OPINION
John Lee Williams was convicted after pleading no contest to one count of kidnapping and three counts of sexual abuse of a minor in the first degree. Kidnapping is an unclassified felony punishable by a maximum of ninety-nine and a minimum of five years in prison. Sexual abuse of a minor in the first degree is an unclassified felony punishable by a maximum of thirty years. As a second felony offender, Williams was subject to presumptive sentences of fifteen years for his first-degree sexual abuse convictions. No presumptive term is specified for kidnapping. Superior Court Judge Peter A. Michalski sentenced Williams to a total term of fifty-three years with twelve years suspended. 1 Williams appeals, contending that his sentence is excessive. We reverse.
THE OFFENSE
As Williams drove through an Anchorage neighborhood early in the morning on *957 December 28, 1988, he encountered B.P., an eleven-year-old paperboy who was making his rounds. Williams had spent the night celebrating his birthday with friends, drinking and smoking T.H.C. Williams drove up to B.P. and asked for directions. He then forced B.P. into his car and demanded money. When B.P. answered that he had no money, Williams forced B.P.’s head down to prevent him from seeing and drove several blocks away. After stopping his car, Williams sexually assaulted B.P., anally raping him, forcing him to commit fellatio, and then anally raping him again.
Following the assault, Williams released B.P., threatening to kill him if he reported the offense. Though somewhat disoriented at first, B.P. managed to find his way home and immediately told his parents that he had been assaulted. Williams was arrested two days later.
THE OFFENDER
At the time of the offense, Williams was twenty-five years old. He had two prior misdemeanor convictions — one for shoplifting, and one for fourth-degree assault— and one felony conviction — for selling a half-ounce of cocaine to an undercover agent. Williams received a suspended imposition of sentence for the felony and was still on probation when he assaulted B.P.
THE SENTENCING
In sentencing Williams, Judge Michalski concluded that consecutive sentences were appropriate in light of the separate nature of the conduct involved in the kidnapping and sexual abuse charges. Relying on B.P.’s age and his vulnerability, the serious nature of Williams’ assault, and the devastating impact that the assault had on B.P. and his family, Judge Michalski expressed the view that Williams had shown himself to be a danger to the community. The judge concluded that a lengthy period of confinement, coupled with a substantial suspended term followed by a period of probationary supervision, was necessary to express community condemnation, to deter Williams and other potential offenders, and to isolate Williams for the protection of the community. Accordingly, Judge Michalski sentenced Williams to partially consecutive terms totaling fifty-three years with twelve years suspended.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Williams challenges this sentence. He does not contest the individual sentences imposed for his offenses, but argues only that the aggregate term of fifty-three years with twelve years suspended is excessive.
In evaluating the propriety of the sentence, we acknowledge that Judge Michal-ski was correct in his conclusion that Williams’ offenses were particularly serious and called for a lengthy period of confinement. Nevertheless, this conclusion does not automatically justify the sentence imposed.
Virtually any sentence of more than ten years may be deemed lengthy.
See, e.g., Pruett v. State,
The relevant question on appeal is thus not whether Williams deserved a lengthy sentence, but rather how lengthy a sentence was appropriate in light of Williams’ background and his conduct in the present case. In answering this question, we must bear in mind that a sentence should be no longer than actually necessary to achieve the legitimate goals of sentencing.
See Pears v. State,
This court and the Alaska Supreme Court have decided numerous sentence appeals involving offenders convicted of both kidnapping and sexual assault.
See generally
cases cited in
Garrison v. State,
First offenders who have kidnapped and raped their victims have typically received composite sentences of twenty years or less.
See Lacy v. State,
There appear to be two notable exceptions to the twenty-year ceiling for first offenders convicted in kidnap/rape situations. In
Morrell v. State,
The second notable exception to the twenty-year ceiling for first offenders in kidnap/rape cases is
Wilson v. State,
*959 These decisions indicate that an aggregate term of twenty years or less will normally be appropriate for a first felony offender in a kidnap/rape case; a longer sentence will be warranted only when the kidnapping is aggravated in its own right, either because of its duration or because the defendant actually placed the victim’s life in jeopardy by means of the abduction. 4
A second category of kidnap/rape cases that this court and the Alaska Supreme Court has considered involves offenders who have had at least one prior felony conviction but whose criminal history was not extensive enough to qualify them as dangerous offenders.
5
See Hintz,
All of the cases in this category involved aggravated sexual assaults — assaults that included significant violence and physical injury, multiple acts of rape, or both. Nevertheless, none of the eases has upheld a composite sentence of more than thirty years. In Hintz, Tookak and Patterson, aggregate sentences of more than thirty years were found excessive; in Johnson and Baker, composite sentences of less than thirty years were found not to be excessive. These precedents firmly establish thirty years as the maximum composite sentence that should ordinarily be imposed in kidnap/rape cases involving offenders who have one or more prior felony convictions but whose criminal history does *960 not place them in the dangerous offender category.
Only a handful of decisions in kidnap/rape cases have approved composite sentences of more than thirty years. Without exception, those cases have involved kidnappings of prolonged duration or offenders whose prior criminal histories established them as persistent, violent criminals.
See Morrell,
In the present case, Williams had only one prior felony conviction and had never served significant time in prison. His criminal history did not qualify him for treatment as a dangerous offender. Although Williams’ sexual assault of B.P. involved exceptionally aggravated conduct, his abduction of B.P. did not in itself constitute an aggravated act of kidnapping. B.P.’s abduction was relatively brief, he was released in an area not far removed from the location of the abduction, and the circumstances surrounding his release were not life-threatening.
Williams’ case appears similar to cases such as Hintz, Tookak, and Patterson. One significant distinction, however, is that Williams’ victim was an eleven-year-old child, whereas the victims in Hintz, Tookak, and Patterson were adults. The age and relative vulnerability of Williams’ victim is to some extent offset, however, in Hintz, Tookak, and Patterson by aggravating circumstances that are absent here. For instance, the offenders in Hintz, Too-kak, and Patterson were armed with handguns. All three cases involved abductions that apparently lasted considerably longer than in the present case. In Hintz and Tookak, the victims were released under life-threatening circumstances. Moreover, the defendants in Patterson and Tookak had prior criminal histories considerably more extensive than Williams’.
In our view, Williams’ case, though in some respects more serious, is essentially similar to the cases in which we have previously approved composite sentences of no more than thirty years. Neither Williams’ criminal record nor the seriousness of his conduct warrants placing his case on a par with Morrell, Post, and Contreras. 6 The similarity between this case and cases such as Hintz, Tookak, and Patterson, requires a sentence that is similar.
We nevertheless believe that the age of Williams’ victim distinguishes his case sufficiently from Hintz, Tookak, and Patterson to justify a period of suspended imprisonment beyond the thirty-year unsuspend-ed terms permitted in those cases; Williams’ choice of an eleven-year-old child as his victim raises particularly serious questions concerning the extent of danger he will pose when he is released. A suspended term of incarceration with a substantial period of probation will ensure that Williams can be adequately supervised and *961 that he will have a strong incentive to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law upon his eventual release.
In summary, we hold that the composite term of fifty-three years with twelve years suspended is clearly mistaken.
McClain v. State,
Notes
. Judge Michalski imposed the following sentences: Count I, kidnapping, twenty years; Count II, sexual abuse, fifteen years, consecutive to Count I; Count III, fifteen years, with three years consecutive to Counts I and II and twelve years concurrent; Count IV, sexual abuse, fifteen years with twelve years suspended, consecutive to all other counts.
. Significantly, since deciding
Morrell,
the Alaska Supreme Court has declined to approve comparable sentences in kidnap/rape cases involving equally egregious sexual assaults but less extreme acts of abduction.
See Hintz
v.
State,
. Two other cases involving first felony offenders who received sentences in excess of twenty years deserve mention, although neither involved a rape/kidnap situation. In
Helmer v. State,
In
Nylund v. State,
. It is also conceivable that a composite term of more than twenty years might be justified in a first offense kidnap/rape case if the circumstances surrounding the victim’s sexual assault were exceptionally serious. In this regard, however, a note of caution is necessary. We have recognized that, even in aggravated cases, first felony offenders convicted of sexual assault or sexual abuse should ordinarily receive a composite sentence of no more than ten to fifteen years of unsuspended incarceration.
State v. Andrews,
Notably, we have never found a sexual assault to be exceptionally aggravated for purposes of exceeding the
Andrews
benchmark merely because it involved several acts of sexual penetration during a single episode. Indeed, most of the first offenders who have been sentenced to composite terms of twenty years or less in kidnap/rape cases committed multiple acts of sexual penetration.
See, e.g., Davis,
. The term "dangerous offender” in this context refers to a person who meets the criteria for a "habitual offender” specified in Standard 18-4.-4(c) of the A.B.A. Standards for Criminal Justice — that is, one who has been convicted of at least two prior felonies committed on different occasions within five years of the most recent offense and who has previously served a sentence in excess of one year. See III
Standards for Criminal Justice §
18-4.4(c) (1982);
Skrepich v. State,
. Nor does Williams appear to be comparable to other offenders for whom sentences of forty years or more have been approved. Except in cases involving murder or attempted murder, we have approved composite terms of forty years or more only for violent crimes committed by offenders with backgrounds that included habitual criminality or repeated acts of serious violence.
See, e.g., Hancock v. State,
