Wesley Dawn pled guilty to charges that he received and possessed a number of films depicting minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. Dawn had made these films in Honduras, where he worked for several years as a schoolteacher. In view of his role as the creator of the films, the district court in sentencing Dawn cross-referenced the guideline for the production of child pornography, which resulted in a substantially higher sentence. Dawn appeals, contending that sentencing him based on conduct that took place outside of the United States is inappropriate absent explicit confirmation that Congress and the Sentencing Commission meant for the laws and sentencing guidelines relating to child pornography to apply extraterri-torially. Dawn was not actually sentenced for production of the films, however; he was convicted on receipt and possession charges alone, and his sentence comports with the statutory mínimums and máximums for those offenses. His production of the films was simply factored into the sentence as conduct relevant to the receipt and possession offenses. This was permissible regardless of whether the proscription against producing *880 child pornography extends beyond the borders of the United States. We therefore affirm Dawn’s sentence.
I.
In July 1995, Dawn dropped off fourteen films for developing at his local grocery store in Spooner, Wisconsin. A film processor conducting a spot check on one of the films noticed that it appeared to contain child pornography, and he notified the police. After reviewing that film, officers obtained an anticipatory search warrant for Dawn’s home. In the meantime, the other thirteen films were processed and returned to Dawn, who was told that the fourteenth (now in the hands of the authorities) was missing. Dawn requested a tracer on the “missing” film and was eventually told that it had been located and would be delivered to him directly by the United Parcel Service. Subsequently, a part-time sheriffs deputy posing as a UPS delivery worker brought the film to Dawn at his home. After Dawn signed for the film, the deputy returned with two investigators to execute the search warrant. Dawn cooperated in the search, providing the officers with between seventy and eighty additional films that he acknowledged producing. The subjects of the films, Dawn explained, were street children in Honduras, who had lived with Dawn in his home there while he was employed as a primary school teacher. The FBI referred fourteen of the films 1 to a pediatrician with expertise in child abuse. She estimated that the children involved were between four or five and twelve years of age. They were engaged in various pornographic activities, and Dawn admitted that an adult hand in the films shown fondling the genitalia of a child belonged to him. The films were stored in boxes labeled “Qualex,” a company that develops eight millimeter films in Texas and California and ships via interstate commerce to drop off sites around the country, including Wisconsin.
Dawn was ultimately charged in a sixteen-count federal indictment. Counts one through fourteen were based on Dawn’s production of the fourteen films, and charged him with violating 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a), which provides:
Any person who employs, uses, persuades, induces, entices, or coerces any minor to engage in, or who has a minor assist any other person to engage in, or who transports any minor in interstate or foreign commerce, or in any Territory or Possession of the United States, with the intent that such minor engage in, any sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing any visual depiction of such conduct, shall be punished as provided under subsection (d), if such person knows or has reason to know that such visual depiction will be transported in interstate or foreign commerce or mailed, or if such visual depiction has actually been transported in interstate or foreign commerce or mailed.
Count fifteen charged Dawn with receipt of the film delivered to him by the undercover deputy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(2), and count sixteen charged him with possessing the fourteen films that he had produced, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B). Dawn pled guilty to counts fifteen and sixteen, but stipulated in his plea agreement that he would be sentenced on the basis of all relevant conduct as defined by United States Sentencing Guidelines section 1B1.3. R. 26 at 2. The parties also stipulated that the films were produced entirely in Honduras and then transported by Dawn to the United States, where they were developed. R. 24.
Several Guidelines sections were important at Dawn’s sentencing. Section 2G2.2, which pertains to “Trafficking in Material Involving the Sexual Exploitation of a Minor,” applied to Dawn’s receipt of the film delivered to him by the undercover deputy. It establishes a base offense level of 15 and provides for several enhancements that may have applied to Dawn’s conduct. Section 2G2.4 applies to possession of child pornography, and establishes a base offense level of 13, also with several enhancements that may have applied to Dawn’s offense. Both sections also pro *881 vide for cross-referencing to section 2G2.1, the guideline that applies to production of child pornography “[i]f the offense involved causing, transporting, permitting, or offering or seeking by notice or advertisement, a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of such conduct.” U.S.S.G. §§ 2G2.2(e)(1), 2G2.4(c)(1) (Nov.1995). It was in Dawn’s interest to avoid the cross-reference, because section 2G2.1 establishes a much higher offense level of 25, and imposes greater enhancements than the other sections. 2
Overruling Dawn’s objections to the cross-reference, the district court applied the production guideline. The base offense level of 25 specified by section 2G2.1(a) was increased by four levels because the offense involved minors under the age of twelve (§2G2.1(b)(1)), and by another two levels because the children Dawn had exploited were under his custody, care, and supervisory control (§2G2.1(b)(2)). The multiple counts provisions of section 2G2.1(c)(1) and section 3D1.4 added five more levels. A three level reduction for acceptance of responsibility (§3E1.1) resulted in a final adjusted offense level of 33. For someone like Dawn with no prior criminal history, the Guidelines specified a sentence of 135 to 168 months. The district court rejected Dawn’s request for a downward departure, and ordered Dawn to serve a prison term of 120 months (the statutory maximum) on the receipt charge and a consecutive term of 36 months on the possession charge. See U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2(d).
II.
Dawn contends that the district court erred in applying the cross-reference to section 2G2.1, because he produced the films outside of the United States. He contends that the guidelines should not be applied to foreign conduct unless Congress or the Sentencing Commission has been explicit about doing so.
3
This is strictly a legal issue, and so our review is de novo.
E.g., United States v. Garcia,
We note at the outset that Dawn’s appeal focuses solely on the fact that the pertinent films were produced on foreign soil. He makes no argument that cross-referencing is otherwise improper. As we have mentioned above, the trafficking and possession guidelines both compel cross-referencing to the production guideline when “the offense involved causing, ... [or] permitting ... a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of such conduct.” U.S.S.G. §§ 2G2.2(e)(1), 2G2.4(c)(1). 4 As the government points out, the term “offense” is defined broadly to include not only the offense of conviction (in this case the receipt and possession of the pornography), but also all conduct deemed relevant by section 1B1.3. U.S.S.G. § 1B1.1 (comment.) (n. 1(l)). We have no difficulty agreeing that Dawn’s exploitation of the minors depicted in the films he subsequently received and possessed would constitute “relevant conduct,” and indeed (the extraterritoriality question aside) Dawn does not argue otherwise. See, e.g., *882 U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(l). 5 So understood, Dawn’s receipt and possession offenses without question “involved” the exploitation of minors, bringing into play the cross-reference to the production guideline (section 2G2.1).
None of the guidelines we have discussed makes the relevance of the defendant’s conduct turn on whether that conduct took place within or without the borders of the United States. The Sentencing Commission’s definitions of “offense” and “relevant conduct,” as well as the terms of the cross-referencing provisions, focus instead upon the factual and logical relationship between the offense of conviction and the defendant’s other acts, wherever they may have occurred. On their face, then, these guidelines would appear to permit (indeed, direct) the sentencing court to consider conduct that culminates in or is otherwise relevant to the offense of conviction, even if that conduct took place in another country. No other guideline specifies differently.
6
Thus, unless some independent principle bars the consideration of foreign acts, the cross-reference was not only permissible, but required.
See United States v. Corbin,
Dawn’s claim that the cross-reference was improperly based on conduct that took place outside of this country looks for support to the case law concerning the extraterritorial reach of United States law. Generally speaking, Congress has the authority to apply its laws, including criminal statutes, beyond the territorial boundaries of the United States, to the extent that extraterritorial application is consistent with the principles of international law.
See EEOC v. Arabian American Oil Co.,
*883
Essentially, Dawn’s theory is that because Congress has not made clear a wish for the statute that section 2G2.1 of the Guidelines implements — 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a) — to apply extraterritorially, the cross-reference to this production guideline was improper.
8
Two circuits have rejected Dawn’s argument on its terms, finding that section 2251(a) (and consequently the corresponding guideline) does reach the conduct of American nationals abroad.
United States v. Harvey,
But whether or not section 2251(a) criminalizes the pornography-related exploitation of minors in foreign countries by American citizens is ultimately immaterial. We would have to confront that question if Dawn had actually been convicted on any of the first fourteen counts of the indictment, which charged him under this statute. But Dawn did not plead guilty to these charges, and they were dismissed. The two charges to which he pled guilty are based on conduct that coneededly took place within this country.
Dawn’s extraterritoriality argument assumes that because he was sentenced
as if
he were convicted for producing the pornography, he was sentenced in fact
for
producing child pornography. This is the fatal flaw in his argument. Time and again, we have been presented with arguments that the Sentencing Guidelines, when they take into account conduct beyond the offense of conviction, deprive the defendant of the panoply of constitutional and other rights associated with criminal trials. Time and again, those arguments have failed.
E.g., United States v. Miner,
Dawn has not been sentenced for producing child pornography simply because the district court cross-referenced the production guideline. The cross-reference merely implements the common sense notion that a receiver or possessor who has manufactured the pornography in his possession is both more culpable and more dangerous than one who has received or possessed the pornography and no more. Correctly understood, Dawn has been sentenced for receiving and possessing the pornography that he produced, in the same way that Willie Corbin, for example, was sentenced for possessing the gun that he used to commit aggravated assault.
See Corbin,
As Dawn points out, the Second Circuit has in two cases excluded “foreign crimes” from the realm of relevant conduct,
see United States v. Azeem,
III.
Because Dawn produced the child pornography that he pled guilty to receiving and *886 possessing, the Sentencing Guidelines required that he be sentenced using the production guideline. The fact that Dawn made the films outside of the United States is immaterial for the reasons we have discussed. We conclude, therefore, that the district court applied the Sentencing Guidelines correctly and Affirm Dawn’s sentence.
Notes
. Whether these were the same fourteen films that Dawn sent for developing in July 1995 is not clear.
. Guidelines section 2G2.1 would have applied to the conduct charged in counts one through fourteen of the indictment, which were dropped after Dawn pled guilty to counts fifteen and sixteen.
. Dawn also argues that sentencing on the basis of his conduct abroad would violate his due process rights because he lacked notice that he would be held responsible for that conduct. Dawn Br. 16. He has left this argument undeveloped, however, and consequently we need not address it.
See
Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(6);
see also, e.g., Bratton v. Roadway Package Sys., Inc.,
. The commentaiy accompanying the trafficking guideline emphasizes that "[t]he cross-reference in [subsection] (c)(1) is to be construed broadly to include all instances where the offense involved employing, using, persuading, inducing, enticing, coercing, transporting, permitting, or offering or seeking by notice or advertisement, a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing any visual depiction of such conduct.” U.S.S.G. § 2G2.2 (comment.) (n.3).
. We consequently need not consider whether there might be some circumstances — for example, an extended period of time between the production of the pornography on the one hand and on the other hand the possession ultimately culminating in the arrest — under which it would be inappropriate to consider the production as conduct relevant to the offense of possession or receipt.
See generally United States v. Sykes,
.
But see United States v. Azeem,
. Bowman
recognizes an exception to the presumption against extraterritorial intent for "criminal statutes which are, as a class, not logically dependent on their locality for the government’s jurisdiction, but are enacted because of the right of the government to defend itself against obstruction, or fraud wherever perpetrated, especially if committed by its own citizens, officers, or agents.”
. Dawn actually phrases his argument somewhat differently. Analogizing to the cases that address the extraterritorial application of U.S. statutes, Dawn suggests that a cross-referencing guideline like section 2G2.2(c)(1) or 2G2.4(c)(1) is only properly applied to foreign conduct if it is clear that the Sentencing Commission affirmatively intended for the guideline to reach conduct taking place outside of the United States. We think that framing the argument in this way is misleading for several reasons, however. Extraterritoriality principles limit the United States' ability to hold a party to account legally for conduct that occurred beyond its borders. Yet, the Sentencing Guidelines are not laws in the sense that penal statutes are. As we note below, the Guidelines simply narrow and direct the sentencing court's exercise of discretion in selecting an appropriate sentence for violating a given statute. Thus, Dawn was not haled into court under the authority of any guideline, but for violating two statutes (sections 2252(a)(2) and 2252(a)(4)(B) of the criminal code) which coneededly apply to his conduct here in the United States. We recognize, of course, that in cases like this one, where the offense of conviction “involved” conduct that occurred outside of the country, the Guidelines may factor that conduct into the sentencing determination. The Sentencing Commission presumably could, if it wished, adopt an explicit set of rules for that scenario. Cf. U.S.S.G. § 4A 1.2(h) (consideration of sentences resulting from foreign convictions in computation of criminal history). But in the absence of such a provision, we see no reason why the rules governing extraterritorial application of laws — including the presumption against extraterritoriality— should also constrain the operation of the Sentencing Guidelines.
. Dawn’s challenge to the cross-reference is reminiscent of an argument we rejected in
Mason, supra.
There a defendant convicted of possessing a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) was sentenced with reference to the guideline for criminal sexual abuse after the district court determined that the defendant had used the gun to commit forcible rape. The defendant argued that "by enhancing his sentence for rape — a crime of which he was never convicted — the district court essentially tried a rape case over which it ‘had no jurisdiction,' thereby violating his fifth amendment due process rights.”
. In that sense, Dawn is situated no differently than the narcotics trafficker whose sentence is enhanced based on her possession of a firearm in connection with the narcotics offense
(see
U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(b)(1)) without regard to whether possession of the gun, standing alone, was illegal.
See United States v. Corcimiglia,
. As we noted
supra
at n. 6, the Second Circuit reached this conclusion based on Section 4A1.2(h) of the Guidelines, which provides that sentences resulting from foreign convictions will not be counted in calculation of the defendant's criminal history, but may be considered as a basis for an upward departure from the sentencing range under section 4A1.3. The court inferred from this provision that Congress (really, the Sentencing Commission) “has chosen to assign foreign crimes a rather limited role.”
Azeem,
