OPINION
Defendant William McKinley appeals the district court’s order sentencing him to 170 months of imprisonment, imposed following remand from this court’s judgment in
United States v. Walker,
I.
In September 1994, defendant William McKinley and three co-defendants were convicted of conspiring to distribute cocaine and crack in the Youngstown, Ohio, area. McKinley was also convicted of possessing crack with intent to distribute and was assigned a total offense level of 38, and sentenced to 260 months of imprisonment. During the original sentencing proceeding, the government urged the district court to apply a two-point enhancement to the defendant’s sentence for possession of firearms during a drug crime, but the district court declined to do so. This court
*718
affirmed McKinley’s convictions in
Walker,
The government chose not to appeal the district court’s decision regarding the sentence enhancement for possession of a firearm during a drug crime. As a result, we did not have notice that this question remained an issue and did not have an opportunity to dispose of this issue as part of the Walker appellate proceeding.
On remand, the parties raised two issues in addition to the “role-in-the-offense” enhancement that formed the basis for the remand order. McKinley reiterated his objection to the district court’s determination of the amount of cocaine and crack for which he was held responsible, but the district court adhered to its earlier determination of this question, which had been upheld by this court. The government in turn re-asserted its claim that the offense level should be increased by two points, to 36, as a result of McKinley’s possession of two firearms. The district court rejected this argument, as it had at McKinley’s original sentencing hearing. We reject both the defendant’s argument on the amount of drugs and the government’s belated firearms argument.
II.
The government urges us to review and reverse the district court’s decision not to raise the defendant’s total offense level for possessing firearms during a drug crime. We find, however, that the government waived this claim when it chose not to seek review of this decision during the original
Walker
appellate proceeding. Our decision on this issue is in accordance with the general rule that when a party fails to seek review of a district court’s final order, it is barred from reasserting that issue in any subsequent appeals occurring in that case.
Crick v. Smith,
This result is in accordance with the policy arguments behind the waiver doctrine. Had the government raised this issue in the initial Walker proceeding, we could have disposed of it accordingly. Instead, the government seeks review of this issue as this case appears before us for the second time. Were we to accept the government’s invitation to review the case and remand to the district court for further proceedings on the firearms enhancement *719 issue, we would doubtless see this case for a third time when the losing party appealed the district court’s decision on this issue. The waiver doctrine exists to forestall this kind of perpetual litigation by notifying parties that they will forfeit their claims if they fail to seek review in the first appeal. Here the government failed to appeal the district court’s decision on the sentencing enhancement when the opportunity first presented itself and therefore relinquished its ability to gain review of the issue by this court.
III.
The district court’s decision regarding the amount of cocaine and crack attributable to the defendant is a factual determination and we therefore review it only for “clear error.” 18 U.S.C. § 3742,
United States v. Bahhur,
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court did not commit clear error in calculating the amount of cocaine and cocaine base attributable to the defendant and that the government waived its appellate rights on the sentence enhancement issue by failing to seek review at the earliest opportunity. The district court’s decision is hereby affirmed.
