Court Opinion

ID: 9947839
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-05 19:01:37.712323+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:28:37.854805
License: Public Domain

Appellate Case: 22-4119     Document: 010111009992        Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 1
                                                                                  FILED
                                                                      United States Court of Appeals
                                        PUBLISH                                Tenth Circuit

                       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                        March 5, 2024

                              FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                      Christopher M. Wolpert
                                                                              Clerk of Court

   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

         Plaintiff - Appellee,

   v.
                                                            Nos. 22-4119 & 22-4122
   WHITNEY McBRIDE, and
   ODYSSEY INTERNATIONAL, INC.,

         Defendant - Appellants.

                     Appeals from the United States District Court
                                for the District of Utah
                         (D.C. No. 2:20-CR-00287-DBB)
                       _________________________________

 Matthew R. Lewis, Kunzler Bean & Adamson, PC, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Defendant-
 Appellant.

 Nathan H. Jack, Assistant United States Attorney (Trina A. Higgins, United States
 Attorney, with him on the brief), Office of the United States Attorney, Salt Lake City,
 Utah, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
                         _________________________________

 Before EID, SEYMOUR, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
                   _________________________________

 SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.
                    _________________________________

        Whitney McBride was tried and convicted for five offenses based on fraudulent

 conduct in obtaining a government contract via her company Odyssey International Inc.
Appellate Case: 22-4119    Document: 010111009992         Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 2

 (“Odyssey”) to service the Army base at Fort Drum, New York. On appeal, McBride

 argues that her convictions for conspiracy, wire fraud, and major fraud should be vacated

 based on Ciminelli v. United States, 598 U.S. 306 (2023), which was decided by the

 Supreme Court after her conviction. She further argues her conviction for making a false

 declaration should be vacated due to errors in the jury instructions. Because of McBride’s

 numerous procedural errors, we affirm.

                                       Background

       In 2011, Whitney McBride and Odyssey won a $99 million government contract

 servicing the Army base at Fort Drum. To bid on and win the contract, however, Odyssey

 was required to be HUBZone-eligible.1 Odyssey was not. Undeterred, McBride made it

 appear as though Odyssey was HUBZone-eligible by cooking the books and fudging the

 numbers.

       McBride’s fraudulent practices did not go unnoticed by the losing bidders, who

 submitted bid protests against Odyssey. To defeat an allegation of common ownership

 between Odyssey and the incumbent contractor, Cadence, McBride submitted a letter to

 the Small Business Administration denying any relationship between Odyssey and

 Patrick Hendrickson, an attorney serving as Cadence’s CAO who had done prior work for

 Odyssey on another bid. Odyssey subsequently defeated the bid protests and began work.

 1
  A company is HUBZone-eligible if at least thirty-five percent of the company’s
 employees live in a Historically Underutilized Business Zone.

                                             2
Appellate Case: 22-4119     Document: 010111009992         Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 3

        Federal agents eventually investigated Odyssey and McBride, uncovering their

 fraud. In August 2020, Odyssey and McBride were indicted for conspiracy to commit

 wire fraud, wire fraud, and major fraud against the United States. When prosecutors

 sought to interview Hendrickson as part of their investigation, McBride filed a

 declaration claiming that her prior letter denying an attorney-client relationship between

 Odyssey and Hendrickson was false and that Hendrickson had been an attorney for

 Odyssey.2 This led the government to bring an additional charge against McBride for

 making a false declaration before a court.3

        The case proceeded to trial where the parties proposed joint jury instructions.

 Relevant here, the district court adopted, without alteration, the language proffered by

 McBride and the government defining a “scheme to defraud” under Count II. The parties

 could not agree on the instruction for Count V for making a false declaration, however.

 McBride sought to add language instructing the jury on the substantive law of attorney-

 client relationships. The government sought to exclude that language. The court

 ultimately declined to add McBride’s proposed language. It reasoned that whether there

 2
  Meaning that communications between Odyssey and McBride and Hendrickson were
 protected under attorney-client privilege.
 3
   The Second Superseding Indictment brought five total counts. Count I of the indictment
 charged McBride and Odyssey with conspiracy to commit wire fraud in violation of 18
 U.S.C. § 1349. Count II charged McBride and Odyssey with wire fraud in violation of 18
 U.S.C. § 1343. Count III charged McBride and Odyssey with major fraud against the
 United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1031. Count IV charged McBride with making a
 false statement to government agents in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2). Count V
 charged McBride with making a false declaration before the court in violation of 18
 U.S.C. § 1623(a).

                                               3
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024       Page: 4

 was an attorney-client relationship between Odyssey and Hendrickson was immaterial

 because Count V alleged McBride had made a false statement about her belief regarding

 whether an attorney-client relationship existed. McBride and Odyssey were convicted on

 all counts. This timely appeal followed.

        Eleven months after the convictions of McBride and Odyssey the Supreme Court

 decided Ciminelli. There, the Court held that the Second Circuit’s “right to control”

 theory of fraud was an invalid basis for liability under 18 U.S.C. § 1343. Ciminelli, 598

 U.S. at 309. “Because ‘potentially valuable economic information’ ‘necessary to make

 discretionary economic decisions’ is not a traditional property interest,” the Court

 instructed, “the right-to-control theory is not a valid basis for liability under § 1343.” Id.

                                          Discussion

        McBride contends her convictions on Counts I, II and III should be vacated

 because Ciminelli required the jury to be instructed that federal fraud statutes only protect

 “traditional property interests.” Pointing to Ciminelli, McBride now attempts to convince

 us that the prosecution’s theory of the case was inextricable from and anchored in the

 now-erroneous “right to control” theory. She further argues that her conviction on Count

 V should be vacated because the jury instructions improperly paraphrased her alleged

 false statement and misstated the law, and the government failed to meet its burden of

 proving her statement was false. Whatever the merits of these arguments, however, we

 decline to address them because of McBride’s numerous procedural stumbles.

        A. McBride waived her challenges to Counts I, II, and III because she invited
           error and also failed to plead plain error.

                                                4
Appellate Case: 22-4119     Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024        Page: 5

     Those who disregard procedural requirements play a dangerous game and do so at

 their peril. This appeal proves that point. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure

 28(a)(8)(B), appellants are required to set forth the standard of review applicable to

 appellate review. McBride utterly fails to do this, so we note it here ourselves. In a

 properly briefed case, we review a “district court’s decision to give or not give a

 particular jury instruction” for abuse of discretion. United States v. Jereb, 882 F.3d 1325,

 1335 (10th Cir. 2018). “[W]e review the instructions as a whole de novo to determine

 whether they accurately informed the jury of the governing law.” Id. (quoting United

 States v. Sharp, 749 F.3d 1267, 1280 (10th Cir. 2014)). If an appellant fails to object to a

 particular jury instruction below, we review for plain error. Id.

     1. Invited Error

        We first address McBride’s argument that her convictions on Counts I, II, and

 III—conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and major fraud against the United

 States respectively—must be vacated because the jury instructions given were improper

 post-Ciminelli.4 Specifically, McBride contends the jury instruction defining a “scheme

 to defraud” was improper because it failed to appropriately caution the jury that, as

 clarified by the Supreme Court in Ciminelli, federal fraud statutes only protect

 4
   We pause to note that the jury instruction McBride challenges clearly refers to an
 element of Count II, and likely to one of Count III. Because it is ultimately irrelevant, we
 simply note that McBride fails to explicitly explain why even if we agreed the jury
 instruction was error and vacated her convictions on Counts II and III, such a ruling
 would also require vacating her conviction on Count I.

                                               5
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 6

 “traditional property interests.” As such, McBride argues that the instruction, which only

 defined the object of a “scheme to defraud” as “money or property,” was insufficient

 because it allowed the jury to convict McBride and Odyssey if it found that they had

 “merely intended to cause the government to dispense funds contrary to a government

 policy,” even if they had not intended to and did not ultimately harm the government’s

 traditional property interests. Aplt. Br. at 12. It is here, the government counters, that

 McBride runs into her first hurdle on appeal: McBride herself offered the instruction

 about which she now complains and is therefore precluded from challenging it under our

 invited error doctrine. We agree.

        Generally, “the invited-error doctrine precludes a party from arguing that the

 district court erred in adopting a proposition that the party had urged the district court to

 adopt.” United States v. Deberry, 430 F.3d 1294, 1302 (10th Cir. 2005). A party who

 “induces an erroneous ruling” from the district court may not then seek sanctuary from

 the consequences of that ruling through an appeal. Id. In jury instruction challenges

 specifically, our caselaw forecloses “this Court [from engaging] in appellate review when

 a defendant has waived his right to challenge a jury instruction by affirmatively

 approving it at trial.” United States v. Cornelius, 696 F.3d 1307, 1319 (10th Cir. 2012).

 See also, e.g., United States v. Visinaiz, 428 F.3d 1300, 1310–11 (10th Cir. 2005)

 (holding that the defendant’s challenge to his own proffered instruction was “thereto []

 precluded as invited error”); United States v. Sturm, 673 F.3d 1274, 1281 (10th Cir.

 2012) (“[The defendant] did not object to the theory of defense instruction given at trial,

                                                6
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992           Date Filed: 03/05/2024         Page: 7

 and proffered the challenged instruction himself. His attack on the sufficiency of this

 instruction is therefore barred by the invited-error doctrine . . . .”); United States v.

 Harris, 695 F.3d 1125, 1130 n.4 (10th Cir. 2012) (holding that a “defendant who proffers

 his or her own instruction, persuades the court to adopt it, and then later seeks to attack

 the sufficiency of that instruction” has invited error); Jereb, 882 F.3d at 1340 (holding

 that the invited error doctrine applied when a defendant “requested (and received) jury

 instructions” he had sought).

        The government argues, and McBride conceded at oral argument, that McBride

 proffered the instruction she now attacks. The government and McBride submitted joint

 jury instructions to the trial court. True, the parties did not entirely agree on the

 instruction at issue, Instruction No. 35, and they submitted competing instructions to that

 end.5 However, that is immaterial. What McBride challenges is the definition of a

 “scheme to defraud,” which she argues is insufficient under Ciminelli’s new

 5
   A redline review of the competing Prosecution and Defense No. 35 Instructions shows
 that the only divergence between the two is the language defining “false” or “fraudulent.”
 Specifically, the prosecution’s instruction defined a representation as “false” or
 “fraudulent” “if it is known by the defendant to be untrue or is made with the defendant’s
 reckless indifference as to its truth or falsity.” Rec., vol. I at 79 (emphasis added). The
 defense’s instruction defined a representation as “false” or “fraudulent” “if it is known by
 the defendant to be untrue or is made by the defendant with reckless indifference as to its
 truth or falsity.” Id. at 81 (emphasis added). The district court offered its own instruction
 at trial, but it is not on that distinction that McBride appeals.

 We note that there were dueling instructions for Instruction No. 36 (major fraud).
 However, the district court adopted language defining “scheme or artifice to defraud the
 United States” wholesale, with appropriate adaptations, from the Prosecution and
 Defense No. 35 Instructions defining a “scheme to defraud.”

                                                7
Appellate Case: 22-4119     Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 8

 understanding of federal fraud statutes. That definitional language in the Defense

 Instruction was the same as that included in the Prosecution Instruction and, more

 importantly, the same as that ultimately adopted by the trial court. For the purposes of

 this appeal, then, we consider the district court as having adopted McBride’s proposed

 language. We note that, although it is insufficient standing alone, the defense also failed

 to object to that instruction.6 See Harris, 695 F.3d at 1130 n.4.

        In her reply, McBride halfheartedly implies that our “supervening decision

 doctrine” offers a metaphorical escape-hatch from her invited error. She seemingly

 argues that she could not object to (and never would have offered) her instruction because

 Ciminelli changed our understanding of federal fraud law only after her trial concluded.

 Therefore she contends Ciminelli’s intervening change excuses her error.

        Our circuit has long recognized an exception to the invited error doctrine, known

 either as the “supervening decision doctrine” or the “intervening decision doctrine.”

 Compare Anixter v. Home-Stake Production, 77 F.3d 1215, 1231 (10th Cir. 1996), with

 Ray v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of America, 314 F.3d 482, 487 (10th Cir. 2002), and United

 States v. Titties, 852 F.3d 1257, 1264 n.5 (10th Cir. 2017). The exception holds that the

 invited error doctrine is per se inapplicable when a party relied on settled law below that

 changed while the case was on appeal. Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5.

 6
  There was a numbering change of the jury instructions over the course of the litigation
 below. The jury instruction for Count II was initially numbered Instruction No. 35 and
 sometime later No. 32. The instruction was numbered No. 32 during the jury instruction
 conference and in the final jury instructions.

                                               8
Appellate Case: 22-4119     Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 9

        To the extent McBride argues that this exception applies to her case, we are not

 persuaded. As we noted clearly in Titties, McBride can successfully invoke the exception

 only if she relied on settled (now erroneous) law when proffering her jury instructions.

 See Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5 (agreeing with the defendant’s argument that “the

 invited-error doctrine does not apply when a party relied on settled law that changed

 while the case was on appeal” (emphasis added)). Two reasons cut against applying the

 exception here. First, and most importantly, McBride nowhere claims to have relied on

 settled law when proffering the instruction she challenges. All she asserts is that federal

 fraud law changed post-Ciminelli when the Supreme Court ruled the “right to control”

 theory invalid. This assertion misses the mark. What is key for the supervening decision

                                               9
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 10

  doctrine’s applicability is that the law upon which a party relied below has changed.7 Id.

  McBride fails to explicitly, much less persuasively, make this argument.8

         Our instinct that McBride did not rely on the “right to control” theory when

  proffering her instructions is further confirmed because she does not cite—let alone claim

  7
   The concurrence accuses us of ostensibly “announc[ing] additional requirements for the
  supervening-decision doctrine” by adding a “reliance” requirement. Concurring Op. at 7.
  Not so. We did not conjure “reliance” out from the ether: Titties articulates the reliance
  prong of the exception, and we follow our caselaw’s lead. See Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264
  n.5.

  We are unconvinced by the concurrence’s consternation over the “subjective” inquiries a
  reliance requirement would invite. Concurring Op. at 6. As the concurrence itself admits,
  we already engage in such inquiries. Consider how we determine a litigant has
  “knowingly and intelligently relinquished” a claim below such that it becomes waiver.
  Cornelius, 696 F.3d at 1319 (“A waived claim or defense is one that a party has
  knowingly and intelligently relinquished; a forfeited plea is one that a party has merely
  failed to preserve.” (quoting Wood v. Milyard, 566 U.S. 463, 470 n.4 (2012))). We
  engage in a subjective inquiry, but, of course, our inquiry is not unmoored. We infer from
  a litigant’s actions below and her arguments on appeal whether she waived an argument.
  See, e.g., Jereb, 882 F.3d at 1340 (analyzing whether Jereb’s actions below, including
  requesting a specific jury instruction, “were enough to convert a forfeiture . . . into an
  invited error” waiver). Given that we already engage in such inquiries in the waiver
  context, we do not see why such inquiries are incompatible with our analysis of a waiver
  exception.
  8
    McBride notes in passing that the “evidence admitted at trial” would have been
  “drastically altered” and would have “allowed [her] to demonstrate that the government
  did not suffer economic loss” if her trial had taken place post-Ciminelli. Aplt. Reply at 6.
  Without more than a conclusory paragraph, we decline to divine an affirmative argument
  that she relied on the validity of the “right to control” theory when litigating this case. If
  McBride expects us to interpret the tea leaves of her reply brief as arguing that she so
  relied, or to otherwise make her arguments for her, she is mistaken. See United States v.
  Yelloweagle, 643 F.3d 1275, 1284 (10th Cir. 2011) (“We cannot make arguments for [the
  defendant].”); Perry v. Woodward, 199 F.3d 1126, 1141 n.13 (10th Cir. 1999) (“This
  court . . . will not craft a party’s arguments for him.”).

                                               10
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 11

  to have relied on—our own circuit’s caselaw upholding it.9 Indeed, nowhere does

  McBride offer a case establishing the necessary premise that our circuit has adopted the

  “right to control” theory. McBride’s failure to at all substantiate her argument with our

  caselaw causes us to infer that the “right to control” theory played no role in her proposed

  jury instructions.10

         Second, based on our own investigation of the record, we are not convinced that

  the law upon which McBride did rely changed post-Ciminelli. In a footnote to the

  definition of a “scheme to defraud” in Defense Instruction No. 35 (McBride’s proposed

  instruction), McBride wrote: “Modified from pattern instruction in light of Kelly v.

  United States, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1565 (2020) (scheme to defraud necessarily means a

  scheme whose object is to obtain money or property).” Rec., vol. I at 81. McBride thus

  9
    We read, for example, cases like United States v. Simpson, 950 F.2d 1519 (10th Cir.
  1991), and United States v. Welch, 327 F.3d 1081 (10th Cir. 2003), as endorsing the very
  “right to control” theory struck down in Ciminelli. See Simpson, 950 F.2d 1523 (“A
  conspiracy to defraud the victim of the use or control of his money is also within the
  purview of the wire fraud statute.” (emphasis added)); Welch, 327 F.3d at 1108 (“[W]e
  have recognized the intangible right to control one’s property is a property interest within
  the purview of the mail and wire fraud statutes.” (emphasis added)).
  10
     McBride does not even argue the government relied on cases like Simpson or Welch
  when drafting the joint jury instructions. That McBride does not (or cannot) argue that
  either party to this litigation relied on our cases endorsing the “right to control” theory
  surely undermines her challenge.

                                                11
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 12

  ostensibly relied on Kelly v. United States. Here, we simply note that there could be no

  error on this point because Ciminelli affirmed Kelly.11

          McBride invited her own error when she persuaded the district court to adopt the

  “scheme to defraud” instruction she proposed. She does not persuasively argue that our

  supervening decision doctrine allows her challenge now because she offers no evidence

  that the law (if any) that she relied on when proffering that instruction changed post-

  Ciminelli. Disarmed of the exception, McBride’s invited error amounts to a waiver of her

  argument, and appellate review is barred. Jereb, 882 F.3d at 1341 (holding that a

  defendant’s appellate challenge to his own proffered instruction was “barred” under the

  invited error doctrine); see also Cornelius, 696 F.3d at 1320; Deberry, 430 F.3d at 1302.

  We therefore affirm her conviction on Counts I, II, and III.

          Alternatively, because McBride fails to argue for any standard of review on

  appeal, including plain error, we also find her argument to reverse her convictions on

  Counts I, II, and III separately waived. It is to that issue we now turn.

       2. Plain Error

          Even if we were to find that McBride’s actions below did not amount to invited

  error or that our supervening decision doctrine otherwise excused her error, we would

  11
     As just one example, the Court cites Kelly approvingly when crafting one of
  Ciminelli’s key tenets, specifically that “the Government must prove not only that wire
  fraud defendants ‘engaged in deception,’ but also that money or property was ‘an object
  of their fraud.’” Ciminelli, 598 U.S. at 312 (citing Kelly, 590 U.S. at __, 140 S.Ct. at
  1571).

                                               12
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024       Page: 13

  still affirm her convictions on Counts I, II, and III because she has failed to argue plain

  error on appeal.

         Typically, plain error would be the correct standard of review for a challenge of

  this kind, i.e. an unpreserved jury instruction claim. See, e.g., Jereb, 882 F.3d at 1335. It

  is the obligation of the appellant to identify, and argue for, that standard. “A party cannot

  count on us to pick out, argue for, and apply a standard of review for it on our own

  initiative.” McKissick v. Yuen, 618 F.3d 1177, 1189 (10th Cir. 2010). The Federal Rules

  of Appellate Procedure themselves mandate this: “The appellant’s brief must contain . . .

  (8) the argument, which must contain . . . (B) for each issue, a concise statement of the

  applicable standard of review.” Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(8)(B) (emphasis added).

         As aptly explained in Richison v. Ernest Grp., Inc., 634 F.3d 1123, 1131 (10th Cir.

  2011), “[T]he failure to argue for plain error and its application on appeal . . . surely

  marks the end of the road for an argument for reversal not first presented to the district

  court.” See also United States v. Lamirand, 669 F.3d 1091, 1100 n.7 (10th Cir. 2012)

  (same); United States v. MacKay, 715 F.3d 807, 831 (10th Cir. 2013) (same). “When an

  appellant fails to preserve an issue and also fails to make a plain-error argument on

  appeal, we ordinarily deem the issue waived (rather than merely forfeited) and decline to

  review the issue at all—for plain error or otherwise.” United States v. Leffler, 942 F.3d

  1192, 1196 (10th Cir. 2019). See also Havens v. Colo. Dep’t of Corrs., 897 F.3d 1250,

  1260 (10th Cir. 2018); Lamirand, 669 F.3d at 1099 n.7; United States v. Wright, 848 F.3d

  1274, 1281 (10th Cir. 2017); United States v. Isabella, 918 F.3d 816, 845 (10th Cir.

                                                13
Appellate Case: 22-4119       Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 14

  2019) (“Ordinarily, ‘an appellant who fails to preserve an evidentiary objection below

  may argue and establish plain error on appeal,’ however, a ‘failure to argue plain error on

  appeal waives the argument.’” (quoting United States v. Roach, 896 F.3d 1185, 1192

  (10th Cir. 2018) (alterations removed)). Although “we have left open the door for a

  criminal defendant to argue error in an opening brief and then allege plain error in a reply

  brief after the Government asserts waiver,” Leffler, 942 F.3d at 1198, we “will not

  consider an appellant’s argument unless it attempts to ‘run the gauntlet created by our

  rigorous plain-error standard of review.’” Isabella, 918 F.3d at 845 (quoting United

  States v. McGehee, 672 F.3d 860, 876 (10th Cir. 2012)).

         We find United States v. Isabella strikingly exemplative. There, Isabella objected

  to the relevance of an expert’s testimony, but not to the expert’s qualifications. Isabella,

  918 F.3d. at 844–45. When he raised the issue of the expert’s qualifications on appeal,

  Isabella was thus entitled only to plain error review. Id. at 845. But Isabella did not argue

  plain error. Id. He mentioned plain error “only in a single paragraph (without any

  citations)” in his reply, “state[d] in a conclusory fashion that the district court committed

  plain error,” did not “recite our plain error standard until the final page of his reply brief,”

  and “simply assert[ed] the plain error elements [were] met.” Id. This, we held, did not

  “permit ‘the adversarial process to be served’” and operated as a waiver of Isabella’s

  argument. Id. (quoting United States v. Zander, 794 F.3d 1220, 1232 n.5 (10th Cir.

  2015)).

                                                14
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992           Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 15

         Here, because McBride failed to preserve her challenges to Counts I – III, she was

  required to plead plain error on appeal to avoid those challenges being waived. Nowhere

  does she do so. “[McBride’s] opening appellate brief neither identifies any standard of

  review nor provides any defense of that standard’s application.” Yuen, 618 F.3d at 1189.

  Like in Isabella, McBride does not address plain error in her opening brief. Unlike

  Isabella, in her reply McBride fails to substantively address the plain error issue at all,

  despite being on notice of the government’s waiver argument. She dismisses the

  government’s waiver assertions only at the very end of her reply. She does not cite the

  plain error standard or its elements, or purport to fit her assertions into that standard.

  McBride’s sole claim that “[t]he change in the law by Ciminelli clearly affected

  Appellant’s substantial rights” is not enough.12 Aplt. Reply at 6. McBride’s arguments

  are conclusory, speculative, and without substantial support or citation. She offers no

  support or further argument for the assertion that Ciminelli “worked a change in the law”

  that might have “altered the evidence admitted at trial and allowed the Appellants to

  12
    Rather than arguing for plain error and how she might meet it, McBride insists both in
  her reply and during oral argument that one of our cases, Anixter v. Home-Stake
  Production, 77 F.3d 1215 (10th Cir. 1996), allows her to forgo our circuit’s briefing
  requirements. Anixter’s text does not support such a bold proposition. In Anixter, our
  court laid the foundation of this circuit’s supervening decision doctrine when it found that
  “the interests of justice . . . reject forcing an appellant to object to a jury instruction
  where, based on the state of the then applicable law, her objection would have been
  futile.” Id. at 1232. Nowhere does the court touch the issue of appellate briefing
  deficiencies in its opinion. Whatever else Anixter may stand for, it does not stand for the
  principle that a supervening change in the law allows an appellant to ignore all briefing
  requirements on appeal. And McBride points to no other caselaw supporting such a
  conclusion.

                                                15
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992           Date Filed: 03/05/2024         Page: 16

  demonstrate that the government did not suffer economic loss.” Id. And as we said in

  Isabella, this court is not in the business of filling in the gaps for insufficient arguments.

  C.f. Isabella, 918 F.3d at 845 (noting that an argument that is “too general and

  conclusory” will not warrant review (quoting Collins v. Diversified Consultants Inc., 754

  F. App’x 714, 718 (10th Cir. 2018))). See also Kerber v. Qwest Pension Plan, 572 F.3d

  1135, 1146 (10th Cir. 2009) (rejecting plaintiffs’ argument “as inadequately briefed”

  because of their failure to “provide a substantive explanation” for and “simply assert[ing]

  in a conclusory fashion” their argument). Because McBride both failed to preserve her

  arguments below and failed to argue plain error here, her arguments have “come to the

  end of the road and [are] effectively waived.” Fish v. Kobach, 840 F.3d 710, 729–30

  (10th Cir. 2016).

         Despite this general rule, if McBride had made a substantive effort to address the

  government’s waiver argument and plead plain error in her reply, our caselaw does not

  mandate we stuff our fingers in our ears and hum loudly to drown out her attempts.

  Leffler, 942 F.3d at 1198. “[W]hen an error is obvious enough and satisfies Federal Rule

  of Criminal Procedure 52(b), we may exercise our discretion to recognize the error

  ‘notwithstanding briefing deficiencies.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Courtney, 816 F.3d

  681, 684 (10th Cir. 2016)); see also MacKay, 715 F.3d at 831 n.17. However, if an

  appellant raises a plain error argument for the first time in their reply brief, we will

  exercise our discretion “only if it ‘permit[s] the appellee to be heard and the adversarial

  process to be served.’” Isabella, 918 F.3d at 845 (quoting Zander, 794 F.3d at 1232 n.5).

                                                16
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 17

         Here, asserting that one-fourth (if that) of the plain error standard has been met is

  “too general and conclusory to warrant review,” and certainly does not allow “the

  adversarial process to be served.” Id. at 845. Because of the paucity of McBride’s briefs

  on the issue, we would not know where to begin if we wanted to analyze her argument

  under plain error and, frankly, that is not our role. See Hill v. Kemp, 478 F.3d 1236, 1251

  (2007) (noting that “we exercise caution” when “undertak[ing] such self-directed

  research or pursu[ing] late and undeveloped arguments” as that “would run the risk of an

  improvident or ill-advised opinion, given our dependence as an Article III court on the

  adversarial process for sharpening the issues for decision” (quoting Headrick v. Rockwell

  Int’l Corp., 24 F.3d 1272, 1278 (10th Cir. 1994))); MacKay, 715 F.3d at 831 n.17 (“[I]f

  an appellant fails to satisfy [the burden of plain error], we do not develop a plain error

  argument for the appellant.”).

         We have identified other instances when we will extend grace to a party before us,

  but none apply here.13 McBride failed a basic responsibility of an appellant: arguing a

  standard of review. Her failure to do so after having failed to preserve her claims below

  waives them, even were we to find her arguments not otherwise barred.

         B. McBride waived her unpreserved challenges to Count V, and we dismiss
            her preserved claims for failing to follow appellate procedure.

  13
    For example, McBride’s failure to argue plain error does not appear to be a “product of
  mistake.” Leffler, 942 F.3d at 1198. She could have responded to the government’s
  argument of waiver in her reply. She did not adequately do so. Further, the government
  neither “neglected to raise . . . [McBride’s] failure to argue for plain error in [her]
  opening brief,” nor is McBride “proceeding pro se on appeal.” Id. at 1199.

                                               17
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992         Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 18

         We turn to McBride’s argument that her conviction on Count V, false declaration

  to a court, should be vacated. McBride levels four challenges to the district court’s jury

  instruction No. 36 that she argues requires us to vacate her conviction: (1) the instruction

  misstated the law, (2) the instruction improperly paraphrased McBride’s alleged false

  statement, (3) the government failed to prove the falsity of McBride’s statement, and (4)

  the government failed to prove the falsity of McBride’s statement “under a reasonable

  interpretation of the law.” Aplt. Br. at 14. The government responds that, once more,

  McBride has waived most of her arguments per invited error14 and her failure to argue

  plain error in her briefs. Whatever the merits of McBride’s arguments, we either find

  them waived or decline to address them. We therefore affirm McBride’s conviction on

  Count V.

         We need not, and will not, repeat the exhaustive law we have just outlined

  regarding an appellant’s obligation to plead plain error for unpreserved claims. Suffice it

  to say that for McBride’s second claim that the jury instruction inaccurately paraphrased

  her Declaration—an error she did not raise below—she is required to argue plain error on

  appeal. A failure to do so generally waives a litigant’s argument. See, e.g., Wright, 848

  14
    We do not reach the question of whether McBride committed invited error on Count V.
  The government argues that McBride now challenges an instruction she proposed in the
  parties’ Joint Instruction No. 38. This is usually enough under our invited error doctrine.
  See Sturm, 673 F.3d at 1281. However, McBride challenged the instruction below during
  the jury instruction conference, and the record is unclear as to whether there was, in fact,
  ever a joint jury instruction for Count V. We need not navigate the invited error thicket
  because McBride failed to argue for a standard of review in her briefs, and that is
  sufficient grounds to affirm in the circumstances here.

                                               18
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992         Date Filed: 03/05/2024         Page: 19

  F.3d at 1281; Isabella, 918 F.3d at 845; United States v. De Vaughn, 694 F.3d 1141, 1159

  (10th Cir. 2012) (holding that because the defendant did “not even tr[y] to show how the

  alleged errors were ‘plain,’” the court did not need to reach the merits). Here, again,

  McBride fails to satisfy her burden. Nowhere in her opening brief can we find McBride

  arguing for (or against) plain error or any other standard of review. This is enough to find

  her second claim waived. See Kobach, 840 F.3d at 729–30.

         Again, we have been willing to entertain an appellant’s plain error argument in

  their reply for unpreserved claims, even absent such an argument in their opening brief.

  See generally Leffler, 942 F.3d at 1197–99. McBride does not attempt to argue, and we

  are not convinced, that any of our circuit’s loopholes offer her sanctuary. See id. (noting

  that our court may address an omitted plain error argument when that omission is a

  “product of mistake,” the government fails to raise the omission in its briefs, or the

  defendant is proceeding pro se).

         McBride’s remaining Count V arguments were preserved, however. McBride

  moved to dismiss Count V as a matter of law via a Rule 29 motion, preserving her third

  and fourth claims, and objected to jury instruction No. 36 as misstating the law,

  preserving her first claim. It is an unsettled question whether we must dismiss when an

  appellant properly preserves their claim below yet fails to argue a standard of review in

  the appeals court. We have long protected our discretion to reach the merits of a claim

  despite briefing deficiencies. MacArthur v. San Juan Cnty., 495 F.3d 1157, 1161 (10th

  Cir. 2007) (“[W]here an appellant has provided defective briefs, the court in its discretion

                                               19
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992           Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 20

  may scrutinize the merits of the case insofar as the record permits . . . .” (citing Fryar v.

  Curtis, 485 F.3d 179, 182 n.1 (1st Cir. 2007)). We have also found that “[i]t is

  indisputably within our power as a court to dismiss an appeal when the appellant has

  failed to abide by the rules of appellate procedure.” Id. See also Praseuth v. Rubbermaid,

  Inc., 406 F.3d 1245, 1254 n. 2 (10th Cir. 2005) (“This failure to state contentions with

  particularity and to propose the appropriate standard of review is sufficient grounds,

  standing alone, to deny Ms. Praseuth’s cross-appeal.”).

         Here, McBride’s “omission of such a basic component of an appellate brief” as a

  standard of review—in both her opening and reply—is “inexcusable.” MacArthur, 495

  F.3d at 1161. The words “standard of review” appear nowhere in McBride’s briefs. This

  is especially galling given McBride was put on notice by the government in its answer

  that it was advancing waiver arguments, precisely because of her failure to argue a

  standard of review. In the only attempt she makes to explain her omission, McBride

  dismissively posits that preservation below excuses arguing a standard of review before

  us. In a single paragraph of three sentences on the last page, McBride asserts that:

         Finally, the government argues that Appellants have not argued plain error. But all
         of these issues were wrapped up in the arguments made in support of Ms.
         McBride’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on Count V and the arguments
         relating to the jury instructions on Count V. Thus, they were preserved for
         purposes of appeal.

  Aplt. Reply at 11. McBride’s statement is both incorrect and insufficient. Preserving an

  issue below is not the same as affirmatively pleading a standard of review on appeal; that

  a party preserved an error below does not empower them to then forgo whatever

                                                20
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992         Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 21

  procedural rules they deem inconvenient here. Both the preservation of an issue below

  and asserting the proper standard of review are required under the Federal Rules. See

  Fed. R. Crim. P. 51 (discussing preserving a claim of error); Fed. R. App. P. 28

  (discussing the requirements of an appellant’s brief). Neither Rule 51 nor Rule 28

  mentions that satisfying one excuses the obligations of the other. The only possibly

  relevant rules from our own circuit do not offer any respite from these requirements. See

  generally 10th Cir. R. 28.1. And, if there were still any confusion on the matter, our

  caselaw indicates we view the two requirements as distinct. See, e.g., Leffler, 942 F.3d at

  1196 (“When an appellant fails to preserve an issue and also fails to make a plain error

  argument on appeal . . . .” (emphasis added)).

         Had McBride only failed to state a standard of review, we might be willing to

  reach the merits of her preserved claims. Unfortunately, that omission is only one among

  several other briefing deficiencies.15 Moreover, even assuming we tried to reach the

  15
     For example, McBride did not cite where in the record her Count V jury instruction
  claims were raised and ruled upon in her opening—despite this being required by our
  circuit rules. “[T]o avoid treating a claim as forfeited or waived, an appellant’s opening
  brief must ‘cite the precise references in the record where the issue was raised and ruled
  on’ in the district court.” Leffler, 942 F.3d at 1196 (citing 10th Cir. R. 28.1(A)). Indeed,
  our rules are even more demanding for jury instructions claims like McBride’s. See 10th
  Cir. R. 28.1(B). McBride also did not cite to the record for her other Count V arguments
  in her opening. She did do so in her reply—but incorrectly. Aplt. Reply at 7. She claims
  she raised her Rule 29 motion between pages 1433–35 of the record. Id. In reality, she
  raised it several pages prior, and it was reserved by the district judge several pages later.
  Rec., vol. VIII at 1430, 1440. She nowhere tells us her Rule 29 motion’s final disposition
  (or where to confirm it). To her credit, she does cite correct page numbers for her jury
  instruction challenge—but she does so in her reply, not her opening.

                                               21
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 22

  merits of her preserved Count V claims, we would be violating our own precedent to do

  so. To illustrate, for her preserved jury instruction claim, abuse of discretion was the

  appropriate standard for McBride to plead and prove.16 See Jereb, 882 F.3d at 1335. She

  nowhere identifies or seeks to argue for this standard. To reach it, then, we would have to

  “pick out, argue for, and apply” that abuse of discretion standard all on our own initiative

  and without the benefit of the adversarial process. Yuen, 618 F.3d at 1189. This we are

  not prepared to do. As we have said, it is not our responsibility, nor our role, to craft an

  appellant’s arguments for her. See Yelloweagle, 643 F.3d at 1284; Woodward, 199 F.3d at

  1141 n.13; Hill, 478 F.3d at 1251. We decline to do so.

         It is within our power to dismiss an appeal that fails to conform to the rules of

  appellate procedure, and we do so now. We affirm McBride’s conviction on Count V.

                                           Conclusion

         In sum, we hold McBride’s challenges to her convictions on Counts I, II, and III

  waived under invited error or, alternatively, because of her failure to argue plain error on

  appeal. We hold her unpreserved arguments regarding her conviction on Count V waived

  We have discretion to “independently review the record,” Leffler, 942 F.3d at 1196, but
  we have spoken in stark terms to litigants who have failed to cite to it, and we have
  previously declined to address arguments not properly cited. See Harolds Stores, Inc. v.
  Dillard Dep’t Stores, Inc., 82 F.3d 1533 n.3 (10th Cir. 1996); United States v.
  Williamson, 53 F.3d 1500, 1514 n.7 (10th Cir. 1995).
  16
    We note that we review the district court’s denial of McBride’s motion for judgment of
  acquittal (her Rule 29 motion) de novo—a standard McBride nowhere argues for. United
  States v. Islam, 418 F.3d 1125, 1126 (10th Cir. 2005).

                                                22
Appellate Case: 22-4119     Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 23

  because of her failure to argue plain error, and her preserved claims dismissed for failure

  to conform to the rules of appellate procedure. We affirm.

                                              23
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024       Page: 24

  USA v. McBride & Odyssey International, Nos. 22-4119, 22-4122

  EID, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment:

         As the majority explains in Part A.2 and Part B, we could have resolved this case

  by holding simply that McBride waived her claims by failing to argue on appeal that the

  district court’s decisions do not survive plain error (or any other standard of review). See

  Maj. Op. at 12–17 (Part A.2); 17–22 (Part B). If all that is true—which it is, in my

  view—then the majority’s discussion of the invited-error doctrine and the supervening-

  decision exception is entirely unnecessary to resolve this case. See id. at 5–12 (Part A.1).

  In addition to being unnecessary in the first instance, the majority’s discussion of the

  supervening-decision exception is unnecessarily broad, and in any event, wrong. The

  majority errs in concluding that the supervening-decision doctrine permits review of

  invited errors only if the appellant actually relied on a now-overruled case below. See

  Maj. Op. at 9–12. That conclusion is not required by our precedents and does not

  comport with the principles of waiver underlying the invited-error doctrine.

  Nevertheless, the majority is correct to conclude that McBride is not entitled to the

  benefits of the supervening-decision exception, even under a proper understanding of that

  rule, because she fails to argue that the law in our Circuit was well-established or that the

  law changed while her appeal was pending. Maj. Op. at 10–11. I therefore concur in the

  judgment.

         I agree with the majority that McBride invited error by proposing the jury

  instructions she now challenges on appeal. See Maj. Op. at 5–8. Therefore, as the

  majority correctly explains, we may review these invited errors only if McBride is
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992           Date Filed: 03/05/2024    Page: 25

  entitled to the benefit of the supervening-decision exception. See Maj. Op. at 9. If this

  exception applies, we may review McBride’s waived claims; otherwise, we may not.

         The majority misstates the controlling rule in our Circuit for when the

  supervening-decision exception applies. We concluded in United States v. Titties that the

  supervening-decision exception is available “when a party relied on settled law that

  changed while the case was on appeal.” 852 F.3d 1257, 1264 n.5 (10th Cir. 2017). The

  majority takes that conclusion and inserts a crucial word—“only.” See Maj. Op. at 9

  (citing Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5). Thus, according to the majority, “[w]hat is key for

  the supervening decision doctrine’s applicability is that the law upon which a party relied

  below has changed.” Maj. Op. at 9–10. The majority therefore concludes that McBride’s

  failure below “to have relied on” Tenth Circuit “caselaw upholding [the right-to-control

  theory]” is fatal to her claim on appeal. Maj. Op. at 11.

         The majority claims that Titties “articulates the reliance prong” it now imposes.

  See Maj. Op. at 10 n.7 (citing Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5). But Titties does not justify

  the majority’s rule or its application here. In Titties, we summarized the appellant’s

  arguments that “he did not invite error when he correctly informed the district court that

  [our precedent] required use of the modified categorical approach,” and that “the invited-

  error doctrine does not apply when a party relied on settled law that changed when the

  case was on appeal.” 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5. Of course, “[w]e agree[d].” Id. And then

  we went on to explain our ruling by citing our rule that “an intervening change in the law

  permits appellate review of an issue not raised below.” Id. We never announced a so-

  called “reliance prong”—and in fact, other than summarizing the appellant’s argument,

                                                2
Appellate Case: 22-4119        Document: 010111009992         Date Filed: 03/05/2024     Page: 26

  Footnote 5 of Titties did not mention “reliance” at all. Id.;1 contra Maj. Op. at 10 n.7.

  Nor did we suggest that we were modifying or overruling prior precedent.2 Titties thus

  identifies one circumstance under which the supervening-decision exception applies, but

  1
      See Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5:
           We reject the Government's separate contention that we should not consider Mr.
           [Titties’s] argument at all because he invited error. See United States v. DeBerry,
           430 F.3d 1294, 1302 (10th Cir. 2005) (“The invited-error doctrine prevents a party
           who induces an erroneous ruling from being able to have it set aside on appeal.”
           (quotations omitted)). The Government contends that Mr. [Titties] invited any error
           because he requested that the district court use the modified categorical approach.
           Mr. [Titties] responds he did not invite error when he correctly informed the district
           court that Hood required use of the modified categorical approach. He argues the
           invited-error doctrine does not apply when a party relied on settled law that changed
           while the case was on appeal.
           We agree with Mr. [Titties]. We rejected a similar invited-error argument in Ray v.
           Union Life Insurance Co., 314 F.3d 482, 486-87 (10th Cir. 2002). In Ray, the parties
           had assumed in the district court that one legal standard applied, but the law changed
           after appellate briefing. Id. at 486. We said “an intervening change in the law
           permits appellate review of an issue not raised below.” Id. at 487; see also Anixter
           v. Home-Stake Prod. Co. 77 F.3d 1215, 1222 (10th Cir. 1996) (“Although this
           argument was not raised below, inasmuch as [a new Supreme Court case] was
           decided after appellant filed her notice of appeal, we may consider change in
           governing law arising during the pendency of the appeal.” We also find persuasive
           the Eleventh Circuit’s refutation of the invited-error argument in United States v.
           Jones, 743 F.3d 826, 827-28 & n.1 (11th Cir. 2014) (rejecting government’s invited
           error argument, addressing defendant’s new argument based on intervening
           Supreme Court and circuit precedent, reviewing for plain error, and vacating
           defendant’s ACCA sentence).
  2
    Prior to Titties, we held that appellants may avail themselves of the supervening-
  decision doctrine even where the appellant did not apparently cite our well-settled case
  law below. See Ray, 314 F.3d at 487; Anixter, 77 F.3d at 1231. Titties cited both Ray
  and Anixter, and did not purport to limit or to overrule them. Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264
  n.5.

                                                 3
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024        Page: 27

  the majority construes Titties to describe the only circumstance under which it applies.

  The majority’s conclusion is simply not required by Titties.

         Nor is the majority’s rule justified by the principles underlying invited error. The

  invited-error doctrine gives effect to the hornbook rule that “[a] party that has forfeited a

  right by failing to make a proper objection may obtain relief for plain error; but a party

  that has waived a right is not entitled to appellate relief.” United States v. Cornelius, 696

  F.3d 1307, 1319 (10th Cir. 2012) (quoting United States v. Cruz–Rodriguez, 570 F.3d

  1179, 1183 (10th Cir. 2009)). We normally understand a mere failure to object to be a

  forfeiture. Id. at 1319–20. However, if a party affirmatively invites the district court to

  take a certain action—for instance, by proposing a jury instruction—we construe the

  party to have “knowingly and intelligently relinquished” any claim of error; that is, we

  deem such a claim waived. Id.

         The supervening-decision rule is an exception to the invited-error doctrine. As we

  have explained, when the relevant issue was governed by “settled law” in our Circuit, but

  that law “changed while the case was on appeal,” the “intervening change in the law

  permits appellate review,” even if the appellant invited the district court to apply the law

  as it stood. Titties, 852 F.3d at 1264 n.5 (quoting Ray, 314 F.3d at 487). This rule

  “reflects the principle that it would be unfair, and even contrary to the efficient

  administration of justice, to expect a defendant to object at trial where existing law

  appears so clear as to foreclose any possibility of success.” Anixter, 77 F.3d at 1231

  (quoting United States v. Washington, 12 F.3d 1128, 1139 (D.C. Cir. 1994)).

                                                4
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024       Page: 28

         Although it is an exception to the invited-error doctrine, the supervening-decision

  doctrine is not an exception to the underlying rule that “a party that has waived a right

  is not entitled to appellate relief.” Cornelius, 696 F.3d at 1319. The supervening-

  decision exception is instead best understood as a limit on when we will infer waiver

  from an appellant’s arguments below. Even if an appellant invited the district court to

  err, we will not presume that an appellant intentionally waived her claim if “the law was

  so well-settled at the time of trial that any attempt to challenge it would have appeared

  pointless.” Washington, 12 F.3d at 1139. Instead, “where existing law appear[ed] so

  clear as to foreclose any possibility of success,” we can draw no inference from an

  appellant’s failure to object. Anixter, 77 F.3d at 1231 (quoting Washington, 12 F.3d at

  1139); cf. Cornelius, 696 F.3d at 1319–20. In other words, a party who “invites error” by

  proposing instructions required by the well-settled law of our Circuit does not

  intentionally relinquish her right to challenge such instructions if the law changes.

  Indeed, we have previously held that, under such circumstances, a failure to object does

  not even evidence a forfeiture requiring plain-error review. See Anixter, 77 F.3d at 1231

  (rejecting the application of the “plain error standard to litigants whose claimed error was

  based on a change in the law that arose after trial”).

         In my view, this is true even if the appellant did not explicitly cite a previously

  well-settled decision below. Contra Maj. Op. at 9–12. The majority deems reliance

  below “key for the supervening decision doctrine’s applicability.” Id. However, I do not

  take the majority to say that the supervening-decision doctrine is a freewheeling

  exception to the waiver doctrine, rather than a mere application of it. And there is no

                                                5
Appellate Case: 22-4119        Document: 010111009992        Date Filed: 03/05/2024       Page: 29

  reason to think that the failure below to cite a now-overruled decision is conclusive

  evidence of waiver. A litigant who capitulates to the well-settled law of our Circuit does

  not necessarily do so willingly, and I would not adopt a conclusive presumption to that

  effect.

            Nor should this Court adopt a reliance requirement that would require us to

  examine litigants’ subjective states of mind below. What about an appellant who

  proffered only the pattern instruction below? Must the appellant say in her opening brief

  that she submitted such instruction in reliance on our previous cases? Must we take the

  appellant’s word for it? Or may we require the appellant’s trial counsel to submit a

  sworn declaration that she knew of our prior cases and submitted the pattern instruction

  only because our prior cases required it? I doubt my colleagues would condone this

  approach. That is why, although waiver speaks to subjective intent, we typically employ

  certain presumptions to objectivize our inquiry on appeal. Where an appellant invited an

  error below, we have adopted the presumption that the appellant’s claim of error was

  waived. Where well-settled law changed on appeal, we have adopted the presumption

  that the appellant did not intend to waive her claim. I would not go further to adopt a

  subjective inquiry into whether the appellant was aware of our well-settled law or relied

  on it below.

            Therefore, to receive the benefit of the supervening-decision exception under our

  controlling precedents, McBride must demonstrate (1) that the law of the Tenth Circuit

  was previously so well-settled it foreclosed any possibility of success; and (2) that the

  relevant law in this Circuit was changed by an intervening Supreme Court or Tenth

                                                 6
Appellate Case: 22-4119      Document: 010111009992          Date Filed: 03/05/2024      Page: 30

  Circuit decision. As the majority explains, McBride fails to demonstrate either of these

  things on appeal. See Maj. Op. at 10–11. Therefore, she is not entitled to the benefits of

  the supervening-decision exception, and our review of her claims is barred.

         The majority apparently agrees with this reasoning. See Maj. Op. at 10–11. This

  is yet another reason the majority’s erroneous discussion of reliance is entirely

  unnecessary to dispose of this appeal. McBride did not argue on appeal that the law in

  this Circuit was settled, so even under the majority’s rule, it is irrelevant whether she

  “relied on” such law below. There was no reason for the majority to announce additional

  requirements for the supervening-decision exception when those requirements would not

  make a difference in this case.

         McBride invited error; she did not show that previously well-settled law in our

  Circuit changed on appeal; and she waived her claims with respect to Count V.3 I

  therefore agree with the majority that we must affirm. However, I disagree with the

  majority’s choice to resolve McBride’s appeal through an unnecessary and incorrect

  restatement of our invited-error doctrine in a published opinion. Therefore, I respectfully

  concur in the judgment.

  3
   I join in Part B, which affirms McBride’s conviction on Count V, because that section is
  not dependent upon the invited-error doctrine. Maj. Op. at 18 n.13.
                                                7