the indictment, the docket entries, the judgment of conviction, and the like — strikes the right balance. Moreover, it does so in a manner that supplies needed uniformity while husbanding scarce judicial resources.
This approach also is in keeping with the way in which we have treated analogous matters. After all, when a federal court looks to a prior state conviction in formulating its sentencing calculus, the court most often characterizes the previous conviction by means of a formal categorical approach, restricting its examination to the legislature’s definition of the crime.
See, e.g., Taylor v. United States,
We are not disposed to deviate from this salutary principle in interpreting the “related case” guideline, USSG § 4A1.2(a)(2). Were we to do so, we would make criminal sentencing—already an operose task under the guidelines—a more cumbersome and time-consuming endeavor with little corresponding benefit. Criminal history, by definition, deals with bygone events which often happened in the distant past, or in a remote jurisdiction, or both. Requiring a federal judge to go behind the formal record and excavate the details of what transpired in each instance would impose an onerous burden, freighted with unusual evidentiary difficulties. We think that a categorical rule, analogous to that sponsored by the Supreme Court in Taylor, better serves the interests of justice.
In the instant case, the record is pellucid that the state court judge never entered an order consolidating the complaints, which embodied the February and June offenses, for sentencing or for any other purpose. To the exact contrary, the complaints embodying these two sets of offenses were at all times handled under separate docket numbers, and there is no indication that the state court judge ever gave a moment’s thought to whether consolidation was (or was not) desirable. Moreover, the appellant concedes that the offenses occurred in different places at different times and that they arose in widely divergent factual contexts. Last, but not least, this is not a situation in which the court of original jurisdiction imposed a single sentence spanning a series of discrete offenses. Rather, the court imposed a prison sentence on the breaking-and-entering convictions (the main component of the February offenses) but did not include the convictions on the June offenses as part of the underpinning for that sentence. Instead, the court filed those charges, in effect reserving the right to call up the file and impose a sentence at a future date. See supra note 1.
We will not paint the lily. Because there were no formal indicia of consolidation, the February offenses were not “related” to the June offenses under a proper reading of the federal sentencing guidelines. Hence, the appellant’s principal assignment of error fails.
Ill
Juvenile Status Offenses
The appellant’s fallback position is that, even if the June offenses are not “related” to the February offenses in the requisite sense, they nonetheless are juvenile status offenses and thus not countable in compiling his criminal history score. See USSG § 4AI.2(c) (ordaining that the sentencing court should “never count ... [j juvenile status offenses” when tabulating criminal history points). The district court rejected this asseveration. So do we.
The sentencing guidelines do not define the term “juvenile status offense,” although they offer illustrations of crimes which, like juvenile status offenses, are excludable in computing a defendant’s criminal history score.
See
USSG § 4A1.2(c)(2). In determining whether a prior conviction falls within the ambit of section 4A1.2(c)(2), courts traditionally “look to the substance of the underlying state offense.”
United States v. Unger,
Considering together the caselaw and the actual guideline provisions, we conclude that a crime constitutes a juvenile status offense only if three elements coalesce: (1) the defendant committed the crime as a juvenile,
see
USSG § 4A1.2, comment, (n.7); (2)
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the conduct would have been lawful if engaged in by an adult,
see United States v. Ward,
In applying this paradigm to the June offenses, we note first that either of the two component crimes — falsifying one’s age to purchase alcohol and contributing to the delinquency of a child — is, if not an exempted offense, independently sufficient to warrant the bestowal of the challenged criminal history point. Since contributing to the delinquency of a child is arguably the more weighty of the crimes, we focus exclusively on it.
The appellant flunks the first segment of the test: the victims may have been juveniles, but in ascertaining whether a crime is (or is not) a juvenile status offense, it is the perpetrator’s age, not the victim’s age, that matters — and Correa was 19 years old when he committed the act. Accordingly, he was not a juvenile. See USSG § 4A1.2, comment. (n.7) (defining a juvenile for this purpose as a person under the age of 18). He also fails to satisfy the second requirement: contributing to the delinquency of a child is conduct which state law criminalizes regardless of the perpetrator’s age. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 119, § 63.
Since the appellant’s argument depends on his ability to establish three factors, and the first two are lacking, we need go no further. 4 It is abundantly clear that the district court did not err either in declining to classify the crime of contributing to the delinquency of a child as a juvenile status offense or in assessing an extra criminal history point for it.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In Massachusetts, after a plea of guilty in a criminal case, "a judge, with the consent of the defendant, may place the case on file rather than impose sentence immediately.”
DuPont
v.
Superior Court,
. The district court apparently applied the November 1995 edition of the sentencing guidelines.
See United States v. Harotunian,
. In so ruling, the lower court relied on an application note instructing that ‘‘[p]rior sentences are not considered related if they were for offenses that were separated by an intervening arrest
{i.e.,
the defendant is arrested for the first offense prior to committing the second offense).” USSG § 4A1.2, comment, (n.3). The court repudiated
United States v. Joseph,
. Because the appellant’s argument stalls at the first two stages of the test, we need not decide whether the offense might be written off either as youthful folly or as lacking predictive value vis-avis future lawlessness (and, therefore, pass muster at the third stage of the test)..
