On February 27, 2004, Angel Lechuga-Ponce pleaded guilty to illegal reentry into this country after deportation. The district court sentenced Lechuga-Ponce to 70 months’ imprisonment. On appeal Lechu-ga-Ponce challenges only his sentence. We order a limited remand.
I.
On December 18, 1997, Angel Lechuga-Ponce was convicted of aggravated assault in connection with drunk driving in Hall County, Georgia. Two years later, Lechu-ga-Ponce, a citizen of Mexico, was deported to Mexico. At some point, however, Lechuga-Ponce reentered the United States without official permission. While in Wisconsin, he was arrested and convicted on March 7, 2003, of felony drunk driving by a Wisconsin state court and sentenced to three years’ imprisonment.
While in prison, officials with the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement “found” Lechuga-Ponce, and he was indicted by a grand jury for illegal reentry after deportation for an aggravated felony. 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) and (b)(2). Lechuga-Ponce pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement. In the plea agreement and at the change of plea hearing, he admitted to the 1997 Georgia conviction.
At a sentencing hearing, the presen-tence report recommended a sentencing range of 77-96 months based on a sentencing enhancement of 16 levels because the underlying felony was a crime of violence. See U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii). Lechu-ga-Ponce moved for, and received, a downward departure because he argued that the sentence overstated the severity of his crime. The district court ultimately sentenced Lechuga-Ponce to 70 months’ imprisonment. This appeal followed. ■
II.
Lechuga-Ponce does not challenge his conviction, only his sentence. Much of Lechuga-Ponce’s argument relates to the enhancement of his sentence due to his 1997 Georgia conviction being classified as a crime of violence.
See id.
Briefs were filed in this case after the Supreme Court’s decision in
Blakely v. Washington,
542 U.S. -,
This argument is flawed in two key respects. First, Lechuga-Ponce’s prior conviction was, in effect, proven beyond a reasonable doubt — in his plea agreement and at the change of plea hearing, Lechu-ga-Ponce admitted the prior conviction.
See Blakely,
Lechuga-Ponce’s equal protection argument has been overtaken by subsequent events. His argument on this point envisioned an outcome to Booker different than that reached by the Court. Lechuga-Ponce anticipated that a defendant, such as he, who was eligible only for criminal history enhancements would be subject to mandatory enhancements while a defendant who was eligible for enhancements because of certain facts concerning his crime would be subject to discretionary enhancements. Lechuga-Ponce thus expected that some enhancements would be mandatory, while others would be discretionary- — an equal protection violation in Lechuga-Ponce’s view. But that is not what happened. The Supreme Court held that the guidelines, in their entirety, were advisory.
The fact that the sentencing guidelines are now advisory does, however, entitle Lechuga-Ponce to a limited remand. This court has recently held that a defendant is entitled to a limited remand where a district court sentenced a defendant under the guidelines and where this court cannot be assured that the district court would have arrived at that same sentence if it had treated the guidelines as advisory.
United States v. Castillo,
Lechuga-Ponce’s final argument is that the district court erred when it failed to recognize that when sentencing him it had the discretion to adjust his sentence downward for the fourteen months he was in state custody from the time he was found by immigration authorities (May 2003) until he was sentenced (July 2004). Lechuga-Ponce- relies principally on the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Barrera-Saucedo,
Lechuga-Ponce has a fundamental problem, however. He is asking this court to find that the district court erred when it held that it had no discretion to depart downward to account for state custody, but Lechuga-Ponce never asked the district court to make such a downward departure. Without such a request, Lechuga-Ponce has waived his argument.
See United States v. Covarrubias,
III.
We direct a limited Remand of Lechuga-Ponce’s sentence so that the district court may determine whether it would have sentenced him differently had it known that the sentencing guidelines are advisory rather than mandatory. We retain appellate jurisdiction pending the outcome of this remand.
Notes
. We note that oral argument in this case was held shortly after Booker was decided and counsel for Lechuga-Ponce conceded that much of his argument was mooted by the Court’s decision in that case.
