Police arrested Maurice Crowder after finding cocaine and marijuana in a hidden compartment of a car that Crowder and a co-defendant shipped from Arizona to Illinois. Crowder was indicted for conspiracy and attempted possession, both in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. Following a bench trial, the district court found Crowder guilty as charged and sentenced him to 240 months’ imprisonment on each count, to run concurrently. Crowder appeals his conviction and sentence, alleging numerous missteps below. Because we find that the district court committed no reversible error, we affirm the conviction and sentence.
I. Background
Maurice Crowder traveled back and forth between Chicago and Tucson, Arizona, with Charome Watkins 1 in January 2006. The men transported a dog from Tucson to Chicago on January 23. The men traveled back to Tucson the next day, allegedly to pick up additional dogs. Police stopped the men in the Dallas/Fort-Worth Airport and conducted a consensual interview, but later allowed them to leave after a drug-sniffing dog did not alert on the $46,000 in cash that Crowder was carrying.
Three days later, title to a 1998 Ford Mustang was transferred to Watkins’s mother, Vickie Watkins, 2 who lived in Harvey, Illinois, with her son. That same day, a woman arranged to have the driver of a car carrier pick up the Mustang and transport it from Tucson to Harvey. The driver arrived at the designated meeting place, followed shortly thereafter by two unidentified Hispanic men, one driving the Mustang and the other a pickup truck. The driver checked the Mustang for damage prior to loading it onto the carrier, filled *932 out the bill of lading, and gave the pink carbon-copy to the man who dropped off the Mustang. The men left the area before the driver loaded the Mustang, which the driver considered unusual because it was his experience that most people stayed to watch the driver load their vehicles onto the carrier.
While en route to Harvey, the driver contacted the Missouri Highway Patrol to report his suspicions about a Grand Prix that he was transporting. He met the highway patrol at a scale house, where he unloaded the Grand Prix and gave the patrol permission to search it. Using a K~ 9 unit, the patrol eventually discovered drugs hidden in secret compartments in the Grand Prix. The patrol then asked the driver if he was suspicious of any other vehicle on his carrier. The driver identified the Mustang based on his earlier observations. For example, while inspecting and loading the Mustang, the driver had noted a number of unusual things about the interior of the Mustang: one of the seats did not work, it smelled like spices, there were several air fresheners, and there were no personal items in the vehicle. The body of the Mustang was also missing the fender wells, trim items, hood scoops, Mustang horse emblem, and rubber molding around the lights. The driver also had opened the trunk after the individual dropping off the Mustang told him that there was a speaker box in the trunk. The driver agreed to unload the Mustang from the top row of the truck to facilitate the patrol’s search of the car.
The patrol made a number of observations from the outside of the Mustang, including that the backseat appeared to have been tampered with and there was an interior screw sitting loose on the backseat. The patrol then opened and searched the Mustang 3 where they discovered eighty pounds of marijuana and approximately two kilograms of cocaine hidden in a secret compartment behind the backseat.
The driver agreed to participate with law enforcement officers in a controlled delivery of the Mustang. The driver called the phone number of the intended recipient of the Mustang and spoke with Watkins. The driver told Watkins that he had been delayed but was still on his way. The next day the driver again spoke with Watkins to arrange a time and place for delivering the Mustang. A police officer recorded the phone conversations between the driver and Watkins.
Police set up surveillance at the delivery site and filmed the controlled delivery. The driver was also wearing audio recording equipment. Crowder and Watkins arrived in a maroon Ford Taurus, with Crowder driving. Both men got out of the Taurus, leaving the doors open and the engine running. Crowder handed Watkins cash to pay the driver for the delivery. The men told the driver that they did not have any form of identification, but Crowder told the driver that they had received the paperwork directly from the men that shipped the car from Arizona. Crowder gave the driver the pink bill of lading that the driver had given the unidentified Hispanic men in Arizona. The driver gave Watkins the white bill of lading after Watkins signed for the Mustang, and Watkins then handed the white bill of lading to *933 Crowder. The men then left the delivery site, with Watkins driving the Mustang and Crowder the Taurus. Both men were arrested shortly thereafter.
A grand jury charged Crowder with conspiracy (Count I) and attempted possession with intent to distribute (Count II), both in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. Crowder moved to suppress evidence of the drugs found in the Mustang, based in part on his argument that the search violated the Fourth Amendment. The district court denied Crowder’s motion to suppress.
The day before the trial was to begin, the government orally communicated to Crowder’s counsel a large amount of new information that had not been disclosed previously to Crowder, including transcripts of the phone calls between Watkins and the driver. 4 The government indicated its preference to the district court that Crowder’s counsel have time to review the evidence once it had been reduced to writing. The court asked Crowder’s counsel what the evidence was, apparently in an effort to determine whether a continuance was required or justified. Defense counsel indicated that he was uncomfortable sharing with the judge the contents of the new information because Crowder intended to waive his right to a jury trial and defend himself in a bench trial. The district court eventually denied Crowder’s motion for continuance and started the trial later that same day. Following a three-day bench trial, the district court found that Crowder was guilty as charged in the indictment.
After denying Crowder’s motion for a new trial, the district court entered judgment against Crowder for conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute (not attempted possession, as charged in the indictment). At sentencing, the government urged that Crowder’s offense level include an enhancement for being a career offender under section 4B1.1A of the Sentencing Guidelines. The district court eventually sentenced Crowder to 240 months’ imprisonment on each count, to run concurrently, a term of imprisonment that falls above the guideline range without any enhancements (130 to 162 months) but below the range if all of the proposed enhancements were included (360 months to life).
Crowder filed a timely appeal, challenging both his conviction and sentence. We find no error below and therefore affirm.
II. Analysis
On appeal, Crowder argues that (1) the district court should have suppressed the evidence from the search of the Mustang; (2) the district court should have granted the motion for continuance; (3) his conviction on Count II should be reversed because the indictment was constructively amended; (4) he cannot be sentenced for both conspiracy to possess and attempted possession arising out of the same statute; (5) the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction; and (6) his prior crimes should not have triggered the career offender enhancement.
A. Fourth Amendment
Crowder argues that the police search of the Mustang violated his Fourth Amendment rights, and that the district court therefore erred when it denied his motion to suppress the contents of the search. We review the district court’s factual findings for clear error, but review legal eon
*934
elusions
de novo. United States v. Mosby,
The Fourth Amendment protects “against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. A government agent’s search is unreasonable when it infringes on “an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to consider reasonable.”
United States v. Jacobsen,
The district court found that Crowder lacked standing
5
to challenge the search of the Mustang because he did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the Mustang. The court also found that the search did not violate the Fourth Amendment.
United States v. Crowder,
No. 06 CR 102-2,
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that Crowder did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the Mustang after he turned it over to the shipper.
6
The doors were left unlocked,
*935
the driver of the car carrier was given the keys, and Crowder knew that the driver would enter the Mustang and drive it. We conclude that no one could have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of a vehicle under those circumstances. Although there is no evidence that Crowder directly authorized the driver to search the vehicle, in light of the circumstances described above it is clear that the driver was “authorized to act in direct contravention to” Crowder’s privacy interest.
See United States v. Young,
Crowder argues that
United States v. Villarreal,
Crowder’s reliance on
Villarreal
is misplaced. The court in
Villarreal
consistently referenced a reasonable expectation of privacy in “closed containers.”
See, e.g., id.
at 773-74 (“Individuals do not surrender their expectations of privacy in closed containers when they send them by mail or common carrier.”
(citing Jacobsen,
Because Crowder lacked a reasonable expectation of privacy in the Mustang, he does not have standing to challenge the search of the car and subsequent seizure of the drugs that were hidden inside. Consequently, Crowder’s appeal based on the Fourth Amendment must fail.
We also agree with the district court that, even if Crowder had standing to challenge the search, the search complied with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment. The district court found that the driver of the car carrier consented to the police search of the Mustang. “[P]olice may reasonably search without a warrant when a person with authority voluntarily consents to the search, though a lack of apparent authority would invalidate the search.”
Mosby,
The driver’s consent, however, is only relevant if he had apparent authority
7
to waive the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment.
See Mosby,
B. Motion for Continuance
Crowder also argues that the district court erred by denying his motion for a continuance after the government disclosed voluminous amounts of new evidence shortly before trial. We review the district court’s denial of a continuance for abuse of discretion and a showing of actual prejudice.
United States v. Miller,
(1) the amount of time available for preparation; (2) the likelihood of prejudice from denial of the continuance; (3) the defendant’s role in shortening the effective preparation time; (4) the degree of complexity of the case; (5) the availability of discovery from the prosecution; (6) the likelihood a continuance would have satisfied the movant’s needs; and (7) the inconvenience and burden to the district court and its pending case load.
Id.
The district court need not make “a rigid recitation and analysis of each point before a continuance may be denied,” and the court may place varying degrees of importance on each factor, depending on the circumstances of the case.
United States v. Williams,
*937 Crowder argues that the district court denied his motion for a continuance solely to preclude him from filing additional motions that would further delay the proceedings. But even a cursory review of the record reveals that although the district court did consider the prospect of additional motions, it also considered the relevant Miller factors and ultimately decided to deny the motion for a continuance based largely on Crowder’s counsel’s unwillingness to state with any amount of specificity the prejudice that might result to his client absent a continuance. (App. at 55-56.) Given Crowder’s counsel’s cryptic discussion of the prejudice that would befall his client absent a continuance, the district court would have had a difficult time assessing both the likelihood of prejudice and the likelihood that a continuance would cure that prejudice. The district court did explicitly consider the complexity of the case (App. at 58) and the inconvenience to the court (App. at 58, 59), and determined that those factors weighed against granting the continuance.
To be sure, the district court could have determined that a continuance was prudent in light of the timing of the disclosures, the lack of time available for Crowder to consider the new materials, and the likelihood that a continuance would have alleviated Crowder’s concern about inadequate time to prepare. But because we review the district court’s decision for an abuse of discretion, we cannot say that the district court erred in denying Crowder’s motion for a continuance.
Crowder’s appeal on this issue also fails because no actual prejudice resulted from the district court denying the continuance.
See Miller,
C. Constructive Amendment
Crowder was indicted for conspiracy and attempted possession. (App. at 29-30.) But when the district court entered judgment against Crowder, it listed the second count of conviction as pos
*938
session with the intent to distribute, rather than attempted possession.
(Id.
at 24-28.) Although neither party moved to correct the judgment or commitment order below, Crowder now argues that the error constitutes a constructive amendment of the indictment and therefore warrants reversal of the conviction. Because Crowder forfeited this argument below, we review for plain error.
United States v. LeShore,
“A constructive amendment to an indictment occurs when either the government (usually during its presentation of evidence and/or its argument), the court (usually through its instructions to the jury), or both, broadens the possible bases for conviction beyond those presented by the grand jury.”
United States v. Cusimano,
The government argues that the appearance of possession with intent in the judgement is simply a clerical error that does not run afoul of the Fifth Amendment. As the government concedes (Appellee’s Resp. at 46), the judgment contains an error — it erroneously lists possession with intent as Count II, rather than attempted possession. However, we agree that it was not plain error because it did not affect a substantial right of the defendant and it does not negatively affect the integrity of the proceedings below. Additionally, a correction pursuant to Rule 36 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure can adequately resolve the error in the judgment.
Crowder has highlighted a few occasions, in the course of the entire trial and sentencing, when the government referred to actual possession rather than attempted possession. In this regard, we find the government’s actions readily distinguishable from the conduct found to constitute a constructive amendment in
United States v. Combs,
D. Conspiracy and Attempt
Crowder argues that the district court erred by sentencing him for both conspiracy and attempt because doing so punishes him twice for the same criminal undertaking. Because Crowder failed to raise this argument with the district court, we review the district court’s imposition of the sentence for plain error.
LeShore,
Both the conspiracy charge and the attempted possession charge arise under 21 U.S.C. § 846, which provides: “Any person who attempts or conspires to commit any offense defined in this subchapter shall be subject to the same penalties as those prescribed for the offense, the commission of which was the object of the attempt or conspiracy.” Crowder does not dispute that a defendant may be charged with and convicted for both conspiracy and attempt under § 846.
United States v. Carrera,
Crowder urges us to follow the Ninth Circuit and hold that a defendant cannot be sentenced for both conspiracy and attempt under § 846 if the charges arise out of a single criminal act. In
United States v. Touw,
the Ninth Circuit held that, although a defendant could be charged and convicted of both conspiracy and attempt, the court could only sentence him on one count if the underlying criminal activity constituted a “single course of action.”
We agree with the Sixth, Eighth, and Tenth Circuits and now hold that the
Blockburger
test should be applied at the sentencing phase to determine whether separate sentences are appropriate for the crimes charged and convicted, even where those crimes arise out of a single criminal act. The
Blockburger
test is easily administered and does not lend itself to a fact-specific inquiry that inevitably will lead to unnecessary appeals and leave parties and courts “without hope of much guidance.”
Savaiano,
*940 We find Crowder’s remaining claims without merit and therefore decline to discuss them.
III. Conclusion
Maurice Crowder’s conviction and sentence are Affirmed.
Notes
. Watkins was indicted together with Crowder. He pled guilty to conspiracy in exchange for a reduced sentence. Watkins was murdered five days before Crowder was to go on trial in August 2007.
. In his supplemental motion to suppress, Crowder said that he purchased the Mustang as a gift for Ms. Watkins.
. The government originally argued below that the patrol did not search the vehicle until a drug-detecting dog alerted on the Mustang; however, it was later revealed that the K-9 unit had already left the area before the patrol searched the Mustang. The district court reiterated in its order denying Crowder’s motion for a new trial that the absence of the dog sniff would not have altered the district court’s denial of Crowder’s motion to suppress or the court’s finding that Crowder was guilty as charged. (App. at 19.)
. Crowder does not argue on appeal that these late disclosures constituted a Brady violalion. (Reply at 14.)
. Crowder makes much of the district court’s and the government’s reference to his "standing” to challenge the search. (Reply at 2.) Crowder is correct that the Supreme Court rejected the use of traditional standing doctrines in assessing the scope of Fourth Amendment rights.
Rakas v. Illinois,
. That the drugs were hidden in a secret compartment in the car clearly evinces Crowder’s subjective desire that the drugs not be discovered. But Crowder must also show that his expectation of privacy was objectively reasonable — the simple act of hiding something will not necessarily trigger Fourth Amendment protections.
See, e.g., United States v. Young,
. Crowder argues that the driver himself did not have authority to search the vehicle, much less to allow police to search the vehicle. Because the driver needed only apparent authority to effectively consent to the police search of the Mustang,
see Mosby,
