After machine guns, firearms, silencers and cocaine were seized from their residence pursuant to a search warrant, Jeremy Wilson and Joseph Guarino entered conditional pleas of guilty to the offenses of illegal possession of those items. Each defendant reserved the right to challenge on appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress the evidence resulting from the execution of the warrant. Each defendant also raises a sentencing issue on appeal. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the district court in all respects but one: The court’s sentencing determination with respect to Mr. Wilson must be reversed and remanded for a recalculation of his sentence.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
Jeremy Wilson and Joseph Guarino both resided in a house in Berwyn, Illinois. On May 2, 1995, Special Agent Ken Howard, a police officer with the Berwyn Police Department who was assigned to the Metropolitan Enforcement Group of Cook County, Illinois, filed a complaint for a search warrant in order to search Mr. Wilson, Mr. Guarino and them residence. The complaint stated that Special Agent Howard, the complainant, had probable cause to believe that in the house were guns, cocaine, items used to manufacture, distribute and possess cocaine, and currency associated with the sale of narcotics.
The probable cause asserted by the officer was based on the statement of confidential informant John Doe that he had known both Mr. Wilson and Mr. Guarino for more than a year and knew that they sold and used cocaine. The informant, a cocaine user himself for two years, stated that he had bought cocaine from them and had used cocaine with them in the past year. On the day before the complaint was filed, May 1, 1995, when the informant was at their residence, he was told that Mr. Guarino and Mr. Wilson had just received a large amount of cocaine. John Doe further related that Mr. Guarino brought up from the basement a large, clear plastic bag that contained smaller packages of the powder cocaine and they used it. He stated that he “received the same feeling from snorting the white powder given to me by Guarino and Wilson as I have from snorting cocaine in the past.” Guarino R.25, Ex.2 at 2. Mr. Guarino then returned the large plastic bag containing smaller packages of cocaine to the basement area of the residence, John Doe reported. Based on those facts, complainant Special Agent Howard stated that he believed that Mr. Guarino and Mr. Wilson were in possession of cocaine. Although the complaint recited all of these facts in a first person narrative, the complaint was signed only by Special Agent Howard and not by John Doe.
On the afternoon of May 2, 1995, Agent Howard appeared before Judge Gamberdino in the Cook County Circuit Court. Appearing with Agent Howard was the confidential informant who had supplied the information that formed the basis for the warrant. In the complaint seeking the warrant, in the draft warrant, and in his statements before the judge, Agent Howard referred to the informant as “John Doe” in order to maintain his anonymity. The judge questioned both the informant and the agent under oath, reviewed the complaint for the search warrant and then granted the warrant.
The next day, May 3, Agent Howard, other officers of the Berwyn Police Department, and several agents from the Department of Treasury’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (“ATF Agents”) executed the warrant and conducted the search of the residence. They seized drugs, a cache of firearms and silencers, and one weapon with an *421 obliterated serial number. The agents and officers also arrested Mr. Wilson and Mr. Guarino. 1
Both men were indicted by a federal grand jury. Mr. Guarino was charged in 3 counts with illegal possession of machine guns and firearms (in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(o) and 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d)) and possession with intent to distribute cocaine (in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841). Mr. Wilson was charged with 2 counts of illegal possession of firearms, one of which had an obliterated serial number (in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d)).
B. Decisions of the District Court
Mr. Guarino filed a motion to suppress the evidence resulting from the search of his residence. Mr. Wilson joined in the motion. The defendants challenged the constitutional validity of the search warrant on the ground that the complaint for the warrant did not comply with the oath or affirmation requirements of the constitutions of the United States and of Illinois because John Doe did not sign the complaint and was not proven reliable.
The government, in response to this motion, attached the sworn affidavits of Judge Gamberdino and Special Agent Howard. These documents described the facts and circumstances concerning the proceedings in the Cook County Circuit Court that led to the issuance of the search warrant. Judge Gamberdino affied that Agent Howard presented the search warrant and complaint for the warrant to the court on May 2,1995, and that both the officer and the informant appeared as witnesses. He further stated that he was aware that “John Doe” was a pseudonym used to conceal the informant’s identity. The judge reported that, even though he could not remember any specific questions he had asked Agent Howard and John Doe, it was his usual and regular practice when reviewing “John Doe” search warrants to question both the informant and the officer under oath. He explained that he “always ask[ed] these questions in order to assess the reliability and credibility of the informant and/or the officer, and to determine their basis of knowledge for the facts alleged in the affidavit.” Wilson B.28, Ex.l. The judge also stated that he approved such warrants only after satisfying himself that the witnesses were “reliable and credible, and that the facts alleged in the affidavit and to me personally are sufficient to establish probable cause to issue the warrant.” Id.
In his affidavit, Special Agent Howard stated that he presented the search warrant and complaint to the court on May 2. His sworn statement also verified Judge Gamber-dino’s reported procedure of questioning both Agent Howard and John Doe under oath. Although Agent Howard did not remember the actual questions the judge asked, he did recall that the under-oath questioning concerned the witnesses’ reliability and credibility and the basis of their knowledge for the facts alleged in the complaint and search warrant.
On November 19, 1996, the district court denied the defendants’ motion to suppress. The court determined first that the complaint for the search warrant was “sloppily drafted and [was], by itself, insufficient to support a finding of probable cause,” Mem. Op. at 7, because it was written as a first-person statement of John Doe but was signed by Agent Howard. Moreover, noted the court, the complaint did not state specifically that Doe informed Agent Howard of the facts in the complaint or that Agent Howard found Doe’s information to be credible and reliable. Nevertheless, the district court stated, because the judge, prior to signing the warrant, reviewed the complaint and heard the sworn testimony of the two witnesses concerning the facts alleged in the warrant, the “oath or affirmation” requirement was satisfied. The court noted in particular that John Doe, by giving sworn testimony, had “subjected himself to the possibility of prosecution for perjury had his testimony proved false” and, by appearing personally before the court, had enabled the judge to assess Doe’s credibility *422 and the reliability of his testimony in the complaint. Id. at 6.
The district court then considered Mr. Guarino’s claim that Agent Howard had misled Judge Gamberdino by presenting information in the complaint that Agent Howard knew to be false. Mr. Guarino, by affidavit, denied that he had used cocaine with anyone oh May 1, 1995, and denied that anyone who could be “John Doe” was in his home on that day. Concluding that Agent Howard fabricated the facts, Mr. Guarino sought a hearing on the issue under
Franks v. Delaware,
The district court also denied Mr. Guari-no’s second motion to quash and suppress. 3 Thereafter, each defendant entered a conditional plea of guilty but reserved the right to appeal the district court’s suppression determinations. On November 24, 1997, Mr, Guarino was sentenced to 42 months of imprisonment and Mr. Wilson to 37 months.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Denial of the Suppression Motion
1.
On appeal, the defendants challenge the validity of the search warrant on two grounds. They contend first that the confidential informant’s unsigned and unsworn statement in the complaint for the search warrant violated the Oath or Affirmation Clause of the Fourth Amendment. Second, they claim that the informant’s reliability was not proven to the court issuing the warrant. Thus, they conclude, the state court erred in relying on the informant’s unsworn statement when it found probable cause to issue the warrant, The defendants further contend that, even though the district court correctly recognized that the complaint for the search warrant was insufficient to support a finding of probable cause, it erred in relying on the inadequate affidavits of Judge Gam-berdino and Special Agent Howard in satisfaction of the oath or affirmation requirement. According to the defendants, the judge’s statement was speculative and ambiguous because he could not remember any questions he asked the two witnesses and because no transcript of the hearing was available. The Special Agent’s affidavit was equally insufficient, the defendants contend, because it never vouched for the credibility and reliability of John Doe’s evidence and because there was no transcript to prove that the officer appeared before the judge. Finally, the defendants assert that a hearing should be held, with opportunity for full cross-examination, to test the state court judge’s memory and his usual and customary practice of questioning complainants under oath.
2.
In this case, our review focuses on a complaint for the search warrant and particularly on the sworn statement of the complainant seeking the search warrant. Whether the oath or affirmation requirement was met is a question of law that we review de novo. In making this assessment, we
*423
keep in mind the words of the Supreme Court in
Illinois v. Gates,
3.
The Fourth Amendment, made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, governs searches and seizures by state officers.
See Ker v. California,
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. Const. amend. IV (emphasis added). Although the states retain a great deal of flexibility in the manner in which they conform their law enforcement procedures to the standards of the Fourth Amendment,
4
our jurisprudence makes clear that federal standards apply to the interpretation of the Fourth Amendment. As Justice Black wrote for the Court in
Cooper v. California,
We believe that the procedure followed in this case by the state court complies sufficiently with the oath or affirmation requirement of the Fourth Amendment. No doubt, the preferred practice counsels that the issuing judge require that the informants’ statements be reduced to writing and verified. Nevertheless, as a practical matter, the procedure employed in this case gave the judicial officer sufficient opportunity to obtain, -under oath, enough information from the informant to satisfy the concerns protected by the oath or affirmation requirement.
The court’s interview of the informant under oath allowed the judicial officer to assess the reliability of the informant as well as the reliability of his factual information. In this case, the complaint itself established that John Doe appeared before the court to attest to the facts presented in the complaint. Moreover, the judge who issued the warrant affied that John Doe appeared and submitted to the court’s questions. Under these circumstances, there was sufficient opportunity for the judge to assess the reliability and credibility of the informant.
Our decision in
United States v. Causey,
both [the officer who signed the warrant complaint] and the confidential informant personally appeared before the issuing judge. The judge’s inquiry of the informant permitted him to assess the informant’s credibility and allay any concerns he might have had about the veracity of the informant’s statements.
Id.
(citation omitted);
see also United States v. Lloyd,
4.
Finally, we cannot accept the contention that the evidence before the district court did not justify the denial of the motion to suppress. Mr. Guarino contends that we cannot be sure John Doe appeared before the issuing judge because there is no transcript of the proceeding and because the issuing judge, in his affidavit, stated that he could not remember the questions he asked Doe. Judge Gamberdino, however, submitted an affidavit stating that he considered “the under oath statements of both individuals who appeared before” him before signing and dating the warrant. Guarino R.28, Ex.l. He further described his usual and regular practice when reviewing John Doe search warrants. His standard practice was to question the officer and the informant “in order to assess the reliability and credibility of the informant and/or the officer, and to determine their basis of knowledge for the facts alleged in the affidavit.” Id. He stated as well that he signed the warrant only after satisfying himself that the witnesses were reliable and credible and the facts alleged were sufficient to establish probable cause. Special Agent Howard, in his affidavit, also recalled that the judge’s questions concerned the informant’s reliability and credibility and the basis of his knowledge of the facts alleged.
Wben there is a judicial proceeding that is under scrutiny, as is the warrant hearing in this case, and there is no transcript of the proceeding, it is not uncommon for a reviewing court to rely on evidence of the regular custom or practice of judicial officers (or of other witnesses) to determine the sufficiency of court procedures or the court’s compliance with constitutional standards.
Cf. United States v.
Dickerson,
The district court did not err in receiving the affidavits of the complainant and of the state trial judge who issued the warrant being challenged. Nor did it err in concluding, on the basis of those affidavits, that the witnesses Agent Howard and John Doe had been sworn and questioned in this particular case. Because Mr. Guarino did not establish that Judge Gamberdino would give testimony under oath different from, and contrary to, his sworn statements in his affidavit, the district court properly concluded that a hearing on Judge Gamberdino’s probable cause hearing would be unnecessary and inefficient. See Guarino R.32 at 7 n. 4.
Before this court, Mr. Guarino now suggests for the first time that Judge Gamberdino and Agent Howard ought to have been required to testify at a suppression hearing. Mr. Guarino seeks to question the state judge’s and special agent’s veracity and memory concerning the procedure employed in applying for the warrant as described in their affidavits. As a threshold matter, we note that arguments raised before this court for the first time are reviewed only for plain error.
See Boggard,
In sum, we hold that the district court did not err in denying the defendants’ motion to suppress evidence seized in the search of their persons and residence.
B. Mr. Guarino’s Sentencing Challenge
After Mr. Guarino entered a plea of guilty, at sentencing he was given a 3-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1. Mr. Guarino now asserts that receiving that reduction required him to forgo any challenge concerning the upward adjustment given for the drugs found in his home. He claims that he had maintained consistently that he had no involvement in drugs in relation to this case, that the cocaine in his house belonged to someone else, and that his admission of guilt was on the gun charge. Nevertheless, he admits, as he must, that he pled guilty to count 3, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and that he chose not to go to trial on that drug charge in the face of the overwhelming evidence against him on the gun charge.
At sentencing, the government argued that the § 3E1.1 reduction ought not be granted. It claimed that Mr. Guarino had made two false denials: (1) He denied that he had reason to believe that the firearms in his residence would be used in connection with another felony offense, such as narcotics trafficking, and (2) he denied knowledge of the cocaine found in his residence that was the basis for count 3. The district court stated to Mr. Guarino that, in deciding whether he had accepted responsibility, it would consider whether he truthfully had admitted the conduct comprising the offenses; it explained that his contesting his possession of cocaine was a denial of that conduct. At that point, Mr. Guarino stated that he would waive his objection. The district court then determined that it would give him the 3-point credit, even though he previously had denied knowledge of the cocaine.
A district court’s § 3E1.1 determination “is one of fact that depends primarily upon credibility assessments and is reviewed for clear error.”
United States v. Whitson,
In this case, at sentencing Mr. Guarino initially denied, rather than admitted, the factual allegations concerning his involvement in drugs. Even though he had pleaded guilty to the count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute it, he argued that the cocaine was not his. At that point in the proceedings, the district court was confronted with a situation that had some similarities to the situation in
United States v. Rector,
In our case, Mr. Guarino did not proceed to trial; nevertheless, at sentencing, even while adhering to his plea of guilty, he wanted to deny the essential factual elements of guilt for cocaine possession. When the sentencing court reminded him that a defendant must demonstrate clearly a recognition and affirmative acceptance of personal responsibility for all his criminal conduct, as § 3El.l(a) requires, Mr. Guarino chose to waive his objections. Mr. Guarino made a conscious decision to forgo his challenge to the factual allegations concerning his involvement in drugs and opted instead for the 3-point reduction. It is clear from the record that the sentencing court did not preclude Mr. Guarino from making a different choice. 6
C. Mr. Wilson’s Sentencing Challenge
Mr. Wilson claims that the court erred in sentencing him at an adjusted offense level of 20. 7 The mistake occurred when the court increased the base offense level by 3 points rather than 2 points for the number of firearms involved. The offense involved 7 firearms and, under § 2K2.1(b)(l)(B), that number of weapons deserves an increase of 2, not 3, levels. Neither the government nor defense counsel noticed the error at the time of sentencing.
The government agrees with Mr. Wilson’s position and urges a remand. It notes that, although the actual sentence imposed by the district court, 37 months, is within the guideline range for level 19 (30-37 months), it is at the top of that range. According to the government, because the district court had determined to sentence Mr. Wilson in the mid-range, the case should be remanded to that court so that it can decide in the first instance whether it should choose again to resentence Mr. Wilson in the middle range of level 19 or at another sentence that it determines, in its discretion, is proper.
Notwithstanding the government’s agreement with Mr. Wilson, we must evaluate independently Mr. Wilson’s claim.
See Griffin v. United States,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand Mr. Wilson’s sentence to the district court for resentencing, and affirm the judgment of the district court as to all other issues raised in this appeal.
Affirmed in part, Reversed and Remanded in part
Notes
. Agent Howard was assisted in the execution of the search warrant by several ATF Agents. The reports filed by ATF Agents Thomas Murphy, Timothy Wilson and Jeffrey Kosiek and by Special Agent Howard listed in detail the evidence seized in various locations of the residence and reported the statements made by Mr. Guarino and Mr. Wilson.
. In
Franks v. Delaware,
. In addition to reaffirming its first ruling on the defendants’ suppression motion, the district court ruled that the person named by Mr. Guari-no as the “confidential informant” was not the informant. It further determined that Mr. Guari-no’s "variety of possible entrapment scenarios” does not constitute a "substantial preliminary showing” that a false statement was included by the confidential informant or Agent Howard in the warrant affidavit. The court concluded that an evidentiary hearing was not warranted. See Order, Guarino R.49.
. The Supreme Court made it clear in
Ker
that "[t]he States are not ... precluded from developing workable rules governing arrests, searches and seizures to meet 'the practical demands of effective criminal investigation and law enforcement’ in the States, provided that those rules do not violate the constitutional proscription of unreasonable searches and seizures....”
State law can also play an ancillary role in Fourth Amendment reasonableness determinations.
See Michigan v. DeFillippo,
. Other circuits have held similarly. In
United States
v.
Wilson,
. The government has not challenged the award of the § 3E1.1 reduction.
. The pertinent sentencing guideline applicable to firearms offenses is U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1. The court determined a base offense level of 18 (§ 2K2.1(a)(5)). It then increased the level by 3 levels because there were 7 firearms (§ 2K2.1(b)(l)(B)) and by 2 levels because one weapon had an obliterated serial number (§ 2K2.1(b)(4)). It then gave Mr. Wilson a downward adjustment of 3 levels for his acceptance of responsibility (§ 3E1.1). As a result, the adjusted offense level was 20. The element being challenged is the 3-level increase because there were 7 firearms.
. Other circuits also hold that the government’s change of position or confession of error is not binding on a court of appeals and does not relieve an appellate court of its responsibility to review the asserted error.
See United States v. Cheek,
.In
United States v. Rector,
