In this case, we review a district court’s decision to dismiss several informations on the ground of prosecutorial vindictiveness. The government contends that the district court’s finding of vindictiveness is wrong as a matter of law and perilous as a matter of policy. The government further contends that even if vindictive prosecution occurred, the remedy that the district court imposed is unwarranted. We decline to accept these claims. According proper deference to the lower court, we affirm its order to dismiss.
I. Background
On April 22, 1985, officers of the United States Park Police arrested approximately 200 political demonstrators outside of the White House. The officers gave each demonstrator a U.S. Park Police Citation Form, issued pursuant to the District of Columbia’s “magistrates’ citation system.” Each form charged the recipient with “demonstrating without a permit” in violation of 36 C.F.R. § 50.19 and described two options for disposing of the charge. According to the form, the arrestee could either forfeit $50 in full satisfaction of the charge *1244 or proceed to trial. The maximum penalty on the specified charge was a $500 fine and six months’ incarceration.
Although most of the demonstrators chose to forfeit $50, some elected to proceed to trial. At their arraignments, which took place on May 29, June 21, and June 28, 1985, these persons learned that they would have to defend themselves against a further charge. The government had filed two-count informations against the demonstrators who had chosen to exercise their right to trial. Count II of the informations contained the original charge of demonstrating without a permit. Count I contained an additional charge of obstructing the sidewalks adjacent to the White House in violation of 36 C.F.R. § 50.30, which also carries a maximum penalty of six months’ imprisonment and a $500 fine. The government extended a plea offer to some of the defendants, under which the government would dismiss Count I of the information and recommend a sentence of six months’ unsupervised probation on Count II if the defendant pleaded no contest to the latter count. A number of the defendants accepted this plea arrangement, but 36 chose to go to trial.
On July 30, 1985, counsel for the defendants moved to dismiss the informations on the ground of vindictive prosecution. Counsel also requested a jury trial, noting that the addition of a second charge and the enhanced potential sentence had triggered the defendants’ jury trial right. The district court granted the motion for a jury trial and found that defendants’ counsel had raised sufficient question concerning prosecutorial vindictiveness to warrant a separate hearing on the issue.
At the hearing on vindictiveness, which occurred on September 11, 1985, the prosecutor immediately moved to dismiss Count I (the added count) of each of the informa-tions. Counsel for the defendants objected, claiming that the sole purpose of the motion was to deprive the defendants of their right to a jury trial. The district court, however, granted the prosecutor’s motion to dismiss the added count. The court then heard argument on the defendants’ motion to dismiss the informations (which now contained only the original count) on the ground of prosecutorial vindictiveness. The court found that the prosecutor had added a count to the informa-tions solely because the defendants had exercised their right to trial and that such a course of action constituted vindictive prosecution. The court chose to remedy this prosecutorial misconduct by dismissing the informations. After the court denied the government’s motion for reconsideration, see Joint Appendix at 99-102, the government filed this appeal.
II. Discussion
Our first task is to determine the appropriate standard of review in a vindictive prosecution case. Although this court has never faced the question, we find the matter fairly easy to resolve. An appellate court must use the clearly erroneous standard to review a trial court’s finding of vindictive prosecution. The clearly erroneous standard ordinarily governs review of a judge’s findings in a criminal case on issues other than the defendant’s guilt,
see Campbell v. United States,
A. The Finding
“Prosecutorial vindictiveness” is a term of art with a precise and limited meaning. The term refers to a situation in which the government acts against a defendant in response to the defendant’s pri- or exercise of constitutional or statutory rights.
See United States v. Goodwin,
The Supreme Court has established two ways in which a defendant may demonstrate prosecutorial vindictiveness. First, a defendant may show “actual vindictiveness” — that is, he may prove through objective evidence that a prosecutor acted in order to punish him for standing on his legal rights.
See id.
at 380-81, 384 & n. 19,
The district court in this case held that the defendants had shown actual vindictiveness, but we decline to reach this question. We uphold the ultimate finding — that pros-ecutorial vindictiveness entered into this case — as not clearly erroneous because we believe that the defendants presented evidence that would allow a court at least to find that a presumption of vindictiveness applied. The government declined to come forward with any evidence that would erase such a presumption and thus doomed itself to the critical finding.
The government contends that a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness can never apply in a pretrial setting and rests this claim on the Supreme Court’s opinion in
United States v. Goodwin.
A magistrate had arraigned Goodwin on several misdemeanor charges, and an attorney from the Department of Justice, who had authority to try only petty crime and misdemeanor cases, took over the case. Plea negotiations ensued, but proved fruitless, and Goodwin asserted his right to a jury trial. Subsequently, an Assistant U.S. Attorney assumed responsibility for the case, and he proceeded to indict Goodwin on more serious charges.
See Goodwin,
We find the government’s reading of
Goodwin
unpersuasive. The Supreme Court in
Goodwin
declined to adopt a
per se
rule applicable in the pretrial context that a presumption will lie whenever the prosecutor “ups the ante” following a defendant’s exercise of a legal right.
See Goodwin,
We begin by noting a set of predicate facts that Goodwin and the case at bar have in common. In both cases, of course, the prosecutor increased the charges against the defendants after the defendants had asserted their constitutional rights. In neither case did the defendants have any notice of this possibility: at no time had the prosecutors informed the defendants that they might face increased charges if they chose to go to trial. Finally, in neither Goodwin nor the case at bar had the defendants’ own conduct after the initial charging decision given the government a legitimate reason to enhance the charges. These circumstances alone, of course, fail to support a realistic likelihood of prosecutorial vindictiveness; the Supreme Court’s decision in Goodwin held as much. We note them because they combine with other circumstances in the case to suggest a retaliatory motivation.
Perhaps the most important of the circumstances peculiar to this case is the government’s disparate treatment of the defendants who elected to go to trial and the defendants who elected to forego their trial rights. All of the defendants participated in the same demonstration and conducted themselves in the same manner. Yet the defendants who chose to go to trial faced two charges, whereas the other defendants confronted only one. This disparate treatment must give rise to a suspicion that the government discriminated among the defendants on the basis of their divergent decisions whether to exercise their right to trial. The facts in this case thus support, far more than did the facts in Goodwin, a finding of a realistic likelihood of prosecutorial vindictiveness.
The simplicity and clarity of both the facts and law underlying these prosecutions heightens the suspicion of prosecuto-rial vindictiveness. Government officials often make their initial charging decisions prior to gaining full knowledge or apprecia
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tion of the facts involved in a given case. In addition, officials often make charging decisions before analyzing thoroughly a case’s legal complexities. The decision in
Goodwin
stemmed largely from the Supreme Court’s understanding of these facts: the
Goodwin
Court recognized the frequency with which prosecutors must act on (and later compensate for) incomplete information or understanding.
See Goodwin,
The government’s conduct after levelling the increased charges against the defendants also lends support to a finding of a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness. At the very beginning of the hearing on prose-cutorial vindictiveness, the government moved to drop the charge that it had so recently added to each information. Perhaps the government official responsible for the prosecutions acted in good faith; perhaps he merely changed his mind a second time. But when we look at the government’s action in the context of the entire case, we find this possibility difficult to accept. The remaining defendants certainly had good reason to think that the government dropped the additional charges in order to avoid the necessity of a jury trial, which the district court had granted to the defendants on the basis of the enhanced charges. We find in this prosecuto-rial action, viewed in context, a disturbing willingness to toy with the defendants, and we think that a lower court may take this kind of willingness into account in determining whether a presumption of vindictiveness will lie.
Finally, we take into consideration the government’s motivation to act vindictively in this case. The
Goodwin
Court expressed doubt that in the run-of-the-mill pretrial situation, the prosecutor would have any reason to engage in vindictive behavior; the Court noted that defendants routinely assert procedural rights prior to trial and that prosecutors are unlikely to respond vindictively to this everyday practice.
See id.
at 381,
The government asserts that assuming arguendo a presumption of vindictiveness can arise in a pretrial context, the various factors we have mentioned fail to support use of a presumption in the case at bar. Essentially, the government contends that no presumption will lie because the “routine and benign procedures necessitated by the magistrates’ citation system” explain the increased charges. See Brief for Appellant at 23. According to the government, the prosecutor only sees the case once the defendant has decided to go to trial; thus, any decision he makes to in *1248 crease charges occurs in the course of routine prosecutorial review and in no way indicates vindictiveness. See id. at 21-24.
We reject this argument. The Supreme Court’s decisions concerning vindictive prosecution have focused on the conduct of the government as a whole, rather than on the conduct or retributive sentiments of a single prosecutor. In
Thigpen v. Roberts,
The government also argues that use of a presumption in this case will have dangerous policy consequences. The government contends that such a result will bind prosecutors to the charging decisions of arresting officers and thereby destroy or disable the magistrates’ citation system.
See
Brief for Appellant at 36-40. We are not convinced. Even if our holding were to bind prosecutors to all charging decisions of arresting officers, we think the government would suffer no great loss. These charging decisions bind the government when defendants forego their right to trial; we fail to understand why the government believes it needs broad-ranging discretion to up the ante when defendants choose to exercise their trial rights. Moreover, a holding that the circumstances of this case support the use of a presumption will not bind prosecutors to all charging decisions of arresting officers. First, such a holding is limited to the precise circumstances of this case; in other cases, with different facts, the presumption may not lie. Second, even when a court uses a presumption, the government has the opportunity to rebut it; thus, the initial charging decision “binds” the government only to the extent that the government has no legitimate and articulable reason for changing that decision. Third, the government may be able to escape the presumption altogether by providing notice to the accused. In
Bor-denkircher v. Hayes,
The government’s arguments thus fail to convince us that the circumstances of this case, when viewed in their entirety, cannot support a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness. Because the government has never attempted to rebut the presumption that arises when a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness exists, we cannot reverse the district court’s finding of prosecutorial vindic
*1249
tiveness under a clearly erroneous standard. Put simply, we have reviewed all of the evidence, and it has not left us with the “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”
See United States Gypsum Co.,
B. The Remedy
The district court chose to remedy the governmental misconduct in this case by dismissing the informations. The government vehemently attacks this choice. As we noted earlier, we can reverse the district court’s remedial order only if it constitutes an abuse of discretion. Because we cannot say that the choice of remedy in this case constitutes such an abuse, we reject the government’s arguments and affirm the district court’s order of dismissal.
The government essentially contends that when confronted with prosecutorial vindictiveness, a court has authority only to dismiss the additional, “tainted” charge.
See
Brief for Appellant at 41. In support of this claim, the government cites several cases in which courts have declined to order any relief other than dismissal of the vindictively motivated charge.
See United States v. Hollywood Motor Car Co.,
We decline to circumscribe so drastically the remedial authority of district courts in cases marked by prosecutorial vindictiveness. None of the cases that the government cites supports any such broad limitation. In those cases, appellate courts merely stated that dismissal of the additional charge constitutes the usual judicial remedy.
See Hollywood,
Given the trial court’s appropriately broad authority to remedy prosecutorial vindictiveness, we cannot say that the district court’s decision to dismiss the infor-mations in this case constitutes an abuse of discretion. We note that the remedy is extreme and that the district court judge had no obligation to impose it.
Cf. Hollywood,
It is so ordered.
