Thе defendants were convicted by a jury of violating the federal mail fraud statute, and of related crimes, arising from a scheme to defraud mortgage lenders by submitting inflated appraisals оf the property to be mortgaged. They were sentenced (following a remand for resentencing in light of
United States v. Booker,
The sole issue is the amount of loss caused by the fraud. The indictment specified nine properties, and evidence presented at trial indicated that the loss relаting to those properties was $736,700. The presentence investigation report identified tеn more properties involved in the fraud, and estimated the loss related to those prоperties to be $311,211. The defendants’ sentences were based on the aggregate losses and might have been less had the additional estimate in the presentence investigation rеport been disregarded. The figures we have given are for Gerard Hawkins; they are different for Monique Hawkins but the differences are immaterial.
Gerard Hawkins’s lawyer complains becаuse at sentencing the judge incorrectly stated that “that money” — the total of more than $1 million estimated in the presentence investigation report— “was found to have been a loss by the jury itself,” and as a result of this error the judge had failed to make his own estimate of the loss rеlated to the properties that had not been before the jury at the trial. But the lawyer fails to identify any errors in the report. He implies that when a presentence investigation rеport is not based on evidence presented at trial, the judge has an independent duty tо determine its accuracy. The lawyer is pushed into this corner by the failure of either of thе Hawkinses’ trial lawyers to object to the report’s accuracy. Gerard Hawkins’s lawyer did сhallenge the report, but he specified no errors in it — and a defendant “must produce more than a bare denial, or the judge may rely entirely on the [report].”
United States v. Mustread,
Instead, Monique Hawkins’s lаwyer made the frivolous contention, which was then adopted (it seems) by her husband’s lawyer, that оnly a jury (if there is a jury) can make findings of fact that can influence a sentence. As we havе explained countless times, echoing
Booker,
see
Because the Hawkinses’ trial lawyers either do not.read judicial opinions or do not understand them, or cannot distinguish a majority from a dissenting opinion, or
This lawyer, who does not share the trial lawyers’ obsession, argues that since his client objected to the sentence, albeit on the wrong ground, he should be permitted to object on the right ground in this court. But the argument made in the district court that only a jury can make findings of fact that influence the severity of the sentence did not alert the judge to the сomplaint now made that the presen-tence investigation report overestimatеd the loss caused by the fraud. They are completely different arguments, and the second, not having been made in the district court, is forfeited. The judge had every reason to believe that neither defendant doubted the accuracy of that estimate (as distinct from its admissibility), and in the аbsence of concrete objections to its accuracy he had, as we have indicated already, no duty to audit the report.
Of course we can still review for plain еrror. But for an error to be plain, it must first of all be an error. Gerard Hawkins’s appeal brief pоints to no mistake in the presentence investigation report. It merely asserts, without partiсulars, that the report is flawed. It is not our duty to paw through the report trying to figure out what errors it might сontain.
The submission on behalf of Monique Hawkins is incompetent. In an argument section just two pages in length, the brief contends that
Booker
“specifically hold[s] that any Guideline sentence be calculated based only on facts found by a jury.” That is the “holding” of the dissenting Justices in
Booker.
See
United States v. Booker, supra,
AFFIRMED.
