This is аn appeal from the denial of a motion to vacate multiple armed rape and sodomy convictions on double jeopardy grounds. We hold that because the motion, which was filed pursuant to D.C.Code § 23-110 (1996), properly is viewed instead as one to correct an illegal sentence pursuant to Super. Ct.Crim. R. 35(a), the dou
I.
Pro se appellant Anthony Brown was convicted in 1986 of three counts of armed rape and three counts of sodomy. The evidence at Brown’s trial established that he and two co-defendants took turns rаping and then sodomizing the complaining witness while they held her at gunpoint. Brown threatened to kill her if she resisted or reported the crimes. On each count of armed rape, the trial judge, Judge Robert M. Scott, sentenced Brown to a prison term of ten to thirty years, with two of the terms to run consecutively and the third term to run concurrently. Judge Scott likewise imposed two consecutive prison terms of three to nine yеars plus one concurrent term of the same length on each sodomy count. Brown thus received a total sentence on the armed rape and sodomy charges of twenty-six to seventy-eight years of imprisonment. This court affirmed Brown’s convictions on direct appeal in
Brown v. United
States,
Some ten years later, Brown moved pursuant to D.C.Code § 28-110 to vacate two of his armed rape and two of his sodomy convictions. In his pro se motion, Brown contended for the first time that his multiple prison terms violated the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Brown argued that because the government had to prove the same elements for each of the three counts of armed rape and each of the three counts of sodomy with which he was charged, those counts merged after his conviction into a single offеnse of armed rape and a single offense of sodomy. In addition, Brown alleged that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel when his trial counsel failed to raise this double jeopardy claim at his sentencing.
Judge Walton, who succeeded the deceased Judge Scott for purposes of handling Brown’s motion, denied the motion on its merits. Judge Walton ruled that each count of the indictment charged a separately punishable offense inasmuch as each count referred to a separate act of armed rape or sodomy that was committed by a different principal perpetrator, either Brown himself or a co-defendant whom Brown aided and abetted. Brown appealed Judge Walton’s ruling to this court.
On appeal, the government asks us to affirm without reаching the merits on the ground that Brown’s double jeopardy claim is “proeedurally barred” by his inability to show either cause for, or prejudice from, his failure to raise it in earlier proceedings, in particular on direct appeal. If we reject that contention and reach the merits, the government argues that Judge Walton correctly ruled that Brown’s convictions do not merge because Brown either сommitted or was eomplicit in three distinct armed rapes and three distinct sodomies committed by three different principal offenders. The government further argues that Brown’s trial attorneys were not ineffective in failing to pursue a double jeopardy claim that was meritless. We address these issues in turn.
A motion under D.C.Code § 28-110 is not
“a
substitute for direct review.”
Head v. United States,
Taking the requirements in reverse order, if Brown’s double jeopardy claim has merit, he undeniably suffered “actual and substantial” prejudice,
Frady,
At first blush, then, Brown’s attempt to assert a double jeopardy claim in his § 23-110 motion appears to be barred because Brown has not proffered cause for his failure to raise the claim in his direct appeal. But Brown’s claim that the trial court imposed multiple punishments for a single offense in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause is, in the circumstances here, a claim that his sentence was illegal. As such, it is a claim that properly is made in a motion to correct an illegal sentence pursuant to Super. Ct.Crim. R. 35(a).
See (Samuel) Byrd v. United States,
Treating Brown’s motion as made pursuant to Rule 35(a), is it subject to the requirement articulated in
Head
that a § 23-110 movant must show both cause for his failure to raise his claim on direct appeal and prejudice as a result of that failure? The court left this precise question open in
Norman. See
Rule 35(a) is an unconditional grant of authority to the court to “correct an illegal sentence at any time.” The premise is that an illegal sentence is “a nullity,”
Prince v. United States,
The reasons for a cause and prejudice requirement when procedurally defaulted claims are asserted in a collateral attack on a conviction are almost entirely absent when the claim is only that the sentence was beyond the рower of the court to impose. Setting aside federalism concerns, which are not present here, the primary rationale is that collateral attacks undermine the finality of convictions, weaken the deterrent effect of the criminal law and, when a new trial is required, “prejudice the government and diminish the chances of a reliable criminal adjudication.” McC
leskey v. Zant,
A secondary justification that has been offered for the cause and prejudice requirement is that “collateral litigation plaсes a heavy burden on scarce ... judicial resources, and threatens the capacity of the system to resolve primary disputes.”
McCleskey,
A final consideration that inclines against a procedural bar to a
bona fide
Rule 35(a) motion is the potential “gravity of the error,”
(Timothy) Robinson,
We conclude that in the interests of justice, a motion to correct an illegal sentence should be considered without regard to cause and prejudice requirements. In the present case, therefore, Brown’s failure to raise his double jeopardy challenge to the legality of his sentence at the time of his sentencing or on direct appeal does not bar our consideration of his claim on its merits.
III.
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits “multiple punishments for the same offense.”
North Carolina v. Pearce,
We reject this argument because each count against Brown charged him with a different act of rape or sodomy that was committed by a different principal perpetrator (either Brown himself or one of his co-defendants, whom Brown aided and abetted). There is no double jeopardy bar to “separate and cumulative punishment for separate criminal acts,” even if those separate acts do happen to violate the same criminal statute.
Gardner v. United States,
Brown can derive no benefit from the rule that a defendant may be convicted of only one count of assault “when the evidence establishes ‘a continuing course of assaultive conduct,’ rathеr than ‘a succession of detached incidents.’ ”
In re T.H.B.,
Here, too, we must reject the “continuing offense” argument. As with the separate acts of sexual abuse in
Gardner, Spain
and
Robinson
— and unlike the closely related acts of sexuаl intercourse committed by a single person in
Gray
or the assaultive conduct committed by several persons together in
T.H.B.
— each discrete act of rape and sodomy committed by Brown and his co-defendants here had (at least in part) a separate purpose or impulse. Behind each successive act of rape and sodomy in this case was the separate impulse of a differеnt principal perpetrator to obtain his own sexual gratification. Each time Brown and his co-defendants changed places and took their respective turns in sexually assaulting their victim, they came to a new “fork in the road.”
Irby v. United States,
129 U.S.App. D.C. 17, 22-23,
As Brown was convicted of separate criminal acts, his double jeopardy clаim is without merit. 5 Judge Walton properly denied Brown’s motion to vacate his convictions on this ground, and we affirm that ruling.
So ordered.
Notes
. "Thus, Super. Ct.Crim. R. 35(a) is to be construed in light of the interpretation given to its federal counterpart by the federal courts.”
Norman,
. Rule 35(a) distinguishes an "illegal” sentence from a sentence that merely is "imposed in an illegal manner.” "[W]here a court of competent jurisdiction imposes a sentence within the limits authоrized by the relevant statute, but commits a procedural error in doing so,” the resulting sentence has been imposed in an illegal manner, but it is not therefore per se illegal within the meaning of Rule 35(a).
(Timothy) Robinson,
. The court dоes, however, have discretion to refuse to entertain such a motion if it simply relies on the same arguments as were “previ
[Although strict principles of res judicata do not apply to motions seeking relief from an illegal sentence, "[t]his does not mean that a prisoner may again and again call upоn a court to repeat the same ruling....” United States ex rel. Gregoire v. Watkins,164 F.2d 137 , 138 (2nd Cir.1947). A sentencing court should have discretionary power to "protect itself against a pertinacious relator.” Id.
Neverdon,
. We have explained this rule as follows:
Some crimes, by their very nature, tend to be committed in a single continuous episode rather than in a series of individually chargeable acts. An ordinary assault, for example — that is, an assault that is not accompanied by an intent to commit anothеr offense — is usually such a crime. "The fact that a criminal episode of assault involves several blows or wounds, and different methods of administration, does not convert it into a case of multiple crimes for purposes of sentencing.”
Owens,
. It follows that Brown’s ineffective assistance claim, which is based on trial counsel’s failure to raise the double jeopardy challenge, is also without merit.
See Washington v. United States,
