Defendant-appellant Deshawn Ferrell appeals from a final order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Brieant, /.) declining to resentence defendant and affirming his original sentence for firearm-related charges. On appeal, Ferrell raises three challenges to the district court’s decision not to resentence him. First, defendant argues that the district court violated his due process rights when, on remand, it would not take into account the relevant sentencing facts and circumstances as they existed at the time of the hearing to consider whether to resentence him, including evidence of post-judgment prison rehabilitation. Second, Ferrell asserts that when the district court did not resentence him it erred, because all errors under
United States v. Booker,
Ferrell’s first argument takes issue with the district court’s failure to consider evidence of his post-conviction rehabilitation when deciding whether to resentence him. But we have repeatedly held that a district court is not to consider such evidence on a remand under
United States v. Crosby,
Defendant, in effect, acknowledges that the restriction on district courts’ consideration of evidence of post-conviction rehabilitation is the law of the circuit. But he asserts that the
Crosby
remand scheme for unpreserved
Booker
errors “does not afford the full benefits of the due process protections that ought to accompany retroactive application of
Booker”
and urges this court to adopt the system for such errors embraced by the Third Circuit.
See United States v. Davis,
In
Williams,
however, we expressly rejected the automatic resentencing approach adopted by the Third Circuit. We explained that our circuit’s process for addressing unpreserved
Booker
errors&emdash;un-like the procedure adopted by the Third Circuit or the automatic affirmance scheme embraced by some other circuits&emdash; adequately protected the rights of defendants entitled to retroactive application of
Booker
but also properly balanced those rights with the need to avoid the “needless burdens and risks of automatic resentenc-ing.”
As this court has already rejected the automatic resentencing procedure embraced by the Third Circuit and determined that the Crosby approach adequately protects the rights of defendants whose sentences were affected by unpreserved Booker errors, we reject Ferrell’s argument that our implementation of Booker&emdash; which precludes district courts, on a Crosby remand, from taking into account evidence of post-judgment conduct&emdash;violates his due process rights. 1
Ferrell next contends that because all
Booker
errors are structural, the district court erred when it did not resen-tence him. But this court has expressly held that such errors are not structural,
see United States v. Roque,
Finally, Ferrell asserts that even if the evidence relating to his post-conviction rehabilitation was properly not taken into account, his sentence is substantively unreasonable in light of some of his personal characteristics. But given all the circum
*690
stances cited by the district court, including Ferrell’s leadership role in the offense; the serious nature of trafficking in firearms, particularly when those firearms are sold to individuals involved in other serious crimes; his efforts to obstruct the investigation into his crimes; and the fact the sentence does not exceed the applicable Guidelines range, we conclude that his sentence falls within the “broad range of reasonable sentences that the District Court could have imposed in the circumstances presented.”
United States v. Fernandez,
The judgment of the district court is therefore Affirmed.
Notes
. We also note that, even under the Third Circuit approach, evidence of post-offense rehabilitation is considered on remand only in "an unusual case.” See
United States v. Lloyd,
