George Correia appeals the district court order which denied his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254, in which he contended that a state trial court judge violated due process by vindictively punishing him for exercising his right to a jury trial on various criminal charges. We affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
On September 8, 1995, petitioner asked a Boston-area car dealership salesman for permission to test-drive a 1989 Corvette. During the еnsuing drive, Correia absconded with the vehicle. Four days later, a Boston police officer saw Correia as he was driving the Corvette in the Beacon Hill area. Unaware that the Corvette was stolen, the officer pulled it over after noting that it had neither a valid license plate nor a current inspection sticker. As the officer approached the Corvette on foot, Correia abruptly sped away from the scene, leading State and Boston police [hereinafter: “police”] on a prolonged high-speed car chase on downtown Boston streets and adjacent freeways. During the chase, Correia recklessly drove the wrong *387 way down one-way streets, crashed into several other police and civilian vehicles, repeatedly refused police demаnds to surrender at gunpoint, attempted to run over several on-foot police officers, and finally managed to strike a police officer with the vehicle. This vehicular rampage caused severe bruises and lacerations to a police officer, as well as spinal injuries to a civilian automobile driver.
In due course, Correia was indicted in Suffolk County Superior Court on forty-eight counts: speeding (4 counts), driving to endanger (4), driving with a suspended license (1), assault and battery with a vehicle (6), assault with a vehicle (6), receiving-stolen goods (2), leaving the scene after causing personal injury or vehicular damages (17), driving the wrong way on a one-way street (2), and failing to stop for a police officer (6).
Prior to the jury trial, Correia informed the presiding superior court judge that he might agree to plead guilty. Wherеupon the judge informed Correia that he probably would impose a 5-to-7 year prison sentence should Correia enter a guilty plea. However, shortly thereafter Correia elected to proceed to trial. Finally, disregarding the court’s advice, Correia elected to represent himself at trial.
Following trial, the jury convicted Corr-eia on twenty-one of the forty-eight counts: assault and battery with the Corvette (1 count); assault with the Corvette (1); receiving stolen goods (2); leaving the scene after causing personal injury or vehicle damage (11); and failing to stop for a police officer (6). 1 The trial judge denied Correia’s ensuing motions for a new trial, and sentenced him to imprisonment for 12 to 17 years, well within the sentencing range prescribed by statute.
The Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed the convictions and sentences in an unpublished opinion, and the Supreme Judicial Court denied the ensuing application for further appellate review. In February 2002, Correia submitted the instant habeas corpus petition to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, which denied the requested relief and issued its certificate of appealability. Correia now appeals from the district court ordеr denying the petition for habeas corpus.
II
DISCUSSION
Correia contends that the Massachusetts Appeals Court unreasonably applied clearly established United States Supreme Court precedent in rejecting his claim that the trial court vindictively punished him for refusing to enter a guilty plea prior to trial by imposing a 12-to-17 year prison term, rather than the 5-to-7 year term which would have been imposed had Corr-eia entered a guilty plea. As evidence of the alleged vindictiveness, Correia relies upon (i) the large numerical differential between the pretrial and post-trial sentencing ranges; (ii) the jury acquittals on many of the more serious charges in the indictment; and (iii) the comments made by the trial judge during trial, suggesting that the trial judge himself believed that Correia was guilty and that the trial was a waste of judicial resources.
We review denials of habeas corpus relief
de novo,
inquiring whether the state-court decision is “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established [Supreme Court precedent].” 28 U.S.C. § 2254;
see Williams v.
*388
Taylor,
In affirming the conviction notwithstanding Correia’s “vindictive sentencing” claim, the Massachusetts Appeals Court relied upon three grounds:(l) the trial court cited objective, non-vindictive reasons for imposing a higher sentence following trial; (2) the trial court neither stated nor implied that Correia would receive a higher sentence if he did not plead guilty; and (3) at no time did the trial court evince a belief that the trial was a waste of judicial resources.
In the event a criminal defendant successfully appeals his conviction and the same trial judge imposes a stiffer sentence following a retrial, the presumption arises that the harsher sentence was a product of judicial vindictiveness in response to the defendant’s rightful recourse to the appellate prоcess; yet this presumption is rebuttable provided the record contains objective evidence which adequately explains the more severe sentence.
See United States v. Goodwin,
The same presumption may arise when a criminal defendant rejects a plea agreement — and with it the prospect of a more lenient sentence — and elects instead to exercise his constitutional right to a jury trial.
See, e.g., Johnson v. Vose,
In any event, as this presumption is designed to safeguard against the risk of actual vindictiveness — as distinguished from the mere fact that the sentencing court decided to impose a harsher sentence following a trial or retrial — the presumption “arises only in circumstances ‘in which there is a
“reasonable likelihood”
that the increase in sentence is the product of
actual vindictiveness.’
”
Id.
(citing
Alabama v. Smith,
The record in the instant case simply cannot support a determination that the Massachusetts Appeals Court unreasonably applied the pertinent legal principles.
See Williams,
As for the remaining aspect of the differential, normally the sentencing court imposes a post-verdict sentence after considering the evidence presented at trial. In contrast, a plea-bargained sentence normally is predicated upon a more rudimentary record of the alleged criminal conduct, such as the description in the indictment, and/or a presentence report.
See id.
at 801,
Compared with the sparse information available to the trial judge at the pretrial conference,
3
consisting of little more than a recitation of the charges set forth in the indictment,
see supra
Section I, the trial record abundantly demonstrates not only the gravity of the alleged criminal conduct, but the increased risk of serious bodily harm to which Correia exposed not only the law enforcement officers involved, but any hapless civilian who happened to be in his way.
Cf. Pearce,
When yet another officer stopped him on Storrow Drive, and approached Corr-eia’s car with revolver drawn, Correia suddеnly reversed his vehicle into a Volvo, causing spinal injuries to its driver. Ignoring the police officer’s orders to stop, Correia promptly sped off over the center island separating Storrow Drive. In so doing, he collided head-on with several vehicles in his path, and attempted to run over two other policemen patrolling on foot, who were forced to respond by firing their revolvers at the vehiсle which Corr-eia was driving. While returning to downtown Boston, Correia attempted to evade two police cruisers which were in pursuit, drove into three cruisers positioned to road-block his vehicle, then backed into a private vehicle, injuring its driver. The police officers who converged upon the scene fired their weapons at the Correia vehicle, wounding him. Undiscouraged, Correia then prоceeded to resist arrest. The police officers were required to extract Correia forcibly from the vehicle in order to effect the arrest.
At trial, Correia tendered the defense that (i) he initially fled not because he was driving a stolen vehicle, but because he was operating without a license, and (ii) he continued his flight in self defense, when the police mistook him for another armed fugitive аnd fired shots at him. However, the record reflects that this “other fugitive” was black; whereas Correia is white.
*391
In light of the demonstrated discrepancies between the pretrial and post-verdict records, the Massachusetts Appeals Court conclusion — that the harsher sentence imposed by the trial judge was based upon factors other than vindictiveness — did not remotely constitute an unreasonable application of United States Supreme Court precedent. “[I]f it is reasonably clear that the judge reshaped the impost merely as a means of bringing original sentencing intentions to fruition after some new development had intervened, a need for employing the
Pearce
presumption never arises.”
United States v. Pimienta-Redondo,
Furthermore, as Correia must concede, the sentencing judge made no comment whatsoever which might even remotely imply that he intended tо impose a harsher post-verdict sentence in the event the defendant did not accept a plea bargain.
Cf., e.g., United States v. Crocker,
In an attempt to demonstrate objective evidence of vindictiveness, Correia contends that the trial judge made comments during trial which suggested pique at Correia’s decision to demand a jury trial. Quite the contrary, none of the comments even remotely suggested that the court intended to punish Correia for rejecting the plea agreement proffered рrior to trial. In excluding Correia’s “necessity” defense during the course of a motion hearing, the trial judge stated: “You were a one-man wrecking crew, and somehow this was justified in some way?” Rather than utilizing this statement to convey his view of Corr-eia’s guilt, the trial judge plainly and correctly chose to express the opinion that the far-fetched claim advanced by Correia— that he simply eluded police in self defense — was undeserving of credence by any rational factfinder.
See United States v. Wasman,
In the other instance, the trial judge stated: “We are not going to start at the beginning of this thing and go through all the [police radio] transmissions, Mr. Corr-eia, we have done that already.” Far from an expression of displeasure that Correia was trying his own case, the trial judge obviously was advising the
pro se
Corr-eia — not an attorney — to refrain from introducing plainly repetitivе evidence, thereby needlessly wasting judicial resources.
See Commonwealth v. Jackson,
Finally, the court explained to Correia that the trial missteps resulting from Correia’s decision to represent himself were the product of his own voluntary decision, notwithstanding the trial judge’s contrary advice. See id. (“There is no judicial obligation to protect a pro se defendant from his lack of legal training.”). Rather than suggesting that the trial judge dissuaded Correia from exercising his right to a jury trial, this observation plainly suggests that the trial judge had encouraged Correia to go to trial with representation by counsel.
As the Massachusetts Appeals Court reasonably could- — and did — conclude that the sentence imposed upon Correia comported with the principles set forth in
Smith, see
Affirmed.
Notes
. The trial court allowed the government's pretrial motion to dismiss 20 of the 48 counts, and the jury eventually acquitted Correia on 5 of the 6 counts charging assault and battery with a vehicle, and 2 of the 6 counts charging assault with a vehicle.
. At the sentencing hearing, the judge stated:
For the record, I wish to make a statement because the sentence imposed here is substantially greater than the sentence discussed at the outset of this trial when there was the prospect of a guilty plea. Since that time, I've come to know the details of the crimes involved here and the character of the defendant a lot better than I knew when I would have been content with a much lower sentence. In my wildest imagination I could find it difficult to find a worse possible scenario for the aftermath or the consequences of a stolen motor vehicle. As I reviеwed my notes, I counted over twenty vehicles that were damaged, smashed into some way by the operation of that vehicle that morning. It has got to be miraculous that no one was killed as a result of this. There was, however, one man seriously injured and he is still suffering the consequences of the conduct of the defendant that day. The conduct of the defendant on the date in question evidenced an absolutely total disregard for the lives of anyone and the property of everyone. In the conduct of his acts that day he viciously attacked any police officers trying to stop him. He was obviously going to stop at nothing, or for nothing, I should say, and ultimately forced the police to use gunfire to stop him on the corner of Washington and Marginal. During the conduct of the trial, he has demonstrated absolutely no remоrse for what has gone on that day. On the contrary, he has converted himself from a perpetrator of serious crimes to a victim of police brutality because of the fact that he forced them to use gunfire to stop him on that occasion. I see no prospect of rehabilitation for this defendant and consequently have sentenced him as I have.
. Correia points solely to the trial judge's pretrial observation that Correia "practically wiped out half of the Boston Police Department and the state troopers,
according to the charges.”
(Emphasis added.) Although the quoted observation plainly reflects a measure of hyperbole, it was neither made in the presence of the jury nor purported to be a premature assessment of Correia's level of culpability, as distinguished from a recounting оf the known and undisputed consequences of Corr-eia’s conduct as set forth in the indictment.
See, e.g., Taylor v. Kincheloe,
. Correia further contends that the jury acquittals on seven of the nine counts of assault and/or battery with a vehicle render the trial judge’s post-verdict sentence vindictive. He maintains that since the jury acquitted him of several charges that he assaulted police officers, the trial court improperly considered that "[i]n the conduct of his acts that day he viciously attacked any police officers trying to stop him.” Correia devotes one conclusory paragraph to this contention, and cites no supporting authority.
See United States v. Sanchez,
