Joseph Diekemper pled guilty to conspiracy to commit bankruptcy fraud, conspiracy to commit mail fraud, making false statements for the purpose of influencing the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) Commodity Credit Corporation, and perjury. Diekemper’s wife and co-conspirator, Margaret Diekemper, was sentenced first and received two years’ probation for her involvement in the conspiracy. As a condition of that probation, Mrs. Diekemper was prohibited from all contact with her husband during those two years. Diekemper was sentenced subsequently, and after receiving a four-level enhancement for his leadership role, he *349 received a within-guidelines sentence of 120 months’ imprisonment.
Diekemper appeals his sentence, alleging that (1) his wife’s probation condition violates his fundamental right to a marital relationship; (2) the district court judge’s failure to recuse himself for bias violates Diekemper’s right to due process; (3) the district court’s application of the sentencing enhancement was in error; and (4) the district court’s failure to weigh all of the sentencing factors in 18 U.S.C. § 3553 was in error. We affirm.
I. Background
Joseph and Margaret Diekemper were dairy farmers who had been married for thirty-five years. The couple filed for bankruptcy in May 2004. For close to four years thereafter Diekemper engaged in a scheme to conceal assets from the bankruptcy court. Eventually the government discovered Diekemper’s conduct and indicted him on twenty-one counts. He ultimately pled guilty to five of the charged counts.
At Diekemper’s plea hearing, he signed a stipulation of facts admitting to a variety of illegal conduct, including: undervaluing property and assets by more than 2.5 million dollars, hiding farm equipment on friends’ properties, titling and selling vehicles and equipment in others’ names, using the mail service to effectuate these transfers, fаiling to disclose financial information to the bankruptcy trustee, fraudulently obtaining agricultural subsidies from the USDA, and urging others to lie under oath during his bankruptcy proceedings. In the interim between Diekemper’s plea hearing and his sentencing hearing, Mrs. Diekemper was sentenced for her participation as a co-conspirator in the scheme. A condition of her two-year probation was that she refrain from all contact with Diekemper during those two years.
One month after Mrs. Diekemper’s sentencing, Diekemper had his own sentencing hearing. During that hearing, Diekemper did not challenge his wife’s probation condition. (See Appellee’s App. at 39) (“[M]y understanding of the ruling was that [Mrs. Diekemper] was not permitted contact.... And I can stand here and question the validity of that judgment, I’m not going to do that.” (statement by Diekemper’s counsel)). But Diekemper did contest the four-level enhancement to his sentence for his role as the organizer of an еxtensive criminal activity, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a). Ultimately, however, the district court found the four-level enhancement appropriate and sentenced Diekemper to 120 months’ imprisonment for his mail fraud and 60 months’ imprisonment on each of the other counts, with each sentence to run concurrently.
II. Analysis
Diekemper now challenges various aspects of his sentencing. We address each of his contentions in turn.
A. Mrs. Diekemper’s Probation Condition
Diekemper first argues that his wife’s probation condition violаtes his fundamental right to a marital relationship. Although the government urges us to find that Diekemper waived this argument through his attorney’s statement at sentencing (and indeed, he may have), we need not address the issue of waiver because Diekemper’s argument is not properly before us in the first instance, and in any event, Diekemper lacks standing to pursue it.
To raise a claim before an Article III court, a litigant must present a case or controversy that can be prоperly adjudi
*350
cated by the federal courts.
O’Sullivan v. City of Chicago,
Diekemper’s argument fails at its inception because the probation condition with which he takes issue was decided in an entirely different case. He is appealing the final judgment in his own case, not the final judgment in Mrs. Diekemper’s case. Mrs. Diekemper neither took issue with her probation condition nor appealed her sentence. And that judgment is not now before us. We therefore have no ability to reach the probation condition because the judgment imposing that condition is not on appeal.
Even assuming that we could examine Mrs. Diekemper’s probation condition, we fail to see how Diekemper can prove causation and redressability, which, for purposes of this case, seem readily intertwined. Although the condition was imposed on his wife’s probation, Diekemper argues that he has standing because his marriage is affected by the terms of that condition; in essence, he seems to argue that being “affected” by the condition is enough to satisfy the three standing requirements. But what Diekemper fails to realize is the mere fact that he may suffer the effects of his wife’s probation condition does not confer upon him Article III standing.
Diekemper is currently serving a prison sentence of 120 months. Without some affidаvit from Mrs. Diekemper that absent her probation condition she would visit her husband, we have no way of knowing that she would in fact do so. Without any corroboration, Diekemper’s own statement that his marriage is affected because his wife cannot visit him is unavailing. We are not at the pleading stage of the case, where general allegations of fact are enough to withstand a challenge.
Lujan v. Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n,
Certainly, the district court’s sentence prohibiting Mrs. Diekemper from seeing her husband
could
be the reason she will have no contact with Diekemper for two years. But again, without some statement from Mrs. Diekemper to that effect, we have no way of knowing whether, in the absence of that condition, she actually
would
contact her husband.
See Perry v. Village of Arlington Heights,
*351
And because they are so intertwined in this case, Diekemper’s failure to show causation also amounts to a failure to demonstrate redressability. In the absence of a causation showing, we simply cannot assume that if we were to remand the injury comрlained of would be remedied.
Plotkin,
B. Recusal
Diekemper also asserts that the district court judge’s failure to recuse himself for bias violated Diekemper’s rights to due process and the recusal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 455. In the context of § 455, our standard of review varies based on the claim. In this circuit, review of a decision denying recusal under § 455(a) must be sought immediately through a writ of mandamus or it is waived.
United States v. Troxell,
Diekemper failed to raise the issue of recusal before the district court but nonetheless argues that the district court judge had a duty to recuse himself suа sponte. As evidence of the district court judge’s bias toward him, Diekemper points to statements made both during Mrs. Diekemper’s sentencing and his own. Because Diekemper argues for recusal under both § 455(a) and (b), we will address each in turn.
1. Section Jp55(a)
Under § 455(a), Diekemper argues that because the judge’s bias toward him first became apparent during his wife’s sentencing, he was unable to raise the issue of recusal at the district court level. Although we have not had occasion to hold explicitly that a defendant may make a motion for recusal in the interim between trial and sentencing, in dicta we have permitted a judicial bias concern to be raised after trial when the bias did not become known until the trial’s cessation.
United States v. Ward,
In this case, Mrs. Diekemper’s sentencing was held more than one month before Diekemper’s. Diekemper does not argue that he had insufficient time to seek a recusal, but rather that he thought a recusal motion was unavailable to him because of no express guidance on this issue. We think Ward provides at least some notice of the potential availability of post-trial recusal motions, but even if it does not, Diekemper has no explanation for his failure to follow proper § 455(a) procedures. In fact, he concedes that our review is *352 limited to cases in which mandamus is sought, but instead of following that procedure, he merely argues that we should adopt a different procedure.
We hold firm to our position that mandamus must be sought for a § 455(a) claim of bias to be preserved properly for appeal. This conclusion follows from the very nature of § 455(a) claims, which seek to prevent the appearance of bias and to preserve the public’s faith in the judicial process.
Brokaw v. Mercer County,
2. Section 455(b)
Diekemper’s § 455(b) claim fails for a different reason. In claims arising under § 455(b), the mere fact that a judge forms a negative opinion of a litigant during the course of a proceeding does not, by itself, constitute bias.
In re Huntington Commons Assocs.,
With regard to the statements made at Diekemper’s sentencing, we think these merely reflect an opinion of Diekemper that the judge formed during the course of trial. The statement that Diekemper was not the first farmer to try to “weasel out of’ some honest debts adequately rеflects the facts of the case and the district court judge’s experience. Contrary to Diekemper’s contention, it does not rise to the level of deep-seated antagonism found in
Berger v. United States,
The statement that Diekemper is “manipulative, narcissistic, and twisted,” similarly is a reflection of the facts before the district court. This statement further served to explain why the judge imposed the sentence that he did. And as the government points out, this statement is similar to calling a defendant “Madame Cocaine,” a “kingpin,” or “not a nice person” — all of which are statements we found proper in
Troxell,
And while the statements made аt Mrs. Diekemper’s sentencing give us a bit more pause, they do not reflect the sort of “antagonism that would make fair judgment impossible.” The judge first commented that the couple’s marriage was *353 “unfortunate.” This statement was made in the context of the district court’s explanation of the no-contact condition, and viewed in that light, it adequately serves as the basis for the finding that Mrs. Diekemper would not have engaged in criminal conduct but for her husband’s influence. The judge clearly was under the impression that to rehabilitate Mrs. Diekemper he had to protect her from her husband’s manipulation, and this statement is evidence of that belief.
More questionable is the judge’s statement that had Mrs. Diekemper been raised during the modern era, she likely would have “shot” Diekemper for urging her to lie during the proceedings. Although when taken out of context this statement seems inflammatory, that is not the case when read in conjunction with the whole transcript. The judgе was explaining why Mrs. Diekemper acquiesced in her husband’s suggestion to lie, a statement he credited to what he considered to be the general subservience of women born to her generation. In context, this statement reflects the judge’s belief that Mrs. Diekemper lied because of her upbringing and inability to escape her husband’s control, rather than because of some illicit motivation. This statement does not run afoul of § 455(b)’s standards.
Because the district court judge was neither biased for purposes of § 455(a) nor unable to render fair judgment under § 455(b), Diekemper’s appeal on this issue fails.
C. Sentencing Enhancement
The district court applied a four-level sentencing enhancement after determining that Diekemper exercised a leadership role in the conspiracy. Although Diekemper conceded that a two-level enhancement was appropriate because he was an organizer, leader, and manager, he arguеd that the facts relied upon as the basis for the finding that his criminal activity was “otherwise extensive” resulted in double counting. On appeal, he persists with that argument, but now raises the additional arguments that the court improperly relied on a finding of five or more participants and that in any event, the evidence was insufficient to support the district court’s findings on the other factual bases. We review the district court’s interpretation of the sentencing guidelines
de novo, United States v. Tai,
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1 provides: “Based on the defendant’s role in the offense, increase the offense level as follows: (a) If the defendant was an organizer or leader of a criminal activity that involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive, increase by 4 levels....” In this case, Diekemper concedes that he was an organizer or leader, but takes issue with the district court’s findings regarding the latter part of the enhancement. We seе no merit to Diekemper’s arguments.
First, Diekemper claims that the district court erred in finding that there were five or more participants. This argument is unworthy of much discussion because the district court never made such a finding. Instead, the district court found that the enhancement applied because the scheme was “otherwise extensive.” And although in its analysis the court stated, “you have the number of participants,” the court goes on to say that the “government doesn’t press the point ... instead [it] focuses on the question of whether this is extensive.” (Appellee’s App. at 16.) In fact, the court made an express finding in which it explained that its ruling was based on the otherwise extensive prong. It is obvious *354 to us that the court was simply using the number of participants as a factor to support extensiveness rather than as an ultimate conclusion.
Second, Diekemper claims that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of extensiveness because the court relied on an “insufficient head count” and on factors which are otherwise accounted for under other sentencing enhancements. Initially, we note that the district court did not rely on a headcount to make the finding of extensiveness. But even if it did, this argument would fail because § 3B1.1 does not require a minimum headcount to find that a criminal scheme was otherwise extensive.
United States v. Miller,
In any event, the district court did not use a headcount in its finding; rather, it considered various factors in determining extensiveness; namely, that the scheme took place over an extended period of time, involved a large amount of money, was highly orchestrated, and utilized the assistance of several other people throughout the conspiracy’s existence. This method of computing extensiveness is entirely proper, as case law cited in Diekemper’s own brief illustrates. For example, in
United States v. Dong Jin Chen,
But Diekemper argues that the use of these factors is improper because they are accounted for elsewhere in the sentencing guidelines. As support for this, he relies upon an abrogated Sеcond Circuit case,
United States v. Carrozzella,
We start our analysis with the rule itself. Double-counting occurs only if “ ‘precisely the same aspect of a defendant’s conduct factors into his sentence in two separate ways.’ ”
United States v. Gibson,
But even if we were to examine this set of facts under the Second Circuit’s approach (which is not binding on us in any event), Diekemper’s conduct took place over several years, involved the assistance of many participants, was carefully orchestrated, and involved continual fraud upon the system in аn effort to hide 2.5 million dollars. We think this conduct certainly exceeds the “contemplation of the otherwise applicable Guidelines.” Diekemper’s argument is without merit.
D. Relevant Sentencing Factors
Finally, Diekemper argues that the district court failed to consider meaningfully the arguments Diekemper offered in mitigation of his sentence under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). We review a district court’s application of the sentencing guidelines
de novo, United States v. Warren,
Diekemper argues that the district court failed to consider fully his criminal history, age, and family circumstances. Diekemper asserts that his criminal history and age make his likelihood of recidivism minimal, and that the district court itself acknowledged this, yet refused to apply a below-guidelines sentence. We think the fact that the district court acknowledged this argument is dispositive — as long as a sentencing court considers the arguments made in mitigation, even if implicitly and imprecisely, the sentence imposed will be found reasonable.
United States v. Poetz,
As for Diekemper’s family circumstances, Diekemper argues that the tragic loss of his son due to a farming accident caused Diekemper to attempt to save his farm at any cost. In support of this argument, he points to
United States v. Schroeder,
Lastly, Diekemper argues that the court erred when it did not explain its decision to impose the statutory maximum for conspiracy to commit mail fraud as opposed to the statutory maximum for conspiracy to commit bankruptcy fraud. Yet Diekemper cites no law in support of this argument, and it was therefore within the district court’s discretion to reject it.
See United States v. Cunningham,
III. Conclusion
Because Diekemper’s arguments are meritless, the decision of the district court is Affirmed.
