Rafael Pacheco-Navarette (“Pacheco”) and Victor Gomez-Vera (“Gomez”) appeal their convictions and sentences following each appellant’s guilty plea to being an alien in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(5) and 924(a)(2). Principally, appellants argue that their appeal waivers are invalid. We must also consider whether to remand in light of Booker and Ameline. We dismiss the appeals for lack of jurisdiction.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Pacheco and Gomez pled guilty to violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(5) and 924(a)(2) because of their possession of firearms to perpetrate various crimes related to trafficking illegal aliens from Mexico to Arizona between August and September 2003.
Appellants entered pleas of guilty pursuant to virtually identical plea agreements that stipulated sentences of 120 months, the statutory maximum. They also stipulated to the upward departures required to reach the negotiated sentence under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (“Guide-lines”), and waived “any right to raise on appeal or collaterally attack any *969 matter pertaining to this prosecution and sentence.” In return for appellants’ pleas, the government agreed to dismiss additional counts in the indictment and to refrain from charging them with additional, more serious, offenses.
After standard change of plea hearings, presentence reports were prepared, recommending the upward departures and ultimate sentences stipulated in the plea agreements. Citing
Blakely v. Washington,
Appellants were sentenced in accordance with their plea agreements.
DISCUSSION
I. Validity of Pacheco’s Guilty Plea
Pacheco challenges the validity of his guilty plea because the district court failed to advise him of his right to have a jury determine the facts upon which any sentence enhancements under the Guidelines were predicated, a right recognized by
United States v. Booker,
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11 obligated the district court to describe to Pacheco the consequences of his plea that had “a definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on the range of [his] punishment.”
United States v. Little-john,
Thus, we hold that a guilty plea colloquy is not deficient solely because the district court did not advise a defendant of rights established by
subsequent
judicial decisions or changes in the law.
Cf. Little-john,
If a guilty plea is not rendered involuntary or unknowing because of subsequent changes in the law, it necessarily follows that a guilty plea cannot be invalidated because the court did not inform a defendant of those then-nonexistent rights. Any other result would force district courts to anticipate all possible changes in the law. Moreover, it would vitiate the decisions in Brady and Johnson because every defendant claiming his plea was involuntary or unknowing because of a subsequent change in the law would also have the claim that the guilty plea colloquy was deficient for failing to inform him of that change.
II. Validity of Appellants’ Appeal Waivers
Pacheco and Gomez also argue that their appeal waivers are invalid; we review such claims
de novo. United States v. Bynum,
Gomez argues that his plea agreement should not have been accepted, so his appeal waiver is necessarily invalid. He argues that the district court should not have accepted the plea agreement into which he entered because it constituted impermissible “double counting” by stipulating upward adjustments and upward departures under the Guidelines based upon the same factors.
Gomez’s argument rests on the false premise that stipulated sentences must comport with the Guidelines. Even before
Booker,
this court accepted implicitly that stipulated sentences could fall outside the otherwise applicable Guideline range.
See United States v. Mukai,
Moreover, it is within the sound discretion of the district court to reject or accept any plea agreement.
See United States v. Barker,
Pacheco argues that, as a result of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Booker,
he could not have waived his appeal right “knowingly and voluntarily,” which is required to uphold a waiver,
see, e.g., United States v. Nguyen,
*971
Therefore, “our inquiry into the validity of the waivers is at an end.”
Nguyen,
III. Remand Pursuant to Booker and Ameline
Finally, appellants ask us to remand their cases to the district court in light of
Booker
and
United States v. Ameline,
Pacheco and Gomez were each sentenced
outside
of the Guidelines pursuant to a negotiated plea agreement. The provisions of the Guidelines relating to plea agreements — U.S.S.G. §§ 6B1.1-4, p.s.— are policy statements only. The binding law is (and was then) Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1)(A) and (C). Moreover, the district court is not permitted to deviate from the sentences stipulated in such agreements.
See, e.g., Mukai,
That the plea agreements stipulated (and the district court evaluated) upward departures is inapposite because the stipulated sentences were not based on the Guidelines. The parties determined that the defendants’ acceptance of the maximum statutory sentence was the appropriate concession for the government’s forbearance to prosecute. Any reference to the Guidelines was designed to make those prior determinations fit into what the parties believed was a mandatory scheme. Indeed, at Pacheco’s sentencing hearing the government explained,
we also wanted to provide a basis that the Court could make its determination to accept the upward departure more than simply the Government is not going to file these other charges. We wanted the Court to have a separate basis [to accept the 120-month sentence].... But in essence ... that was an afterthought. ...
We conclude that, where a defendant was sentenced after pleading guilty pursuant to a plea agreement that included a specific sentence stipulation that did not exceed the statutory maximum and was not contingent upon the Guidelines, remand is not required to comport with
Booker
and Ameline,
3
Accord. United States v. Silva,
CONCLUSION
Appellants knowingly and voluntarily entered guilty pleas pursuant to plea agreements they negotiated to avoid prosecution for more serious offenses. In exchange for the government’s forbearance, appellants agreed to serve the maximum sentence allowed by 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(2). *972 Nothing about the process was irregular, unlawful, or unconstitutional. We, therefore, lack jurisdiction to hear their claims.
DISMISSED.
Notes
. At sentencing, Pacheco could have moved to withdraw his guilty plea for the "fair and just reason” of an intervening Supreme Court decision.
See United States v. Ortega-Ascanio,
. Pacheco also argues that, because his guilty plea was invalid, his appeal waiver is necessarily invalid as well. However, since his guilty plea was valid, this argument fails.
. We need not determine whether or to what extent a plea agreement containing a stipulation of a particular Guideline range or a sentence otherwise based or contingent upon the Guidelines must comport with the Guidelines, as that situation is not before us.
