We heard this case
en banc
to resolve an intra-circuit conflict in our Double Jeopardy jurisprudence. Our cases have reached inconsistent results as to whether a defendant who has engaged in a single overall conspiracy to commit acts proscribed by more than one statute may be convicted and punished for committing two offenses, one under the general conspiracy statute,
*1034
18 U.S.C. § 371, and the other under a specific conspiracy statute. To resolve the conflict, we must determine whether or not, when considering the elements of § 371, we should treat the specific offense that a defendant is alleged to have conspired to commit as an element of that statute. Answering the question in the affirmative would lead to the conclusion that a defendant may be tried and convicted under both the general conspiracy statute and a specific conspiracy statute when the substantive offense that is charged as the object of the § 371 conspiracy and the substantive offense that is the object of the other charged conspiracy are different. We conclude that we are required to hold that the specific offense designated as the object of the conspiracy in a § 371 indictment does constitute an element of the offense, and we therefore overrule our opinion holding to the contrary,
United States v. Alerta,
I.
Charles Wesley Arlt was charged with and convicted of participating in a conspiracy to supply massive quantities of a key ingredient used to manufacture methamphetamine, hydriodic acid. The indictment alleged, inter alia, that Arlt would deposit large sums of cash in a bank account held by a co-conspirator, Deanna Pierce. Ms. Pierce would use the funds to buy cashier’s checks in the name of a front company and wire the money to an apparently legitimate hydriodic acid manufacturer, who would ship the acid to Arlt in 55 gallon drums labeled “Mining Fluid.” 2
Arlt was indicted along with six others in a twenty-two count indictment for participating in a conspiracy to manufacture methamphetamine, a conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States, identified in the applicable count as laundering money, and for the substantive offense of money laundering. The government did not contend that Arlt participated in two separate conspiracies — rather, it argued that the one conspiracy was penalized under two separate statutes. Arlt appealed his convictions to this court, alleging,
inter alia,
that he was denied the right to represent himself at trial.
United States v. Arlt,
A second superseding indictment was filed against Arlt, charging him with nineteen separate counts for his activities in the methamphetamine operation. Only *1035 the first two counts, charging Arlt under two different conspiracy statutes, are relevant to this opinion. Count One alleges that Arlt conspired to “aid and abet the manufacture of 1 kilogram or more of ... methamphetamine, ... in violation of Title 21, United States Code, Sections 841(a)(1) and 846,” and to “manufacture 1 kilogram or more of ... methamphetamine, ... in violation of Title 21, United States Code, Sections 841(a)(1) and 846.” The first code provision cited, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), prohibits, inter alia, the manufacture of controlled substances, and the second provision, 21 U.S.C. § 846, penalizes conspiracies and attempts to commit certain drug offenses, such as § 841.
Count Two alleges that Arlt conspired to “launder monetary instruments, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 371 and 1956(a)(1).” The conspiracy provision cited, 18 U.S.C. § 371, makes it unlawful for “two or more persons” to, inter alia, “conspire ... to commit any offense against the United States.” The other provision cited, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1), prohibits money laundering.
After a jury trial, Arlt was again convicted, and again appeals. His appeal, which was initially argued before a three-judge panel of this court, raises fourteen separate issues, each of which, he asserts, constitutes a ground for reversal. At the request of the panel, we voted to hear the case en bane solely to resolve one of the issues — -whether Arlt’s conviction under both Counts One and Two subjected him to multiple punishments for the same offense in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause. In view of our decision, we will return to the panel jurisdiction over the remaining issues.
II.
The Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits the imposition of multiple trials, multiple convictions and multiple punishments for the same offense.
See North Carolina v. Pearce,
The question before us, then, is whether Congress intended that separate punishments be imposed for the two conspiracy counts, or whether the two statutory provisions indeed prohibit the “same offense.” Whether the statutory provisions cover the “same offense” is a question that is “deceptively simple in appearance but virtually kaleidoscopic in application.”
Whalen,
*1036
Nothing in the legislative history of the enactment of § 846 or § 371 specifically addresses this question.
United States v. Nakashian,
where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or only one is whether each provision requires proof of an additional fact which the other does not.
Id.
at 304,
Our precedent is in conflict as to what elements to compare when a defendant is charged with two conspiracies, one of which is a § 371 conspiracy: a conspiracy to commit any offense against the United States. The inconsistency arises when applying the test to the element of § 371 that requires proof of what it is that the defendant is alleged to'have conspired to do. Specifically, is the element simply as stated in the text of § 371, “any offense against the United States,” or is it the specific offense that the defendant is alleged to have conspired to commit (in this case, money laundering as defined by 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1))? -
In
United States v. Cuevas,
By contrast, in
Alerta,
As the parties agree,
Alerta
cannot be reconciled with
Cuevas
and
Otis. Alerta
*1037
correctly notes that our inquiry, when applying the
Blockburger
test, concerns the “statutory elements” of each offense.
Vi-tale,
III.
In
Iannelli v. United States,
The other circuits that have considered the issue all have concluded that convicting and punishing a defendant under both § 371 and § 846 does not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause when the substantive offense underlying the § 371 conviction differs from the drug offense underlying the § 846 conviction.
United States v. Holloway,
Whalen’s holding, Iannelli’s dictum, and the decisions of other circuits lead us to conclude that we must overrule Alerta and reaffirm Cuevas and Otis. When applying the Blockburger test in a case in which a defendant is convicted under §' 371, the element that we must consider is not “any offense against the United States” but rather the specific substantive offense that the defendant is alleged to have conspired to commit; that substantive offense is designated in the count of the indictment charging the defendant under § 371. Put differently, the indictment on a § 371 offense incorporates by reference the provisions of the specific substantive criminal statute involved as a “statutory element” of the conspiracy charge.
IV.
We now apply the Blockburger test to Arlt’s conviction. As stated in Count Two of the indictment, the specific offense that is the object of the conspiracy charged is money laundering. The acts necessary to establish a conspiracy to launder money, as prohibited by § 371 and 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1), will not necessarily also support a conviction for a conspiracy to violate the drug laws. For example, a defendant guilty of participating in a money-laundering conspiracy involving funds generated from an illegal marketing scheme is not also guilty of participating in a § 846 drug conspiracy. The § 846 conspiracy requires proof of an additional fact that the charged § 371 conspiracy does not. 6
Similarly, the acts necessary to establish a conspiracy to violate the drug laws specified by § 846 will not necessarily also support a conviction for a conspiracy to launder money. For example, a defendant who conspires to grow a marijuana garden for consumption only by the conspirators is guilty under § 846, but has not committed the acts necessary to be guilty of participating in a money-laundering conspiracy. *1039 The charged § 371 conspiracy requires proof of an additional fact that the § 846 conspiracy does not.
Perhaps the simplest explanation, even for lawyers, and judges, is that a drug conspiracy need not (although it almost always will) involve the unlawful use of money, and money laundering need not (although it sometimes will) involve unlawful drug transactions. Accordingly, application of the Blockburger test, as it has been implemented by the Court since its adoption seventy years ago, leads to the conclusion that Congress intended the crimes charged in Counts One and Two to be separate offenses. Therefore, under Blockburger, Arlt’s conviction on both counts is consistent with the statutes and does not offend the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Arlt argues that, even if we treat the § 371 conspiracy as a conspiracy to launder money, and not simply a conspiracy to commit any offense against the United States, he cannot be convicted on both counts. He claims that a conspiracy to launder drug money can constitute a conspiracy to aid in the distribution of drugs because the money laundering facilitates the drug distribution. Whatever the factual merits of his premise, it does not follow that the two conspiracies cover the same offense. Rather, it merely shows that, in
some
instances, the same conduct satisfies the elements of both offenses. However, “substantial overlap” between the two crimes does not preclude them from being separate offenses.
Iannelli,
V.
We conclude that Arlt’s two convictions, under 18 U.S.C. § 371 and 21 U.S.C. § 846, do not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause, because the § 371 count charged him with the crime of participating in a conspiracy to launder money, and that crime is not the “same offense” as the crime of participating in a § 846 drug conspiracy. With this issue resolved, we return control of this appeal to the three-judge panel so that it may resolve the thirteen remaining issues pending before the court.
REMANDED to the panel for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. We are not the only court that finds difficulty in explaining exactly what the Double Jeopardy Clause does and does not prohibit. Chief Justice Rehnquist explained that "[the Supreme Court's] opinions, including ones authored by me, are replete with
mea
culpa's occasioned by shifts in assumptions and emphasis” as to the meaning of the Clause.
Whalen v. United States,
. Hydriodic acid is not only used to make methamphetamine — it also is used to mine for precious metals.
.
Iannelli
concluded that the
Blockburger
test was satisfied because "[t]he essence of the crime of conspiracy is agreement, an element not contained in the statutory definition” of the gambling offense, and a conviction under the gambling offense “requires establishment of a fact not required for conviction for conspiracy to violate that statute.”
Iannelli,
. The Supreme Court took the same approach in another felony-murder case,
Harris v. Oklahoma,
. The Eleventh Circuit arrived at the same result by a different route.
See Mulherin,
. The
Blockburger
test, on its face, concerns proof of an "additional fact,” but, as applied by the Supreme Court, it actually concerns proof of only a "different fact.”
See, e.g., Albemaz,
