This sеntencing appeal concerns primarily the issue of whether a condition of supervised release, omitted from the oral pronouncement of sentence, may be included in the writtеn judgment of conviction and sentence. The condition restricts the Defendant’s employment. Vassilios K. Handakas appeals from the May 20, 2002, judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Nеw York (Jack B. Weinstein, District Judge) resentencing him after a remand from our Court. We conclude that the omission of the condition from the oral sentence was error, that the error was probably harmless, but that it would be prudent to remand the sentence to afford the District Court an opportunity to reconsider imposition of the employment condition after hearing the objection of the Defendant. The Appellant’s remaining contentions have been rejected in a summary order filed this date. We therefore remand for reconsideration of the employment condition and affirm thе conviction and all other aspects of the sentence.
Background
Handakas was originally convicted, following a jury trial, of one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, one count of conspiracy to launder the proceeds of a mail fraud, two counts of illegally structuring financial transactions in order to evade reporting requirements, one count of failure to file a currency report, one count of making a materially false representation, and one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States. The mail fraud conspiracy cоncerned work done for the New York City School Construction Authority (“SCA”) by a construction company owned by Handakas. That company had violated New York’s requirement of a “prevailing rate оf wage” and other construction contract requirements.
See United States v. Handakas,
On appeal, this Court reversed the convictions on the mail fraud conspiracy count, the money laundering conspiracy count, and one of the two structuring counts (the surviving count to be determined by the District Court), and affirmed the convictions on the remaining counts.
Handakas I,
Discussion
Handakas contends that the written judgment is erroneous because it included an occupational condition omitted from the oral pronouncement of sentence. He relies on Rule 43(a)(3) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which requires that the defendant be present at sentencing. Reasoning from this requirement, we have ruled that in the event of a conflict between the oral pronouncement of sentence and the written judgment, the oral pronouncement “generally controls” because the defendant is present at the announcement of the sentence, but not when the judgment is later entered.
United States v. DeMartino,
However, we have not rigidly disregarded all conditions of supervised release later included in a judgment but omitted from the oral pronouncement of sentence. Initially, we permitted the later inclusion of conditions listed as “[m]andatory” or “stаndard” in subsections 5D1.3(a) and (c) of the Sentencing Guidelines.
See Truscello,
*118 The occupational restriction in our case is not a “mandatory” or “standard” condition listed in subsections 5D1.3(а) and (c), nor a “recommended” condition listed in subsection 5D1.3(d). And it clearly is not a basic requirement for the administration of supervised release. However, occupational restrictions are listed as item (4) in subsection 5D1.3(e). These subsection 5D1.3(e) conditions “may be appropriate on a case-by-case basis.” U.S.S.G. § 6D15(e).
The Government seeks to bring this case within
Asuncion-Pimental
by taking out of context the following sentence in
United States v. Cutler,
Thus, the inclusion in the judgment of the occupational restriction omitted from Handakas’s oral sentence does not comport with the requirements of Rule 43(a)(3). Nevertheless, the Gоvernment contends, with considerable force, that the error is harmless because the condition was included in the oral pronouncement of the original sentence and the Defendant thеn voiced no objection to it. According to the Government, the Defendant could have expected the condition to be reimposed at resentencing and had an opportunity to offer any objection at that time. The Defendant responds that the vacation of the mail fraud conspiracy conviction has eliminated the justification for the condition, see id. § 5F1.5(a), becаuse that offense was the only one “that touched upon his management, supervision or work in the construction industry.” Brief for Appellant at 7.
We are inclined to disagree that the condition was nо longer appropriate. Even though the prior appeal determined that the legal requirements for a conviction on the mail fraud count were not established, Judge Weinstein was entitlеd to conclude by a preponderance of the evidence, and did conclude, that Handakas had acted wrongfully in his dealings with the SCA. At resentencing, in considering the appropriate offense level under the Sentencing Guidelines for the structuring conviction that Judge Weinstein elected to retain, he pointedly disagreed with defense counsel’s contention that the structured funds could not be considered to have come from an unlawful source: “[The money] was earned illegally by under paying deliberately and violating the state statute.”
Thus, it appears that, after the mail fraud conviction was vacated, Handakas had an opportunity to contend that he had not acted unlawfully in his construction activities. And knowing that the employment condition had previously been imposed, he could have fairly apprehended that it was likely to be reimposed. These circumstances render the error in omitting the condition from the oral sentence very likely harmless.
Cf. United States v. Pagan,
Nevertheless, we recognize that a defendant’s argument against an adjusted of *119 fense level calculаtion is not necessarily a substitute for his opportunity to contest the imposition of a non-standard condition of supervised release. Without determining the range of circumstances in which a remand might be appropriate to reconsider a provision in a judgment omitted from an oral sentence, 1 we conclude that, even if not required, it is prudent in this case to remand for the limited purрose of affording Handakas an opportunity to contest the occupational restriction. Whether after such opportunity the restriction should be reimposed will be within the District Court’s discretion.
Conclusion
The case is remanded for reconsideration of the condition of supervised release restricting the Defendant’s employment. In all other respects the conviction and sentеnce are affirmed.
Notes
. We have previously left this broader issue open. See
Thomas,
