Jesus Adrian Beng-Salazar (“Beng”) appeals his conviction and sentence for illegal reentry into the United States in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. In a separate memorandum, we affirm Beng’s conviction. In this opinion, we consider Beng’s arguments that his sentence violated the Sixth Amendment and ran afoul of the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
I. Background
In July 2004, a jury found Beng guilty of illegal reentry. At the time of his sentencing in October 2004, the Supreme Court had decided
Apprendi
and
Blakély,
but not
Booker.
In
Apprendi,
the Court held that “[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Beng’s Presentence Report (“PSR”) recommended an increase in Beng’s base offense level by sixteen levels, based on the fact that he was previously deported following a conviction for a crime of violence. See U.S.S.G. ' § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii). The PSR also recommended that Beng be placed in Criminal History Category III, based on a calculation of five criminal history points. Relying on Apprendi and Blakely, Beng argued to the district court that these recommendations would violate his Sixth Amendment right to have a jury determine any facts that increased the maximum sentence he could receive. Beng made three arguments.
First, Beng asserted that
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
The district court rejected Beng’s arguments. Relying on its finding that Beng had been deported subsequent to a conviction for a crime of violence, the court increased Beng’s offense level by sixteen levels. The court also found that Beng was in Criminal History Category III. With an adjusted offense level of twenty-four, the court calculated Beng’s Guideline range to be sixty-three to seventy-eight months. The district judge sentenced Beng to seventy months in prison followed by three years of supervised release. Beng timely appealed.
II. Discussion
A. Challenges to Almendarez-Torres and 8 U.S.C. § 1826(b)
We first dispose of two of Beng’s sentencing challenges, which are foreclosed by our case law. Under § 1326(b)(2), the maximum penalty for illegal reentry is increased from two years to twenty years in prison if the defendant was previously removed subsequent to a conviction for an aggravated felony.
1
In
Almendarez-Torres,
the Supreme Court held that “subsection [ (b) of 8 U.S.C. § 1326] is a penalty provision, which simply authorizes a court to increase the sentence for a recidivist. It does not define a separate crime. Consequently, neither the statute nor the Constitution requires the- Government to charge the factor that it mentions, an earlier conviction, in the indictment.”
On appeal, Beng abandons his claim that
Almendarez-Torres
implicitly has been overruled by subsequent Supreme Court precedent, but renews his argument that recent decisions of the Supreme Court limit
Almendarez-Torres’s
holding to cases where a defendant has admitted his prior convictions during a guilty plea. He cites
Shepard v. United States,
Beng makes a separate but related argument that 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b) is unconstitutional because it permits a judge to increase a defendant’s statutory-maximum sentence for a § 1326 .violation from two years to ten or twenty years, in violation of Apprendi. In adopting the PSR’s recommendations, the court effectively increased Beng’s maximum potential sentence to twenty years, based on § 1326(b)(2).
Our decision in
United States v. Rodriguez-Lara,
B. Preservation >of Error
Although Beng’s Sixth Amendment arguments fail, we hold that his invocation of *1092 them in district court was sufficient to preserve a challenge to the nonconstitu-tional error identified in Booker, i.e., the fact that Beng was sentenced under the mandatory Guidelines system.
1.
Apprendi
and its progeny give rise to two interrelated but distinct claims of sentencing error. First, a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial is infringed if his maximum sentence is increased based on facts not proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. A defendant who makes this claim asserts an error of constitutional magnitude. Second, the unique remedy the Supreme Court fashioned in
Booker
gives rise to a different kind of sentencing error. We have held that application of the mandatory Guidelines, absent a Sixth Amendment violation, constitutes nonconstitutional
Booker
error.
United States v. Ameline,
2.
A defendant challenging his sentence under Booker might be entitled to relief because either (1) his constitutional right to have a jury determine facts that enhance his maximum sentence was abridged, or (2) he was sentenced under the mandatory Guidelines regime. Beng is not entitled to relief on the first ground. Beng’s argument that he is entitled to resentencing on the second ground requires us to address an issue of first impression in this circuit.
Defendants making either of the above claims for relief can preserve their arguments by raising them in the district court. Typically, we review preserved errors for harmlessness.
See
Fed R.Crim. P. 52(a);
see also United States v. Seschillie,
In
Ameline,
however, we set forth a unique procedure to apply in cases of un-preserved, constitutional Sixth Amendment
Apprendi
error. The unpreserved nature of the error in
Ameline
called for plain error analysis, and we adopted an anomalous remand procedure to address the substantial rights prong of the plain error test.
Ameline,
Ameline
and
Moreno-Hemandez
left open the question of what procedure to apply in cases of
preserved
constitutional (i.e., Sixth Amendment) and nonconstitu-tional (i.e., mandatory application of the Guidelines or
Booker)
error. In
United States v. Kortgaard,
If Beng did not preserve his challenge to the district court’s use of the mandatory Guidelines at his sentencing, his case is controlled by Moreno-Hernandez and we will grant a limited remand as outlined in Ameline. If, however, Beng preserved his challenge, we must vacate his sentence and remand for resentencing, provided the error was not harmless. Determining whether Beng’s Booker challenge is preserved is thus a prerequisite to deciding the proper disposition of his appeal.
3.
As it turns out, resolving whether Beng preserved his challenge to the court’s mandatory use of the Sentencing Guidelines leads us to address an issue of first impression in our circuit. Beng repeatedly raised his Sixth Amendment claims in his presentencing briefs and at his sentencing hearing, citing
Apprendi
and
Blakely.
But at no point prior to his briefing in this court did he explicitly argue that the federal Sentencing Guidelines were unconstitutional because of their mandatory nature, or that mandatory application of the Guidelines to his case was error. Indeed, to have done so would have required foresight of Cassandran proportion. No one predicted that the Supreme Court would remedy the Guidelines’ constitutional infirmity by rendering them advisory. Our own court did not anticipate this result.
See United States v. Ameline,
We believe that, in these circumstances, the better approach is to take a generous view of which objections preserve a challenge to a district court’s use of mandatory Sentencing Guidelines. ' We hold that Beng’s Sixth Amendment objections, made at the time of sentencing and raised under and citing to Apprendi and Blakely, are sufficient to preserve his Booker claim.
To the extent they have spoken on this issue, our sister circuits uniformly have adopted similar standards for determining when a defendant has preserved his challenge to mandatory application of the Guidelines to his case. The First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits each have recognized that a defendant’s argument that
Appren-
*1094
di
or
Blakely
undermined the federal Guidelines, or that he was entitled to have a jury determine the sentencing factors in his case, preserved his claim of nonconsti-tutional
Booker
error.
See United States v. Rodriguez-Mesa,
The First Circuit explained the rationale behind this approach in
United States v. Martins,
*1095
ing, we are mindful of our charitable approach to preservation questions in other contexts.
See, e.g., Valley Outdoor, Inc. v. City of Riverside,
4.
Here, Beng objected to any enhancement of his sentence based on facts that had not been found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. In support of his argument, he relied on Apprendi and Blakely, grounding his objection in the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial. Beng’s objections in district court preserved his nonconstitutional Booker error claim.
C. Proper Remedy
It is beyond dispute that the district court, albeit unknowingly at the time, erred in sentencing Beng using the then-mandatory Sentencing Guidelines. Because we conclude that Beng preserved his claim of nonconstitutional Booker error, we must decide the appropriate remedy in his case.
In
Kortgaard
and
Hagege,
cases of preserved constitutional and nonconstitutional
Booker
error, respectively, we did not grant limited
Ameline
remands but rather vacated the sentences and remanded for resentencing. We crafted the remedy of an
Ameline
remand in response to an “unusual situation,” and out of concern that we not affirm unconstitutional sentences.
Ameline,
Therefore, as does every other circuit that has encountered a case of preserved, nonconstitutional error, we review Beng’s
Booker
error for harmlessness.
Accord Rodriguez-Mesa,
In light of the new advisory Guidelines system, it may be difficult for the government to show that it is more probable than not that a district judge would have imposed the same sentence under the advisory Guidelines.
See Casas,
Once the Supreme Court fundamentally altered federal sentencing procedures by ruling in Booker that the Guidelines were no longer required to be applied, it became difficult for the Government to sustain its burden of proving that a Booker error was harmless. Although some sentences imposed under the pr e-Booker regime would not have been different had the sentences been imposed under the post-Booker regime, it will usually not be easy to divine with certainty that the sentencing judge would have imposed the same sentence. We have recognized that a “rare” case may arise where we can confidently say that a sentencing error was harmless, as occurs in circumstances where a statutory mandatory minimum prevents the sentencing judge from giving a lesser sentence after Booker than the one imposed pr e-Booker.
The Government cannot direct us to any evidence in Beng’s case to satisfy its burden.
Cf. Rodriguez-Mesa,
*1097 III. Conclusion
We reject Beng’s arguments regarding the continued validity of Almendarez-Tor-res and 8 U.S.C. § 1326(b).
We follow the lead of every other circuit to consider the issue and hold that a defendant who raised an objection in district court based on the Sixth Amendment holdings of the Apprendi line of cases preserved his claim that he is entitled to resentencing under the advisory Guidelines regime. Because Beng’s objections pass muster under this test, he is entitled to full vacatur of his sentence and a remand to the district court for resentencing unless the Government can show that the error was harmless. In light of the district court’s understandable silence on how it would have sentenced Beng under an advisory Guidelines system, the Government cannot meet its burden.
We VACATE Beng’s sentence and REMAND his case to the district court for resentencing.
Notes
. Subsections (b)(1), (3), and (4) increase the maximum penalty to ten years in prison if other factors not at issue, in Beng's case apply-
. Not every circuit uses the terms "constitutional’' and "nonconstitutional” or
"Booker”
error that we have adopted in this circuit. The Fifth Circuit refers to
"Booker”
and
"Fanfan
” error, respectively.
See United States v. Walters,
. A panel of the Sixth Circuit came to the same conclusion in an unpublished decision.
United States v. Thomas,
.We also agree with the First Circuit that not all objections to a pr
e-Booker
Guideline sentence will preserve a claim of
Booker
error. Rather, “the sort of constitutional challenges sufficient to preserve claims of
Booker
error in
pre-Booker
cases must fall at least arguably within the encincture of the constitutional concerns raised in
Apprendi, Blakely,
and
Booker." Martins,
. Although we adopted the limited remand approach in
Ameline
and extended its use in
Moreno-Hernandez,
in other cases of
Booker
error we have vacated and remanded for re-sentencing.
See, e.g., United States v. Sanders,
.
That Beng was sentenced to a mid-range Guideline sentence does not affect our analysis.
See United States v. Glover,
