Roylin Fairclough (“Fairclough”) appeals from a judgment of conviction entered May 25, 2005, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Stephen C. Robinson, Judge). Pursuant to a plea agreement with the government, Fairclough pleaded guilty to a superseding indictment charging him with possessing a firearm after having been convicted of a felony on December 4, 2003, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The plea agreement and Pre-Sentence Report stated Fairclough’s offense level under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (“Guidelines”) to be 12 and his Criminal History Category to be IV, corresponding to a range of 21 to 27 months’ imprisonment. On May 24, 2005, the District Court, applying
United States v. Booker,
In
Booker,
the Supreme Court held that a district court’s mandatory application of
*78
the Guidelines to enhance a sentence beyond the otherwise applicable Guidelines range based on facts neither found by a jury nor admitted by a defendant violated the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
Id.
at 244,
We recently held in
United States v. Vaughn,
In holding that the appellants’ claim failed, we noted that the Supreme Court’s holding in
Rogers v. Tennessee,
[j]ust as appellants had fair warning that their conduct was criminal, they also had fair warning of the potential penalties they faced for conspiring to distribute marijuana. The relevant maximum applicable to the drug quantity found by the jury at the time the appellants committed their offense was the statutory maximum of twenty years’ imprisonment. Appellants also had fair notice at that time that their sentences could be based on a judicial determination of the quantity of marijuana involved in their offense as long as the sentences were below the relevant statutory maximum. The sentences imposed by the district court were below the statutory maximum and within the range prescribed by the Guidelines for the quantity of drugs the court determined to have been involved in the appellants’ crime. Even under pre-Booker law, defendants faced the possibility of sentences anywhere within the applicable statutory range.
Id. (internal citation omitted). We therefore found nothing improper in the application of Booker to cases pending on direct review and joined the First, Fifth, Seventh, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits in so holding. See id. (collecting cases).
The instant appeal raises the same issue in a slightly different context. That is, Fairclough claims that the
District
*79
Court
(as opposed to the Court of Appeals on direct review) violated
ex post facto
principles when it retroactively applied the remedial holding of
Booker
at his sentencing. We hereby reject this claim for the same reasons stated in
Vaughn.
In short, there was no
ex post facto
problem with the District Court’s application of the remedial holding of
Booker
at sentencing because Fairclough had fair warning that his conduct was criminal, that enhancements or upward departures could be applied to his sentence under the Guidelines based on judicial fact-findings, and that he could be sentenced as high as the statutory maximum of ten (10) years.
See Vaughn,
Because Fairclough’s ex post facto argument fails, his Sixth Amendment argument, which depends upon the Guidelines maximum being treated as the relevant maximum based on ex post facto concerns, also fails. The district court’s fact-findings did not expose Fairclough to a sentence beyond the statutory maximum set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2) (ten years) and therefore there was no Sixth Amendment violation.
Fairclough also challenges the reasonableness of his sentence. As the Supreme Court observed in
Booker,
courts of appeals are familiar with assessing the “reasonableness” of sentences. In the past, courts of appeals reviewed departures for reasonableness and reviewed sentences imposed after violations of supervised release for “plain” unreasonableness.
See United States v. Booker,
As we stated in
Crosby,
“ ‘reasonableness’ is inherently a concept of flexible meaning, generally lacking precise boundaries.”
should exhibit restraint, not micromanagement [in assessing reasonableness]. In addition to their familiarity with the record, including the presentence report, district judges have discussed sentencing with a probation officer and gained an impression of a defendant from the entirety of the proceedings, including the defendant’s opportunity for sentenc *80 ing allocution. The appellate court proceeds only with the record. Although the brevity or length of a sentence can exceed the bounds of “reasonableness,” we anticipate encountering such circumstances infrequently.
United States v. Fleming,
Here, the District Court imposed a non-Guidelines sentence of forty-eight (48) months that was twenty-one (21) months higher than the maximum advised by the Guidelines. The basis for the increase in sentence was that Fairclough “had a relatively uninterrupted string of criminal activity and arrests,” including arrests that resulted in dispositions in January 1998, March 1998, April 1998, January 1999, April 1999, January 2002, and September 2002. The District Court characterized Fairclough as having had “interaction after interaction after interaction with the criminal justice system, and his response to it is to turn around and literally the moment he’s back on the street do something else.” The District Court found that Fairclough “has no respect for the law.” The District Court also believed that Fairclough should not be treated “as if he’s a person who had a handgun for his protection for some reason that the law wouldn’t allow,” inasmuch as he sold the gun “to somebody who he understood] or believe[d][was] up to no good.... He was selling the gun on the street to somebody that he suspected was about to do bad with it.” The District Court felt that the Guidelines range was inadequate to address the “nature and circumstances” of the offense, and that a 48-month sentence was appropriate in light of “the- nature and circumstances of the offense, the history and characteristics of the defendant, ... the seriousness , of this crime, ... [the need for] just punishment for the offense, ... [and the need for] adequate deterrence to others and to protect the public.”
The District Court did not clearly err in finding the facts on which the sentence was based.
See United States v. Selioutsky,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is hereby Affirmed.
