ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
On September 23, 2004, we issued an unpublished opinion,
United States v.
*1241
Sears,
For two reasons we do not believe that
Booker
requires us to alter our prior decision in this case. First, the Appellant did not raise any
Apprendi/Blakely/Booker
issue in his initial brief to this Court. He did attempt to file a supplemental brief raising such an issuе, but we denied him permission ,to do so. The Appellant’s failure to raise the issue in his initial brief bars him from doing so now.
See United States v. Dockery,
Second, the Appellant has been given an opportunity to be sentenced in accord with Booker, and he voluntarily elected not to be. After our mandate issued remanding the case for resentencing, the distriсt court began proceedings to correct his sentence, as our decision required. The district court was apparently unaware that the Appellant was simultaneously seeking cer-tiorari. Before the district court corrected the sentence, the Supreme Court issued its Booker decision on January 12, 2005. The actual resentencing in the district court took place оn February 3, 2005. The district court advised the Appellant that it would sentence him in accordance with the Booker decision, as he had рreviously requested, if he wished the court to do so. The court pointed out that the first time around it had sentenced the Appеllant to the highest sentence it could while treating the guidelines as binding. It explained that treating the guidelines as advisory, rather than mandatory, could result in a higher sentence. The Appellant, after consulting with his attorney during a recess, elected not to be sentenced de novo in accord with the Booker decision but instead to have the district court simply correct the supervisory release terms as the cоurt of appeals’ mandate required. That is what the district court did.
This is not a case in which the Appellant merely forfeited the Booker issue by not timely raising it, although he did that. It is a case in which the Appellant actually waived the right to be sentenced in accord with Booker after that decision came out. The Appellant could have had the relief he seeks now, but he knowingly elected to forgo it. In these circumstances, we will not give the Appellant yet another bite at the Booker apple.
Next, the Appellant argues that the district court’s action in resentencing him is “void ab initio” on the theory that the Supreme Court’s order vacating our judgment also had the effect of vitiating the district court’s resentencing order entered pursuant to our judgment. We disagree. The Appellant did not аsk us to stay the mandate of our September 23, 2004, decision requiring that his sentence be corrected for reasons that werе not Boo/cer-based. Our mandate issued in the normal course on October 22, 2004. Issuance of the mandate gave the district сourt jurisdiction over the case again, and that court exer *1242 cised it when it resentenced Appellant. Six weeks after our mandate issued, on December 22, 2004, the Appellant filed a petition for writ of certiorari raising the Booker issue. The petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court did not divest the court of appeals or district court of jurisdiction. Under Fed.R.App.P. 41(d)(2), the cеrtiorari petitioner can apply for a stay of the mandate; one does not automatically issue upon filing with the Supreme Court. Therefore, the mere filing of a petition for certiorari with the Supreme Court neither stops the mandate frоm issuing nor stops the case from proceeding in the district court. A litigant desiring such cessation must seek and obtain a stay.
In
Warden, Lewisburg Penitentiary v. Marrero,
The instant case is analogous to the foregoing cases. We hold that the fact that certiorari proceedings were going forth in the Supreme Court does not divest the district court of jurisdiction upon the issuance of our mandate remanding for resentencing, and does not vitiate the district court’s resentencing order. In the absence of a stаy, the proceedings in the district court were in no way improper.
The Supreme Court’s remand instructions require only that we reсonsider our prior judgment in light of the Booker decision. Having done that, we will reinstate our previous judgment. That restores the effect of оur prior remand and any actions the district court took in compliance with our remand instructions. The situation is now the same аs if the Supreme Court had not vacated our judgment.
We express no opinion on any issues that the Appellant may raise in аn appeal from the district court’s resentence order on remand, except that we do hold the court had jurisdiction to resentence on remand in accord with the mandate that issued after our initial decision in this case, and the Appellant waived any right he had to be resentenced pursuant to the Booker decision.
Our September 23, 2004 opinion is REINSTATED.
