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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 22-4689
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee
v.
DIANA TOEBBE,
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia, at
Martinsburg. Gina M. Groh, District Judge. (3:21-cr-00049-GMG-RWT-2)
Argued: September 19, 2023 Decided: October 25, 2023
Before NIEMEYER, RICHARDSON, and RUSHING, Circuit Judges.
Dismissed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge
Richardson and Judge Rushing joined.
ARGUED: Jessica Nicole Carmichael, CARMICHAEL ELLIS & BROCK, PLLC,
Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant. Danielle Tarin, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Barry P. Beck, POWER,
BECK & MATZUREFF, Martinsburg, West Virginia, for Appellant. Matthew G. Olsen,
Assistant Attorney General, National Security Division, UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C.; William J. Ihlenfeld, II, United States
Attorney, Jarod J. Douglas, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Wheeling,
West Virginia, for Appellee.
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NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
Diana Toebbe pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement to conspiracy to
communicate, transmit, or disclose Restricted Data of the United States Navy relating to
Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines with the intent to injure the United States or to
secure an advantage to a foreign nation, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 2274(a). At sentencing,
the district court calculated her Sentencing Guidelines range and sentenced Toebbe to 262
months’ imprisonment, which was at the bottom of that range.
Although Toebbe acknowledges that in her plea agreement, she voluntarily and
intelligently waived all rights to appeal “whatever sentence [was] imposed . . . for any
reason,” she now seeks relief from that waiver, arguing that the district court committed
errors during sentencing that she “could not have reasonably contemplated” when she
executed the plea agreement. She claims in particular that, during sentencing, the district
court “violated the principle of party presentation” in failing to accommodate the parties’
agreements; that the court-imposed sentence was “roughly 13 years above the binding
[G]uidelines as outlined in the plea agreement”; that the district court enhanced her
sentence for obstruction of justice, which was not contemplated in the plea agreement and
thus was an “unfounded enhancement”; and that “the district judge . . . abandon[ed] her
role as [a] neutral arbiter, refusing to credit even the most basic factual premises universally
accepted by all parties, and developing and relying on a theoretical ‘plan C,’ a notion that
the prosecutor vehemently tried to dispel.” Pointing to this and other similar alleged
conduct, Toebbe contends that “the district court so severely infected the sentencing [and]
the sentencing process that [her] due process rights were violated during the course of the
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sentencing hearing to an extent that could not have been contemplated by, and transcends,
the appeal waiver.” She also contends that the government, in its appellate brief, breached
the plea agreement and therefore that the agreement “is now void” and the “waiver in it is
invalid.”
The government has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal based on the appeal waiver
in Toebbe’s plea agreement.
After carefully reviewing the entire record and considering all the arguments, we
conclude that Toebbe has failed to make a sufficient showing to avoid the clear terms of
her plea agreement, which she acknowledges she entered into knowingly and intelligently.
We also conclude that the government did not breach the plea agreement. Accordingly,
we grant the government’s motion to dismiss.
I
Diana Toebbe and her husband, Jonathan Toebbe, are highly educated professionals
who, during the relevant period, were living in Annapolis, Maryland. Diana Toebbe holds
a Ph.D. and worked in Annapolis as a high-school humanities teacher. Jonathan Toebbe
worked in Washington, D.C., for the U.S. Navy as a nuclear engineer assigned to the
Reactor Engineering Division of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program. In connection
with this job, Jonathan Toebbe held an active Top Secret security clearance through the
Department of Defense, as well as an active “Q clearance” through the Department of
Energy, which granted him access to information involving or incorporating “Restricted
Data,” as that term is used in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. See 42 U.S.C. § 2014(y)
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(defining “Restricted Data” to include data concerning “the use of special nuclear material
in the production of energy”). In particular, he had access to classified information
concerning the nuclear reactors used to power Virginia-class submarines, which are state-
of-the-art warships costing approximately $3 billion each.
Over a period of several years, Jonathan Toebbe smuggled classified, Restricted
Data that related to Virginia-class submarines from his workplace so that he could sell the
data to a foreign nation. His wife, Diana Toebbe, knowingly and voluntarily joined the
scheme, actively participating in its planning and execution.
Specifically, in April 2020, Jonathan Toebbe sent a package to a foreign government
that contained a sample of Restricted Data and instructions for establishing a clandestine
relationship to purchase additional material. That foreign government, however, provided
the package to the FBI, which initiated a covert operation to identify the sender. Purporting
to act on behalf of the foreign government, undercover FBI agents then began exchanging
encrypted email messages with Jonathan Toebbe. After the FBI sent $10,000 in
cryptocurrency to a payment address provided by him, the undercover agents arranged for
him to conduct a “dead drop” of additional Restricted Data.
Thereafter, on June 26, 2021, Jonathan and Diana Toebbe traveled together from
Maryland to a park in Jefferson County, West Virginia, where the FBI was conducting
surveillance. The Toebbes hiked to the location in the woods that had been selected for
the dead drop, and Diana Toebbe provided cover and acted as a lookout while Jonathan
Toebbe hid a Ziplock bag that contained one half of a peanut butter sandwich. Inside the
sandwich was an SD card (a secure digital memory card) wrapped in plastic wrap, and after
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the FBI paid an additional $20,000 in cryptocurrency, Jonathan Toebbe sent the agents a
decryption code that allowed them to see that the data saved on the SD card was “Restricted
Data relating to militarily sensitive design elements, operating parameters, and
performance characteristics of Virginia-class submarine reactors.” There was also a typed
message that included statements such as “I hope your experts are very happy with the
sample provided” and “I want our relationship to be very successful for us both.”
Subsequently, Jonathan Toebbe conducted three additional dead drops, with Diana
Toebbe accompanying him and serving as a lookout during two of the three. Specifically,
on July 31, 2021, the Toebbes left behind, at a prearranged location in south-central
Pennsylvania, a typed message that proposed that Jonathan Toebbe would provide 51
packages of information over time in exchange for $5 million in cryptocurrency. The
message also stated that the material “was slowly and carefully collected over several
years” and “smuggled past security checkpoints a few pages at a time” and that one set of
information “reflects decades of U.S. Navy ‘lessons learned’ that will help keep your
sailors safe.” Then, about a month later, Jonathan Toebbe alone conducted a drop in eastern
Virginia, leaving behind an SD card hidden in a chewing-gum package that contained
additional Restricted Data relating to Virginia-class submarine nuclear reactors, as well as
a typed message indicating that he had told “only one other person . . . of our special
relationship” — i.e., Diana Toebbe — and that he “trust[ed] that person absolutely.” The
message stated further, “We have cash and passports set aside for th[e] purpose” of fleeing
the United States. Finally, on October 9, 2021, both Jonathan and Diana Toebbe returned
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to Jefferson County, West Virginia, to conduct a drop, which was the fourth dead drop.
Immediately after completing it, however, they were arrested by FBI agents.
During the course of the undercover investigation, the FBI transferred a total of
$100,000 in cryptocurrency to “wallets” created by Jonathan Toebbe. Later investigation
revealed that Diana Toebbe knew the “pass phrase” to at least one such wallet and thus had
access at least to it.
Following the Toebbes’ arrest, a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging
each with one count of conspiracy to communicate Restricted Data, in violation of
42 U.S.C. § 2274(a), and two counts of aiding and abetting the communication of
Restricted Data, in violation of § 2274(a) and 18 U.S.C. § 2.
A few months later, in February 2022, Diana Toebbe entered into a written plea
agreement with the government by which she agreed to plead guilty to the conspiracy
count, a crime that carried a statutory maximum of life imprisonment. The agreement,
which was proffered to the district court under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
11(c)(1)(C), would, if accepted, bind the court to impose a term of imprisonment “of not
more than 36 months.” If the court were not to accept that sentence, however, Toebbe
would “have the right to withdraw her plea of guilty.” In the agreement, Toebbe also
agreed that if the court were to accept the proffered sentence, she would waive her right
“to appeal whatever sentence is imposed . . . for any reason,” except with respect to “claims
of ineffective assistance of counsel or prosecutorial misconduct.”
The magistrate judge who conducted the initial hearing on the proposed plea
agreement confirmed that Toebbe, who was highly educated, understood the terms of her
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plea agreement, including the appeal-waiver provision, and he found that Toebbe’s guilty
plea was knowingly and voluntarily made. He deferred, however, to the district judge to
determine whether to accept the plea agreement under Rule 11(c)(1)(C) and thus impose
the agreed-to sentence.
At the hearing before the district judge, both the government and Diana Toebbe
urged the court to accept the plea agreement. The government argued that a 36-month
sentence would be appropriate for Diana Toebbe because she had “played [a] limited
passive role[] in [a] scheme[] led by [her] husband[],” as to whom a similar plea agreement
proffered a sentence of 151 to 210 months’ imprisonment. The government stated to the
court, “Really her offense boils down to acting as a cover and a lookout on three occasions
in a three-month period. Nothing more than that. Nothing less.” The government did note
that Diana Toebbe had also known the pass phrase to one of the cryptocurrency wallets —
which Jonathan Toebbe had forgotten — but it emphasized that she had provided it to
authorities when asked, allowing the government “to corroborate Mr. Toebbe’s claim that
no payments have been received [in] that wallet.”
At the end of the extended hearing, however, the district court concluded that “a
sentence of no more than 36 months” would be “strikingly deficient” “for an active
participant in a conspiracy to communicate Restricted Data.” The court explained that
Diana Toebbe’s participation in the conspiracy “was apparently done for selfish and greedy
reasons but that [it] could have easily caused great harm to the Navy, the United States,
servicemen, and even the world.” The court relied in this regard on a victim impact
statement prepared by the U.S. Navy, in which a vice admiral stated, among other things,
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that the information compromised by the conspiracy “could be used by an adversary to
harm or disable currently operating U.S. nuclear submarines,” thus increasing the risk faced
by “nearly 25,000 active duty submarine sailors,” and that the conspiracy had threatened
“one of [the United States’] prized strategic advantages.” In addition to reading the Navy’s
statement into the record, the court also noted that the probation officer had calculated
Diana Toebbe’s Sentencing Guidelines range as 151 to 188 months’ imprisonment — a
range based on a base offense level of 37 with a 3-level reduction for acceptance of
responsibility. In light of all the circumstances, the court found no “justifiable reasons for
accepting” a plea agreement that would bind it to impose a sentence so far below that range.
As a consequence of the district court’s ruling, Toebbe withdrew her guilty plea.
But about a month later, on September 20, 2022, she and the government executed a second
plea agreement by which Toebbe would again plead guilty to Count I charging conspiracy
to communicate Restricted Data, and the agreement would again be proffered under Rule
11(c)(1)(C). But rather than proffer a sentence of no more than 36 months’ imprisonment,
the revised agreement would require the court to impose “a sentence of imprisonment of
not more than the low end of the applicable Guidelines range,” with the “low end” defined
as “the lowest number of months of imprisonment available in the applicable Guidelines
range.” The agreement also provided that the district court would calculate the applicable
Guidelines range. Indeed, Toebbe expressly “consent[ed] to . . . a determination of any
and all facts and a resolution of the application of any and all Guidelines factors by the
United States District Judge.” (Emphasis added). Again, this second agreement provided
that if the court did not accept the proffered sentence — a sentence at the lowest end of the
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court-determined Guidelines range — Toebbe would have the right to withdraw her guilty
plea. This agreement also included agreements between Toebbe and the government that
were not binding on the court, such as (1) that the proper base offense level for Toebbe’s
offense was 37; (2) that the government would “move the Court” for a 3-level downward
departure “from the otherwise applicable Guidelines range”; and (3) that the government
would recommend a 3-level reduction under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1 for timely acceptance of
responsibility. Accordingly, based on the parties’ agreements, Toebbe would have a total
offense level of 31 if the district court agreed with their recommendations, resulting in a
Guidelines range of 108 to 135 months’ imprisonment.
Like Toebbe’s first plea agreement, the second plea agreement contained a waiver
of her appellate rights. Specifically, the agreement provided that “if the Court sentence[d]
her pursuant to Paragraph 3 of this agreement” — providing for a sentence at the lowest
end of the Guidelines range calculated by the district court — she would “knowingly and
expressly waive[] all rights . . . to appeal whatever sentence [was] imposed . . . for any
reason (including the establishment of the advisory sentencing guidelines range, . . . the
weighing of the sentencing factors, and any constitutional challenges to the calculation and
imposition of any term of imprisonment . . .).” The agreement excepted from the appeal
waiver only “claims of ineffective assistance of counsel [and] prosecutorial misconduct.”
But Toebbe also agreed “that there is currently no known evidence of [either].”
At the initial hearing on the second plea agreement before the magistrate judge,
Toebbe again affirmed that she understood the agreement and knowingly and voluntarily
agreed to its terms, including that the district court would determine her advisory
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Guidelines range and that she was waiving her right to appeal any sentence that was
consistent with the plea agreement. Again, the magistrate judge deferred to the district
judge to determine whether to accept the proffered plea agreement under Rule 11(c)(1)(C).
Before the hearing before the district judge, the government filed a motion for a 3-
level downward departure for Toebbe’s cooperation, as it had agreed to do in the plea
agreement. In the motion, the government noted that, in addition to providing the pass
phrase to the cryptocurrency wallet, Toebbe had also met with FBI agents for
approximately five hours, “provid[ing] details about the offense that captured her
perspective and involvement,” including “her knowledge of and planned involvement in
reconnaissance actions taken by Mr. Toebbe to decide how best to contact a foreign nation
to offer the Restricted Data for sale.” The government noted that she also “answered all
questions posed to her by agents from the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit,” providing
information relating to “the psychological dynamics between Mr. Toebbe and her,
including how those dynamics related to the planning and commission of the underlying
offense.” That Unit had not “had the opportunity . . . to interview both [spouses] in a
husband-and-wife espionage scheme” in at least 10 years, and a member of the Unit had
noted “the importance of those types of interviews in profiling criminal subjects and
solving future espionage cases.” The government advised the court that it considered
Diana Toebbe’s assistance in these respects to be “highly significant and useful” and that
its assessment was that she had “provided truthful, complete, and reliable information.” It
therefore urged the court to grant its motion for a 3-level downward departure.
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The district court, however, denied the motion following a hearing. It found that
other than the pass phrase, “Mrs. Toebbe largely provided information generally already
known to the government.” And it ultimately concluded that there was “nothing
remarkable about the information she provided or anything that she [had] done for the
government,” finding that she had provided only “the sort of cooperation that is commonly
seen in debriefings after a guilty plea.”
Before preparing a revised presentence report for the court to consider when
sentencing Diana Toebbe under the second plea agreement, the probation officer, pursuant
to his “effort to provide supplemental information” for the report, reached out to the
regional jail where the Toebbes had been detained following their arrest in October 2021.
As a result, the probation officer received information in early October 2022 that Diana
Toebbe had attempted to send two letters to Jonathan Toebbe, one in December 2021 and
another in January 2022, both of which had been intercepted by jail staff. The probation
officer indicated in his presentence report that, in the letters, Diana Toebbe had made
“several attempts to induce her husband to . . . provide statements to authorities affirming
her ignorance of his criminal scheme,” including by “repeated[ly] referenc[ing] . . . [their]
children and the potential for her to care for them.” The probation officer further reported
that Jonathan Toebbe had informed authorities that, prior to their arrest, “he and his wife
had . . . pre-arranged [a] ‘cover story’ relating to a bitcoin algorithm . . . in an . . . attempt
to shield her from consequences should the conspiracy be disrupted by authorities.” Diana
Toebbe then invoked this bitcoin algorithm cover story in the letters in an apparent attempt
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to signal to her husband that she was sticking to that story and to implore him to do the
same.
In the presentence report, the probation officer calculated Diana Toebbe’s advisory
Guidelines range, finding first that the base offense level for her violation of § 2274(a) was
37. Based on the two letters, he then recommended applying an upward adjustment under
U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 of two levels for obstruction of justice, while still applying a downward
adjustment under § 3E1.1 of three levels for acceptance of responsibility, resulting in a
total offense level of 36. Based on that offense level and a Criminal History Category I
(reflecting no prior convictions), the presentence report calculated the advisory Guidelines
range to be 181 to 235 months’ imprisonment. Toebbe objected to the application of the
obstruction of justice enhancement.
The district court conducted a joint hearing for both Diana and Jonathan Toebbe on
November 9, 2022, to determine whether to accept their respective Rule 11(c)(1)(C) plea
agreements and, if so, to impose sentences consistent with those agreements. In calculating
Diana Toebbe’s Guidelines range, the court first addressed her objection to the obstruction
of justice enhancement and overruled it. It found that in the letters, Diana Toebbe had
“pressure[d]” and “encourage[d]” her husband “to lie” and “perjure [himself],” which was
“obstruction plain and simple.” The court concluded next that based on her obstructive
conduct, Diana Toebbe should lose the recommended 3-level reduction for acceptance of
responsibility, noting that the Guidelines Manual instructed that conduct resulting in an
obstruction enhancement “ordinarily indicates that the defendant has not accepted
responsibility for his criminal conduct.” (Quoting U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1 cmt. n.4). Thus, to
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calculate the advisory Guidelines range, the court began with the agreed-upon base offense
level of 37 and then applied the 2-level obstruction enhancement. With no reductions to
be made, the court determined that Diana Toebbe’s total offense level was 39, resulting in
an advisory Guidelines range of 262 to 327 months’ imprisonment. After making those
calculations, the court concluded that “acceptance of [Diana Toebbe’s] plea agreement
[would] not undermine the statutory purposes of sentencing,” and accordingly it accepted
her Rule 11(c)(1)(C) plea agreement. As a result, the maximum sentence the court could
impose became 262 months’ imprisonment, the lowest in the calculated Guidelines range.
Diana Toebbe, with the affirmative support of the government, then argued for a
downward variant sentence based on the 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors. She proposed a
sentence “in the range of 3 to 4.9 years.” In arguing for this substantial variance, Diana
Toebbe’s counsel argued that “[h]er husband was the principal actor” who had “come up
with the idea to do this,” while Diana Toebbe had a long, documented history of struggling
with anxiety and depression, including suicidal ideation, which had clouded her judgment.
Her counsel also maintained that a sentence at the bottom of the calculated Guidelines
range would result in an unwarranted disparity when compared to the sentences imposed
on other defendants convicted of espionage offenses, citing statistics from a Defense
Department study indicating that from 1990 to 2015, 42% of such defendants had “received
a sentence of below 5 years” and 66% had “received less than 10 years.”
Diana Toebbe’s counsel argued further that the “risk of recidivism” was exceedingly
low. In response to that argument the court asked, “How do we know that if they had the
Plan B cover story [involving the bitcoin algorithm], there [was] not a Plan C where
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something else [was] secreted [away] for when they get out that they can share and make
money from?” Diana Toebbe’s counsel responded that the government had “done
everything [it] know[s] how to do to confirm that there is no further information out there”
and that it had a “high degree of confidence [that] there’s not.” And the government
subsequently confirmed this statement, providing a fulsome summary of the extensive
steps that the FBI had taken to confirm the scope of the conspiracy and representing that
not only was there “no evidence [of] some type of Plan C,” but that “all of the evidence
goes against such a conclusion.”
Joining Toebbe’s request for substantial downward variance, the government
continued to maintain that the three-year sentence proposed in the original plea agreement
was the appropriate sentence. It maintained that “[i]t’s universally accepted that the person
with access [to classified information] . . . who is trusted [and] who has the specialized
knowledge . . . should be punished more severely than someone who might have helped in
some way.” And it also argued that in applying the § 3553(a) factors, the court should
ensure that it was not giving too much weight to the two letters Diana Toebbe had attempted
to pass to her husband, as they “did not make it to the recipient and had no effect on the
case.” Finally, the government repeated its request that the court consider Diana Toebbe’s
cooperation, emphasizing that “[t]he FBI and the Department of Navy [were] uniquely
positioned to assess” its value and that both considered it significant.
After considering the parties’ arguments, the district court rejected the request for a
downward variant sentence and thus sentenced Diana Toebbe to 262 months’
imprisonment, the bottom of the advisory Guidelines range. The court stated that “while
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the factors listed in mitigation by the government and the defendant [did] impact the
Court’s sentencing and . . . [its decision] to accept . . . the binding plea agreement in the
first place,” it had concluded that those factors did “not support a variance sentence.” The
district court explained that it considered the Toebbes’ crime to be one of the most serious
it had ever seen, emphasizing that the conspiracy “posed a legitimate concern for the
national security interests of this country,” as it “had the potential to undermine countless
hours of effort made by an untold number of individuals . . . and could have endangered
military service personnel.” The court stated further that while it had considered the
information provided by defense counsel pertaining to the sentencing outcomes in other
espionage cases, “the facts of each of those cases [were] very different, and the defendants
[were] very different as well.” The court also rejected the premise that Diana Toebbe was
“a minor participant.” Indeed, based upon certain intercepted communications between
the Toebbes that were presented as evidence at her detention hearing, as well as the two
letters that Diana Toebbe had attempted to send to Jonathan Toebbe, the court found that
“it was most probably Mrs. Toebbe that was driving the bus.” Finally, the court stated that,
“given likely technological and military advances,” its chosen sentence would help ensure
that “by the time this defendant is released from imprisonment, any information” that “she
or her husband held onto” “would most certainly be outdated, stale, and worthless to any
nation [that] would want to cause us harm.”
After sentencing Diana Toebbe to 262 months’ imprisonment, the court sentenced
Jonathan Toebbe to 232 months’ imprisonment. It did so based on the same base offense
level of 37, plus an enhancement for his role in the offense. But it also applied a reduction
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to his offense level for his acceptance of responsibility. His offense level was accordingly
36, resulting in an advisory Guidelines range of 188 to 235 months’ imprisonment. His
232-month sentence was thus at “the higher end of the binding term of imprisonment
contained in [his] plea agreement.”
From the judgment entered on November 17, 2022, Diana Toebbe filed this appeal
challenging her sentence. The government filed a motion to dismiss the appeal based on
the appeal-waiver provision in her plea agreement, and Toebbe has advanced several
arguments that her appeal waiver does not bar her appeal, including a claim that the
government, in making its arguments on appeal, has breached the plea agreement.
II
We address at the outset the government’s motion to dismiss this appeal on the
ground that Toebbe waived her right to appeal whatever sentence was imposed for any
reason. The government contends that “[a]ll the sentencing issues Toebbe seeks to raise
on appeal fall within the broad scope of her appeal waiver.” It argues further that while
Toebbe has couched her arguments in constitutional terms, her claims actually “amount to
a simple disagreement with the district court’s factual findings and Guidelines calculation
at sentencing,” which are clearly unreviewable under the parties’ agreement. Finally, the
government asserts that Toebbe has provided no authority holding that her issues “fall[]
within the narrow class of claims that would render her appeal waiver unenforceable.”
Toebbe does not dispute the validity of her waiver. Rather, she mounts a multi-
faceted challenge to the fairness and adequacy of her sentencing process, contending that
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during the process the district court relied on “unfounded speculation”; that the court failed
to adhere “to the principle of party presentation” by ignoring the parties’ agreements and
recommendations; that the court violated required judicial neutrality when it denied
positions that had been recommended by both parties and instead made its own findings;
and that the court imposed a sentence that was “so far beyond the anticipated range” that it
was fundamentally unfair. She argues that her appeal waiver cannot bar her from
challenging the cumulative effect of such conduct by the district judge, as it could not have
been anticipated by the parties when they negotiated the plea agreement.
Before addressing this issue, we lay out the relevant language of the plea agreement,
which demonstrates the negotiated expectations of the parties.
The agreement, which was executed on September 20, 2022, provides that Toebbe
would plead guilty to Count I of the indictment, the conspiracy count, which provides for
a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, and the government would dismiss Counts II
and III.
The agreement was executed and proffered to the district court as a plea agreement
under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1)(C), by which parties can agree to a
specific sentence, a sentencing range, or the application of a particular Sentencing
Guidelines provision or factor that then becomes binding on the district court if it accepts
the agreement. Paragraph 3 of the plea agreement in this case thus included as a core term
the following:
Pursuant to Rule 11(c)(1)(C) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the
parties agree to the following binding term: a sentence of imprisonment of
not more than the low end of the applicable Guidelines range. The parties’
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reference to “low end” means the lowest number of months of imprisonment
available in the applicable Guidelines range. . . . The parties understand that
if the Court does not accept the binding provisions of this paragraph, then
Ms. Toebbe will have the right to withdraw her plea of guilty.
(Emphasis added). The agreement also included stipulations by the parties, an agreement
by the government to file a motion for a downward departure, and recommendations by
the government, but none of these was binding on the court. Thus, in Paragraph 4, the
parties “stipulate[d] and agree[d] that the base offense level [for Toebbe’s conviction]
[was] . . . 37,” but they also agreed that “the Court is not bound by the stipulations in this
paragraph.” (Emphasis added). The government also agreed to make recommendations
that were similarly not binding on the court. Paragraph 15 provided:
Although this agreement contains a binding term regarding imprisonment,
the United States will make the following nonbinding recommendations: 1)
if Ms. Toebbe accepts responsibility, and if the probation office recommends
a two-level reduction for “acceptance of responsibility,” . . . the United States
will concur in the recommendation; and 2) should Ms. Toebbe give timely
and complete information [as required by U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(b)], the United
States will recommend . . . an additional one-level reduction for this “timely
acceptance” of responsibility.
(Emphasis in original). Finally, the government agreed, as a response to Toebbe’s
cooperation, that “[p]rior to sentencing,” it would “move the Court to depart downward”
and grant her a 3-level reduction of her offense level.
The nonbinding aspect of these stipulations and recommendations was again
confirmed in Paragraph 7. In that paragraph, Toebbe
consent[ed] to the application of the Guidelines, in conformity with United
States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005), and to a determination of any and all
facts and a resolution of the application of any and all Guidelines factors by
the United States District Judge. Ms. Toebbe further agree[d] that the
District Judge should make any sentencing determinations, including, but
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not limited to, Guidelines determinations, using the preponderance of the
evidence standard.
(Emphasis added). Thus, the agreement provided for a binding sentence no higher than the
bottom of the Guidelines range and that the Guidelines range would be determined by the
district court based on its findings.
Finally, the parties agreed to waive appeals if the court sentenced Toebbe consistent
with the plea agreement’s binding provision. The waiver by Toebbe provided:
[I]f the Court sentences her pursuant to Paragraph 3 of this agreement . . .
[t]he defendant knowingly and expressly waives all rights conferred by
18 U.S.C. § 3742 to appeal whatever sentence is imposed . . . for
any reason (including the establishment of the advisory sentencing
guidelines range, . . . the weighing of the sentencing factors, and any
constitutional challenges to the calculation and imposition of any term of
imprisonment . . .).
* * *
Nothing in this paragraph, however, will act as a bar to the defendant
perfecting any legal remedies she may otherwise have on appeal or collateral
attack respecting claims of ineffective assistance of counsel or prosecutorial
misconduct. The defendant agrees that there is currently no known evidence
of ineffective assistance of counsel or prosecutorial misconduct.
And the waiver by the government provided:
The United States waives its right to appeal any sentence within [the] range
specified in Paragraph 3.
It is well established that a criminal defendant may waive the statutory right to
appeal her sentence as part of a plea agreement and that we will ordinarily enforce that
waiver should the defendant nonetheless appeal the sentence imposed by the district court.
See United States v. Archie, 771 F.3d 217, 221 (4th Cir. 2014). More specifically,
“[w]here, as here, the Government seeks enforcement of an appeal waiver,” we will
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generally enforce the waiver “to preclude a defendant from appealing a specific issue if the
record establishes that the waiver is valid and the issue being appealed is within the scope
of the waiver.” Id. Moreover, “[a]n appellate waiver is valid if the defendant’s agreement
to the waiver was knowing and intelligent.” United States v. Thornsbury, 670 F.3d 532,
537 (4th Cir. 2012).
Toebbe does not contest the validity of her appeal waiver, and the record confirms
that she knowingly and intelligently waived her right to appeal. See Thornsbury, 670 F.3d
at 537 (“Generally, if a district court questions a defendant regarding the waiver of
appellate rights during the Rule 11 colloquy and the record indicates that the defendant
understood the full significance of the waiver, the waiver is valid”). Moreover, the scope
of her appeal waiver on its face is quite broad, barring, with two limited exceptions not
applicable here, Toebbe’s “appeal [of] whatever sentence [was] imposed . . . for
any reason,” “including [1] the establishment of the advisory sentencing guidelines range,
. . . [2] the weighing of the sentencing factors, and [3] any constitutional challenges to the
calculation and imposition of any term of imprisonment.” (Emphasis added). Thus, unless
some other exception based in the law and the facts in this case can be demonstrated,
Toebbe’s challenge to her 262-month sentence would appear to fall squarely within the
scope of her valid appeal waiver. Nonetheless, she seeks relief from her waiver.
To obtain such relief, Toebbe advances the premise that, given the terms of her plea
agreement, she could not have reasonably anticipated the sentence that she received and
that this discordance between the anticipated sentence and the actual sentence was
attributable to bias by the district judge, who unfairly refused to accommodate the parties’
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agreements in favor of her personal views of the circumstances. Moreover, Toebbe argues
that the district judge, in doing so, hypothesized facts that were unsupported. She contends
that, in this manner, the sentencing process was so egregious and unfair as to violate her
due process rights and that she cannot legally waive her right to appeal a sentence based
on such a violation.
Toebbe’s argument relies generally on our jurisprudence recognizing that “a
defendant who waives the right to appeal nevertheless ‘retains the right to obtain appellate
review of his sentence on certain limited grounds,’ even if those grounds are not specified
in the plea agreement.” United States v. Marsh, 944 F.3d 524, 528 (4th Cir. 2019) (quoting
United States v. Attar, 38 F.3d 727, 732 (4th Cir. 1994)). For example, “[n]o appeal waiver
. . . can bar a defendant’s right to challenge his sentence as outside a statutorily prescribed
maximum ‘or based on a constitutionally impermissible factor such as race.’” Id. (quoting
United States v. Marin, 961 F.2d 493, 496 (4th Cir. 1992)). And it is similarly well
established that a defendant’s claim that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel
following the entry of his guilty plea cannot be barred by an appeal waiver. See Attar,
38 F.3d at 732–33. In such circumstances, we have explained, “the errors allegedly
committed by the district courts were errors that the defendants could not have reasonably
contemplated when the plea agreements were executed.” United States v. Blick, 408 F.3d
162, 172 (4th Cir. 2005). Moreover, as we have observed, the “only” circumstance in
which we have “declined to enforce a valid appeal waiver [is] where the sentencing court
violated a fundamental constitutional or statutory right that was firmly established at the
time of sentencing.” Archie, 771 F.3d at 223.
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In her effort to make a case for relief from the waiver, Toebbe points to the
government’s position in her case as supporting her expectation of a lower sentence. She
notes that throughout the entire sentencing process, the government favored a 36-month
sentence and so stated to the court. In the plea agreement, the government also agreed to
move for a 3-level reduction of her offense level for her cooperation and to recommend a
3-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. And, while not part of the plea
agreement, the government supported and argued for a substantial downward variant
sentence in Toebbe’s favor. Thus, both the government and Toebbe requested — and
accordingly expected — a lower sentence than would have otherwise been indicated by the
Sentencing Guidelines. Yet, while Toebbe insists that she expected that the court would
accommodate the parties’ positions, she knew that the court was not bound by the parties’
positions, as explicitly stated in her plea agreement. She also knew that the district court
had rejected the 36-month sentence included in her first plea agreement as “strikingly
deficient.”
Moreover, Toebbe’s argument fails to take account of the critical fact that clearly
influenced the district court. Namely, after the execution of the second plea agreement, the
probation officer uncovered two letters that Diana Toebbe had attempted to send to
Jonathan Toebbe, in which she urged him to fabricate facts and falsely tell authorities that
she was innocent and should be released. Accordingly, the probation officer recommended
a 2-level increase in Toebbe’s offense level for obstruction of justice.
At sentencing, the district court expressed dismay that the letters had not been
provided to the court earlier. Toebbe’s counsel acknowledged that “it was disappointing”
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that Toebbe had attempted to send the letters. After reading the text of the letters into the
record, the court found that Diana Toebbe was attempting to encourage Jonathan Toebbe
to perjure himself about her role in the offense. The court explained that with the letters,
Diana Toebbe was conveying that “it’s time to deploy the cover plan [that the two had
formulated before their arrest]. So you go forth, and you plead guilty, and you perjure
yourself and tell them I had nothing to do with this.” The court added that the letters also
suggested that Diana Toebbe was “driving the bus”; she was, according to the court,
“making sure he deployed the cover story for her.”
The district court was entitled to give weight to these letters. They undermined the
forthrightness that the government had reported to the court and undermined her arguments
for a lower sentence. And while the government apparently concluded that Toebbe should
still receive credit for having accepted responsibility and cooperated after her attempt to
convince her husband to perjure himself had failed, the district court was not bound by the
government’s conclusion in this regard — indeed, it had a duty to make its own
assessments.
We conclude that Diana Toebbe had no reasonable basis to believe that the district
court would provide her all of the benefits derivable from the stipulations and
recommendations that the government had made in the plea agreement. As important,
Toebbe has also been unable to present any authority to support her claim for relief from
her waiver based on her unrealized expectations as to the sentence she would receive.
Instead, our jurisprudence clearly indicates that a defendant’s mere expectation of a lower
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sentence, even if reasonable, is not a ground for us to fail to enforce the defendant’s valid
appeal waiver. See, e.g., Archie, 771 F.3d at 223.
Finally, her argument that her due process rights were violated, based on the totality
of the district court’s conduct, is also unsupported. While Toebbe’s plea agreement did
waive her right to appeal her sentence even on constitutional grounds, a defendant in her
position might nonetheless be able to argue persuasively that holding her to such an
agreement would be fundamentally unfair if the district court’s process for accepting the
plea agreement and conducting the sentencing was grossly imbued with arbitrariness. See
Marin, 961 F.2d at 496 (“[A] defendant who waives his right to appeal does not subject
himself to being sentenced entirely at the whim of the district court”). But any such
argument would have to be based on demonstrated facts that the process became unhinged
from the rules and principles established for defendants’ protection and that it clearly
exceeded the bounds of commonsense and reason. But we have no such circumstances
here.
In this case, the district court’s rulings relating to Toebbe’s offense level, which
supported the sentence the district court ultimately imposed, were made by applying the
applicable Sentencing Guidelines provisions and making findings of fact. As a result of
those rulings, the court determined that Toebbe’s total offense level was 39, as compared
to the offense level of 36 recommended in the presentence report. These rulings by the
court cannot be characterized as conduct without regard to applicable rules and principles
and outside the bounds of commonsense and reason.
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At bottom, we conclude that Toebbe’s arguments for relief from her appeal waiver
are insufficient.
III
Apart from her claim for relief from the waiver, Toebbe also relies on the language
of her plea agreement and Rule 11(c)(1)(C) to expand the scope of that which bound the
district court. Specifically, she argues that because her plea agreement was proffered to
the court under Rule 11(c)(1)(C), “the district court was bound to apply the government’s
recommendations as to the applicability of” the 3-level downward departure for
cooperation and the 3-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. (Emphasis added).
Accordingly, she maintains that we must remand this case for specific performance and
order that the district court adhere to the government’s recommendations in connection
with the determination of her total offense level.
Neither the agreement nor Rule 11 supports her argument. Rule 11(c)(1)(C)
authorizes plea agreements in which “an attorney for the government will . . . agree that a
specific sentence or sentencing range is the appropriate disposition of the case, or that a
particular provision of the Sentencing Guidelines, or policy statement, or sentencing factor
does or does not apply,” with that “recommendation or request [becoming] bind[ing] [on]
the court once the court accepts the plea agreement.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(c)(1)(C)
(emphasis added). Thus, as relevant here, the Rule authorizes a plea agreement in which
the parties agree to a specific sentencing range — e.g., one not more than the bottom of
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the applicable Guidelines range — and bind the court to imposing a sentence within that
range without also binding the court in its calculation of the applicable Guidelines range.
This is precisely the structure of the parties’ plea agreement in this case.
Specifically, Paragraph 3 provides:
Pursuant to Rule 11(c)(1)(C) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the
parties agree to the following binding term: a sentence of imprisonment of
not more than the low end of the applicable Guidelines range. . . . The parties
understand that if the Court does not accept the binding provisions of this
paragraph, then Ms. Toebbe will have the right to withdraw her plea of
guilty.
(Emphasis added). Thus, the sole “binding term” of the plea agreement was the parties’
agreement that Toebbe would receive “a sentence of imprisonment of not more than the
low end of the applicable Guidelines range.” She agreed, moreover, that her “applicable
Guidelines range” was to be determined by the district court, expressly agreeing to “a
resolution of the application of any and all Guidelines factors by the United States District
Judge.” (Emphasis added). And while the plea agreement reflects the two parties’
agreements with each other as to how certain Guidelines factors would apply — obligating
the government to file a motion asking the district court to apply a 3-level downward
departure for cooperation and to make a “nonbinding recommendation[]” that Toebbe
receive another 3-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility — those provisions of
the plea agreement, by their own terms, were not binding on the district court. Thus, we
find no merit to Toebbe’s argument that “the district court . . . violated Rule 11(c)(1)(C)”
by denying the government’s motion for a downward departure and declining to follow its
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“nonbinding recommendation” that Toebbe receive a 3-level reduction for acceptance of
responsibility.
IV
Additionally, Toebbe contends that her “21.5-year sentence is so grossly
disproportionate to her conduct of standing lookout at a drop of confidential information
three times” that the sentence violated her Eighth Amendment right against cruel and
unusual punishments. She argues that “[i]t is grossly above the 3-year sentence that the
prosecutor recommended, and it is grossly above the sentences of other similarly situated
defendants.”
While her appeal waiver appears also to cover this argument, we conclude that were
it appropriate for us to consider it, it would nonetheless have no merit. Toebbe pleaded
guilty to a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 2274(a), for which Congress provided a maximum
sentence of life imprisonment. And in assessing such a violation in the context of all other
violations of federal crimes, the Sentencing Commission assigned it a base offense level of
37. Without adjusting that offense level for other factors, the resulting advisory sentencing
range established by the Commission for one without a criminal history would be
imprisonment from 210 to 262 months. And in this case, because Toebbe was found to
have obstructed justice, her advisory sentencing range was increased to 262 to 327 months’
imprisonment. The district court sentenced her to 262 months, a sentence within the range
prescribed not only by the statute but also by the Sentencing Guidelines. Yet, she has made
no effort to challenge either. In these circumstances, there simply can be no Eighth
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Amendment argument. Cf. United States v. Cobler, 748 F.3d 570, 580 (4th Cir. 2014)
(recognizing that a defendant challenging her sentence under the Eighth Amendment must
first establish a “threshold inference of gross disproportionality”).
Toebbe relies on the facts that the government recommended a 36-month sentence
and that others in similar circumstances have received lower sentences. But these facts
hardly establish that the district court violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of cruel
and unusual punishments when it imposed a sentence that was authorized by Congress and
consistent with the Sentencing Commission’s assessment of the seriousness of the offense
relative to other federal crimes. And while Toebbe attempts to minimize her role in the
conspiracy, the district court reasonably rejected that characterization. The court
concluded, based on the record before it, including the Navy’s victim impact statement,
that the conspiracy was one of the most serious crimes it had ever seen.
At bottom, Toebbe has failed to demonstrate an acceptable reason why her appeal
waiver should not be enforced against her Eighth Amendment claim.
V
Finally, Toebbe contends that her plea agreement, together with its waiver, is invalid
and cannot be enforced because the government breached the plea agreement by what it
argued in its appellate brief. Specifically, she notes that the plea agreement required the
government to seek a 3-level downward departure “from the otherwise applicable
Guidelines range” and to recommend a 3-level reduction in her offense level for acceptance
of responsibility. Yet, the government now argues on appeal in support of the sentence
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imposed by the district court. While Toebbe acknowledges that the government did honor
its obligations before the district court, she maintains that its “new assertions” in its brief
on appeal “directly contravenes [its] obligations in the plea agreement,” with the result
being that the agreement’s appeal waiver can no longer be enforced against her.
To make the argument, however, Toebbe relies on a misreading of her plea
agreement. Again, Paragraph 5 of the agreement provided that “[p]rior to sentencing . . . ,
the United States will move the Court to depart downward from the otherwise applicable
Guidelines range” by three levels. And in Paragraph 15, the government agreed that “if
the probation office recommends a two-level reduction for ‘acceptance of responsibility,’”
it would “concur in [that] recommendation” and also “recommend . . . an additional one-
level reduction for . . . ‘timely acceptance’ of responsibility” if Toebbe satisfied specified
conditions. The government fulfilled both of these obligations, arguing fervently to the
district court throughout the sentencing proceeding that Toebbe should receive those
benefits. The court, however, rejected both arguments and applied neither reduction,
ultimately imposing a Guidelines sentence of 262 months’ imprisonment.
Critically, the plea agreement provided further that once the district court exercised
its authority to sentence Toebbe, the government was authorized to advance arguments on
appeal in support of that sentence. Specifically, it provided, “Both parties have the right
during any appeal to argue in support of the sentence.” And that is all the government has
done. We understand the central thrust of its position to be that, although the district court
certainly could have agreed with it and Toebbe below when calculating Toebbe’s offense
level, the court nonetheless acted “reasonably and within [its] discretion” when it rejected
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the government’s reduction and downward-departure requests. Taking all of the plea
agreements’ provisions into account, we readily conclude that the government’s arguments
on appeal do not amount to a breach of its obligations under the agreement.
VI
While Toebbe finds her sentence to be a heavy one — indeed too heavy for the
conduct as she assesses it — her violation of law was a most serious one. She actively
participated, for personal financial gain, in a conspiracy to communicate important
Restricted Data about the U.S. Navy’s Virginia-class submarines, with actual harmful
consequences and potentially catastrophic ones. The U.S. Navy advised the district court
that the betrayal by the Toebbes had far-reaching ramifications for the United States and
the sailors and the families that serve the United States Navy, enhancing the risk faced by
nearly 25,000 active-duty submarine sailors. And as the district court noted, “the damage
here has already been done.” In addition, as the Navy stated, her conduct threatened “one
of the [United States’] prized strategic advantages.” The gravity of Toebbe’s conduct must
not be diminished on the ground that it was not as extensive in the overall scheme as was
her husband’s. She knowingly engaged in the full scope of the conspiracy — not only
providing cover and lookout but also engaging in planning and strategy — recognizing the
significant damage that it could cause to the United States. Indeed, her understanding of
the damage is reflected by the millions of dollars that she and her husband demanded and
expected from their betrayal.
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For the reasons that we have given, we enforce Toebbe’s appeal waiver and dismiss
her appeal.
DISMISSED
31