OPINION OF THE COURT
Following their acquittal on several Virgin Islands charges arising from an alleged
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assault on May 19, 1989, Anthony Blyden and Allen Van Putten appeal the denial, by the District Court of the Virgin Islands, of their motion to dismiss a federal information arising from the same incident. Appellants argue that trial on the federal charges will violate the Double Jeopardy Clause because all of the crimes charged in the federal information are identical to the two gun possession charges prosecuted under Virgin Islands law for which they were acquitted.
This court has jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and
Abney v. United States,
I. BACKGROUND
On May 20, 1989, appellants were arrested in St. Thomas and various firearms seized from them in response to a complaint that they had attempted to murder Clarence Husband and Parris Nicholas. On May 31, 1989, the United States Attorney for the District of the Virgin Islands filed a 10-count information, Criminal No. 1989-89, that charged appellants with violations of Virgin Islands law. The first six counts related to appellants’ attempted murder of Husband and Nicholas on May 19, 1989; 1 the remaining four counts charged Van Putten with offenses relating to his separate assault on Husband on May 18, 1989. 2
Shortly after appellants’ arrest, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (“ATF”) conducted a federal investigation to determine whether appellants had violated federal firearms laws. The investigation revealed that Blyden was a fugitive, having fled from the state of New York in 1982 following his release on bail on first-degree robbery and related weapons charges. At a July 28, 1989 status conference, the prosecutor informed the district court 3 that it intended to file additional charges if the pending ATF report supported such action. The court directed the government that it had until August 4, 1989 to file any additional charges or else the “information would proceed as constituted.” (Blyden App. at 5). By August 1, 1989, the ATF had conducted ballistics tests on the weapons and verified that Bly-den and Van Putten were not authorized to transport or possess a machine gun. (Bly-den App. at 9-12). On August 4, 1989, the United States Attorney filed a four-count information, Criminal No. 1989-119, *325 against appellants, which alleged offenses in relation to the May 19, 1989 incident. 4
On August 25, 1989, Blyden filed a motion to require the government to elect between one of the two informations and dismiss the other one on the grounds that the Virgin Islands gun possession counts were identical to the federal gun possession charges and thus placed him in danger of double jeopardy. (Blyden App. at 170-171). On November 7, 1989, the trial judge conducted an in-chambers conference prior to the trial scheduled for that day. The judge indicated that his understanding was that the government had consolidated the informations for simultaneous trial, in accordance with the practice in the District of the Virgin Islands, and was prepared to proceed to trial on both informations that day. Counsel for Blyden, Mr. Francis, pointed out that the government’s motion for consolidation was still open and pending because a formal ruling consolidating the matters had not been made. According to Blyden’s counsel, because there had been no formal ruling and because his client had not received a detention hearing regarding the later filed federal charges, he “really did not know” what action the court would be proceeding on that day and had assumed that the federal information would not proceed. (Blyden App. at 33-4). The district court then conducted an inquiry into the prejudice Blyden might suffer from a consolidated trial. The transcript indicates that the conversation included discussion of Blyden’s double jeopardy arguments as well as the alleged prejudice before the jury on the Virgin Islands charges that would result from references to his fugitive status and aliases in the federal information:
THE COURT: What’s the prejudice to Defendant Blyden from a consolidation?
MR. FRANCIS: Number one, in regards to [the] single sovereign, Mr. Bonner [the United States Attorney] is representing the Government of the Virgin Islands in 89-89 ... [and] is using the same evidence, the same facts, when in fact the Virgin Islands [and the United States] are one sovereign.
The question is by Mr. Bonner proceeding in this manner [it] can only in fact result in prejudice to Mr. Blyden after the evidence starts to unfold. It’s two sovereigns when its only one in fact, [emphasis added].
THE COURT: So you want me to sever 89-89 from 89-119?
MR. FRANCIS: That is correct.
THE COURT: And Van Putten?
MR. HYMES: We basically join in the arguments of Blyden and suggest that appropriate remedy would be an election and dismissal of those cases which are not elected to be tried.
THE COURT: Okay. I’m making a ruling on that shortly.
(Blyden App. at 34, 36). The district court then went on to discuss the other motions before the court. The discussion proceeded as such until co-counsel for Blyden, Mr. Lapidus, returned the conversation to the question of whether to consolidate the two trials and the prejudice that might result to his client:
MR. LAPIDUS: ... Now, in 89-89, you have a charge just against Anthony Blyden. For per Anthony Blyden in 89-119, you have a charge [against] Anthony Blyden, also known as Michael Caines, also known as Robert Golden, and also known as Black something. So it’s three a/k/a’s after that name.
*326 In 89-119 they are going to be permitted to bring up proof of at least what? Two, three, four other alleged crimes that Mr. Blyden is under indictment for under different names. There is a severe prejudice there.
We are now going to be defending not only the Blyden case under the name Blyden with the May 19 incident, but we are also going to be defending Blyden with two other cases out of the state of New York for other crimes in which those other cases the Government is going to be introducing....
THE COURT: Your problem is the created prejudice in dual — in consolidated prosecution.
(Blyden App. at 42-44) (emphasis added).
Following the conference in chambers, the trial judge issued a ruling from the bench that the case would proceed only on the Virgin Islands allegations. The federal allegations “... will be subject to prosecution subsequently if the Government chooses to. In effect, I have forced an election on the Government by severing.” (Blyden App. at 48). The transcript does not indicate that either party registered any objections to the trial court’s ruling.
Appellants were tried by jury and found not guilty on the six counts of the Virgin Island charges that they had in common. Their defense was that they had been kidnapped by the alleged victims and that the guns were in the possession of the victims rather than the defendants. (Blyden App. at 136). After their acquittal, appellants filed a motion to dismiss the federal charges arguing that the government was collaterally estopped from attempting to prove that they had illegally possessed firearms in violation of federal law. The acquittal, appellants argued, showed that the jury accepted their version of the events of the night in question. They also argued that they would be subject to double jeopardy. The district court concluded that appellants caused the severance and therefore waived their double jeopardy claims.
United States v. Blyden,
II. DISCUSSION
The government urges that appellants have waived their right to claim double jeopardy. The district court agreed with this argument below and held that appellants had waived their double jeopardy claim because
defendants successfully sought to have the trials severed [which] precludes defendants from raising any double jeopardy claims. Defendant’s motion to have the government elect which information would be the one on which the trial would proceed precipitated the trial court’s ‘severance.’
Id.
at 378. The concept of waiver of double jeopardy was discussed in
Jeffers v. United States,
a defendant is normally entitled to have charges on a greater and a lesser offense resolved in one proceeding, there is no violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause when he elects to have the two offenses tried separately and persuades the trial court to honor his election.
Jeffers,
Our review of the proceedings below, indicates that appellants’ opposition to the consolidated trials was based both on the alleged prejudice that might have resulted as well as on double jeopardy grounds. Nevertheless, we are unpersuaded that the trial judge accepted any election theory which would have precluded the government from pursuing a subsequent prosecution on the federal information. Moreover, it is apparent that appellants were aware that the district court did not accept their election argument and that the court considered their motion as one for severance. The record indicates that during the conference in chambers, appellants accepted the district court’s description of their motion as a request for a severance. (Blyden App. at 36). Appellants were also on notice that trial on the federal charges could proceed at a later date. The district court held that “it would grant a severance and thus force an election on the government.” (Blyden App. at 48). It then provided that the government could try the remaining charges at a later date if it chose. Id. Appellants made no objection at that time and the record indicates that they even went so far as to discuss whether two jury panels should be chosen immediately. Therefore, however we may choose to construe or characterize appellants’ motion, the fact still remains that they obtained separate trials as result of their objection, on a basis unrelated to factual guilt or innocence, to the government’s motion for consolidation.
The instant case is a classic example of able lawyers pursuing what Roscoe Pound once called “the sporting theory of justice.”
7
In essence it is as if one were
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flipping a coin yelling, “Heads I win; tails you lose.” This case began with counsel urging that there should be trial on only one of the two informations. If the trial judge had not granted the severance to remedy the alleged “severe prejudice” and if any convictions had resulted, appellants most likely would now be arguing before us that it was an abuse of discretion for the trial judge to not have severed the trials.
See e.g., United States v. Sandini,
It is well accepted that any double jeopardy problem resulting from the consolidated trials could have been resolved at the sentencing stage.
See Ohio v. Johnson,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that trial on the federal charges will not implicate the Double Jeopardy Clause. The judgement of the district court denying the motion to dismiss is affirmed.
Notes
.Count 1: attempted murder of Clarence Husband in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 922(a)(1); Count 2: attempted murder of Parris Nicholas in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 922(a)(1); Count 3: assault with intent to commit murder of Clarence Husband in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 295(1); Count 4: assault with intent to commit murder of Parris Nicholas in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 295(1); Count 5: unlawful possession of two unlicensed Colt .45 caliber pistols and an unlicensed Smith and Wesson 9mm pistol during the commission of a crime of violence, to wit, attempted murder, first degree assault and third degree assault in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 2253(a); Count 6: unlawful possession of an unlicensed 9mm machine gun and silencer during the commission of a crime of violence, to wit, attempted murder, first degree assault and third degree assault in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 2253(b). (Blyden App. at 1-4)
. At trial on the territorial information, the jury convicted Van Putten on two of those four counts. (Blyden App. at 89). Those offenses and their disposition are not relevant to this appeal.
. At the time of trial and as of the time of writing this opinion, the District Court of the Virgin Islands is without a permanent judge and is staffed by judges from other jurisdictions sitting by designation. Judge J. Farnan presided over the pre-trial proceedings and the trial on the Virgin Islands charges. Judge S. Brot-man considered the post-trial motion for dismissal of the federal charges.
. Count 1: Blyden, a/k/a Michael Caines, a/k/a Tony Blacks, being a fugitive from justice, and aided and abetted by Van Putten, possessed and received the following firearms that had been transported in interstate or foreign commerce: (1) a 9mm machine gun, (2) a silencer, (3) two loaded Colt .45 caliber pistols, and (4) a Smith and Wesson 9mm caliber pistol, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(2); Count 2: Blyden, a/k/a Michael Caines, a/k/a/ Tony Blacks, being under an indictment for a felony, and aided and abetted by Van Putten, received the same five firearms listed in Count I which had been shipped in interstate commerce, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(n); Count 3: Appellants unlawfully possessed a machine gun, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(e)(1); Count 4: Appellants carried a machine gun equipped with a silencer, during and in relation to a crime of violence, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c).
. See supra, n. 2.
. Had the two charges been tried together, defendant would have been entitled to a lesser included offense instruction. If such an instruction had been denied on the ground that the conspiracy offense was not a lesser included offense, defendant could have preserved his point by proper objection. Jeffers, 97 S.Ct. at 2217-18.
.
See Schiavone v. Fortune,
