Appellants Bryson Jose and Roberto A. Miguel appeal the district court’s denial of their joint motion to dismiss their indictments on double jeopardy grounds. As is relevant here, appellants were convicted of felony murder and three predicate felonies. The counts were charged under one indictment and prosecuted together in one trial. On direct appeal, this court reversed appellants’ felony murder convictions, reversed Miguel’s conviction for use of a firearm during a crime of violence, affirmed all other convictions and remanded to the district court for further proceedings. On remand, Miguel moved for dismissal of the indictment on double jeopardy grounds, claiming that his final convictions on the lesser included predicate felonies barred retrial of the greater felony murder charge. Jose joined in the motion. We affirm the district court’s denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss the indictments.
This case raises a purely legal question about the reach and proper application of the Double Jeopardy Clause: Does the reversal of a conviction on a greater offense, coupled with a final conviction on a lesser included offense, preclude retrial of the greater offense when the offenses were charged in the same indictment and tried together in the same original trial? We hold that it does not.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
For purposes of this interlocutory appeal, a detailed rendering of the facts of the case is neither necessary nor particularly helpful. For a more in-depth description of the facts, we refer the interested reader to this court’s previous opinion
*1240
in
United States v. Miguel,
Jose and Miguel were part of a drunken group of teenage revelers that ended its evening debauch by killing an army officer in the course of an attempted robbery' and burglary of a cabin at the Waianae Army Recreation Center (“WARC”)-
Miguel,
They successfully appealed their felony murder convictions on the ground that the district court “committed structural error when it precluded the defendants from arguing their theory of the case and instructed the jury that no evidence supported the defendants’ theory.”' Id. at 997. This court, therefore, reversed appellants’ felony murder convictions, vacated their sentences, and remanded for further proceedings. Id. at 1007. Appellants did not appeal their predicate felony convictions, which were nevertheless affirmed by this court on direct appeal. See id. at 997 n. 3.
On remand, Miguel moved to bar retrial of his felony murder charge on double jeopardy grounds, and Jose joined in the motion. The district court denied the motion and this interlocutory appeal timely followed. This court reviews the denial of a motion to dismiss an indictment on double jeopardy grounds de novo.
See United States v. Lun,
II. Discussion
A. The Ball Rule
The Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall “be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of. life or limb.” U.S. Const, amend. V. Jeopardy is said to “attach” when a defendant is “put to trial.”
Serfass v. United States,
420, U.S. 377, 388,
However, “the conclusion that jeopardy has attached begins, rather than ends, the inquiry....”
Illinois v. Somerville,
Even though jeopardy has attached to, and seemingly terminated on, an offense for which a defendant has been tried and convicted, the defendant may still be retried for the same offense, consistently with the Double Jeopardy Clause, when retrial is pursuant to a reversal on appeal.
Ball v. United States,
Pursuant to the
Ball
rule, had appellants been charged solely with the greater offense of felony murder and had that conviction been reversed and remanded for retrial, jeopardy would have clearly “continued” on the greater offense, making a second trial on the same charge constitutionally permissible.
See Ball,
B. Appellants’ Reliance on Brown
While the Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar retrial
after reversal of a conviction, it does bar a successive trial on an offense not charged in the original indictment once jeopardy has already terminated on, what is for double jeopardy purposes, the “same offense.”
Brown v. Ohio,
In
Brown,
the defendant was charged with, and convicted of, “joyriding,” which, under Ohio law, consisted of “taking or operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent.”
Id.
at 167,
Notably,
Brown
emphasizes that the Court was “not concerned ... with the double jeopardy questions that may' arise when a defendant is retried on the same charge after ... a conviction is reversed on appeal.”
Id.
at 165 n. 5,
Importantly, none of the cases appellants cite in support of this contention involves a situation such as the one here, in which the lesser and greater offenses were charged in one indictment and tried in one case. Vitale, Harris, and Nielsen all involved successive prosecutions in which jeopardy had terminated after a final judgment on a separately indicted lesser or greater offense. They do not speak to the “hybrid” situation in which jeopardy terminated on the lesser included offense but continued on the greater offense by virtue of the defendant’s successful appeal and reversal of that conviction. Appellants insist that the fact “that there is only one indictment makes no difference.” It makes all the difference.
Suppose appellants had been charged solely with felony murder and jeopardy terminated on that charge by virtue of an acquittal or final conviction. If the government subsequently sought to try appellants for the lesser included predicate felonies, it would be constitutionally barred from doing so under
Nielsen
and its progeny.
See, e.g., Nielsen,
The Double Jeopardy Clause embodies two concepts, whose aims serve as its twin rationale — “principles of finality and prosecutorial overreaching.”
Ohio v. Johnson,
C. The Applicability of this Court’s Precedent in Forsberg
Suitably generalized, Forsberg v. United States,
The instant case présents the unique situation in which a defendant is tried on greater and lesser included offenses under the same indictment, jeopardy terminates as to the lesser offenses by virtue of final convictions, and the government seeks to retry the defendant on the greater offense after reversal.
3
Forsberg
presents a similar scenario. In
Forsberg,
the defendant was charged with related greater and lesser included offenses, jeopardy terminated as to the greater offense by acquittal, and continued as to the other offense pursuant to a mistrial. In such a situation, the government is not barred from retrying the defendant, notwithstanding that jeopardy has terminated on the related offense.
Forsberg,
In Forsberg, the defendant was charged in a two count indictment with (1) assault with intent to commit murder (the greater offense), and (2) assault with a dangerous weapon with intent to do bodily harm (the lesser included offense). Id. at 244. The jury found him not guilty of the greater offense, but" could not agree on the lesser included offense. Id. The judge declared a mistrial as to the second count and discharged the jury. Id. Forsberg was then retried and convicted on Count Two. Id. On appeal to this court, Forsberg contended that the second trial on Count Two violated his constitutional right against double jeopardy, “since he had already been acquitted on Count One, which included the lesser offense set forth in Count Two.” Id. This court, in similarly distinguishing Nielsen, upon which the appellant in Forsberg likewise heavily relied, noted that “Nielsen and the other cases we have examined refer specifically to subsequent prosecution under a new indictment for a lesser offense after prosecution and acquittal of a greater offense.... Here, however, the two counts were properly included in the original indictment.” Id. at 248 (emphasis added). Forsberg thus held that it was not a violation of double jeopardy to retry Forsberg on the lesser included offense on which the jury deadlocked, notwithstanding Forsberg’s acquittal on the greater charge. Id.
There are a few notable differences between the procedural posture of
Forsberg
and that of the case at hand. The differences, however, do not limit the applicability of
Forsberg’s
holding here. In
Forsberg,
the retrial was pursuant to a hung jury, whereas in this case the defendants were retried pursuant to a successful reversal of their convictions on appeal. For purposes of the
Ball
rule, however, jeopardy continues on remand — and there is accordingly no double jeopardy violation — whether the retrial is precipitated by a hung jury or a defendant’s successful reversal of conviction.
See Oregon v. Kennedy,
Let us assume that appellant had been found not guilty on Count One and guilty on Count Two, and that his conviction on Count Two had been reversed with a remand for a new trial. We perceive, no good reason why he could not have been retried on Count Two. Nor should the fact that there was a hung jury instead of a verdict of conviction bar his retrial on Count Two.
The hypothetical also illustrates that even if there is a jeopardy terminating event on the “same offense” (such as an acquittal on the greater offense, as in the hypothetical, or a conviction on the lesser offenses, as in this case), the
Ball
rule applies. The reversed conviction may still be retried.
See United States v. Larkin,
The hypothetical highlights a further difference. The issue in Forsberg arose because jeopardy on the greater charge terminated with an acquittal. In the present case, jeopardy terminated with appellants’ final convictions on the lesser included offenses. It does not matter for our *1245 purposes that Forsberg was acquitted as opposed to convicted on the greater offense. 4 What matters is that in both Fors-berg and the instant case, jeopardy continued on the remaining count. In this case, it continued because of the successful appeal and reversal of conviction on the felony murder charge; in Forsberg, it continued because of the hung jury on the lesser assault charge.
The last difference between
Forsberg
and this case is that jeopardy terminated in
Forsberg
on the greater offense while jeopardy terminated in this case on the lesser offenses. However, this makes no difference because the offenses are equivalent for purposes of double jeopardy, and the effect of the termination of jeopardy on one such offense is the same whether the offense was the greater offense or any lesser offense included in it.
See Brown,
D. Appellants’Reliance on Oreen
Appellants also rely upon
Green v. United States,
*1246
In
Green,
the defendant was charged with arson and felony murder in the commission of an arson, which, under Washington, D.C. law, constituted murder in the first degree.
Id.
at 185,
Green appealed, claiming that his retrial for first degree murder violated his constitutional protections against double jeopardy.
Id.
The Court agreed, finding that “for purposes of former jeopardy” the jury should be understood to have “returned a verdict which expressly read: “We find the defendant not guilty of murder in the first degree but guilty of murder in the second degree.’ ”
Id.
at 191,
In fact, under appellants’ logic, Green could not have been retried for
either
first
or
second degree murder. Under Jose and Miguel’s double jeopardy framework, a retrial for second degree murder would also have been barred because jeopardy had already terminated on the first degree murder charge (by way of the implicit acquittal), and second degree murder was a lesser included offense of first degree murder.
See Green,
It is not without some irony that appellants rely heavily on Green, a case that manifestly undermines their argument. *1247 That their theory of double jeopardy would compel results so obviously contrary to Green and its progeny serves as a reductio ad absurdum of their position.
E. Practical Implications and Guidance for the Future
We pause to consider the practical implications of our decision and to provide the district courts with some guidance. Prosecutors should not be discouraged from charging defendants with greater and lesser included offenses in separate counts under the same indictment. Indeed, if they fail to try the lesser and greater included offenses together in one trial, they may not, consistently with the protections of the Double Jeopardy Clause, later try the defendant for the related offense in a subsequent trial under a separate indictment.
See, e.g., Brown,
Should a jury find a defendant guilty of both the greater and lesser included offenses within the same indictment,
Rutledge
counsels that the district court not enter a final judgment of conviction on both offenses, unless Congress clearly indicates that it intended to allow multiple punishments.
Id.
at 301-03,
Here, assuming without deciding that the district court erred by entering final judgment on all convictions (even though it refrained from sentencing on the predicate felony convictions), this court previously
*1248
corrected the error when it affirmed the predicate felony convictions on appeal notwithstanding that the defendants appealed only their convictions on the felony murder counts.
Miguel,
III. Conclusion
Jeopardy continued on the felony murder charges upon retrial for the reversed convictions. Because final convictions on the underlying predicate felonies do not trigger double jeopardy protections against retrial of the greater offense originally charged under the same indictment in the same trial, we affirm the district court’s denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Jeopardy also continues upon retrial where the retrial is pursuant to a mistrial for "manifest necessity.”
United States v. Bates,
. We note that, by contrast, the Double Jeopardy Clause "does not prohibit the State from prosecuting [a defendant] for [greater and lesser included] multiple offenses in a single prosecution.”
Ohio v. Johnson,
. The government refuses to concede that the convictions on the predicate felonies have become final notwithstanding the district court's entry of final judgments of conviction on those offenses, albeit without sentences attached. The government maintains this position in the first instance because if those convictions did not become final, then jeopardy would not have terminated on those offenses, eliminating the double jeopardy bar that appellants urge on this court. That appellants did not contest their convictions on the predicate offenses and that this court already affirmed the convictions on direct appeal further suggests the finality of those judgments.
See Miguel,
, The district court in
Forsberg
was careful to instruct the jury in such a way as to prevent it from rendering guilty verdicts on
both
the lesser and greater included offenses.
See Forsberg,
. Counsel for Miguel agreed at oral argument that Green could have been retried for second degree murder.
. In dicta, in
United States v. Medina,
we shied away from this approach.
