We have consolidated for argument and decision defendant Bownes’s appeals from his sentence and from other orders issued by the district court. The primary charge against him was mail fraud arising from a “land flipping” .scheme whereby he would acquire homes in a poor area at low prices and resell them to poor people at high prices, financing the sales by obtaining inflated mortgage loans through the submission of false appraisals by crooked appraisers acting in concert with him. He was also charged with threatening a reporter who investigated the scheme. He pleaded guilty to the charges in accordance with a plea agreement (actually twо agreements, but we can ignore that detail) and was sentenced to 210 months in prison and also ordered to pay almost $2.5 million in restitution. His appeals raise a number of issues, including whether he should be resentenced in the light of
United States v. Booker,
— U.S. -,
The agreement states that “the Defendant knowingly waives the right to appeal any sentence within the maximum provided in the statute of conviction (or the manner in which the sentence was determined), including any order of restitution, ... on any ground whatever, in exchange for the concessions made by the United States in this plea agreement.” The exception is inaрplicable because the prison sentence was less than the maximum authorized by the statutes under which Bownes was convicted and therе is no ceiling on restitution. But he argues that his waiver was not knowing and intelligent because he had no reason to anticipate the ruling in Booker. Not only did thе agreement predate the Supreme Court’s decision; it preceded our decision in Booker, which the Supreme Court affirmed.
Disputes over plea agreements arе usefully viewed through the lens of contract law. E.g.,
United States v. Randle,
In a contract (and equally in a plea agreement) one binds oneself to do something that someone else wants, in exchange for some benefit to oneself. By binding oneself one assumes the risk of future changes in circumstances in light of which one’s bargain may prоve to have been a bad one. That is the risk inherent in all contracts; they limit the parties’ ability to take advantage of what may happen over the period in which the contract is in effect.
The government didn’t want Bownes to appeal and was willing to offer concessions that he and his lawyer considered adequate to induce him to forgo his right to appeal. Had Bownes insisted on an escape hatch that would have enabled him to appeal if the law changed in his favor after he was sentenced, the government would have been charier in its concessions. Nothing in the text of the plea agreement or in the negotiations leading up to it suggests that the parties agreed to such an escape hatch. Since there is abundant case law that appeal waivers worded as broadly as this one аre effective even if the law changes in favor of the defendant after sentencing,
United States v. Bradley,
Bownes argues that Booker is special because . it brought about a “sea change” in the law. Thе identical argument was rejected, rightly in our view, in the Bradley and Killgo cases that we cited in the preceding paragraph. It is true that Booker has had a tremendous impact because it has affected many thousands of sentences, but it is no more, and indeed less, of a “sea change” than numerous оther legal innovations scattered across the volumes of the United States Reports and the Federal Reporter. And anyway a “sea change” exception to the rule that an unqualifiеd appeal waiver is to be' enforced as written would be hopelessly vague.
It is also unnecessary given the limitations on waiver of thе right of appeal in a criminal case that are imposed by judicial interpretations of the due process clause.
United States v. Schilling,
We need not decide precisely how deep an inroad the cases elucidating such differences makе into the contractual model of plea bargaining. None of them bears on the present case. Indeed, it is not even clear thаt defendants as a whole would benefit from a right to rescind a plea agreement on the basis of a “sea change” in law. Apart from thе fact that the government would insist on a compensating concession, and apart from the further fact that rescission would relieve the government from whatever concessions it had made to obtain the agreement,
United States v. Kelly,
Bownes’s appeals are
Dismissed.
