This is a post-conviction proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 in which the district court vacated Norman Ray Woodall’s sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1), because his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance in not objecting to an inadequate showing of the requisite prior “violent felony” convictions. Woodall appeals the court’s additional ruling that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amend *78 ment does not bar his resentencing under § 924(e)(1). We affirm.
I.
Woodall was tried and convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). He was also charged with violating § 924(e)(1), a sentence enhancement statute requiring a mandatory minimum fifteen-year prison sentence for § 922(g) violators who have at least three prior violent felony convictions. A § 924(e)(1) violation is determined at sentencing.
See United States v. Washington,
“Violent felony” is defined in § 924(e) to include “burglary.”
See
§ 924(e)(2)(B). Three months before Woodall was sentenced, the Supreme Court held “that an offense constitutes ‘burglary’ for purposes of a § 924(e) enhancement if either its statutory definition substantially corresponds to ‘generic’ burglary, or the charging paper and jury instructions actually required the jury to find all the elements of generic burglary.”
Taylor v. United States,
Woodall’s presentence investigation report (“PSR”) listed five burglary convictions in Texas state court but did not provide information showing that they were “generic” burglaries under
Taylor.
Woodall did not object to this portion of the PSR, nor did he contend at sentencing that the burglary convictions were not prior violent felonies for purposes of § 924(e)(1). The district court sentenced him to fifteen years in prison based upon the information contained in the PSR. He appealed his conviction and sentence on other grounds, and we affirmed.
United States v. Woodall,
Woodall moved
for § 2255
relief,
claiming
that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing. The magistrate judge recommended that the § 924(e)(1) sentence be vacated because counsel should have objected that the PSR did not establish Woo-dall’s Texas burglary convictions as violent felonies under
Taylor.
In addition, without addressing the prejudice prong of ineffective assistance under
Strickland v. Washington,
The district court agreed with the recommendation that Woodall’s trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object under Taylor to the burglaries listed in the PSR. However, the court rejected the Double Jeopardy Clause recommendation, concluding instead that sentencing under § 924(e)(1) “does not bear the hallmarks of a trial-type proceeding” to which double jeopardy protections attach. Woodall appeals the latter ruling.
II.
The Double Jeopardy Clause “does not prevent the government from retrying a defendant who succeeds in getting his first conviction set aside, through direct appeal or collateral attack, because of some error in the proceedings leading to conviction.”
Lockhart v. Nelson,
Burks
concerned insufficient evidence to convict; we deal here with proof
of
facts necessary to impose a sentence. The Supreme Court extended
Burks
to trial-like death penalty sentencing procedures in
Bullington v. Missouri,
In this case, Woodall argues (i) that we should extend our Bohlen and Nelson double jeopardy holdings to sentencing under § 924(e), and (ii) that the government is then barred from resentencing him under § 924(e) because it presented insufficient proof of a § 924(e)(1) violation at his initial sentencing. We reject both contentions.
A.
For a number of reasons, we agree with the district court that the Burks double jeopardy principle does not apply to § 924(e) sentencing proceedings.
1. “Sentencing matters do not ordinarily have the ‘qualities of constitutional finality that attend an acquittal.’ ”
United States v. Hudspeth,
2. Accepting our decision that
Burks
applies to the trial-like sentencing proceedings at issue in
Nelson
and
Bohlen,
federal sentencing proceedings are nonetheless readily distinguishable. True, the government must prove facts relevant to sentencing guidelines and statutory enhancement issues, and the defendant is entitled to a sentencing hearing on disputed issues of fact. But the government’s burden of proof is only by a preponderance of the evidence. Moreover, the sentencing judge receives important input from the probation officer, who prepares the PSR, and sentencing findings may be based upon what the judge heard at trial, as well as what is presented at the sentencing hearing ancontained in the PSR.
Compare DiFrancesco,
3. Woodall cites no case applying the
Burks
principle to § 924(e) sentencing, or indeed to any post-guidelines federal sentencing issue. The Seventh Circuit rejected this contention in
Hudspeth,
and a number of eases have assumed that a defendant may be resentenced under § 924(e). For example, after the Supreme Court’s decision in
Taylor,
we remanded to the district court, which reimposed the § 924(e)(1) enhancement. On appeal, we consolidated
Taylor
with another § 924(e) appellant,
Banks.
We affirmed both § 924(e) resentencings as consistent with the new burglary standard of
Taylor
without discussing
Burks
or the Double Jeopardy Clause even though on remand the government had expanded the sentencing record “in a critical respect.”
United States v. Taylor,
4. The Supreme' Court has noted that expansive application of the Double Jeopardy Clause may cause appellate courts to be less zealous in correcting trial court errors.
See United States v. Tateo,
B.
Even if the Burks double jeopardy principle applies to § 924(e) sentencings, it does not bar Woodall's resentencing.' The district court vacated Woodall’s sentence because his attorney failed to object to the adequacy of the PSR’s description of Woo-dall’s prior burglaries for purposes of applying § 924(e) as construed in Taylor. This is a classic example of “trial error,” not the kind of evidentiary insufficiency that triggers Burks.
Generally, the government establishes pri- or violent felonies warranting a § 924(e)(1) enhancement by submitting the PSR listing defendant’s prior convictions.
See United States v. Redding,
That the trial error in this case does not trigger relief under Burks becomes apparent if one considers the prejudice prong of Strickland that the district court overlooked. To establish that Woodall’s Texas burglary convictions were violent felonies under Taylor, the sentencing court needed to determine either that the applicable Texas statutes, or the indictments or jury instructions in Woodall’s cases, revealed “generic” burglaries. The PSR did not contain that information. If Woodall’s counsel had timely objected on that ground, the probation officer or the government could have supplied the missing information prior to or at the sentencing hearing. Thus, to find Strickland prejudice, the district court should have determined whether the government could have presented either burglary statutes or other information that would have established three violent felony convictions and therefore a violation of § 924(e)(1). If the government already possessed, or could readily have obtained such information, counsel did not provide ineffective assistance by failing to make a futile objection to the inadequate PSR. This basic Strickland prejudice inquiry makes it apparent that the § 2255 relief afforded Woodall by the district court is not functionally equivalent to a judgment of acquittal under Burks.
The district court’s double jeopardy ruling is affirmed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The objecting defendant bears the burden of proving that a prior conviction is not a violent felony or a serious drug offense as defined in § 924(e)(2).
See Redding,
