ORDER AND AMENDED OPINION
ORDER
The opinion filed on August 3, 2005, slip opinion at 9059, and appearing at
On slip opinion page 9066 n. 3, appearing at
On slip opinion page 9069 n. 5, appearing at
Defendant raises two arguments about the procedure that the district court *918 must follow in the event that the court agrees to resentence him. We leave those issues for the district court to decide in the first instance.
Petitions for rehearing and for rehеaring en banc may be filed.
OPINION
Defendant Matthew Eugene Dupas appeals the sentence imposed after his conviction for possessing stolen mail in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1708.
1
The government concedes that Defendant’s sentence of imprisonment may be remanded to the district court pursuant to our decision in
United States v. Ameline,
First, Defendant argues that the retro-activity principles of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause preclude the retroactive application of the
remedial
holding of
United States v. Booker,
— U.S. -,
Second, Defendant challenges two conditions of supervised release pertaining to searches and to payments for substance abuse treatment. We affirm the former and, although we are uncertain whether the latter was an improper delegation of the district court’s authority under 18 U.S.C. § 3672, our very uncertainty persuades us that the district did not plainly err.
A. Factual and Procedural Background
Defendant and a co-defendant were stopped by a police officer for traffic violations. After the officer learned that an arrest warrant was outstanding for the co-defendant, he arrested the co-defendant and searched the passenger compartment of the car. He found mail, checks, and credit cards belonging to other people and, consequently, arrested Defendant as well. A search of the entire car revealed many similar items.
After the district court denied Defendant’s motion to suppress, he entered a conditional guilty plea to one count of possession of stolen mail. In the plea agreement, Defendant and the government stipulated to an amount of loss not exceeding $5,000. Before accepting Defendant’s plea, the district court warned him that the *919 court was bound to apply the Sentencing Guidelines (“U.S.S.G”) and, thеrefore, could not guarantee that Defendant would receive the sentence agreed to in the plea agreement. 2
At sentencing, the district court declined to accept the parties’ stipulated calculation of loss and instead found, over the objections of both parties, that the intended loss was $49,306.95. The court based its calculation on information in the presentence report (“PSR”) that Defendant had possessed 67 “unauthorized access devices” (under U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, cmt. n. 2(F)(1) (2002), the minimum loss per access device is $500, for a total of $33,500); and that Defendant possessed stolen checkbooks from which they had written checks amounting to $15,806.95. Because of those findings, Defendant received an upward adjustment of 6 offense levels under U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(D), resulting in a total offense level of 13 and a sentencing range of 24 to 30 months. The court sentenced Defendant at the bottom of that range.
The court also imposed several conditions of supervised release, two of which Defendant challenges on appeal. The conditions are reproduced below, in our discussion of Defendant’s arguments.
B. Ex post facto principles do not prohibit resentencing under Booker and Arneline.
Some background is helpful to understanding Defendant’s argument. After the Supreme Court invalidated Washington State’s sentencing scheme in
Blakely v. Washington,
Defendant is not satisfied with the remedy selected by the Supreme Court. The “advisory guidelines” remedy gives the sentencing judge discretion to sentence outside the guideline range, but still allows the sentencing judge (as distinct from a jury) to make the findings of fact necessary to determine the guideline range in the first place. In Defendant’s case, where the parties agreed to a loss of no more than $5,000 but the district court instead found a loss of $49,306.95, Defendant would prefer a remedy that eliminates the court’s power to make findings of fact at all. Under Ameline, the district court could make the same finding of fact at resentencing and, if it does, Defendant will have to rely on the court’s discretion to receive a sentence lower than the range set by the guidelines. By contrast, under a system in which thе guidelines were mandatory but a jury was required to decide the facts necessary to determine the sentencing range, Defendant would be assured of a sentencing range corresponding to a loss of $5,000 or less, because the *920 government agreed not to argue that the amount of loss exceeded $5,000. In pursuit of that result, Defendant fashions a novel due process argument based on ex post facto principlеs. His argument proceeds in two steps.
First, Defendant points out that
Booker
contains two separate holdings. One is the Sixth Amendment rule set forth in Justice Stevens’ opinion: Within a system of mandatory sentencing guidelines, any fact (other than a prior conviction) that is necessary to support a sentence exceeding the maximum authorized by the facts established in a guilty plea or jury verdict must be admitted by the defendant or proved to the jury beyond a reasonablе doubt.
See Booker,
In the second step of his argument, Defendant “essentially asks this court to apply Justice Stevens’ opinion in
Booker
retroactively, but refuse to apply Justice Breyer’s opinion in
Booker
retroactively.”
United States v. Duncan,
Defendant’s argument suffers from three fatal flaws. First, as the Eleventh Circuit pointed out in responding to a very similar argument, “in
Booker,
the Supreme Court expressly stated that
both
holdings should be applied to cases on direct review.”
Duncan,
Second, “[i]n
United States v. Newman,
Finally, even if we could distinguish
Newman,
the holding in
Bouie
would not entitle Defendant to protection from every change in sentencing law that might disadvantage him. In
Rogers v. Tennessee,
[.Bouie’s] rationale rested on core due рrocess concepts of notice, foreseeability, and, in particular, the right to fair warning as those concepts bear on the constitutionality of attaching criminal penalties to what previously had been innocent conduct.
Id.
at 459,
The Eleventh Circuit relied on
Rogers’
clarification of
Bouie
to reject an argument similar to the one that Defendant makes herе.
Duncan,
For those three reasons, we reject Defendant’s argument and grant him a limited remand according to the procedures set forth in
Ameline,
*922 C. The district court did not plainly err by imposing conditions of supervised release.
1. The search condition
Defendant argues that the following condition, which provides for searches “with or without” cause, facially violates his Fourth Amendment rights:
The defendant shall submit person and property to search or seizure at any time of the day or night by any law enforcement officer with or without a warrant and with or without reasonable or probable cause[.]
The constitutionality of this condition is controlled by
United States v. Guagliardo,
Defendant also argues that we must remand for the district court to provide a statement of reasons why the condition was imposed. Under
Rearden,
an explicit statement of reasons is not absolutely required by 18 U.S.C. § 3583(d).
See
2. The treatment condition
The court ordered Defendant to participate in substance abuse treatment and imposed the following condition regarding payment for that treatment:
As directed by the Probation Officer, the defendant shall pay all or part of the costs of treating the defendant’s drug or alcohol dependancy to the aftercare contractor during the period of community supervision, pursuant to 18 USC 3672.
The defendant shall provide payment and proof of payment as directed by the Probation Officer[.]
Defendant argues that allowing the probation officer to determine Defendant’s share of the treatment costs improperly delegates to the probation officer the court’s exclusive authority under 18 U.S.C. § 3672. He urges us to interpret § 3672 strictly, as the courts of appeals have interpreted statutes that give the court exclusive authority to order payment of restitution and fines.
See, e.g., United States v. Gunning,
*923 Section 3672 sets forth the “Duties of [the] Director of [the] Administrative Office of the United States Courts” with respеct to the probation system and its officers. Among other things, it gives the director “the authority to contract with any appropriate public or private agency or person for the detection of and care in the community of an offender” with substance abuse or psychiatric issues. After setting forth the various duties and powers of the director, the statute’s final paragraph turns to the authority of the court to order payment for substance abuse and psychiatric treatment:
Whenever the court finds that funds are available for payment by or on behalf of a person famished such services, training, or guidance, the court may direct that such funds be paid to the Director. Any moneys collected under this paragraph shall be used to reimburse the appropriations obligated and disbursed in payment for such services, training, or guidance.
18 U.S.C. § 3672 (emphasis added). 7
There are good arguments on both sides of the question that Defendant raises. On the one hand, § 3672 refers expressly to
the couH’s
authority. In this sense, it parallels the text of the restitution and fine statutes thаt we mentioned above.
See id.
§ 3572(d) (“If the court provides for payment in installments, the installments shall be in equal monthly payments over the period provided by the court, unless the court establishes another schedule.”);
id.
§ 3664(f)(1)(B) (“Upon determination of the amount of restitution owed to each victim, the court shall ... specify in the restitution order the manner in which, and the schedule according to which, the restitution is to be paid.... ”). As we have said, those statutes have been interpreted literally to require that the court alone exercise the specified authority.
See, e.g., Gunning,
*924
On the other hand, the only other circuit to address this precise question concluded that delegation to a probation officer was permissible under § 3672, despite controlling precedent holding that the court’s authority under a restitution statute is exclusive and nondelegable.
United States v. Warden,
There are strong arguments in favor of
Warden’s
position, not the least of which is our preference for avoiding circuit splits. Additionally, the context of the provision in § 3672 is quite different from the context found in §§ 3572 and 3664. The latter provisions relate generally to the court’s imposition of sentences and restitution. Section 3672, by contrast, is directed primarily to the functions of the probation office. Moreover, the need to interpret the statute strictly so as to reserve core judicial functions to the court is weaker here; the condition at issue does not delegate to the probation officer the power to order substance abuse treatment in the first place.
Cf. United States v. York,
Fortunately, our only task here is to determine whether the district court plainly erred. “Before [we] can cоrrect an error not raised at trial, there must be (1) error, (2) that is plain, and (3) that affects substantial rights.”
United States v. Jordan,
In summary, the district court did not plainly err by imposing the two conditions of supervised release that Defendant challenges on appeal. But under our holding in Ameline, a limitеd remand of Defendant’s prison sentence is appropriate. That remedy is not barred by the ex post facto principles articulated by the Supreme Court in Bouie and Rogers.
*925 Conditions of supervised release AFFIRMED; sentence of imprisonment REMANDED.
Notes
. Defendant’s guilty plea was conditioned on his appeal of the district court's denial of his motion to suppress. We affirmed the district court's denial of the motion and affirmed Defendant’s conviction in a memorandum disposition.
United States v. Dupas,
. The court noted, “the Guidelines become sentencing, in a sense.” Because of this comment and because the court sentenced Defendant to the bottom of the applicable sentencing range, we agree with the parties that resentencing is appropriate under Ameline.
. The Ex Post Facto Clause of Article I, Section 9, by its terms, applies only to changes in the law resulting from legislative or executive action, but the Court has extended similar principles to the Due Process Clause to cover "unforeseeable [judicial] construction of a criminal statute.”
Bouie,
.
Holgerson
involved a habeas petition by a defendant in state custody, so we relied on
Newman
only for the proposition that it was not clearly established that
Bouie
applies to sentencing enhancements.
Holgerson,
. Defendant raises two arguments about the procedure that the district court must follow in the event that the court agrees to resen-tence him. We leave those issues for the district court to decide in the first instance.
. There may be circumstances in which a search conducted pursuant to this condition would raise Fourth Amendment concerns, but we need not confront such circumstances here. We are asked to determine
only
the facial validity of the condition, which was upheld in
Guagliardo,
. This paragraph was added to § 3672 in 1987, Pub.L. No. 100-182, § 20(2), 101 Stat. 1266 (1987), a year after the provision relating to the director's authority to contract with treatment providers. We have located no legislative history pertaining to the 1987 addition.
. We have never held that delegation is improper under § 3572(d). In fact, in
Monta-no-Figueroa v. Crabtree,
