Luis Martínez-Vives (“Martinez”) appeals his conviction and sentence for transporting illegal aliens, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324. He argues that the district judge’s instructions to the jury deprived him of a fair trial; that the judge’s limitation of his counsel’s questions deprived him of his right to effective cross-examination of witnesses; and that his sentence was unreasonable. We affirm.
I. Background
Early in the morning on November 27, 2004, Martinez, along with Ismael Curet-Torres (“Curet”) and Aristides Jovanny Cruz-Alemn (“Cruz”), an undocumented alien, drove to Manat Beach, Puerto Rico, to pick up a group of aliens that had arrived on the beach during the night. Curet and Cruz drove a rented truck to the beach to pick up the aliens, while Martinez, driving Curet’s Ford Explorer, stayed at the entrance to the beach to watch for police. After picking up the aliens, the two vehicles then drove back to Curet’s residence in the Ville Verde gated community in Bayamn, arriving some time around 4:00 a.m.
The noise of the truck backing into Cu-ret’s garage awoke several neighbors, one of whom saw individuals exiting the back of the truck with the help of Martinez. Concerned that the house was being robbed, the neighbor phoned a community leader, who in turn phoned the police. The local police arrived around 6:00 a.m. to observe the situation, and then contacted immigration officials. Federal officers arrived, and around 9:30 a.m. the officers entered the Curet residence and discovered 23 undocumented aliens. 1
Martinez had in the meantime left the Curet residence in Curet’s Explorer, along with some of the aliens, in order to deliver them to their families. Returning to the Ville Verde gate between 10:00 and 10:15 a.m., he was given admission to the gated community, per the instructions of the federal officers. As he proceeded toward the Curet residence, Cruz warned him that the police were at the house. The record is unclear as to whether Cruz had been in the Explorer all along and somehow noticed the police, or whether he just got into the Explorer on Martinez’s return to Ville Verde in order to warn him. The police, having been notified of Martinez’s arrival by the gatekeepers and seeing the Explorer suddenly turn around, gave chase and stopped it just outside the main gate of the community. Cruz and Martinez were arrested and taken back to Curet’s residence. There, Martinez, in a meeting with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) agent Ricardo Nazario-Rivera (“Nazario”), signed a Miranda waiver and admitted the facts described herein. Later, at the local police station, he signed a statement containing substantially the same information. Still later he gave an additional statement to ICE agent Ricardo Morales-Berros (“Morales”) that, with only minor differences, was consistent with his first statement. During his initial interrogation at the Curet residence, Martinez received several calls on his cellular phone. A police officer answered the calls, which were from people trying to arrange for final payment so that they would be allowed to pick up their friends and relatives.
Martinez was indicted on two counts of transporting and harboring illegal aliens, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324. The jury returned a guilty verdict on both counts, *51 and Martinez was sentenced to 33 months’ imprisonment and three years’ supervised release. He now appeals his conviction and sentence.
II. Discussion
A. Jury Instructions
Martinez argues that the district judge’s instructions to the entire venire panel deprived him of his right to an impartial jury, deprived him of the presumption of innocence, and impermissibly shifted the burden of proof from the government onto him.
The instructions at issue were as follows:
Members of the jury, the case we are going to start in a minute is a ease against Luis Martínez Vives.
The indictment that he faces is a'two-count indictment where the following allegations are made. The indictment mentions the date November 27, 2004, and also mentions Mr. Martinez along with two other persons, Aristides Jovan-ny Cruz Alemn and Ismael Curet Torres.
The three of them are charged — or were charged in the indictment. And the only one who is before the Court at this time is Mr. Martínez. The allegations stem from the following facts:
That on this date, November 27, 2004, the three of them, Mr. Cruz Alemn, Mr. Curet Torres, and Mr. Vives [sic], went in a rental van to a place in Manat. I gather from what I saw here in the papers that it was a beach somewhere. And there they picked up 24 illegal aliens who had come to Puerto Rico through the Manat area. These individuals that were picked up were taken to a residence in Bayamm And there, they were basically hidden.
The idea would be, according to these papers, that the three defendants would, through a payment of some money per person, actually help them to make their way into the free community, if you will, in the area of Puerto Rico; that they would be placed or given to their family members or whatever for money. That is basically the allegations. It is two counts.
Of course, the defendant has denied the facts, and that is the reason why we are here to try the case. The indictment is not evidence of guilt or of anything else. It is simply a document that contains the charges against the defendant.
Tr. 1/11/05 at 3-5 (emphasis added).
Martinez objects principally to the use of the word “facts” and to the judge’s reference to the particular location of the pick-up, a detail that was not in the indictment. 2 He argues that by using this language the judge put his imprimatur on the government’s version of the events and thus placed the burden on the defense to overcome the presumption that the allegations were actually “facts.”
Because Martinez did not object to the instructions below, our review is only for plain error.
See United States v. Landrau-Lopez,
Though we agree that the judge’s statement to the venire panel was “infelicitously phrased,”
Landrau-Lopez,
“ ‘Moreover, in reviewing jury instructions, our task is also to view the charge itself as part of the whole trial.’ ”
United States v. Serino,
B. Limitation of Cross-Examination
Martinez next challenges the trial judge’s limitation of his cross-examination of two witnesses, arguing that the barred questions would have gone to Martinez’s theory of poliee credibility, bias, and excessive zeal to make arrests. Martinez cites to three particular incidents.
In the first incident, counsel for Martinez was cross-examining Ernesto Rosario-Cintrn (“Rosario”), the officer who initially arrested Martinez and Cruz after they took off in Curet’s Explorer. Rosario testified that his initial cause to arrest Martinez after stopping him was that he was driving with an undocumented alien, namely Cruz, which he discovered after asking them for their documents. Counsel then asked, “The truth is that once this person speaks for the first time and you think he is Dominican, you didn’t read him any warnings about rights or anything like that, did you?” The judge then interjects, “Counsel, you have no standing to ask that question, and I will not allow you to ask that question. You have no standing to ask that question.”
Second, counsel for Martinez continued, and a few questions later, asked Rosario, *53 “Did you have a judicial order to open and search [the truck the aliens were in]?” The judge again interrupted, “You have no right to ask that question. Your client has no standing to ask that question.”
Third, counsel for Martinez was cross-examining ICE agent Nazario and asked, “Did you have a judicial order to go into the house?” The government objected, and the objection was sustained, though not before the witness answered, “No.”
Martinez argues that each of these inquiries were central to his defense, since they addressed the motives of the law enforcement officials and thus would impact on their credibility.
The Sixth Amendment protects a defendant’s right to effective cross-examination of key adverse witnesses.
United States v. Callipari,
On a challenge to a district court’s limitation of cross-examination, we first perform a
de novo
review to determine whether a defendant “was afforded a reasonable opportunity to impeach adverse witnesses” consistent with the Confrontation Clause.
Id.
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Provided that threshold is reached, we then review the particular limitations only for abuse of discretion.
See id.; United States v. Gonzalez-Vazquez,
“[R]estrictions on cross-examination regarding bias are erroneous only if they are ‘manifestly unreasonable or overbroad.’ ”
Callipari,
After reviewing the record, we hold that Martinez was given a reasonable opportunity to impeach the witnesses, and that the judge did not abuse his discretion in limiting the cross-examination. Martinez argues that the questions went to his theory of police bias and credibility. However, “[t]he Confrontation Clause does not give a defendant the right to cross-examine on ‘every conceivable theory of bias.’ ”
Callipari,
If indeed Martinez had been intending to show bias on the part of the law enforcement officers, he had not up to that point made any proffer of evidence to serve as a foundation for that theory. But even assuming that pursuing that theory was proper, there was a high likelihood that the confusion and prejudice that these particular questions would have created in a jury outweighed any probative value, given that there was no claim that law enforcement had actually violated any procedures, either in the initial arrest of Martinez or in the search of the house and truck. See Fed.R.Evid. 403.
. The court gave Martinez ample opportunity to cross-examine the two witnesses on issues of bias and excessive zeal. In the case of Rosario, counsel for Martinez asked several questions directed at whether Rosario might be biased against Dominicans. It was only \yhen the question went directly to whether Cruz received a Miranda warning that the judge intervened. Similarly, counsel asked Rosario and Na-zario several questions attempting to establish whether they had probable cause for entering the truck and house. Again, it was only when the questions went to the issue of whether they had a judicial order to do so that the questioning was stopped. In both cases, the questions went beyond the issues of bias and credibility, and sought instead to impeach the witnesses based on their failure to do specific legal acts, when it was never established that those acts were actually required. 4
Therefore, Martinez was given a sufficient opportunity to cross-examine the adverse witnesses. The. judge’s restrictions were not “manifestly unreasonable or overbroad,” Gomes, 177 F.3d at 81-82, and did not prejudice Martinez.
C. Sentencing
Martinez challenges his 33-month sentence as unreasonable. Following
United States v. Booker,
We note at the outset that any claim that the judge erred in calculating the applicable Sentencing Guidelines range of 27 to 33 months based on the presentence report (“PSR”) fails. Because Martinez did not object below to the Guidelines analysis, we review for plain error only.
United States v. Rivera,
Even assuming,
arguendo,
that he had preserved the arguments, the judge committed no error in his analysis, plain or otherwise. First, Martinez challenges the lack of an offense level reduction for acceptance of responsibility under USSG § 3E1.1. His theory is that, because he gave incriminating statements that formed the basis of his prosecution, this in some manner entitles him to the credit. It is not necessary for us to discuss this rather attenuated claim, because “under most circumstances, a defendant who goes to trial is not entitled to acceptance of responsibility credit.”
United States v. Hall,
Second, Martinez makes an unsupported argument that he should have received a three-level reduction under USSG § 2L1.1 for committing a crime “other than for profit.” However, money clearly changed hands in this crime, and Martinez makes nu argument that it did not.
See United States v. Zannino,
Third, and thinnest of all, he makes the argument that he should not have received an offense level increase under USSG § 2Ll.l(b)(2) for having been involved in transporting more than 24 aliens, simply because he was not a ringleader and had not been involved in deciding how many aliens would be brought into the country. Martinez does not make the argument, nor can he, that USSG § 2L1.1 takes such a factor into account. Cf. USSG § 3Bl:l(a) (setting forth an additional offense level increase, not applied here, for being an “organizer or leader of a criminal activity”). This argument is without merit.
Martinez next argues that it was unreasonable for him to receive the high end of the guidelines range when Cruz, who Martinez argues was more culpable, received the low end of his applicable range from the same judge. Martinez points to our decision in
United States v. Saez
for the proposition that “if the same judge sentences two identically situated defendants to substantially different terms, some explanation may well be required; uniformi
*56
ty aside, the basic requirement of rationality remains.”
In sentencing Martinez to the high end of the range, the judge considered the § 3553(a) factors, and stated:
You are basically taking advantage of people who are in a position of disadvantage and, although you cannot excuse the fact that they decided to come illegally, the truth of the matter is that compounding that with the harboring and the keeping of the aliens until additional monies are paid is something that is totally unacceptable.
Therefore, I will impose a sentence on the higher end of the guidelines, which is 33 months.
He thus met his obligations under Jimenez-Beltre. The sentence was reasonable.
The conviction and sentence are affirmed.
Notes
. Including aliens who had already left the residence, Martinez and the others transported more than 24 undocumented aliens that day.
. It is unclear which “papers” the judge was referring to, but we note that the affidavit of Morales stated that the pick-up was in the “Manat beach area.”
. However, in order to forestall appeals such as this one, we note that judges should be scrupulous in avoiding any possibility of inference that allegations in the indictment be treated as facts.
. The government argues that it was not necessary to provide any Miranda warnings to Cruz prior to his admission of being an undocumented alien, because he had not yet been taken into custody. Similarly, it argues, that warrants were not necessary to search the truck or house because the officers had sufficient probable cause. Martinez does not claim here that the officers actually behaved improperly, an issue on which we take no view.
. These factors are: (1) the nature and circumstances of the offense and the history and characteristics of the defendant; (2) the need for the sentence to reflect the seriousness of the offense, to promote respect for the law, and to provide just punishment; to afford adequate deterrence; to protect-' the public; and to provide the defendant with needed educational or vocational training or medical care; (3) the kinds of sentences available; (4) the kinds of sentence and the sentencing range established by the Guidelines; (5) any pertinent policy statement; (6) the need to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct; *55 and (7) the need to provide restitution to any victims of the offense. 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).
. Martinez points to the commentary under USSG § 3E1.1 to support the argument that going to trial does not automatically foreclose this reduction. However, the commentary states that such cases are "rare,” such as when a defendant wishes to try issues "not relatedfd] to factual guilt.” USSG § 3E1.1, comment, (n.2).
