This case requires us to examine a ruling based on the claim of vindictive prosecution. The district court dismissed a felony indictment for illegal entry on the ground of presumed vindictiveness because the indictment followed entry of a not guilty plea to a misdemeanor charge at an initial appearance before the magistrate. The Government appeals. We reverse. 1
In accordance with a long-standing agreement between the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) and the Arizona United States Attorney, designed for a heavy volume of illegal entry cases, INS has the authority to file misdemeanor illegal entry complaints for later prosecution by the U.S. Attorney. Felony complaints for illegal entry, though, require prior approval by the U.S. Attorney.
On March 1, 1981, immigration agents apprehended Gallegos-Curiel, the appellee here, for entering the country illegally. The next day an immigration agent prepared and filed a complaint charging appellee with misdemeanor illegal entry under 8 U.S.C. § 1325 (1976), and presented appel-lee before a magistrate, with counsel. 2 Ap-pellee entered a plea of not guilty at the initial appearance.
When the U.S. Attorney’s office received the trial setting order from the magistrate a few days later, it reviewed appellee’s complete file, including his prior non-immigration record. A copy of that record had not been included in the file before the immigration agent who issued the misdemeanor complaint. 3 After considering appellee’s complete prior record of both immigration and non-immigration violations, the Assistant U.S. Attorney sought an indictment for felony illegal entry under 8 U.S.C. § 1325 *1167 (1976). 4 The grand jury issued the indictment on March 10, 1981.
In the district court, appellee filed a motion to dismiss the felony indictment on the ground of vindictive prosecution, claiming that the charge against him was raised to a felony simply because he had exercised a procedural right, that is, entry of a not guilty plea to the misdemeanor charge. The district court granted the motion and dismissed the felony indictment. In accepting the vindictive prosecution claim, the district court concluded that the INS agent could have had access to the non-immigration record, and that the U.S. Attorney’s office would not have reviewed appellee’s file if he had pled guilty to the misdemean- or. We must decide whether vindictiveness can be inferred from the challenged prose-cutorial conduct.
The doctrine of vindictive prosecution must not be misapplied by blurring the distinction between what is actual retaliation and what is presumed. The presumption applies only to the extent it reflects the very real likelihood of actual vindictiveness.
In
North Carolina v. Pearce,
In
Blackledge v. Perry,
When there is no evidence of actual vindictiveness and the only question is whether it must be presumed, cases involving increased charges or punishments after trial are to be sharply distinguished from cases in which the prosecution increases charges in the course of pretrial proceedings. This has been established by the Supreme Court in
United States v.
Goodwin, - U.S. -,
First, the Court recognized that before the trial has begun, “the prosecutor’s assessment of the proper extent of prosecution may not have crystallized.” - U.S. at - - -,
After considering the timing of the defendant’s action, the Court in
Goodwin
analyzed the nature of the right asserted. Although the plea of not guilty forced the Government to prove its case, the Court found that the plea did not warrant a presumption that subsequent modification of the charges was unjustified, even when the not guilty plea was coupled with the request for and burdens imposed by a jury trial. The not guilty plea and request for jury trial did not force the duplicative expenditure of prosecutorial resources, and hence did not invoke the institutional bias against the retrial of decided issues that might motivate a vindictive reaction, as did the asserted rights in
Pearce
and
Blackledge. Id.
at - - -,
The holding in
Goodwin
and the analysis developed from
Pearce
to
Goodwin
dictate our conclusion that a presumption of vindictiveness is not warranted in this case. This circuit has applied the presumption of vindictiveness doctrine in the form of the “appearance of vindictiveness” test. Absent direct evidence of an expressed hostility or threat to the defendant for having exercised a constitutional right, see,
e.g., United States v. Hollywood Motor Car Co.,
The principle of vindictive prosecution is not a fiction, either in concept or in its implementation. The appearance of vindictiveness test is not a per se rule striking down any increased charge following any act by the defendant. The appearance of vindictiveness does not embody the
post hoc ergo propter hoc
fallacy,
see United States v. Robison,
When increased charges are filed in the routine course of prosecutorial review or as a result of continuing investigation,
see United States v. Griffin,
Vindictiveness is antithetical to a fair evaluation of the case. If an objective assessment of the prosecution’s position reveals that charges should be increased or made more precise to take account of information not previously known to the prosecutor or to state more accurately the Government’s position, then the prosecution has the right, if not the duty, to do so, provided there is no procedural unfairness to the defendant, see
id.
at -, - & n.14,
In every case alleging inferred vindictive prosecution, there must be a threshold showing of vindictiveness or the likelihood of it before the court is justified in inquiring into the prosecutor’s actual motives. The exercise of routine or clearly necessary defense motions in the pretrial stage does not meet the threshold for more detailed inquiry and does not suffice to raise the presumption of vindictiveness. As did the Supreme Court in Goodwin, we will analyze the timing and nature of defendant’s act to determine whether the prosecutor likely acted for a punitive or retaliatory motive so that the presumption is warranted. The case before us contains no allegations of express threats or harassment. The allegations are simply that there is an appearance of vindictive prosecution because the appellee was indicted for a felony after he entered a plea of not guilty to a misdemeanor at an initial appearance before a magistrate. Under Goodwin that sequence of events is not alone sufficient to raise an appearance of vindictive prosecution.
Appellee entered his initial plea of not guilty on the same day the misdemeanor complaint was prepared and the day after he was apprehended. The felony indictment was sought only a few days later, well before trial. At this pretrial stage in the proceedings, the prosecutor’s assessment of society’s interest in prosecuting appellee certainly could not have crystallized, and the prosecution should not be bound by the initial charge filed by the INS upon apprehension. As the Court in
Goodwin
acknowledged, “[i]n the course of preparing a case for trial, the prosecutor may uncover additional information that suggests a basis for further prosecution or he simply may come to realize that information possessed by the State has a broader significance.” - U.S. -at -,
The prosecution’s assessment of appellee’s case demonstrates a proper reevaluation of new and existing information concerning a defendant’s conduct to further society’s best interests. Such pretrial prosecutorial conduct should not be burdened with presumptions of vindictiveness.
Id.
at - - -,
In this pretrial setting, moreover, the entry of the not guilty plea, like the motion to be tried by jury, is routinely made and is expected as part of the adversary process, so that it is unrealistic to assume the prosecutor’s pretrial response would be vindictively motivated. The timing of appellee’s procedural right demonstrates clearly that no presumption of vindictiveness is warranted.
The nature of the right appellee asserted here also does not warrant a presumption of vindictiveness, as
Goodwin
directly held. “This Court in
Bordenkircher [v. Hayes,
Finally, it should be recognized that even if the prosecutor had increased the charges against appellee because his initial expectation that appellee would plead guilty to the misdemeanor proved unfounded, this would have been a legitimate exercise of prosecutorial discretion. Departures from the initial indictment do not raise presumptions of vindictiveness except in a rare case. The initial indictment “does not necessarily define the extent of the
*1171
legitimate interest in prosecution.”
Goodwin, -
U.S. at - - -,
Appellee’s assertion that but for the plea of not guilty the U.S. Attorney’s office would not have reviewed appellee’s file and filed the felony indictment is to no avail. A sequence of events is not enough; the likelihood of retaliation is crucial.
See Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
We conclude that the circumstances surrounding appellee’s indictment for felony illegal entry after his plea of not guilty at an initial appearance before the magistrate do not raise a threshold appearance of vindictiveness sufficient to trigger an inquiry into the prosecutor’s actual motives. A careful examination of whether an appearance is raised is generally essential to prevent wasteful delays of trial and to screen out frivolous vindictive prosecution claims. The severe presumption should not be invoked lightly. Goodwin, - U.S. at -,
REVERSED.
Notes
. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1976).
. The immigration agents accompanying appel-lee to the courthouse became concerned that he might be incompetent to comprehend what was happening to him. The agents expressed their concern to the magistrate, who then appointed counsel before the initial appearance.
. Gallegos-Curiel’s non-immigration record was summarized on the back of the “Record of Deportable Alien”, which was included in ap-pellee’s file. The back of the record, however, was not copied for the immigration agent’s review.
. Section 1325 provides for a misdemeanor conviction for the first commission of, and a felony conviction for a subsequent commission of, an illegal entry violation.
The Assistant U.S. Attorney testified at the hearing in the district court that he sought the felony indictment for two reasons: because he believed appellee’s immigration record alone justified it, and because he believed the non-immigration record justified it. The immigration agent who had issued the misdemeanor complaint testified that, had he known of the non-immigration violations, he would have notified the U.S. Attorney’s office to request a felony prosecution.
. Counsel for appellee, in his argument before the district court on the motion to dismiss, admitted that because he was appointed immediately before the initial appearance and because of the concern over defendant’s competency, see note 2 supra, he could not “make any decision other than, ‘I’ve got to find out.’ So we enter a plea of not guilty.” Reporter’s Transcript at 36. Normally in these proceedings, the defendant does not have an attorney present at the initial appearance before the magistrate.
. The abuse of discretion standard is to be applied in reviewing dispositions of claims of prosecutorial vindictiveness.
See United States v. Griffin,
