In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 17‐1823
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff‐Appellee,
v.
RALPH D. HATHAWAY,
Defendant‐Appellant.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Central District of Illinois.
No. 15‐CR‐30035 — Richard Mills, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED JANUARY 8, 2018 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 12, 2018
____________________
Before EASTERBROOK and SYKES, Circuit Judges, and
BUCKLO, District Judge.*
BUCKLO, District Judge. Ralph Hathaway was convicted
after a jury trial of knowingly transporting a minor across
state lines to engage in criminal sexual activity and of travel‐
ing between states to do the same. See 18 U.S.C. § 2423(a),
* Of the Northern District of Illinois, sitting by designation.
2 No. 17‐1823
(b). At sentencing, the district court ordered Hathaway to
pay restitution to his victim; Hathaway objected to part, but
not all, of the restitution order. On appeal, Hathaway chal‐
lenges the portions of the restitution order that he declined
to contest in the district court. Because Hathaway waived his
right to assert further objections to the restitution order, we
affirm.
In early 2013, when Hathaway was 44 years old, he be‐
gan exchanging online messages with a 13‐year‐old girl,
“L.H.” After pursuing L.H. online via video chats and social
media accounts for a few months, Hathaway proposed that
the two meet in person. Soon thereafter, he drove from Illi‐
nois to L.H.’s home in South Carolina, where he convinced
L.H. to engage in sexual activity with him. In the year that
followed, Hathaway made several more trips to South Caro‐
lina to continue the sexual relationship.
In June 2015, Hathaway again traveled to South Carolina,
this time to pick L.H. up in the middle of the night and drive
her to his home in Illinois. Law enforcement found L.H.
there the next evening and took her into protective custody.
Agents also brought Hathaway in for questioning but re‐
leased him later that night. After the authorities intervened,
L.H.’s father gave them permission to send L.H. to Califor‐
nia to live temporarily with her uncle, in part to keep her
away from Hathaway, who had not yet been arrested. While
L.H. was in California, her father traveled to Illinois to col‐
lect her belongings from the sheriff’s department.
Hathaway was eventually arrested and charged with one
count of transporting a minor with intent to engage in crim‐
inal sexual activity in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2423(a) and
two counts of traveling between states for the purpose of
No. 17‐1823 3
engaging in illicit sexual conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 2423(b). After a four‐day trial, a jury found him guilty on
all three counts.
The probation office’s presentence investigative report
(PSR) calculated Hathaway’s offense level at 41 with a crim‐
inal history category of I, which meant that his sentencing
guidelines range for the § 2423(a) conviction was 324 to 405
months of imprisonment. The PSR also recommended that
Hathaway pay $4,489 in restitution to his victim and her
family, including $1,089 for L.H.’s counseling expenses,
$3,100 for costs incurred in relocating L.H. to California after
law enforcement found her at Hathaway’s home, and $300
for the costs of retrieving L.H.’s belongings from Illinois.
At his sentencing hearing, Hathaway raised six objec‐
tions to the PSR, one of which concerned restitution. Specifi‐
cally, Hathaway opposed the inclusion of the victim’s coun‐
seling expenses in the restitution calculation. Before address‐
ing the objections, the court advised Hathaway of his right
to present additional pro se objections, and the court asked
both Hathaway and his attorney whether there were other
issues they wished to contest. Hathaway told the court that
his attorney had already presented all of his objections in the
paperwork filed with the court, and Hathaway’s attorney
confirmed that he had no further objections to add.
The district court denied Hathaway’s objection to the res‐
titution calculation, concluding that the Mandatory Victims
Restitution Act (MVRA), 18 U.S.C. § 3663A, required Hath‐
away to pay for his victim’s counseling and psychological
care. Thus, in addition to imposing a 400‐month prison term
and five years of supervised release, the district court or‐
dered Hathaway to pay all $4,489 of the proposed restitu‐
4 No. 17‐1823
tion, including the counseling expenses and the remaining
$3,400 in uncontested costs.
On appeal, Hathaway contends that the district court
erred by including the relocation expenses in the restitution
calculation because, in his view, they were not directly relat‐
ed to his criminal conduct. He also argues that the court
should not have included the retrieval expenses because
they were not properly supported in the record. In response,
the government asserts that Hathaway waived these late ob‐
jections by declining to raise them at his sentencing hearing
and by strategically asserting other objections instead.
A criminal defendant hoping to preserve an issue for ap‐
peal must make a “timely and specific objection” in the dis‐
trict court. United States v. Burns, 843 F.3d 679, 685 (7th Cir.
2016). There is no dispute that Hathaway failed to object to
paying L.H.’s relocation and retrieval expenses at sentenc‐
ing, so we must determine whether Hathaway waived or
merely forfeited the objections he now pursues on appeal. Id.
“Waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known
right.” United States v. Waldrip, 859 F.3d 446, 449 (7th Cir.
2017) (quoting Burns, 843 F.3d at 685). Forfeiture, on the oth‐
er hand, is the accidental or neglectful failure to timely assert
a right. Id. at 450. The distinction between waiver and forfei‐
ture is an important one. See United States v. Butler, 777 F.3d
382, 386–87 (7th Cir. 2015). While waiver “precludes appel‐
late review by extinguishing any error that occurred,” forfei‐
ture allows for plain‐error review on appeal. Waldrip, 859
F.3d at 449–50; see also Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b).
To resolve whether a defendant has waived or forfeited
an argument, we must determine “whether [he] chose, as a
No. 17‐1823 5
matter of strategy, not to present [the] argument.” United
States v. Garcia, 580 F.3d 528, 541 (7th Cir. 2009). “We do not
require the defendant to expressly state on the record his in‐
tent to waive a challenge before we will consider it waived.”
Id. at 542. Rather, we evaluate the record as a whole to sur‐
mise whether a defendant’s failure to object was deliberate.
Waldrip, 859 F.3d at 449.
In United States v. Brodie, 507 F.3d 527 (7th Cir. 2007), we
observed that a decision to assert some sentencing objections
and not others was “the paragon of intentional relinquish‐
ment.” Id. at 531. In that case, a criminal defendant appealed
both his conviction and sentence, asserting several argu‐
ments he never raised in the district court. Id. at 530. We held
that the defendant waived his sentencing challenges be‐
cause: 1) he knew of his right to object to the probation of‐
ficer’s recommendations at the time of his sentencing, and in
fact did object to certain parts of his PSR; and 2) he stated on
the record that he had no further objections when the district
court inquired. Id. at 531. Recognizing that defendant’s coun‐
sel had sound reasons not to raise in the district court the
weak arguments he was pressing on appeal, we concluded
that the defendant’s failure to preserve the issues for appeal
was a deliberate decision rather than an oversight. Id. at 531–
32.
As in Brodie, Hathaway’s specific objections to several
parts of the PSR, including the proposed restitution for
counseling expenses, indicate that he did not just carelessly
overlook the restitution issue at sentencing. Hathaway was
obviously aware of his right to challenge the PSR’s restitu‐
tion calculation. He exercised this right by objecting to one
category of restitution expenses and not the others. When, at
6 No. 17‐1823
the sentencing hearing, the district court invited Hathaway
and his attorney to raise any additional objections, they ex‐
pressly declined to do so, just as the defendant did in Brodie.
This record indicates that Hathaway made a strategic deci‐
sion to assert one restitution‐related argument and to forgo
others. See Garcia, 580 F.3d at 542 (defendant waived his
challenge to the court’s drug‐quantity calculation when he
“had access to the PSR, knew of his right to object, consid‐
ered objecting to portions of the PSR other than the [drug‐
quantity calculation], and stated on the record that he did
not have any further objections when asked by the district
court”). Hathaway cannot now assert the arguments he pre‐
viously disclaimed. See id. at 541–42; Brodie, 507 F.3d at 531–
32; see also United States v. Fuentes, 858 F.3d 1119, 1121 (7th
Cir. 2017) (defendant’s objection to certain factual character‐
izations in the PSR, but not to the PSR’s guidelines calcula‐
tion, supports waiver).
Hathaway contends that his failure to object to the reloca‐
tion and retrieval expenses was mere forfeiture because, in
his view, there is no strategic rationale that could explain the
failure. But many factors could have motivated Hathaway’s
decision not to challenge the other restitution amounts at
sentencing. He and his attorney might have determined that
objecting to the relocation and retrieval costs would have
been futile. See, e.g., Waldrip, 859 F.3d at 450 (futility as a stra‐
tegic rationale); see also United States v. Hayward, 359 F.3d
631, 642 (3d Cir. 2004) (concluding that parents were entitled
to restitution under the MVRA for reasonable costs incurred
in “obtaining the return of their victimized children” and
“making their children available to participate in the investi‐
gation and trial”). Or they might have decided that Hatha‐
way had a better chance at prevailing on the counseling ex‐
No. 17‐1823 7
penses alone than on the three restitution categories togeth‐
er. See Brodie, 507 F.3d at 532 (noting tactical reasons for
omitting weak arguments that could distract from other ob‐
jections). Whatever the strategic thinking might have been at
the time, the fact that Hathaway challenged some, but not
all, of the restitution calculations, while expressly declining
to raise other objections, exhibits intentional relinquishment.
As we have cautioned, the “sentencing in the district
court is the main event.” United States v. Lewis, 823 F.3d 1075,
1083 (7th Cir. 2016). If Hathaway had concerns about the
PSR’s restitution recommendation beyond the ones his at‐
torney articulated in his written submission, the sentencing
hearing was the appropriate time to raise them.
Hathaway has waived his objections to the restitution
calculation. The district court’s sentence is AFFIRMED.