opinion of the Court:
1 1 Lemuel Prion pled guilty and mentally ill to three felony charges in August 1994, pursuant to Utah Code section 77-162-104(8). 1 Under the provisions of the statute, Prion was first sentenced to three terms of varying length, all to be served concurrently. As a part of this first sentence, Prion was committed to the Utah State Hospital for evaluation. After a stay of several months, Prion was released and reappeared before the district court for resentencing. Based on the recommendations of the mental health facility staff and administration, the district court resentenced Prion to serve his three terms consecutively, nearly doubling his prison time.
T3 On certiorari we conclude that, although the sentencing statute at issue expressly allows for a recall and resentencing at any time during an eighteen-month review period, Prion's resentencing exceeded the bounds of the Double Jeopardy Clause in light of the nature and timeframe of this proceeding. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
I
T4 In August 1994, Lemuel Prion pled guilty and mentally ill to three felony charges stemming from two separate criminal cases. He pled guilty to possession of a dangerous weapon in a correctional facility, a second degree felony, in the first case; and aggravated assault and dealer in possession without affizing a tax stamp, both third degree felonies, in the second case.
T5 On September 1, 1994, the «district court conducted a plea hearing to ascertain, among other things, Prion's mental state under the Utah Code's guilty and mentally ill (GAMI) provisions. Uta Cope §§ 77-162a-101 to -104, -202 (1994). Following expert testimony on Prion's mental health and medication history, the district court found that Prion posed an "immediate physical danger to himself or others, including jeopardizing his own or others' safety, health, or welfare if placed in a correctional or probation setting, or lacks the ability to provide the basic ne-cesgities of life, such as food, clothing, and shelter, if placed on probation." The court further found that "until [Prion's] medication [was] regulated he [could not] be committed to the Department of Corrections."
T6 Pursuant to the GAMI statute, the district court sentenced Prion to three separate terms of 5 years, 0 to 5 years, and 1 to 15 years, disregarding his mental illness. See Copm § Ti-16a-104(8) (1994). 2 Having imposed the sentence terms, the court thereafter ordered that Prion would serve his terms concurrently, amounting to a maximum of 15 years.
17 As a part of his GAMI sentence, the court also ordered that Prion be committed to the Utah State Hospital for care and treatment for a period of "no more than 18 months, or until he has reached maximum benefit." See id. § Ti-162-202(1)(b) (1994). 3 The district court expressly retained jurisdiction of the case "to alter or amend its order" and indicated that, following his commitment period with the State Hospital, Prion would again be brought before the court for reconsideration of his sentence. See id. (stating that after the offender's time at the department for care and treatment expires, "the court may recall the sentence and commitment, and resentence the offender").
18 Five months later, in January 1995, Prion was released from the State Hospital. In conjunction with this release, the hospital submitted a written report to the district court indicating that Prion had reached "maximum hospital benefit" and recommending that Prion "be engaged in some type of sex offender program." The report was accompanied by a "Review and Recommendation," outlining Prion's diagnosis, his violent behavior (including threats to patients and staff), his failure to cooperate with counseling, and the staff's general belief that he was "very dangerous."
10 Nearly fifteen years later, on January 16, 2009, Prion filed a motion under rule 22(e) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure seeking to vacate his second sentence. Prion argued that his second sentence was illegally imposed because (1) the court lacked statutory authority to increase his sentence following imposition of the first sentence and (2) the second sentence violated the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution. The district court denied Prion's motion, reasoning that "the Double: Jeopardy Clause only protects against re-sentencing when the defendant reasonably believes the original sentence is final," citing State v. Maguire,
{11 In an unpublished per curiam decision, the court of appeals affirmed the denial of Prion's motion. State v. Prion, 2009 UT App 219U,
112 The court of appeals therefore concluded that, because the GAMI statute allowed the district court to retain jurisdiction to alter or amend its original sentence and because the district court's order "expressly indicated that Prion’s sentence would be reconsidered" upon his release from the State Hospital, Prion could not have legitimately expected that the September 1, 1994 order constituted his final sentence. Id. para. 4. Accordingly, the court of appeals affirmed the district court's denial of Prion's rule 22(e) motion.
"13 Prion filed a petition for certio-rari, which we granted. On certiorari, we owe no deference to the court of appeals. State v. Arave,
H
114 Prion challenges the district court's denial of his motion to correct an illegal sentence on both statutory and constitutional grounds. He contends that the State lacked statutory authority to increase his sentence when it resentenced him and also asserts that an increase constitutes multiple punishment in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
{15 The State disagrees on both counts. It also asks us to affirm on an alternative, procedural ground-that rule 22(e) is not an appropriate vehicle for Prion's challenges to the legality of his sentence.
[ 16 We uphold the procedural propriety of Prion's motion and acknowledge that the statute purports to allow a court to increase a mentally ill defendant's sentence on resen-tencing. We reverse on constitutional grounds, however, holding that an increase in a mentally ill defendant's sentence on resen-tencing under the GAMI statute infringes
A
117 The State challenges Prion's motion on the procedural ground that under State v. Candedo,
18 In advancing this argument, the State acknowledges broad language in Candedo concluding that an "ilegal sentence under rule 22(e) includes constitutional violations," id. 111, but suggests that we construe that language narrowly in a way that forecloses its invocation by Prion, id. 19 (noting that "rule 22(e) claims must be narrowly cireum-seribed to prevent abuse" (internal quotation marks omitted)). The State's challenge to Prion's 22(e) motion is rooted in a concern about a tension between the scope of rule 22(e) under Candedo and our rules of preservation, which ordinarily would foreclose challenges to a trial or sentence not raised during the initial proceedings but introduced for the first time years later.
119 Preservation rules are important, as they enhance efficiency and fairness and generally.assure that most claims are raised and resolved in the first instance by the original trial court. See State v. King,
$20 Rule 22(e) is one of several narrow exceptions to the rule.
5
It preserves an avenue for a later, unpreserved challenge to the lawfulness of a eriminal sentence, even on grounds not raised in the initial trial proceedings. Because an illegal sentence is treated as void, it may be raised "at any time." Candedo,
T21 That concern does recommend a narrow construction of the constitutional challenges to a sentence that may be asserted pursuant to rule 22(e) under Candedo. But although there must be limits on the scope of rule 22(e) motions, we see no basis for foreclosing that avenue for the claims raised by Prion in this case. Both grounds he asserts to challenge his revised sentence are consistent with the traditional, established bases for a rule 22(e) motion, and we accordingly reject the State's procedural argument notwithstanding our acknowledgement of the need for a narrow construction of the rule.
22 Our rule 22(e) is based on an antecedent in the federal rulee-rule 835(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, 7 which until 1987 authorized federal courts to correct illegal sentences. 8 Under this rule, the federal courts traditionally defined an "illegal sentence" to encompass instances "when the sentence imposed exceeds the statutorily-authorized limits, violates the Double Jeopardy Clause, or is ambiguous or internally contradictory." 9 This approach struck a careful balance between the goal of correcting illegal sentences on one hand and that of encouraging preservation and finality on the other. 10 The "ilegal Sentence[s]f’ that could be challenged "at any time" by rule were those whose defects would be apparent on their face-because they exceeded the limits of a statute or the Double Jeopardy Clause or because they were facially ambiguous or internally contradictory. Such defects, moreover, would not as strongly implicate rules of preservation because facial defects of these sorts could easily be corrected without the need for factual development in the original trial court. 11
123 These'limits, however, do not foreclose challenges like those asserted by Prion in this case. His statutory claim is essentially one that challenges his revised sentence as exceeding the limits of the governing statutory scheme. As explained below, Prion reads the GAMI statute to foreclose any increase in the sentence initially imposed. His rule 22(e) motion, therefore, is one that comes within the traditional bounds of the rule, and
4 24 Prion's constitutional challenge is also procedurally proper. Double jeopardy challenges have long been understood to come within the seope of the federal antecedent to our rule 22(e), and we likewise uphold Prion's challenge under our rule. A sentence imposed in contravention of the Double Jeopardy Clause is an "illegal sentence"-even under a "narrowly cireumseribed" construction of rule 22(e)." Candedo,
B
$25 On the merits of Prion's motion, we turn first to the statutory question. Prion's statutory argument is based on the GAMI statute's provision for a sentence "that could be imposed under law upon a defendant who is not mentally ill" and its requirement that the defendant be (a) committed to the state hospital; (b) subjected to probation; or (c) placed in the custody of the department of corrections. Urtax CopE.§$ 77-16a-104(8) (1994). Although the statute authorizes a subsequent "recall" and "resen-tencling?t" of a defendant after an initial period of commitment to the state hospital, id. § Ti-16a-202(1)(b) (1994), Prion asks us to construe that authority narrowly. Specifically, Prion argues that the "recall" and "resen-tencling]" proceeding should be limited to a reconsideration of the defendant's placement (in the state hospital or with corrections), and not to encompass the length of the defendant' sentence.
126 This argument falters on the ground that it fails to credit the broad, ordinary meaning of the statutory term "resentence." It is certainly true that a defendant's initial sentence under the statute implicates a significant structural decision regarding the nature of the sentence and the placement of the defendant-whether the defendant should be placed on probation and, if not, whether his confinement should be under the supervision of the Department of Human Services (in the state hospital) or in the custody of the Department of Corrections (in prison). But that is not the only decision to be made at the time of sentencing. The initial sentencing decision includes, of course, the term or length of confinement. And if that is part of the initial sentencing, then a "recall" and "resentence," id. § T7-16a-202(1)(b) (1994), encompasses a reconsideration of that aspect of the sentence as well.
127 Nothing in the ordinary meaning of the term "resentence" suggests a limitation of the sort advocated by Prion. If the initial "sentence" encompassed a decision regarding the length or term of confinement (as it obviously did), then so would a "resentence," as the prefix "re" simply means " 'again, anew, [or] over again.'" 12 Thus, Prion's notion of a "resentenc{ing]" limited to placement is incompatible with the statutory text, and we accordingly reject it.
128 The structure of the GAMI statute bolsters this conclusion. At the time of resen-tencing, the court is to consider mental health status reports on the offender, including reports of the danger the offender may pose to society and himself, his prognosis for remission of symptoms, the likelihood of recidivism, and the effectiveness of the mental health treatment he received.
13
All of these considerations could play into a judge's determination of the length of an offender's sentence, including, of specific relevance to this case, whether to run an offender's sen
We therefore hold that the GAML statute aims to permit a district court, to recall, resentence, and even increase an offender's sentence following his commitment and release from the state hospital We affirm the decision of the court of appeals insofar as it implicitly endorsed this reading of the statute.
C
T30 Prion also challenges the proceeding increasing his sentence on double jeopardy grounds. The constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy "has been said to consist of three separate constitutional protections. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. And it protects against multiple punishments for the same offense." North Carolina v. Pearce,
181 A "primary purpose" of the Double Jeopardy Clause is "to preserve the finality of judgments." Crist v. Brets,
132 The Constitution also proscribes the imposition of multiple punishments for the same offense. See Ex parte Lange,
$34 That statement, however, cannot be taken to its literal extreme. The government could not, for example, cireum-vent the strictures of the Double Jeopardy Clause by styling a new prosecution for a past offense as a mere "resentencing." At some point, the imposition of a new punishment could be deemed to raise double jeopardy concerns even absent a new trial formally addressed to the question of the defendant's guilt.
17
See, eg., Ex parte Lange,
[ 85 This case requires us to delineate the boundary between the sorts of resentencing proceedings that fall outside the double jeopardy prohibition and those that impose multiple punishments raising constitutional concerns. The constitutional question presented here is whether a resentencing proceeding under the GAMI statute falls on the permissible or prohibited side of that line.
T 36 In defending the GAMI resentencing regime, the State insists that the clear language of the statute defeats any reasonable expectation of finality on Prion's part. This argument is premised on language in DiFrancesco,
187 We reject this reading of DiFrancesco. The clear, explicit nature of a legislative incursion on a defendant's expectation of the finality of a judgment or sentence cannot be the end of the double jeopardy inquiry. If that were the sum and substance of this constitutional guarantee, the legislature would have unfettered power to authorize multiple punishments for a sin
138 We do not read DiFrancesco to so enfeeble this fundamental constitutional right. The double jeopardy landscape under DiFrancesco is not as broadly brushed as the State suggests. DiFrdmcesco upholds the propriety of a resentencing on a new trial after a successful appeal, but it does so not solely on the basis of the "clear and specific" nature of the statutory provision for review of a defendant's sentence upon appeal by the prosecution, id., but also in light of the nature of the resentencing proceeding. Specifically, and as explained in greater detail below, the DiFrancesco decision turned in substantial part on the fact that the resen-tencing it upheld involved historically " 'well established'" mechanisms for the correction of improper sentences within limited time frames and did not involve a "retrial or approximate the ordeal of a trial." id. at 184-36,
T 39 Thus, DiFrancesco does not give carte blanche authority for any resentencing whose statutory prescription is clear and explicit. It suggests, rather, that the constitutionality of such a proceeding depends on a number of factors, such as whether the particular resen-tencing proceeding at issue has an established pedigree, occurs within a limited time-frame, and approximates the ordeal of a new trial.
140 Applying these factors, we hold that the state's resentencing of Prion under the GAMI statute crosses the constitutional line established by the Double Jeopardy Clause. Our holding is based on the grounds that Prion's resentencing (1) came under a sui generis resentencing procedure established under the GAMI statute, not one of the historically established mechanisms for resentencing endorsed in the double jeopardy case law; (2) occurred outside the time limits that would apply to established mechanisms for correcting an improper sentence; and (8) considered new evidence not presented or even available in Prion's initial trial and sentencing.
1
41 In cases upholding resentencing proceedings against double jeopardy challenges, United States Supreme Court has emphasized the historical pedigree of the resen-tencing mechanism at issue. In Bozso v. United States,
{42 The Court's endorsement in Pearce,
$44 Prion's resentencing under the GAMI statute bore no relation to any of the standard procedural mechanisms upheld in these decisions. He was not resentenced on a motion to correct a mistake in sentencing, as in Bozza. Nor was his new sentence fixed after or upon an appeal, as in Pearce or DiF®rancesco. Instead, Prion's new sentence was imposed in a de novo hearing convened at the end of a lengthy period of evaluation during his confinement in the state hospital. The State has not identified any traditional or historical basis for such a resentencing. The lack of such a pedigree is a factor that cuts against this resentencing proceeding under the Double Jeopardy Clause.
2
[ 45 The cases upholding resentencing proceedings against double jeopardy challenges have also noted the limited timeframe in which those proceedings have taken place. In DiFrancesco, the Court noted that the timeframe for a challenge to a sentence on appeal was appropriately brief, acknowledging that, although an "appeal may prolong the period" of a defendant's anxiety over the prospect of additional jeopardy for his behavior, that anxiety is limited to "the finite period provided by the statute." DiFrances-co, Id. at 186,
[ 46 For DiFrancesco, this finite period of anxiety was short-the time available to press an appeal.
18
The "dangerous special offender" statute at issue in that case did permit the sentencing court to grant an extension of the time for taking a review of the sentence, but the sentencing court could only extend the time by a maximum of thirty days beyond "'the expiration of the time otherwise prescribed by law.' " Id. at 120 n. 2,
147 The timeframe for the correction of the defendant's sentence in Bozsza was even more limited. The Court's opinion in that case emphasized that the trial court's decision to correct the sentence that omitted a statutorily required fine happened "about five hours after the sentence was announced."
1] 48 These limited timeframes are of constitutional significance under the Double Jeopardy Clause. DiFrancesco alluded to this point, noting that historically "[t]he trial court's increase of a sentence, so long as it took place during the same term of court, was permitted .... [and] not thought to violate any double jeopardy principle."
4 49 Double jeopardy's historical roots run deep. The seeds of this foundational princi
during the term wherein any judicial act is done, the record remaineth in the breast of the judges of the court, and in their remembrance, and therefore the roll is alterable during that term, as the judges shall direct; but when that term is past, then the record is in the roll, and admitteth of no alteration, averment or proof to the contrary.
3 Epwarp Coxe, InsttrurEs § 488 at 260.
{50 The common law's "terms of court" grew out of what was onee "one continual term for hearing and deciding cases." 3 Wiruiam Brackston®s, 275-76 (1769). Eventually, the church interposed and "exempted certain holy seasons from being profaned by forensic litigation." Id. As Blackstone explained, the terms were "gradually formed from the canonical constitutions of the church; being indeed no other than those leisure seasons of the year which were not occupied by great festivals or fasts." Id. The English courts therefore convened only during specific terms falling between the most important of Christian holidays. Id. at 276. 21 Outside these terms, which varied from year to year due to seasonal and lunar holidays but typically lasted somewhere between three and six weeks, 22 common law courts lacked power to revise their decisions rendered in prior terms.
1 51 The common law courts abided by the finality of the terms of court with such exactness that "matters which were not disposed of at a term had to be started over" in the next term. 23 This meticulous adherence to the terms system resulted in procedural bars on both amending final orders once the term expired and continuing trials from one term to the next. 24
152 Through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, common law courts continued to observe the term of court system, retaining the power to substantively amend previously imposed judgments or sentences so long as they did so during the same term of court.
25
Early American courts adopted this same framework. As one nineteenth-century Massachusetts court noted, "(al judge of the ... court has power to revise and increase a sentence imposed upon a con-viet, during the same term of court, and before the original sentence has gone into operation, or any action has been had upon it." Commonwealth v. Weymouth,
4 53 This historical record underscores the constitutional significance of the timeframe of a proceeding to subject a eriminal defendant to resentencing. The framers of the Double Jeopardy Clause were undoubtedly familiar with the limits of the common law terms of court, including on a court's authority to revise a prior sentence. 26 And thus they would have seen a resentencing proceeding in a new term as legally questionable, as the court intimated in DiFrancesco and Ex Parte Lange.
4 54 Of course the common law notion of a term of court is no longer with us today. But we have adopted modern analogs. The principal time bar to revising a judgment in modern law is in our procedural rules for post-judgment relief, such as rule 60 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure (and its federal counterpart). When the federal rule was adopted, its drafters indicated an intent to abolish the term of court regime and replace it with a more equitable, orderly system of post-judgment relief. See 7 James Wu. Moore Et an, MoorE's Practicrk § 60App.100 (8d ed. 2011). The federal rule drafters expressed concerns with the common law term of court system, under which "the time for vacating a judgment rendered early in a term was much longer than for a judgment rendered near its end." Id. Yet they still acknowledged a need for time limits to facilitate finality, adopting a six-month time limit for most motions for relief from a judgment. Id. 27 (Utah later adopted its own rule 60(b), 28 modeled after the federal rule, but our rule sets a general three-month time limit. Uras R. Civ. P. 60. 29 )
4 55 The resentencing proceeding for Prion under the GAMI statute happened well outside the finite, limited timeframe for an appeal or a motion for post-judgment relief. Prion was resentenced more than six months after he began serving his initial sentence.
30
The extensive time between Prion's initial sentence and the resentencing hearing would undoubtedly have been deemed problematic in the common law era in which the Double Jeopardy Clause was adopted. A common law court, in fact, would have lacked power to revise a sentence after such an extended period of time,
31
which would have spanned more than one and perhaps several different terms of court. It is significant, moreover, that Prion's resentencing occurred well outside the time frame for any motion for post-
156 We need not-and do not-hold that 'a resentencing proceeding beyond the deadline for a motion for post-judgment relief is a per se breach of the double jeopardy guarantee. We simply conclude that the timing of a defendant's resentencing has constitutional significance-that the extent of the delay between the initial and subsequent sentencing weighs in favor of a defendant's double jeopardy challenge to the resentenc-ing. And where, as here, the defendant's resentencing took place more than six months after the original sentence was handed down in a proceeding that bore no relation to any traditional, established mechanism for resentencing, we find that the sentencing scheme ran afoul of the Double Jeopardy Clause, particularly given the nature of the proceeding (as explained below).
3
€57 Finally, the cases upholding resen-tencing proceedings against double jeopardy attacks have emphasized the limited nature of the proceedings at issue. In Difrancesco, for example, the Court recalled the "central" objective of the Double Jeopardy Clause of providing a "barrier to affording the prosecution another opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to muster in the first proceeding." DiFranmceseo,
158 In reviewing the propriety of other sentencing proceedings, the Court has explored whether they bear "the hallmarks of [a] trial on guilt or innocence." Bullington,
" 59 The case law's focus on the nature of the resentencing proceeding has roots in broader double jeopardy principles. It has been said that the Double Jeopardy Clause "prevents the State from honing its trial strategies and perfecting its evidence through successive attempts at conviction." Tibbs v. Florida,
160 At its core, the Double Jeopardy Clause serves as a protective barrier between the individual defendant (with limited resources and high personal stakes in the outcome) and the state (with extensive resources and little anxiety arising from the outcome of the case). Although some resen-tencing proceedings will not approximate the ordeal of a trial, others will, in the sense that they furnish "the prosecution another opportunity to supply evidence which it failed to muster in the first proceeding." 33 And in those cases, the nature of the resentencing proceeding is a factor weighing in favor of the defendant who raises a double jeopardy challenge.
161 Prion's GAMI resentencing proceeding implicates these concerns. In contrast to the dangerous special offender scheme at issue in DiFrancesco, the GAMI statute allows for additional evidence to be gathered and presented to the court in a subsequent hearing. Although the ultimate determination of guilt or innocence has already been made, the GAMTI resentencing approximates the ordeal of a trial in that substantive reviews and recommendations are made to the court based on new evidence gathered in connection with the offender's mental health evaluations. For that reason, a GAMI resen-tencing proceeding bears some of the hallmarks of a trial and implicates core double jeopardy concerns.
1 62 Again, we do not suggest that a resentencing proceeding could never conform to the requirements of double jeopardy if it involved the presentation of new evidence. But where such a proceeding does not resemble a traditionally accepted mechanism for reopening a final judgment, and where it is convened well after the standard timeframe for such review, we find a double jeopardy violation in a proceeding that allows the prosecution to reopen the initial sentencing decision on a de novo basis in light of evidence that is gathered subsequent to the initial judgment and sentence.
III
I 63 We affirm the procedural propriety of Prion's rule 22(e) motion and recognize that the GAMI statute purports to allow the district court to increase his sentence. We reverse, however, on double jeopardy grounds.
€64 We recognize that a resentenc-ing proceeding is not the equivalent of a retrial for double jeopardy purposes. The constitution leaves more leeway for the state to reconsider a defendant's sentence than to reevaluate his guilt. But that leeway is not absolute. If the state resentenced a convicted defendant after he had already served most of his time-doubling his sentence, for example, based on new evidence of dangerousness presented by the prison warden-that would surely raise the double jeopardy concern of a multiple punishment for the same offense. Such a proceeding, moreover, would not escape double jeopardy scrutiny just because its prospect was clearly announced in the governing sentencing statutes. A defendant's expectation of finality is relevant to the double jeopardy analysis, but the state cannot evade this constitutional guarantee simply by making the possibility of increased punishment clear on the face of its sentencing scheme.
T 65 The state's resentencing of Prion under the GAMI statute is problematic under a proper understanding of the Double Jeopardy Clause. Prion was resentenced months after his initial sentence was entered. And his sentence was nearly doubled in a sui generis proceeding based on new evidence gathered during the course of his confinement. We find this resentencing to cross the
Notes
. Citations to title 77 chapter 16a in this opinion are to the 1994 Utah Code, as the statute has been amended (albeit cosmetically, in ways that presumably would not alter the analysis) since Prion's conviction. All citations to other sections of the code refer to the version currently in force.
. Utah Code section 77-16a-104(3) (1994) instructs a sentencing court faced with a mentally ill offender to "impose any sentence that could be imposed under law upon a defendant who is not mentally ill and who is convicted of the same offense."
. See also State v. Herrera,
. See Urax Cope § 78B-9-106(1) ("Alperso‘n is not eligible for [post-conviction] relief ... upon any ground that ... was raised or addressed at trial or on appeal ... [or] could have been but was not raised at trial or on appeal ...."); id. § 78B-9-107(1) (post-conviction remedies petitioner 'is entitled to relief only if the petition is filed within one year after the cause of action has accrued"); Urag R. Civ. P. 65C(h)(1) (requiring district court to review post-conviction petitions for frivolous or previously adjudicated claims and accordingly dismiss them).
. The text of the rule provides that "{the court may correct an illegal sentence, or a sentence imposed in an illegal manner, at any time." Uran R.Crm. P. 22(e).
. See, eg., Hill v. United States,
. See Fep.R.Crm.P. 35 (1950) ("[The court may correct an illegal sentence at any time."). Our rule 22(e) tracks the federal rule's original language. See Urn R.Crm. P. 22(e) ("The court may correct an illegal sentence, or a sentence imposed in an illegal manner, at any time.").
. See Fep.R.Crm.P. 35(a) (1984) (''The court may correct an illegal sentence at any time and may correct a sentence imposed in an illegal manner within the time provided herein for the reduction of sentence."). Rule 35 was repealed effective November 1, 1987, however, and the new’rule eliminated the "illegal sentence" language. See Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-473, § 215, 98 Stat. 1837, 2014. The modern version, enacted in light of the newly adopted Federal Sentencing Guidelines, authorized courts to correct sentences only when they were the result of "arithmetical, technical, or other clear error." Fzp.R.CrimP. 35(a). Federal offenders facing allegedly illegal sentences today may still challenge the constitutional validity of their sentences through petitions for habeas corpus. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255. \.
. United States v. Pavlico,
. See, eg., State v. Thorkelson,
. See Clements,
. Addis v. Smith,
. See Utah Cops §§ 77-16a-202(3), -203 (1994). These sections require the Department of Human Services to prepare and submit regular reports to the district court on the status of offenders being treated by a mental health facility under the GAMI statute. Reports are to include updates on the offender's current mental condition, progress since commitment, prognosis, the potential for recidivism, estimates of the offender's dangerousness to himself or others, and recommendations for future treatment. Id. § 77-16a-203 (1994).
. See id. § 76-3-401(2) (1994) ("A court shall consider the gravity and circumstances of the offenses and the history, character, and rehabilitative needs of the defendant in determining whether to impose consecutive sentences"); accord id. § 76-3-401(2) ("In determining whether state offenses are to run concurrently or consecutively, the court shall consider the gravity and circumstances of the offenses, the number of victims, and the history, character, and rehabilitative needs of the defendant.").
. In support of his statutory argument, Prion also cites section 76-3-405(1) of the Utah Code, which prohibits the imposition of a harsher sentence "[where a ... sentence has been set aside on direct review or on collateral attack." Prion argues that the thrust of this statute is "to protect a defendant's right to appeal by eliminating the chilling effect the threat of an increased sentence after a successful appeal might have on the exercise of appellate rights." That may be, but section 76-3-405 is inapplicable here for two reasons. First, GAMI resentencing is not the result of appellate review or collateral attack; it is an ongoing procedure directed by the trial court. Second, section 76-3-405 does not extend to circumstances where "the increased sentence is based on facts which were not known to the court at the time of the original sentence, and the court affirmatively places on the record the facts which provide the basis for the increased sentence." Urarg Cope § 76-3-405(2)(a). Prion's re-sentencing, was based on newly gathered information that was not available to the court during the original sentencing, which evidence was noted on the record during the resentencing proceeding. Section 76-3-405 is accordingly inapplicable here.
. A narrow exception to this general rule was recognized in Bullington v. Missouri, which found a double jeopardy problem in a case that subjected a capital defendant to the death penalty in a new trial after the defendant's successful appeal from a conviction resulting in a sentence of life imprisonment.
. See United States v. Fogel,
. See Fen. R. Apr. P. 4(b)(1) (1979). At the time of his case, DiFrancesco would have had fourteen days following the entry of the sentencing order against him within which he could appeal the sentence as a matter of right. Id.
. See Uraxu R. Civ P. 60(b).
. Joshua C. Tate, Ownership and Possession in the Early Common Law, 48 Am. J. Lecat Hist. 280, 280 (2006) ("Many scholars have viewed the reign of Henry II (d. 1189), the medieval English king most associated with legal reform, as pivotal in the development of the common law.").
. See also Jongs, A HanpBoox or Dates ror Stupents or EncuisH: History 98-99 (2000). Several statutes passed at various points in English history attempted to more precisely define the terms. By 1831, the "dates of the terms were fixed as follows: Hilary, 11-31 Jan.; Easter, 15 April-8 May; Trinity, 22 May-12 June; Michaelmas, 2-25 November." Id. at 103; see also
. See Jones, supra 1 50 n. 21, at 98-99.
. 3 Buackston®'s Commentaries on tHE Law 709 (Bernard C. Gavit ed., 1941).
. Id. ("[A] final judgment [was] not ... disturbed after the term at which it was entered hafd] expired unless a proper motion for a new trial was filed within a designated time.").
. The term of court system was eventually abolished in England as part of the Judiciary Act of 1873. Although most American states have similarly abolished the term system, some still retain relics of it in their law. See, eg., Dunlap v. State,
. See William S. McAninch, Unfolding the Law of Double Jeopardy, 44 S.C. L.Rev. 411, 414-16 (1993) ("The basic English common-law protections were well known to colonial lawyers through Coke's Institutes and Blackstone's Commentaries."); see also United States v. Wilson,
. Later, the committee extended the timeframe to file a 60(b) motion to up to one year under certain circumstances. Frp.R.Civ.P. 60 advisory committee's note to 1946 amendment. .
. Urag R. Civ. P. 60(b). Although rule 60(b) is a rule of civil procedure, we have allowed criminal defendants to avail themselves of it. See, eg., Menzies v. Galetka,
. Utah's rule 60(b) provides courts a mechanism to "relieve a party ... from a final judgment, order, or proceeding" for a variety of reasons. Urag R. Civ. P. 60(b). Unless the judgment is void, has been "satisfied, released, or discharged," or is otherwise rendered invalid, litigants must move for relief under this rule within three months. Id.
. Prion's six-month review, moreover, was perhaps on the shorter end of the resentencing proceedings authorized under the GAMI statute, which permits resentencing as late as eighteen months after the initial sentence is entered.
. United States v. Mayer,
. Bullington was perhaps unique in that it involved a capital sentencing proceeding, which was "in many respects a continuation of the trial on guilt or innocence of capital murder." Monge v. California,
. Burks v. United States,
