Jоhn Bolsinger appeals following resen-tencing for his convictions on three counts of sexual exploitation by a counselor or therapist in violation of Iowa Cоde section 709.15(2) (2001) and three counts of sexual misconduct with a juvenile in violation of section 709.16(2). Bolsinger asserts the district court erred in restructuring his sentence for the purpose of elongating his term of incarceration. We affirm the district court.
Bolsinger was originally convicted of three counts of sexual abuse in the third degree in violation of section 709.4(1), as well as the three counts of sexual exploitation and the three counts of sexual misconduct noted above. He was sentenced to indeterminate terms оf incarceration on each of the nine counts: ten years each on Counts I through III, the sexual abuse offenses; five years each on Counts IV through VI, the sexual explоitation offenses; and two years each on Counts VII through IX, the sexual misconduct offenses. The sentences were structured in such a way that Bolsinger received a total term of incarceration not to exceed thirty-seven years. 1
Bolsinger appealed. The supreme court reversed Bolsinger’s sexual abuse convictions and remаnded for resentencing on
*645
the sexual exploitation and sexual misconduct convictions only.
State v. Bolsinger,
Bolsinger appeals, asserting the harsher sentence is unconstitutional and void under
North Carolina v. Pearce,
Under
Pearce,
it is a “flagrant violation of the Fourteenth Amendment” for a state trial court to impose heavier sentences upon a reсonvicted defendant as a punishment for having successfully attacked his original conviction on appeal.
Pearce,
Pearce’s holding has been limited by subsequent cases, however, which have found due prоcess is not violated when the harsher sentence following a second trial was imposed by a different judge or jury, or where the same judge imposed a harsher sentence following trial than had been imposed following a now overturned guilty plea. 3 As summarized by our supreme court,
“[W]hen a different judge sentences a defendant after a retrial, and that judge articulates logical, nonvindictive reasons for the sentence, there simply is no sound basis to presume that the sen *646 tence is the product of judicial vindictiveness.” However, this does not mean that the examination of an increased sentence is toothless, for if a defendant is able to show actual vindictiveness on the part of the second judge, he or she may still prevail on a claim of judicial vindictiveness.
Mitchell,
Bolsinger points to the foregoing law and asserts that, because his sentences upon remand were imposed by the same judge who imposed his original sentences, and because the second proceeding did not involve any new fact findings, he is entitled to a presumption of vindictiveness. Although this matter involves resentencing on the remaining counts following reversal of some of the defendant’s convictions, rather than sentencing following a second procеeding on the merits, we agree with those federal courts that have found
Pearce
applicable under the present circumstances.
See, e.g., U.S. v. Campbell,
It is clear that imposition of a harsher sentence upon resentencing is the key to a
Pearce
vindictiveness claim.
See Pearce,
appellate courts compаre the district court’s aggregate sentence on the non-reversed counts after appeal with the original sentence imposed on those same counts before appeal. If the new sentence on the remaining counts exceeds the original sentence on those counts, the Pearce presumption attaches.
Id.
We have reviewed the reasoning behind bоth approaches. We conclude when, as here, the reversed convictions are related to the convictions subject to resentencing, the reasoning undеrlying the aggregate package approach is the more persuasive. Simply stated, this approach
best reflects the realities faced by district court judges who sentence a defendant on related counts of an indictment. Sentencing is a fact-sensitive exercise that requires district court judges to consider a wide array of factors when putting together a “sentencing package.” When an appellate court subsequently reverses a conviction (or convictions) that was part оf the original sentence, the district court’s job on remand is to reconsider the entirety of the (now-changed) circumstances and fashion a sentence that fits the crime аnd the criminal. The aggregate approach’s inherent flexibility best comports with this important goal.
Id.
Employing the aggregate package approach leаds us to conclude Bolsinger did not receive a harsher sentence upon remand. Following his original trial and convictions, Bolsinger was sentenced to a total term of inсarceration not to exceed thirty-seven years. Upon remand, he was sentenced to a total term of incarceration *647 not to exceed twenty-one years, sixteen years less than his original total sentence.
Because a harsher sentence was not imposed upon remand, the
Pearce
vindictiveness presumption does not apply. In addition, although not expressly addressed by Bolsinger, we note the district court provided adequate reasons for the sentences imposed and the record does not indicate any actual vindictiveness on the part of the district Court.
See Mitchell,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Count II was to run consecutively to Count I, and Count III wаs to run concurrently with Count II. Count IV was to run consecutively to Count II, Count V was to run consecutively to Count IV, and Count VI was to run consecutively to Count V. Count VII was to run consecutively to Count VI, Count VIII was to run concurrently with Count VI, and Count IX was to run concurrently with Count VII.
.
Overruled on other grounds by Alabama v. Smith,
.
Alabama,
