Defendant-appellant William A. Dietz pled guilty to twenty-eight counts of fraud, conspiracy, and the like, implicating, inter alia, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 371, 1001, 1341 (1988) and 42 U.S.C. §§ 408(g)(2), 1383a (1988). The district court computed the guideline sentencing range (GSR) and sentenced Dietz within it. 1 On appeal, Dietz challenges the court’s determination of the GSR in three respects. Finding the assigned errors to be lacking in merit, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Inasmuch as the underlying conviction resulted from a guilty plea, we draw the facts necessary to place this appeal into perspective from the uncontested portions of the Presentence Investigation Report (PSI Report),
see
U.S.S.G. § 6A1.2, and the transcript of the sentencing hearing,
see United States v. Iguaran-Palmar,
*52 Appellant’s youngest child, Gregory, is profoundly disabled as a result of birth defects and subsequent complications. In 1977, shortly after Gregory was born, the appellant filed forms with the Social Security Administration (SSA) indicating, falsely, that he was providing no income to the familial household and that he did not anticipate providing any income in the foreseeable future. The following year, Dietz’s wife, Irene, filed forms with the SSA indicating that Dietz no longer lived with the family or provided any support, and that his whereabouts were unknown. These statements, too, were apocryphal. In each subsequent year up to and including 1989, Mrs. Dietz submitted forms perpetuating the same spurious scenario. Throughout this period, the appellant, although venturing out of state on occasion, resided primarily in the family home. He and his wife regularly received legitimate income from wages (some earned under an alias) and not-so-legitimate income from falsified unemployment claims. All told, Mr. and Mrs. Dietz euchred $59,498.93 from the SSA by means of their meretricious conduct. 2
During the latter part of this time frame, Dietz also exercised his considerable talent for cozenage by masterminding another scheme, this time defrauding not only the federal government, but seven state employment security agencies as well. In the course thereof, appellant, his wife, and their son, Christopher, filed false unemployment claims. Christopher and his brother, Kenneth, assisted in retrieving the benefit checks from a network of post office boxes, many rented under pseudonyms. Dietz’s daughter-in-law, Lisa, who was employed from time to time by different banks, used her position to help in cashing the checks. In all, the unemployment insurance scam netted a total of $158,717. 3
II. ROLE IN THE OFFENSE
Appellant’s first assignment of error concerns the district court’s enhancement of his offense level based on the pivotal role he played in spinning the web of familial fraud. Because role-in-the-offense determinations are necessarily fact-specific, “considerable respect [must] be paid to the views of the nisi prius court.”
United States v. Ocasio,
U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a) provides for an increase of four levels “[i]f the defendant was an organizer or leader of a criminal activity that involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive....”
See, e.g., McDowell,
At the root of appellant’s objection are two problematic contentions: (1) that there must be at least five persons involved before a criminal scheme can be deemed “extensive,” and (2) that only those individuals who are active participants in the scheme may be aggregated for purposes of U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a). In mounting these contentions, the appellant relies almost exclusively on
United States v. DeCicco,
In assessing whether an organization is “otherwise extensive,” all persons involved during the course of the entire offense are to be considered. Thus, a fraud that involved only three participants but used the unknowing services of many outsiders could be considered extensive.
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1, comment, (n.2). Furthermore, once the irreducible minimum of two (the defendant and some other criminally responsible participant) has been met, the extensiveness of a criminal activity is not necessarily a function of the precise number of persons, criminally culpable or otherwise, engaged in the activity. Bather, an inquiring court must examine the totality of the circumstances, including not only the number of participants but also the width, breadth, scope, complexity, and duration of the scheme.
This is not to say that a head count is either irrelevant or unimportant. In most instances, the greater the number of people involved in the criminal activity, the more extensive the activity is likely to be. Thus, while we do not feel any compulsion to determine the number of participants in *54 these criminal schemes with exactitude, we think it is significant that the offenses of conviction involved the appellant himself, three other criminally culpable individuals (Irene, Christopher, and Lisa Dietz, all of whom were found guilty of charges arising out of the schemes in question), Kenneth Dietz, 7 and countless employees of the government offices that processed the bogus claims. When these sheer numbers are coupled with other relevant facts—the course of criminal activity spanned twelve years, crossed into seven states, 8 utilized many fictitious identities, infiltrated two distinct sets of programs, and snared eight different governmental agencies in its intricately spun web—extensiveness becomes apparent. Unless ordinary language is to lose all meaning, the district court did not err in finding that Dietz’s course of conduct was sufficiently extensive to warrant a four-level increase.
III. AMOUNT OF LOSS
Appellant’s second ground for appeal concerns the eight-level upward adjustment which the district court imposed because more than $200,000 was extracted from public coffers through the appellant’s machinations. See U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b)(l)(I) (in respect to fraud crimes, add eight levels for losses ranging from $200,000 to $350,-000). We need not reach the substance of the appellant’s argument because his right to appellate review has not been preserved. We explain briefly.
In his written objections to the PSI Report and at sentencing, Dietz contested the loss calculation on the basis that, if the money legitimately obtainable from the SSA on Gregory’s behalf were subtracted from the money fraudulently obtained, the net amount of the loss would be less than $200,000. He did not, however, proffer any reliable calculation of the benefits that Gregory might lawfully have been eligible to receive.
See supra
note 2. The district court rejected Dietz’s asseveration, ruling that the loss calculation need only be approximate, given the available information; that the methodology followed in the PSI Report (which did not differentiate between fraudulently obtained and legitimately obtainable benefits) was satisfactory; and that the Report’s estimate of the loss was sufficiently accurate to be relied upon for sentencing purposes.
See
U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1, comment, (n. 8) (sentencing court “need only make a reasonable estimate of the range of loss, given the available information”);
see also
U.S.S.G. § 6A1.3 (sentencing court may consider pertinent information possessing “sufficient indicia of reliability to support its probable accuracy”). In his appellate brief, Dietz failed to renew this objection. He thereby waived it.
See United States v. Zannino,
In lieu of the point previously presented and abandoned, Dietz now seeks to challenge the district court’s loss computation on two new bases. First, he argues that, when his wife fed the SSA false information concerning his whereabouts and level of support, she embarked on a scheme distinct from his own fraudulent conduct; thus, Dietz theorizes, the profit accruing from her “separate” scheme should not be counted against him. Second, he asserts that the funds which his son, Christopher,
*55
obtained through fraudulent unemployment insurance claims while in college likewise resulted from an independent frolic, the avails of which should not be laid at Dietz’s doorstep. These neoteric arguments bear no substantial relation to the basis for objection raised by the appellant in the district court. That, then, ends the matter. We have repeatedly ruled, in connection with sentencing as in other contexts, that arguments not seasonably addressed to the trial court may not be raised for the first time in an appellate venue.
See, e.g., United States v. Uricoechea-Casallas,
IV. CRIMINAL HISTORY CALCULATION
Dietz’s final lamentation focuses upon the addition of three points to his criminal history score. The district court assessed one point based on Dietz’s prior conviction for nonsupport,
see
U.S.S.G. §§ 4Al.l(c), 4A1.2(c)(l), and two more points because Dietz was in the midst of a period of probation on the nonsupport conviction and, therefore, “committed the instant offense while under [a] criminal justice sentence.” U.S.S.G. § 4Al.l(d);
see generally United States v. Gallego,
In his written opposition to the PSI Report, Dietz objected to the probation officer’s description of his conviction for nonsupport, stating that “at the time [he] entered a plea of guilty ... he was not represented by counsel_[and] that ... entry of that plea was done under duress and by threat of immediate incarceration.” In response to this objection, the PSI Report was revised. The amendment asserted that “[t]he defendant waived his right to counsel and represented himself.” The inclusion of this statement in the PSI Report cloaked the stated fact with a sufficient indicium of reliability to support its accuracy and warrant reliance by the sentencing court.
See United States v. Figaro,
On appeal, Dietz wisely abjures any complaint anent the district court's failure to depart downward.
See United States v. Harotunian,
V. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Inasmuch as the appellant has failed to show any cognizable impropriety in the district court’s construction of the GSR, his conviction and sentence must be
Affirmed.
Notes
. Sentencing took place on February 13, 1991. Dietz was sentenced to thirty-five months in prison (near the GSR’s midpoint), followed by three years of supervised release. He was also directed to make restitution in the amount of $161,477.93 and ordered to pay a special assessment of $1,400.
. To be sure, appellant might legitimately have been entitled to receive some amount of money for Gregory’s care through the social security supplemental income program during this time period. The record does not contain a reliable calculation of the difference between Dietz's likely entitlement and the admittedly larger amount that he actually received by fraudulent means.
. The record reflects that the appellant himself made sixteen ersatz claims, using sixteen different social security numbers and fourteen cognomens, against six states. These claims netted him $101,745. Four claims filed by Irene Dietz accounted for $23,317. Six claims filed by Christopher Dietz brought in the remaining $33,652. (Although these figures aggregate $3 less than the total take envisioned in the PSI Report, the difference scarcely seems significant.)
. If a defendant is an organizer or leader of a smaller, less farflung criminal cabal, the guidelines dictate an upward adjustment of two levels. See U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(c).
. The appellant also argued below that applying section 3Bl.l(a) in his case would produce an impermissible "double counting” effect because his offense level had already been boosted by two levels under U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(2), a separate guideline provision which directs an increase when crimes rooted in deceit involve "more than minimal planning,” or "a scheme to defraud more than one victim." This ground not having been pursued on appeal, we deem it abandoned.
See United States v. Zannino,
.Although
DeCicco
arose under U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(c), the Seventh Circuit’s discussion of the need for involvement of at least one other criminally culpable individual spanned all three subsections of section 3B1.1.
See DeCicco,
. The district court declined to classify Kenneth Dietz as criminally culpable notwithstanding his participation in the collection and cashing of fraudulently procured checks. But as we have pointed out, a participant need not be criminally culpable before his presence can be factored into the section 3Bl.l(a) calculus. By the same token, although the district court did not list all the participants in the criminal activity by name, there was no need to do so. Given that at least three criminally responsible individuals other than the appellant were readily identifiable, and that the accouterments of extensiveness were apparent, no more was exigible.
. At oral argument, the appellant’s counsel stressed that the appellant had sometimes been physically present in other states for reasons unrelated to effectuation of the fraudulent unemployment insurance scheme, thus setting the stage for the involvement of so many different agencies. It seems to us immaterial, however, whether Mohammed went to the mountain, or the mountain to Mohammed. We cannot fathom how the peripatetic nature of Dietz’s existence might undermine the district court’s finding of extensiveness.
. We have previously refrained from a gratuitous exploration of the interrelationship between the
Baldosar
doctrine and the federal sentencing guidelines,
see United States
v.
Unger,
. U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2(c)(l) specifically lists “[n]on-support” as a covered offense, so long as the sentence imposed "was a term of probation of at least one year or a term of imprisonment of at least thirty days....”
