In April 2005, we affirmed Anthony Ca-panelli’s conviction for conspiring to rob the Employee Federal Credit Union at the New York Times facility in Queens. The evidence at trial showed that Capanelli, a pressman at the facility, was the conspiracy’s inside man and supplied his coconspir-ators with uniforms and a sketch of the facility indicating the location of the money.
See United States v. Savarese,
Capanelli now appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Haight, /.) entered on June 7, 2005, that reimposed his fifty-one month sentence. He argues that (1) his sentence is procedurally unreasonable because the district court gave too much weight to the guideline range and too little weight to the other factors enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a); and (2) the district court erred in applying the § 2B3.1(b)(2)(C) firearm enhancement because there was insufficient evidence that Capanelli specifically intended the possession or brandishing of a firearm. We conclude that the district court’s sentence was entirely proper; accordingly, we affirm.
I.
We review a district court’s sentence for reasonableness.
Booker,
Capanelli argues that his sentence is procedurally unreasonable because the district court “failed to appreciate the sea change in sentencing wrought by Booker,” and instead “gave complete deference to the guidelines while not giving the other § 3553(a) factors the appropriate weight.” Capanelli draws on several statements made by the district court during the sentencing hearing: that the guidelines should be given “significant deference,” that the guidelines’ “advice has a very distinct resonance about it,” and that district courts “are instructed to give significant and substantial deference to the guidelines.”
The district court’s statements do not constitute procedural error. The recommended guideline range
“should
serve as ‘a benchmark or a point of reference or departure’ ” for a sentencing court.
United States v. Fernandez,
The district court appreciated that the Sentencing Guidelines are advisory. United States v. Capanelli, No. 01 Cr. 1121, Sentencing Tr., June 2, 2005 [hereinafter Sentencing Tr.], at 59 (“Although they are no longer binding upon sentencing judges, ... the advice has a very distinct resonance about it.”); id. 60 (“[T]hey are advisory, and inherently, conceptually advice can be offered and not acted upon or accepted .... ”). Additionally, the court considered the other § 3553(a) factors: the nature and circumstances of the offense, id. 68 (“[T]he nature and potential circumstances of the offense, which was the objective of the conspiracy, are dreadful.”); the history and characteristics of the defendant, id. 67 (“A number of people have written to me and said that he was a very fine union man, a good representative and helped other members of the union. Yet this same man was quite prepared to give significant vital assistance to a group of violent people who ... would have placed some of those very same union members and coworkers and employees in grave danger.”); the seriousness of the offense, id. 68 (“It was a very serious, horrific, potentially life-threatening scheme to which Mr. Capanelli willingly lent himself.”); and the other factors, id. (“to promote respect for the law; and to provide just punishment for the offense; and to afford adequate deterrence in criminal conduct”; “And having considered all of those factors to the best of my ability ... ”). Accordingly, Capanelli’s sentence was procedurally reasonable.
*166 II.
In Capanelli’s first appeal (Savarese) we held that “the base offense level for a conspiracy to commit robbery is enhanced ... where it can be established with
reasonable certainty
that the conspirators
specifically intended
that a firearm be brandished or possessed, although it is unnecessary that any brandishing or possession
actually occurred.”
Reviewing the record then before us, we stated that the district court’s findings “strongly suggested] that the use of firearms was a specifically intended element of the conspiracy” and that “the district court could have concluded that the use of firearms was a specifically intended element of the conspiracy.” Id. at 656 (emphasis added). The evidence at trial permitted the district court to infer “that the conspirators: (i) were able to get firearms; (ii) recognized that the ... robbery required firearms; (iii) expected and prepared for resistance from security guards within the ... facility; and (iv) were willing to overcome that resistance with firearms.” Id. However, because the district court had been proceeding under an erroneous legal standard, we remanded to allow the district court to “consider whether to apply the § 2B3.1(b)(2)(C) enhancement under the appropriate legal framework.” Id.
On remand the district court observed that our formulation of the legal standard did not make clear whose intent was relevant for the “specific intent” finding. Accordingly, the district court made two independent findings: (1) that “if any conspirator had [the required] specific intent — and they clearly did — then Mr. Ca-panelli is bound by it as a member of that conspiracy,” Sentencing Tr. 64; and (2) that “Mr. Capanelli as a member of the conspiracy,, and as a member fully cognizant of its dimensions and the manner in which it was going to be conducted, had the specific intent that a firearm be brandished or used,” id. 64-65.
The first finding is premised on an insufficient showing. As the finding is framed, an individual coconspirator’s specific intent to possess or brandish a firearm could be attributed to Capanelli even if that intent was unknown to Capanelli, even if the intended action was not an ordinary and natural means to the conspiratorial ends, and (perhaps) even if the intended action was not foreseeable. However (as we noted in Savarese), “a criminal conspiracy is defined by the conspirators’ unlawful agreement.”
The second finding is premised on a standard that is too stringent. The conclusion that the defendant himself specifically intended the brandishing or possession of firearms is certainly sufficient for application of the enhancement, but it is not required. “The gist of conspiracy is, of course, agreement.”
United States v. Beech-Nut Nutrition Corp.,
The
Savarese
instruction therefore focused on the “specifically intended scope of the conspiracy.”
Capanelli argues that anything less than a requirement of individualized specific intent amounts to Pinkerton liability.
See
The standard adopted in Savarese requires more: the intended action must be part of the conspiratorial plan for the enhancement to be imposed. However, a defendant’s intent that part of the plan be changed (a desire not to use firearms) or a defendant’s lack of intent with respect to an aspect of the plan (ambivalence regarding the type of force used) does not alter the intended features of the conspiratorial plan itself. Accordingly, a defendant is liable for those specifically intended features, regardless of his personal intent (or lack thereof). Membership in the conspiracy is sufficient to support the application of an enhancement based on the intended features of the conspiratorial plan.
We affirm the district court’s imposition of the § 2B3.1(b)(2)(C) enhancement. The district court found that Capanelli was “fully cognizant” of the conspiratorial plan, and that one aspect of the conspiratorial plan was the possession or brandishing of firearms during the robbery.
Savarese
acknowledged that the evidence could support this conclusion.
‡ ‡ ‡ ‡ ‡ ‡
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the district court is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. A sentence is substantively reasonable if its length is "reasonable in light of the factors outlined in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).”
Rattoballi,
