United States v. Rogers, No. 20-3408 (8th Cir. 2021)
Annotate this CaseThe Eighth Circuit affirmed defendant's 210 month sentence imposed by the district court after determining that he was a career offender under USSG 4B1.1(a). The court concluded that the district court did not abuse its substantial sentencing discretion in this case. The court explained that, in denying a variance and imposing a 210-month sentence, the district court carefully explained that it had considered the 18 U.S.C. 3553(a) sentencing factors, the sentencing guidelines, the seriousness of the offense conduct, the violations defendant committed when granted pretrial release, his troubled childhood and health conditions as mitigating factors, and his extensive criminal history beginning at age 13 and extending nearly four decades as an adult.
Court Description: [Per Curiam - Before Smith, Chief Judge, and Wollman and Loken, Circuit Judges] Criminal case - Sentencing. Challenge to career offender guidelines rejected; defendant's sentence was not an abuse of the district court's substantial sentencing discretion.
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