Aрpellant Juan HernandezAMartinez (“Martinez”) appeals his revocation sentence, arguing inter alia that the district court improperly based his sentence on the Guideline for illegal reentry to the United States, a crime he committed but was not charged with. Under the applicable plain error standard of review, Martinez cannot establish that the district court used an improper sentencing consideration, and his sentence is AFFIRMED.
I. BACKGROUND
Hernandez’s first appearance before the district court occurred in 1999, when he pled guilty to one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, an offense that carried a statutory penalty of one hundred twenty months. Hernandez’s сriminal history made him safety-valve eligible, reducing the applicable Guidelines range to seventy to eighty-seven months. Based on his substantial assistance to the Government, however, the court granted a significant downward depаrture and sentenced Hernandez to only forty-eight months imprisonment, to be followed by five years’ supervised release. Among the conditions of supervised release were that: (1) Hernandez was not to commit another federal, state, or local crime; (2) if deported, Hernandez was not to reenter the United States illegally; and (3) if Hernandez returned to the United States, he was to report to the nearest United States Probation Office.
After cоmpleting his sentence, Hernandez was released from prison in May 2002, and deported to his home country of Mexico. His homecoming was short-lived. Hernandez returned to the United States illegally approximately a year and a half after his deportation and began working in a mattress factory in Chicago, Illinois. In 2005, he was arrested for shoplifting from a JC Penney store. Hernandez was released on bond, but after he was detained following a traffic stop, the Probation Office was notified of the arrest. Hernandez was not charged in Illinois with either theft or illegal reentry, but the United States Government sought to revoke his supervised release for three separate violations: (1) committing theft; (2) unlawfully reentering the United States; and (3) failing to report to the Probation Office upon reentry. Hernandez was sent from Illinois to Texas for revocation proceedings.
At the revocation hearing, Hernandez aрpeared before the same judge who had granted him a significant downward departure in his cocaine possession sentence, and he pleaded true to the three violations. The court expressed displeasure that Hernandez had blatantly disregarded the provisions surrounding his supervised release and that the prior sentence had not deterred his criminal activity. The court also expressed frustration with the failure of the U.S. Attorney’s office in Chicago to prosecute Hernandez, and others similarly situated, for illegal reentry into the United States, instead sending them to the Southern District of Texas for revocation proceedings. After discussing with counsel Hernandez’s viоlations, the prior downward departure, and the lack of an illegal reentry prosecution, the court inquired what the Guidelines sentence for illegal reentry would have been. The Probation *272 Officer advised the court that Hernandez would have faced forty-six to fifty-seven months imprisonment had he been prosecuted in Illinois for illegal reentry. Concluding that the revocation Guideline of four to ten months did not adequately address this type of violation and that the prior sentence had served as an insufficient deterrent, the court sentenced Hernandez to forty-six months-&emdash;significantly above the Guidelines range but well below the statutory maximum of five years for revocation.
Hernandez appeals, asserting that he was impermissibly sentenced for his uncharged illegal reentry rather than for his underlying drug offense, and that his sentence is thus unreasonable, plainly unreasonable, and an abuse of discretion.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Preservation of Error
Thе Government argues that Hernandez raises his reasonableness objection for the first time on appeal, and we therefore should review only for plain error.
See
Fed. R.Crim. P. 52(b);
United States v. Olano,
Hernandez is incorrect that simply asking the court to sentence him within the Guidelines preserves an argument of specific legal error. Nowhere before the district court did Hernandez object that the sеntence was unreasonable, nor did he alert the court to the legal argument he now presents that the court considered an inappropriate factor and impinged on pros-ecutorial discretion.
1
Were a generalized request for a sentence within the Guidelines sufficient, a district court would not be given an opportunity to clarify its reasoning or correct any potential errors in its understanding of the law at sentencing, and its efforts to reach a correct judgment could be nullified on appeal.
See United States v. Reyes,
Here, the district court expressed frustration both at the failure of the Government to charge illegal reentry and the fact that Hernandez had not taken the opportunity arising from a lenient sentence to stay within the law. It did not specify which of these was its motivating factor, nor was it asked to do so by Hernandez. Similarly, as the court was not on notice that its statements were being construed in the manner in which Hernandez now characterizes them, it is unclear whether, by questioning the Government as to its failure to charge reentry, the district court was using that as a basis on which to sentence Hernandez, or simply expressing displeasure at the Government’s charging practices.
Had the defense objected at sentеncing, the court easily could have clarified or, if necessary, corrected itself.
Cf. id.
(“[I]f Reyes had objected to the dis
*273
trict court’s instructions, the court would certainly have corrected its error”). Because it was not on notice of the arguments Hernandez now presents, however, it was not given that opportunity. We therefore review the case only for plain error.
See United States v. Dominguez Benitez,
B. Reasonableness
Before
United States v. Booker,
According to Hernandez, the reasonableness standard should apply to any non-Guidelines sentences, whether original or revocation. Thus, we would consider whether the sentence: (1) fails to account for a factor that should have received significant weight; (2) gives significant weight to an irrelevant or improper factor; or (3) represents a clear error of judgment in balancing the sentencing factors.
See United States v. Duhon,
In contrast, the Government advocates adherence to the pre-Boоker plainly unreasonable standard. Unlike the Guidelines applicable to original sentences, the Guidelines for revocation sentences have always been advisory.
See United States v. Escamilla,
There are other indications that the same standard of review should not apрly to revocation and original sentences. For example, the Sentencing Commission “chose to promulgate less precise, nonbinding policy statements” for revocation sentences. Id. at 438. Additionally, in § 3583(e), which govеrns revocation sentences, Congress provided that only some of the factors set forth in § 3553(a), which are to be considered when imposing a sentence, also apply in revocation proceedings. Id. Finally, Congress used both the terms “unreasonable” and “plainly unreasonable” in § 3742(e), suggesting it intended the two terms to be distinct, and “plainly” was not mere surplusage. Id.
Ultimately, any difference between the two proffered standards of review for a revocation sentence would not affect Hernandez’s fate. The plain error standard of review clearly forecloses appellate relief. Although the district court expressed displeasure at the Govеrnment’s failure to charge Hernandez with illegal reentry, it is not evident that it based his sentence on that ground; it is equally or more plausible that the court based his sentence on the fact that it gave Hernandez a significant downward dеparture in his original sentence. Thus, if there was any error, it is not plain. Because Hernandez did not object at sentencing and give the court an opportunity to clarify itself, we are unable to conclude that the cоurt based his sentence on an impermissible factor. Moreover, that the forty-six month sentence is significantly below the statutory five-year maximum on revocation strongly counsels against its being held reversible on plain error review.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Hernandez’s sentence is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. That Hernandez presents a specific legal error distinguishes this case from those that have held that the defendant need not specifically object that a sentence is "unreasonable” to preserve a reasonableness objection on appeal.
Compare United States v. Lopez-Flores,
.
See United States v. Sweeting,
