PER CURIAM:
Scott Wilson pled guilty to one count of arson, 18 U.S.C. § 844(i) (2006). The district court departed above the Guidelines range and sentenced Wilson as a de facto career offender to a term of 240 months imprisonment.
Wilson and his wife, Sarah Manning, ran a business together at their primary residence, both before and after their divorce, until her death in 2007. Thereafter, Wilson became involved in a legal dispute with his wife's family over her estate. On October 21, 2008, the Howard County, Maryland circuit court issued a ruling that was adverse to Wilson's attempt to assert a claim on the estate through the business. On October 31, 2008, Wilson set fire to the house, resulting in its complete destruction. Following the fire, in a tape-recorded interview with an insurance investigator, Wilson said he knew that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) was investigating the fire and that he believed his wife's family members were saying he had caused it. Wilson strewed glass and screws on the driveway of Priscilla Manning Ford, his wife's sister, the executor of the estate. He also called Mary Lou Manning, his wife's mother, threatening to kill her and her grandchildren, and called John Manning, Jr., his wife's brother, and threatened to kill him.
In the presentence report, the probation officer recommended a Guidelines range of 63-78 months, but suggested that an upward departure under § 4A1.3 might be appropriate in light of Wilson's ten prior convictions for arson, none of which were counted in his criminal history because they were outside the applicable time period. Wilson also had an outdated prior conviction for assault resulting from an incident where he held his mother hostage with a shotgun. The government requested a departure to the Guidelines range that would apply if Wilson were a career offender,
At sentencing, an ATF agent testified about the fire investigation, as well as evidence uncovered during the investigation that Wilson had responded to his first wife's leaving him by trying to burn their house down after locking her in the bathroom and that Wilson had been paid to burn several structures in 1988. The district court agreed that a departure was appropriate and that a lesser departure than the one requested by the government would be insufficient. The departure produced a Guidelines range of 210-240 months. The court imposed the statutory maximum term of 240 months.
A sentence is reviewed for reasonableness under an abuse-of-discretion standard.
Wilson first argues that no evidence supported the district court's conclusion that he intended to obstruct the fire or grand jury investigation when he made post-fire threats to the Mannings. A district court's determination that a defendant obstructed justice is reviewed for clear error.
Wilson maintains that his conduct toward the Mannings after the fire related solely to the ongoing dispute over his former wife's estate, which pre-dated the fire, and that the government lacked evidence directly connecting Wilson's post-fire conduct to the investigation. However, the district court did not ignore this fact. The court noted that Wilson had engaged in conduct which expressed his hatred for the Manning family before the fire and after the fire, and the court considered whether the post-fire threats and intimidating conduct related to the fire investigation. The court ultimately found, based on Wilson's statement to the insurance investigator, that Wilson was aware of the fire investigation and the Mannings' participation in it, and that Wilson's post-fire threats to them were motivated in part by this new circumstance. Application Note 4(a) to § 3C1.1 states that the adjustment applies to "threatening, intimidating, or otherwise unlawfully influencing a . . . witness . . . directly or indirectly, or attempting to do so[.]" We conclude that the court did not clearly err in finding that the adjustment applied in Wilson's case.
Next, Wilson argues that his sentence is unreasonable because the district court "failed to articulate a sufficient justification" for the departure. A district court commits procedural error in sentencing when it fails "to adequately explain the chosen sentence."
The district court considered and rejected a lesser departure, and explained that Wilson had not rehabilitated himself in the time that had passed since his ten arson convictions in 1981, that he had continued to set destructive fires, that he continued to pose an immediate threat to the community, and that his conduct was not excused by mental illness or substance abuse.
In evaluating the district court's explanation of the sentence imposed, the district court must consider the 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) (2006) factors and explain the sentence, although it need not explicitly refer to § 3553(a) or discuss every factor on the record.
We therefore affirm the sentence imposed by the district court. We dispense with oral argument because the facts and legal contentions are adequately presented in the materials before the court and argument would not aid the decisional process.