This case involves the question of whether a defendant who pleaded guilty to a criminal offense and entered into a stipulated judgment in a parallel civil forfeiture action, and *181 is later sentenced in the criminal action, may challenge that sentence on double jeopardy grounds. The district court held that he could not and thus denied his 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion for habeas corpus. We affirm the district court’s decision.
Background
On December 4, 1991, defendant was indicted for conspiracy to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846. He entered a plea of not guilty. On December 5, 1991, the government filed a civil forfeiture action in rem pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7), seeking a forfeiture of defendant’s residence in Peoria, Illinois. 1 The complaint was based on the same criminal conduct underlying the parallel criminal action, alleging that the residence was used to store cocaine and distribute hashish and marijuana in violation of federal drug laws.
In January 1993, defendant began simultaneous settlement negotiations with the U.S. Attorney for both the civil and criminal actions against him. The result was that on January 13,1993, defendant pleaded guilty to the criminal action pursuant to a plea agreement and entered into a stipulated judgment of forfeiture in the civil action, under which he forfeited his residence to the United States. The stipulated judgment of forfeiture was filed with the district court on that day and was entered as a final judgment on January 22,1993.
On October 8, 1993, defendant was sentenced in the criminal ease to 105 months of imprisonment, followed by a ten-year term of supervised release. Defendant did not appeal either the civil forfeiture judgment or his criminal conviction. However, on February 13, 1995, he filed a motion to vacate the criminal sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 on double jeopardy grounds. This motion was denied on May 11, 1995, and this appeal followed.
Discussion
Two years after he voluntarily pleaded guilty to criminal violations and forfeited his residence to the United States, defendant now contends that his criminal sentence was imposed in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. In order to follow defendant’s argument, it is helpful to review the chronological order of the four relevant events: (1) defendant pleaded guilty and was convicted on January 13, 1993; (2) he simultaneously entered into a stipulated forfeiture judgment in the parallel civil action; (3) the judgment of civil forfeiture was entered January 22,1993; (4) defendant was sentenced in October 1993. Defendant challenges only the fourth event, his sentencing.
Defendant’s argument is somewhat complex. First, he notes that some Courts of Appeals have interpreted
Austin v. United States,
We also note that under the logic of these cases, if defendant had been found guilty after the civil forfeiture, the criminal conviction might have been a double jeopardy violation. But that is not what occurred; his conviction was completed prior to the forfeiture. To overcome this hurdle, defendant asks us not only to apply the holdings of the eases discussed above — that a civil forfeiture is a separate jeopardy — but to extend them in a rather innovative manner. Namely, to hold that jeopardy attaches at a different point in time for the prohibition against multiple punishments than for the prohibition against multiple prosecutions.
Defendant acknowledges that courts have generally held that “a defendant is considered to be convicted by the entry of his plea of guilty just as if a jury had found a verdict of guilty against him, and jeopardy therefore attaches
with acceptance of his guilty plea.” United States ex rel. Stevens v. Circuit Ct. of Milwaukee County,
Wis.,
Branch VIII,
The only Circuit Courts of Appeals to address this argument have rejected it. In
United States v. Pierce,
Implies that a defendant ought to have the option to endure an unconstitutional second trial in the hope that it will both conclude first and lead to a more lenient punishment than that eventually imposed in the first trial, and then to object to the punishment imposed in the first trial on double jeopardy grounds. We cannot locate any authority for this proposition, and we reject it out of hand. The Double Jeopardy Clause is a shield against the oppression inherent in a duplicative, punitive proceeding; it is not a tool by which the defendant can avoid the consequences of the proceeding in which jeopardy first attached. Id. at 890.
The Second Circuit found this reasoning persuasive and “likewise reject[ed] out of hand the theory that jeopardy in the context of successive punishments does not attach until the time of punishment.”
United States v. Idowu,
The defendant did not appeal either the criminal action or the civil action against him. Such a failure to raise a constitutional challenge to a conviction on direct appeal bars its being raised later, absent a showing of good cause and prejudice. See,
e.g., Barker v. United States,
Unfortunately for the defendant, we are required to deny his habeas motion regardless of how we answer the question of when the main premise of defendant’s argument— that a civil forfeiture is a separate jeopardy — became established: If it was established at the time of his conviction and sentence, then he waived the issue by not raising it on appeal; if, on the other hand, the rule was not established, then, as discussed below, Teague v. Lane, supra, precludes its application to defendant’s situation.
In
Teague,
the Supreme Court held that a “new constitutional rule of criminal procedure” may not be applied retroactively. A case announces a new rule “if the result was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Id.
at 301,
Defendant’s only attempt to circumvent the timing of the cases he cites is to contend that it is improper for us to look to case law in determining when the relevant premise was established. He argues:
The holdings [relied upon] in regard to the double jeopardy claim are actually based on the Constitution and have been in existence for over a hundred years. Thus it is not a “new rule” but rather an application of an old rule in a new factual context. [Reply Br. p. 6].
We refuse to accept this argument because it would require the conclusion that all “constitutional rules of criminal procedure” have existed since the adoption of the Constitution and would thus render Teague meaningless.
Conclusion
The rule that the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits parallel actions for civil forfeiture and criminal sanctions was not established at the time defendant’s actions were concluded. Therefore, Teague requires that defendant’s habeas motion be denied. However, were we to conclude that the rule was clearly established at the time of his sentencing, defendant’s habeas motion would still be denied because of his failure to raise the constitutional challenge on appeal.
Judgment affirmed. 5
Notes
. Prosecutors need not bring a criminal action and a forfeiture action as separate proceedings. They are able to seek both prison and forfeiture in a single indictment. See Fcd.R.Crim.P. 7(c)(2), 31(e), 32(b)(2). Such action would render useless any objection on double jeopardy grounds, "[fjor the double jeopardy clause docs not bar cumulative punishments imposed in a single proceeding — whether these punishments be the ordinary combination of prison plus a fine, or consecutive terms in prison, or prison plus a forfeiture.”
United States
v.
Torres,
. See also
Department of Rev. of Mont. v. Kurth Ranch,
- U.S. -,
. The district court properly noted that there is a narrow exception where on the face of the record a court had no power to enter the conviction or impose the sentence at all.
United States v. Broce,
. That same position was subsequently adopted by the Eleventh Circuit in
United States v. One Single Family Residence,
. Defendant's motions for leave to supplement his reply brief and to cite additional authority were granted but do not alter this result.
