Court Opinion

ID: 5648528
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 14:00:34.476878+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:38:27.446746
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 19-13898     Date Filed: 01/11/2022   Page: 1 of 30

                                           [DO NOT PUBLISH]
                            In the
         United States Court of Appeals
                 For the Eleventh Circuit

                   ____________________

                         No. 19-13898
                   ____________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
                                              Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
TREVOR AINES,
a.k.a. Sticks,

                                           Defendant-Appellant.

                   ____________________

          Appeal from the United States District Court
              for the Southern District of Georgia
           D.C. Docket No. 4:18-cr-00260-RSB-CLR-7
                    ____________________
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2                       Opinion of the Court                  19-13898

Before ROSENBAUM and JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judges, and ALTMAN,*
District Judge.
PER CURIAM:
       Trevor Aines appeals his 280-month sentence as procedur-
ally and substantively unreasonable. Under a plea agreement with
the Government, Aines pled guilty to conspiracy to possess with
intent to distribute, and to distribute, 5 grams or more of metham-
phetamine and possession of a firearm by a felon. Given Aines’s
criminal history and offense level, the Sentencing Guidelines
yielded a range of 168 to 210 months in custody. The district judge
varied upward and sentenced Aines to 280 months in custody.
Aines argues that this sentence is procedurally unreasonable be-
cause, according to Aines, the court made and relied on improper
factual findings. In addition, Aines contends that the sentence is
substantively unreasonable. For the reasons that follow, we affirm
the district court’s sentence.
                         I.     Background
       Trevor Aines was a member of the Ghost Face Gangsters
(“GFG”), described by the Presentence Investigation Report
(“PSI”) as a “traditional white supremacy gang originating in

*The Honorable Roy Altman, United States District Judge for the Southern
District of Florida, sitting by designation.
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19-13898                Opinion of the Court                         3

Georgia prisons.” In 2015, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Fire-
arms, and Explosives (“ATF”) initiated an investigation of GFG.
        Unrelatedly, on July 1, 2018, the Savannah Police conducted
a traffic stop on a vehicle Aines was driving. The officers discov-
ered Aines had an active contempt-of-court warrant. When they
directed Aines to exit the vehicle, Aines fled on foot and then
fought with officers when they tried to arrest him. A search of the
vehicle yielded a Crown Royal bag that contained 38 small bags
and 11 individual plastic wraps; a black digital scale; multiple pieces
of gold jewelry; a clear Ziploc bag of methamphetamine (2 grams);
a sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun loaded with 5 rounds of ammuni-
tion; a knife; multiple hypodermic needles; multiple .38 caliber
rounds of ammunition; and a .38 special Smith and Wesson re-
volver. Both firearms had been reported stolen.
       Meanwhile, ATF’s investigation culminated in a Southern
District of Georgia grand jury’s return of an 83-count indictment
against Trevor Aines and 42 codefendants. Aines was named in
Counts 1, 72, 73, 74, and 75 of the indictment, which related in part
to the events that occurred on July 1, 2018.
       Eventually, Aines pled guilty to the lesser-included offense
of Count 1 (conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute, and to
distribute, 5 grams or more of methamphetamine) and to Count 74
(possession of a firearm by a felon) in exchange for the dismissal of
the other charges against him.
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4                      Opinion of the Court                19-13898

        The PSI concluded that Aines’s total offense level was a 31
because the base offense level was a 30, plus two points for use of
a firearm and two points for use of violence, minus two points for
acceptance of responsibility and one point for assisting authorities.
In addition, Aines had a criminal-history category of V. This re-
sulted in a guideline sentence range of 168 to 210 months in cus-
tody. The probation officer recommended a sentence of 210
months as to Count 1 and 120 months as to Count 74, to be served
concurrently. Aines’s counsel filed objections to the PSI, and the
government filed a memorandum asking the court to sentence
Aines above the guideline-range maximum.
       At the sentencing hearing, defense counsel withdrew all ob-
jections to the PSI except to Paragraph 15, which stated,
      15. Maurice Graham (codefendant) submitted to
      an interview with agents on September 17, 2018. Gra-
      ham reported that he had watched a video of Helen
      Giffen being sexually assaulted by Trevor Aines and
      other GFG members. Graham asserted that he
      viewed a portion of the video on Devon Aines’ [Tre-
      vor Aines’s brother and a codefendant] laptop com-
      puter sometime after the assault occurred. In the
      video, Trevor Aines put a gun in Giffen’s mouth as
      Giffen cried.
Aines “authorized [his counsel] to be very specific that he ob-
ject[ed] to any indication that he sexually assaulted or raped any-
one.” The court adopted the unobjected-to factual statements and
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19-13898               Opinion of the Court                       5

advisory guidelines in the PSI and reserved ruling on the objection
to Paragraph 15 until after testimony. But the court acknowledged
that the information contained in Paragraph 15 did not affect the
guideline range.
        The court then heard testimony from government wit-
nesses Brianna White, Reannon Warnock, Helen Giffen, and Dan-
iel Duane Jeffers. White testified that she used meth with Aines.
She recalled a particular instance in which she was in a hotel room
with Aines and Aines believed he was missing drugs. After search-
ing his car and the hotel room, Aines forced White to strip naked
so he could verify she had not stolen the drugs. Then, Aines forced
White to play “Russian Roulette.” Specifically, the testimony was
as follows:
      Q: And he put some bullets back in [the gun], and
      then he made you open your mouth. And then he
      stuck the gun in your mouth?
      A: Yes.
      Q: Did he pull the trigger?
      A: Yes.
Warnock testified that White called her crying during this incident.
She eventually helped retrieve White from the situation. White
was visibly upset and shaken.
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6                          Opinion of the Court                       19-13898

       Giffen testified that she also had an encounter with Aines in
a hotel room.1 She explained that her brother “left her” with Aines
to repay a drug debt he owed to Aines. Aines and Giffen engaged
in what Giffen characterized as consensual sex. They did meth to-
gether. Giffen explained that she did not feel free to leave the hotel
room. As Giffen recalled, people were “in and out [of the hotel
room] all day” doing drugs. Giffen described herself as nodding off
and falling asleep, which she found surprising because, in her expe-
rience, meth usually kept her awake. She testified she believed
Aines had given her a drug to make her fall asleep.
       At some point, Giffen stated, Aines pointed a gun at her
head. Giffen accompanied Aines to deliver meth. She fell into un-
consciousness, and when she awoke, she was sore from her waist
down with multiple bruises all over her body. Later, Maurice Gra-
ham told Giffen that he had seen a video in which “they took ad-
vantage of you and they recorded it.” 2 Giffen said she was scared
of Aines and felt that she had to do whatever he asked of her. Nev-
ertheless, Giffen recalled, Aines would leave the hotel room for

1 This  was apparently a separate hotel stay than the one about which White
testified. The PSI notes that Giffen’s event occurred “while at a Days Inn hotel
in May 2018,” while Source of Information 27 (who is apparently White) stated
that the Russian Roulette incident occurred “during April or May of 2018” in
a hotel room “at a Best Western.”
2The court overruled defense counsel’s hearsay objection to this testimony
after finding that the testimony was reliable. See United States v. Magluta, 418
F.3d 1166, 1184 (11th Cir. 2005) (“[I]n sentencing, a district court can consider
hearsay . . . so long as there are sufficient indicia of reliability.”).
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19-13898              Opinion of the Court                       7

spans of hours and maybe days. Because she was high on meth,
she did not know how many days she was in the hotel room.
       The government offered into evidence photographs of
Giffen’s bruising. Giffen did not testify specifically that she be-
lieved Aines had sexually assaulted her.
      Finally, Jeffers, an unindicted codefendant, testified that
when he was coming into the courthouse that very day, he passed
Aines and Aines called him a snitch.
       After the evidence was presented the government argued
for an upward variance from the guideline range. In the course of
that argument, the government stated that Aines’s acts of violence
included “putting a gun in a person’s mouth and playing Russian
Roulette. They include holding people against their will where sex-
ual abuse took place.” The government also asserted,
      He then gets two points for using violence in this
      case. Two points. I would submit that putting a gun
      in someone’s mouth and playing Russian Roulette
      and making their life flash before their eyes, not
      knowing whether they’re going to live or die, being
      held against their will, is worth more than a point.
      Engaging or allowing others to engage in a gang rape,
      or a rape, that is videotaped and holding someone
      against their will at gunpoint is worth more than a
      point. Two points clearly under-represents the true
      violence that was perpetrated by this defendant.
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8                      Opinion of the Court                 19-13898

     In response, defense counsel pointed out that no evidence
showed that Aines had participated in a gang rape.
      The court then ruled on the objection to Paragraph 15:
      Regarding the Paragraph 15, I overrule the objection
      in part and sustain the objection in part. This is what
      the correct reading of Paragraph 15 should be: “Mau-
      rice Graham submitted to an interview with agents
      on September 19, 2018. Graham reported that he’d
      watched a video of Helen Giffen being sexually as-
      saulted by other GFG members. Graham asserted
      that he viewed a portion of the video on Devon
      Aines’s laptop computer sometime after the assault
      occurred. In the video Trevor Aines put a gun in
      Giffen’s mouth as Giffen cried.” That’s how it will
      read.
        After Aines made a personal statement to the court in which
he again stressed that he was not involved in a sexual assault, the
court pronounced the sentence. It varied upward from the guide-
line range and sentenced Aines to custody for a total term of 280
months for Count 1 and 120 months for Count 74, to be served
concurrently. The court gave four reasons for varying upward.
First, it stated that the ascertainable amount of drugs described in
the PSI underrepresented Aines’s criminal drug dealing. Next, the
court found that the significant violence that Aines exhibited in fur-
therance of the drug conspiracy warranted an upward variance.
With regard to this factor, the court explained,
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19-13898               Opinion of the Court                         9

      I don’t need to emphasize any more than has already
      been emphasized [in] the testimony I heard today.
      But suffice it to say putting these females through
      what you put them through is abhorrent, and it de-
      serves far more than a two-point increase in your of-
      fense level. And make no mistake, every time you
      flew off the handle it’s because you thought some-
      body stole your drugs. Not every time, but several
      times. So, again, it’s related to the conduct itself.
Next, the court found that Aines’s criminal-history category did not
adequately represent the type of criminal conduct Aines had been
engaged in because of the types of convictions that Aines had gath-
ered in a very short period. The court felt that Aines had previously
been given “wake-up calls” in the form of serious convictions and
that Aines had never changed his ways. Last, the court varied up-
ward because Aines had called Jeffers a snitch to his face that very
day, in an attempt to intimidate Jeffers, which, according to the
court, displayed that Aines still had no remorse.
        The court summarized that it was varying upward primarily
in consideration of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(2)(C): “But particularly here,
it’s a need to protect the public. Folks who testified today aren’t
the only ones that have been terrorized by your conduct and vic-
timized by your conduct. Hopefully, they’ll be the last. This sen-
tence is designed to protect the public.”
      In the judgment and statement of reasons for the sentence,
the court checked the box that it adopted the PSI with the following
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10                    Opinion of the Court                 19-13898

change: “The Court finds that Paragraph 15 incorrectly summa-
rizes an interview with a cooperating codefendant. The Court
holds that Graham did not specifically state that he observed Tre-
vor Aines sexually assaulting Helen Giffen. Accordingly, the sec-
ond sentence of Paragraph 15 should read: ‘Graham reported that
he had watched a video of Helen Giffen being sexually assaulted by
other GFG members.’” The Court also explained further its rea-
soning for the upward variance:
      The Court finds that the offense level for the defend-
      ant is largely based on the ascertainable amount of
      drugs. It is the belief of the Court that the amount at-
      tributed grossly underrepresents the quantity of
      drugs that the defendant was involved in distributing.
      Further, the level of violence displayed by the defend-
      ant is not adequately represented in a two-level in-
      crease in offense level. The defendant brandished a
      firearm numerous times to continue to create a cli-
      mate of fear to further the drug conspiracy and gang
      activity. The Court finds that the defendant has a his-
      tory of serious felony convictions that are not ade-
      quately represented by a Criminal History Category
      V. Further, the defendant calling a cooperating unin-
      dicted codefendant “a snitch” outside of the court-
      room on the day of sentencing shows the defendant
      has not truly accepted responsibility for his actions
      and continues to try to use intimidation and fear. A
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19-13898               Opinion of the Court                        11

      sentence significantly above the guideline range has
      been imposed mainly to protect the public from the
      violence that the defendant displays.
       The same district judge also sentenced Aines’s codefendants.
According to Aines’s brief, and not disputed by the government, of
the other codefendants, one received a sentence of 235 months,
two sentences of 210 months each, and the remaining codefendants
each received a sentence under 200 months (with 21 codefendants
receiving less than 100 months).
        The plea agreement preserved Aines’s right to appeal if the
court varied upward from the guideline range, and Aines timely
filed his notice of appeal.
        He argues on appeal that, in varying upward, the district
judge improperly relied on the sexual-assault allegation and on the
allegedly erroneous factual finding that Aines had “a large amount
of drugs” despite testimonial evidence to the contrary. Aines as-
serts that the cumulative effect of these errors is that Aines ended
up with a significantly higher sentence than his codefendants, and
that is substantively unreasonable.
                       II.    Legal Standard
       We review a criminal sentence for procedural and substan-
tive reasonableness under an abuse-of-discretion standard. United
States v. Villarreal, 613 F.3d 1344, 1357 (11th Cir. 2010). Under this
standard, “[a] district court’s underlying legal conclusions are re-
viewed de novo and its factual findings for clear error.” United
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12                     Opinion of the Court                 19-13898

States v. $70,670.00 in U.S. Currency, 929 F.3d 1293, 1300 (11th Cir.
2019).
                         III. Discussion
A.       Procedural Unreasonableness
       Aines argues that the district court based its decision to im-
pose a 70-month above-guideline sentence on the alleged sexual as-
sault and the court’s finding that Aines dealt “a large amount of
drugs.” He contends that both were improper considerations, and
as a result, his sentence is procedurally unreasonable.
        A sentence is procedurally unreasonable if a district court
commits an error “such as failing to . . . adequately explain the cho-
sen sentence . . . .” Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38, 51 (2007).
Section 3553(c) requires that “[t]he sentencing judge . . . set forth
[sufficient reasoning] to satisfy the appellate court that he has con-
sidered the parties’ arguments and has a reasoned basis for exercis-
ing his own legal decisionmaking authority.” Rita v. United States,
551 U.S. 338, 356 (2007).
         1.   The Sexual Assault
       Aines makes three arguments for why consideration of the
sexual-assault allegation was erroneous. First, he contends that the
court failed to resolve the factual dispute about the sexual assault.
Next, according to Aines, consideration of the sexual assault was
improper because, even if the court resolved the dispute against
Aines, the assault was not related to the charged offenses. Last,
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19-13898                Opinion of the Court                          13

Aines urges, it was improper to rely on the sexual assault because
Aines did not get to present an insanity defense to the offense.
       We are not persuaded. First, as a matter of fact, the record
does not support Aines’s assertion that the court relied on the sex-
ual-assault allegation when it chose the sentence. Second, even as-
suming the court did sentence Aines based in part on the sexual-
assault allegation without resolving the factual dispute, Aines in-
vited the error by agreeing to the court’s resolution of his objection
to Paragraph 15. Third, again assuming the court sentenced Aines
in part based on the sexual-assault allegation without resolving the
factual dispute, Aines’s argument that the court may not consider
uncharged offenses that are not relevant to the charged offense is
unavailing because it relates to upward departures, not upward
variances. Last, Aines had notice that the sexual-assault allegation
might come up at the sentencing hearing because the PSI included
it and the government filed a motion requesting an upward vari-
ance. As a result, Aines had the opportunity to present an insanity
defense to the allegation if he so desired.
      We explain our reasoning in more depth below.
       First, the district court did not, in fact, rely on the allegation
that Aines was involved in a gang rape of Giffen. According to
Aines, the district court’s statement during the sentencing hearing
(noted below) amounts to “the court plainly stat[ing] that it put
significant weight on the sexual-assault allegations in imposing an
above-Guidelines sentence”:
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14                     Opinion of the Court                19-13898

      I don’t need to emphasize any more than has already
      been emphasized [in] the testimony I heard today.
      But suffice it to say putting these females through
      what you put them through is abhorrent, and it de-
      serves far more than a two-point increase in your of-
      fense level. And make no mistake, every time you
      flew off the handle it’s because you thought some-
      body stole your drugs. Not every time, but several
      times. So, again, it’s related to the conduct itself.
But this statement, taken in context, reflects instead that the court
was referring to the extensive evidence of gun violence on Aines’s
part. This is evident for a few reasons.
       For starters, the court referred to Aines putting “females”
(plural) through something abhorrent. Only Giffen alleged she ex-
perienced sexual assault. Both women experienced gun violence—
White testified that Aines forced her to play Russian Roulette and
the PSI reflected that Aines put a gun in Giffen’s mouth—so the
court’s reference to what Aines put multiple “females” through
makes sense only if the court was referring to Aines’s violence us-
ing guns, not the sexual-assault allegation.
       The court also mentioned Aines’s “flying off the handle”
when he thought someone stole his drugs. Only White (not Giffen,
the sexual-assault victim) testified that Aines’s misperception that
she had stolen his meth resulted in the violence (forced Russian
Roulette) against her.
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19-13898                Opinion of the Court                        15

        And in the judgment and explanation of sentence, concern-
ing the upward variance based on violence, the court wrote, “Fur-
ther, the level of violence displayed by the defendant is not ade-
quately represented in a two-level increase in offense level. The
defendant brandished a firearm numerous times to continue to cre-
ate a climate of fear to further the drug conspiracy and gang activ-
ity.” (emphasis added). Again, the violence the court used to justify
the upward variance was gun violence, like brandishing a firearm.
The court did not reference the sexual assault.
      Taking the written explanation of the sentence along with
the court’s statements at the sentencing hearing, the record simply
does not reflect that the court relied on the sexual-assault allegation
when it chose to vary upward from the guideline range.
       Second, even assuming arguendo that the court did rely on
the sexual-assault allegation—and assuming that hypothetical reli-
ance was error—Aines invited the error by accepting the court’s
resolution of his objection to Paragraph 15.
       Under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32, if a factual
dispute arises concerning any part of the PSI, the sentencing court
must rule on the dispute or determine that a ruling is unnecessary
because the ruling will not affect sentencing or be considered dur-
ing sentencing. Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(i)(3)(b); United States v. Foley,
508 F.3d 627, 634 (11th Cir. 2007). According to Aines, the district
court failed to do either with respect to the sexual-assault allega-
tion, so his sentence is procedurally unreasonable. Aines is mis-
taken.
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16                    Opinion of the Court                19-13898

        Before the court took testimony at the sentencing hearing,
the government proposed the change to Paragraph 15 that the
court eventually adopted—that Graham told the interviewers that
he saw “other GFG members”—not Aines—sexually assault
Giffen. The court asked defense counsel whether the amendment
resolved the objection, and she responded: “According to my cli-
ent, in conferring with him, he says that based on what the govern-
ment just presented to the Court, it clarifies it for him.”
      Then, when the district court amended Paragraph 15, the
following exchange occurred:
      Defense counsel: That’s how it reads, and we under-
      stand and added that we knew that Maurice Graham
      was going – that’s based on what Maurice Graham
      believes that he saw. And we’re saying that – or the
      objection was that it was hearsay because we don’t
      even have the video, but we do not deny or object to
      that that’s what Maurice Graham told the inter-
      viewer.
      The Court: Okay. Well, that’s my ruling, what I just
      stated –
      Defense counsel: Okay.
      The Court: -- regarding Paragraph 15.
      Defense counsel: All right.
      The Court: All right?
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19-13898                   Opinion of the Court                              17

       Defense counsel: Yes.
       We need not decide whether it was error for the court not
to resolve the factual dispute of whether Aines himself sexually as-
saulted Giffen because, even assuming it was, Aines invited the er-
ror.
       The invited-error doctrine “is implicated when a party in-
duces or invites the district court into making an error.” United
States v. Brannan, 562 F.3d 1300, 1306 (11th Cir. 2009) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Such invited error is not reviewable on
appeal. Id. “Thus, if a party waives a procedural right or agrees to
the admissibility of certain evidence, he cannot later complain that
any resulting error is reversible.” Id.
       Here, Aines’s counsel objected to Paragraph 15. After con-
ferring with Aines, she agreed that the court’s revision to Para-
graph 15 resolved the objection. Because Aines agreed to the
Court’s resolution of his objection, he cannot argue otherwise on
appeal. While Aines did say he didn’t want any implication in the
PSI that he sexually assaulted someone, he and his counsel agreed
that the court’s revision of Paragraph 15 resolved the objection.
And Aines doesn’t argue on appeal anything about the hearsay ob-
jection. So this argument fails. 3

3 Aines argues that the court’s failure to make a factual finding “highlights an
open question in this Circuit regarding the standard of proof for uncharged
offenses that are unrelated to the crimes of conviction.” According to Aines,
this Court has not addressed whether the government has to prove uncharged
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18                        Opinion of the Court                    19-13898

       Third, again assuming arguendo that the district court con-
sidered that Aines had participated himself in the alleged gang rape
of Giffen, Aines argues that was inappropriate because the allega-
tion was not relevant to the charged offenses. In support of his
contention that an uncharged offense must be relevant to the
charged offense for the court to be able to consider it, Aines first
cites U.S.S.G. § 5K2.21. That section of the Sentencing Guidelines
states,
       The court may depart upward to reflect the actual se-
       riousness of the offense based on conduct (1) under-
       lying a charge dismissed as part of a plea agreement
       in the case, or underlying a potential charge not pur-
       sued in the case as part of a plea agreement or for any
       other reason; and (2) that did not enter into the deter-
       mination of the applicable guideline range.
(emphasis added).
      According to Aines, because the sexual assault was not dis-
missed and was not “not pursued” as part of the plea agreement, it

offenses beyond a reasonable doubt or by a preponderance of evidence for the
court to consider them in sentencing. But in United States v. Overstreet, 713
F.3d 627, 637 (11th Cir. 2013), this Court held that it was not error for the
sentencing court to find that the defendant murdered his wife when the gov-
ernment proved it by a preponderance of evidence. So, “the district court was
still entitled to consider the murder in deciding whether to vary outside the
guideline range.” Id. The standard of proof required, then, is not an open
question in this Court.
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19-13898                Opinion of the Court                        19

was improper for the district court to rely on it when deciding
Aines’s sentence.
        This argument misses the mark. Section 5K2.21 relates to
an upward departure, not an upward variance. By the district
court’s own description, the district court did not depart upward;
it varied upward. So § 5K2.21 does not apply, and neither do the
cases Aines cites for the same proposition.
        He first cites United States v. Ellis, 419 F.3d 1189 (11th Cir.
2005). Ellis is a departure case that was decided shortly after United
States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005). In Booker, the Supreme
Court held that the mandatory nature of the Sentencing Guidelines
violated the Sixth Amendment, so the guidelines could be only ad-
visory. In Ellis, we held that the district court erred by departing
upward under a sentencing guideline that didn’t apply. We then
acknowledged that, on remand, the district court couldn’t depart
for those reasons, but under Booker, could instead take them into
account when tailoring the sentence, including in varying upward.
Id. at 1193.
        Next, Aines cites United States v. Allen, 488 F.3d 1244 (10th
Cir. 2007). In addition to being out-of-circuit precedent, this case
undermines Aines’s argument. The Tenth Circuit acknowledged
that in a drug case, the district court could not depart upward based
on uncharged allegations of rape of a minor. Id. at 1256–57. But
the court went on to explain that, “after Booker, sentencing courts
have some latitude to consider evidence and conduct beyond what
would have been permissible under [various Sentencing Guidelines
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20                     Opinion of the Court                19-13898

provisions] in the course of determining whether the defendant’s
criminal history adequately reflects his dangerousness to the com-
munity.” Id. at 1259. The court did vacate the sentence, but it was
because the district court had placed so much emphasis on the rape
allegation that the court imposed the sentence based on it rather
than on the drug charge. Id. at 1262. Aines makes no such argu-
ment here.
       Aines also cites United States v. DiDomenico, 78 F.3d 294,
305 (7th Cir. 1996). This is an out-of-circuit, pre-Booker case that
evaluated an upward departure. So again, it is not relevant here,
where we are dealing with a variance.
       Perhaps sensing the problem with his reliance on the depar-
ture provision, Aines also urges that nothing “in § 3553(a) per-
mit[ted] the district court to impose an above-Guidelines sentence
due to the uncharged and unrelated sexual assault.” In support of
this argument, Aines points to various factors listed in 18 U.S.C. §
3553(a) that focus on “the offense.” For example, (a)(1) directs the
sentencing court to consider “the nature and circumstances of the
offense and the history and characteristics of the defendant.” 18
U.S.C. § 3553(a)(1) (emphasis added). And (a)(2)(A) says the court
should consider “the need for the sentence imposed … to reflect
the seriousness of the offense . . . .” Id. § 3553(a)(2)(A) (emphasis
added). According to Aines, then, “[n]one of the factors enumer-
ated in § 3553(a) instructs sentencing courts to look at conduct that
is neither part of the charged offense nor part of the defendant’s
criminal history.”
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19-13898                Opinion of the Court                        21

        But the sentencing court is not required to put blinders on
and consider only the charged offense in isolation. Nor must ex-
traneous conduct be connected to the charged offense to be con-
sidered. See Overstreet, 713 F.3d at 637 (finding that district court
was entitled to consider that defendant murdered his wife after
government proved it by a preponderance of evidence, even
though that conduct was not related to the charged offense). The
limit on the court’s consideration of extraneous conduct comes not
from its relevance (or lack of it) to the charged offenses, but from
its relevance to the sentencing factors in § 3553(a). Courts may
consider uncharged conduct in constructing a sentence if doing so
serves the purposes of one or more sentencing factors. See id.; see
also United States v. Faust, 456 F.3d 1342, 1348 (11th Cir. 2006) (af-
ter Booker, “courts may still consider relevant facts concerning a
defendant’s ‘background, character, and conduct’ when making
sentencing calculations, even if those facts relate to acquitted con-
duct”).
       Here, even assuming the district court relied on the conclu-
sion that Aines participated in the gang rape, it necessarily did so in
its consideration of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(2)(C)—the need for the sen-
tence to protect the public from further crimes of the defendant.
When the court pronounced the sentence, it stated in part, “But
particularly here, it’s a need to protect the public. Folks who testi-
fied today aren’t the only ones that have been terrorized by your
conduct and victimized by your conduct. Hopefully, they’ll be the
last. This sentence is designed to protect the public.” Similarly, on
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22                    Opinion of the Court                19-13898

the judgment form, the court checked the box (in addition to oth-
ers) showing that it based the variance on § 3553(a)(2)(C). And in
summarizing its reasons for the upward variance, the court stated
in part, “A sentence significantly above the guideline range has
been imposed mainly to protect the public from the violence that
the defendant displays.” So even assuming the court was referring
to the sexual assault when it mentioned “violence,” then the court
found that its consideration of Aines’s alleged sexual assault of
Giffen was appropriate to protect the public. Aines does not chal-
lenge this finding.
      Fourth, and again assuming arguendo that the court consid-
ered Aines’s alleged sexual assault of Giffen, Aines complains that
he was never afforded an opportunity to defend against the claim
and Aines would have had a colorable insanity defense against it.
The government responds that this contention is contradicted by
the record.
      The PSI does reflect that Aines had struggled with schizo-
phrenia in the past. It states in relevant part,
      56. The defendant reports that he hears voices that
      tell him that they love him and tell him not to hurt
      himself or anyone else. He asserts he was placed on
      medication while in Chatham County Detention
      Center in 2017. He reports he did not want to be on
      medication and stopped taking the medication.
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19-13898               Opinion of the Court                      23

      57. In 2018, the defendant’s mother had him com-
      mitted to Georgia Regional for paranoid delusions
      and hearing voices. The defendant was diagnosed
      with paranoid schizophrenia. Georgia Regional staff
      noted that the defendant refused to take medication,
      talked to himself, and stated that there was a devil in
      his home. The defendant reports that since his instant
      arrest, he’s contemplated and attempted suicide and
      his been cutting his wrists in Chatham County Deten-
      tion Center.
And at the sentencing hearing, in support of mitigation, Aines’s
counsel noted that Aines had been institutionalized for paranoid
schizophrenia. Aines himself also highlighted his mental-health is-
sues and told the court that he was “having very bad paranoid
schizophrenic attacks” during the hotel incident with Giffen.
      Aines was on notice that the sexual-assault allegation would
come up at the hearing because it was included in the PSI. Indeed,
he objected to it. Not only that, but the government filed a motion
requesting an upward variance. If Aines wanted to refute the alle-
gation of sexual assault with evidence of mental illness, he could
have done so through witness testimony or other evidence. That
Aines did not choose to present such evidence does not mean that
he was denied the opportunity to do so.
       For all these reasons, Aines’s arguments based on the court’s
alleged consideration of the sexual-assault allegation fail.
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24                     Opinion of the Court                19-13898

      2.     The Amount of Drugs
       Unlike with the sexual assault, the trial court did, in fact,
base the upward variance in part on its determination that Aines
was dealing a large amount of drugs. When the court pronounced
the sentence, it stated in part,
      First of all, the ascertainable amount of drugs that
      were outlined in the presentence investigation report,
      while accurate, under-represent this defendant’s
      criminal drug dealing. It’s pretty clear when I look at
      the totality of this case, when I hear about the testi-
      mony I heard today about the prevalence of drugs, he
      was dealing a large amount of drugs and he was reg-
      ularly dealing those drugs.
The judgment also relies on the drug quantity as a reason for vary-
ing upward:
      The Court finds that the offense level for the defend-
      ant is largely based on the ascertainable amount of
      drugs. It is the belief of the Court that the amount at-
      tributed grossly underrepresents the quantity of
      drugs that the defendant was involved in distributing.
Aines argues that this was error because no testimony at the sen-
tencing hearing supported the conclusion that Aines dealt a large
amount of drugs. The government responds that, regardless of the
specific witness testimony at the sentencing hearing, sufficient
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19-13898                  Opinion of the Court                             25

evidence in the record supports this finding, and it cannot be con-
sidered “clear error.” 4
        Aines is correct that, for the most part, the witnesses at the
sentencing hearing did not offer testimony that would support a
finding that Aines dealt a large amount of drugs. For example, on
cross examination, Giffen agreed with defense counsel that she had
previously told police that she saw Aines “with small quantities of
meth.” And when the court asked Giffen whether Aines was “dis-
tributing significant amounts of drugs,” she replied, “I would sit in
the car all the time. So I don’t know what he did when he went
inside these places, but I would guess so.” She also stated that she
did not know the quantities of drugs Aines dealt. White likewise
testified that she did not know the amount of drugs that Aines
dealt.
      On the other hand, unobjected-to statements in the PSI
could have led the court to find the charged amount of meth did
not accurately represent Aines’s drug dealing. The PSI attributed
99.225 grams of methamphetamine to Aines, under U.S.S.G. §
2D1.1. That amount was based on a single purchase of metham-
phetamine that Aines made with codefendant Jeffers. Although
Aines initially objected to this amount of attributable drugs, he

4 There is some dispute as to whether Aines preserved error with regard to
this finding by the court, which would affect the standard of review (“clear
error” vs. “plain error”). As explained below, there was no error under either
standard, so we need not determine whether Aines preserved error.
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26                      Opinion of the Court                  19-13898

withdrew that objection at sentencing. Before that happened,
though, and in response to Aines’s objection, the probation officer
explained that the 99.225 grams was an “extremely conservative”
estimate, given the “totality of the circumstances.”
       The district court adopted all factual statements to which
there were no objections. Not objecting to statements in the PSI
“renders those statements undisputed and permits the sentencing
court to rely upon them without error even if there is an absence
of supporting evidence.” United States v. Aguilar-Ibarra, 740 F.3d
587, 592 (11th Cir. 2014). Here, the relevant unobjected-to state-
ments in the PSI included the following:
       (1) Aines purchased 5 or 6 ounces (99.225 grams under pu-
rity analysis) of methamphetamine on one occasion, setting the
drug amount in the presentence report;
      (2) text messages between codefendant David McCloskey
and another individual indicate that Aines was selling methamphet-
amine for $300 per ounce and trying to undercut competitor prices;
       (3) Aines was arrested with 2 grams of methamphetamine
on him, along with numerous items indicative of drug trafficking,
including a Crown Royal bag that contained 38 small bags and 11
individual plastic wraps, a black digital scale, multiple pieces of gold
jewelry, a clear Ziploc bag with the methamphetamine in it, a
sawed-off 12 gauge shotgun loaded with 5 rounds of ammunition
(reported stolen), a knife, multiple hypodermic needles, multiple
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19-13898                Opinion of the Court                        27

.38 caliber rounds of ammunition, and a .38 special Smith and Wes-
son revolver (also reported stolen);
       (4) Aines was missing 7 grams of methamphetamine in a ho-
tel room in April 2019 and told the person he was with that he re-
fused to take another loss (emphasis added);
       (5) Aines served as a driver who traveled to Atlanta, Georgia
to obtain methamphetamine and deliver it to another individual;
      (6) Aines “put guns in multiple people’s faces to threaten
them to not buy methamphetamine from another source”; and
      (7) Aines sold $10 to $20 quantities of methamphetamine
every day for three weeks to a cooperating witness, who also ob-
served Aines possess Ziploc bags full of methamphetamine.
       These statements in the PSI provide sufficient support for
the district court’s conclusion about the amount of drugs involved.
Indeed, Aines seems to realize this, as he argues instead that this
information in the PSI is irrelevant because the court indicated it
found that Aines dealt a large amount of drugs based on only testi-
mony. This misrepresents the district court, which said it based the
finding on “the totality of the case,” including (but not limited to)
the testimony.
       In short, we cannot say that the district court erred in finding
that the ascertainable amount of drugs for which Aines was con-
victed under-represented his drug dealing or in basing the upward
variance, in part, on that finding.
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28                     Opinion of the Court                19-13898

B.    Substantive Unreasonableness
       Aines last argues that his sentence is substantively unreason-
able because the cumulative effect of the court’s errors resulted in
a sentence longer than his codefendants’ sentences. We first note
that “where there is no error or only a single error, there can be no
cumulative error.” United States v. House, 684 F.3d 1173, 1210
(11th Cir. 2012). And here, as we have explained, there is no error.
       But even on its own terms, we cannot say that Aines’s sen-
tence is substantively unreasonable. Aines’s guideline range was
168 to 210 months. The court sentenced him to 280 months, 70
months more than the guidelines advised. This means Aines’s sen-
tence is 133% of the maximum guideline range sentence. A sen-
tence outside the guideline range does not enjoy a presumption of
reasonableness, but neither is it presumed unreasonable. United
States v. Irey, 612 F.3d 1160, 1185 (11th Cir. 2010) (en banc).
       When we review for substantive reasonableness, we con-
sider “the totality of the circumstances, including an inquiry into
whether the statutory factors in § 3553(a) support the sentence in
question.” United States v. Gonzalez, 550 F.3d 1319, 1323 (11th Cir.
2008). A sentence can be substantively unreasonable if the district
court does any of the following: (1) fails to afford consideration to
relevant factors that were due significant weight, (2) gives signifi-
cant weight to an improper or irrelevant factor, or (3) commits a
clear error of judgment in considering the proper factors. Irey, 612
F.3d at 1189.
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19-13898                 Opinion of the Court                          29

       One factor for the sentencing court to consider is “the need
to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with
similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct.” 18
U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6). The government does not dispute Aines’s con-
tention, that, at least so far, Aines’s sentence is the longest of all his
codefendants. The next longest sentence of a codefendant is 235
months. But besides the arguments regarding the sexual assault
and the amount of drugs (which have already been addressed),
Aines doesn’t offer any argument as to why his longer sentence is
“unwarranted.” See United States v. Williams, 526 F.3d 1312, 1324
(11th Cir. 2008) (defendant failed to demonstrate that her and a
codefendant’s situations were similar enough that disparity in sen-
tencing was unwarranted).
       And in the past, we have found similar or even more dra-
matic upward variances to be reasonable. See, e.g., United States
v. Early, 686 F.3d 1219 (11th Cir. 2012) (upholding a 210-month
sentence where the guideline range was only 78 to 97 months and
the statutory maximum was 900 months); United States v. Mateos,
623 F.3d 1350, 1366 (11th Cir. 2010) (upholding a sentence equal to
the statutory maximum, which was more than 8 years above the
top of the guidelines range); United States v. Eldick, 443 F.3d 783,
786, 790 (11th Cir. 2006) (upholding a 180-month sentence, the stat-
utory maximum, where the guideline range was 87 to 108 months);
United States v. Shaw, 560 F.3d 1230, 1232, 1241 (11th Cir. 2009)
(upholding a 120- month sentence representing a 224 percent up-
ward variance from the maximum guideline sentence (the
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30                     Opinion of the Court                19-13898

guideline range was 30 to 37 months)); United States v. Amedeo,
487 F.3d 823, 828, 834 (11th Cir. 2007) (upholding a 120-month sen-
tence representing a 161 percent upward variance (the guideline
range was 37 to 46 months)); United States v. Turner, 474 F.3d
1265, 1281 (11th Cir. 2007) (upholding a 240-month sentence rep-
resenting a 281 percent upward variance (guideline range of 51 to
63 months)).
       In addition, a comparison of the sentence to the statutory
maximum can be helpful in determining whether the sentence is
reasonable. See United States v. Valnor, 451 F.3d 744, 751 (11th
Cir. 2006). Here, the statutory maximum for Count 1 was 40 years.
A sentence of 23 years and 4 months is “appreciably below the
length of the statutory maximum,” indicating reasonableness. Id.
      In sum, we cannot say that the district court’s decision to
sentence Aines to 280 months in custody was substantively unrea-
sonable.
                         V.      Conclusion
        For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court
is affirmed.
      AFFIRMED.