Counsel for Sherif Awadalla, a convicted felon who absconded after filing a notice of appeal in this Court, moves for a stay of Awadalla’s appeal or, alternatively, for dismissal of his appeal without prejudice to renewal when he surrenders. The Government cross-moves to dismiss Awadalla’s appeal with prejudice. For the reasons set forth below, the Government’s motion is granted, and the appeal is dismissed with prejudice.
BACKGROUND
On June 6, 2003, Awadalla was convicted, following a guilty plea, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Sterling Johnson, Jr., Judge) of one count of conspiracy to commit credit card fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1029. He was sentenced to a *245 prison term of 14 months and a three-year term of supervised release, and was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $101,293.48 along with a $100 special assessment. On June 16, 2003, Awadalla filed a notice of appeal in this Court.
The District Court ordered Awadalla to surrender voluntarily on August 12, 2003. By letter dated August 8, 2003, Awadalla’s counsel requested that the surrender date be postponed until August 15, 2003. The District Court granted the extension. Awadalla failed to surrender on that date, or thereafter.
Awadalla’s counsel now moves for a stay of Awadalla’s appeal or, alternatively, for dismissal of the appeal without prejudice to renewal when Awadalla returns to custody. The Government cross-moves to dismiss Awadalla’s appeal with prejudice.
DISCUSSION
The two issues presented are (1) whether we should dismiss Awadalla’s appeal and (2) if so, whether the appeal should be dismissed with prejudice.
A. Dismissal of the Appeal
1. The Fugitive Disentitlement Doctrine
The Supreme Court has long held that, in criminal cases, appellate courts have the authority to “dismiss the appeal of a defendant who is a fugitive from justice during the pendency of his appeal.”
Ortega-Rodriguez v. United States,
In determining whether to dismiss a criminal appeal pursuant to the fugitive disentitlement doctrine, we look to four grounds we have identified for “disentitling” fugitives: “1) assuring the enforceability of any decision that may be rendered against the fugitive; 2) imposing a penalty for flouting the judicial process; 3) discouraging flights from justice and promoting the efficient operation of the courts; and 4) avoiding prejudice to the other side caused by the defendant’s escape.”
Empire Blue Cross & Blue Shield
*246
v. Finkelstein,
In
Degen,
the Supreme Court indicated that the dignity and deterrence grounds for disentitling fugitives do not support dismissal of a
civil
appeal based on an appellant’s fugitive status in a separate criminal case. The Court held that “[t]he need to redress the indignity visited upon the District Court by [the appellant’s] absence from the criminal proceeding, and the need to deter flight from criminal prosecution by [the defendant] and others” are not sufficiently served by disentitlement of a criminal defendant in a related civil case.
Degen,
The
Degen
Court’s rationale for discounting dignity and deterrence as relevant factors — namely, that a criminal defendant should not be sanctioned by one court for his affront to another court — has no application to criminal appeals. Unlike the fugitives in
Degen
and
Berger,
who sought to prosecute civil appeals despite their fugitive status, a fugitive who absconds in the course of an ongoing criminal appeal flouts the authority of the court from which he seeks relief. By imposing the sanction of disentitlement, that court can both protect the dignity of its proceedings and deter similarly situated parties from absconding.
See Ortega-Rodriguez,
2. Applied to this Case
Because Awadalla absconded after challenging his judgment of conviction in this Court, there is no doubt that we have the authority to dismiss his appeal. Moreover, three of the factors to be considered in determining whether a fugitive should be disentitled weigh in favor of dismissal. First, because Awadalla’s whereabouts are unknown, we cannot assure that any decision rendered against him will be enforced.
See Finkelstein,
Each of these factors is an independently sufficient basis on which to dismiss Awa-dalla’s appeal. Therefore, the motion by Awadalla’s counsel to stay the appeal is denied. Instead, we exercise our discretion to dismiss Awadalla’s appeal under the fugitive disentitlement doctrine.
B. Dismissal with Prejudice
The remaining question is whether to dismiss the instant appeal with prejudice, as requested by the Government, or without prejudice to renewal, as requested by counsel to Awadalla. Considering the number of cases in which federal appellate courts, including both the Supreme Court and our Court, have dismissed appeals brought by fugitives, there is a surprising shortage of guidance on this issue. Accordingly, we take this opportunity to review the relevant case law, and to explain why we have concluded that Awadalla’s appeal should be dismissed with prejudice.
In
Molinaro v. New Jersey,
Molinaro
has uniformly been interpreted to authorize immediate dismissal
with prejudice
of a fugitive’s appeal.
See, e.g., United States v. $129,374 in United States Currency,
Our Court also has exercised its discretion to dismiss fugitives’ appeals both with and without prejudice to renewal. In one recent case, we exercised our discretion to dismiss a civil appeal immediately — that is, with prejudice,
see
note 3,
ante
— where the appellee’s case was adversely affected by the appellant’s fugitive status.
See Finkelstein,
Based on this collection of cases both from the Supreme Court and from our Court, it is clear that we have discretion to dismiss Awadalla’s appeal with or without prejudice to renewal. Upon due consideration, we exercise our discretion to dismiss Awadalla’s appeal with prejudice. We choose that course of action because we believe that dismissal with prejudice is consistent both with the more recent decisions of the Supreme Court and with the underlying purposes of the fugitive disen-titlement doctrine.
Eisler, which involved an appeal by a convict who had escaped the country and successfully resisted extradition, is the only decision from the Supreme Court (or our Court) that has examined the rationale for dismissing a fugitive’s appeal with prejudice in any detail. In that case, Justice Frankfurter, writing for the Court, explained the decision to dismiss Eisler’s appeal with prejudice as follows:
This case has nothing in common with instances cited as precedent for leaving it off the docket until a direction to the contrary shall issue. Smith v. United States,94 U.S. 97 ,24 L.Ed. 32 ; Bonahan v. Nebraska,125 U.S. 692 ,8 S.Ct. 1390 ,31 L.Ed. 854 . In those cases convicts had broken jail while their cases were pending in this Court and remained at large. As a matter of practical good sense, apparently upon informal suggestion, the Court suspended disposition of the cases until it should receive word from the sheriff who reported the escape that a recapture had been accomplished. Such jailbreaks, indeed, as often as not imply a merely temporary separation from confinement. But whatever may be thought of such a light-reined way of dealing with a jail *249 break from our local jails, the situation presented by this case is totally different. Here we have the most formal kind of resistance to the jurisdiction of this Court.
Eisler,
In
Molinaro,
in which the Supreme Court dismissed with prejudice the appeal of a felon who failed to surrender to state authorities after his bail expired, the Court did not rely on the distinction drawn in
Eisler
between formal resistance to an appellate court’s jurisdiction and mere jailbreaks. Instead, the Court simply stated: “While [the defendant’s] escape does not strip the case of its character as an adjudi-cable case or controversy, we believe it disentitles the defendant to call upon the resources of the Court for determination of his claims.”
Molinaro,
The Molinaro Court, which cited Eisler, may have believed that .a convicted felon who jumps bail falls in the same category as a defendant who successfully resists extradition. Alternatively, the Court may have believed that any fugitive’s appeal should be dismissed with prejudice. Under either scenario, Molinaro — the most recent decision of the Supreme Court that is directly on point — suggests that a defendant who jumps bail is no longer entitled to draw on the resources of an appellate court, and, therefore, should not be accorded additional time to return to custody before his appeal is dismissed.
The practice endorsed in Molinaro— namely, immediate dismissal of a bail jumper’s appeal
with prejudice
— is consistent with the principles underlying the fugitive disentitlement doctrine. It is plain that, if the only rationale for the doctrine were assuring the enforceability of a decision rendered against the fugitive, there would be no significant harm in giving a fugitive a grace period in which to return to custody. Likewise, to the extent that the doctrine is intended to prevent continuing prejudice to the government caused by a defendant’s absence (as opposed to past, irrevocable prejudice), it might be prudent in some circumstances to allow a defendant to renew his appeal upon surrendering to the jurisdiction of the court.
5
However, where the court hearing an appeal is the same court from which the fugitive seeks relief from his conviction,
*250
the fugitive disentitlement doctrine also serves two additional purposes: “imposing a penalty for flouting the judicial process” and “discouraging flights from justice and promoting the efficient operation of the courts.”
Finkelstein,
Citing these two rationales for disen-titlement — dignity and deterrence — we concluded in United States v. Morgan, 254 F.3d 424 (2d Cir.2001), that a district court did not err when it invoked the fugitive disentitlement doctrine to deny a motion even after the defendant had returned to custody. 6 Like the defendant in Morgan, Awadalla has affronted the dignity of the court from which he seeks relief. Accordingly, consistent with the Supreme Court’s decisions in Eisler and Molinaro, we dismiss his appeal with prejudice. In our view, any other course of action would dilute the sanction imposed for flouting the judicial process and reduce the deterrent effect of that sanction.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the motion by Awadalla’s counsel to stay the instant appeal or, alternatively, to dismiss the appeal without prejudice to renewal is denied. The Government’s motion to dismiss the appeal with prejudice is granted. We direct the Clerk of the Court to enter an order dismissing the appeal.
Notes
. Appellate courts likewise have the authority to dismiss a criminal appeal under the fugitive disentitlement doctrine where an appellant is not a fugitive during the pendency of his appeal but there is "some connection between the defendant’s [prior] fugitive status and his appeal.”
Ortega-Rodriguez v. United States,
On the other hand, dismissal of a criminal appeal is not proper on the sole ground that a defendant had been a fugitive during the proceedings before the district court.
Ortega-Rodriguez,
. The only relevant factor that does not weigh in favor of dismissal of Awadalla’s appeal is "the need to avoid prejudice to the other party resulting from the defendant’s fugitive status.”
SEC v. Berger,
. Although the Molinaro and Eisler Courts did not specifically use the words "with prejudice,” by dismissing the appeals before them without giving the appellants an opportunity to return to custody and renew their appeals, the Courts effectively dismissed the appeals with prejudice. Thus, in this context, "immediate dismissal” and dismissal “without delay” are interchangeable with dismissal "with prejudice.”
. Although we did not give any specific reason in
Sperling
for our decision to give the fugitive 30 days to return to custody, it is noteworthy that, in the same opinion, we reversed the fugitive’s conviction on one of the counts in the indictment, although we affirmed another of his convictions.
See United States v. Sperling,
. We do not in any way suggest that delaying dismissal is required or even preferable in civil cases, where, pursuant to
Degen,
the dignity and deterrence rationales for the fugitive disentitlement doctrine do not apply with equal force. In
Finkelstein,
for example, we dismissed a fugitive’s civil appeal with prejudice without finding that the appellee had been irrevocably harmed by the defendant’s absence.
See Finkelstein,
. The application of the doctrine in that case was also justified because "Morgan’s flight would result in prejudice to the government if his case were now to go to trial because the government no longer knows the whereabouts of the cooperating witness who would have testified against Morgan."
United States
v.
Morgan,
