ORDER OF COURT
Appellant John L. Riccio was convicted of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001 by submitting a false statement on a background check form (SF-86) to his former employer, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA). Mr. Riccio was later sentenced to
Appellant filed a Petition for Rehearing and Motion for Clarification requesting that we amend our opinion because the government had conceded that the trial judge’s oral pronouncement that Mr. Riccio continue his current mental health counseling, which was on an outpatient basis, as a condition of release would “control over the written condition which included in-patient treatment as well.”
Having reviewed the audio-recording of the argument held on March 4, 2008, we conclude that the government made the concession the defendant argues for at oral argument. The government said the following:
“We concede that if the defense is willing to live with the oral condition as it was pronounced at sentencing then we are willing to live with it as well. And as Judge Stahl has pointed out, normally the oral condition controls anyway. I had thought there was a broader attack on the condition, but if the defense is withdrawing the other facets of its attack ...”
While we have recently held, in a somewhat different context, that “[tjhis court is not bound by a party’s concessions,” United States v. Borrero-Acevedo,
Appellant’s Motion for Clarification is granted and our original decision is modified to reflect the government’s concession at oral argument. We remand the case to the district court so that the written judgment may be corrected to conform to the judge’s oral pronouncement at the sentencing hearing.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Fed. R.App. P. 40(a)(4) provides that if a petition for rehearing is granted, the court may "make a final disposition of the case without reargument.”
