These sentencing appeals reverberate with the echo of a question that we thought we had laid to rest in
United States v. Reccko,
*188 I. BACKGROUND
Because these appeals follow the entry of guilty pleas, we take the relevant facts from the defendants’ change-of-plea colloquies, the uneontested portions of the pre-sentence investigation reports, and the transcripts of their disposition hearings.
See United States v. Dietz,
In more tranquil times, defendants-appellants Carlos Javier Ortiz Santiago (Ortiz) and Omar Parrilla Román (Parrilla) worked as fleet service clerks for American Airlines at the Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in Carolina, Puerto Rico. 1 Fleet service clerks are responsible for loading and unloading cargo onto and off of passenger aircraft, handling mail and freight for shipment by air, and cleaning the interior areas of passenger aircraft. They also drive airline vehicles, operate machinery, guide aircraft through ground-level arrival and departure maneuvers, and help to de-ice airplanes when required. Judging by the defendants’ rates of pay, fleet service clerks earn from $10.00-$12.50 an hour.
In 2003, the defendants supplemented their workload (and, presumably, their income) by conspiring with others to transport cocaine from Puerto Rico to various destinations on the mainland. The basic scheme, with minor variations from caper to caper, operated as follows. Ortiz would receive a suitcase containing cocaine, which he would then carry or drive through security checkpoints without inspection. He then ensured that the suitcase was stowed safely aboard a designated departure-bound airplane. For his part, Parrilla made sure that his confederates knew that “the bird is in flight”; that is, that a cocaine-laden suitcase had been placed aboard a pre-selected flight. On at least two occasions, he provided coconspir-ators with a baggage claim ticket, flight information, and the assumed name that had been used for such a suitcase.
In due season, federal agents unearthed the plot. An indictment followed apace. To make a tedious tale tolerably terse, both Ortiz and Parrilla eventually pleaded guilty to a count that charged conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five ox-more kilograms of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841, 846.
The disti-ict court sentenced Parrilla on March 11, 2005. The main battle was over the applicability vel non of the position-of-trust enhancement. See USSG § 3B1.3. Parrilla argued that, given his duties as a fleet service clerk, he had no managerial discretion, played no supervisory role, and thus could not be deemed to occupy a position of trust. Parrilla buttressed his argument with a copy of the job description for the fleet service clerk position. The argument was in vain. The district court imposed the position-of-trust enhancement, stating:
Now, you have submitted a copy of the job description, and that is fíne. But let’s take it one step prior to the job description. If [Parrilla] did not have a security cleai-ance from the Ports Authority whereby he had to comply with certain conditions to obtain the security clearance, he would not have been able to be employed by American Airlines.
The facts that your client accepted when he pled guilty include[] the fact that once inside the airport, the suitcase was provided to the co-defendant, who *189 insured that the suitcase made it on board....
... But he is there in that position because he held a position of trust or a secured position within the airport, as authorized by Ports Authority.
So if he had not had that security clearance, he would not have been in a position to insure that the luggage got on the airplane. And that is why his position of private trust did contribute in some significant way to facilitating the commission of the crime. Otherwise, the suitcases would not have been put on board.
Combined with Parrilla’s base offense level, other adjustments, and criminal history category (I), the offense level increase yielded a guideline sentencing range (GSR) of 87-108 months. Without the enhancement, the GSR would have been 70-87 months. The court levied an 87-month incarcerative term — -the bottom of the calculated GSR.
The district court convened Ortiz’s disposition hearing on April 28, 2005. The hearing unfolded and concluded in much the same manner. Pertinently, Ortiz argued that, as a mere baggage handler, he had no professional or managerial discretion and could not be deemed to occupy a position of trust. The government countered that because he had a security clearance that enabled him to pass unchallenged through security checkpoints and transport drugs through restricted areas of the airport without being stopped, he occupied a position of trust.
The district court accepted the government’s logic. It reasoned:
[N]ot everybody can qualify for [the fleet service clerk] position. First of all, they have to go through a security check of the airport. They have to submit background information. They have to submit background records. They have to have a police clearance from the police that no criminal record is involved, and after going through all that, then the airport personnel provides this individual with a pass, which they have to carry all the time with their photograph, which allows them to go into a secured area.
So in that sense, the Defendant is being allowed to go into a secured area because he holds a position of trust. Otherwise, he wouldn’t be going into the secured area. Once ... he is identified as being a person of trust within the secured area of the airport, then he’s able to move in and out from the secured area to the other areas of the airport to bring in suitcases without having them inspected, and furthermore, to being able to place them in the airplanes ....
With this predicate in mind, the district court concluded that Ortiz, like Parrilla, should receive a position-of-trust enhancement because his position had contributed significantly to the commission of the offense of conviction.
The court increased Oritz’s offense level accordingly. Combined with his base offense level, other adjustments, and criminal history category (I), this increase yielded a GSR of 87-108 months. Without the enhancement, the GSR would have been 70-87 months. The court sentenced Ortiz to serve a low-end 87-month incarcerative term and to pay a $5,000 fine.
Both Parrilla and Ortiz appealed their sentences. This court consolidated the two appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
The principal issue on appeal is the defendants’ claim that the district court erred in imposing the position-of-trust en- *190 hanceraents. Ortiz also attempts to raise a further claim that the district court abused its discretion in failing to reconsider the imposition of the fine. We consider these claims sequentially.
Our standard of review is familiar. Following the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
In reviewing such a calculation, we accept the sentencing court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.
See United States v. Dixon,
A. Position of Trust.
The guideline at issue here provides:
If the defendant abused a position of public or private trust ... in a manner that significantly facilitated the commission or concealment of the offense, increase [the defendant’s offense level] by 2 levels.
USSG § 3B1.3. An application note elaborates:
‘Public or private trust’ refers to a position of public or private trust characterized by professional or managerial discretion (i.e., substantial- discretionary judgment that is ordinarily given considerable deference). Persons holding such positions ordinarily are subject to significantly less supervision than employees whose responsibilities are primarily non-discretionary in nature. For this adjustment to apply, the position of public or private trust must have contributed in some significant way to facilitating the commission or concealment of the offense {e.g., by making the detection of the offense or the defendant’s responsibility for the offense more difficult). This adjustment, for example, applies in the case of an embezzlement of a client’s funds by an attorney serving as a guardian, a bank executive’s fraudulent loan scheme, or the criminal sexual abuse of a patient by a physician under the guise of an examination. This adjustment does not apply in the case of an embezzlement or theft by an ordinary bank teller or hotel clerk because such positions are not characterized by the above-described factors.
Id., cmt. n. 1.
Consistent with this guideline and the quoted application note, we have constructed, and directed sentencing courts to use, a two-step process for determining whether a position-of-trust enhancement should be imposed. The sentencing court must first answer the status question: Did the defendant occupy a position of trust? If not, the inquiry ends. If, however, the status question produces an affirmative response, the court must then answer the conduct question: Did the defendant use that position to facilitate significantly the commission or concealment of the offense?
See Reecko,
In imposing a position-of-trust enhancement pursuant to section 3B1.3, the Reccko district court incorrectly determined that the defendant, a switchboard operator at a municipal police headquarters, held a position of trust precisely because her job provided her with the access needed to commit the charged crime (unlawfully tipping off a suspect to an impending raid). See id. The sentencing court’s determination here suffers from much the same infirmity. Rather than first posing the status question-asking whether the fleet service clerk position was characterized by professional or managerial discretion and minimal supervision&emdash;the court jumped immediately to the conduct question, zeroing in on the defendants’ ready access to restricted areas of the airport. The court then used that access as the basis for a blanket answer to both the status and the conduct questions. That analysis merged the two distinct steps that Reccko requires.
Recognizing the inconsistency between the district court’s approach and the
Reccko
paradigm, the government tries to distinguish
Reccko
on the ground that there was no evidence in that case to suggest that the defendant had obtained a security clearance. To support the relevance of this suggested distinction, the government cites
United States v. Castagnet,
Relatedly, the government indulges in an unabashed attempt at bootstrapping. It says that since the defendants were successful for a time in smuggling contraband into the airport, their positions must have entailed minimal supervision. That turns the guideline on its head: it does not follow that, merely because a defendant’s position enables him to commit an offense, the position must have been unsupervised and, thus, a position of trust.
Cf. id.
(explaining that “[opportunity and access” do not equate with substantial discretionary judgment);
United States v. Sierra,
The government’s citation to our decision in
United States v. Casas,
There is no need to tarry. At bottom, the government’s arguments vividly illustrate its lack of comprehension of (or, perhaps, its stubborn unwillingness to accept) the standard that we delineated in Reccko. That is particularly unfortunate here because the facts, as developed in the district court, will not support a finding that the fleet service clerk positions are positions of trust within the meaning of USSG § 3B1.3. After all, the government concedes that neither Ortiz nor Parrilla was afforded discretion to establish policies or to supervise co-workers. Moreover, nothing in the record suggests that either of the two men toiled under minimal supervision. To the contrary, the kinds of tasks typically required of fleet service clerks (e.g., loading and unloading cargo, cleaning cabin interiors, and guiding taxiing aircraft) are the kinds of tasks that almost invariably require oversight.
In all events, the government bears the burden of proving the applicability of the position-of-trust enhancement.
See United States v. Connell,
B. The Fine.
As a postscript of sorts, we briefly address Ortiz’s objection to the $5,000 fine imposed by the district court (an objection that he couches in the form of an objection to the denial of his serial motions to reconsider the fine). As we explain below, he has waived his right to appeal that impost.
Ortiz pleaded guilty pursuant to a negotiated plea agreement with the government (the Agreement). The Agreement included an explicit commitment that as long as the district court accepted the Agreement and sentenced him in accordance with its terms, he “waivefd] and surrendered] his right to appeal the judgment and sentence in this case.” The district court accepted the Agreement and, in doing so, received appropriate assurances that this waiver was knowing and voluntary. The court proceeded to sentence Ortiz within the parameters of the Agreement.
In his appellate brief, Ortiz does not mention this waiver. It is easy to see why: the waiver was unequivocal. The only reservation of a right to appeal concerned the possible application of the hotly contested position-of-trust enhancement. See supra Part 11(A).
We consistently have upheld properly phrased waivers of the right to appeal from criminal sentencing decisions.
See, e.g., United States v. Miliano,
It makes no difference that Ortiz has couched his claim of error in terms of the denial of his serial motions to reconsider the fine. Because Ortiz waived his right to appeal the fine itself,
see
text
supra,
we discern no legally cognizable basis on which he can challenge the denial of motions to reconsider its imposition. A criminal defendant who, like Ortiz, knowingly and voluntarily waives his right to appeal all or some part of his sentence, cannot evade the effects of that waiver by the simple expedient of moving to reconsider the unappealable sentence and then appealing the denial of that motion.
Cf. United States v. Joiner,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Because the district court erred in imposing position-of-trust enhancements, we vacate the defendants’ sentences and remand for re-sentencing without resort to those enhancements. The guidelines are, of course, advisory in nature,
see Booker,
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. Originally, the airline listed Ortiz's job title as "ramp agent.” He later became a fleet service clerk. The district court and the parties seem to have employed the two titles interchangeably. Because nothing turns on this nomenclative point, we use the latter title.
. Although it may be tantamount to carting coal to Newcastle, we note that a sentencing court has wide discretion in deciding whether or not to impose a fine.
See United States v. Savoie,
