                    United States Court of Appeals
                              FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
                                    ___________

                                    No. 10-3596
                                    ___________

United States of America,                *
                                         *
      Plaintiff - Appellee,              *
                                         * Appeal from the United States
      v.                                 * District Court for the
                                         * Western District of Arkansas.
Kirk Demeyer,                            *
                                         *    [PUBLISHED]
      Defendant - Appellant.             *
                                    ___________

                               Submitted: October 17, 2011
                                  Filed: January 26, 2012
                                   ___________

Before RILEY, Chief Judge, LOKEN and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
                              ___________

PER CURIAM.

        Kirk Demeyer raped his developmentally disabled teenage daughter,
photographed and videotaped her engaged in sexually explicit conduct, and
transmitted these sexually explicit materials over the internet through file sharing
services and live webcam transmissions. He was identified during an investigation
of an on-line file sharing program, and examination of his computer revealed 16,098
still images and 735 video files of child pornography, including 594 files concerning
his daughter. After he was convicted in state court of raping his daughter, Demeyer
pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual exploitation of a minor in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 2251(a) and (e).
      The advisory guidelines range for Demeyer’s offenses was life in prison.
Describing the horrendous abuse of Demeyer’s daughter as “child pornography at its
worst and at it most hurtful,” the district court1 determined that the recommended
guidelines sentence was appropriate. Because the statutory maximum sentence for
each count of conviction was thirty years in prison, the court sentenced Demeyer to
four consecutive thirty-year prison terms, to be concurrent with the undischarged
portion of the forty-year rape sentence he is serving. Demeyer appeals, arguing the
120-year sentence is substantively unreasonable. We affirm.

       Demeyer argues that because he was 52 years old at sentencing, the 120-year
sentence “does not accurately reflect a ‘life’ sentence as contemplated by the
guidelines.” One or at most two thirty-year sentences, he argues, would be sufficient
to achieve the sentencing purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). The district court rejected
this argument at sentencing. It was well within its discretion to do so.

       Demeyer concedes, as he must, that the guidelines sentence of life in prison
was substantively reasonable punishment for his horrific crimes. That being so, it is
not for us to micro-manage how the district court exercised its discretion to impose
concurrent or consecutive sentences for the multiple counts of conviction in order to
ensure that Demeyer would in fact serve a life sentence. As we said in affirming a
750-year sentence imposed on a defendant whose child pornography offenses
victimized his granddaughters, “The district court emphasized incapacitation . . . and
stressed the importance of a life sentence in achieving that result. The absurdity of
a 750 year sentence, or even a 10,000 year sentence, should not detract from the
gravity of [the defendant’s] crimes.” United States v. Betcher, 534 F.3d 820, 828 (8th
Cir. 2008), cert. denied, 129 S. Ct. 962 (2009); see United States v. Metzger, 411 Fed.



      1
       The Honorable Jimm Larry Hendren, Chief Judge of the United States District
Court for the Western District of Arkansas.

                                         -2-
App’x 1, 4 (7th Cir. 2010) (unpublished) (“Once Metzger acknowledged the validity
of a life term for his crimes, his sentence for hundreds of years is not excessive.”).

      Very long prison sentences for particularly abhorrent conduct have been
repeatedly upheld. See United States v. Sarras, 575 F.3d 1191, 1220-1221 (11th Cir.
2009) (collecting cases and affirming a 100-year sentence). The district court did not
abuse its substantial sentencing discretion.

      The judgment is affirmed.
                     ______________________________




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