Court Opinion

ID: 8468350
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-05 10:41:11.294153+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:49:15.440406
License: Public Domain

ORDER
Despite a complex procedural history, see United States v. Paladino, 401 F.3d 471, 474-85 (7th Cir.2005); United States v. Paladino, 143 Fed.Appx. 716, 717 (7th Cir.2005), Monica Iles’s latest appeal is an uncomplicated affair. Her pro se arguments are familiar, and we affirm. -
Given our earlier decisions, see Paladino, 401 F.3d at 474-85; Paladino, 143 Fed.Appx. at 717, we need not revisit Iles’s history in much detail. In 2003 she was convicted of eight counts of wire fraud, see 18 U.S.C. § 1343, and the district court imposed concurrent sentences of 78 months’ imprisonment. lies appealed, along with her codefendants. Though their convictions were sound, we ordered a limited remand to determine whether the district court judge would have imposed different sentences had he known the guidelines were advisory. Paladino, 401 F.3d at 484-85. The answer to that question was no, but the court acknowledged in its response that “[sjeparate from the ‘Booker’ issue ... an incorrect [30-year] statutory maximum was used when imposing sentences on individual counts.” We agreed that the correct maximum in each case was five years given that “the crimes did not affect a financial institution and took place before the statute was amended in 2002.” Paladino, 143 Fed.Appx. at 717. The district court, we wrote, “should have structured the defendants’ overall punishment by imposing five-year terms and making the sentences partially consecutive to achieve the same bottom line.” Id. And with that we vacated each defendant’s sentence and remanded “so that each sentencing ‘package’ can be properly structured and the terms of supervised release corrected.” Id.
As expected, on remand the district court sentenced lies to concurrent terms of 60 months on the first seven counts and 18 months — to be served consecutively— on the eighth count. lies now contends that the district court treated the guidelines as mandatory; that she was unlawfully sentenced above the statutory maximum; that her Sixth Amendment rights were violated when the court imposed a sentence based on facts not established by a guilty plea or proven to a jury; and that her latest sentencing hearing was procedurally inadequate.
The first of those assertions is untenable. The whole reason for our limited remand — the first of its kind — was to pose the Booker question, and the court appreciated that the guidelines are now advisory. As for the second argument, lies misunderstands statutory maxima. She was subject to a sixty-month ceiling on each count; her total sentence would have to exceed 480 months to run afoul of the statute. See 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (2000); U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2(d); United States v. Spells, 537 F.3d 743, 754-55 (7th Cir.2008); United States v. Thompson, 523 F.3d 806, 814 (7th Cir.2008).
*612Iles’s Sixth Amendment argument is fruitless as well. She asserts that only the jury could properly assess the amount of loss stemming from the fraud. In the same vein lies proposes that the district court was not authorized to find, at sentencing, that she had violated an SEC administrative order because that too, according to lies, is the exclusive province of the jury. See U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b)(3)(B) (1997). But to repeat, “Booker clearly permits a distinct court to grant a sentencing enhancement based on facts not charged in the indictment, not proven to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt or not admitted by the defendant.” United States v. Owens, 441 F.3d 486, 490 (7th Cir.2006). See also United States v. Robinson, 435 F.3d 699, 701-02 (7th Cir.2006).
That leaves Iles’s dissatisfaction with her latest sentencing hearing, which she insists was proeedurally inadequate— her term is “truncated” — in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(g). We disagree. The district court conducted an extensive inquiry and articulated various reasons why 78 months’ imprisonment was (still) an appropriate sentence. lies was present via video conference and addressed the court, although she tells us otherwise in her brief. True enough, the probation office did not draw up a fresh presentence investigation report, as she would have liked. But none was required given the nature of our remand. See United States v. Sexton, 512 F.3d 326, 332-33 (6th Cir.2008); United States v. Parker, 101 F.3d 527, 528 (7th Cir.1996).
AFFIRMED.