This case is here again, this time on interlocutory appeal by the defendants from the district court’s denial of their motion to dismiss the indictment against them on double jeopardy grounds.
See Abney v. United States,
All of the relevant facts and procedural history of this case up through our earlier decision can be found in our prior opinion, and we will assume the reader’s familiarity with it. After we sent the case back to the district court for further proceedings, the defendants filed a motion asking the court to dismiss the reinstated indictment. Their motion asserted that it would violate the Double Jeopardy Clause to retry the defendants in light of the mistrial that had been required by the earlier mid-trial dismissal of the indictment. That dismissal was one which the defendants had obtained and which we had held should never have been granted.
See Jordan,
Before the district court ruled on the defendant’s post-remand motion to dismiss, the government filed a motion asking the district court judge, who had erroneously found the prosecutor guilty of misconduct during the trial and had dismissed the indictment on that basis, to recuse herself. She did. At least one other judge from the district did so as well, and thereafter a judge from outside the district was assigned to handle the case.
The newly assigned judge entered an order denying the defendants’ motion to dismiss as well as their request for an evidentiary hearing. They wanted an evi-dentiary hearing to prove their theory that the prosecutor had intentionally caused them to seek the dismissal of the indictment that led to the mistrial. The district court believed the prosecutor’s intent irrelevant given this Court’s holding that there had been no misconduct.
The defendants contend that the district court was wrong, that the prosecutor’s intent when engaging in conduct that prompts a defendant to seek a mistrial is relevant even if that conduct is not misconduct. The law is settled that a mistrial requested by the defendant because of prosecutorial misconduct does not bar a retrial under double jeopardy principles, unless the prosecutor intentionally misbehaved for the specific purpose of goading the defendant into moving for the mistrial.
Oregon v. Kennedy,
I.
The first reason is that the defendants’ double jeopardy contention is precluded by the law of the case doctrine. In our earlier decision we recognized that we would not have appellate jurisdiction to review the district court’s mid-trial dismissal of the indictment if a retrial were barred on double jeopardy grounds.
Id.
at 1247-48. That is what 18 U.S.C. § 3731 plainly says. It gives us broad jurisdiction over appeals by the government from dismissals in criminal cases, “except that no appeal shall lie where the double jeopardy clause of the
*1035
United States Constitution -prohibits further prosecution.”
Id.
In our opinion in the earlier appeal we quoted that provision with its double jeopardy exception and acknowledged the defendants’ position that we lacked jurisdiction as a result of the exception.
Jordan,
The law of the case doctrine bars relitigation of issues that were decided, either explicitly or by necessary implication, in an earlier appeal of the same case.
See Schiavo ex rel. Schindler v. Schiavo,
It is true that in disposing of the defendants’ contention that we lacked jurisdiction over the earlier appeal we explicitly addressed only one of the two double jeopardy arguments they made. We wrote about why we were rejecting their argument that double jeopardy applied because the district court’s dismissal of the indictment with prejudice was the functional equivalent of an acquittal.
See Jordan,
An argument is rejected by necessary implication when the holding stated or result reached is inconsistent with the argument. Given the plain language of § 3731, which we quoted in our opinion, id. at 1248, the holding that we had appellate jurisdiction and our exercise of that jurisdiction to reverse the district court’s decision cannot be reconciled with the position *1036 that the non-acquittal branch of double jeopardy bars a retrial. By necessary implication we rejected that argument in the earlier appeal.
That our prior decision necessarily implies there is no double jeopardy bar to retrying the defendants is a conclusion that logically follows when the legal premises we have explained are viewed against the procedural facts of the appeal. The defendants do not seriously contest the logical force of that conclusion given the legal premises, but they do dispute those premises in two ways. One way is by arguing that our recent decision in
United States v. Bobo,
The defendants second line of attack on the legal premises leading to our conclusion that the law of the case doctrine applies is the argument that the necessary implication part of the doctrine cannot be applied where the issue necessarily but implicitly decided in the prior appeal involves the court’s jurisdiction. They cite as authority for this assertion Supreme Court decisions holding that “the existence of unaddressed jurisdictional defects has no precedential effect.”
Lewis v. Casey,
Of course, the law of the case doctrine has exceptions. The only one the defendants argue is the exception that applies where we are convinced our decision in the prior appeal is clearly erroneous and following it would work a manifest injustice.
See Agostini v. Felton,
II.
If the law of the case did not cover the specific double jeopardy contention that the defendants are pressing in this appeal, we would still reject it. In the prior opinion this Court explicitly found that the prosecutor engaged in no misconduct, that his conduct was not sanctionable in any way, that he did nothing wrong.
See Jordan,
That leaves us with a situation in which the defendants wrongfully obtained a mistrial, which the prosecutor vigorously argued against, and they did so based on prosecutorial conduct that was entirely proper. To state the obvious, no authority supports the defendants’ position that the Constitution entitles them to escape any further prosecution if only they can show that the prosecutor really, truly wanted them to wrongfully seek the mistrial, and hoped that if they did the court would err and grant them one. The defendants’ factual theory posits the prosecutor as a cunning puppeteer who skillfully manipulated experienced defense counsel into misleading the court about the law so that they could be given relief to which they were not entitled, all in pursuit of the prosecutor’s secret desire to stop the trial.
That theory seems far fetched for a number of reasons, one of which is that the prosecutor practically begged the district court not to dismiss the indictment or grant a mistrial. We suppose, however, that the defendants’ cunning prosecutor theory is broad enough to include the idea that the prosecutor argued so hard against the mistrial because he was so much for it, using his words to mask his real desire, a Machiavellian maneuver that even the Prince himself would have envied. Regardless, because the defendants’ request for an evidentiary hearing was denied, we will indulge for now their fanciful theory of the facts and assume that the prosecutor’s insistent argument was all an act, that he secretly hoped that both the defense counsel and the court would mistakenly think that his proper conduct was not only improper but improper enough to justify dismissing the indictment and declaring a mistrial. We will assume that the intent behind the prosecutor’s proper conduct relating to discovery was to goad the defendants into moving for a mistrial. Even propped with those assumptions, the defendants’ position cannot stand.
*1038
No decision of any court that the defendants have cited or that we have been able to find on our own has held that a defense-procured mistrial bars a retrial in the absence of prosecutorial misconduct. In
Oregon v. Kennedy,
which is the principal decision the defendants rely upon, there was prosecutorial misconduct that prompted the mistrial motion.
In reversing the lower court’s reversal of the conviction in
Kennedy,
the Supreme Court did not question that there had been prosecutorial misconduct, but instead held that there was an additional requirement, which is that the misconduct must have been committed by the prosecutor with the intent of causing the mistrial.
Id.
at 675-76,
Absent prosecutorial misconduct sufficient to justify a mistrial on a defendant’s motion, there is no double jeopardy. This conclusion is not only consistent with the language we have quoted from the
Kennedy
opinion, it is also in keeping with the Court’s characterization of the circumstances in which a defendant who moves for a mistrial cannot be retried: “a narrow exception to the rule that the Double Jeopardy Clause is no bar to retrial.”
Id.
at 673,
Our conclusion is also consistent with the basic principles in this area. The purpose of the Double Jeopardy Clause as it relates to retrials following mistrials is to preserve “the right of the defendant to have his trial completed before the first jury empaneled to try him.”
Id.
at 673,
The “narrow exception to the rule,” id., exists where a prosecutor deliberately forced that choice on the defendant by *1039 creating the error through intentional misconduct for the purpose of goading the defendant into asking for a mistrial. To allow a prosecutor to deliberately inject error into a trial in order to force the defendant to seek a mistrial would not be fair, and it would afford too little weight to the defendant’s interest in continuing on to judgment in one proceeding.
On the other hand, where a prosecutor has not engaged in misconduct the defendant faces no choice about whether to continue on with a trial whose verdict may be affected by the prosecutor’s error, because there is no error to affect the verdict. If the defendant obtains a mistrial based on assertions of prosecutorial misconduct where there has been no misconduct, the defendant has stopped the trial when he had no right or need to do so, and in those circumstances it is not at all unfair to require the defendant to face trial again. Indeed, it would be unfair to allow the defendant to escape jeopardy in these circumstances, thereby rewarding him for his own error and putting too little weight on the public’s interest in having criminal matters end in just judgments.
For these reasons, we conclude that a double jeopardy violation following a mistrial that the defendant requested is an alloy of two elements: it requires prosecu-torial misconduct, and it requires that the misconduct have been intended to goad the defendant into seeking the mistrial.
See United States v. Blankenship,
III.
The order denying the motion to dismiss the indictment and denying an evidentiary hearing on that motion is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The defendants' misunderstanding of the law of the case is not limited to the application of that doctrine to the double jeopardy issue. Jordan suggests in his brief that the district court's ruling in the first trial excluding the testimony of Royce Fields,
Jordan,
