The narrow issue on this appeal is whether a presumption of vindictiveness arises from a prosecutor’s decision after a mistrial to lodge a superseding indictment that adds a criminal charge but does not expose the defendant to any higher maximum criminal penalty. Bernice Lane appeals from a judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (John F. Keenan, Judge) denying her petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Because we conclude that the circumstances of this case do not “pose a realistic likelihood of ‘vindictiveness,’ ”
Blackledge v. Perry,
Background
Bernice Lane and John Henry Simmons were originally indicted in April 1976 by a New York grand jury for criminal possession and sale of a controlled substance. N.Y.Penal Law §§ 220.21, 220.43 (McKinney 1980). The charges arose out of a sale of heroin to undercover police officers.
In October 1976, Lane and Simmons began a jury trial before Acting Supreme Court Justice Shirley R. Levittan. At trial, it was revealed that Simmons had offered to cooperate with the district attorney and had implicated Lane in connection with an attempted plea bargain. Lane moved for a severance and a new trial. Justice Levit-tan granted the motions.
In March 1977, Lane began a second jury trial before Justice Levittan. At this trial, the State sought to prove Lane’s identity as one of the perpetrators of the charged offenses by introducing evidence of her role in a subsequent drug sale. Judge Levittan sustained Lane’s objection to the introduction of this “other crimes” evidence. When the jury failed to reach a verdict, Justice Levittan declared a mistrial.
In May 1977, the prosecutor filed a superseding indictment repeating the two substantive offenses of the earlier indictment and adding an additional count of conspiracy. N.Y.Penal Law § 105.15 (McKinney 1975 & Supp.1987). The conspiracy offense carries a maximum sentence of twenty-five years.
Id.
§ 70.-00(2)(b). The additional charge, however, did not increase the maximum punishment Lane faced because the maximum sentence on the original drug selling offense is life imprisonment.
Id.
§ 70.00(2)(a).
1
The prosecutor’s purpose in lodging the additional charge was to provide a basis for admitting the “other crimes” evidence that Justice Levittan had excluded. Thereafter, Lane brought an Article 78 proceeding seeking a writ of prohibition against prosecution on the superseding indictment on the ground that it violated state law and due process. The Appellate Division denied Lane’s petition.
Lane v. Office of Special Narcotics Prosecutor,
In September 1977, Lane’s third jury trial began, with Justice Ernst H. Rosenber-ger presiding. Lane was convicted of the sale and conspiracy counts. She was sentenced to a term of fifteen years to life imprisonment for the sale offense and a concurrent term of zero to seven years for the conspiracy offense.
Lane’s direct appeals in the New York courts on the ground that the superseding indictment violated the New York double jeopardy statute were denied.
People v. Lane,
In July 1985, Lane filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, challenging the prosecutor’s addition of the conspiracy count after the mistrial. Judge Keenan determined that no presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness applied in this case and denied Lane’s petition.
Discussion
Since its decision in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
Since
Blackledge,
the Supreme Court has applied the presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness only to situations in which a prosecutor lodges more severe charges following a defendant’s post-conviction exercise of his right to appeal.
See Thigpen v. Roberts, supra.
The Court has declined to apply the presumption with regard to the lodging of a superseding indictment following unsuccessful plea bargaining because the “give-and-take” of plea bargaining does not in general reflect a retaliatory motive.
Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
The present case falls in between the Supreme Court’s pretrial/post-conviction dichotomy. The prosecutor lodged the additional charge following declaration of a mistrial. Recognizing the inflexibility of a presumption of vindictiveness and that institutional pressures similar to those identified in
Blackledge
might operate in the mistrial context,
see United States v. Kahn,
In the present case, the prosecution, after a mistrial, lodged a superseding indict
*879
ment that, although adding a conspiracy count, did not expose Lane to any greater criminal penalty than the original indictment. At least in the mistrial context, we believe that a threat of greater punishment is required to justify a “realistic” apprehension of retaliatory motive on the part of the prosecution.
Blackledge v. Perry, supra,
In deciding whether to move for a mistrial when a jury reports a deadlock, a defendant acting completely rationally would compare the likely consequences of allowing the jury to deliberate longer with the likely consequences of obtaining a mistrial. To make that choice the defendant would have to make two difficult assessments: the likelihood of conviction if deliberations continue and the likelihood of conviction at a retrial. It has been reported that the last vote of deadlocked juries favors conviction nearly three times as often as acquittal.
See
H. Kalven, Jr. & H. Zeis-el,
The American Jury
460 (1966). Perhaps that is why defendants commonly request a mistrial at the first report of a deadlock, forgoing the possibility of an acquittal if deliberations continue in favor of the certainty of avoiding conviction at the first trial, even at some risk of facing what might be an enhanced prospect of conviction at a retrial. While we do not rule out the remote possibility that some defendant might hesitate to move for a mistrial out of the fear that the prosecution could lodge additional, though no more severe, charges following a mistrial and thereby increase the chances of conviction at a retrial, we do not believe that leaving prosecutors free to add such charges prior to a conviction creates the “realistic likelihood of ‘vindictiveness,’ ”
Blackledge v. Perry, supra,
Even though Lane does not benefit from a presumption of vindictiveness, she may still seek to prove actual prosecutorial vindictiveness.
See United States v. Goodwin, supra,
[t]he decision to re-indict was not a response to [Lane’s] exercise of a right, but was merely a result of the prosecutor’s desire to have improperly suppressed evidence relative to defendant’s identity admitted at a later trial.
Opinion and Order of the District Court at 10 (June 10, 1986) [Available on WEST-LAW, DCTU database].
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The addition of the conspiracy charge did not create the risk of any increase in the minimum period of imprisonment (MPI). Under the law in effect when Lane was convicted, MPI’s were not cumulated where consecutive sentences were imposed. N.Y.Penal Law § 70.30(l)(b) (McKinney 1975). We do not imply that the outcome of this case would be different under current law, which requires cumulation of MPI’s for sentences imposed consecutively.
Id.
§ 70.30(l)(b) (McKinney Supp.1987).
See generally Hunter v. Fogg,
. In the present case, the appellate record is not clear on whether the prosecutor resisted declaration of the mistrial. The State asserts, in an affidavit filed with its brief, that it cannot locate any transcript or other record relating to the trial court's declaration of a mistrial. In the absence of certainty on this point, we do not consider United States v. Kahn, supra, controlling.
