ON PETITION FOR REHEARING EN BANC
ORDER:
The Court having been polled at the request of one of the members of the Court and a majority of the Circuit Judges who are in regular active service not having voted in favor of it (Rule 35, Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure; Eleventh Circuit Rule 35-5), the Suggestion of Rehearing En Banc is DENIED.
CARNES, Circuit Judge, Concurring in the Denial of Rehearing En Banc, in which BLACK, HULL and MARCUS, Circuit Judges, join:
Our dissenting colleague has written much expressing his disagreement with the panel opinion in this case and his disappointment about the refusal of the en banc court to vacate the panel decision. We resist the temptation to write as much and respond only briefly.
I.
As the dissent concedes, the rule requiring that issues be raised in opening briefs is well-established.
See United States v. Ardley,
Retroactivity doctrine answers the question of which cases a new decision applies to, assuming that the issue involving that new decision has been timely raised and preserved. Procedural bar doctrine answers the question of whether an issue was timely raised and preserved, and if not, whether it should be decided anyway. It makes no more sense to say that a procedural bar should not be applied in this situation because doing so undermines or frustrates retroactive application of a Supreme Court decision, than it does to say that procedural bars should not be applied in any situation because doing so undermines or frustrates the constitutional doctrines аnd commands underlying the issue that is held to be defaulted. We routinely hold that constitutional issues based upon Supreme Court decisions applicable to trials occurring after those decisions are issued are nonetheless procedurally barred if they were not raised in a timely and appropriate fashion. No one has suggested, so far as we know, that procedural bars should not be enforced in that context because doing so undermines or frustrates the doctrine that Supreme Court decisions should be applied to all trials occurring after the decisions are issued.
If the dissent’s position were adopted, no procedural bar could ever be enforced because doing so would undermine or frustrate whatever values or doctrines underlie the constitutional or statutory provisions being belatedly asserted. Why should we give more protection against procedural default to the principles underlying the general doctrine established by retroactivity decisions than we do to the doctrines established by any other decisions of the Supreme Court, or than we do to the Fourth, Fifth, or Sixth Amendments, or any other constitutional provisions? We do not think we should.
As a final point on the retroactivity matter, we note that the dissent’s position is more than a little inconsistent. It recognizes that
Apprendi
issues not timely raised at trial should be reviewed only for plain error, which is another way of saying that trial level procedural defaults should be enforced in the usual way notwithstanding the retroactive applicability of the
Ap-prendi
decision to all cases pending at the time it was announced. Plain error review is much more narrow than the review that is conducted when there has been no procedural default.
See United States v. Humphrey,
One of the best indications of the narrowness of plain error review is the fact that this Court has not yet found any
Apprendi
error to fit within the scope of the plain error doctrine. Many appellants have tried to squeeze their
Apprendi
claims through, but we have rejected all their efforts. Even when there has been
Apprendi
error and it has been “plain,” we have still held the other requirements of the plain error rule were not met. See, e.g.,
United States v. Cromartie,
*993 The dissent never explains why enforcing trial level procedural rules by cutting appellate review down to the narrow confines of the plain error rule does not undermine or frustrate the purposes of the retroactivity doctrine, but enforcing appellate level procedural rules does. If the retroactivity doctrine requires that we address issues that have been procedurally defaulted on appeal, why does it not require that we address full bore those issues that have been procedurally defaulted at trial instead of limiting our review to plain error? Everything the dissent says about declining to review Apprendi issues that were not properly raised in an appellаnt’s brief applies with equal force to refusing to review for anything other than plain error Apprendi issues that were not properly raised at trial. The retroactivity doctrine either trumps the procedural default doctrine or it does not. Our position, which is consistent, is that it does not.
II.
The dissent also suggests, in footnote 20, that our enforcement of procedural bars in this context will require district courts to hold evidentiary hearings in order to decide if an attorney’s failure to raise
Ap-prendi
issues before that decision was released constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel. That is simply not so. In this circuit, we have a wall of binding precedent that shuts out any contention that an attorney’s failure to anticipate a change in the law constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel.
See, e.g., Spaziano v. Singletary,
Further, the rule that it is not ineffective assistance for an attorney to fail to foresee a change in the law applies even when the change is such that the forfeited issue was, in hindsight, a sure fire winner.
Wright v. Hopper,
Not only that, but we have recently held that neither the novelty of the
Apprendi
decision nor the perceived futility of raising the issue before the Supreme Court released that decision can serve as adequate cause to excuse a defendant’s failure to have raised the issue in a timely fashion.
*994
See McCoy v. United States,
III.
The final point to which we wish to respond is the dissent’s assertion that the panel’s application of a procedural bar in this context is somehow disobedient to the Supreme Court’s remand instructions.
Whenever the Supreme Court decides an important issue of law, it routinely takes every case in which the court of appeals decision came out before the new decision was announced and in which the certiorari petitioner claims that new decision might apply, and treats all of those cases the same. The uniform treatment given all such cases is to vacate the court of appeals judgment and remand the case for further consideration in light of the new decision. Those boilerplate orders come out in bushel baskets full. There is no implication in the standard language of those orders that the court of appeals is to do anything except reconsider the case now that there is a new Supreme Court decision that may, or may not, affect the result. We have never felt constrained to read anything into such routine remands other than the direction that we take another look at the case because оf the new decision.
See United States v. Miller,
For example, in
Jones v. American Broad. Cos., Inc.,
The kind of mass production, assembly-line remand order that was issued in this case implies nothing about what a court of appeals should do on remand, except that it is to reconsider the case in light of the intervening decision of the Supreme Court that is named in the remand order. The panel in this case did that. It reconsidered its decision affirming Ardley’s conviction and sentence in light of Apprendi. The reconsideration the panel afforded the ease in light of Apprendi included whether the appellant had procedurally defaulted the Apprendi issue by not raising it in his briefs before this Court. He had.
Inherent in the dissent’s position is speculation that the Supreme Court meant to *995 preclude the panel in this case from considering on remand whether the Apprendi issue was procedurally barred. There is nothing at all to support that speculation. There is no reason to believe that the Supreme Court decided to rule out the aрplication of well-established procedural rules to Apprendi issues in this or any other case, and for some reason simply forgot to tell anyone. We give the Supreme Court more credit than that.
Perhaps the best indication that the panel’s action on remand in this case was not disobedient to the Supreme Court’s instructions is the fact that the Supreme Court promptly denied the certiorari petition that was filed seeking review of the panel’s action on remand.
See Ardley v. United States,
— U.S. -,
IV.
We have not attempted to set out everything in the dissenting opinion with which we disagree, but instead have confined our discussion to a few of the major points. To go further would require more of the reader’s attention than this enterprise justifies. The panel simply applied a long- and well-established procedural rule to an appeal when the case was remanded to it by the Supreme Court. We think the panel got it right and that this Court as a whole was correct to deny en banc rehearing. It is no wonder why the Supreme Court so promptly denied certiorari when this case reached it after the remand decision was entered by the panel.
TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge, Dissenting from the Denial of Rehearing En Banc, in which BARKETT, Circuit Judge, joins:
The panel’s opinion on remand from the Supreme Court,
I believe that the panel should have reached the merits of the defendant’s claim that his sentence was imposed in violation of Apprendi. Under the doctrine of retroactivity, the defendant should receive the benefit of the rule announced in Apprendi because his case was on direct appeal when the Supreme Court decided Apprendi. The panel’s decision in this case, however, deprives the defendant of such benefit by invoking the procedural rule regarding abandonment. The panel thus limits the reach of retroactivity by giving retroactive application to an intervening Supreme Court decision only if a *996 litigant placed an argument mirroring the Supreme Court’s decision in his initial brief on appeal, even if such argument ran counter to circuit precedent at the time the litigant submitted his brief.
Because I do not subscribe to such a limitation on retroactivity, which will have sweeping effects far beyond Apprendi cases, and because the panel’s opinion has created a circuit split on retroactive application of intervening Supreme Court decisions (with the Eleventh Circuit standing alone), I dissent from the court’s refusal to rehear this case en banc.
I.
The principle of
Ardley
is that this circuit will apply the law of an intervening Supreme Court decision
only if
the litigant briefed the issue addressed by that intervening decision in the litigant’s first brief to us. This principle holds true even if a case is on remand from the Supreme Court for reconsideration in light of that intervening decision, and even if it is readily apparent to all that the intervening decision could affect the resolution of the case. I believe Ardley’s principle sets a dangerous precedent because it runs afoul of the long-standing “general rule of retrospective effect for the constitutional decisions of [the Supreme] Court.”
Robinson v. Neil,
A.
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once estimated that “[jjudicial decisions have had retrospective operation for near a thousand years.”
Kuhn v. Fairmont Coal Co.,
In Harper, the Court spoke succinctly about retroactive application of an intervening decision:
When this Court applies a rule of federal law to the parties before it, that rule is the controlling interpretation of federal law and must be given full retroactivе effect in all cases still open on direct review and as to all events, regardless of whether such events predate or postdate our announcement of the rule.
Harper,
The rule of retroactive application of new constitutional rules is most clear in criminal cases.
See, e.g., Griffith,
*998
The second reason for retroactively applying new rules to cases pending on direct appeal is that “selective application of new rules violates the principle of treating similarly situated [parties] the same.”
Id.
(alteration in original) (quoting
Griffith,
B.
In
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Instead of applying plain error review to the defendant’s
Apprendi
claim, the panel’s decision in this case declines to reach the merits of the claim at all.
6
The panel bases its decision on our procedural rule “that issues and contentions not timely raised in the briefs are deemed abandoned.”
United States v. Ardley,
The panel has essentially superimposed an additional requirement onto retroactivity determinations. While the Supreme Court has clearly stated that all cases pending on direct appeal at the time of an intervening decision are entitled to the benefit of a new rule, the panel’s decision narrows the class of cases entitled to ret-roactivity. The panel’s new rule is that cases are entitled to the benefit of an intervening decision only if: 1) the case was not yet final at the time of the intervening decision; and 2) the litigant presaged the intervening decision by raising the issue addressed by that decision in the litigant’s initial brief on appeal. I believe that by adding this second requirement to retroactive application of intervening decisions, the panel’s opinion runs counter to retroactivity as defined by Supreme Court precedеnt.
Consider the effect of our new rule on the instant case. Starting with the assumption that the defendant has a meritorious claim that his sentence was imposed in violation of Apprendi, the panel’s decision forecloses the defendant, sentenced in violation of the constitution, from obtaining relief — even though his conviction and sentence were not yet “final” when Apprendi was decided. I cannot agree that this an appropriate “retroactive” application of the intervening Supreme Court decision.
The Supreme Court’s rationale for retroactive application of intervening decisions provides further illustration that the panel’s decision runs afoul of retroactivity. As noted supra part I.A, the Supreme Court employs retroactivity to ensure the “integrity of judicial review,” such that *1000 courts operate as a judiciary rather than a legislature, and to ensure that “similarly situated” litigants are treated the same. By failing to accord the defendant the benefit of Apprendi, the panel has rendered Apprendi prospective in application, at least in cases like Ardley. This certainly impugns the integrity of judicial review. 8 The panel’s rule also negаtes the principle of treating similarly situated litigants the same. As noted above, in the retroactivity context the Supreme Court has discussed whether litigants are “similarly situated” in terms of the timing of the case. That is, when the Supreme Court announces a new rule and applies it to a litigant in a specific case, another litigant is considered “similarly situated” if his case is still on direct appeal. 9 Implicit in the panel’s decision is that litigants are not “similarly situated” for retroactivity purposes if one litigant has failed to make an argument on appeal in his case while another litigant has made such argument. Although this is sometimes a proper distinction, 10 my reading of the cases leads me to believe that it is a distinction without a difference when evaluating cases for retroactivity purposes.
I believe that the panel has wrongly added an additional hurdle to the retroactive application of an intervening Supreme Court decision.
11
This hurdle has been neither contemplated nor condonеd by the Court, and unnecessarily narrows the class of litigants who will receive the benefit of an intervening Supreme Court decision.
12
Further, because we are the only circuit to impose this additional hurdle, there is now a circuit split on this important issue.
See United States v. Clinton,
C.
The panel’s decision in this case will have far greater сonsequences than appear at first blush. While this case involves a single case on remand from the Supreme Court for reconsideration in light of Ap-prendi, the rule of Ardley extends to all other criminal and civil cases. Moreover, the rule of Ardley will be the rule of law in the lower courts in this circuit in addition to serving as binding precedent on this court.
Prior to
Ardley,
it had been my understanding that courts would apply an intervening decision
despite
procedural rules to the contrary.
See, e.g., United States v. Candelario,
After Ardley, I fear that intervening decisions that establish new precedent will be given short shrift in this circuit in other cases that are not yet final. I am unsure as to all of the consequences, but it seems certain that Ardley will apply in civil cases as well as criminal cases, for there is no reason to distinguish between the two based on the language of Ardley. 15 Further, it’ is perfectly logical to think that a district court will see no need to grant a litigant the benefit of a new rule announced by this court or the Supreme Court if there is any sort of procedural bar.
For example, in the criminal context,
Ardley
could lead to the continued incarceration of a defendant who was unconstitutionally convicted. This is because
Ard-ley
applies not just to sentence appeals, but also to appeals raising constitutional infirmities in the conviction itself. Consider, for example, the new rule we announced in
United States v. Santa,
In the same way, the rule of
Ardley
will have deleterious consequences in civil cases. Consider an example in which the en banc court or the Supreme Court held in Case A that a claim must be filed within two years rather than three years, thereby reversing settled precedent with regard to a statute of limitations.
17
With this new
*1003
statute of limitations in hand, the defendant in Case B — a case in which the pleadings are closed — moves the district court to dismiss Case B because the plaintiffs claim is barred by the now-applicable statute of limitations. In response, the plaintiff cites
Ardley
for the proposition that the defendant is procedural!y barred from asserting as an affirmative defense the statute of limitations, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 8(c) (stating that an affirmative defense based on the statute of limitations “shall” be set forth in the answer). The district court thus denies the defendant’s motion, based on
Ardley,
and allows the case to progress to trial — despite the fact there is no longer a legally cognizable claim at issue! The plaintiffs recovery from the defendant would be affirmed on appeal because the defendant “waived” his right to assert the affirmative defense of statute of limitations.
See EEOC v. White & Son Enter.,
In short, the consequences of Ardley are much greater than they may. appear at first blush. These consequences demonstrate that the panel should not have applied a procedural bar as it did.
II.
Aside from the retroactivity problems, the panel’s decision is troubling for two additional reasons. First, the panel could have made an exception to the abandonment rule, for the abandonment rule is only a prudential constraint. Second, I believe the panel’s decision frustrates the Supreme Court remand.
A.
I believe the panel should have overlooked the defendant’s failure to include an Apprendi-tyрe argument in his initial brief on appeal. The requirement of placing all issues in the initial brief is found in Rule 28(a)(9)(A) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure: The appellant’s brief “must contain” the “appellant’s contentions and the reasons for them, with citations to the authorities and 'parts of the record on which the appellant relies.”' Failure to ‘ comply with this requirement usually results in waiver or abandonment of the issue.
See, e.g., Flanigan’s Enters., Inc. v. Fulton Co.,
In the instant case, prudence surely counsels that the panel should have reached the merits of the defendant’s
Ap-prendi
claim, given that it is starkly presented and that courts have uniformly pronounced sentences in excess of the statutory maximum, meted out without a jury finding on drug quantity, to be error.
20
See, e.g., United States v. Strayhorn,
In this case, we find the following circumstances relevant to the exercise of our Rule 28 discretion. One, Apprendi was decided after briefing and one of the defendants refers us to the new decision in his post-argument brief. Thus, it is not completely accurate to characterize the issue as waived or abandoned. Two, Appellants protested at trial and on appeal that their due process rights had been infringed by the district court’s procedure for determining drug quantity. We cannot in good faith ignore Ap-prendi in a discussion of what process is due a criminal defendant who challenges a drug quantity determination. Finally, it is clear from the record in this case that Appellants were sentenced in violation of constitutional due process as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Ap-prendi. Basеd on these factors, we will consider whether that violation was plain error as to each of the Appellants in this case. See United States v. Garcia,242 F.3d 593 (5th Cir.2001).
Miranda,
Thus, aside from my concerns about ret-roactivity, I believe that the
Ardley
panel should have exercised its discretion to overlook the defendant’s failure to enumerate an Apprendi-type claim in his initial appellate brief.
21
The panel’s failure to exercise its discretion forecloses all future panels from exercising their discretion in
Apprendi
and
non-Apprendi
cases alike, because
Ardley
and its progeny have directly confronted and addressed the issue of the procedural bar.
Ardley,
B.
I also believe that the panel’s decision frustrates the Supreme Court’s remand.
*1006
To be sure, the Supreme Court did not intimate its views on the merits of this case simply by remanding it to this court.
See In re Sealed Case,
The language of the Court’s remand supports my understanding. The remand instructs this court to reconsider its previous opinion in light of Apprendi.
22
Rather then emphasizing the
remand itself,
the panel emphasized the
boilerplate nature
of the remand.
See Ardley,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, I disagree with the panel’s decision in Ardley. I therefore dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc.
APPENDIX
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 98-7033
D.C. Docket No. 97-00251-CR-l
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
BARRY LEON ARDLEY, Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama
(February 20, 2001)
ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Before CARNES, MARCUS and COX, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
We have previously affirmed the conviction and sentence in this case.
See United States v. Ardley,
No. 98-7033 (11th Cir. Nov. 18, 1999). The Supreme Court has vacated our prior judgment and remanded the case to us for further consideration in light of
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Ardley did not raise the
Apprendi
issue when the case was before us prior to the certiorari petition being filed. He did not mention that issue in his initial brief, his reply brief, or in the suggestion for rehearing en banc that he filed. Nothing in the
Apprendi
opinion requires or suggests that we are obligated to consider an issue not raised in any of the briefs that appellant has filed with us. Nor is there anything in the Supreme Court’s remand order, which is cast in the usual language, requiring that we treat the case as though the
Apprendi
issue had been timely raised in this Court.
See United States v. Miller,
In the absence of any requirement to the contrary in either
Apprendi
or in the order remanding this case to us, we apply our well-established rule that issues and contentions not timely raised in the briefs are deemed abandoned.
Hartsfield v. Lemacks,
Our opinion affirming the conviction and sentence, United States v. Ardley, No. 98-7033 (11th Cir. Nov. 18, 1999), is REINSTATED.
Notes
. I realize that there are some nuances to this rule in the civil сontext. I have written about this in
McKinney v. Pate,
. Because
Griffith
characterized Justice Harlan's concerns as two-fold rather than threefold,
see Griffith,
. Justice Harlan's opinions in
Desist, Mackey,
and, to a much lesser extent,
United States v. Estate of Donnelly,
."As a practical matter, of course, [the Supreme Court] cannot hear each case pending on direct review and apply the new rule. But [the Court] fulfills [its] judicial responsibility by instructing the lower courts to apply the new rule retroactively to cases not yet final. Thus, it is the nature of judicial review that precludes us from '[s]imply fishing one case
*998
from the stream of appellate review, using it as a vehicle for pronouncing new constitutional standards, and then permitting a stream of similar cases subsequently to flow by unaffected by that new rule.'
" Griffith,
. In this case, the defendant was indicted and convicted for violating 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a) *999 and 846, Count 1, and 18 U.S.C. § 1952, Counts 2 and 3. His 293-month prison sentence on Count 1 is the subject of his Apprendi claim.
. Judge Carnes attempts to find an inconsistency in my position that this court should apply plain error analysis to an Apprendi argument raised for the first time on appeal but should refrain from applying the procedural bar of Fed. R.App. P. 28. There is no inconsistency in this position because there is a distinct difference in the outcomes of applying the two procedural rules: enforcing Rule 28 "frustrates the purposes of the retroactivity doctrine” because the court is absolutely barred from applying the new constitutional rule; whereas, applying a plain error analysis, even though it is a more narrow review, allows the court, in at least some instances, to implement the new constitutional rule.
. I do not believe that the policy reasons in support of the "abandoned objectiоn rule,” which I enumerate in Presnell, are furthered by enforcement of the rule in this case.
. The usual rationale for consistent enforcement of procedural requirements is judicial restraint, borne of the Constitution's "case or controversy" requirement. Unfortunately, the panel's decision, while utilizing a tool of judicial restraint, perversely promotes judicial activism by making
Apprendi
prospective in application in some cases.
See Harper,
. In addition to the citations
supra
part I.A,
Teague,
. For example, this distinction should determine the appropriate standard of review for a case on direct appeal.
See, e.g., United States v. Candelario,
. This hurdle applies to retroactivity in general, and not just to decisions of the Supreme Court. For example, if the en banc court overrules precedent to change the law of this circuit, there is no reason for such a situation to be treated differently from a Supreme Court decision. In the same way, a panel decision that does not overrule precedent but sets forth a seminal principle for the first time would be subject to the same retroactivity rules.
. The claim that the Supreme Court intends decisions such as
Apprendi
to be applied retroactively to cases such as
Ardley
is bolstered by
Johnson v. United States,
. The First Circuit’s position is not well-defined, for that circuit declined to allow supplemental briefs on the
Apprendi
issue in
United States v. Burgos,
. In
Calhoon,
the defendant’s initial brief did not mention
Gaudin,
even though
Gaudin
was decided about three weeks prior to the filing of the brief in
Calhoon.
The closest the defendant came to the
Gaudin
issue was his one page assertion that the trial court erred "as a matter of law” in determining that certain claims were material. The Government’s brief first raised the
Gaudin
issue: "Although Appellant did not raise the issue, the government must address the impact of
[Gaudin
] on the case at bar.” The defendant then made a full-fledged
Gaudin
argument in his reply brief. The panel opinion in
Calhoon
made no mention of the fact that the defendant had "abandoned” his argument by failing to raise it in his initial brief on appeal. In fact, the panel understood that
Griffith
required it to apply
Gaudin
retroactively,
Calhoon,
.I suppose one could argue that the
Ardley
decision is somehow limited to
Apprendi
cases, since this circuit has only aрplied this variation on retroactivity in the
Apprendi
context.
See, e.g., United States v. Garcia,
. This hypothetical would work equally well with any defense that a defendant can waive if not timely asserted.
. This might arise in a choice of law scenario when two states have differing statutes of limitations and a court must decide which is applicable.
. My example could apply to any claim that can be waived under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The affirmative defenses of Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 8(c) provide ready examples of such "waivable” claims or defenses.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. An additional reason for reaching the merits of the defendant's
Apprendi
claim in this direct appeal is that the defendant surely will mount a collateral attack, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, based on
Apprendi.
His attack could be asserted in one of two ways. First, he could present a substantive
Apprendi
claim, that is, the same claim he could have raised in his initial brief on direct appeal. To do so, however, he would have to show "cause” for his failure to raise the claim and resulting "prejudice.”
Engle v. Isaac,
. If one subscribes to Blackstonian jurisprudential views, one could validly assert that the panel should have noticed,
sua sponte,
plain error in the defendant's sentence in the initial appeal. This is because, according to this view of the law, courts do not create new law, but only announce what the law always has been. Thus, any error in the defendant's sentence existed when the case was here on the initial appeal, and the panel erred by failing to notice and address the error. (I note that multiple panels on which I served made the same error.
See, e.g., United States v. Wims,
. The Supreme Court's opinion in this case stated, in full:
On petition for writ of сertiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. Motion of petitioner for leave to proceed in forma pauperis and petition for writ of certiorari granted. Judgment vacated, and case remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit for further consideration in light of Apprendi v. New Jersey,530 U.S. 466 ,120 S.Ct. 2348 ,147 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000).
Ardley
v.
United States,
. While the Supreme Court has issued dozens of identical remands to virtually every other circuit court of appeal, I have been unable to find any other circuit that has taken the approach of the
Ardley
panel regarding abandonment with respect to cases on remand from the Supreme Court for reconsideration in light of an intervening decision. To the contrary, the Fifth Circuit has explicitly reached the merits of a defendant's
Apprendi
claim in a case on remand from the Supreme Court, even though the defendant failed to raise an
Apprendi
claim in the trial court or in his initial brief to the appellate court.
United States v. Clinton,
