                                                                      FILED
                                                          United States Court of Appeals
                                                                  Tenth Circuit

                                   PUBLISH                      March 20, 2020
                                                             Christopher M. Wolpert
                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                Clerk of Court

                                TENTH CIRCUIT



 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

       Plaintiff - Appellee,
                                                       No. 18-3045
 v.

 BRANDON THOMAS FINNESY,

       Defendant - Appellant.


                 Appeal from the United States District Court
                          for the District of Kansas
                     (D.C. No. 6:17-CR-10010-EFM-1)


Daniel T. Hansmeier, Appellate Chief (Melody Brannon, Federal Public Defender
with him on the briefs), Office of the Federal Public Defender, Kansas City,
Kansas, for Defendant-Appellant.

Carrie N. Capwell, Assistant United States Attorney (Stephan R. McAllister,
United States Attorney, and Jason Hart, Assistant United States Attorney on the
brief), Office of the United States Attorney, Wichita, Kansas, for Plaintiff-
Appellee.


Before HOLMES, McKAY, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.


HOLMES, Circuit Judge.
      Brandon Thomas Finnesy appeals from his conviction and sentence for

escape from custody. As to his conviction, which was entered upon his guilty

plea, Mr. Finnesy contends that he should be permitted to withdraw his guilty plea

because the magistrate judge who conducted his plea colloquy lacked

“jurisdiction” to accept his plea. As to his sentence, he maintains that the district

court erred in applying the United States Sentencing Guidelines (the “Guidelines”

or “U.S.S.G.”) in his case. For the reasons explicated infra, we disagree.

Accordingly, exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the

district court’s judgment.

                                          I

      In 2015, Mr. Finnesy was charged and convicted of misprision of a felony,

in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 4. 1 He was subsequently sentenced to twenty-eight

months’ imprisonment, with a scheduled release date of March 22, 2017. A few

months prior to Mr. Finnesy’s scheduled release date, in late 2016, he was

transferred to a halfway house to serve the remainder of his sentence. In January

2017, however, Mr. Finnesy left the halfway house and failed to return. Several

weeks later and still at large, Mr. Finnesy was indicted by a federal grand jury on

one count of escape from custody, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 751.


      1
             As the facts underlying Mr. Finnesy’s misprision-of-a-felony offense
are not germane to this appeal (and the parties do not contest these facts), we do
not discuss them herein.

                                          2
      A few days after Mr. Finnesy’s indictment, in early February 2017, Kansas

law enforcement arrested Mr. Finnesy, along with two other suspects, following a

car chase; law enforcement recovered methamphetamine and firearms in the

vehicle and near the scene of the chase. In that connection, a Kansas state court

convicted him of one count of possession of a controlled substance and one count

of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He was sentenced to forty-eight

months’ imprisonment in July 2017, and several weeks later was admitted to a

state correctional facility to begin serving his sentence on these two state

offenses.

      In November 2017, while Mr. Finnesy was serving his state sentence, the

federal government took steps in federal district court to pursue its prosecution of

Mr. Finnesy for his escape-from-custody offense. But several weeks before his

trial was slated to begin on that offense, Mr. Finnesy entered into a plea

agreement with the government, whereby he agreed to plead guilty to escape from

custody. The government, for its part, agreed to recommend the maximum

applicable offense-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, as well as “to

join [Mr. Finnesy] in recommending his sentence be served concurrent to his

[state] sentence”—but with several conditions. R., Vol. I, at 20 (Plea Agreement,

dated Dec. 20, 2017). Specifically, the government’s fulfillment of its obligations

under the plea agreement was contingent on, inter alia, Mr. Finnesy “continuing


                                          3
to manifest an acceptance of responsibility” and not “engag[ing] in additional

criminal conduct” in advance of sentencing. Id. at 20–21. If Mr. Finnesy failed

to adhere to these conditions, the government reserved the right to petition the

court for a hearing to determine if he had breached the plea agreement. Id. If the

district court were to then conclude that he had in fact done so, the government

would be released from its obligations under the plea agreement.

      In connection with his guilty plea, Mr. Finnesy also signed a document

entitled “Consent to Proceed with Guilty Plea Before a United States Magistrate

Judge in a Felony Case.” Supp. R. at 1 (Consent to Proceed Form, filed Dec. 20,

2017). In so signing, Mr. Finnesy affirmatively represented that he had been

informed of his right to “enter” a guilty plea before a U.S. district judge, and that

he was waiving that right and consenting to “enter[]” a guilty plea before a U.S.

magistrate judge. Id.

      A magistrate judge presided at Mr. Finnesy’s plea hearing. During the

hearing, the magistrate judge confirmed that Mr. Finnesy had agreed to have a

magistrate judge “conduct[]” the hearing, and accepted the signed Consent to

Proceed form. R., Vol. III, at 64–65 (Tr. Plea Hr’g, dated Dec. 20, 2017). At the

end of the hearing, Mr. Finnesy pleaded guilty, and the magistrate judge

“accept[ed]” the guilty plea. Id. at 83–84.




                                           4
      In the lead-up to sentencing on Mr. Finnesy’s escape-from-custody

conviction, the parties submitted several filings laying out their recommendations

on Mr. Finnesy’s sentence. These filings included Mr. Finnesy’s Motion for

Downward Variance and Sentencing Memorandum. Therein, Mr. Finnesy

addressed, in relevant part, the parties’ recommendation for a concurrent

sentence, requesting that the district court “impose a sentence concurrent with his

State case that he is presently serving.” Id., Vol. I, at 27–28 (Mot. for Downward

Variance & Sentencing Mem., filed Feb. 21, 2018).

      The day after Mr. Finnesy’s submission of his motion, the United States

Probation Office filed a Presentence Investigation Report (“PSR”) in connection

with Mr. Finnesy’s sentencing on the escape-from-custody offense. As relevant

here, the PSR calculated a base offense level of thirteen under U.S.S.G.

§ 2P1.1(a)(1), 2 and recommended a two-level reduction for acceptance of

responsibility under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a), resulting in a total offense level of

eleven. And, as to the issue of whether Mr. Finnesy’s sentence should run

consecutively to or concurrently with his state sentence, the PSR acknowledged

the parties’ recommendation for a concurrently run sentence, but the PSR itself



      2
             The Probation Office relied on the 2016 edition of the Guidelines in
computing Mr. Finnesy’s Guidelines sentencing range. Mr. Finnesy does not
challenge this decision on appeal. Therefore, in resolving his sentencing
challenges, we also rely on this edition of the Guidelines.

                                          5
made no recommendation on this issue. Rather, insofar as the PSR did address

Mr. Finnesy’s state sentence, it did so in the context of recounting Mr. Finnesy’s

criminal history (including the underlying state offenses) and in assigning

criminal-history points to the state offenses. Mr. Finnesy’s counsel ultimately did

not lodge any objections to the PSR’s above-noted calculations or

recommendations. See R., Vol. II, ¶ 139, at 39 (Modified PSR, filed Feb. 22,

2018); id. (in section of report entitled, “Objections,” noting that “[c]ounsel, for

the defendant, has no objections to the presentence investigation report”).

      Shortly thereafter, the government filed a Motion to Determine Breach of

Plea Agreement (the “motion to determine”). In so moving, the government

explained that it had been informed of Mr. Finnesy’s recent involvement in a

“prisoner altercation” in which he had “possess[ed] a ‘shank’ and us[ed] it to

harm another inmate at the detention facility where [Mr. Finnesy] [was] housed.”

R., Vol. I, at 30 (Mot. to Determine, filed Feb. 28, 2018). These actions, the

government contended, constituted a breach of the plea agreement’s condition that

Mr. Finnesy not “engage[] in additional criminal conduct,” id. (quoting R., Vol. I,

at 20–21), and that this breach, in turn, relieved the government of its obligation

under the agreement “to join [Mr. Finnesy] in recommending concurrent

sentencing with [the state sentence],” id. The government requested that the




                                           6
district court so find, and that it do so at Mr. Finnesy’s upcoming sentencing

hearing.

      To that end, the district court took up the government’s motion to

determine several weeks later at Mr. Finnesy’s sentencing hearing. There, the

government adduced evidence of the alleged prisoner altercation in which Mr.

Finnesy had purportedly used a shank to attack another inmate, including

testimony on the incident, a still shot from a video of the altercation, and the

shank itself. The government argued that based on this evidence, it was clear that

Mr. Finnesy had committed battery, in violation of the plea agreement’s condition

that he not commit additional criminal violations pending sentencing. The

government also presented testimony from a captain at the Butler County

Sheriff’s Office, who averred that Mr. Finnesy had attempted to traffic

contraband by surreptitiously giving prescription medication to another inmate;

this conduct, too, the government argued, constituted a criminal violation, in

breach of the plea agreement. Mr. Finnesy’s counsel rejoined that the video did

not show a shank in Mr. Finnesy’s hand, and that, given the jail setting and “other

surrounding circumstances,” Mr. Finnesy’s actions during the incident in question

did not qualify as battery. Id., Vol. III, at 38–39 (Tr. Sentencing Hr’g, dated Mar.

6, 2018). Mr. Finnesy’s counsel also asserted that the only evidence of

contraband trafficking was “essentially hearsay statements,” in the form of other


                                           7
officers’ reports to which the captain then attested. Id. at 39. The district court

agreed with the government, holding that Mr. Finnesy’s actions involving the

shank constituted battery and that he had trafficked contraband. Then, “on the

basis of this evidence that [the district court] heard,” the court made the following

ruling:

             I am going to grant the [g]overnment’s motion that Mr. Finnesy
             has breached his plea agreement; therefore, [he] is not entitled to
             the acceptance of responsibility reduction of two points in this
             case, and that’s going to adjust his offense level to a level 13,
             criminal history category VI.

Id. at 40. Thus, having determined that Mr. Finnesy breached the plea agreement,

the district court then granted the government’s request that it be released from its

plea-agreement obligation to join Mr. Finnesy in recommending that the instant

sentence run concurrently with the state sentence. The district court concluded its

ruling by asking the parties, “[are there] [a]ny other issues with respect to the

presentence investigation report?” Mr. Finnesy’s counsel responded, “No, Your

Honor.” Id. at 41.

      The court then shifted its attention to other sentencing issues, including, as

relevant here, whether to order that Mr. Finnesy’s sentence on the instant escape-

from-custody offense run consecutively to or concurrently with his undischarged

sentence on his state offenses. The government recommended a consecutive

sentence, emphasizing Mr. Finnesy’s lengthy criminal history.


                                           8
      Mr. Finnesy’s counsel countered that committing an offense while in escape

status deprived Mr. Finnesy of the benefit of U.S.S.G. § 2P1.1(b)(3). This section

typically provides for a four-level reduction for a defendant who (like Mr.

Finnesy) escapes from a halfway house. But there is an exception, which, if

triggered, renders that four-level reduction inapplicable: “if the defendant, while

away from the facility, committed any federal, state, or local offense punishable

by a term of imprisonment of one year or more.” U.S.S.G. § 2P1.1(b)(3). Here,

Mr. Finnesy’s defense counsel noted, his commission of the state offenses while

in escape status implicated that exception, rendering § 2P.1(b)(3)’s four-level

reduction inapplicable. In that regard, in arguing against the imposition of

consecutively run sentences (among other sentencing matters), Mr. Finnesy’s

defense counsel explained that the Guidelines range for Mr. Finnesy’s escape-

from-custody offense was already “higher than most escape, walk-away cases.”

R., Vol. III, at 46. He thus requested that if the court ultimately were to decide

not to run the sentences concurrently, then that it sentence Mr. Finnesy at the low

end of the Guidelines range. See id. at 46–47.

      Having heard the parties’ arguments, the district court announced a

tentative sentence. It began by observing that Mr. Finnesy’s offense level was

thirteen (as modified upon the loss of acceptance-of-responsibility credit), that his

criminal history category was VI, and that this yielded a Guidelines range of


                                          9
thirty-three to forty-one months’ imprisonment. Nonetheless, the court noted that

it intended to impose a sentence of sixty months—reflecting the statutory

maximum sentence—in view of “the inadequacy of his criminal history category,

as well as the nature of his refusal to accept responsibility even on a

going-forward basis.” Id. at 53.

      The district court then took up Mr. Finnesy’s request for a concurrent

sentence. First, the court acknowledged that the government had previously

joined Mr. Finnesy in recommending a concurrent sentence (prior to the

government’s learning of Mr. Finnesy’s alleged altercation with another prisoner,

and then, as a result, asking that it be released from its obligation to join Mr.

Finnesy in that recommendation). Id. at 55. However, the court noted that even

if the government had continued to recommend concurrent sentences, it was “not

sure [it would] have granted that request in any event” because Mr. Finnesy’s

previous convictions on the state offenses did not “really relate[] to the offense

that he‘s being sentenced for here.” Id. Accordingly, the district court

concluded, it was “going to order that his sentence in this case is to be

consecutive to the sentence he’s to serve [for his previous state offenses].” Id.

      The district court solicited objections to the tentative sentence. Mr.

Finnesy’s counsel asserted that “the sentence at the statutory maximum and

consecutive to what he’s already serving is substantively unreasonable, and I


                                           10
would object.” Id. at 56. Mr. Finnesy’s counsel then continued, “I would also

submit that procedurally . . . the sentence is also unreasonable.” Id. The district

court inquired as to “the nature of [counsel’s] procedural objections,” to which he

responded, “[t]he ability of the -- just some of the objections that I had with

respect to the testimony that was brought out in the hearing today.” Id. The

district court stated that it saw no “procedural irregularity” in the conduct of the

hearing, noting particularly that Mr. Finnesy’s counsel received a “full

opportunity” to cross-examine witnesses and make objections during the hearing.

Id. Mr. Finnesy’s counsel advised that he would seek to raise on appeal his

procedural objections “with respect to those issues . . . that went against [him].”

Id. The district court overruled the objections, stating that “the fact that [Mr.

Finnesy’s counsel] lost an objection” was not a “procedural irregularity.” Id.

      The district court then imposed a sixty-month consecutive sentence, in

accordance with its tentative sentence. In doing so, it noted that the PSR had

been “adjusted pursuant to the [g]overnment’s motion which [the district court]

sustained to revoke acceptance of responsibility.” Id. at 57.

      Consistent with its statements at the hearing, the district court entered

judgment, and Mr. Finnesy timely appealed.




                                          11
                                          II

      On appeal, Mr. Finnesy raises three claims of error. The first of these three

claims concerns his conviction, and the second and third claims concern his

sentence. As to Mr. Finnesy’s conviction, he argues that magistrate judges do not

have the authority to accept guilty pleas and adjudicate a defendant guilty, and

that the magistrate judge here thus lacked jurisdiction to enter his guilty plea. As

to Mr. Finnesy’s sentence, first, he argues that the district court, in determining

whether to run the instant offense consecutively to or concurrently with his

undischarged state sentence, erroneously failed to apply U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3(b).

Mr. Finnesy’s second challenge to his sentence posits that the district court erred

in denying him an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment under

U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a) “solely” because the government refused to recommend such

a reduction.

      We reject Mr. Finnesy’s claims in full, and we therefore affirm the district

court’s judgment as to Mr. Finnesy’s conviction and sentence.

                                          A

      We first address Mr. Finnesy’s contention that he is entitled to withdraw

his guilty plea because a magistrate judge lacks “jurisdiction” or “authority” to

“accept a guilty plea” and “adjudicate[] him guilty.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 10,

15. We reject this argument.


                                         12
                                          1

      Before we turn to the merits of this issue, however, we consider the

appropriate standard of review. Mr. Finnesy candidly acknowledges that he did

not raise his challenge to the magistrate judge’s authority before the district court

and that “[t]ypically, when a party fails to raise an issue below, the party has

forfeited the issue, and this Court reviews for plain error.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at

10; see, e.g., United States v. Garcia, 936 F.3d 1128, 1131 (10th Cir. 2019),

petition for cert. docketed, No. 19-7991 (10th Cir. Mar. 16, 2020) (noting that

“[a]s a general matter, arguments not raised before the district court are forfeited

on appeal”); see also United States v. Rosales-Miranda, 755 F.3d 1253, 1258

(10th Cir. 2014) (applying “rigorous” plain-error standard of review to forfeited

error (quoting United States v. Bader, 678 F.3d 858, 894 n.24 (10th Cir. 2012))).

Nevertheless, Mr. Finnesy maintains that plain-error review does not apply here,

because jurisdictional issues cannot be waived or forfeited. Aplt.’s Opening Br.

at 10–12. Therefore, he asks us to review his challenge de novo. See, e.g.,

United States v. Brown, 164 F.3d 518, 521 (10th Cir. 1998) (holding that “[w]e

review [defendant’s] challenge to the district court’s jurisdiction de novo”);

accord United States v. Tolliver, 730 F.3d 1216, 1224 (10th Cir. 2013); United

States v. Kammersell, 196 F.3d 1137, 1138 (10th Cir. 1999).




                                         13
      In support of his argument, Mr. Finnesy relies on two Supreme Court

decisions that, he points out, “expressly refer[] to a magistrate judge’s authority

in jurisdictional terms.” Aplt.’s Br. at 11. The first of these two cases, Gomez v.

United States, took up the question of whether a magistrate judge in a defendant’s

felony case has the authority to preside over jury selection absent the defendant’s

consent. 490 U.S. 858 (1989). In determining that a magistrate judge does not

have such authority, the Gomez Court assessed the proper scope of a magistrate

judge’s duties in terms of “jurisdiction,” asserting that a magistrate judge

“exceeds his jurisdiction by selecting a jury” without the defendant’s consent. Id.

at 865–72, 876 (emphasis added).

      The second case, Peretz v. United States, considered whether a magistrate

judge had the authority to select a jury in a felony case where, in a departure from

Gomez, the defendant had provided consent. 501 U.S. 923 (1991). Again, in

addressing this question—this time answering in the affirmative—the Supreme

Court spoke in terms of “jurisdiction,” explaining that “[w]hen a defendant does

consent to the magistrate’s role, the magistrate has jurisdiction to perform this

additional duty.” Id. at 935–36, 940 (emphasis added). At bottom, Mr. Finnesy

argues the fact that the Gomez and Peretz Courts “expressly refer[red]” to a

magistrate judge’s authority “in jurisdictional terms” underscores that a




                                          14
magistrate judge’s authority is a “jurisdictional issue” subject to de-novo—not

plain-error—review. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 11.

      We reject Mr. Finnesy’s argument. In a long line of cases issued after

Gomez and Peretz (cases that Mr. Finnesy largely elides), this court has

expounded on the meaning of “jurisdiction” as it pertains to a magistrate judge’s

authority. And what those cases have made plain is this: the term “jurisdiction,”

when employed by courts in reference to a magistrate judge’s authority, is not

used in the strict sense of subject-matter jurisdiction.

      We crystallized this proposition the year after Peretz was decided, in Clark

v. Poulton. There, in addressing the implications of a defendant’s failure to

object to a district-court referral to a magistrate judge, we examined “the

jurisdiction and authority of a federal magistrate judge under section 636 [of the

Federal Magistrates Act].” 963 F.2d 1361, 1363 (10th Cir. 1992). In particular,

we looked to the Gomez Court’s use of the term “jurisdiction,” emphasizing that

in that context, “the Court was not using the term ‘jurisdiction’ in the sense of

non-waivable subject matter jurisdiction,” but rather in the sense of “authority.”

Id. at 1366–67 (citing Peretz, 501 U.S. at 953 (Scalia, J., dissenting)). We also

looked to Peretz and determined that, despite its use of the term “jurisdiction,” its

holding—i.e., that a magistrate judge has the authority to conduct jury selection

with the parties’ consent—supported the notion that the magistrate judge’s


                                          15
authority in that context did not implicate subject-matter jurisdiction, because

“litigants cannot confer jurisdiction by consent where none exists.” Id. at 1367

(quoting United States v. Judge, 944 F.2d 523, 525 (9th Cir. 1991)). Accordingly,

we concluded in Clark that “a magistrate judge’s lack of statutory authority is not

a jurisdictional defect, so any objection is waived if not raised.” 3 Id. In other

words, any such objection is not preserved for appellate review.

      Clark, moreover, was hardly a one-off. Since issuing that decision, we

have repeatedly cited it and its progeny—in controlling precedent, as well as non-

precedential decisions—for the proposition that a magistrate judge’s authority is

not jurisdictional. See, e.g., In re Griego, 64 F.3d 580, 583 (10th Cir. 1995) (“A

magistrate judge’s lack of statutory authority is not a jurisdictional defect; thus,

objection to such authority is waived if not timely raised.”). Indeed, we analyzed

issues strikingly similar to those presented here in United States v. Ciapponi (a

case discussed at length below), which applied plain-error review where a

defendant had failed to object to a magistrate judge “taking” his guilty plea. 4 77

      3
             In the interest of semantic precision, we note that Clark predated the
Supreme Court’s United States v. Olano decision, which established a clearer
distinction between waiver and forfeiture. 507 U.S. 725, 733 (1993).
      4
              In attempting to escape the strictures of our precedent, Mr. Finnesy
takes aim at Ciapponi, arguing that although it “indicated that plain error review
applied,” in actuality, it performed a merits analysis, “without any indication that
it actually applied plain error review.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 11–12. This
argument, however, provides Mr. Finnesy no succor. Irrespective of the precise
                                                                        (continued...)

                                          16
F.3d 1247, 1249–50 (10th Cir. 1996). Thus, our precedent forecloses Mr.

Finnesy’s argument. 5

      In sum, Mr. Finnesy failed to properly raise his challenge to the magistrate

judge’s authority in district court—a challenge that we conclude is non-

jurisdictional and, consequently, is subject to our usual forfeiture rules.

Accordingly, we review for plain error.

                                          2

      A party seeking relief under the plain-error rubric bears the burden of

showing “(1) an error, (2) that is plain, which means clear or obvious under

current law, and (3) that affects substantial rights.” United States v. McGehee,

672 F.3d 860, 876 (10th Cir. 2012) (quoting United States v. Cooper, 654 F.3d

1104, 1117 (10th Cir. 2011)); see also United States v. Gonzalez-Huerta, 403

      4
        (...continued)
contours of its analysis, Ciapponi expressly invoked the plain-error framework,
and this fact undercuts, rather than supports, Mr. Finnesy’s argument for applying
a different standard here. Furthermore, rejection of an argument on its merits is
entirely consistent with the plain-error standard, given that one of the standard’s
questions—indeed, its first one—is whether there was any error at all. See, e.g.,
United States v. McGehee, 672 F.3d 860, 876–77 (10th Cir. 2012). Finally, for all
of Mr. Finnesy’s focus on Ciapponi, he fails to address the earlier, and arguably
more robust, analysis of substantially similar issues in Clark, including its
consideration of the meaning of the word “jurisdiction” as used in Gomez and
Peretz, as well as its topline conclusion that “a magistrate judge’s lack of
statutory authority is not a jurisdictional defect.” 963 F.2d at 1367. Accordingly,
Mr. Finnesy’s efforts to chip away at our prior cases are unavailing.
      5
             Because our precedent ultimately answers the question at issue here,
we find no reason to engage with the out-of-circuit cases that Mr. Finnesy cites.

                                          17
F.3d 727, 736 (10th Cir. 2005) (en banc) (noting that a party seeking relief under

plain-error review bears the burden of satisfying the elements of that standard of

review). “As to the plain-error rubric’s second inquiry, we have held that an error

is clear or obvious if ‘it is contrary to well-settled law.’” United States v. Garcia,

946 F.3d 1191, 1202 (10th Cir. 2020) (quoting United States v. Whitney, 229 F.3d

1296, 1309 (10th Cir. 2000)). “In general, for an error to be contrary to

well-settled law, either the Supreme Court or this court must have addressed the

issue.” United States v. Ruiz-Gea, 340 F.3d 1181, 1187 (10th Cir. 2003). “[A]s

to the third inquiry, ordinarily when we say that ‘the error affects substantial

rights . . . [that] ‘usually means that the error must have affected the outcome of

the district court proceedings.’” Garcia, 946 F.3d at 1202 (alterations and

omission in original) (quoting Gonzalez-Huerta, 403 F.3d at 732–33).

      “If these factors are met, [this court] may exercise discretion to correct the

error if (4) it seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of

judicial proceedings.” United States v. Cordery, 656 F.3d 1103, 1105 (10th Cir.

2011); United States v. Winder, 557 F.3d 1129, 1136 (10th Cir. 2009) (“Under the

plain error standard, ‘even if a defendant demonstrates an error that is plain, we

may only take corrective action if that error not only prejudices the defendant’s

substantial rights, but also seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public




                                            18
reputation of judicial proceedings.’” (quoting United States v. Rivas-Macias, 537

F.3d 1271, 1281 (10th Cir. 2008))).

                                          3

       We now turn to the merits of Mr. Finnesy’s first claim on appeal,

challenging his conviction. He argues that the powers granted to magistrate

judges by federal statute and rule do not include the authority to accept guilty

pleas and adjudicate a defendant guilty, and that the magistrate judge here thus

lacked jurisdiction. Accordingly, he contends, he should be permitted to

withdraw his guilty plea. We conclude that Mr. Finnesy has not cleared even the

first hurdle of plain-error review: he has not demonstrated that the district court

erred at all.

       The bedrock authority delineating a magistrate judge’s authority is the

Federal Magistrates Act, and in particular, 28 U.S.C. § 636, entitled “Jurisdiction,

powers, and temporary assignment.” As its title signifies, this statute enumerates

specific “powers” accorded to magistrate judges, such as the power to conduct

certain trials and the power to enter sentences for certain misdemeanors. See 28

U.S.C. § 636(a)(3), (a)(5). In addition to these specified powers, the statute also

provides that a district judge may, with some exceptions, “designate a magistrate

judge to hear and determine any pretrial matter pending before the court,” as well

as “conduct hearings . . . and to submit to a judge of the court proposed findings


                                         19
of fact and recommendations for the disposition.” Id. § 636(b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B).

Of particular note, this statute further provides, under what is referred to as the

“additional duties clause,” that “[a] magistrate judge may be assigned such

additional duties as are not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the

United States.” Id. § 636(b)(3). Finally, § 636(b)(4) provides that “[e]ach district

court shall establish rules pursuant to which the magistrate judges shall discharge

their duties.” Id. § 636(b)(4). The District of Kansas, in turn, has enacted a rule

stating that a magistrate judge may “take a felony guilty plea when the defendant

consents and the district judge does not object.” D. K AN . R. OF P RACTICE &

P ROCEDURE 72.1.1(i)(4).

      Expounding on 28 U.S.C. § 636 and the scope of a magistrate judge’s

duties are several key cases, which we briefly highlight here. As touched on

above, in Gomez, the Supreme Court held that the selection of a jury in a felony

trial without a defendant’s consent is not one of the “additional duties” that

district courts may assign to magistrate judges under the Federal Magistrates Act.

See Gomez, 490 U.S. at 858, 871–72. Then, in Peretz, the Court held that the

Act’s “additional duties” clause permits a magistrate judge to supervise jury

selection in a felony trial provided that the parties consent, on the view that a

defendant’s consent is analytically significant in defining the scope and operation

of that clause. See 501 U.S. at 924–25, 935–36. Peretz observed that Gomez’s


                                          20
holding was narrow and was compelled by the constitutional issue it potentially

engendered as to “whether a defendant has a constitutional right to demand that

an Article III judge preside at every critical stage of a felony trial”; the principle

of constitutional avoidance, Peretz explained, thus led the Gomez Court to

demand clear evidence of Congress’s intent to include among magistrate judge’s

“additional duties” one that “raised a substantial constitutional question” (viz.,

supervision of jury selection in felony trials). Id. at 928–30.

      Finally, there is Ciapponi, which considered Peretz in some depth.

Ciapponi is fatal to Mr. Finnesy’s argument. In Ciapponi, a district judge

designated a magistrate judge to “accept” the defendant’s guilty plea. 77 F.3d at

1249. At the defendant’s plea hearing, the magistrate judge informed the

defendant of his right to “appear before a district judge to enter his plea,” the

defendant then executed a Consent to Proceed form “waiving his right to enter his

plea before a district judge and consenting to proceed before the magistrate

judge,” and ultimately, the magistrate judge conducted the proceedings “and

accepted the defendant’s plea of guilty.” Id. Addressing defendant’s challenge to

his conviction, Ciapponi framed the issue on appeal as “whether the magistrate

judge lacked jurisdiction to accept [the] defendant’s guilty plea.” Id.

Applying plain-error review, the Ciapponi court analyzed Peretz and the

“additional duties” clause, asking whether “the task at issue” bore “some


                                           21
reasonable relation to specified duties which may be assigned to magistrate judges

under the [Federal] Magistrates Act,” and, even if so, whether such a referral to a

magistrate judge “impinge[d] a criminal defendant’s constitutional right under

Article III to have a district court judge preside at all critical stages of a felony

trial.” Id. at 1250. Ciapponi observed that in Peretz, “the Court stressed that the

defendant’s consent was critical to both the statutory and constitutional

inquiries.” Id. It further noted that, in construing the Federal Magistrates Act in

this context—where “the principle of constitutional avoidance” ordinarily is

involved—“when the defendant consents to proceed before a magistrate judge, the

constitutional analysis changes significantly because no constitutional right is

implicated if the defendant does not object to the absence of an Article III judge.”

Id. (citing Peretz, 501 U.S. at 936); see also id. at 1251 (stating that the

defendant’s “failure to object or otherwise request review by the district court

leaves him in no position to now complain that the magistrate judge’s taking of

his guilty plea . . . violated his constitutional rights”). Thus, “[c]onsistent with

Peretz,” Ciapponi held that “with a defendant’s express consent, the broad

residuary ‘additional duties’ clause . . . authorizes a magistrate judge to conduct a

Rule 11 felony plea proceeding, and such does not violate the defendant’s

constitutional rights.” Id. at 1251.




                                           22
      Ciapponi concluded, “neither the Magistrates Act nor Article III requires

that a referral be conditioned on subsequent review by the district judge, so long

as a defendant’s right to demand an Article III judge is preserved.” Id. at

1251–52. In so concluding, the court noted that under the Federal Rules of

Criminal Procedure, defendants have the right to demand an Article III judge, as a

matter of right, by motion to withdraw their guilty plea before sentencing, and

therefore, their right to demand an Article III judge is preserved. Id. at 1252; see

also F ED . R. C RIM . P. 11(d)(2) (providing that defendant may withdraw a guilty

plea between the court’s acceptance of the plea and the imposition of sentence if

“the defendant can show a fair and just reason for requesting the withdrawal”).

      The principles expressed in Ciapponi remain good law in this circuit. Time

and again, this court has continued to hold that a magistrate judge has the

authority to accept a defendant’s guilty plea, provided that the defendant has

given consent to that procedure. See, e.g., Garcia, 936 F.3d at 1138 (“Based on

our precedent, it is clear that in the Tenth Circuit, federal magistrate judges have

the authority to accept felony guilty pleas . . . .”); United States v. Salas-Garcia,

698 F.3d 1242, 1253 (10th Cir. 2012) (“Magistrate judges have the authority to

conduct plea hearings and accept guilty pleas.”); United States v. Montano, 472

F.3d 1202, 1204 (10th Cir. 2007) (“A magistrate judge has jurisdiction to conduct

a plea hearing and subsequently accept a defendant’s plea where the defendant


                                          23
consents.”). In short, Ciapponi instructs that a magistrate judge may accept a

felony guilty plea if the defendant consents, and roundly forecloses Mr. Finnesy’s

argument to the contrary. 6 In the face of this controlling authority, Mr. Finnesy



      6
              Mr. Finnesy drills down on Ciapponi’s language and urges that we
take note of certain of the terms it employs. Most relevantly, he hones in on the
term “conduct,” emphasizing that the opinion’s holding is that a magistrate judge
is authorized to “conduct” a felony plea colloquy. 77 F.3d at 1251 (emphasis
added); see also id. at 1249, 1251 (discussing the issue in terms of “taking” a plea
(emphasis added)). But conducting a change-of-plea colloquy on the one
hand—which, by his reading, is all that Ciapponi countenances—and
“accept[ing] a guilty plea and adjudicat[ing] a defendant guilty” on the other, are
markedly and meaningfully distinct, he argues. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 16–17
(emphases added). A close reading of Ciapponi, however, undercuts Mr.
Finnesy’s argument on this score. First and foremost, in discussing the factual
background of the case, Ciapponi made no mention of the magistrate judge
issuing a recommendation to a district judge, nor did it characterize the magistrate
judge’s participation as limited to “conducting” a plea colloquy. 77 F.3d at 1249.
Instead, it spoke of the magistrate judge “accept[ing] defendant’s plea of guilty”
and did not discuss any further action by the district court (aside from imposing a
sentence). Id.

       We also note that this court’s subsequent cases citing Ciapponi, as well as
at least one out-of-circuit case, frame Ciapponi’s holding in terms of a magistrate
judge’s ability both to conduct a plea hearing and to accept a guilty plea.
Salas-Garcia, 698 F.3d at 1253; Montano, 472 F.3d at 1204; see United States v.
Harden, 758 F.3d 886, 891 (7th Cir. 2014) (observing “widespread agreement”
that a magistrate judge may conduct a Rule 11 colloquy for purposes of making a
report and recommendation, and that the Fourth, Tenth (in Ciapponi), and
Eleventh Circuits further “authorize magistrate judges to accept felony guilty
pleas with the parties’ consent”); see also United States v. Torres, 258 F.3d 791,
795 (8th Cir. 2001) (observing that the Second, Fifth, and Tenth circuits have
ruled that a magistrate judge may preside over an allocution and plea in a felony
case where the defendant consents, and that the Tenth Circuit (in Ciapponi) has
further held that the district court “need not review the proceedings unless the
parties so demand”).

                                         24
cannot satisfy even the first prong of the plain-error framework: he cannot

establish error.

      Yet straining to blunt Ciapponi’s controlling force, Mr. Finnesy contends

that certain post-Ciapponi developments have cast Ciapponi into doubt. Aplt.’s

Opening Br. at 18. Specifically, he focuses on the 2005 enactment of Federal

Rule of Criminal Procedure 59. This rule describes how magistrate judges should

deal with referred matters in criminal cases, dividing them into “nondispositive”

matters and “dispositive” matters. See F ED . R. C RIM . P. 59. Rule 59 defines

“nondispositive” matters as “any matter that does not dispose of a charge or

defense.” As to such matters, the magistrate judge conducts proceedings and

enters an order, and any party may object to the order and have the district court

set aside rulings that are “contrary to law or clearly erroneous.” Id. at R. 59(a).

“Dispositive” matters, meanwhile, include “a defendant’s motion to dismiss or

quash an indictment or information, a motion to suppress evidence, or any matter

that may dispose of a charge or defense.” Id. at R. 59(b). Rule 59 contemplates

that magistrate judges handling such “dispositive” matters conduct proceedings

and make a “recommendation” for the district judge’s acceptance or rejection, and

that the parties then have the right to object to the recommendation under a de-

novo standard of review by the district court. Id. Against this backdrop, Mr.

Finnesy contends that “[t]o the extent Ciapponi can be read to deny relief here,


                                         25
the addition of Rule 59 undermines that reading” by requiring a magistrate judge

to issue a recommendation on the “dispositive” matter of a defendant’s guilty

plea. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 18; see United States v. Jones, 818 F.3d 1091, 1100

(10th Cir. 2016) (stating that a panel may “depart from precedent without en banc

review when an amendment to an applicable rule or statute creates a new

standard”).

      Our recent decision in United States v. Garcia—which squarely addressed

the effect (or more accurately, lack thereof) of Rule 59 on Ciapponi’s

holding—firmly closes the door on Mr. Finnesy’s argument. There, we

determined that Rule 59 had no bearing on our decision in Ciapponi, because

“nothing in the language of Rule 59 indicates that magistrate judges cannot accept

felony guilty pleas when the parties consent,” and “Rule 59 places the discretion

of such authority in the hands of the courts absent explicit instruction otherwise.”




                                         26
Garcia, 936 F.3d at 1139. 7 Therefore, Mr. Finnesy’s arguments concerning post-

Ciapponi developments do not give us pause.

      In sum, Mr. Finnesy has failed to establish that the district court erred in

permitting the magistrate judge to accept his felony guilty plea. Accordingly,

absent a showing of error, much less plain error, we reject Mr. Finnesy’s first

challenge and, consequently, uphold his conviction. We turn to Mr. Finnesy’s

two claims of error as to his sentence.

                                          B

      Turning to Mr. Finnesy’s second claim of error (and the first of his two

challenges to his sentence), he contends that the district court improperly failed to

apply U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3(b) in his case. See Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 9, 19–23.

Specifically, he argues that, had this provision been applied, it would have

required the district court (absent a variance) to impose his federal sentence to

run concurrently with, rather than consecutively to, his undischarged state


      7
              Indeed, there is some suggestion in Rule 59’s drafting history that the
Advisory Committee intended to preserve the approach set forth in Ciapponi. See
Magistrate Judges Committee Agenda for Dec. 2002, at 9–11 (advising against
adopting version of Rule 59 that would specifically include felony guilty pleas
among “dispositive matters,” as doing so would “prohibit the approach taken in
New Mexico and approved by the Tenth Circuit [in Ciapponi],” and stating that it
may be “more appropriate” for courts to be provided with the “flexibility” to,
inter alia, “follow the practice upheld by the Tenth Circuit of having magistrate
judges accept felony guilty pleas with the defendant’s consent, subject only to the
defendant’s right to withdraw the plea”).


                                          27
sentence. Id. at 23. In other words, Mr. Finnesy contends that his consecutive

sentence is the product of the district court’s improper application of the

Guidelines. As such, Mr. Finnesy challenges the procedural reasonableness of the

district court’s sentence. See, e.g., United States v. Gordon, 710 F.3d 1124, 1160

(10th Cir. 2013); United States v. Mollner, 643 F.3d 713, 714 (10th Cir. 2011).

      Typically, “‘we review legal questions regarding the application of the

Sentencing Guidelines de novo,’ and ‘a district court’s factual findings are

reviewed only for clear error, giving due deference to the district court’s

application of the Guidelines to the facts.’” United States v. Iley, 914 F.3d 1274,

1278–79 (10th Cir. 2019) (quoting United States v. Pentrack, 428 F.3d 986, 989

(10th Cir. 2005)). Nonetheless, “[a]s a general rule, when a defendant fails to

preserve an objection to the procedural reasonableness of his sentence, we review

only for plain error.” United States v. Martinez-Barragan, 545 F.3d 894, 899

(10th Cir. 2008).

      As we discuss below, we conclude that Mr. Finnesy has forfeited his

§ 5G1.3(b) challenge to the procedural reasonableness of his sentence, and,

therefore, our review is only for plain error. As to the merits of his claim, we

hold that Mr. Finnesy has failed to satisfy the second element of the plain-error

test—that is, he has failed to demonstrate that the district court clearly or

obviously erred in failing to apply § 5G1.3(b).


                                          28
                                          1

      We are confronted with a threshold question of whether Mr. Finnesy’s

claim of error was forfeited in district court, thereby triggering plain-error review.

Although he did not specifically invoke § 5G1.3(b) in district court, Mr. Finnesy

contends that his general request for a concurrent sentence was sufficient to

preserve his challenge for appeal. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 19. The government

disagrees, arguing that Mr. Finnesy has forfeited his challenge and that it is thus

subject to plain-error review. See Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 10–11.

      We agree with the government. Not only did Mr. Finnesy fail to specify in

the first instance that he objected to the district court’s ruling on § 5G1.3(b)

grounds, but to the extent that Mr. Finnesy’s counsel directed the district court

toward an alleged error, it was not the error that he presents on appeal. That is to

say, Mr. Finnesy’s counsel effectively diverted the district court’s attention from

the alleged error he pursues on appeal. As a consequence, he forfeited this

argument. See, e.g., United States v. Roach, 896 F.3d 1185, 1192 (10th Cir.

2018) (noting that a party forfeits an objection by “stating a different ground at

trial than on appeal”).

      The facts bear out Mr. Finnesy’s failure to adequately alert the district

court to the alleged sentencing error under § 5G1.3(b). As discussed above, in

addressing its tentative federal sentence on the escape-from-custody offense, the


                                          29
district court informed the parties that this sentence would run consecutive to his

state sentence. The court then solicited objections. Mr. Finnesy’s counsel

advised the court that “the sentence at the statutory maximum and consecutive to

what he’s already serving is substantively unreasonable” and that “procedurally . .

. the sentence is also unreasonable.” R., Vol. III, at 56. The district court then

pressed defense counsel to specify the “nature of” his procedural objections. Id.

Mr. Finnesy’s counsel responded that his objections concerned “the testimony that

was brought out in the hearing today.” Id. The district court informed counsel

that it saw no “procedural irregularity” in the conduct of the hearing, and defense

counsel stated that he would seek to argue on appeal “those issues that [he] raised

in [his] objections that went against [him].” Id. The district court overruled his

purported procedural objection, stating that “the fact that [Mr. Finnesy’s counsel]

lost an objection” was not a “procedural irregularity.” Id. That was the extent of

the colloquy with the district court: at no point did Mr. Finnesy’s counsel specify

that he was objecting on the ground that the district court had not applied

§ 5G1.3(b), nor did he even assert (more generally) that a concurrent sentence

was required under the Guidelines based on the factual circumstances here.

Accordingly, Mr. Finnesy (through counsel) forfeited his § 5G1.3(b) argument.

      In arguing to the contrary, Mr. Finnesy’s reliance on United States v.

Tisdale is unavailing. There, while presiding over the defendant’s sentencing


                                          30
hearing, the district court described a tentative sentence and then “asked whether

there were any objections to the proposed sentence.” 248 F.3d 964, 976 (10th

Cir. 2001). Mr. Tisdale’s counsel responded, “[t]he only request, Your Honor,

would be that the [c]ourt consider the lower end of the [G]uidelines. And also, he

is serving a State sentence, but that the [c]ourt make the sentence here concurrent

with the State sentence.” Id. The district court heard “brief arguments” (not

further described in Tisdale) on “this issue” and then ordered a consecutive

sentence. Id. On appeal, we opined that Mr. Tisdale’s objection was not “the

model of specificity” and that it would have been “preferable” for Mr. Tisdale to

have referenced § 5G1.3. Id. at 975–76. We determined, however, that his

argument “sufficiently raised the issue of the imposition of a consecutive versus a

concurrent sentence” and “alert[ed] the district court to the issue at hand,”

including a contention that the district court erroneously applied § 5G1.3. Id. at

976. Thus, we reviewed Mr. Tisdale’s contentions de novo. Id.

      Mr. Finnesy argues that his case is squarely governed by Tisdale: he

reasons that, although he did not invoke § 5G1.3 in district court, he “nonetheless

requested a concurrent sentence,” like Mr. Tisdale’s counsel. Aplt.’s Reply Br. at

6. But we see a significant difference between the facts of Mr. Finnesy’s case

and the facts in Tisdale. In Tisdale, the defendant’s arguable failing was simply

that he asserted his objection to the sentencing error that he later presented on


                                          31
appeal in a somewhat unspecific manner. See Tisdale, 248 F.3d at 976. And we

concluded unremarkably that, though it was not “the model of specificity,” his

objection sufficiently “alert[ed] the district court to the issue at hand.” Id.

However, in sharp contrast here, insofar as Mr. Finnesy alerted the district court

to an issue, he did not alert the court “to the issue at hand,” id. (emphasis added);

that is, it was not the issue that he now presents on appeal. In other words, Mr.

Finnesy’s objection before the district court was not just somewhat vague;

instead, it effectively shifted the district court’s attention away from the supposed

concurrent-consecutive procedural error under § 5G1.3(b) he now alleges on

appeal. Recall that when asked to specify the “nature of” his procedural

objections, R., Vol. III, at 56, Mr. Finnesy told the court that his objections

pertained to “the testimony that was brought out in the hearing today,” id. In

effect, Mr. Finnesy led the court to believe that his objections related to one or

more “procedural irregularit[ies]” in the conduct of the hearing. Id. And, despite

ample opportunity in the context of the court’s questioning to clarify that he

actually found procedural fault in the court’s application of § 5G1.3 and its

resulting decision to run his sentence consecutively, Mr. Finnesy failed to do so.

Instead, he simply complained that the court’s proposed consecutive sentence

would be “substantively unreasonable.” Id. (emphasis added); see United States

v. Smart, 518 F.3d 800, 803 (10th Cir. 2008) (“Our appellate review for


                                           32
reasonableness includes both a procedural component, encompassing the method

by which a sentence was calculated, as well as a substantive component, which

relates to the length of the resulting sentence.”). Accordingly, we believe Mr.

Finnesy’s reliance on Tisdale is misplaced.

      In short, Mr. Finnesy’s procedural objection here did not adequately alert

the district court that its proposed decision to run his federal sentence

consecutively to his state sentence might contravene U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3(b).

Accordingly, we deem this claim of error to be forfeited and apply plain-error

review. See United States v. Gilkey, 118 F.3d 702, 704 (10th Cir. 1997)

(reviewing for plain error a legal question involving application of the Guidelines

where counsel failed to “lodge a specific objection based upon either of the issues

now presented for the first time on appeal”); see also Holguin-Hernandez v.

United States, --- U.S. ----, 140 S. Ct. 762, 767 (2020) (Alito, J., concurring)

(“The plain-error rule serves many interests, judicial efficiency and finality being

chief among them. Requiring a party to bring an error to the attention of the court

enables the court to correct itself, obviating the need for an appeal. At the very

least, the court can explain its reasoning and thus assist the appellate process. A

court cannot address particular arguments or facts not brought to its attention.”




                                          33
(citation omitted)); 8 United States v. Lynn, 592 F.3d 572, 579 n.4 (4th Cir. 2010)

(“Of course, lodging one specific claim of procedural sentencing error before the

district court, e.g., relying on certain [18 U.S.C.] § 3553 factors, does not



      8
              We note that in Holguin-Hernandez, the Supreme Court recently
clarified that the standard of specificity that at least one circuit—the
Fifth—demanded litigants adhere to when lodging certain objections to the
substantive reasonableness of sentences, i.e., the length of sentences, was too
stringent to be consistent with the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. 140 S.
Ct. at 767 (“We hold only that the defendant here properly preserved the claim
that his 12-month sentence was unreasonably long by advocating for a shorter
sentence and thereby arguing, in effect, that this shorter sentence would have
proved ‘sufficient,’ while a sentence of 12 months or longer would be ‘greater
than necessary’ to ‘comply with’ the statutory purposes of punishment.” (quoting
18 U.S.C. § 3553(a))); see id. at 766 (“[It] is certainly true in cases such as this
one, where a criminal defendant advocates for a sentence shorter than the one
ultimately imposed. Judges, having in mind their ‘overarching duty’ under
§ 3553(a), would ordinarily understand that a defendant in that circumstance was
making the argument (to put it in statutory terms) that the shorter sentence would
be ‘sufficient’ and a longer sentence ‘greater than necessary’ to achieve the
purposes of sentencing. Nothing more is needed to preserve the claim that a
longer sentence is unreasonable.” (quoting Pepper v. United States, 562 U.S. 476,
491 (2011))); see also id. at 765 (contrasting our preservation approach in United
States v. Torres-Duenas, 461 F.3d 1178, 1183 (10th 2006), with the Fifth
Circuit’s). However, the Court stressed that it was not speaking to the standard of
specificity properly demanded of litigants filing objections pertaining to the
procedural reasonableness of sentences—viz., “what is sufficient to preserve a
claim that a trial court used improper procedures in arriving at its chosen
sentence” was a subject the Court underscored it “shall not consider.” Id. at 767;
see id. (Alito, J., concurring) (“writ[ing] to emphasize what we are not deciding,”
including the preservation question concerning objections to the procedural
reasonableness of sentences). Mr. Finnesy’s sentencing challenges—both this one
related to § 5G1.3(b) and his subsequent acceptance-of-responsibility challenge
resolved infra—concern the procedural reasonableness of his sentence.
Therefore, Holguin-Hernandez’s holding has no direct bearing on the preservation
standards that we articulate herein.

                                          34
preserve for appeal a different claim of procedural sentencing error, e.g., relying

on different § 3553 factors.”).

                                            2

         We now turn to the merits of Mr. Finnesy’s second claim of error. Recall

that in order to satisfy the rigorous plain-error standard, a party ordinarily must

show “(1) an error, (2) that is plain, which means clear or obvious under current

law, and (3) that affects substantial rights.” McGehee, 672 F.3d at 876 (quoting

Cooper, 654 F.3d at 1117). If that party makes this showing, we may exercise our

discretion to correct the error if (4) “it seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or

public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id. (quoting Cooper, 654 F.3d at

1117).

         Mr. Finnesy contends that, in ordering his federal escape-from-custody

sentence to run consecutively to his undischarged state sentence, the district court

plainly erred because it should have applied § 5G1.3(b) of the Guidelines, which

would have directed the court to run those sentences concurrently. Section 5G1.3,

entitled “Imposition of a Sentence on a Defendant Subject to an Undischarged

Term of Imprisonment” sets out the framework for the imposition of concurrent

and consecutive sentences, and provides as follows :

               (a) If the instant offense was committed while the defendant
               was serving a term of imprisonment (including work release,
               furlough, or escape status) or after sentencing for, but before
               commencing service of, such term of imprisonment, the

                                           35
             sentence for the instant offense shall be imposed to run
             consecutively to the undischarged term of imprisonment.

             (b) If subsection (a) does not apply, and a term of
             imprisonment resulted from another offense that is relevant
             conduct to the instant offense of conviction under the
             provisions of subsections (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) of § 1B1.3
             (Relevant Conduct), the sentence for the instant offense shall
             be imposed as follows:

                    (1) the court shall adjust the sentence for any period of
                    imprisonment already served on the undischarged term
                    of imprisonment if the court determines that such period
                    of imprisonment will not be credited to the federal
                    sentence by the Bureau of Prisons; and

                    (2) the sentence for the instant offense shall be imposed
                    to run concurrently to the remainder of the undischarged
                    term of imprisonment. . . .

             (d) (Policy Statement) In any other case involving an
             undischarged term of imprisonment, the sentence for the
             instant offense may be imposed to run concurrently, partially
             concurrently, or consecutively to the prior undischarged term
             of imprisonment to achieve a reasonable punishment for the
             instant offense.

U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3 (emphases added). The Application Notes to § 5G1.3 clarify

the scope of subsection (b). Specifically, in pertinent part, Note 2 states the

following:

              2. Application of Subsection (b). –

                    (A) In General. – Subsection (b) applies in cases in
                    which all of the prior offense is relevant conduct to the
                    instant offense under the provisions of subsection (a)(1),
                    (a)(2), or (a)(3) of § 1B1.3 (Relevant Conduct). Cases in


                                             36
                    which only part of the prior offense is relevant conduct
                    to the instant offense are covered under subsection (d).

                    (B) Inapplicability of Subsection (b). – Subsection (b)
                    does not apply in cases in which the prior offense was
                    not relevant conduct to the instant offense under §
                    1B1.3(a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) . . . .

Id. § 5G1.3 cmt. n.2.

      Mr. Finnesy contends that the district court committed plain procedural

error because it failed to apply § 5G1.3(b); if it had done so, he says, it would

have run his federal sentence concurrently with his undischarged state sentence

(absent a variance). See Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 21–23; Aplt.’s Reply Br. at 13;

see also United States v. Kieffer, 681 F.3d 1143, 1167 (10th Cir. 2012) (noting

that, where the offense underlying the undischarged sentence was the kind of

relevant conduct that § 5G1.3(b) contemplates, the Guidelines “required the court

to account for U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3(b)(2) and, absent a variance based on the

§ 3553(a) factors, impose a concurrent term of imprisonment on Defendant as part

of any sentence within the applicable guideline range” (emphasis omitted)).

      By Mr. Finnesy’s logic, because the offenses underlying his state

sentence—possession of a controlled substance and possession of a firearm by a

convicted felon—were committed while he was in escape status, the state offenses

are relevant conduct to his federal escape-from-custody offense upon which the

district court sentenced him, and thus the court should have applied § 5G1.3(b)


                                          37
and run his escape-from-custody sentence concurrently with his undischarged

state sentence. See Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 22. In particular, Mr. Finnesy reasons

that his underlying state offenses are relevant conduct of the kind that § 5G1.3(b)

covers because escape is a continuing offense, see, e.g., United States v. Bailey,

444 U.S. 394, 413 (1980); United States v. Brown, 314 F.3d 1216, 1224 (10th Cir.

2003), and he committed his state offenses “during the commission of the

[escape] offense” pursuant to Guidelines § 1B1.3(a)(1)(B). 9



      9
             In full, subsection (a)(1)(B) provides that:

             (B) in the case of a jointly undertaken criminal activity (a
             criminal plan, scheme, endeavor, or enterprise undertaken by
             the defendant in concert with others, whether or not charged as
             a conspiracy), all acts and omissions of others that were–

                   (i) within the scope of the jointly undertaken criminal
                   activity,

                   (ii) in furtherance of that criminal activity, and

                   (iii) reasonably foreseeable in connection with that
                   criminal activity;

             that occurred during the commission of the offense of
             conviction, in preparation for that offense, or in the course of
             attempting to avoid detection or responsibility for that offense
             ...

U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1)(B) (emphasis added). As noted supra, Mr. Finnesy was
not alone when he was apprehended in escape status. Though he does not say so,
presumably this is why Mr. Finnesy invokes the relevant-conduct provision
related to “jointly undertaken activity.”

                                         38
      The government contests Mr. Finnesy’s assertion of plain error. Among

other things, it disputes Mr. Finnesy’s contention that the prior offenses

underlying his undischarged state sentence were relevant conduct at all, and, even

if they were, that they were the kind of relevant conduct that § 5G1.3(b)

contemplates. In particular, the government asserts that the PSR did not consider

the offenses underlying Mr. Finnesy’s undischarged state sentence to be relevant

conduct. In this regard, it notes that the PSR discussed the state offenses in

recounting Mr. Finnesy’s criminal history and assigned criminal history points to

the offenses, see R., Vol. II, ¶¶ 45–48, at 22–23, which it would not have done if

those offenses constituted relevant conduct, see, e.g., United States v. Torres, 182

F.3d 1156, 1159 (10th Cir. 1999) (noting that “a prior sentence counts as criminal

history if it does not involve relevant conduct under § 1B1.3”); accord United

States v. Vargas-Garcia, 434 F.3d 345, 348 (5th Cir. 2005) (noting that “unlike a

prior offense resulting in a prior sentence, relevant conduct that is part of the

instant offense does not create additional criminal history points”).

      The government observes, moreover, that “the district court did not appear

to treat the state conviction as ‘relevant conduct,’” Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 13, in

that it expressly commented that the state offenses underlying that conviction “are

not really related to the offense that he’s being sentenced for here,” R., Vol. III,

at 55. Finally, the government argues that “[e]ven if the state conviction had been


                                          39
considered as ‘relevant conduct,’ it is not clear that, in this case, the possession of

methamphetamine and criminal possession of a firearm conviction should fall

within (a)(1) rather than (a)(4) of” § 1B1.3. 10 Aplee’s Resp. Br. at 13. The

upshot, of course, is that if the state offenses do in fact fall under subsection

(a)(4), then § 5G1.3(b) would not apply because subsection (a)(4) is not one of

the relevant-conduct provisions identified therein. And, in rebutting Mr.

Finnesy’s argument that escape is a “continuing offense,” the government asserts

that “none of those cases [that Mr. Finnesy relies on] addressed whether a new

crime committed during the escape necessarily qualified as relevant conduct under

(a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3) or (a)(4) of USSG 1B1.3.” Id. at 14. In this same vein, the

government suggests that not every crime committed when a defendant is in

escape status will necessarily qualify as relevant conduct under the specific

provisions of § 1B1.3 that § 5G1.3(b) enumerates. Generally speaking, we agree

with the government. 11

      10
             Subsection (a)(4) specifies that—amongst the other variables that
should be taken into account in determining relevant conduct—is “any other
information specified in the applicable guideline.” U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(4). The
Guidelines commentary explains, “[s]ubsection (a)(4) requires consideration of
any other information specified in the applicable guideline. For example, § 2A1.4
(Involuntary Manslaughter) specifies consideration of the defendant’s state of
mind; § 2K1.4 (Arson; Property Damage By Use of Explosives) specifies
consideration of the risk of harm created.” Id. § 1B1.3 cmt. (backg’d).
      11
             Because we do so for the reasons explicated here, we have no
occasion to address the government’s other arguments opposing Mr. Finnesy’s
                                                                    (continued...)

                                           40
      We conclude that Mr. Finnesy has not established that the district court

clearly or obviously erred under the circumstances of this case in not applying

§ 5G1.3(b) and, consequently, ordering his sentence for the federal escape-from-

custody offense to run concurrently with his undischarged state sentence. More

specifically, neither the record nor well-settled law supports Mr. Finnesy

contention that the district court plainly erred in not applying § 5G1.3(b).

      We turn first to examining the merits of his contention in the context of the

record. It is undisputed that (if subdivision (a) does not apply) a district court is

only obliged to apply § 5G1.3(b) where the offenses underlying the undischarged

sentence are relevant conduct as to the offense of conviction (viz., the subject of

the sentencing) and are, more specifically, relevant conduct within the meaning of

subsection (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) of § 1B1.3. Accordingly, if the record before

the sentencing court failed to show that the offenses underlying the undischarged

sentence were relevant conduct and, in particular, were relevant conduct under

subsection (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3), then the sentencing court would not have erred

in failing to apply § 5G1.3(b). What this would then logically mean is that,

viewed through the prism of plain-error review, unless the record clearly or

obviously revealed that the offenses underlying the undischarged sentence were



      11
       (...continued)
second claim of error.

                                           41
relevant conduct and, more specifically, were relevant conduct under subsection

(a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3), then the sentencing court could not have clearly or

obviously erred in failing to apply § 5G1.3(b)—viz., it could not have plainly

erred in failing to apply this provision.

      We conclude that on the record before the district court, it hardly would

have been clear or obvious that the state offenses underlying Mr. Finnesy’s

undischarged state sentence were relevant conduct, or that, even if they were, they

were relevant conduct within the meaning of subsection (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) of

§ 1B1.3. Accordingly, Mr. Finnesy cannot demonstrate that the district court

clearly or obviously erred in failing to apply § 5G1.3(b). Cf. United States v.

Hamilton, 587 F.3d 1199, 1216 n.9 (10th Cir. 2011) (“[E]ven if we applied plain

error review, the fact-dependent nature of Mr. Hamilton’s claims would prevent

us from reaching a conclusion that any error by the district court satisfied the

plain error standard” because, by failing to present his claims to the district court,

“Mr. Hamilton effectively prevented the court from making factual findings that

would be germane to the disposition of [his] claims” and thus, “any alleged errors

could not be deemed to be obvious and clear.”); cf. also United States v. Ceron,

775 F.3d 222, 226 (5th Cir. 2014) (per curiam) (collecting cases for proposition

that plain-error review takes place “based on the record before the district court”).




                                            42
      The PSR left virtually no room for doubt that it did not consider Mr.

Finnesy’s state offenses to be relevant conduct. And, importantly, Mr. Finnesy

raised no objections to the contents of the PSR, see R., Vol. II, ¶ 139, at 39

(“Counsel, for the defendant, has no objections to the presentence investigation

report.”), meaning that the district court would not have been alerted to any

concerns regarding the PSR’s assessment of the scope of relevant conduct.

Specifically, as Mr. Finnesy himself acknowledges, see Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 23,

the PSR never expressly referred to the offenses giving rise to his undischarged

state sentence as relevant conduct, nor did it mention those offenses in the section

of the PSR labeled, “The Offense Conduct,” R., Vol. II, ¶¶ 12–16, at 7 (bold font

and underlining omitted). Instead, as the government indicates, the PSR only

discussed those offenses as part of Mr. Finnesy’s criminal history and assigned

criminal history points to them—an action that would have been at odds with the

view that the offenses were relevant conduct. See Torres, 182 F.3d at 1159.

Indeed, even Mr. Finnesy acknowledges that “a sentence previously imposed for

conduct that is relevant conduct to the instant offense should not receive criminal

history points.” Aplt.’s Reply Br. at 9.

      To be sure, Mr. Finnesy contends that the PSR would not have assigned Mr.

Finnesy a base offense level of thirteen under U.S.S.G. § 2P1.1(a)(1), unless it

considered his offenses underlying his state sentence to be relevant conduct. In


                                           43
this regard, he notes that ordinarily § 2P1.1 provides for a four-level reduction

from the base offense level for defendants who escape from a “non-secure”

facility, like Mr. Finnesy did, see U.S.S.G. § 2P1.1(b)(3) (providing under certain

circumstances for a four-level reduction in the base offense level “[i]f the

defendant escaped from the non-secure custody of a community corrections

center, community treatment center, ‘halfway house,’ or similar facility”), but he

did not receive that reduction. He reasons that this is because the PSR took into

account his state offenses as relevant conduct, and that under the plain terms of §

2P1.1(b)(3), this made him ineligible for the reduction. See id. (“Provided,

however, that this reduction shall not apply if the defendant, while away from the

facility, committed any federal, state, or local offense punishable by a term of

imprisonment of one year or more.”). However, even if we assume that the PSR’s

decision not to give Mr. Finnesy the benefit of the offense-level reduction for

escapes from a non-secure facility means that the PSR tacitly determined that his

state offenses were relevant conduct, that would provide only meager aid to Mr.

Finnesy’s cause. It would not change the fact that the PSR never—not in the

§ 2P1.1 context or otherwise—expressly referred to Mr. Finnesy’s state offenses

as relevant conduct, such that it would have been clear or obvious to the district

court that this was a possibility. Moreover, even if the PSR tacitly determined

that Mr. Finnesy’s state offenses were relevant conduct for purposes of § 2P1.1,


                                         44
that would not have necessarily shed any light on whether those offenses were

relevant conduct within the meaning of subsections (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) of

§ 1B1.3 so as to trigger the application of § 5G1.3(b). And this assumed tacit

determination certainly would not have made it clear or obvious to the district

court that Mr. Finnesy’s state offenses fell within one of the three enumerated

relevant-conduct provisions.

      Thus, based on the PSR—as to which Mr. Finnesy lodged no objection—it

would not have been clear or obvious to the district court that Mr. Finnesy’s state

offenses underlying his undischarged state conviction were relevant conduct, let

alone relevant conduct under subsection (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) so as to trigger

the application of § 5G1.3(b). And there is nothing else in the record to the

contrary. Indeed, it should not be surprising based on the record—as Mr. Finnesy

acknowledges, see Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 23—that the district court made no

findings that his state-law offenses were relevant conduct. To the contrary, as the

government noted, the district court expressly observed that the state offenses

underlying Mr. Finnesy’s undischarged sentence “are not really related to the

offense that he’s being sentenced for here.” R., Vol. III, at 55.

      In sum, the record does not support Mr. Finnesy’s contention that the

district court plainly erred in not applying § 5G1.3(b). Nor does the well-settled

law, as we now turn to discuss.


                                          45
      Mr. Finnesy suggests that—notwithstanding the record’s virtual silence

concerning the matter—the circumstances of his state-law offenses should have

made it clear or obvious to the district court, as a matter of law, that those

offenses were relevant conduct of the kind that § 5G1.3(b) contemplates.

Accordingly, as Mr. Finnesy sees it, the district court committed “reversible

error” when it “failed to account for § 5G1.3(b)” in imposing a consecutive

sentence. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 23. In this regard, Mr. Finnesy reasons that

because his escape-from-custody offense is undisputedly a continuing offense, it

necessarily follows that his state-law offenses—which were committed while he

was in escape status—took place “during the commission of the [escape] offense”

within the meaning of U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1)(B), and that, as such, those offenses

fall within the scope of § 5G1.3(b). See Aplt.’s Reply Br. at 11 (noting that “the

conduct underlying the state sentence [of Mr. Finnesy] fits easily within § 1B1.3’s

definition of relevant conduct,” specifically because that conduct occurred

“during the commission of the offense”).

      However, it is telling—and especially problematic for Mr. Finnesy on

plain-error review—that, in his reply brief, Mr. Finnesy does not challenge the

government’s assertion that “none of those cases [that Mr. Finnesy relies on]

addressed whether a new crime committed during the escape necessarily qualified

as relevant conduct” under the § 1B1.3 subsections specified in § 5B1.3(b) (i.e.,


                                          46
(a)(1)–(a)(3)). Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 14 (emphasis added); see United States v.

A.S., 939 F.3d 1063, 1076 (10th Cir. 2019) (noting that “we are free to conclude

that [the defendant] waived, at the very least, non-obvious arguments against” a

ground for affirmance that “the government highlighted . . . in its responsive

briefing”); accord Eaton v. Pacheco, 831 F.3d 1009, 1031 (10th Cir. 2019). In

any event, our examination of Mr. Finnesy’s cases confirms the truth of the

government’s assertion. Those cases addressed whether escape was a continuing

offense in contexts that are not directly apposite to this one. See Bailey, 444 U.S.

at 412–13 (establishing that escape was a continuing offense, in the context of

determining whether defendant-escapee was entitled to an instruction on duress or

necessity as a defense to the crime charged); Brown, 314 F.3d at 1224 (assessing

whether escape from a county jail was a continuing offense for purposes of

evaluating district court’s imposition of a Guidelines enhancement for possessing

a firearm in connection with another felony); see also United States v. Jones, 332

F.3d 1294, 1303 n.13 (10th Cir. 2003) (cited by Mr. Finnesy solely for the

proposition that, as to Guidelines § 2P1.1, “Congress has recognized that, in some

instances, a prior criminal conviction is relevant in determining the ‘seriousness’

of the offense’”).

      Therefore, Mr. Finnesy has not satisfied his burden under the second prong

of plain-error review because in addition to the absence of record support for his


                                         47
position, he has failed to identify well-settled law—i.e., ordinarily, understood to

be law from the Supreme Court or our court—indicating that the district court

clearly or obviously erred in failing to recognize that Mr. Finnesy’s offenses

underlying his undischarged state sentence were relevant conduct of the kind that

§ 5G1.3(b) contemplates because they took place during the course of Mr.

Finnesy’s continuing offense of escape. See, e.g., United States v. Courtney, 816

F.3d 681, 683 (10th Cir. 2016) (“[I]n all cases, the ‘burden of establishing plain

error lies with the appellant’ . . . .” (quoting Somerlott v. Cherokee Nation

Distribs., Inc., 686 F.3d 1144, 1151 (10th Cir. 2012))); United States v. Knight,

659 F.3d 1285, 1293 (10th Cir. 2011) (“Although Knight points to several cases

in which courts distinguish between actual and constructive possession, he does

not identify any case—much less a Tenth Circuit or Supreme Court

decision—holding that failure to provide a constructive possession instruction is

erroneous. Absent such authority, any claim of error was not plain.”). 12

      In any event, our independent examination of the controlling caselaw

revealed no decisions directly addressing the relevant-conduct question before us,

making it all the more pellucid that the district court’s purported error was


      12
              Mr. Finnesy has asked us not to “consider this [second] prong of
plain error review” because the government does not “make a separate argument”
concerning it. Aplt.’s Reply Br. at 13. However, we reject this request because
as noted in text supra—as the proponent of plain-error review—Mr. Finnesy bears
the burden to establish each element of the standard.

                                          48
anything but “clear or obvious” under the plain-error framework. See Garcia, 946

F.3d at 1210 (where defendant “ha[d] cited no controlling precedent from the

Supreme Court or the Tenth Circuit that establishe[d] [his asserted challenge on

appeal],” and “we are not aware of any[,] . . .[t]his effectively sounds the death

knell for his . . . challenge on plain-error review”).

      We recognize that Mr. Finnesy’s argument under this second prong of

plain-error review also relies in part on “the plain text of § 5G1.3(b) and

§ 1B1.3.” Aplt.’s Reply Br. at 13. And it is true that the plain terms of a statute

or regulation in certain instances can provide the basis for a plain-error finding.

See United States v. Brown, 316 F.3d 1151, 1158 (10th Cir. 2003) (in holding that

the district court clearly or obviously erred in awarding a one-point acceptance-

of-responsibility adjustment under § 3E1.1(a), noting that “the guideline clearly

and obviously is limited to the all or nothing adjustment”); id. (“[T]he absence of

circuit precedent [does not] prevent[] the clearly erroneous application of

statutory law from being plain error.” (alterations in original) (quoting United

States v. Evans, 155 F.3d 245, 252 (3d Cir. 1998))); accord United States v. Poe,

556 F.3d 1113, 1129 (10th Cir. 2009). However, Mr. Finnesy does not elaborate

on this plain-error contention, and we cannot conclude that the plain terms of

§ 5G1.3(b) and § 1B1.3 speak to the consecutive-concurrent issue before us in a




                                           49
sufficiently clear or obvious manner so as to satisfy the second prong of plain-

error review.

      In sum, we conclude that Mr. Finnesy has not demonstrated under the

circumstances of this case that the district court clearly or obviously erred in not

applying § 5G1.3(b) in determining whether to run Mr. Finnesy’s federal escape-

from-custody offense concurrently with his undischarged state sentence. More

specifically, neither the record nor well-settled law supports Mr. Finnesy’s

contention that the district court plainly erred in not applying § 5G1.3(b).

Therefore, Mr. Finnesy has not carried his burden under the plain-error test.

                                          C

      Mr. Finnesy’s third and final claim of error is that the district court

improperly denied an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment under

U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a) “solely because the government refused to recommend [it].”

Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 24 (bold font omitted). Mr. Finnesy contends that this

challenge is preserved for appellate review “[b]ecause [he] objected below.” Id.

He asserts that the proper standard of review for his challenge is de novo because

it presents “a legal question” concerning “[t]he scope of § 3E1.1(a).” Id. Here,

again, the government disagrees both as to the proper standard of review and on

the merits. Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 16.




                                          50
      As we discuss below, we conclude that Mr. Finnesy forfeited his third

claim of error and is therefore entitled to only review for plain error. See, e.g.,

McGehee, 672 F.3d at 876. 13 And, as with his first two claims, Mr. Finnesy has


      13
              The government’s position on the preservation question is somewhat
unclear. It expressly asserts in its brief that Mr. Finnesy did not preserve his
acceptance-of-responsibility argument before the district court, contending that
Mr. Finnesy “did not object when given the opportunity” to do so, in response to
“the district court’s retraction of the two points for acceptance of responsibility.”
Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 16–17. But, curiously and mistakenly, the government
contends that, because of Mr. Finnesy’s lack of preservation, his acceptance-of-
responsibility argument should be “reviewed for clear error,” id. at 17, which of
course is the standard ordinarily applied to preserved factual contentions of error,
see, e.g., H ARRY T. E DWARDS & L INDA A. E LLIOTT , F EDERAL S TANDARDS OF
REVIEW : R EVIEW OF D ISTRICT C OURT D ECISIONS AND A GENCY A CTIONS , ch. II,
Westlaw (database updated Feb. 2018) (noting that “most findings of fact” are
subject to the clearly-erroneous standard of review). Nevertheless, the
government should get some “benefit” for taking the “step” of alerting us to Mr.
Finnesy’s lack of preservation, even though it failed to properly identify the
resulting standard of review. McGehee, 672 F.3d at 873 n.5; see id. (noting that
“the government did contend at oral argument that Mr. McGehee failed to
preserve the acceptance-of-responsibility argument—albeit [incorrectly] on
grounds that he purportedly forfeited it, rather than waived it”). In any event, we
have the discretion to independently give proper effect to a party’s lack of
preservation. See id. (deeming the defendant’s acceptance-of-responsibility
argument waived, even though the government claimed that it was forfeited). As
explicated infra, Mr. Finnesy insists that he did preserve his acceptance-of-
responsibility argument, despite the government’s contentions to the contrary.
However, he notably does not see fit to make—as he did with his § 5G1.3(b)
argument—an alternative argument (even in his reply brief) for plain-error review
to address the possibility that we would disagree with him and conclude that he
did not preserve his argument. The consequences of such an omission can be
severe: we may deem the argument “effectively waived” and not consider it at all.
Fish v. Kobach, 840 F.3d 710, 729–30 (10th Cir. 2016); accord Havens v. Colo.
Dep’t of Corrs., 897 F.3d 1250, 1259–60 (10th Cir. 2018). However, in instances
of lack of preservation, we have the discretion to decide what issues we consider.
                                                                        (continued...)

                                          51
not made a sufficient showing to satisfy this rigorous standard of review as to his

third claim.

                                          1

      The parties dispute whether Mr. Finnesy preserved before the district court

the acceptance-of-responsibility argument that he presents on appeal. We

conclude that he did not.

      In arguing to the contrary, Mr. Finnesy points to his objection to the district

court’s decision to grant the government’s motion to determine. The government

alleged in that motion that the plea agreement was conditioned on Mr. Finnesy

continuing to evince an acceptance of responsibility and that he had violated this

condition by engaging in post-plea-agreement criminal conduct while in prison,

including “possessing a ‘shank’ and using it to harm another inmate.” R., Vol. 1,

at 30. Because of the alleged breach, the government sought in its motion to be

relieved of its own plea-agreement obligations. Mr. Finnesy supports his claim



      13
        (...continued)
See, e.g., Abernathy v. Wandes, 713 F.3d 538, 552 (10th Cir. 2013) (“[T]he
decision regarding what issues are appropriate to entertain on appeal in instances
of lack of preservation is discretionary.”). And, especially given the miscue of
the government concerning the proper standard of review for lack of preservation,
we are inclined to exercise our discretion to consider Mr. Finnesy’s
argument—but only under “our rigorous plain-error standard of review.”
McGehee, 672 F.3d at 873, 876 (after concluding that Mr. McGehee “ha[d]
waived” his acceptance-of-responsibility argument, proceeding to consider it
under “our rigorous plain-error standard of review”).

                                         52
that his objection to the motion to determine preserves his current acceptance-of-

responsibility argument by noting that the district court denied him an acceptance-

of-responsibility adjustment, “[c]iting nothing other than the grant of this motion

[i.e., the government’s motion for a determine].” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 24.

      We are not persuaded, however, by Mr. Finnesy’s preservation argument.

In order for Mr. Finnesy to succeed on this argument, we must accept the tacit

premise that his objection to the district court’s decision to grant the

government’s motion to determine was effectively also an objection to the basis

for the district court’s separate decision to deny Mr. Finnesy an acceptance-of-

responsibility adjustment under § 3E1.1(a). Put another way, we must accept the

premise that Mr. Finnesy’s motion-to-determine objection was sufficient to

properly put the district court on notice that he also was objecting to the court’s

basis for denying his acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment. We decline to

accept this premise.

      Even though the general subject matter of the government’s motion to

determine was Mr. Finnesy’s alleged failure to continue manifesting an

acceptance of responsibility for his charged offense by continuing his criminal

conduct in prison, as the government rightly points out, the motion to determine

did not ask the district court to “retract” Mr. Finnesy’s acceptance-of-

responsibility adjustment. Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 17. In other words, the


                                          53
government did not seek such a retraction or disallowance of the acceptance-of-

responsibility adjustment as part of its requested relief in its motion to determine.

Indeed, there is not so much as even a single citation to § 3E1.1(a) in that motion.

Accordingly, we are hard pressed to accept the premise that when Mr. Finnesy

objected to the district court’s decision to grant the government’s motion to

determine he adequately preserved an objection to the district court’s separate

decision to deny him an acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment—let alone

preserved an objection to the precise basis for that separate decision. And, after

the district court did make that separate decision, the court gave Mr. Finnesy

ample opportunity to make the exact objection that he does here to the court’s

supposed sole reliance “on the government’s refusal to recommend the

[acceptance-of-responsibility] reduction,” Aplts.’s Opening Br. at 28, but Mr.

Finnesy failed to do so, see R., Vol. III, at 40–41 (Mr. Finnesy’s counsel

responding “[n]o, Your Honor,” when the court inquired, “[a]re there any other

objections or issues that need to be brought up with respect to the presentence

investigation report?”). Therefore, we perceive no basis to conclude that Mr.

Finnesy preserved his acceptance-of-responsibility argument.

      In attempting to forestall this conclusion, Mr. Finnesy is willing to concede

that his was only a “general objection.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 24 n.4. But,

citing our decision in United States v. Lozano, 514 F.3d 1130 (10th Cir. 2008), he


                                          54
asserts that his general objection should be deemed “sufficient to preserve this

issue [i.e., his acceptance-of-responsibility argument] for appeal.” Aplt.’s

Opening Br. at 24 n.4. We disagree. It is well established that such general

objections to a district court’s rulings are typically insufficient to preserve an

argument on appeal. See United States v. Sharp, 749 F.3d 1267, 1291 (10th Cir.

2014) (in view of the “general objections” lodged by defendant’s counsel in

district court, concluding that “plain error review applies to [defendant’s]

challenges to the procedural reasonableness of the [sentence] imposed by the

district court,” given that “[n]othing about these general objections was sufficient

to alert the district court to the more-specific procedural objections that

[defendant] now asserts on appeal”); United States v. Summers, 414 F.3d 1287,

1297 n.7 (10th Cir. 2005) (observing that plain-error review applies to issues “not

raised with specificity” in district court (emphasis added)); Gilkey, 118 F.3d at

704 (reviewing for plain error a legal question involving application of the

Guidelines, where counsel had failed to “lodge a specific objection based upon

either of the issues now presented for the first time on appeal”).

      And Lozano does not give us cause to alter our view. In Lozano, “the

government concede[ed] that . . . Ms. Lozano preserved her § 3E1.1 argument at

the sentencing hearing,” and, without analysis, we simply signaled our agreement.

See Lozano, 514 F.3d at 1134. Moreover, Ms. Lozano actually objected


                                           55
vigorously to the denial of an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment,

although admittedly her objection did not embrace with specificity the error both

sides agreed that the district court had made—that is, granting under § 3E1.1(a)

“a one-level reduction for partial acceptance of responsibility.” Id. at 1133–34.

      By contrast here, the government does not agree that Mr. Finnesy preserved

his acceptance-of-responsibility argument. And, in light of the government’s

concession in Lozano, it was not “essential” for us to resolve a preservation

dispute there, as it is here; accordingly, we would best advised to view our

agreement with the government in Lozano as no more than dictum. In re Tuttle,

291 F.3d 1238, 1242 (10th Cir. 2002) (“[D]icta are ‘statements and comments in

an opinion concerning some rule of law or legal proposition not necessarily

involved nor essential to determination of the case at hand.’” (quoting Rohrbaugh

v. Celotex Corp., 53 F.3d 1811, 1184 (10th Cir. 1995))); accord United States v.

Titties, 852 F.3d 1257, 1273 (10th Cir. 2017); see also JLM Indus., Inc. v. Stolt-

Nielsen SA, 387 F.3d 163, 173 (2d Cir. 2004) (observing that the litigant was

“correct” in interpreting a comment from the Supreme Court as “dictum” because

the subject matter of the comment was not contested before the Court). As such,

we are not obliged to follow Lozano on this preservation issue. Bates v. Dep’t of

Corr., 81 F.3d 1008, 1011 (10th Cir. 1996) (“[A] panel of this Court is bound by




                                         56
a holding of a prior panel of this Court but is not bound by a prior panel’s

dicta.”); accord Tokoph v. United States, 774 F.3d 1300, 1303 (10th Cir. 2014).

      Moreover, even if the Lozano court’s agreement with the government on

the preservation question could be construed as a binding holding (which it

cannot), Lozano is distinguishable because there the defendant’s objection at least

related in general terms to the court’s action challenged on appeal—its failure to

grant an acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment. The same, however, is not true

here. Mr. Finnesy’s objection before the district court related to the court’s grant

of the government’s motion to determine—which did not even cite the

acceptance-of-responsibility provision, § 3E1.1, let alone ask the court to deny

Mr. Finnesy an acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment. Therefore, contrary to

Mr. Finnesy’s contention, it does not logically follow at all that because “the

defendant in Lozano preserved the legal issue addressed there,” that Mr. Finnesy

did “so too.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 25 n.4. In sum, Lozano is not controlling

precedent on the preservation question before us, and, in any event, is

distinguishable and does not avail Mr. Finnesy.

      In order to preserve his acceptance-of-responsibility challenge for appeal,

Mr. Finnesy was obliged to bring it to the district court’s attention. We conclude

that he did not. Accordingly, Mr. Finnesy is entitled to no more than plain-error

review.


                                          57
                                          2

      We now turn to the merits of Mr. Finnesy’s third and final claim of

error—that is, that the district court erroneously denied an acceptance-of-

responsibility reduction under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a) “solely” because the

government did not recommend such a reduction. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 24.

Based on the record before us, however, we cannot conclude Mr. Finnesy has

demonstrated that the district court clearly or obviously erred. Therefore, he has

failed to satisfy the second element of the plain-error test and cannot prevail on

his third claim of error.

      Guidelines § 3E1.1(a) provides that “[i]f the defendant clearly demonstrates

acceptance of responsibility for his offense,” the sentencing court should

“decrease the offense level by 2 levels.” The Application Notes provide helpful

clarification regarding the scope and focus of this provision. For example, Note 1

states in pertinent part, “[i]n determining whether a defendant qualifies under

subsection (a), appropriate considerations include, but are not limited to, the

following: . . . (B) voluntary termination or withdrawal from criminal conduct or

associations[.]” U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1 cmt. n.1(B). “The [G]uidelines do not,

however, qualify that factor to permit consideration of only criminal conduct

related to or of the same nature as the offense of conviction.” United States v.

Prince, 204 F.3d 1021, 1023 (10th Cir. 2000) (emphasis added). Indeed, in


                                         58
Prince, “[w]e join[ed] the majority of circuits and h[eld] that the [G]uidelines do

not prohibit a sentencing court from considering, in its discretion, criminal

conduct unrelated to the offense of conviction in determining whether a defendant

qualifies for an adjustment for acceptance of responsibility under § 3E1.1.” Id. at

1024; see, e.g., United States v. Jordan, 549 F.3d 57, 61 (1st Cir. 2008)

(“Criminal conduct, whatever its nature, is a powerful indicium of a lack of

contrition. Thus, we hold that a district court, in determining the propriety vel

non of an acceptance-of-responsibility credit, may consider a defendant’s

commission of any post-indictment criminal conduct, whether or not it bears a

significant connection to, or constitutes a significant continuation of, the offense

of conviction. In other words, no particular nexus is required.”).

      Mr. Finnesy contends, however, that “nothing within § 3E1.1 suggests that

subsection (a)’s application turns on whether the government thinks the defendant

has accepted responsibility,” and that the district court was thus wrong to deny

Mr. Finnesy an acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment based solely on the

government’s failure to recommend that he receive it. Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 26.

He notes that while further acceptance-of-responsibility credit under § 3E1.1(b) is

expressly conditioned on the filing of a “motion of the government,” § 3E1.1(a),

on the other hand, contains no such express requirement, Aplt.’s Opening Br. at

28 (“As applied to § 3E1.1, only subsection (b) requires a government motion; by


                                          59
its plain terms, subsection (a) does not.”); see also U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1 cmt. n.1

(enumerating a non-exhaustive list of “appropriate considerations” under

§ 3E1.1(a) and not including consent of the government among them). The

government does not appear to disagree with Mr. Finnesy’s assertion that a

sentencing court’s decision concerning a § 3E1.1(a) downward adjustment does

not properly turn on the government’s favorable recommendation. But the

government does contend that the record does not show that the district court

relied on the government’s lack of recommendation concerning Mr. Finnesy’s

accept responsibility in denying him an acceptance-of-responsibility downward

adjustment.

      We conclude that, even assuming Mr. Finnesy’s interpretation of § 3E1.1(a)

is correct—viz., that a court’s determination under § 3E1.1(a) on whether to grant

a defendant a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility does not

properly turn on the government’s recommendation (or position) concerning the

defendant’s acceptance of responsibility—the record does not make it clear or

obvious that the district court relied on the government’s failure to recommend

that Mr. Finnesy receive an acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment in denying

him that adjustment. 14


      14
            In assuming that Mr. Finnesy’s interpretation of § 3E1.1(a) is correct,
we do not intimate any view on the matter, much less definitively resolve it.
                                                                     (continued...)

                                         60
      Indeed, we think the natural reading of the record is to the contrary: that

the district court denied Mr. Finnesy’s a downward adjustment for acceptance of

responsibility because it independently found—after an evidentiary hearing on the

government’s motion to determine—that Mr. Finnesy failed to voluntarily

terminate or withdraw from criminal conduct. Such a finding would properly

support the court’s denial of the adjustment. Indeed, in Prince, on similar facts

we concluded that “the district court’s denial of an adjustment for acceptance of

responsibility based on reports of defendant’s criminal conduct in prison while

awaiting sentencing was not legal error.” 204 F.3d at 1024; see id. at 1022–23

(noting that the government received reports that “[w]hile defendant was in

custody awaiting sentencing, . . . defendant stabbed another prisoner”).

      In this regard, the district court expressly found that Mr. Finnesy “initiated

the physical conduct” with another inmate that constituted “a battery”—striking

“the first blow” on the inmate with a “shank . . . that caused the puncture wounds


      14
         (...continued)
Notably, Mr. Finnesy does not cite in his briefing any Supreme Court or Tenth
Circuit authority that has directly endorsed his view, an omission that ordinarily,
for the reasons noted supra, would fatally undercut Mr. Finnesy’s attempt to show
plain error. See, e.g., Knight, 659 F.3d at 1293. Having said that, Mr. Finnesy
seems to lean heavily on the “plain terms” of § 3E1.1(a), Aplt.’s Opening Br. at
28, and we recognize that the plain terms of a statute or regulation in certain
instances can form the foundation for a plain-error finding, see, e.g., Brown, 316
F.3d at 1158. However, in light of our assumption here, we have no occasion to
determine the correctness of Mr. Finnesy’s interpretation of § 3E1.1(a).


                                         61
in the victim.” R., Vol. III, at 39–40. It also determined that the Barton County

captain’s testimony regarding Mr. Finnesy’s purported involvement in trafficking

contraband constituted “evidence of contraband being there.” Id. at 40. And later

in the proceedings, without any reference to the government’s motion to

determine, the court seemingly confirmed this finding of Mr. Finnesy’s continued,

post-arrest criminal conduct and its nexus to his lack of acceptance of

responsibility by referencing Mr. Finnesy’s “refusal to accept responsibility even

on a going-forward basis.” Id. at 53.

      To be sure, some of the district court’s comments (which Mr. Finnesy

highlights) could be read as suggesting a connection—even a causal

one—between the court’s decision to accept the government’s position in its

motion to determine that Mr. Finnesy failed to accept responsibility by engaging

in post-plea-agreement criminal conduct while in prison, and the court’s decision

to deny Mr. Finnesy a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility.

See, e.g., id. at 40 (“So on the basis of this evidence that I’ve heard in this court, I

am going to grant the [g]overnment’s motion that Mr. Finnesy has breached his

plea agreement; therefore, [he] is not entitled to the acceptance of responsibility

reduction of two points in this case.” (emphasis added)); id. at 57 (“The court

determines that the [PSR], as previously corrected or modified by the [c]ourt or, I

should say, adjusted pursuant to the Government’s motion which I sustained to


                                           62
revoke acceptance of responsibility and the previously stated findings, are [sic]

accurate.” (emphasis added)).

      However, this should not be surprising, and it does not necessarily mean

that the court’s acceptance of the government’s position was a factor—let alone

the sole one—in the court’s determination to deny Mr. Finnesy the acceptance-of-

responsibility downward adjustment. That is because the same evidence that

allowed the district court to accept the government’s position (advanced first in

its motion to determine) that Mr. Finnesy had failed to accept

responsibility—within the meaning of the plea agreement—also would have

permitted the district court to independently find that Mr. Finnesy did not qualify

for an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment because he had failed to

“voluntar[ily] terminat[e] or withdraw[] from criminal conduct”—within the

meaning of the Guidelines. U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1 cmt. n.1(B).

      That the district court relied on the same evidence in reaching the two

distinct decisions—to accept the government’s position in its motion to determine

concerning Mr. Finnesy’s failure to accept responsibility and to deny Mr. Finnesy

an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment under § 3E1.1(a)—does not

necessarily mean that every factor that was central to the first decision was

important to—let alone determinative of—the second one. More specifically, the

fact that the impetus for the first decision was the government’s position that Mr.


                                         63
Finnesy’s continued criminal conduct evinced a failure to accept responsibility, as

required by his plea agreement, does not mean that this position was a factor—let

alone the sole factor—in the court’s second, evidence-based decision to deny Mr.

Finnesy an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment. And, the

existence of such a causal relationship between the first and second decisions is

not the natural inference from the record.

       Viewed in the light most favorable to Mr. Finnesy, at best, the district

court’s comments make the record ambiguous concerning whether the court relied

on the government’s position that Mr. Finnesy failed to accept responsibility in

denying him an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment. As such, Mr.

Finnesy cannot demonstrate with the requisite degree of clarity under the plain-

error standard that the district court erred. In other words, Mr. Finnesy cannot

establish that the district court committed clear or obvious error in denying him

an acceptance-of-responsibility downward adjustment. Therefore, Mr. Finnesy’s

last claim of error fails.

                                         III

       For the foregoing reasons, each of Mr. Finnesy’s claims of error fails. We

accordingly AFFIRM Mr. Finnesy’s conviction and sentence.




                                          64
