Dеfendant Augstin Torres-Aguilar pleaded guilty to illegally reentering the United States after previously having been deported, see 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a) (2000), and was sentenced to 250 days imprisonment, time served, and one year of supervised release. Torres-Aguilar appeals the district court’s judgment, arguing that it improperly included a special condition of supervised release not mentioned in the oral pronouncement of sentence. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
During Torres-Aguilar’s sentencing hearing, the district court stated: “I’ll sentence you to 250 days. You’ll be finished here today or so, and try not to come back. I’ll place you on one year of supervised release. If you come back during that time, you’ll get more time in this case.” Other than warning Torres-Aguilar not to attempt illegally to reenter the United States, the district court did not allude to any conditions applicable to the term of supervised release. In its judgment, however, the district court instructed, “[t]he defendant shall not possess a firearm, destructive device, or any other dangerous weapon” during his supervised release. On appeal, Torres-Aguilar argues that the condition that he not possess “any dangerous weapon” during his supervised release must be stricken from the judgment because it conflicts with the terms of the sentence orally imposed by the district court. 1
II. DISCUSSION
Because Torres-Aguilar “had no opportunity to object to or comment on the special conditionf ] ... imposed in the written order,” on appeal we “review the district court’s imposition of [the] special condition[] for an abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Warden,
In this circuit, “we have long held that a defendant has а constitutional right to be present at sentencing.”
United States v. Vega,
In this case, we are presented with the task of drawing a line between those omissions creating a “conflict” between an oral pronouncement and the accompanying judgment and those omissions that create a mere “ambiguity” in the oral sentence
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that can be clarified by viewing the written record. In the past, we have emphasized the importance of whether the condition omitted from the oral pronouncement was а standard or a special condition of supervised release.
See Martinez,
Torres-Aguilar argues that the portion of the judgment prohibiting him from possessing “any other dangerous weapon” during the supervised release is a “special” condition that must be pronounced at oral sentencing. He points out that this condition is included in the list of “ ‘special’ conditions of supervised release” that appears in the United States Sentencing Guidelines. U.S.S.G. § 5D1.3(d)(l). Torres-Aguilar also contends that a district court may choose not to prohibit a felon from possessing dangerous weapons during his term of supervised release because the Sentencing Guidelines merely recommend imposing this condition on a defendant who has been convicted of a felony. Id. Therefore, he argues that the dangerous weapon prohibition is a discretionary cоndition, not one of the “standard” conditions that a district court may choose not to mention during a sentencing hearing. 2
The government disagrees and argues that the prohibition on a felon’s possession of a dangerous weapоn is a “standard” condition of supervised release, which the district court was not required to mention during the sentencing hearing. First, the government notes that within the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, the bar on possessing a dangerous weapon has been made a “standard” condition of supervised release by a general order of the court. Second, although U.S.S.G. § 5D1.3(d) refers to the dangerous weapons bar as one of a list of “special” conditiоns, the government notes that the Second Circuit has held that § 5D1.3(d)’s conditions are nevertheless “standard” because they are regularly applied by district courts when a defendant meets the specific qualifying factors listed in the Sentencing Guidelines.
See United States v. Jacques,
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In
United States v. Asuncion-Pimental,
the Second Circuit recognized that the Sentencing Guidelines’ identification of the conditions enumerated in § 5D1.3(d) as “special” does not foreclose the possibility that a district court may properly include them in its judgment without orally informing the defendant of the conditions at the sentencing hearing.
See
While the “standard” conditions provided in § 5D1.3(c) are presumed suitable in all cases, the suitability of the conditions provided in § 5D1.3(d) may be contingent on the presence of specific factors in each сase. Where these factors are present, however, these “special” conditions are no different in practical terms from “standard” conditions, that is, they are generally recommended.
Specifically, § 5D1.3(d)(l) of the Sentencing Guidelines makes the following recommendation to federal district courts:
If the instant conviction is for a felony, or if the defendant was previously convicted of a felony or used a firearm or other dangerous weapon in the course of the instant offense — [impose] a condition prohibiting the defendant from possessing a firearm or other dangerous weapon.
Neither side disputes that Torres-Aguilar pleaded guilty to the felony of illegally reentering the United States after previously being deported. Therefore, “[i]n these circumstances, the ‘special’ condition recommended in § 5D1.3(d)(l) is as standard as those conditions in § 5D1.3(c),” which the Sentencing Guidelines specifically refеr to as the “standard” conditions of supervised release.
Asuncion-Pimental,
Torres-Aguilar attempts to distinguish
Asunciorir-Pimental
from the instant case, noting that the Second Circuit’s holding involved a condition in the judgment barring a felon from possessing a “firearm,” not a “dangerous weapon.” Without question, the Sеcond Circuit found support for its conclusion that the firearm prohibition, found in § 5D1.3(d)(l), was a standard condition of a felon’s supervised release because “the specific condition that Defendant not possess a firearm is largely only a clarification of the more general mandatory condition that he not break the law.”
Id.
at 94. Despite Asuncion-Pimental’s reference to the illegality of a felon’s possessing a firearm, later cases have clarified that this was not the dispositive factor in the case. Instead, the Second Circuit has extended its holding to encompass all of the conditions of supervised release recommended in § 5D1.3(d), as long as the defendant meets the specific prerequisites enumerated by the Sentencing Guidelines.
See, e.g., United States v. Thomas,
We are persuaded by the logic of the Second Circuit’s rule. If the district court orally imposes a sentence of supеrvised release without stating the conditions applicable to this period of supervision, the judgment’s inclusion of conditions that are mandatory, standard, or recommended by the Sentencing Guidelines does not create a conflict with the oral pronouncement. Instead, “ ‘[t]he written judgment simply clarifie[s] the meaning of that sentence by specifying what the supervision [is meant] to entail.’ ”
Warden,
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the defendant’s judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Torres-Aguilar does not also argue that the judgment’s prohibition on his possessing either a firearm or a destructive device conflicts with the oral sentence; instead, because federal law prohibits cоnvicted felons from possessing both types of devices, he concedes that these are mandatory conditions of a felon's sentence that need not be orally pronounced.
See United States v. Asuncion-Pimental,
. We do not address Torres-Aguilar's alternative claim — that the “dangerous weapon” prohibition is unreasonable and overly broad— because he has abandoned this argument by only briefly mentioning it in a single footnote of his opening brief, without providing any legal citations or analysis. See
United States v. Green,
. Our conclusion is reinforced by this court’s recent observation, in
Vega,
that the “Mandatory and Standard Conditions of Supervision” set forth in judgment form AO 245B have been formally adopted as the standard conditions of supervised release in the Southern District of Texas.
