Pursuant to a plea agreement, Defendant-Appellant Bruce Rhodes (“Rhodes”) pleaded guilty to mail fraud. Although he waived his rights to appeal his conviction in the plea аgreement, Rhodes reserved the right to appeal the amount of restitution ordered by the district court if the amount ordered exceeded $9,198.00. The district court ordered that Rhоdes make restitution in the amount of $1,104,557.39, due and payable “immediately” to Rhodes’ former employer, Magna Investments, Inc. (“Magna”). Rhodes appeals the restitution order, and we affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
According to the plea agreement, between October 1997 and July 1999, Rhodes worked as an investment representative for Magna, an investment brokerage firm, at one оf its branches in Springfield, Illinois. While at Magna, Rhodes created a two-fold scheme to defraud Magna’s customers and enrich himself. First, without the knowledge or consent of six (6) investors, Rhodеs placed money from their accounts into his own accounts. Second, Rhodes also diverted the money of approximately 240 investors, without their knowledge or consent, from the investments that they had chosen (low-risk, short-term) to investments that paid a higher commission (high-risk, long-term). To effectuate this second scam, Rhodes made false statements, prepared false documents, and made use of the U.S. mails.
After an investigation by federal authorities, a federal grand jury was convened on January 4, 2001, and returned a six-count indictment against Rhodes for his criminal conduct. Counts I through IV charged him with mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343; Counts V and VI charged him with wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343. On July 2, 2001, Rhodes entered into a plea agreement in which he рleaded guilty to one count of mail fraud. At his sentencing hearing on April 29, 2002, pursuant to the plea agreement with the approval of the court, the Government moved to dismiss the rеmaining Counts against Rhodes and the court agreed.
The district court sentenced Rhodes to 37 months in prison, a three-year term of supervised release, and ordered that he pay a $100 special assessment. In addition, the judge ordered Rhodes to make restitution in the amount of $1,104,557.39, due and payable “immediately” to Magna, *952 relying on the fact that Magna had reimbursed the direct victims of Rhodes’ fraud.
Rhodes filed this appeal timely, May 8, 2002, and this Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a)(1) and (2).
II. DISCUSSION
A. Argument Waiver
This Court has repeatedly held that “a voluntary аnd knowing waiver of an. appeal is valid and must be enforced.”
See, e.g., United States v. Sines,
Here, however, Rhodes does not claim that the waiver was involuntarily made, was based on an impermissible factor, or was made without the effective assistance of counsel. Rather, Rhodes objects to the fact that the restitution order imposed on him directs him to pay his former employer, Magna. Hе also maintains that the district court erred by not establishing a payment schedule for the restitution.
We will not vitiate the plea agreement by entertaining either of these two arguments. Paragraph 12 of the plea agreement expressly states that “the Defendant knowingly and voluntarily waives the right to appeal his conviction, any invalidity in the plea agrеement and any sentence within the maximum provided in the statute of conviction.” The only exceptions to this waiver are narrow: “[T]he Defendant reserves the right to appеal from (a) any finding that the amount of loss attributable to the Defendant under § 2F1.1 or owed as restitution is more than $9,198.00; (b) any determination that the Defendant’s sentencing range for imprisonment is highеr than 33 to 41 months; and (c) any upward departure.”
Rhodes was sentenced within the 33-41 month range (37 months), and he did not receive any upward departure. Under the terms of the plea agreement he signed, Rhodes reserved the right to appeal only one aspect of the restitution order — the amount owed, if ordered over a given amount of $9,198.00. Thus, he waived his right to make any other arguments — including those concerning the identity of the party to whom he was ordered to make restitution and the lack of a payment schedule — when he signed thе plea agreement.
As we stated in
United States v. Behrman,
B. Calculation of the Loss Amount
Unlike waiver, which is “accomplished by intent,” forfeiture “comes about
*953
through neglect.”
Staples,
Rhodes contends on appeal that Magna over-compensated the victims of his fraud, and thus the court committed error when determining the amount of restitution. Rhodes’ complaint essentially is that Mag-na was not patient enough, and that it should have wаited until interest rates had changed before liquidating the riskier investments Rhodes had purchased for Mag-na’s customers without their consent. As Rhodes failed to raise this objection in the triаl court, he has forfeited the issue and we will therefore apply plain error review.
This Court has held that under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act of 1996, 18 U.S.C. § 3663, there must be a “causal relation between the defendant’s conduct and the loss that the Act requires him to restore.”
United States v. Martin,
The district judge after review found that the investors Rhodes defrauded “suffered an actual loss of $1,104,557.39 because that is the amount of money Magna Investments had to dole out in order to make its customers whole as a result of Rhodes’ fraud.” While it is not clear to us that the district court properly distinguished betweеn “loss” for purposes of sentencing and “loss” for purposes of making restitution,
see United States v. Rhodes,
C. Consequential Damages
Rhodes’ last argument against the district court’s restitution order is that he should .not be required to reimburse Magna for “consequеntial damages.” 1 Rhodes claims that “in order to avert possible suit by its customers,” Magna immediately liquidated the unauthorized investments Rhodes had made, thereby incurring losses caused by a diр in the values of those investments and the fact that at least some of the investments were sold before their maturation date.
A district court’s imposition of an order of restitution is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
United States v. McIntosh,
III. CONCLUSION
"We are cоnvinced that the district court did not err in concluding that Rhodes’ actions caused the losses suffered by the victims of his fraudulent schemes. We also hold that the court, in the absence оf any documented proof to the contrary, properly determined the amount of loss in the order of restitution imposed upon Rhodes. As we believe Rhodes has waived his other arguments made on this appeal, we Affirm the district court’s imposition of the order of restitution.
Notes
. "Consequential damages” are those damages that do not flow directly from a party’s action, but only from some of the consequences or results of such action.
