Christopher X. Bohlen appeals the denial of his habeas corpus petition by the district court. Bohlen argues that he was subject to double jeopardy at a resentencing hearing where the state was given a second chance to prove that he is a persistent offender under Missouri law. Finding that double jeopardy protections apply to persistent offender sentencing proceedings in Missouri, we reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
Bohlen, on July 1,1982, was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri, on three counts of first degree robbery. On October 15, 1982, the trial court sentenced him as a persistent offender to three consecutive fifteen-year terms in prison. The record shows that no evidence of prior convictions was presented either at trial or at the sentencing hearing to prove that Bohlen was a persistent offender.
On direct appeal, the Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction, but reversed and remanded for a hearing on the state’s allegations of prior convictions and for resentencing if the state could prove Bohlen’s persistent offender status beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Bohlen,
On September 5, 1989, Bohlen filed the present petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Bohlen’s petition alleged, among other things, that he was subjected to double jeopardy when the state was allowed to introduce evidence of prior convictions at the second sentencing hearing. The magistrate judge recommended that relief be denied.
Bohlen v. Caspari,
No. 89-1651-C(4), Report and Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge (E.D.Mo. August 14, 1991) According to the magistrate judge, jeopardy did not attach at the first sentencing hearing because the hearing lacked the hallmarks of an adversarial trial.
Id.
at 13. Thus, the second sentencing hearing did not violate double jeopardy. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendations and denied habeas corpus relief.
Bohlen v. Caspari,
No. 89-1651-C(4), Order (E.D.Mo. August 28, 1991). Bohlen appeals arguing that the resentencing hearing constituted double jeopardy under the rule announced in
Bullington v. Missouri,
II. DISCUSSION
The issue in this case is whether the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth
*111
Amendment, imposed upon the state through the Fourteenth Amendment, prevents resentencing of a defendant in a non-capital ease where an appellate court has reversed the defendant’s sentence, under a persistent offender statute, for the state’s failure to prove any prior convictions. Since Bohlen is before us on collateral review, we must determine as a threshold matter whether applying the double jeopardy rule in
Bullington
to a non-capital case would constitute a “new rule” for purposes of retroactivity.
1
Penry v. Lynaugh,
A. New Rule Analysis
The Supreme Court has defined a new rule as one which “breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government,” or, “[t]o put it differently, a case announces a new rule if the result was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s [sentence] became final.”
Teague,
Bohlen’s sentence became final on August 20, 1985, when the Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed his sentence after remand.
State v. Bohlen,
In
Burks,
the Supreme Court held that the double jeopardy clause forbids retrial of a defendant whose conviction is overturned by an appellate court because of insufficiency of the evidence at trial.
Burks,
The Court reasoned that although “[t]he imposition of a particular sentence usually is not regarded as an ‘acquittal’ of any more severe sentence that could have been imposed,”
Bullington,
The Court found it significant in deciding to invoke double jeopardy protection that, unlike usual sentencing procedures in which the “sentencer’s discretion [is] essentially unfettered,”
id.
at 439,
The persistent offender sentencing enhancement procedure in Missouri has protections similar to those in the capital sentencing hearing in Bullington. A persistent offender is a person who has pleaded guilty to or been found guilty of two or more felonies committed at different times. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 558.016.3 (1986). In order for the court to find that a defendant is a persistent offender, (1) the charging document must plead all essential facts warranting a finding that the defendant is a persistent offender; (2) evidence must be introduced by the state to establish that the facts as pleaded warrant a finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is a persistent offender; and (3) the trial *113 court must make findings of fact that warrant a finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is a persistent offender. Id. § 558.021.1. At the hearing on persistent offender status, the defendant has rights of confrontation, cross-examination, and the opportunity to present evidence. Id. § 558.021.4. Persistent offender status greatly affects the defendant’s rights. A finding by the court that the defendant is a persistent offender deprives the defendant of the opportunity to be sentenced by a jury, id. §§ 557.036.2; 558.016.1, and subjects the defendant to the possibility of a greater term of imprisonment. Id. § 558.-016.1.
The state argues that
Bullington
does not extend to non-capital cases. According to the state’s argument, application of double jeopardy protection to capital sentencing was compelled because capital sentencing involves “additional sensitivities created by the Eighth Amendment” pot present in persistent offender enhancement hearings. Appellee’s Brief at 11. The language of
Bullington
belies this assertion. Nowhere in
Bullington
does the majority rely on Eighth Amendment concerns to support its holding. In his dissent, Justice Powell explicitly recognizes the scope of the majority rule, noting that “[t]he Court does not purport to justify its conclusion with the argument that facing the death sentence a second time is more of an ordeal in the legal sense than facing any other sentence a second time.”
Bullington,
Accordingly, we find that
Bullington
dictates that the implicit acquittal rationale of
Burks
must apply to the Missouri persistent offender sentencing scheme to bar a second enhancement hearing where there has been a finding of insufficient evidence of persistent offender status.
5
Missouri considers persistent offender sentencing serious enough to set up a statutory en-háncement procedure with protections similar to a trial on guilt or innocence. That procedure is sufficiently similar to trial procedures that it triggers double jeopardy protection. In a persistent offender hearing, the trial court has two alternatives: to find that the defendant is a persistent offender beyond a reasonable doubt or not. The outcome of this decision greatly affects the possible length of defendant’s sentence. By placing the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt on the state, Missouri has indicated that the state should bear most of the risk of error. It is a hallmark of our system of jurisprudence that “the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense.”
Green v. United States,
B. Reasonableness Determination
The state argues that even if we find Bullington controlling, we should give def *114 erence to the Missouri Court of Appeals’ rejection of the Bullington rule in a non-capital case because it was reasonable under the jurisprudence at the time Bohlen’s sentence became final. In support of this argument the state asserts that there is currently a split among the federal circuits on the issue of whether Bullington applies in non-capital cases and that Missouri courts have held that the persistent offender statute does not implicate double jeopardy. 6
The principles of
Teague
serve to ensure that “gradual developments in the law over which reasonable jurists may disagree are not later used to upset the finality of state convictions valid when entered.”
Sawyer v. Smith,
In this case, as indicated, the state argues that there is a split among the circuits which shows that reasonable jurists could disagree over whether
Bullington
applies in non-capital cases. Thus, the state argues, the Missouri appellate court acted reasonably when it denied Bohlen double jeopardy protection. The state notes additionally that the Supreme Court has not yet commented on the availability of
Bulling-ton
in non-capital proceedings.
See Lockhart v. Nelson,
We note initially that the apparent split among, the circuits may in fact be illusory. In
Lockhart v. Nelson,
the Court, assuming that
Bullington
applies to non-capital cases, held that double jeopardy does not apply to enhancement proceedings where the sentence is reversed due to trial error, not insufficient evidence.
Lockhart v. Nelson,
The state’s argument that we should defer to the Missouri appellate court because
*115
it followed prior Missouri precedent similarly lacks foundation. On direct appeal after resentencing, the appellate court relied on
State v. Holt,
The views of the other federal circuits and of the Missouri courts are relevant to our inquiry into whether the Missouri Court of Appeals decision was a reasonable interpretation of existing precedent, but they are not dispositive.
Stringer,
— U.S. at -,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, the decision of the district'court is reversed and the case shall be remanded with directions for the district court to enter a conditional writ of habeas corpus consistent with this opinion.
See Cokeley v. Lockhart,
Notes
. We have addressed this issue before and found that double jeopardy protection does apply in certain non-capital sentencing proceedings,
Nelson v. Lockhart, 828
F.2d 446, 449 (8th Cir.1987),
reversed on other grounds sub nom. Lockhart
v.
Nelson,
. Teague
and its progeny speak in terms of the date of conviction instead of the date of sentencing. Since Bohlen does not attack the constitutionality of his underlying conviction, however, the relevant date for purposes of our inquiry is the date his sentence became final.
See Stringer v. Black,
— U.S. -, -,
. The Court found that use of the reasonable doubt standard indicated that it was the state, not the defendant, that should bear almost the entire risk of error.
Bullington,
. The state argues that "the continuing vitality of
Bullington
is open to question since it has no foundation in the rationales discussed in
North Carolina v. Pearce."
Appellee’s Brief at 11. This argument appears to put the cart before the horse since
Bullington
was decided after
Pearce
and carved out a specific exception to the rationale of
Pearce. Bullington
distinguished
Pearce
because, among other reasons, "there was no separate sentencing proceeding at which the prosecution was required to prove — beyond a reasonable doubt or otherwise — additional facts in order to justify the particular sentence.”
Bullington,
. The district court adopted the magistrate’s reasoning that in this instance jeopardy did not attach in the first hearing because there were no disputed issues, no new evidence or witnesses were presented (other than allocution), there were no opening or closing statements made by either party, and the reasonable doubt standard was not employed.
Bohlen v. Caspari,
No. 89-1651-C(4), Report and Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge at 13 (E.D.Mo. August 14, 1991). The magistrate judge noted that "[i]n fact, the prosecutor remained silent throughout most of the proceeding.”
Id.
This reasoning does not follow from double jeopardy jurisprudence. If the state were to proceed to trial in a criminal case, and after the jury was sworn presented no evidence or witnesses, further prosecution would be prohibited.
Crist v. Bretz,
. The state also distinguishes the present case from
Bullington
because the persistent offender decision here was made by the judge, not a jury. This distinction does not affect the determination of whether
Bullington
applies in non-capital cases.
See Stringer,
— U.S. at -,
. The state suggested at oral argument that evidence of prior convictions might have been offered at the first hearing, but was erroneously omitted from the record. Our review of the transcripts belies this assertion. In any event, the state was given ample opportunity to complete the record on Bohlen’s direct appeal:
Our search of the record indicates that although the defendant was sentenced by the judge as a persistent offender no proof was made of the prior convictions. We requested the parties to supplement the record to prove that the prior convictions were presented to the court. No such proof was furnished.
State
v.
Bohlen,
