We determined,
sua sponte,
to rehear this case en banc,
see United States v. Zuniga-Salinas,
The facts are set forth in the panel opinion,
In
Herman,
without citation to any case-law, we held that “where all but one of the charged conspirators are acquitted, the verdict against the one will not stand.”
In its brief to the panel, the government suggested that
Herman
and
Sheikh
had been overruled implicitly by
United States v. Powell,
The panel,
The Eleventh Circuit, like this court, was bound by
Herman,
as
Herman
was a Fifth Circuit decision issued prior to the split of the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits effective October 1, 1981, and the Eleventh Circuit has adopted existing Fifth Circuit decisions as precedent.
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
We agree. An inconsistent verdict should no longer be a bar to conviction where all other co-conspirators are acquitted. For the reasons enunciated in Powell (including specifically the possibility of mistake, compromise, or lenity, and the independent availability of sufficiency-of-the-evidence review), such verdicts should not be subject to review for inconsistency. 3
Notes
.
See, e.g., United States v. Tarpley,
. The Fourth Circuit has treated
Powell
similarly.
See United States v. Thomas,
. In his supplemental brief on rehearing en banc, Zuniga-Salinas does not argue that the Herman line of cases should not be overruled. Instead, he asserts now, for the first time, that this case does not present the inconsistent-verdict problem at all. The reason given is that Zuniga-Salinas was charged with conspiring with OIvera-Garcia and “persons unknown” and that, as the jury acquitted OIvera-Garcia, it must have found that Zuniga-Salinas conspired with the unnamed persons, a verdict not inconsistent with the acquittal of OIvera-Garcia. Zuniga-Salinas then reasons that, as the district court and the government now agree that there was insufficient evidence of a conspiracy with such unknown persons, his conviction must be reversed.
