Earl M. Burnett appeals a sentence imposed by the district court following his guilty plea for failure to surrender for service of sentence in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3146. We affirm.
Burnett failed to appear for service of a five-year term of imprisonment arising from a 1989 conviction for mail and wire fraud in connection with the sales оf vending machines.
See United States v. Burnett,
Burnett argues that the assessment of three points under § 4Al.l(a) for the offense for which he failed to appеar constitutes impermissible double-counting, reasoning that his conviction was a necessary element of the offense of failure to appear for service of a sentence. Burnett, however, acknowledges that in
United States v. Lewis,
Burnett also acknowledges that in
United States v. Thomas,
Burnett attempts to distinguish Lewis, noting that at the time Lewis was decided § 2J1.6 did not differеntiate between failure to appear for trial and failure to serve a sentence. 3 He also notes that § 2P1.1, the escape guideline at issue in Thomas, was applicable to escape from arrest, as well as escape from postconviction custody.
We are not persuaded. As stated in
Thomas,
“courts have applied a statutory-interрretation analysis to the Guidelines, concluding the unambiguous language of the enhancement provisions does not provide any exception for the offense of escape, indicating the Commission’s intent that the enhancement provisions apply.”
Burnett also asserts that the assignment of points under both § 4Al.l(a) and § 4Al.l(d) constitutes “double” double-counting. Again, we disagree. In
United States v. Martinez,
Burnett also argues that the district court erred in failing to grant him a reduction fоr acceptance of responsibility. At his December 1990 guilty plea hearing he offered a number of reasons for his failure to appear, including his fear of prison,
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automobile problems, death threats, temporary insanity, and misinformation from his attorney. In a January 23, 1991 letter to the district court, Burnett stated that “nobody is responsible for not showing up, but me.” Burnett’s assertion that the guilty plea and the letter entitled him to the reduction is without merit.
See United States v. Keene,
Last, Burnett argues that the district court erred in imposing employment restrictions on his two-year period of supervised release. As a condition of release, the court ordered that Burnett “shall be employed in a business which does not require travel and does not involve the sale of vending machines.” Guidelines § 5F1.5 provides that a court may impose a condition on supervised release “prohibiting the defendant from engaging in a specified occupation, business, or profession, or limiting the terms on which defendant may do so,” if the court determines that the restriction is reasonably related to the offense and reasonably necessary to protect the public. We find no error with the restrictions prohibiting Burnett from employment in jobs involving travel and vending machine sales.
See United States v. Prouse,
Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. We note the recent case of
United States v. Manuel,
. In
Lewis,
the court relied on escape from custody cases, nоting they were analogous to failure to appear for service of sentence cases "because both offenses occur while the defendаnt is under a criminal justice sentence.”
. In
Lewis,
the court noted that because the previous version of § 2J1.6 applied to persons convicted of failure to appear for trial, as well as for failure to appear for sentence, not all persons convicted under § 2J1.6 would be subject to the enhancemеnt under § 4Al.l(d). The court reasoned that "the Sentencing Commission intended for § 4Al.l(d) to be applied to an offense under § 2J1.6 to produce a stiffer sentence for onе who failed to appear while under a criminal justice sentence."
Id.
at 881. Relying on escape from custody cases, the court, however, also notеd that "failure to add points to a defendant’s criminal history score pursuant to § 4A 1.1(d) would subject a person who assisted an inmate to escape, yet had no criminal history, to the same sentencing range as the escaped inmate.”
Id.
at 880 (footnote omitted) (citing
United States v. Ofchinick,
. We note that another condition of probation requires that Burnett pay restitution of $248,-724.99 to the victims of the fraud. Whether this is possible in light of other factors in the case remains to be seen. We do not decide that question here and now.
