This Cоurt has previously upheld the enforceability of appeal waivers that are knowingly and voluntarily entered.
E.g., United States v. Bushert,
Angela Rubbo does not dispute any of that, but shе does contend that the appeal waiver she agreed to as part of her plea bargain ought not prevent her from raising sentencing issues arising under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
United States v. Booker,
543 U.S. -,
A sixty-three count indictment charged Rubbo with mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, and various conspiracies, stemming from a multi-million dollar telemarketing fraud operation that she and her threé sons ran. Through plea negotiations with prosecutors, Rubbo’s attorney managed to whittle the charges down to one: conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. In return for the government agreeing to dismiss the remaining sixty-two counts against her and for other favors at sentencing,- Rubbo agreed to рlead guilty, cooperate, and waive her right to appeal any sentence she received subject to a few exceptions. After two hearings, the district court granted Rubbo’s motion to change her plea to guilty, accepted that new plea, and adjudicated Rubbo guilty of the one count of violating § 371.
During the course of one of those hearings, the district court engaged in a colloquy with Rubbo in which it ensured that she fully understood the appeal waiver part of her plea agreement and voluntarily consented to it. To the extеnt that Rubbo contends that she did not knowingly and voluntarily agree to the appeal waiver, we reject that contention because it is inconsistent with the record.
At sentencing, over Rubbo’s objections the district- court imposed two enhancements. One was a two-level enhаncement either because the offense involved relocating a fraudulent scheme to another jurisdiction to elude law enforcement, U.S.S.G; § 2Fl.l(b)(5)(A) (Nov.1998), or because it used sophisticated means, U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b)(5)(C) (Nov.1998). The other was a two-level enhancement for being an organizer оr leader of a criminal activity that involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(e) (Nov.1998). The district court ultimately sentenced Rubbo to forty-eight months’ imprisonment, twelve short of the statutory cap of sixty months for the crime. See 18 U.S.C. § 371.
Notwithstanding her promise that she would not appeal, Rubbo did. She filed a brief contending that the impositions of the enhancements were erroneous applications of the guidelines. The government responded with a motion to dismiss Rub-bo’s appeal based on the waiver.
See generally Buchanan,
Rubbo filed a reply to the government’s dismissal motion in which she indicated that in light of the intervening decision in
Blakely v. Washington,
542 U.S. -,
*1333 The appeal waiver paragraph in the plea agreement that Rubbo signed says this:
The defendant is aware that Title 18, United States Code, Section 3742 affords the defendant the right to appeal the sentence imposed in this case. Acknowledging this, in exchange for the undertakings made by the United States in this plea agreement, the defendant hereby waives all rights conferred by Title 18, United States Code, Section 3742 to appeal any sentence imposed, including any restitution order, or to appeal the manner in which the sentence was imposed, unless the sentence exceeds the maximum permitted by statute or is the result of an upward departure from the guideline range the Court establishes at sentencing. The defendant further understands that nothing in this plea agreement shall affect the government’s right and/or duty to appeal as set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3742(b). However, if the United States appeals the defendant’s sentence pursuant to Section 3742(b), the defendant shall be released from the waiver of appellate rights. The defendant understands that, although the defendant will be sentenced in conformity with the Sentencing Guidelines, by this agreement the defendant waives the right to appeal the sentеnce on the basis that the sentence is the result of an incorrect application of the Sentencing Guidelines.
The general waiver language — “all rights conferred by Title 18, United States Code, Section 3742 to appeal any sentence imposed, including any restitution ordеr, or to appeal the manner in which the sentence was imposed” — certainly is broad enough to cover any issues arising from
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Rubbo’s position is not outlandish. The plea agreement language permitting her to escape the waiver if “the sentence еxceeds the maximum permitted by statute” is semantically similar to the “statutory maximum” term that was a key component of the Supreme Court’s reasoning and analysis in
Blakely.
In its opinion in that case, the Court gave this definition of that term: “Our precedents make clear, however, that the ‘statutory maximum’ for
Apprendi
purposes is the maximum sentence a judge may impose solely on the basis of the facts reflected in the jury verdict or admitted by the defendant.”
Blakely,
Because the sentence the district court imposed on Rubbo goes beyond that permitted on the basis of the facts she admitted during her plea colloquy, Rubbo
*1334
contends that it exceeds the statutory-maximum sentence for
Booker
purposes. Given that, she says that her sentence “exceeds the maximum permitted by statute” for purposes of the exception to the appeal waiver contained in her plea agreement. The problem with Rubbo’s contention is its invisible premise, which is that the “statutory maximum” for
Booker
purposes is .the same thing as “the maximum permitted by statute” for purposes of Rubbo’s appeal waiver. The two are not the same. The context in which the terms are used and the meaning they convey are different. After all, “[a] word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged, it is the skin of a living-thought and may vary greatly in color and content according to the circumstances and the time in which it is used.”
Towne v. Eisner,
In the
.Apprendi/Booker
line of decisions, the Supreme Court used the term “statutory maximum” to describe the parameters of the rule announced in those decisions, a rule that had nothing to do with the scope of аppeal waivers.
Booker,
Whether it did, however, is not the point for present purposes. The point here is that the definition of “statutory maximum” the Supreme Court usеd to describe and explain its holdings in those cases says nothing about what Rubbo and the government meant when they used the term “the maximum permitted by statute” in the appeal waiver. This is not a matter of legal research. It is a question of the parties’ intent.
Plea bargains, we have recognized, are like contracts and should be interpreted in accord with what the parties intended.
See Howle,
For purposes of thе exception to the appeal waiver, the parties chose to define the maximum sentence in terms of what is “permitted by statute,” not in terms of what is permitted by the Apprendi line of decisions that was evolving at the time. We asked counsel for Rubbo at oral argu7 ment whether there was anything in the record to indicate that the parties intended to reserve a right for her to appeal any Apprendi-type issues. He replied with commendable candor that there was not, and that if that had been the intent Rubbo would have raised an Apprendi issue at the sentence proceeding, which she did not.
We take our final point from the D.C. Circuit’s decision last month in
United States v. West,
The same is true in the present case. A prоvision in the plea agreement states that Rubbo understands and acknowledges that “the Court may impose a statutory maximum term of imprisonment of up to five (5) years, followed by a term of supervised release of up to'three (3) years, and a fine of up to $250,000,” and may order the dеfendant to pay restitution. In that provision, “statutory maximum” unquestionably means the maximum permitted by the statute itself, undiminished by any Ap-prendi /Booker considerations. If we were to read the language in the appeal waiver provision in this same -agreement to mean anything else, we would be interpreting mаterially identical terms in the same contract to mean substantially different things. That we will not do.
In summary, the right to appeal a sentence based on Apprendi /Booker grounds can be waived in a plea agreement. Broad waiver language covers those grounds of appeal. Absent some indication that the parties intended otherwise, when аn exception to an appeal waiver is stated in terms of'a sentence imposed in excess of the statutory maximum, those terms should be given their ordinary and natural meaning. Ordinarily and naturally, “statutory maximum” and “the maximum permitted by statute” refer to the longest sentence that the statute which punishes a crime permits a court to impose, regardless of whether- the actual sentence must be shortened in a particular case because of the principles involved in the Apprendi /Booker line of decisions.
The government’s motion to dismiss this appeal on the basis of the aрpeal waiver is granted. ARPEAL DISMISSED.
Notes
. Because Rubbo did not raise the
Blakely
issue in her opening brief, the government contends that she is procedurally barred from arguing it.
See United States v. Levy,
