UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Randy H. CHEE, Defendant-Appellant

*1491BRUNETTI, Circuit Judge:

Randy Harrison Chee appeals his sentence under the United States Sentencing Guidelines. Chee pled guilty to one count of assault on an Indian reservation, prohibited by 18 U.S.C. §§ 113(a)(6), 1153 and the district court sentenced him to 44 months of imprisonment. On appeal, Chee contends that the district court improperly considered hearsay at sentencing, incorrectly concluded that he physically restrained the victim, incorrectly found that he threatened the victim with a deadly weapon, and improperly denied him a third point for acceptance of responsibility. We affirm the district court’s decision.

I. Background

On February 5, 1995, Chee instigated an argument with his girlfriend, Shelley Begaye. He repeatedly beat her and then took her to a motel room in Flagstaff. The next day, Begaye was able to call her mother and the motel manager, who helped her escape from Chee. Begaye was treated at a local hospital, where she gave statements to several people. Later that day, Chee voluntarily surrendered to police and gave them a lengthy statement. All of these statements were provided to the sentencing court and to the Probation Officer who prepared the pre-sentence report (PSR). Although Chee objected to portions of the PSR factual statement, he never challenged the accuracy of his statement to the police.

After giving his initial statement, Chee was questioned about details of the assault by FBI Agent Geeslin and Flagstaff Detective Young. Chee stated that he and Begaye had been dating for approximately five years, and that he had hit her on five other occasions. Chee admitted slapping, punching, kicking, and biting Begaye, as well as pulling her hair and dragging her by the hair, on February 5. He denied that he forced Begaye into his car, but reiterated that he activated the power door locks when she tried to open the door to leave the car. Before Chee pulled the car over, Begaye told him twice that she wanted to leave the car. To prevent her from leaving the car, Chee said he locked the car and held her down.

Chee also admitted that he threatened to kill Begaye with a knife or gun, although he lied to her about having a weapon. He asked her if she wanted to die, told her he was going to kill her, and opened the trunk to see if he could find a weapon. In the police interview, Chee never specifically stated that he had threatened her with a gun, but agreed with the officers’ characterization of his threat in that manner. Chee did not have a gun or any weapon in his car. After he threatened to kill Begaye, the fight ended. Chee said that Begaye went with him to the motel voluntarily, and did not try to leave or make any phone calls while at the motel. Nonetheless, he admitted that he would not have let her leave the motel room if she had asked him for permission to leave.

Agent Geeslin also questioned Begaye at the hospital. She told Geeslin that Chee forced her to get into the car by throwing her into the ear, closing the door behind her, and quickly driving away while using the power door locks. She also stated that Chee hit her when she tried to leave the car. She said Chee pulled the car over, continued beating her beside the car, and dragged her by her hair to the trunk of the car. Chee told her that he had a gun in the trunk and was going to kill her. Then, Chee took her to the motel room where he forced her to have sex, and left her alone in the room the next morning. As soon as Chee left the room, Begaye called her mother, who called the police, and the front desk. Begaye’s mother, police officers, and the motel manager then rescued Begaye from the room and took her to the hospital.

Flagstaff Police Officer Brown took a report from Begaye at the motel and the hospital. She told Brown that Chee came by her house, they talked, and he took her by the arm and guided her back to his car. Chee opened the passenger door and told her to get in. After they got into the car Chee said that “they were all going to die” then he began driving her away from her family’s car. She stated that he hit her a couple of times, grabbed her by the hair and held her head under the steering wheel while he was driving. Begaye said that when Chee stopped the car, he walked her to the trunk, and told her that he “was going to get his gun and kill her.” Officer Brown noticed that Begaye had many bruises, abrasions, *1492and bite marks on her head, back, arms, and legs.

On March 1, 1995, a grand jury indicted Chee for one count of assault on an Indian reservation and one count of kidnapping on an Indian reservation.

On the first day of trial, after jury selection, the court heard argument regarding Begaye’s testimony. In the time between the assault and trial, Begaye and Chee reconciled, and just before trial Begaye indicated to the government that she would not testify favorably for the government. When the prosecutor, Agent Geeslin, and others were confronted with this change of heart, they recommended that Begaye obtain counsel and told her that she could be prosecuted for making false statements if her testimony at trial differed from her statements after the incident. Once Begaye received this advice, she refused to discuss the case with Chee’s counsel and obtained an attorney. She indicated that she would assert the Fifth Amendment and would not testify at trial.

The district court then held a hearing concerning Begaye’s decision to assert the Fifth Amendment. At the hearing, her attorney indicated that Begaye would probably still be willing to testify to the assault facts she relayed to the officers right after the crime, but that her testimony about the kidnapping would be different and thus might subject her to criminal liability. The court ruled that her testimony on the assault count would not be incriminating, and told the government it had several options, including dismissing the kidnapping, immunizing Begaye, or not calling her at all. At that point, the government agreed to dismiss the kidnapping count and Chee agreed to plead guilty to assault. Be-gaye later met with the Probation Officer and told him about her injuries. Chee objected to the PSR statements regarding the Probation Officer’s interview with Begaye as well as the PSR paragraphs based on Be-gaye’s earlier reports.

At the April 22, 1996 sentencing, the court relied on the PSR statements taken from Begaye by the Probation Officer and the police, but ruled that Chee’s statement was sufficient to support its findings even in the absence of any statements made by Begaye. The court also increased the offense level by three for threatened use of a deadly weapon and by two for restraint of the victim. Finally, the court gave Chee a downward adjustment of two levels for acceptance of responsibility, but denied Chee’s request for an additional point adjustment for assistance to the government in the prosecution of his ease. Chee challenges all four rulings.

II. Discussion

A. Hearsay

Chee contends that the district court improperly relied on Begaye’s hearsay statements when sentencing him. We agree that Chee was denied the opportunity to question Begaye about her statements. Although the court ruled that she could assert the Fifth Amendment privilege only for the kidnapping count and allowed Chee to introduce statements she made to defense counsel before asserting her privilege, she apparently refused to discuss either count with the defense after asserting the privilege. Nonetheless, the district court did not abuse its discretion by considering Begaye’s hearsay statements.

Generally, hearsay is fully admissible at sentencing. See United States v. Huckins, 53 F.3d 276, 279 (9th Cir.1995). However, due process requires that “some minimal indicia of reliability accompany a hearsay statement at sentencing.” United States v. Petty, 982 F.2d 1365, 1369 (9th Cir.1993), amended on other grounds, 992 F.2d 1015 (9th Cir.1993).

In this case, the court found Begaye’s early statements, made to the police and at the hospital, to be reliable. The court explained that her initial statements were “credible and trustworthy,” in part because they were made “immediately upon contact with her mother, with the contact by the police, and to hospital staff.” That finding was not an abuse of discretion. See Petty, 982 F.2d at 1369.

In Petty, the court upheld the district court’s ruling that statements supported by other facts were reliable. Id. at 1369. In contrast, Chee relies on cases where the court made clear errors regarding the facts about the hearsay statements and those statements bore no indicia of reliability. See *1493Huckins, 53 F.3d at 279-80; United States v. Hanna, 49 F.3d 572, 577-78 (9th Cir.1995). This case is much closer to Petty, because the court here listed factors showing the reliability of Begaye’s statements, such as their corroboration by other statements, including Chee’s statement, and their immediacy to the crime. Chee has failed to demonstrate how the district court abused its discretion.

Additionally, with the exception of Begaye’s statement about the duration of her pain, a point Chee does not contest, the court found that it did not need to rely on Begaye’s statements. The court found that Chee’s own statement supported its findings. To require a remand, any improper reliance on hearsay must be “demonstrably made the basis for the sentence.” Huckins, 53 F.3d at 280 (quotation omitted). In light of the court’s express finding that Chee’s statement supported its rulings and that it did “not need to rely upon” Begaye’s statements, Chee could not show the need for a remand, even if the court had somehow abused its discretion.

Chee also infers that government misconduct prevented him from cross-examining Begaye. At trial, the district court denied Chee’s motion to dismiss the indictment for alleged government misconduct, finding that the government had acted appropriately toward Begaye. Chee did not appeal that determination. We reject Chee’s claim that the hearsay could not be used at sentencing because of the government’s failure to grant Begaye immunity. He did not raise that claim in the district court and thus has waived it. See United States v. Flores-Payon, 942 F.2d 556, 558 (9th Cir.1991).

B. Restraint of the Victim

Chee contends that the district court improperly applied a two-level enhancement to his offense level for restraint of the victim. According to Chee, the only evidence of restraint was Chee’s admitted use of the power door locks in the car. The court found that Chee “consciously locked her in the car by use of power door locks and holding her down” and did so “to preclude her from jumping out of the vehicle ... it was to keep her in the car.” The district court determined that Chee restrained Begaye inside the vehicle. Chee does not argue that these factual findings were clearly erroneous, but instead contends that his acts do not meet the legal definition of “restraint.”

We disagree. This court has recently defined restraint under the Guidelines. See United States v. Thompson, 109 F.3d 639 (9th Cir.1997) (holding that “no actual touching” is required to constitute restraint under the Sentencing Guideline when defendant pointed gun at victim). Chee does not dispute that he restrained Begaye from leaving the vehicle by depressing the automatic door locks and holding her down. This behavior falls squarely within Thompson’s definition of restraint. Id. (victim restrained when defendant “checked her free activity and otherwise controlled her actions”). Consequently, we reject Chee’s argument as a matter of law.

C. Threatening Use of a Deadly Weapon

Chee also asserts that because he did not possess a deadly weapon, the court erred in imposing a three-level enhancement under § 2A2.2(b)(2).

Section 2A2.2(b)(2)(C) provides for a three-level increase when a dangerous weapon “was brandished or its use was threatened.” USSG § 2A2.2(b)(2). The district court found that, while it was “clear that [Chee] did not brandish either a gun or a knife, ... [there is] no doubt that [Begaye] was threatened with a weapon; thought that there was a weapon in the defendant’s possession, in his vehicle; and felt that the weapon would be used on her if she resisted further.” Therefore, the court found that “there was a threat of the use of a weapon, a deadly weapon in this instance, that justifies” the three-level increase.

It appears that no circuit has addressed this question and very few cases discuss the threat of weapon use at all. This may be attributed to the logical and obvious argument that threatening to use a weapon is a threat whether or not a weapon is present. Accordingly, a plain reading of the Guideline provides an adequate basis for our decision. The Guideline does not require the actual presence of a weapon and to do so would essentially make the “threatened” clause a *1494redundancy to the preceding “brandished” requirement. See USSG § 2A2.2(b)(2)(C).

United States v. Sims supports our decision. 952 F.2d 1014 (8th Cir.1991). In Sims, the Eighth Circuit addressed the threatened use of a weapon from the victim’s standpoint. 952 F.2d at 1017. There, the defendant contracted with an informant to kill a government witness. The defendant gave the informant a gun and ammunition to use during the killing but never had any direct contact with, the victim. The district court increased the defendant’s offense level “because his offense involved the threatened use of a weapon.” Id. at 1016. On appeal, the defendant argued that, since he never directly threatened the victim with the gun, he could not have threatened to use a weapon. The court in Sims disagreed, noting that, “from the point of view of the victim ... Sims’ offense involved the threatened use of a dangerous weapon.” Id. at 1017.

This approach is consistent with the Guideline’s language, which simply refers to threatening the use of a weapon and not to actually possessing the weapon. Under this formulation, the district court’s factual finding that Begaye believed Chee was threatening her and legal finding that Chee’s admitted threat to use a knife or gun constituted threatening the use of a weapon were not erroneous.

D. Acceptance of Responsibility

Finally, Chee contends that he merited a three-point reduction for acceptance of responsibility, instead of the two he was granted. Section 3El.l(b) provides that a defendant who qualifies for a reduction for acceptance of responsibility may qualify for an additional one-point reduction where he either “(1) timely [provides] complete information to the government concerning his own involvement in the offense; or (2) timely [notifies] authorities of his intention to enter a plea of guilty, thereby permitting the government to avoid preparing for trial.” USSG § 3El.l(b)(l)-(2). As the government notes, to qualify under subsection (b)(2), the defendant must plead early enough that the prosecution may avoid trial preparation. See USSG § 3El.l(b)(2), comment, (n.6).

The district court denied Chee the third point because it found that he was “minimizing his conduct with respect to the various episodes of restraint ... [and] denying the threats that were made.” According to the district court, Chee had “not provided complete information” to the police because he minimized the extent of the physical abuse when he talked to the officers and later contested some of his statements. The court also noted that the government had completely prepared for trial and that the parties had already picked a jury when Chee pled guilty.

The district court did not clearly err. The defendant did not timely provide complete information concerning his assault and kidnapping of Begaye. In addition, Chee should not profit from the acceptance of responsibility merely because Begaye recanted her testimony. By minimizing or not admitting the charges attested to by the witness, the defendant forced the government to prepare for trial. He should not now be rewarded for the victim’s new-found reticence. He can only get the additional one-point reduction based upon his timely cooperative actions, not on the fortuitous change of heart of the key witness who was also the victim.

The dissent cites United States v. Stoops, 25 F.3d 820, 822 (9th Cir.1994), in arguing that timing is the sole determinant of the award of an additional point. However, both the facts and conclusion in Stoops differ markedly from our case. In Stoops, the defendant provided “[m]ultiple consistent confessions on the day of arrest.” Id. at 823. The court held that this cooperation qualified the defendant for the additional point, despite the easy availability of inculpatory evidence. Id. Here, the defendant provided inconsistent statements and attempted to minimize the extent of his physical abuse of the victim.1 Chee’s conduct does not approach the level of cooperation demonstrated by the defendant’s unqualified confession in Stoops.

*1495Only early and consistent cooperation which saves the government from the rigors of trial preparation and jury selection merits the assistance reduction. Here, the district court did not clearly err in finding that Chee’s eleventh-hour cooperation came too late to qualify for the one-point reduction.

AFFIRMED.

. In addition, the Stoops decision did not address the ramifications of a guilty plea entered on the day of trial and whether that timing would disqualify a defendant from the third assistance point. Stoops, 25 F.3d at 822 n. 1.