delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Introduction
A jury found Defendant Juanita Victoria Medina guilty of class 5 felony accessory following the trial court's instruction and both parties' argument at trial with regard to the elements of the class 5 felony accessory charge. Nonetheless, at sentencing, the trial court stated that Medina had been convicted of class 4 felony accessory, a greater offense, and sentenced her to the maximum possible sentence for this offense. Medina appealed her sentence to the court of appeals, arguing that her conviction must be vacated and the case remanded for resentencing because the jury actually convicted her of a less serious offense than that to which she was sentenced.
The court of appeals upheld Medina's sentence despite reсognizing that the trial court erred, reviewing the trial court's sentencing error under plain error analysis. In People v. Medina,
The court of appeals determined that the jury instruction contained a misdesecription of an element of the class 4 accessory charge under Neder v. United States,
Becausе Medina did not object to the jury instruction at trial, the court of appeals applied the plain error standard of review to address both of these errors. Id. at 66. Concluding that the error did not undermine the validity of the sentence, the court affirmed Medina's sentence. Id. We granted certiorari to determine whether the plain error standard of review applies where, as here, the jury instruction described the elements of a less serious offense than the offense that the defendant was sentenced under.
Medina argues that plain error analysis should not apply when a sentencing court enters a conviction different from that provided for by a jury's finding of guilt based upon a jury instruction that correctly and completely describes all the elements of a less serious offense rather than misdesecrib-ing or omitting an element of an offense. We agree.
Sentencing courts do not have discretion to reconsider a defendant's guilt following a jury verdict. A court violates a defendant's due process and Sixth Amendment rights to a trial by jury when it sentences a defendant on a crime different from that on which a jury's guilty verdict is based. Such rulings constitute structural error in sentencing and require that the sentence be vacated. Because this error does not affect the trial process, however, the jury's conviction of guilt may stand.
Here, the trial court committed structural error in sentencing when it sentenced Medina for a class 4 felony because the jury had convicted her of a class 5 felony. Because this error was confined to Medina's sentencing and did not affect her trial, the jury's conviction of guilt for the class 5 felony nеed not be disturbed. For this reason, we affirm Medina's conviction for the class 5 felony, vacate Medina's sentence for the class 4 felony, and remand this case to the court of appeals to be returned to the trial court for resentencing on the class 5 felony conviction.
Facts and Procedural History
The prosecution charged Medina by information as an accessory to the murder of Matthew Salazar. This chаrge arose from allegations that Medina "provided assistance" to her boyfriend Derek Martinez's crime by driving him from the erime seene where he had been engaged in a fight with two men that ended with Martinez shooting and killing Salazar.
Although the information listed Medina's charge as a class 4 felony under section 18-8-105, C.R.S. (2002), the information did not include a necessary element required for a conviction of class 4 accеssory-that the defendant knew that the person she was assisting had committed a class 1 or class 2 felony.
THE DEFENDANT, with intent to hinder, delay and prevent the discovery, detection, prosecution, cоnviction, punishment, and apprehension of Derek Lee Martinez for the commission of First Degree Murder and Second Degree Murder as defined by C.R.S. § 18-3-102 and § 18-3-108, did knowingly, feloniously and unlawfully render assistance to Derek Lee*1139 Martinez by harboring and concealing him and providing him with money, transportation, weapon and disguise and other thing to be used in avoiding discovery and apprehension.
Hence, it was unclear from thе information itself whether Medina was charged with a class 4 felony or class 5 felony.
The prosecution cleared up this discrepancy on the first day of trial when it proffered a jury instruction for class 5 felony accessory. This instruction stated that Medina was guilty as an accessory if she assisted Martinez knowing that he was suspected of and wanted for a crime:
(1) That the defendant (2) in the State of Coloradо, at or about the date and place charged, (8) knowingly, (4) rendered assistance to Derek Lee Martinez, who was suspected of and wanted for a crime, (5) with intent to hinder, delay, and prevent the discovery, detection, apprehension, prosecution, conviction, and punishment of Derek Lee Martinez, (6) and the crime that Derek Lee Martinez was suspected of and was wanted for was First Degree Murder and Second Degree Murder.
(Emphasis added.) This was the instruction that the court ultimately gave the jury. The court never instructed the jury on the elements of a class 4 felony accessory charge, and neither party objected. This instruction appears consistent with the parties' presentations and theories of their cases.
Both parties proceeded throughout the trial as if Medina wаs being tried on the class 5 felony accessory charge. There was no factual issue as to whether Martinez killed Salazar. However, the parties did not present evidence and did not argue to the jury the question of whether Medina knew that Martinez had actually committed the crime of first degree murder or second degree murder. Instead, the prosecution's theory of the case as stated in its closing argument was that "[tlhere's no dispute ... that [Medina] knowingly rendered assistance to him, an individual who was suspected of and wanted for a crime." (Emphasis added.) And the theory of the defense as stated in closing was that Medina did not drive Martinez from the crime seene with the intent to prevent Martinez's arrest, but instead drove away out of fear for her safety.
Neither party objected when the jury returned a guilty verdict for thе class 5 felony accessory charge. The sentencing judge, who did not preside at the trial, sentenced Medina to a class 4 felony although the jury's verdict authorized only a class 5 felony sentence. The court made no comment on this discrepancy, stating only that the case was before it "on the Defendant's conviction of being an accessory to a crime which was murder, a Class 1 and Class 2 felony; and her offense is classified as a Class 4 felony." The court then sentenced Medina to the maximum sentence for class 4 felony accessory, six years in the Department of Corrections with an additional mandatory three years of parole. Medina did not object to the sentence at that time.
Medina later appealed her sentence, arguing that her conviction must be vacated and the case remanded for resentencing since the jury actually convicted her of a class 5 felony, a less serious offense than that on which she was sentenced. The court of appeals affirmed her conviction. In reaching its decision, the court stated that "[the information charged defendant with a class four felony and alleged that she unlawfully assisted a person who 'had committеd first or second degree murder." Medina,
The court concluded that the jury instruetion was erroneous because it misdescribed an element of the offense as explained in Neder,
We granted Medina's petition for certiorari to determine whether plain error analysis applies where the trial court sentences the defendant to a greater offense than the offense described in the jury instruction and jury verdict.
I.
This case implicates two important constitutional protections: a defendant's Fifth Amendment due process right to proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which a defendant is charged, and a defendant's Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury. Taken together, these amendments require a jury verdict finding a defendant guilty of every element beyond a reasonable doubt. Sullivan v. Louisiana,
These protections prohibit courts from entering a conviction for an offense other than that authorized by a jury's guilty verdict. See Apprendi,
We find unconvincing the court of appeals' conclusions that Medina was charged with a class 4 felony and that the trial court's jury instruction merely misdes-cribed an element of the class 4 felony charge, requiring a plain error analysis under Neder and Griego. Even though the information stated that the prosecution was charging a class 4 felony, the information's description of the charge failed to include the necessary element that Medina knew that Martinez had committed the crime, making it unclear whether the prosecution was charging Medina with the class 4 or class 5 felony.
Having concluded that the Neder and Griego standard of review does not apply to the trial court's constitutional violation of Medina's Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights, we must now determine the appropriate remedy for this constitutional error.
IL.
Not all federal constitutional errors require reversal Chapman v. California,
To determine which standard applies, we rust consider the effect the error had on the guilty verdict in the case. Sullivan,
Thus, we affirm Medina's conviction, vacatе her sentence, and remand her case to the court of appeals to return the case to the trial court for resentencing on the jury's class 5 felony accessory conviction. See United States v. Salemo,
Conclusion
Here, the trial court committed structural error in sentencing when it sentencеd Medina for class 4 felony accessory because the jury had convicted her of class 5 felony accessory. Because this error was confined to Medina's sentencing and does not affect the jury's guilty verdict, the jury's conviction of guilt for the class 5 felony remains undisturbed. Hence, we affirm Medina's convietion for the class 5 felony, vacate Medina's sentence for the class 4 felony, and remand this case to the court of appeals to be returned to the trial court for resentencing on the class 5 felony conviction.
Notes
. The court of appeals initially rendered an unpublished opinion, People v. Medina, 03CA2282 (Colo.App. Sept. 22, 2005). The court later modified the opinion, denied Medina's petition for rehearing, and published the opinion.
. Class 4 felonies carry a minimum sentence of twо years imprisonment and a maximum of six years imprisonment. Id. On the other hand, class 5 felonies carry a minimum sentence of one year imprisonment and a maximum sentence of three years imprisonment. Id.
. Section 18-8-105(3) states that:
Being an accessory to crime is a class 4 felony if the offender knows that the person being assisted has committed, or has been convicted of, or is charged by pending information, indictment, or complаint with a crime, and if that crime is designated by this code as a class 1 or class 2 felony.
(Emphasis added.)
Section 18-8-105(4) states:
Being an accessory to crime is a class 5 felony if the offender knows that the person being assisted is suspected of or wanted for a crime, and if that crime is designated by this code as a class 1 or class 2 felony.
(Emphasis added.)
. We granted certiorari on the issue: "Whether the standard of review in Neder v. United States,
. Notably, this ambiguity did not prejudice Medina because the prosecution proffered a jury instruction at the start of trial that included an instruction on the lesser class 5 felony accessory chаrge. The jury instructions provided Medina with adequate notice of the offense that the prosecution sought to prove-the class 5 felony. See People v. Williams,
. This case is factually and legally distinguishable from Washington v. Recuenco, - U.S. -,
Justice Ginsburg, in dissent, disagreed with the majority's reliance on Neder, instead characterizing the trial court's error as sentencing the defеndant for a crime different and greater than the crime for which he was charged and tried. Id. at 2557,
We find the reasoning in Justice Ginsburg's dissent persuasive in this case because unlike the trial court's error in Recuenco, which is properly described as an error in instructing the jury, the trial court in this case sentenced Medina for an entirely different crime (class 4 felony accessory) than the crime that the jury found she had committed (class 5 felony accessory). The jury returned a complete verdict of guilty beyond a reasоnable doubt for a class 5 felony but the trial court sentenced her for a class 4 felony. This error cannot be characterized as a mere instructional error by way of omitting an element of the offense or a sentencing factor. This error is more fundamental and egregious than the trial court's erroneous omission of a sentencing factor in Recuenco. Hence, structural error analysis is warranted on these facts.
