Fenner appeals from the district court’s order denying his petition for habeas corpus relief. Almost three years after his release from federal custody, Fenner filed a pro se habeas petition challenging his special parole term. Less than one month later, he was arrested for parole violations. Fenner’s amended petition contends (1) that his sentence did not include a special parole term, and (2) that the United States Parole Commission (Commission) issued the warrant for his arrest in retaliation for filing a habeas petition. The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. We have jurisdiction over this timely filed appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
I
On August 22, 1986, Fenner pleaded guilty to one count of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and two counts of possessing a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. Appendix II § 1201(a)(1). The district court sentenced. Fenner to seventeen years imprisonment and imposed a five-year special parole term, as required by 21 U.S.C. § 841(b).
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35(b), Fenner moved to reduce his term of imprisonment, and, in an order dated January 12, 1989, the district court partially granted his motion, reducing his total period of incarceration to twelve years. Fenner’s motion did not include a request to strike or modify the special parole term, and the district court’s order amending his sentence made no reference to it, addressing only the custody portion of Fenner’s sentence.
The government moved for reconsideration of the district court’s order. The government’s motion did not address the absence of the special parole term. Fen-ner filed a letter with the district court opposing the government’s motion and seeking a modification or clarification of the order with respect to his special parole. The district court denied the government’s motion and denied Fenner’s request for clarification or modification. The government appealed the order and, on July 16, 1990, we affirmed the district court’s reduction of Fenner’s custody sentence in an unpublished disposition.
Fenner was released from custody in June 1992, pursuant to a mandatory release date. He refused to sign the conditions of release form which indicated that his special parole term of five years would commence on September 18, 1996. After his release, Fenner violated the terms of his regular parole and returned to prison. On October 22, 1995, Fenner again was released from custody pursuant to a mandatory release date; this time, he did sign the conditions of release form, which contained the same identification of the special parole term.
Fenner abided by the terms of his special parole without complaint for nearly three years after its commencement on September 18, 1996. However, on June 21, 1999, he filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleging that, under the terms of his amended sentence, he was not subject to special parole. On July 13, 1999, less than one month after Fenner filed his petition, Fenner’s probation officer sent a letter to the Commission alleging that Fenner had violated conditions of his special parole, and on July 19,1996, the Commission issued a warrant for Fenner’s arrest, charging him with six parole violations. Fenner was arrested on July 26, 1999, and at his January 18, 2000, parole revocation hearing, Fenner was found guilty on five of the six charges (charge *785 one having been dropped by the Commission prior to the hearing).
On August 5, 1999, the district court appointed the Federal Public Defender to represent Fenner, and granted leave to amend his habeas petition. In part, the amended petition argued that (1) the January 13, 1989, order reducing Fenner’s sentence to twelve years imprisonment did not impose a term of special parole, and (2) the Commission’s decision to charge Fen-ner with special parole violations was based on a vindictive desire to punish Fen-ner for filing his habeas petition.
The same judge who issued the 1989 order reducing Fenner’s sentence determined that the 1989 order modified only the custody portion of Fenner’s sentence, leaving the other terms intact, including the special parole term.- Thus, the court held that while the 1989 order failed to include any reference to the special parole term, it remained in effect. The district court pointed out that Fenner’s motion for reduction of his sentence did not request any modification of the special parole term; thus, the 1989 order only responded to Fenner’s request for reduced incarceration and did not impact the term of special parole. Further, the court emphasized that Fenner’s behavior upon release from custody was consistent with the continuing effect of the special parole term. The court found that when Fenner was released from custody in October 1995, he signed a document identifying his special parole, and in November 1998 he signed a document agreeing to a modification of his parole conditions.
Next, the court held that Fenner’s petition failed to include sufficient factual support for his vindictiveness claim. The court found that there was no evidence in the record that the Commission was aware of Fenner’s habeas petition before he was arrested on the parole violation charges. Thus, there was no causal connection between Fenner’s petition and the Commission’s charges. In addition, the court held that it was insufficient to show that Fen-ner’s probation officer was aware of his petition as that “does not establish that the information was known to the Parole Commission.” The district court denied Fen-ner’s petition.
' II
We first analyze whether Fenner is subject to the special parole term. Fenner contends on appeal that he was not, arguing that when the district court amended his sentence in 1989, reducing his term of imprisonment from seventeen to twelve years, it eliminated the term of special parole imposed in his original sentence by omitting any reference to it. Thus, according to Fenner, the amended sentence is unambiguously clear: because it did not include a special parole term, he was not subject to one. He asserts that the language of the amended sentence must be taken at face value, without reference to the original sentence or the district court’s subjective intent.
The government responds that (1) the district court’s order addressed and modified only the custody portion of Fenner’s sentence, leaving intact all other terms, and (2) Fenner always believed he was subject to a term of special parole. Thus, the government contends that Fenner is attempting to “receive a bonanza” simply because the district court omitted a term from its order that both the court and Fenner believed was still valid.
We review de novo the district court’s decision to deny Fenner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241.
Bowen v. Hood,
*786
The January 1989 order standing alone makes no reference to special'parole. Thus, on its face, no special parole is provided. The question is whether we may go behind the order because the omission of the special parole term in the district court’s order created an ambiguity in Fen-ner’s sentence. The Tenth Circuit has stated that one of the situations in which an ambiguity may exist in a sentence is where the plain meaning of the judge’s words leads to an irrational or absurd result.
United States v. Villano,
“The intent of the sentencing court must guide any retrospective inquiry into the tern and nature of a sentence.”
United States v. Taylor,
Fenner contends that this analysis is backwards: it is his subjective expectation and not the sentencing judge’s intent that controls. He relies upon
United States v. Garcia
for the proposition that “the pronouncement of a sentence, even if contrary to the district judge’s intent, must control.”
In Garcia, the district court at oral sentencing inadvertently imposed a sentence of twenty-six years and six months pursuant to the wrong statutory provision. The minimum sentence the court announced was inconsistent with the requirements of the stated provision, which re *787 quired a minimum sentence of only ten years. The written judgment, which did not state the court’s intended minimum sentence, sentenced the defendant pursuant to the same provision. Thus, under an objective reading of the written judgment, the defendant would be eligible for parole after ten years. When the sentencing judge realized his mistake, he attempted to “correct” the written judgment by imposing the higher minimum sentence he intended, utilizing the correct provision. Id. at 1368. We held that the written judgment controlled because, unlike the oral pronouncement, it was unambiguous, and, because it was not illegal, “any attempt to ‘correct’ it violates ... double jeopardy rights.” Id. Thus, Garcia commands that where there is an ambiguity in the oral pronouncement of a sentence, an unambiguous written judgment controls. In other words, where the defendant is unambiguously told one thing in the written judgment, the trial judge may not later go back and change it: a clear written judgment must control over any subsequent clarification or correction.
“If, however, [the written judgment] is ambiguous or open to reasonable interpretation ... it cannot possibly ‘control.’ ”
O’Brien,
Fenner’s assertion that his expectation controls is further undermined by his own conduct, which demonstrates that he did not believe that the amended sentence was clear and unambiguous. First, Fenner’s initial response to the order was to file a letter with the district court requesting clarification of the amended sentence regarding his special parole term. Second, upon being released from prison in 1995, he signed the conditions of release form, which contained an identification of special parole, and he abided by its terms for nearly three years before alleging that he was not subject to special parole.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the district court did not err in determining that Fenner was subject to the special parole term required by 21 U.S.C. § 841(b) and included in the court’s original judgment order.
Ill
Fenner also contends that the Commission violated his Fifth Amendment due process rights by charging him with parole violations in retaliation for filing a habeas petition.
Due process forbids “ ‘enhanced sentences or charges ... motivated by actual vindictiveness toward the defendant for having exercised guaranteed rights.’ ”
Bono v. Benov,
In
Bono v. Benov,
we followed the Third Circuit’s decision in
Marshall v. Lansing,
There are limits, however, in application of the presumption: it only applies where there is a “reasonable likelihood” that the parole decision is the product of actual vindictiveness. Id. at 416. “As a matter of logic, vindictiveness becomes a danger only where an event prods [the Commission] into a posture of self-vindication. Absent a triggering event, the court will not presume vindictiveness.” Id. at 417 (internal quotation and citation omitted). “Where there is no reasonable likelihood, the burden remains upon the defendant to prove actual vindictiveness.” Id. at 416.
A.
Our first inquiry is whether anything occurred to trigger the presumption of vindictiveness. A motivation for self-vindication requires something to excite it, and Fenner must show a crucial event from which vindictiveness could be imputed.
See Kindred,
Here, the Commission had no “personal stake” in the terms of the sentence imposed by the district court.
Bono,
*789
In contrast to
Bono,
the facts of this case provide no basis for a presumption of vindictiveness. Fenner’s original petition could not be construed as a challenge to the Commission’s authority. Fenner would have us presume vindictiveness because his petition challenged the Commission’s jurisdiction over him. However, “[pjresuming vindictiveness on this basis alone would be tantamount to presuming that a judge will be vindictive towards a defendant merely because he seeks an acquittal.”
McCullough,
Further, the Commission provided “wholly logical,” “nonvindictive” reasons for issuing the parole violation warrant.
Newman,
B.
In the absence of a reasonable likelihood that the Commission’s action was the product of vindictiveness, Fenner must assume his burden to prove actual vindictiveness without the presumption assistance. Id. The district court held that Fenner failed to meet his burden. The only evidence Fenner produced in support of his vindictiveness claim was the declaration of Robin Packel, a research attorney in the Oakland, California Federal Public Defender’s office. Packel declared that a conversation with Fenner’s probation officer, James Lee, led her to believe that Lee was “aware that Mr. Fenner had filed or was planning to file a habeas petition challenging the special parole.” Further, Packel stated that “it appears that the special parole revocation proceedings against Mr. Fenner were initiated by ... Lee.” The obvious implication Fenner draws from this declaration is that Lee initiated Fenner’s parole revocation proceedings in retaliation against Fenner for filing (or planning to file) a habeas petition challenging the special parole term. Beyond making this inferential leap, Fenner would also have us impute Lee’s alleged motive to the Commission as an institution. We need not decide whether the Commission may ever be liable pursuant to imputed responsibility, because Fenner has failed to supply sufficient evidentiary proof of actual vindictiveness, either on the part of Probation Officer Lee or the Commission. Therefore, we hold that the district court did not err in finding that the Commission’s decision to charge Fenner with parole violations was not proven to be based on a malevolent motive.
AFFIRMED.
