United States v. Tavares

September 3, 1996
                United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                         

No. 96-1763

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      DANIEL D. TAVARES,

                          Appellant.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET
                                     ERRATA SHEET

The opinion of this Court  issued on August 21, 1996, is corrected
as follows:

On page 15, line 23:  replace "inch deep" with "inch long"


                United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                         

No. 95-1763

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      DANIEL D. TAVARES,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                
                                         

                            Before

                   Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     

               Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                         

                  and Lynch, Circuit Judge.
                                                      
                                        

Kevin S. Nixon for appellant.
                          
Daniel D. Tavares, on brief pro se.
                                              
Michael J.  Pelgro, Assistant  United States  Attorney, with  whom
                              
Donald  K. Stern, United States Attorney,  was on brief for the United
                        
States.
                                         

                       August 21, 1996
                                         

          LYNCH, Circuit Judge.   An early-morning assault in
                      LYNCH, Circuit Judge.
                                          


Mashpee,  Massachusetts, on  August 29,  1991, resulted  in a

chase  through  nearby woods  and  the  arrest  of Daniel  D.

Tavares.  On May 15, 1992, Tavares was convicted of violating

18  U.S.C.    922(g), the  felon in  possession of  a firearm

statute.  Tavares appealed, and  this court, sitting en banc,
                                                                        

reversed  his  conviction on  the  ground  that the  district

court's decision to  allow the government to prove the "prior

felon" element of Section 922(g) rather than accept a defense

stipulation created  unfair prejudice.  See  United States v.
                                                                      

Tavares, 21  F.3d 1 (1st Cir.  1994) (en banc).   There was a
                                                         

second  trial and, on March 30, 1995, Tavares was again found

guilty.  He appeals, asserting: (i) a variety of trial errors

in  a pro  se  submission;  and  (ii) two  sentencing  errors
                         

through  a  counsel  assisted  submission.    We  affirm  the

district court  on the claimed  trial errors, but  vacate and

remand on the sentencing issues.

                              I.
                                            

          On  August  29, 1991,  Tavares  and his  companion,

Cyril  Pocknett, Jr.,  were in  a confrontation  with Sheldon

Blake and Rodney Hunt over accusations of the  theft of a car

stereo.  Threats were exchanged,  but no violence ensued, and

Tavares and Pocknett left the area.  Blake and Hunt then went

to  Blake's  apartment.     Blake  lived  in  a  second-floor

apartment with his girlfriend,  Nicole Cain, and their infant

daughter.   About  an  hour and  a  half later,  Tavares  and

                             -3-
                                          3


Pocknett returned and buzzed Blake's front door.  Hunt opened

the door and Tavares greeted  him with a shotgun to  the head

and the words, "What's up  now, motherfucker?"  Standing next

to Tavares was Pocknett, aiming a .22 caliber rifle at Hunt.

          Acting  on instinct,  Hunt grabbed  the  barrels of

both  rifles, pushed them down,  and fled up  the stairs into

Blake's apartment.  Tavares then fired his shotgun repeatedly

into Blake's nearby parked car.  Meanwhile, Hunt noticed that

his hand was bleeding.  Apparently, in grabbing the barrel of

Tavares' shotgun, he had  ripped the palm of his  hand on the

gun's sight.

          Cain,  on  hearing  the  gunshots,  rushed  to  her

daughter's  bedroom to  protect her from  danger.   After the

shots subsided, she looked out the window and saw Tavares and

Pocknett   running   toward  the   nearby  woods.     Shortly

thereafter, the police arrived.  They searched the woods, and

after a chase, captured Tavares.  They also found the shotgun

and .22 caliber rifle, hidden under pine needles.  

          Back at the apartment  building, Hunt, whose  right

hand was bleeding profusely,  wrapped it in a rag  which soon

became bloodsoaked.   On entering the  building, Officer Alan

Roguzac  observed pools of blood  in both the  hallway and on

the carpeting leading  up to Blake's apartment.   Soon after,

on  seeing Hunt's  wound, Roguzac  radioed for  an ambulance.

                             -4-
                                          4


Hunt was taken to the Falmouth Hospital emergency room, where

his hand received eight stitches.

          Cain,  Blake  and  Hunt  were  interviewed  by  the

police. Specifically,  Cain spoke to Sergeant  David Mace and

Detective Doris Dottridge.

Trial
                 

          Cain  did not testify at  Tavares' first trial.  At

his second trial, however, she testified that on the night of

the incident she had told a male police officer and Dottridge

that  she had seen Tavares  with a gun.   Dottridge could not

recollect any  such statement  by Cain,   but Mace  testified

that he was the male police officer to whom Cain had made her

statement.  Tavares attacked Mace's testimony by pointing out

that Mace's police report  did not specifically report Cain's

statement. Instead,  Mace's report said only  that "they" had

seen  Tavares with a gun.   Tavares argued  that "they" meant

only  Hunt  and  Blake,  whereas Mace  asserted  that  "they"

included Cain as well.

          At the conclusion of  the six-day second trial, the

jury  requested the  transcripts  of the  testimony of  Cain,

Hunt,   Blake,  and Earl  Cash, another  witness.   The court

explained to the  jury that, thanks  to the court  reporter's

personal investment  in certain equipment, the  court had the

unusual  ability to  provide them  with transcripts  within a

short period of time.  The court noted, however, that despite

                             -5-
                                          5


the reporter's speed, skill and equipment, since the reporter

was needed on a different case the next morning, he might not

be able to  satisfy all of the jury's requests,  and that the

jury was  to proceed in its deliberations  nevertheless.  The

next morning, the jury was  provided with the transcripts for

Cain, Hunt, and Cash, but not Blake.  The court told the jury

that, if  possible,  it  would get  them  the  transcript  of

Blake's testimony, but  reiterated that  they should  proceed

regardless. Within  a little over an hour, and without having

received  the  transcript  of  Blake's  testimony,  the  jury

returned a verdict of guilty.

Sentencing
                      

          Tavares was sentenced to ten years in prison.   The

guideline applicable to his offense of conviction was Section

2K2.1 (unlawful  possession of a  firearm).   See U.S.S.G.   
                                                             

2K2.1  (Nov. 1990).1  The  court then  applied Section  2A2.2

(aggravated assault)  by way of a  cross-reference in Section

2K2.1.2    As  a  result  of  applying  the  cross-reference,

Tavares' offense  level jumped  from twelve to  twenty-three.

Level twenty-three  represented a  starting offense  level of

fifteen  for aggravated  assault  plus an  increase of  eight

levels for specific offense characteristics  -- a three-level

                    
                                

1.  The court applied the version of the Guidelines in effect
at the time of Tavares' offense.  Neither party contends that
a different version should apply.

2.  See U.S.S.G.    2K2.1(c)(2) and 2X1.1(c)(1). 
                   

                             -6-
                                          6


increase  for the  victim's  bodily injury  and a  five-level

increase  for the discharge  of a firearm.   The Pre-Sentence

Investigation  Report  recommended  that the  court  sentence

Tavares under the aggravated assault guideline because he had

pointed  a  loaded  shotgun  at his  victim's  head,  thereby

evincing  an  "intent to  do bodily  harm."   See  U.S.S.G.  
                                                             

2A2.2, comment. (n.1(a)).   The Guidelines define "aggravated

assault"  as "a  felonious assault  that involved"  either "a

dangerous  weapon with  intent to  do bodily harm  (i.e., not
                                                                    

merely to frighten)" or "serious bodily injury" or "intent to

commit another  felony."   U.S.S.G.   2A2.2,  comment. (n.1).

          At  sentencing,  however,  Tavares  protested  that

there was  insufficient record  support for either  a finding

that he had had the  requisite intent to do bodily harm  or a

finding that serious bodily injury had resulted.  Instead, he

said,  the  evidence showed  that  he  had  merely  meant  to

frighten  his victim.    Additionally, Tavares  argued  that,

under the  Guidelines, a serious  bodily injury was  one that

required hospitalization or surgery.   The government  argued

that  the injury Tavares' victim had suffered, i.e., a cut to
                                                               

the hand requiring  a trip  to the emergency  room and  eight

stitches, was  in fact  a  serious bodily  injury within  the

Guidelines'  definition.    See  id. and  U.S.S.G.     1B1.1,
                                                

comment. (n.1(j)).   The court  accepted this argument.   The

                             -7-
                                          7


resulting   Guidelines   sentencing  range,   given  Tavares'

criminal history category ("CHC") of IV, was 70-87 months.

          The sentencing  court then departed  upward by  two

CHC  levels  and  one  offense  level  to  achieve  a   final

sentencing range  of 110-125 months.   See U.S.S.G.    4A1.3,
                                                      

p.s.   (departures  beyond   CHC  VI   may  occasionally   be

appropriate  in  cases  of an  "egregious,  serious  criminal

record").  The court's stated basis for  the upward departure

was that Tavares had,  in fact, committed three state  crimes

(that had resulted in  "guilty filed" dispositions as opposed

to  outright convictions3) that  were not counted  in his CHC

score and  that a CHC  of IV did  not adequately  reflect the

true seriousness of Tavares' chronic criminality.

          Tavares appeals, asserting errors in both the trial

and sentencing.

                             II.
                                            

                            Trial
                                             

                    
                                

3.  "Guilty  filed"  dispositions   in  the  Commonwealth  of
Massachusetts involve an admission  of sufficient facts for a
possible finding of guilt,  but not an explicit  admission of
guilt.   The primary focus  of the  sentencing hearing  after
Tavares'  second  federal  trial  was whether  three  of  his
"guilty  filed" dispositions counted as predicate convictions
under  the Armed Career Criminal Act ("ACCA").  See 18 U.S.C.
                                                               
  924(e).  The sentencing court ruled that the "guilty filed"
dispositions could  not be  counted as convictions  under the
ACCA.    The  court explained,  however,  that  as  there was
sufficient evidence  that Tavares  had in fact  committed the
state crimes,  and because,  had they been  convictions, they
would have resulted in a minimum federal sentence  of fifteen
years,  it was going to depart upward and sentence Tavares to
ten years.        

                             -8-
                                          8


          Tavares'  pro  se brief  asserts that  the district
                                       

court committed  reversible error in: (i)  failing to provide

the jury with a transcript of a particular witness' testimony

that it had  requested and instructing  the jurors that  they

should proceed  to deliberate  without that transcript;  (ii)

permitting  the   jury  to  "view"  the   allegedly  perjured

testimony of a witness; (iii) failing to ask the jury whether

its request for transcripts pertained to the instant trial or

prior proceedings.   Because contemporaneous  objections were

not made  with respect to  any of the  claims, review is  for

plain error.   See,  e.g., United States  v. Cruz-Kuilan,  75
                                                                    

F.3d 59,  62 (1st Cir.  1996).  We discern  no miscarriage of

justice  and Tavares'  claims fail this  review.   See, e.g.,
                                                                        

United States v. Sullivan, 85 F.3d 743, 751 (1st Cir. 1996).
                                     

A. Failure to Provide Transcript 
                                            

          After  deliberations commenced,  the jury  asked to

review the testimony of four witnesses: Cain,  Hunt, Cash and

Blake.  The  next morning, the court was  able to provide the

jury with transcripts  for Cain, Hunt  and Cash, but  Blake's

was not yet ready.  The court reporter  was needed on another

case  and the court told  the jurors that,  if possible, they

would be  provided with the transcript, but  that they should

proceed with their deliberations regardless.   Tavares argues

that this was reversible error.

                             -9-
                                          9


          Decisions   regarding   the   provision  of   trial

transcripts  to the  jury are  within  the discretion  of the

trial judge.  See United States v. Akitoye, 923 F.2d 221, 226
                                                      

(1st Cir.  1991) (decision as to  whether requested testimony

should be reread to jury  rests in trial court's discretion).

In making  its  decision,  the  trial judge  is  to  consider

factors such as the ease or difficulty of compliance with the

jury's request  and what is likely to be gained or lost.  Id.
                                                                         

The  court  here provided  the jury  with  three of  the four

transcripts requested.   The one transcript  not provided was

that  of Blake, who had testified most recently, and that was

because  the court reporter was needed for another case.  Cf.
                                                                         

id. (where testimony is fresh in jury's mind there is less of
               

a need for  rereading).  We discern no plain  error either in

the  non-provision of  the transcript  or in  the instruction

that the jury should continue deliberations.

B. Perjured Testimony
                                 

          Tavares argues that  the court erred  in permitting

the  jury  to  "view"  the  perjured  testimony  of  Cain,  a

government  witness.4    Tavares  further  asserts  that  the

government knew or should have known that not only was Cain's

testimony  perjured,  but that  the  supporting  testimony of

Sergeant Mace  was perjured as  well.  Tavares,  however, has

                    
                                

4.  We  assume  that  Tavares  is referring  to  the  court's
provision of the jury with the transcript of Cain's testimony
during deliberations.

                             -10-
                                          10


not  shown that either witness committed perjury.  And so the

argument fails for want of a foundational piece.

          Cain testified  at the  instant trial that:  (a) on

the night of  the incident, she  saw Tavares with a  gun; and

(b) that she had told this to the police on the  scene.  Cain

did not, however, testify at Tavares' first trial.

          Tavares  says that  her  testimony  at the  instant

trial  must have been perjured because there was no record of

her having  related this  information to  the  police on  the

night in  question.   Tavares theorizes that  the government,

having been reversed once,  used perjured testimony to ensure

its victory  in the second  trial.  As support,  he points to

the  testimony of  Dottridge, one of  the officers  whom Cain

allegedly  told of having seen Tavares with a gun.  Dottridge

testified  that she could not recall  Cain having stated that

she  saw Tavares with a  gun.  There  was, however, testimony

from Dottridge's  colleague, Mace,  that he had  heard Cain's

statement.   But Tavares says that Mace's testimony must have

been perjury as  well because  Mace's police  report did  not

state specifically  that Cain  had seen Tavares  with a  gun.

Instead, Mace's  report stated  that "they" had  seen Tavares

with  a  gun,  without  specifying   which  witnesses  "they"

referred to.

          "[A]  conviction obtained  by  the knowing  use  of

perjured testimony  is fundamentally unfair, and  must be set

                             -11-
                                          11


aside if there  is any reasonable  likelihood that the  false

testimony  could have  affected  the judgment  of the  jury."

United States  v. Agurs, 427  U.S. 97, 103  (1976) (footnotes
                                   

omitted).  Under federal law, perjury occurs when a  "witness

testifying  under  oath   or  affirmation . . . gives   false

testimony  concerning  a  material matter  with  the  willful

intent to provide false testimony, rather than as a result of

confusion,  mistake, or  faulty  memory."   United States  v.
                                                                     

Dunnigan, 507 U.S. 87, 94 (1993) (referring to the definition
                    

of  perjury under 18 U.S.C.    1621).   Tavares, however, has

pointed  to no  more  than an  inconsistency (between  Cain's

testimony and that of Dottridge) and an unclear police report

(that of Mace).   Inconsistent testimony  by itself does  not

amount  to perjury, nor does an unclear police report make it

so.  See  United States v. Gary, 74 F.3d  304, 314 (1st Cir.)
                                           

("it  is axiomatic that inconsistent  testimony is not per se
                                                                         

perjurious"), cert. denied, 116  S.Ct. 2567 (1996).  Further,
                                      

the fact that Cain  did not testify at Tavares'  first trial,

but did at the  second, avails Tavares naught.   See Anderson
                                                                         

v.   United  States,  403  F.2d  451,  454  (7th  Cir.  1968)
                               

(inconsistency in  witness' testimony between trials  is not,

alone, enough to  show perjury), cert.  denied, 394 U.S.  903
                                                          

(1969); cf.  United States v.  Lebon, 4 F.3d  1, 2  (1st Cir.
                                                

1993) (defendant did not show perjury merely by  showing that

witness changed her  story between post-arrest  interview and

                             -12-
                                          12


trial).  Tavares made no request that the trial  court make a

finding  of perjury.  We  decline his invitation  that we now

find willful  intent to provide  false testimony based  on no

more than an  inconsistency in testimony  and a dispute  over

the clarity of a police report.

C.  Transcript From Prior Trial   
                                           

          Tavares'  final trial-related  claim  is  that  the

court misunderstood the  jury's request  for transcripts  and

sent  in  the  wrong transcripts.    The  court  sent in  the

transcripts of the instant  trial, but Tavares says  that the
                                             

jury  was, in fact,  requesting the transcripts  of his prior
                                                                         

trial for the same offense.  The claim is unavailing.
                 

          To  the extent  there was  ambiguity in  the jury's

request  for   transcripts,  Tavares   had  the   ability  to

contemporaneously request  clarification.  He did  not do so.

Nor has Tavares  pointed to  any sign that  the jury  thought

that  they had been given  the wrong transcripts.   We reject

the claim.

                             III.
                                             

                         Sentencing 
                                               

          In his counsel-assisted submission,  Tavares claims

that the  sentencing court erred in: (i)  determining that he

had committed an aggravated assault and that his sentence was

thus governed by Section 2A2.2; and (ii) in  determining that

he  had an  egregious,  serious criminal  record that,  under

                             -13-
                                          13


Section  4A1.3,  warranted  an  upward   departure  from  the

Guidelines' recommended  range of 70-87 months  to a sentence

of 120 months.5  A. Aggravated Assault
                                                  

          Tavares argues that  the sentencing court  erred in

determining that his offense was an aggravated assault within

the  meaning of Section 2A2.2.   However, because  of a fact-

based internal  inconsistency in  the court's  application of

Section 2A2.2, we are unable to decide the merits of Tavares'

challenge and remand for clarification and resentencing.

          The aggravated assault  guideline is structured  so

that a  victim's serious  bodily injury both  functions as  a

trigger for the application  of the guideline as a  whole and
                                                                         

provides  a   basis,  in  applying  the   guideline,  for  an

additional upward  offense level adjustment.   In effect, the

guideline provides two separate  opportunities for a court to

give  effect  to a  finding of  serious  bodily injury.   See
                                                                         

United States v. Newman, 982 F.2d 665, 673-75 (1st Cir. 1992)
                                   

(double   counting   of   victim's  serious   bodily   injury

permissible under Section 2A2.2),  cert. denied, 510 U.S. 812
                                                           

(1993).   Here,  the sentencing  court appeared  to determine

that  the  victim  had  suffered serious  bodily  injury  for

purposes  of  deciding the  applicability,  vel  non, of  the
                                                                

aggravated  assault guideline, but  also determined  that the

                    
                                

5.  Tavares' pro se brief  raises the same sentencing issues,
                               
albeit  with  less clarity.    We,  therefore,  focus on  his
counsel-assisted submission.   

                             -14-
                                          14


victim had suffered something less than serious bodily injury
                                              

for purposes of applying the guideline's  internal provisions

for offense level adjustment.

          The  Guidelines  define  aggravated  assault  as  a

felonious assault involving:

          (a) a dangerous weapon  with intent to do
          bodily   harm   (i.e.,   not  merely   to
                                           
          frighten), or
          (b) serious bodily injury, or
          (c) an intent to commit another felony.

U.S.S.G.    2A2.2, comment. (n.1).  Serious bodily injury, in

turn, is defined as:

          [(i)]  injury  involving extreme  pain or
          the impairment of a function  of a bodily
          member, organ or mental faculty; or
          [(ii)]  requiring   medical  intervention
          such  as   surgery,  hospitalization,  or
          physical rehabilitation.6

U.S.S.G.    1B1.1,  comment.  (n.1(j)).   Tavares caused  his

victim to suffer  a laceration  to the hand  that required  a

trip to the  emergency room  and eight stitches.   The  court

determined that that injury  was sufficiently analogous to an

injury  requiring  surgery,   hospitalization,  or   physical

rehabilitation  to  fall  within  the  definition of  serious

bodily injury; thus, Section 2A2.2 applied.

                    
                                

6.  In  contrast,   "bodily  injury"   is  defined  as   "any
significant  injury;  e.g., an  injury  that  is painful  and
                                      
obvious,  or  is  of  a  type  for  which  medical  attention
ordinarily  would be  sought."   U.S.S.G.    1B1.1,  comment.
(n.1(b)). 

                             -15-
                                          15


          The court did not find on the record before it that

the brandishing  of  the shotgun  itself  was done  with  the

"intent  to  do bodily  harm."   Absent  such a  finding, the

aggravated assault  determination could  not  be premised  on

note 1, part  (a), of the commentary to Section 2A2.2.  While

such  an intent  may in  fact have  been present,  the record

before the  district court  did not  require such a  finding.

We, therefore, cannot rest an affirmance on such a ground.

          The  next  step  was  to  calculate adjustments  to

Tavares' offense level under the specific offense  adjustment

provisions  of  the   aggravated  assault  guideline.     The

aggravated assault guideline provides for different increases

in  the offense  level, depending on  the seriousness  of the

victim's injury:

          If  the  victim sustained  bodily injury,
          increase the offense  level according  to
          the seriousness of the injury:

          Degree of Bodily Injury    Increase in Level
                                                                  

          (A) Bodily Injury            add 2
          (B) Serious Bodily Injury    add 4
                                               
          (C) Permanent or
              Life-Threatening 
              Bodily Injury            add 6

          (D)If  the   degree  of  injury  is   between  that
                                                                         
specified
                     
          in subdivision (A) and (B),  add 3 levels; or
                                                               

          (E)If   the  degree  of   injury  is  between  that
specified
          in subdivisions (B) and (C), add 5 levels.

                             -16-
                                          16


U.S.S.G.     2A2.2(b)(3) (emphasis  added).    The sentencing

court increased  Tavares' offense  level by three.   A  three
                                                             

level  increase applies  when the  magnitude of  the victim's

injury is  between  bodily injury and  serious bodily injury.
                              

See  U.S.S.G.   2A2.2(b)(3)(D).   But  this  determination --
               

that  the victim's  injury  was less  than  a serious  bodily
                                                

injury  -- is in direct  conflict with the  court's basis for

applying the aggravated assault guideline in the first place,

i.e., that  the victim had suffered a serious bodily injury.7
                

          Were  the inconsistency in  the court's application

of  Section 2A2.2 a purely legal  matter, we might be able to

resolve it ourselves, without the need to remand.  But we  do

not think that the question can  be reduced to a purely legal

one.  Depending on context, an inch long laceration requiring

eight stitches  might or might not  constitute serious bodily

injury.  For  example, if  there was  a great  deal of  blood

loss, or the victim  was a hemophiliac, such an  injury might

well  be thought serious.  More generally, we cannot say that

the  victim's injury in  this case  is of  a kind  that would
                                                             

categorically call  for its characterization as  "serious" or
                         

not.   Lacerations can be life-threatening  or trivial; where

                    
                                

7.  We  note that  a three  level increase  in offense  level
would  not  have  produced such  a  conflict  if the  court's
decision to  apply  Section  2A2.2  had been  premised  on  a
determination that there  was an "intent to do  bodily harm."
See U.S.S.G.   2A2.2, comment. (n.1(a)). 
               

                             -17-
                                          17


on  the sliding  scale  of severity  a particular  laceration

falls  is not  a determination that  can be made  solely as a

matter of law.

          As  explained in  Newman, we review  the sentencing
                                              

court's  "fact   dominated   evaluative  judgment"   of   the

seriousness of the victim's injury for clear error.  982 F.2d

at 671.   This  is  not a  case in  which  the record  either

clearly  precludes or  mandates a  finding of  serious bodily

injury.   In the context of clear error review, it is not for

this court to choose  between two mutually inconsistent fact-

based determinations that each has some plausibility in light

of  the record.   Since,  on this record, we cannot reconcile

or  resolve  the  sentencing  court's dual  findings  of  the

severity of the  victim's injury, we are  left no alternative

but  to vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.  The

district court is free to make new findings or reconsider the

basis for  the  adjustment entirely.   Cf.  United States  v.
                                                                     

Wester,    F.3d   ,   , slip op. at 21, No. 95-1143 (1st Cir.
                  

July 22, 1996). 

B. Egregious, Serious Criminal Record
                                                 

          Tavares  next  argues  that   the  court  erred  in

departing upward from the recommended  70-87 month sentencing

range (that  applied as a  result of applying  the aggravated

assault  guideline)  to  a  sentence  of  120  months.    The

sentencing court  made the  departure  because it  determined

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                                          18


that  the CHC  of  IV  that  had  produced  the  70-87  month

recommended   range  did  not   adequately  reflect  Tavares'

extensive criminal  record.  It  therefore increased Tavares'

CHC level by two,  to CHC VI (the Guidelines'  highest level,

resulting in a  sentencing range of 92-115  months), and then

within  CHC VI, departed higher  still, to a  sentence of 120

months.    The  Guidelines,   in  the  proper  circumstances,

encourage  departures  in  CHC  levels, but,  for  departures

beyond CHC VI, require that the defendant have an "egregious,

serious criminal record."   U.S.S.G.   4A1.3, p.s.;  see also
                                                                         

United  States v.  Doe, 18  F.3d 41,  48-49 (1st  Cir. 1994);
                                  

United States  v. Mendez-Colon,  15 F.3d  188, 190  (1st Cir.
                                          

1994).    Tavares argues  that  his criminal  record  was not

egregious and serious and that  the sentencing court erred in

determining so.

          The  sentencing court  explained that  had Tavares'

three "guilty  filed" dispositions from the  state court been

convictions, a  minimum sentence of fifteen  years would have

resulted under  the ACCA.   See  18 U.S.C.    924(e).   Since
                                           

there  were sufficient  facts  for the  court  to find  by  a

preponderance  of the  evidence that  the three  state crimes

were  in  fact  committed,  it  found  a  ten  year  sentence

appropriate.   Based on  Tavares' extensive criminal history,

we  see  no abuse  of discretion  in  the court's  upward CHC

departure.  See United States v. Koon, 116 S. Ct. 2035, 2047-
                                                 

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                                          19


48  (1996)  (abuse of  discretion  standard  appropriate when

examining  district  court's  decision  to  depart  from  the

Guidelines).  Similarly, we see no abuse of discretion in the

extent  of  the  departure.   See  id.    However, since  the
                                                  

sentencing   court's  offense   level  determination   is  in

question, we leave it to the sentencing court to redetermine,

on remand, the extent of CHC departure warranted.

77                           IV.
                                            

          The  judgment  of  conviction  is  affirmed.    The
                                                                 

sentence, however, is vacated,  and the case is  remanded for
                                                                     

resentencing.    

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                                          20

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