MEMORANDUM AND OPINION
In 1997, a Texas grand jury indicted Robert N. Angleton for the capital murder of his wife, Doris Angleton. The indictment alleged that Angleton had promised to pay his brother to have Doris Angleton killed. In August 1998, a Texas state jury acquitted Robert Angleton of the capital murder charge. In January 2002, a federal grand jury indicted Robert Angleton under the federal murder for hire statute, alleging that he had promised to pay his brother to have Doris Angleton killed and caused his brother to travel in interstate commerce and use interstate facilities to accomplish the murder. Angleton has moved to dismiss this federal indictment on the basis of his prior trial and acquittal on the state capital murder charge. The question before this court is whether the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution bars this prosecution and requires the dismissal of the federal indictment. 1
This court concludes that although the State of Texas would be foreclosed from reprosecuting Angleton for the murder of his wife, the dual sovereignty doctrine, which permits the federal and state governments to prosecute an individual for the same act if that act violates the laws of each government, defeats Angleton’s motion to dismiss. Long-standing precedent affirming and applying the dual sovereignty doctrine leads this court to conclude that double jeopardy does not bar this federal prosecution. However, not all of Angleton’s arguments are frivolous, as that term is defined in
United States v. Dunbar,
The reasons for these rulings are explained in detail below.
*699 1. Background 2
In April 1997, Doris Angleton was shot to death in her home in Houston, Texas. An extensive investigation followed. The primary investigators were Houston Police Department Homicide Detective Sergeants Jerry Novak and David Ferguson. Suspicion focused on Robert Angleton, from whom Doris Angleton was seeking a divorce. Robert Angleton was familiar to state and federal law enforcement officers as a professional bookmaker who cooperated with local and federal law enforcement agencies, working as an informant while continuing his illegal activities. The investigation led the police officers to suspect that Roger Angleton, Robert Angleton’s brother, was involved in the murder. Roger Angleton had lived in San Diego, California. (Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 6, Vol. 6, at 166). Police developed evidence showing that shortly before the murder of Doris Angleton, Roger Angleton used various aliases to register in different hotel rooms and rent two cars in Houston, Texas. (Id. at 151-169; Vol. 7, at 7-43). A few days after the murder, Roger Angle-ton abandoned a suitcase at an airport security checkpoint after two guns were detected. (Id. at 25-37; 60-62; 157-58). 3 Roger Angleton was later arrested in Las Vegas, Nevada on unrelated California warrants. (Id. at 129-151). Police also developed evidence that showed mail communications between Angleton and his brother shortly before and after the murder. (Docket Entry No. 64, Ex. 3, at 14, 18).
In the fall of 1997, following Roger An-gleton’s arrest in Las Vegas, Nevada, police arrested both brothers for Doris An-gleton’s murder. In October 1997, a Texas grand jury returned separate indictments against Roger Angleton and Robert Angle-ton for capital murder under section 19.03 of the Texas Penal Code. The Texas indictment against Robert Angleton alleged as follows:
The duly organized Grand Jury of Harris County, presents in the District Court of Harris County, Texas, that in Harris County, Texas, ROBERT NICHOLAS ANGLETON, hereinafter styled the Defendant, on or about APRIL 16, 1997, did then and there unlawfully, intentionally, and knowingly cause the death of DORIS ANGLETON, hereafter styled the Complainant, by promising money to ROGER ANGLETON to cause the death of the Complainant for remuneration and the promise of remuneration.
(Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 2).
Angleton and his brother were held without bond pending trial. In February 1997, Roger Angleton committed suicide in jail. He left behind a handwritten note indicating that he alone was responsible for Doris Angleton’s murder.
The state trial of Robert Angleton began in July 1998. During the trial, HPD Detective Sergeants Novak and Ferguson testified and HPD Officer Jewel acted as the liaison between the police department and the Harris County District Attorney’s Office. (Docket Entry No. 64, Ex. 3, at 27). During the trial, state prosecutors introduced at least one piece of evidence obtained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, a surveillance tape from an unrelat *700 ed investigation containing Angleton’s voice. 4 On August 12, 1998, the jury acquitted Angleton of the capital murder for hire charge. (Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 3). Angleton’s acquittal was the first acquittal in a capital murder case tried in Harris County since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. (Docket Entry No. 64, Ex. 3, at 34).
Approximately six months after the acquittal, FBI Special Agent Cynthia Rosen-thal and another FBI agent began investigating Angleton for violations of federal law, including money laundering and RICO violations relating to his gambling and bookmaking activities and income tax evasion. (Id. at 11, 26). This investigation did not include the murder of Doris Angle-ton. State officials cooperated with this federal investigation. (Id. at 26). At some later date, the Harris County District Attorney’s Office asked the United States Attorney’s Office to investigate Angleton for murder for hire under federal law. (Id. at 28). In April 2000, the United States Attorney’s Office asked the FBI to expand its investigation of Robert Angle-ton’s activities to include his role in the murder of his wife. (Id.). An ad hoc, undocumented joint task force of federal and state officials, consisting of Special Agent Cynthia Rosenthal, other FBI agents, HPD Sergeants Novak and Ferguson, and HPD Officer Jewel, was formed. (Id. at 27-28). 5 Sergeants Novak and Ferguson were the primary case agents who originally investigated Doris Angleton’s murder and testified in Angleton’s state trial; officer Jewel was the liaison between the HPD and the state prosecutors. (Id.; Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 6, Vol. 1, at 5-6). The three HPD members of the joint task force were deputized as United States Deputy Marshals so that they could access FBI files. (Docket Entry No. 64, Ex. 3, at 45-46). The HPD continued to pay their salaries. (Id.). The joint task force received all the information the HPD had gathered for use in the state prosecution. (Id. at 28). The two assistant district attorneys who prosecuted Angleton in the state trial, who are personal friends of FBI Special Agent Rosenthal, also cooperated with and encouraged the federal/state joint task force. (Id. at 35). As part of the investigation, FBI agents interviewed members of the jury that had acquitted Angleton. 6 Angleton’s counsel have been allowed to review and summarize the FBI reports of these interviews. From these summaries, it appears that the questioning focused on how various pieces of evidence and other trial strategies impacted the jurors’ decision to vote not guilty. (Docket Entry No. 64, Ex. 1). The parties agree that the federal prosecution will rely on much of the same evidence as the state prosecution. 7
*701 No federal indictment was returned alleging that Angleton had violated RICO or committed money laundering or income tax evasion, charges that the federal agents had first investigated. In January 2002, a federal grand jury returned a three-count indictment against Angleton, based on the 1997 murder of Doris Angle-ton. Count One of the indictment charges Angleton with conspiring to commit murder for hire, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1958. 8 It states:
From an unknown date believed to be in January, 1997, in the Southern District and Northern Districts of Texas and the State of California, the defendant, did knowingly and willfully combine, conspire, confederate and agree with Roger Angleton, not indicted herein, to cause another to travel in interstate commerce and use a facility in interstate commerce with intent that the murder of Doris Angleton be committed in violation of the laws of the State of Texas and the United States, as consideration for the receipt of, and as consideration for a promise and agreement to pay, a thing of pecuniary value, that is, United States Currency, such conduct resulting in the death of Doris Angleton.
(Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 1). The indictment then alleges the methods, means, and overt acts of the conspiracy, including that Robert Angleton agreed to pay Roger An-gleton to have Doris Angleton murdered; that Roger Angleton traveled from California to Texas to prepare for the killing; that Roger Angleton shot Doris Angleton in Houston, then left the city; and that the plan included Robert Angleton’s agreement to pay Roger Angleton even if he was captured and Roger Angleton’s agreement to take the full blame and attempt to exonerate his brother if he was captured.
Count Two of the indictment charges Robert Angleton with committing murder for hire, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1958. Count Two states:
From an unknown date, believed to be in January of 1997, and continuing until April 16, 1997, in the Southern District of Texas, the defendant, Robert Nicholas Angleton, aided and abetted by Roger Angleton, not indicted herein, did cause another to travel in interstate commerce and did use a facility of interstate commerce with intent that the murder of Doris Angleton be committed in violation of the laws of the State of Texas and the United States, as consideration for the receipt of, and as consideration for a promise and agreement to pay, a thing of pecuniary value, that is, United States Currency, such conduct resulting in the death of Doris Angleton.
(.Id.) 9
Count Three of the indictment charges Angleton with using a firearm in connec *702 tion with a crime of violence, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). 10 Count Three states:
On or about April 16, 1997, in the Southern District of Texas, the defendant, Robert Nicholas Angleton, aided and abetted by Roger Angleton, not indicted herein, did knowingly use and carry a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence for which he may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, as alleged in Counts One and Two of this Indictment.
(Id.).
Angleton challenges the federal indictment under the Double Jeopardy Clause on several grounds. First, Angleton argues that the nature and extent of the state officials’ involvement in Angleton’s federal indictment and prosecution amounts to collusion between the state and federal governments that triggers the “sham prosecution” exception to the dual sovereignty doctrine. Second, he contends that because the federal murder for hire statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1958, incorporates the Texas capital murder statute, there is no separate federal basis for this prosecution. Angleton relies on the pre-Civil War case of
Houston v. Moore,
Angleton urges that these grounds require the dismissal of this indictment. At a minimum, Angleton contends that the arguments he raises are colorable and, therefore, not frivolous, permitting him an interlocutory appeal that divests this court of jurisdiction to proceed with his trial until the appeal is decided.
The government’s primary response is that under binding Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit case law, the dual sovereignty doctrine applies to permit the federal government, a separate sovereign from the State of Texas, to prosecute Angleton for the separate, federal offense that arose from the use of interstate facilities and travel to commit the murder for hire of his wife. The government asserts that the *703 degree of federal and state cooperation in obtaining this successive indictment is well within the limits of the dual sovereignty doctrine and far less than courts have required to trigger any sham prosecution exception to that doctrine. The government contends that under well-established law, murder for hire is a federal crime when its perpetration involves the use of interstate travel or facilities in interstate commerce, and that this indictment does not strain constitutional limits. Finally, the government argues that the law is so clear that Angleton’s challenges should be deemed frivolous, so that this court retains jurisdiction to proceed with his trial during any interlocutory appeal.
In accordance with
United States v. Stricklin,
Each of Angleton’s arguments, and the government’s response, is addressed below.
II. The Law of Double Jeopardy
A. Procedural Rules Governing Double Jeopardy Claims
The Fifth Circuit has established procedures for district courts to apply in analyzing double jeopardy claims raised before trial. In
Stricklin,
Stricklin
did not involve successive prosecutions by different sovereigns. The only issue in
Stricklin
was whether the indictments charged the same offense under the standards of
Blockburger v. United States,
To establish a
prima facie
claim of double jeopardy, Angleton must first show that the offenses charged in the state and federal indictments are the “same offense” under the
Blockburger
test. If the offenses are the “same” for the purpose of double jeopardy, the government must show that the dual sovereignty doctrine applies. Angleton contends that this court should apply the sham prosecution exception to the dual sovereignty doctrine; he must make a
prima facie
showing that the federal prosecution was a mere tool of the state prosecution.
Cooper,
The threshold issue is whether the federal indictment charges the same offenses that were the basis of Angleton’s state trial and acquittal.
B. The Blockburger Analysis
The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution commands that no person shall “be subject for the same of-fence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” U.S. Const, amend. V. A subsequent prosecution avoids double jeopardy if the charged offenses are not the same. The government contends that under the test established in
Blockburger v. United States,
“Under the
Blockburger
test, each offense must contain an element not contained in the other; if not, they are the same offense within the Clause’s meaning and double jeopardy bars subsequent punishment or prosecution.”
Sharpe,
*705
Angleton is charged with both conspiracy to commit murder for hire and committing murder for hire. The elements of commission of murder for hire resulting in death are: 1) travel in or causing another to travel in interstate commerce, or using or causing another to use the mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce; with 2) intent that a murder be committed in violation of the laws of Texas;
11
3) as consideration for a promise or agreement to pay anything of pecuniary value; 4) resulting in a death. The elements of conspiracy to commit murder for hire are identical, with the addition of the element of conspiring with another. (Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 1). Conspiracy and the substantive offense that is the object of the conspiracy are. separate and distinct crimes.
See, e.g., United States v. Hernandez,
Angleton was indicted for, and acquitted of, the offense of capital murder under Texas Penal Code § 19.03(a)(3). Angleton argues that conspiracy to commit murder for hire and the commission of murder for hire under section 1958 are the same offense as capital murder for remuneration under Texas law because there is no additional element in the state offense that is not contained in the two federal offenses separately. 12
The elements of the offense charged in the state indictment are: 1) intentionally or knowingly; 2) causing death; 3) by employing another to commit the murder for remuneration or the promise of remuneration. (Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 2). Both the state and federal offenses require: 1) intent; 2) death; and 3) commission of the murder for remuneration. The federal offenses each require proof of additional elements—a conspiracy and interstate travel—but the state murder charge does not. The government argues that the state charge of murder for remuneration requires proof that a death occurred, which is not an element under section 1958. However, if, as here, a death occurred, section 1958 provides for an enhanced maximum penalty of life imprisonment or death, which increases the statutory punishment. The fact that a death occurred must be pleaded in the indictment, submitted to the jury, and found beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Apprendi v. New Jersey,
The offenses charged in Counts One and Two of the indictment are, for
Blockburger
purposes, the same offense as the Texas capital murder charge for which Angleton was tried and acquitted.
See, e.g., United States v. Basile,
If the dual sovereignty doctrine applies, double jeopardy does not prevent the federal government from prosecuting Angle-ton for the same offense.
See Abbate v. United States,
C. The Dual Sovereignty Doctrine
Even if two offenses contain the same elements, “successive prosecutions by separate sovereigns for crimes arising out of the same acts are not barred” by double jeopardy.
United States v. Johnson,
The United States Supreme Court first used the dual sovereignty concept in
Lan-za
to uphold a federal prosecution after a state prosecution for the same offense. However, the Court had discussed the doctrine in two pre-Civil War cases,
Fox v. Ohio,
46 U.S (5 How.) 410,
It is almost certain, that, in the benignant spirit in which the institutions both of the State and Federal systems are administered, an offender who should have suffered the penalties denounced *707 by the one would not be subjected a second time to punishment by the other for acts essentially the same, unless indeed this might occur in instances of peculiar enormity, or where the public safety demanded extraordinary rigor.
Id. at 435. Justice McLean dissented, arguing that the majoiity’s result established
a great defect in our system. For the punishment under the State law would be no bar to a prosecution under the law of Congress. And to punish the same act by the two governments would violate, not only the common principles of humanity, but would be repugnant to the nature of both governments. If there were a concurrent power in both governments to punish the same act, a conviction under the laws of either could be pleaded in bar to a prosecution by the other. But it is not pretended that the conviction of Malinda Fox, under the State law, is a bar to a prosecution under the law of Congress. Each government, in prescribing the punishment, was governed by the nature of the offense, and must be supposed to have acted in reference to its own sovereignty. There is no principle better established by the common law, none more fully recognized in the federal and State constitutions, than that an individual shall not be put in jeopardy twice for the same offense. This, it is true, applies to the respective governments; but its spirit applies with equal force against a double punishment, for the same act, by a State and a federal government.
Id. at 439.
In
Moore v.
Illinois,
Every citizen of the United States is also a citizen of a State or territory. He may be said to owe allegiance to two sovereigns, and may be liable to punishment for an infraction of the laws of either. The same act may be an offense or transgression of the laws of both.... That either or both may (if they see fit) punish such an offender, cannot be doubted. Yet it cannot be truly averred that the offender has been twice punished for the same offenses; but only by one act he has committed two offenses, for each of which he is justly punishable.
Id. at 20. Justice McLean again dissented, arguing that the federal statute should be held to preempt state statutes criminalizing the same conduct in order to avoid a result so “contrary to the nature and genius of our government” as “to punish an individual twice for the same offense.” Id. at 21-22.
In
Lanza,
decided in 1922, the Court upheld a federal prosecution after the state had convicted the defendant for the same offense.
Each government in determining what shall be an offense against its peace and dignity is exercising its own sovereignty, not that of the other.
It follows that an act denounced as a crime by both national and state sover-eignties is an offense against the peace and dignity of both and may be punished by each. The Fifth Amendment, like all the other guaranties in the first eight amendments, applies only to proceedings by the federal government ... and the double jeopardy therein forbidden is a second prosecution under authority of the federal government after a first trial for the same offense under the same authority. Here the same act was an offense against the state of Washington, because a violation of its law, and also an offense against the United States under the National Prohibition Act. The defendants thus committed two different offenses by the same act, and a conviction by a court of Washington of the offense against that state is not a conviction of the different offense against the United States, and so is not double jeopardy.
Id.
at 382,
The Court did not limit its language to cases arising under the Eighteenth Amendment, which established an area of concurrent state and national power. Instead, the Court endorsed in broad terms the dual sovereignty doctrine that had been articulated in Fox v. Ohio and Moore v. Illinois, describing these cases as a “long line of decisions” supporting a view of the Fifth Amendment that permitted successive prosecutions for the same conduct. The Court explained why it believed its decision to be sound:
If a state were to punish the manufacture, transportation and sale of intoxicating liquor by small or nominal fines, the race of offenders to the courts of that state to plead guilty and secure immunity from federal prosecution for such acts would not make for respect for the federal statute or for its deterrent effect.
Id.
In 1959, the Supreme Court decided
Bartkus v. Illinois,
In
Bartkus,
the defendant was indicted, tried, and acquitted in federal court on charges that he had robbed a federally insured savings and loan association located in Illinois. Three weeks later, an Illinois state grand jury indicted the defendant for the same acts, charging him with violating a state robbery statute. The Supreme Court affirmed the second, state prosecution under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, relying on the inapplicability of the Double Jeopardy Clause to the states and on what the majority described as a “long, unbroken, unquestioned course of impressive adjudication” before and since
Lanza
permitting a “second prosecution where the first was by a different government and for violation of a different statute.”
In his dissent, Justice Black criticized the majority’s characterization of the precedents, noting that “[djespite its exhaustive research, the Court has cited only three cases before
Lanza
where a new trial after an acquittal was upheld.”
Id.
at 161,
*710 Justice Black made his own point as to the practical impact of the dual sovereignty doctrine:
The Court apparently takes the position that a second trial for the same act is somehow less offensive if one of the trials is conducted by the Federal Government and the other by a State. Looked at from the standpoint of the individual who is being prosecuted, this notion is too subtle for me to grasp. If double punishment is what is feared, it hurts no less for two “Sovereigns” to inflict it than for one. If danger to the innocent is emphasized, that danger is surely no less when the power of State and Federal Governments is brought to bear on one man in two trials, then when one of these “Sovereigns” proceeds alone. In each case, inescapably, a man is forced to face danger twice for the same conduct.
Id.
at 155,
In
Abbate,
the defendants pleaded guilty to violating an Illinois statute criminalizing conspiracy to injure or destroy the property of another.
In response to
Bartkus,
the Department of Justice implemented the so-called
Petite
*711
policy, first recognized by the courts in
Petite v. United States,
The Supreme Court’s most recent case applying the dual sovereignty doctrine in the context of double jeopardy is
Heath v. Alabama,
Heath,
decided in 1985, applied the dual sovereignty doctrine to successive prosecutions by two states. The Supreme Court has not considered a ease involving successive state and federal prosecutions for the same offense since deciding
Bartkus
and
Abbate
in 1959. Angleton urges that specific developments justify a reexamination of the dual sovereignty doctrine. After
Lanza, Bartkus,
and
Abbate
were decided, the Supreme Court held that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment is applicable to the states.
Benton v. Maryland,
In
Elkins v. United States,
The increase in the scope of federal criminal law, a “dramatic change[] that ha[s] occurred in the relationship between the federal government and the states since the time of
Bartkus
and
Abbate,”
has greatly expanded the likelihood of successive prosecutions. The successive prosecutions permitted under the dual sovereignty doctrine in
Bartkus, Abbate,
and
Heath
stand in tension with the Court’s recognition in cases such as
Green v. United States,
that a government may not repeatedly prosecute an individual, “thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense, and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety, insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found guilty.”
Despite such developments and criticism of the dual sovereignty doctrine, the circuit courts have continued to reaffirm and apply
Bartkus, Abbate,
and
Heath
to uphold successive prosecutions by state and federal governments, as well as by the federal government and foreign governments.
See McKinney,
Angleton acknowledges that the dual sovereignty doctrine is established law, binding on this court, although he urges its reexamination. Angleton also argues that the doctrine’s exceptions and limits preclude its application to this case.
III. The Limits of the Dual Sovereignty Doctrine
A. The Bartkus “Sham Prosecution” Exception
1. The Applicable Legal Standards
In
Bartkus v. Rlinois,
the Court suggested, in
dicta,
that despite extensive participation by federal authorities in the successive state trial, the defendant could not reasonably claim that the state “was merely a tool of the federal authorities” or that the “state prosecution was a sham and a cover for a federal prosecution.”
The facts of
Bartkus
itself demonstrate that there can be extensive involvement by the first sovereign in a second sovereign’s prosecution without vitiating the application of the dual sovereignty doctrine. In
Bartkus,
the dissent described the extent of the federal authorities’ involvement in the state prosecution that followed Bart-kus’s federal court acquittal. The federal authorities “solicited the state indictment, arranged to assure the attendance of state witnesses, unearthed additional evidence to discredit Bartkus and one of his alibi witnesses, and in general prepared and guided the state prosecution.”
Since
Bartkus,
courts have considered a number of challenges to subsequent prosecutions based on the
Bartkus
sham prosecution exception to the dual sovereignty
*714
doctrine. The Fifth Circuit has considered seven such challenges.
16
In one case, the Fifth Circuit expressed skepticism as to whether the sham prosecution exception in fact existed, or could be applied.
Patterson,
The Supreme Court recently cited
Bart-kus
in discussing whether “cooperative conduct” between the United States and foreign governments could support a claim that fear of foreign prosecution triggered the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. In
United States v. Balsys,
The Supreme Court in
Bartkus,
and all circuit courts to consider
Bartkus
sham prosecution claims, have held that even significant cooperation between the two sovereigns does not provide a basis for applying the
Bartkus
exception.
See, e.g., United States v. Rashed,
The courts have straggled to articulate when cooperation between successively prosecuting governments does rise to a level that makes the
Bartkus
exception apply. A number of courts have suggested that the exception applies only when one sovereign has essentially manipulated another sovereign into prosecuting.
See Whalers Cove,
These standards are applied to the facts disclosed by the present record.
2. Analysis
The Fifth Circuit has established a procedure to follow when a defendant invokes the sham prosecution exception. In the most recent Fifth Circuit case on the issue, the court explained:
When a defendant claims collusion between federal and state law enforcement officials, the defendant has the burden of *716 producing evidence to show a 'prima fa-cie, double jeopardy claim. Once a pri-ma facie case is shown, the burden of persuasion shifts to the government.
McKinney,
The facts on which Angleton relies include the following:
• The federal government showed no interest in investigating Angleton on any federal charges until after Angleton’s state acquittal, when state officials cooperated with the federal investigation into suspected money laundering, RICO, and income tax evasion.
• The United States Attorney’s Office did not investigate Aigleton for suspected federal murder for hire until after the Harris County District Attorney’s Office requested it to do so.
• The FBI did not investigate Angleton for the murder of Doris Angleton until after state authorities had asked the United States Attorney’s Office to extend the investigation.
• The failure of the state prosecution led first to the FBI’s investigation of An-gleton’s activities that had a clear federal nexus, including suspected money laundering. When the attempt to indict Angleton for these offenses failed, a joint federal-state task force, consisting of the original state law enforcement investigators and an FBI agent with close ties to the Harris County District Attorney’s office, 18 was formed with the sole purpose of prosecuting Angleton for murder for hire.
• The three and one-half years that elapsed between the state acquittal and the federal indictment points to a lack of independent federal interest.
• The Houston Police Department detectives who investigated Angleton for the state trial and testified in that trial *717 have been deputized as federal deputy marshals for the Angleton federal investigation, although they continue to be paid by the City of Houston.
• The state prosecutors have provided the federal investigators and prosecutors with full access to all the information and evidence developed for the state prosecution.
• The investigation by the joint task force has yielded very little new evidence.
• The federal authorities interviewed the jurors from the state trial in efforts to improve their prosecutorial strategy for this second prosecution.
• The only witness to testify before the federal grand jury that indicted Angle-ton for murder for hire was an FBI agent who led the joint federal/state task force, and who is married to the Hams County District Attorney.
The Fifth Circuit has consistently rejected arguments of sham prosecution based on cooperation between successively prosecuting sovereigns. However, the Fifth Circuit has only considered seven eases raising the Bartkus sham prosecution exception, and the facts did not fairly raise the issue.
The Fifth Circuit first considered the
Bartkus
exception in
United States v. McRary,
The Fifth Circuit next considered a
Bartkus
sham prosecution claim in a case involving a police shooting,
United States v. Patterson,
In
United States v. Harrison,
In two cases decided in December 1991, the Fifth Circuit again rejected claims of collusion under
Bartkus.
In
United States v. Cooper,
In
United States v. Moore,
In the Fifth Circuit’s most recent case on the
Bartkus
exception,
United States v. McKinney,
Angleton observes that each of the Fifth Circuit cases involved a lesser degree of one sovereign’s involvement in a second sovereign’s prosecution than is present in this case. However, the Fifth Circuit has considered cases involving some of the factors on which Angleton relies to support his sham prosecution argument. The Fifth Circuit has held that an extended delay between the first and second prosecutions and the absence of interest by federal officials until after a prior state prosecution ended did not raise an inference of collusion.
Harrison,
There are only two reported cases in which circuit courts have remanded a case to the district court for further fact-finding on the applicability of the
Barikus
exception.
See United States v. All Assets of G.P.S. Automotive Corp.,
Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office referred this case to the U.S. Attorney in the first instance, that much of the evidence used in the federal forfeiture action was developed in connection with their state criminal proceedings, and that the Suffolk County district attorney was cross-designated as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney for the purpose of prosecuting the federal forfeiture action against GPS and the Schaffers.
Id. at 494. The court noted that these facts did not establish the “narrow exception to the dual sovereignty doctrine.” Id. at 495. However, the defendants also provided evidence that the state would receive a very large percentage of any federal forfeiture proceeds. Id. at 496. The court concluded that if, on remand, the evidence *721 demonstrated that state would receive “all, or a disproportionate share, of the forfeiture proceeds,” that “the federal forfeiture was essentially instigated by the state,” and that it was “conducted almost exclusively by state officials from state offices,” then the Bartkus exception would be “strongly implicated.” Id. No subsequent rulings in the case are reported. No similar facts regarding forfeiture of assets are suggested in the present record.
The Ninth Circuit has also remanded a case for further fact-finding as to the
Bartkus
sham prosecution exception. In
United States v. All Assets Of G.P.S. Automotive Corp.,
There is only one published, unreversed decision in which a district court dismissed an indictment in a successive prosecution based on
Bartkus.
In
United States v. Belcher,
Angleton acknowledges that cooperation between state and federal law enforcement does not ordinarily create “collusion” and is encouraged by the courts.
See Bartkus,
The record is clear that the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas sought permission from the United States Justice Department be
*722
fore deciding to seek a federal murder for hire indictment against Angleton. Assistant United States Attorneys have vigorously pursued this prosecution. They, not state prosecutors, are prosecuting the case. There is no basis to conclude that the state officials “so effectively manipulated the actions of the [United States] so that [its] officials retained little or no independent volition” in deciding to prosecute and in pursuing the prosecution.
United States v. 38 Whalers Cove,
Angleton’s argument as to federal and state cooperation in this federal prosecution is less one of collusion and more an argument that there is no separate or compelling federal interest. Angleton’s argument is not so much that the state government colluded with the federal government so that the state could in effect reprosecute him, but rather that the federal government has an insufficient federal interest in this prosecution to warrant the application of the dual sovereignty exception to the double jeopardy protection. (Docket Entry No. 38, at 21-37). Angle-ton frames this argument in several ways. He argues that the federal government cannot base a successive prosecution on an incorporated state statute, citing
Houston v. Moore,
B. Federal Incorporation of a State Statute
Angleton argues that because section 1958 incorporates and derivatively enforces the Texas murder statute, the federal government has no independent, federal interest in prosecuting him and is not a separate sovereign for the purpose of the dual sovereignty doctrine. Angleton bases his argument on a Supreme Court case decided before the Civil War,
Houston v. Moore,
*723
Houston was tried by the Pennsylvania court martial, found guilty, and sentenced to pay a fíne.
Id.
When the United States deputy marshal for the district levied on his property, as provided under the federal statute, Houston brought an action for trespass in the state court against the deputy marshal. At trial, Houston argued that the Pennsylvania statute under which he was convicted was contrary to the Constitution of the United States.
Id.
Before the United States Supreme Court, Houston argued that the Pennsylvania statute was unconstitutional because Congress retained the exclusive power to regulate the militia. Id. at 5. In support of his position, Houston contended that if the state had concurrent jurisdiction to regulate the militia, a conviction by the state court would either “oust the jurisdiction of the United States’ Court Martial, or might subject the accused to be twice tried for the same offense.” Id. at 31. The Court concluded that the state statute conferred “authority upon a State Court Martial to enforce the laws of the United States against delinquent militia men.” Id. at 32. The state had provided jurisdiction to its military tribunal to apply and enforce federal law. In response to Houston’s argument regarding double jeopardy, the Court stated:
*724 if the jurisdiction of the two Courts be concurrent, the sentence of either Court, either of conviction of acquittal, might be pleaded in bar of the prosecution of the other, as much so as the judgment of a State Court, in a civil case of concurrent jurisdiction, may be pleaded in bar of an action for the same cause, instituted in a Circuit Court of the United States.
Id. at 31. Justice Story dissented, arguing that Congress was given the exclusive power under the Constitution to regulate the militia. Foreshadowing Justice Black’s future dissents in Bartkus and Ab-bate, Justice Story argued that the dual sovereigns of federal and state governments created by our federal system dictated avoiding concurrent jurisdiction:
In a government formed like ours, where there is a division of sovereignty, and, of course, where there is a danger of collision from the near approach of powers to a conflict with each other, it would seem a peculiarly safe and salutary rule, that each government should be left to enforce its own penal laws in its own tribunals.
Id. at 69. In support of his argument, Justice Story noted the effect of allowing concurrent jurisdiction under the statutes in question:
In the first place, if the trial in the State Court Martial be on the merits, and end in a condemnation or acquittal, one of two things must follow, either that the United States’ Courts Martial are thereby divested of their authority to try the same case, in violation of the jurisdiction confided to them by Congress; or the delinquents are liable to be twice tried and punished for the same offence, against the manifest intent of the act of Congress, the principles of common law, and the genius of our free government.
Id. at 72 (Story, J., dissenting). However, Justice Johnson rejected the suggestion that successive prosecutions by separate sovereigns were improper, stating in his concurrence: “Why may not the same of-fence be made punishable both under the laws of the states and the laws of the United States? Every citizen of a state owes a double allegiance.... ” Id. at 33 (Johnson, J., concurring).
Houston v. Moore
has been cited for numerous propositions.
25
Of primary importance to Angleton’s argument is the citation to
Houston v. Moore
in
Bartkus,
Angleton’s argument is that section 1958 incorporates in haec verba the Texas capital murder statute under which he was previously acquitted. Section 1958 requires that the defendant travel in or use facilities of interstate commerce “with intent that murder be committed in violation of the laws of any State.... ” Angleton contends that the principal element of both section 1958 and Texas Penal Code § 19.03 is a violation of Texas law that both the federal and state governments are empowered to enforce. Because section 1958 refers to state law to define an element of the offense, Angleton argues that the federal government is not pursuing a federal crime, but is merely attempting to enforce the Texas statute a second time. In support of this argument, Angleton points out that the only distinguishing element between the two statutes is the interstate commerce “jurisdictional hook” contained in section 1958. He argues that the addition of this federal jurisdictional hook cannot properly convert the state offense into a federal crime.
Angleton cites no case in which this specific argument formed the basis for dismissing a successive indictment.
26
But cf. United States v. Mason,
Unlike the state legislation conferring authority on the state court martial at issue in Houston v. Moore, section 1958 does not, by its terms, empower a federal court to try a case under Texas Penal Code § 19.03. Although the elements to be proved at trial under each statute are the same, except for the jurisdictional element — which is why the double jeopardy issue arises in the first place' — section 1958 does not incorporate Texas Penal Code § 19.03 to the same extent, or in the same manner, as the Pennsylvania statute incorporated the Congressional Act of February 28,1795.
The Pennsylvania statute specifically referenced the federal act of February 28, 1795 and provided for precisely the same penalties. The fines imposed under the Pennsylvania statute were referred to the United States marshal for “further proceedings directed to be had thereon by the *726 laws of the United States.” Acts of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1813-1814, Act of March 28, 1814, § 21. Militiaman Houston was fined by the state tribunal, but under the federal statute. The fines were levied by the United States marshal, to be paid to the United States supervisor of revenue for the district. Act of February 28, 1975, § 8. The Pennsylvania statute punished the defendant for the identical conduct proscribed and defined by the federal statute, imposed penalties under the federal statute, and provided that fines collected under the state statute would be paid to the federal government. Section 1958 and Texas Penal Code § 19.03 do not have this same relationship.
Section 1958 punishes the defendant for the same conduct as Texas Penal Code § 19.03, with the additional elements necessary to invoke federal jurisdiction, but does not impose penalties under Texas law by the Texas government. Section 1958 does not incorporate Texas Penal Code § 19.03 such that an acquittal under section 19.03 could bar a prosecution under section 1958.
C. The Role of Collateral Estoppel
Angleton argues that elements essential to the federal murder for hire charges against him were actually litigated and necessarily determined in the state capital murder trial, and that collateral estoppel precludes relitigation. The Supreme Court has stated that the principle of collateral estoppel in criminal cases is embodied in the Fifth Amendment’s proscription against double jeopardy.
Ashe v. Swenson,
The parties do not dispute that both section 1958 and Texas Penal Code § 19.03 require proof of intent to commit murder and that the element of intent was necessarily determined by the state court acquittal. (Docket Entry No. 38, at 17; Docket Entry No. 51, at 9-10). The issue presented by Angleton’s argument is whether the State of Texas and the federal government are the “same party” for the purpose of collateral estoppel.
The parties dispute the standard to be applied in determining whether the federal government is the “same party” as the State of Texas and barred from prosecuting Angleton for murder for hire. Angle-ton argues that the mutuality of interest between the state government in the first prosecution and the federal government in the second prosecution satisfies the “same party” requirement for collateral estoppel. In support of his argument, Angleton cites
dicta
in
Ashe v. Swenson
indicating that “same party” is defined as broadly in criminal cases as in civil matters. (Docket Entry No. 38, at 18) (citing
Ashe,
The government responds that because collateral estoppel is applied to implement double jeopardy, the dual sovereignty doctrine governs the “same party” determination. The government asserts that since the state and federal governments are separate sovereigns, they are separate parties. The Fifth Circuit has held that “[cjollateral estoppel does not apply to successive prosecutions by the state and federal governments because the party that the defendant seeks to estop in the second prosecution was not a party to the first trial.”
United States v. Hayes,
Three circuit courts have considered the standard that applies in determining whether a separate sovereign should be bound by a prior criminal prosecution under
Ashe.
In
United States v. Davis,
The Eighth Circuit has also considered a collateral estoppel challenge under
Ashe.
In
United States v. Garner,
*728
In
United States v. Tirrell,
Most of the courts that have considered collateral estoppel in successive prosecutions by separate sovereigns have applied the standards of the dual sovereignty doctrine and its exception.
Davis,
Even if this court applied a lower standard of privity to determine whether the successively prosecuting sovereigns are the same parties for collateral estoppel purposes, Angleton’s argument would still fail. If traditional standards of collateral estoppel apply to this criminal prosecution, this court would give the Texas court judgment the same preclusive effect it would have under Texas law.
See McCoy v. Hernandez,
The federal government was clearly not a party to the prior state prosecution; An-gleton must demonstrate that the federal prosecution was in privity with the state prosecution. Parties are in privity for the purposes of collateral estoppel when: (1) they control the action; (2) their interests are represented by a party to the action; or (3) they are successors in interest, deriving them claims through the party to the prior action.
HECI Exploration Co. v. Neel,
Applying these factors to the present case, without considering the dual sovereignty doctrine, this court finds that the federal government was not in privity with the State of Texas. There is no evidence that the federal prosecution had controlled the state prosecution. To the contrary, Angleton does not claim that the federal prosecutors or investigators were involved in the state prosecution. The issue is whether the federal and state governments have “an identity of interests” such that the federal government is bound by the outcome of the state prosecution because the two governments had the same legal right. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals considered a similar issue in
Reynolds v. State,
In this case, it is undisputed that the Harris County District Attorney’s Office controlled the first prosecution and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas is controlling the federal prosecution. Texas law would not give the Texas state acquittal estoppel effect to bar this federal prosecution.
The Fifth Circuit has held that “collateral estoppel does not apply to successive prosecutions by the state and federal governments.”
Hayes,
*730 D. The Argument of an Inadequate Federal Interest: Section 1958, the Commerce Clause, and Double Jeopardy
Angleton argues that this successive federal prosecution for the murder of his wife, following a state acquittal for capital murder, raises serious constitutional issues that can only be avoided by reexamining the dual sovereignty doctrine; holding the application of section 1958 to this case unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause; or limiting the application of section 1958 to cases where an independent and compelling federal interest is present. Angleton argues that changes in the jurisprudence underlying the dual sovereignty doctrine, the increasing federalization of criminal law, and changes in the jurisprudence of the Commerce Clause make this federal prosecution untenable. Angleton argues that this court should avoid these constitutional issues by holding that the government must demonstrate to the court a sufficient, independent federal interest in prosecuting Angleton for murder for hire before this prosecution can proceed. Each of these arguments is examined below.
1. Changes in the Constitutional Underpinnings of the Dual Sovereignty Doctrine
Angleton adopts the argument of some courts, and a number of scholars, that the Supreme Court’s decisions recognizing that the Bill of Rights, including the Double Jeopardy Clause, applied to the states and the increasing federalization of criminal law has undercut the constitutional underpinnings from the dual sovereignty doctrine and require a reexamination.
See United, States v. All Assets of G.P.S. Automotive Corp.,
*731 As noted earlier, however, after the change in the incorporation doctrine, and in the face , of the criticisms and calls for reexamination of the dual sovereignty doctrine, the circuit courts have consistently continued to treat the dual sovereignty doctrine as valid. Angleton recognizes that this court is bound by Abbate, which held that a federal prosecution following a state prosecution was constitutional based on the dual sovereignty doctrine.
2. Changes in Commerce Clause Jurisprudence
Angleton also argues that recent changes in Commerce Clause jurisprudence indicate a willingness by the courts to reexamine the limits of Congress’s Commerce Clause power. He asserts that section 1958, as applied in this case, crosses those limits, eliminating the independent federal interest in pursuing this prosecution. In
United States v. Lopez,
In
United States v. Morrison,
The Fifth Circuit has also recently reexamined the constitutionality of federal criminal statutes based on the regulation of activities affecting commerce. In a recent case, the Fifth Circuit, by an evenly-divided en banc vote, held that a conviction under the Hobbs Act for a series of fast food restaurant robberies was constitutional.
United States v. Hickman,
Unlike the statutes in
Lopez, Morrison,
or the Hobbs Act cases, section 1958 does not purport to regulate murder for hire because the activity affects interstate commerce. Rather, it is based on Congress’s power to regulate either the channels of interstate commerce or the subjects of interstate commerce. The most recent case to test the continuing viability of statutes regulating the subjects of interstate com
*732
merce is
Reno v. Condon,
Section 1958 contains a jurisdictional element requiring travel in interstate commerce or use of a facility of interstate commerce. Its constitutionality is firmly established under existing Commerce Clause jurisprudence.
Morrison,
Angleton argues that section 1958 as applied to this ease raises serious questions regarding the outer limits of the Commerce Clause power because the link with interstate commerce is incidental to the alleged crime. Angleton points out that many of the successive federal prosecutions are cases involving civil rights violations, drug trafficking, or organized crime activities, in which the separate federal interest is clear.
Patterson,
Angleton’s Commerce Clause arguments are foreclosed by Fifth Circuit precedent. The Fifth Circuit has recently confirmed the constitutionality of section 1958 in
United States v. Marek,
Angleton urges that Congress’s intent to limit section 1958 to cases involving significant federal interests is confirmed by the Department of Justice
Petite
Policy governing successive federal prosecutions. He argues that to allow a successive prosecution in this case under section 1958 is inconsistent with the legislative intent behind that statute and inconsistent with the
Petite
policy itself. Angleton asserts that this court should limit section 1958 by making it applicable only where there is a significant federal interest at stake — that is, by judicially implementing the
Petite
policy. (Docket Entry No. 38, at 35-38). However, the courts have consistently held that the
Petite
policy may not be enforced by a defendant against the government.
See Patterson,
In the one reported federal prosecution under section 1958 that followed a state murder prosecution,
United States v. Basile,
while contract killing, standing alone, may not be a federal crime, it may become such when its perpetration involves the use of the mail or facilities in interstate commerce. The independence and importance of the federal interest in protecting the channels of interstate commerce from the taint of crime is unaffected by [defendant’s] previous acquittal in state court; it remains just as important and worthy of vindication after the state trial as it was before. “[T]he federal government had an interest, independent of any state interest, to ensure that an individual who is believed to have violated a federal statute is prosecuted for that violation.”
Id. (citations omitted).
Like Angleton, the defendant in Basile argued the absence of a compelling federal interest justifying a successive federal prosecution under section 1958 in terms of a misapplication of the Petite policy. The Basile court stated:
*734 We are not convinced that the federal prosecution in this case failed to meet the “compelling interests” requirement of the Petite policy. We need not and do not decide the question, however, because the Petite policy is “not constitutionally mandated,” Rinaldi,434 U.S. at 29 ,98 S.Ct. at 85 , and otherwise “confers no substantive rights on the accused,” United States v. Moore,822 F.2d 35 , 38 (8th Cir.1987) (per curiam). Thus the DoJ’s implementation of the policy “cannot form the basis of a claim [by a defendant] that the prosecution was improper.” United States v. Lester,992 F.2d 174 ,176 (8th Cir.1993).
Id.
A federal prosecutor may, in deciding to pursue a subsequent prosecution, “take into consideration what he deems is an ‘inadequate result’ ” of the state proceedings.
United States v. Arena,
Angleton’s argument that this court should avoid constitutional issues by requiring the government to show a compelling federal interest as a condition of prosecuting Angleton under the federal murder for hire statute is not a valid basis for dismissing this indictment.
IV. The Findings as to Frivolousness
The final procedural issue raised in this case is whether this court will continue to have jurisdiction to try the case during the interlocutory appeal from the denial of Angleton’s motion to dismiss. In
Abney v. United States,
Because of this focus on the “risk” of conviction, the guarantee against double jeopardy assures an individual that, among other things, he will not be forced, with certain exceptions, to endure the personal strain, public embarrassment, and expense of a criminal trial more than once for the same offense. It thus protects interests wholly unrelated to the propriety of any subsequent conviction.
Id.
at 662,
In
United States v. Dunbar,
Henceforth, the district courts, in any denial of a double jeopardy motion, should make written findings determining whether the motion is frivolous or nonfrivolous. If the claim is frivolous, the filing of a notice of appeal by the defendant shall not divest the district court of jurisdiction over the case. If nonfrivolous, of course, the trial cannot proceed until a determination is made of the merits of an appeal.
Id.
The Fifth Circuit emphasized that such written findings by the district court would permit expeditious appellate review of the issues presented. If the circuit court disagreed with the court’s determination that the claim was frivolous, it could grant a stay or a writ of mandamus pending appeal. If the circuit court did not issue a stay, permitting the trial to proceed pending the appeal, then found the appeal meritorious, the conviction in the district court would be reversed. If the appeal was found not to have merit, jurisdiction for the trial that had occurred during the appeal would be affirmed.
Id.
at 989. Other circuit courts have followed this approach.
See, e.g., United States v. Millan,
The government argues that this court must find Angleton’s claims are frivolous because he has failed to establish a
prima facie
case of double jeopardy. (Docket Entry No. 51, at 3). Angleton responds that the government’s argument improperly conflates the standard for determining a
prima facie
case of double jeopardy and the standard for a nonfrivolous or “color-able” claim of double jeopardy. Angleton argues that even if this court finds he has not made a
prima facie
case under existing law defining and applying the dual sovereignty doctrine, he has nonetheless made colorable, nonfrivolous arguments supporting a reexamination of that doctrine, as applied to the particular facts presented by this case. Angleton identifies four issues as “not insubstantial .... fairly debatable ... or of arguable merit factually and legally.” (Docket Entry No. 79, at 3,
citing United States v. Becton,
• “[I]n the era of the State/Federal task force, an issue of whether Bartkus/Ab-bate are still relevant (the broad question)”;
• “[T]he question of whether, by the guise of regulating commerce among the States, the Federal Executive can re-litigate an issue of violation of a State Statute by adopting that statute into a derivative federal statute (a more narrow question)”;
• “[T]he question of when the State/Federal task forces become sufficiently intertwined so that estoppel begins to bite”; and
• “[T]he question of whether the Courts need to adopt and enforce something similar to the ... Petite Policy.”
(Id.). Angleton in effect urges that even if his arguments have little likelihood of success under current law, he has raised col-orable challenges to the application of the law to the unusual facts of this case, inconsistent with a finding of frivolousness.
*736 A. The Frivolousness Standard under Dunbar
In
United States v. Dunbar,
In
United States v. Kalish,
district courts must adhere to the literal meaning of the term “frivolous”.... The whole purpose of Abney is defeated when district courts proceed to trial because they do not believe the defendant’s double jeopardy plea is sufficiently meritorious to warrant a stay. Dunbar was intended to prevent dilatory claims, not colorable ones.
Id.
Other courts have held that double jeopardy claims are not frivolous when the claim is complicated or raises legal issues
*737
not clearly foreclosed by binding precedent, even if the claim is rejected on the merits. In
United States v. Aguilera,
The Supreme Court has also discussed, in
dicta,
when a double jeopardy claim is appealable under
Abney.
In
Richardson v. United States,
This court applies these standards to Angleton’s double jeopardy claims.
B. Analysis
The threshold question is whether this court’s finding that Angleton failed to make a prima facie showing of double jeopardy precludes a finding that he has raised any nonfrivolous issues on appeal. The government’s argument is supported by the language in Dunbar emphasizing the relationship between the district court’s determination under Stricklin that the defendant has tendered a prima facie nonfrivolous double jeopardy claim before shifting the burden of persuasion to the government, and the district court’s determination that the claim was frivolous under Abney. However, this observation does not end the analysis.
Neither Dunbar nor Stricklin involved successive prosecutions under the dual sovereignty doctrine. In those cases, the defendant had the burden of making a nonfrivolous prima facie showing that the *738 indictments charged the same offenses. This court has found that Angleton did make a prima facie showing under Block-burger that the state and federal indictments charged the same offenses, but that the government then met its burden of showing different offenses in the two indictments by virtue of the dual sovereignty doctrine. As to this threshold showing, this court’s denial of the double jeopardy motion does not preclude a finding that Angleton’s argument is nonfrivolous.
Angleton then argued that under
Bart-kus
and its progeny, the degree of state involvement in this federal prosecution makes it, in effect, a state prosecution and a sham. This court has found that Angle-ton failed to make a
prima facie
nonfrivo-lous showing of collusion sufficient to trigger the
Bartkus
exception.
See Harrison,
Angleton’s double jeopardy claim based on his argument that because the federal indictment incorporates and derivatively enforces that state statute, the dual sovereignty doctrine does not apply, is a purely legal argument. It is based on a comparison of the elements of the federal murder for hire statute and the elements of the state statute that it “incorporated,” different from the
Blockburger
test at issue in
Stricklin
and from the
Bartkus
sham prosecution exception. This court found Angleton’s argument unpersuasive on several grounds, including that the relationship of the state and federal statutes in
Houston v. Moore
was far closer than the relationship of the state and federal statutes at issue here. However, only one reported circuit court case,
United States v. Basile,
Angleton’s claim that the Double Jeopardy Clause and the Commerce Clause are strained beyond constitutional limits if applied to this successive federal murder for hire prosecution following the state capital murder acquittal is, at bottom, an argument that the dual sovereignty doctrine should be modified or limited. 30 Angleton emphasizes changes that have occurred *739 since Bartkus and Abbate were decided— the increasing federalization of federal criminal law and the Supreme Court’s narrowing of the permissible use of the Commerce Clause — to support his arguments for reexamining and limiting the dual sovereignty doctrine, at least as applied to the unusual facts presented here. His arguments raise an issue unaddressed in cases involving appeals under Abney: is an argument for a modification of the existing law of double jeopardy, at least as applied to the unusual facts of a particular case, by definition and without exception frivolous?
Angleton is far from the first to argue that some of the assumptions on which
Lanza, Bartkus, Abbate,
and their progeny rest have changed, based on the fact that
Lanza, Bartkus,
and
Abbate
were all decided by closely divided Courts and that the Supreme Court has not specifically addressed the federalism aspects of the dual sovereignty doctrine since 1959, which was before the Court recognized that the Double Jeopardy Clause applies to the states, before the vast increase in federal criminal law, and before the Court recognized limits to the Commerce Clause.
See, e.g., GPS Automotive,
In
Dunbar,
the court admonished district courts to examine other contexts in which findings are made as to frivolousness as a guide to its application in an
Abney
appeal. In
Kalish,
the court admonished district courts to adhere to the literal meaning of the term “frivolous,” emphasizing that the
Dunbar
procedure was intended to prevent dilatory claims, not colorable ones. A brief examination of the term “frivolous” in these other contexts is instructive. In the context of determining whether arguments are frivolous for the purpose of imposing sanctions, courts examine whether “they are warranted by existing law or any plausible good faith argument for the extension, modification or reversal of existing law.”
Reed v. Commercial State Bank of El Campo,
It is not the burden of the petitioner to show that his appeal has merit, in the sense that he is bound, or even likely, to prevail ultimately. He is to be heard, as is any appellant in a criminal case, if he makes a rational argument on the law or facts.
Id.
at 447-48,
Angleton acknowledges that many of his arguments challenge the application of existing case law. He urges the modification of long-standing precedent as applied to a case in which the indictment in the successive prosecution alleges a violation of a federal statute that incorporates and derivatively enforces the state law that was the subject of the prior state acquittal, and the federal basis for prosecution is created through the incidental use of interstate travel and facilities of interstate commerce. This court holds that under existing precedent, Angleton’s double jeopardy claim is without merit. However, Angle-ton’s argument for modifying and narrowing the dual sovereignty doctrine as applied to the facts disclosed on this record is not frivolous; it may well fail, but is not frivolously asserted.
Angleton did not wait until the eve of trial to assert a double jeopardy claim. There is no suggestion that he has asserted this claim solely for the purpose of delaying this second trial. While there is always delay and disruption attendant to an interlocutory appeal that stays the trial pending the outcome, that delay is relatively small in this case, as compared to the three and one-half years that elapsed between Angleton’s state trial and the issuance of the federal indictment. This court finds that Angleton’s argument for modification and limitation of the dual sovereignty doctrine in a case in which the federal statute under which the defendant is prosecuted incorporates the state statute under which that defendant was previously acquitted is not frivolous.
V. Conclusion
This court DENIES Angleton’s motion to dismiss based on the Double Jeopardy *741 Clause and enters the findings as to frivolousness as stated above.
. Counts One and Two additionally charge violations of 18 U.S.C. § 2, the aiding and abetting statute. That statute defines which actors may be charged for violating other substantive criminal statutes and cannot alone be violated.
See United States v. Sorrells,
Notes
. Angleton has also moved to dismiss Count I of the indictment, charging him with conspiracy to commit murder for hire, on the ground that it violates "Wharton’s Rule” as expressed in
Iannelli v. United States,
. The background facts recited are drawn from FBI Special Agent Cynthia Rosenthal’s testimony at Angleton’s arraignment, detention, and bond hearing; Angleton's statement of facts in his motion; and the documents made part of the record at the hearing, which include the federal indictment, the state indictment, the state jury verdict, the state jury instructions, the state trial transcript, the FBI interviews of the state jurors, and Angleton’s Request for Pretrial Release previously considered by this court.
. These guns were not the same caliber as the guns used to murder Doris Angleton.
. This tape was obtained from previous investigations involving Angleton in his role as an informant for the Houston Police Department and the FBI relating to his bookmaking and gambling activities.
. The involvement of the Houston Police Department and the Harris County District Attorney’s office in the federal investigation and indictment was detailed by FBI Special Agent Cynthia Rosenthal in her testimony at Angle-ton’s arraignment.
. The defense presented its summary of the FBI reports at the hearing. The government objected to this document, not on the basis of reliability, but rather on the basis that the summaries are not relevant to the issues now before this court. The fact that the FBI interviewed the state court jurors is relevant to the issue of collusion between the state and federal prosecutions, which Angleton asserts bars this prosecution under
Bartkus v. Illinois,
.The joint task force has received one piece of new evidence, a tape recording of an interview Angleton gave to a writer, Vanessa Leg-gett, and has continued to develop previously available evidence, including an enhanced *701 tape recording that was a focus of the state trial.
. Section 1958(a) provides, in relevant part:
Whoever travels in or causes another ... to travel in interstate or foreign commerce, or uses or causes another ... to use the mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce, with intent that a murder be committed in violation of the laws of any State ... as consideration for the receipt of, or as consideration for a promise or agreement to pay, anything of pecuniary value, or who conspires to do so, ... and if death results, shall be punished by death or life imprisonment, or shall be fined not more than $250,000, or both.
. Section 924(c)(1) provides, in relevant part:
Except to the extent that a greater minimum sentence is otherwise provided by this subsection or by any other provision of law, any person who, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime (including a crime of violence or drug trafficking crime that provides for an enhanced punishment if committed by the use of a deadly or dangerous weapon or device) for which the person may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, uses or carries a firearm, or who, in furtherance of any such crime, possesses a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such crime of violence or drug trafficking crime — (i) be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 5 years; (ii) if the firearm is brandished, be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 7 years; and (iii) if the firearm is discharged, be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not less than 10 years.
. The indictment charges intent to commit a murder "in violation of the laws of the State of Texas and the United States.” (Docket Entry No. 38, Ex. 1). The government concedes, however, that there is no general federal murder statute and no other applicable federal murder statute. (Docket Entry No. 51, at 30).
. Section 19.03(a)(3) provides:
(a) A person commits an offense if he commits murder as defined under Section 19.02(b)(1) and:
(3) the person, commits the murder for remuneration or the promise of remuneration or employs another to commit the murder for remuneration or the promise of remuneration;
Texas Penal Code § 19.02(b)(1) provides:
(b) A person commits an offense if he:
(1) intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual;
. Justice Brennan also dissented in Bartkus. His dissent dealt primarily with the "sham prosecution” exception and is discussed below.
. Academic commentators have also found fault with Justice Frankfurter's characterization of the record of authority supporting successive prosecutions by state and federal courts. “The existing body of precedent did not present the ‘irrefutable evidence’ he described. The course of adjudication was not 'long/ 'unbroken/ or 'unquestioned'; frankly, it was not that 'impressive.' " Daniel Braun, Praying to False Sovereigns: The Rule Permitting Successive Prosecutions in the Age of Cooperative Federalism, 20 AmJ.Crim.L. I (1992); see also Akhil Reed Amar & Jonathan L. Marcus, Double Jeopardy Law After Rodney King, 95 Colum.L.Rev. 1 (1995); Sandra Guerra, The Myth of Dual Sovereignty: Multijurisdic-tional Drug Law Enforcement and Double Jeopardy, 73 N.C.L.Rev. 1159 (1995). However, commentators have also recognized that despite these criticisms, "candor requires acknowledgment that, in 1922, the most obvious *710 of the existing precedents supported successive prosecutions.” Kenneth M. Murchison, The Dual Sovereignty Exception to Double Jeopardy, 14 N.Y.U.Rev.L. & Soc. Change 383, 402 (1986), quoted in Braun, Praying to False Sovereigns, at 10.
. Justice Black argued that Lanza could be limited to the unusual context of Prohibition in which the case arose: the specific creation in the Eighteenth Amendment of an "area of concurrent state and national power where the Federal Government was not supreme.” Id., 157 n. 16. However, the Lanza opinion is not so narrowly drafted, and Bartkus and Abbate did not read it narrowly.
.
See United States v. McKinney,
. Before the hearing, Angleton filed a motion requesting discovery under
Brady v. Maryland,
. Special Agent Rosenthal is the wife of Charles A. Rosenthal, Jr., who, at the time of Angleton’s prosecution, was chief of the felony division of the Harris County District Attorney’s office. Charles Rosenthal was elected as the District Attorney for Harris County, Texas in November 2000.
. McRary also failed to introduce any evidence regarding his conviction in Cuba.
Id.
at 123,
. Although the court did not address the issue, the defendants' double jeopardy claim in
Patterson
would fail, even if they established the
Bartkus
exception, because attempted murder and aggravated perjury under Texas law and violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 241 and 242 are not the "same offense" under
Blockburger,
. The
Cooper
court also considered the argument that federal charges were barred by the double jeopardy clause under
Grady v. Corbin,
. The law enforcement officers who primarily conducted the investigation were an agent of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics and another individual described as "Sergeant McVey” or “officer McVey.” Id. at 1372, 1376 n. 9. It appears that FBI agents were also involved because the investigation ranged across Mississippi, Alabama and Florida; Logan was arrested in Mississippi, while Stanley was arrested in Florida. Id. at 1373.
. Although the Fifth Circuit did not address the point, the federal and state charges were not the “same offense” under Blockburger. The state and federal offenses each contain an element not contained in the other and, thus, would not constitute double jeopardy even if charged in succession by the same sovereign.
. The Pennsylvania statute in question provided:
That if any commissioned officer of the militia, shall have neglected or refused to serve when called into actual service, in pursuance of any order or requisition of the President of the United States, he shall be liable to the penalties defined in the act of the congress of the United States, passed on the twenty-eighty day of February, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five: that is to say, Each and every officer having so offended, shall forfeit a sum not exceeding one year’s pay nor less than one month's pay, to be determined and adjudged by a court martial; and shall, moreover, be liable to be cashiered by sentence of a court martial, and to be incapacitated from holding a commission in the militia for a term not exceeding twelve months, as the discretion of said court; or shall be liable to any penalty which may have been prescribed since the date of the passage of the said act, or which may hereafter be prescribed by any law of the United States.
Acts of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1813-1814, Act of March 28, 1814, § 21 (emphasis in original). The next paragraph of the Pennsylvania statute provided that:
*723 Each and every non-commissioned officer and private of the militia who shall have neglected to serve when called into actual service, in pursuance to an order or requisition of the president of the United States, shall be liable to the penalties defined in the act of the congress of the United States, passed the twenty-eighth of February, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five: that is to say, Each and every non-commissioned officer or private having so offended, shall forfeit a sum not exceeding one year's pay nor less than one month's pay, to be determined and adjudged by a court martial and shall be liable to be imprisoned by a like sentence, on failure of payment of the fines adjudged, for one calendar month for every five dollars of such fine, or to any penalty which may have been prescribed since the date of the passage of said act, or which may hereafter be prescribed by any law of the United States.
Id. (emphasis in original). The Pennsylvania statute provided that a state court martial shall try those accused under the statute. Id. The president of the state court martial
shall furnish to the marshal of the United States, or to his deputy, and also the comptroller of the treasury of the United States, a list of the delinquents fined, in order that the further proceedings directed to be had thereon by the laws of the United States, may be completed.
Id.
Section 5 of the Act of the United States Congress passed on February 28, 1795, provided:
That every officer, non-commissioned officer, or private of the militia, who shall fail to obey the orders of the President of the United States, in any of the cases before recited, shall forfeit a sum not exceeding one year's pay, and not less than one month's pay, to be determined and adjudged by a court martial; and such officer shall, moreover, be liable to be cashiered by sentence of a court martial, and be incapacitated from holding a commission in the militia, for a term not exceeding twelve months, at the discretion of said court: And such non-commissioned officers and privates shall be liable to be imprisoned, by a like sentence, on failure of payment of the fines adjudged against them, for one calendar month, for every five dollars of such fine.
Act of February 28, 1795, § 5, 1 Stat. 424. The Act also provides that the "courts martial for the trial of the militia shall be composed of militia officers only” and the fines assessed are to be certified by the presiding officer to the marshal of the district. Id. §§ 6-7. The marshal or his deputy "shall forthwith proceed to levy the said fines with costs, by • distress and sale of the goods and chattels of the delinquent....” and shall pay the fines to the "supervisor of the revenue in the district in which they are collected.” Id. §§ 7-8.
.
See, e.g., Ex Parte Milligan,
71 U.S. (4 Wall) 2, 44 n. 31 (1866) (citing
Houston v. Moore
as supporting the position that a person is not subject to a United States Court Martial until he has gone to the place of rendezvous and been enrolled and mustered into the national militia);
State of California
v.
Zook,
. One explanation for the lack of applicable precedent is identified by a law review article on the dual sovereignty doctrine, noting that "[o]ne should not attempt to enlist Houston’s narrow holding or muddled rationale in any legal argument.” Braun, Praying to False Sovereigns, 20 AmJ.Crim.L. at 9.
. In
United States v. Bonilla Romero,
. The Supreme Court has not addressed whether nonmutual collateral estoppel applies between successively prosecuting sovereigns. However, the Court has determined that non-mutual collateral estoppel does not apply between successively prosecuted defendants. In
Standefer v. United States,
. A different perspective is provided in
United States v. McHan,
The Double Jeopardy Clause imposes a rule of finality for criminal law judgments to protect persons from the burden, expense, embarrassment, and harassment of multiple prosecutions and punishments for the same offense.... But the rule does not restrict Congress in defining separate offenses and prescribing punishments.... Moreover, its application has never been considered absolute. Rather, the prohibition against double jeopardy has regularly been applied to accommodate the government's interest in prosecuting persons who violate the law.
. To the extent Angleton's Commerce Clause argument seeks a determination by this court
*739
that section 1958 is unconstitutional, that argument is clearly foreclosed and is not an argument based on double jeopardy. As the Fourth Circuit noted in
Head,
. The 1993 Advisory Committee Notes to Rule 11 state that "arguments for extensions, modifications, or reversals of existing law or for creation of new law do not violate [Rule 11] provided they are 'nonfrivolous.' .. . the extent to which a litigant has researched the issues and found some support for its theories even in minority opinions, in law review articles, or through consultation with other attorneys should certainly be taken into account. ...”
. The standard under 18 U.S.C. § 1348 was replaced by a stricter standard in the Bail Reform Act of 1984.
See United States v. Valera-Elizondo,
