The central question presented by these consolidated appeals from the District Court is whether appellants, having successfully sought a mistrial under an earlier indictment for second degree murder, could thereafter be indicted for first degree murder. We conclude that, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, the Due Process Clause stands in the way. Accordingly, and for the reasons set forth hereinafter, we find the indictments invalid and reverse the convictions.
I
According to the testimony of government witnesses, appellants Clayborne Ja-mison, Sr., and his son, Clayborne Jami-son, Jr., spent much of the evening of April 13, 1971, searching for one Paul Willis, whom they accused of having robbed them on two occasions. Two witnesses, one of them Willis’s mother, testified that the Jamisons had approached them during the evening to ask if they knew Willis’s whereabouts, and, brandishing pistols, had stated their intention when they found him to “blow his brains out.” Several bystanders in the cafe where Willis was murdered later that night testified that it was Jami-son, Jr., accompanied by his father, who entered the cafe and, walking straight to where Willis was seated, put a pistol to his head and fired the shot which caused his death.
*409
Indicted for second degree murder and carrying a dangerous weapon, 22 D.C. Code §§ 2403, 3204 (1973), appellants were tried together on June 1, 1972. In the presentation of the government’s evidence, the prosecutor attempted to introduce an oral confession purportedly made by Jamison, Jr., when he surrendered himself to police custody a few hours after the shooting, but this was found by the trial judge to have been illegally obtained and it was excluded. Defense counsel, who was representing both appellants, thereafter made an opening statement to the jury which consisted almost exclusively of an assertion that both appellants would take the stand in their own defense and that their testimony would prove more credible than that of the government’s witnesses. The trial judge immediately called defense counsel to the bench and directed his attention to the Supreme Court’s decision in Harris v. New York,
Following the recess there was a further discussion at the bench, during which the trial judge commented that if appellants did not take the stand, defense counsel would have to make some explanatory statement to the jury, which might draw adverse inferences from the reversal of strategy. Defense counsel then requested “ten or fifteen minutes” for discussion of the dilemma with his clients. Expressing dissatisfaction with the delay that had already been caused, the trial judge gave defense counsel “five or six minutes” for the purpose. When the court reconvened, defense counsel moved for a mistrial on grounds of “ineffective assistance of counsel.” The prosecutor responded that he was “ready to go to the jury” and “in a real good position,” suggesting also that each defendant be asked if he concurred in defense counsel’s motion. Without elaboration the trial judge asked each appellant if he “agreed with the position taken” by defense counsel. When they answered affirmatively, a mistrial was declared.
Appellants were subsequently re-indicted for first degree murder and carrying a dangerous weapon, 22 D.C. Code §§ 2401, 3204 (1973), to which they took exception. 2 At their second trial beginning October 18, 1972, the government offered substantially the same evidence as it had offered at the first trial. Appellants offered no evidence of their own, and after the dismissal of the dangerous weapon count *410 against Jamison, Sr., a jury convicted them as charged. They now appeal their convictions for first degree murder. 3
Appellants have between them raised a number of distinct challenges to their convictions: (1) that the earlier trial ending in a mistrial constituted former jeopardy and barred any reprosecution of them for the criminal acts involved in this case; (2) that the double jeopardy clause in any event prevented the United States from reindicting them for a more serious crime than that for which they were previously indicted; (3) that the possibility of being charged with and convicted of a more serious crime on retrial denied the defendants due process in that it placed an “unconstitutional condition” on the exercise of their right to seek a mistrial; (4) that due process requires that the fear of a vindictive charge increase following upon a successful defense request for a mistrial be dispelled by a prohibition of any such increase; 4 and (5) that, in the case of appellant Jamison, Jr., who was twenty years old when sentenced, the trial court erroneously sentenced him as an adult instead of committing him as a youth offender under the Youth Corrections Act, 18 U.S.C. § 5005 et seq. (1970). We think the first of these contentions is without merit; and, since we hold that the fourth requires reversal, we do not reach the remaining points. 5
II
In considering the various ways in which a trial may come to an end prematurely, the courts have largely “declined ... to formulate rules based on categories of circumstances which will permit or preclude retrial.” United States v. Jorn,
Appellants argue, however, that the formality of the defendant’s having moved for a mistrial should not be controlling in all cases, and that to consider it so would be to adopt a “mechanical rule” of the kind that the Supreme Court has consistently rejected in this area. Illinois v. Sommerville,
When exactly judicial or prosecutorial misconduct ceases to be of the kind that may provoke a defendant’s mistrial motion without barring retrial and becomes an “overreaching” we cannot say, but no such question arises in this case. It was action by defense counsel which brought about the need to discontinue the proceedings. It may be that he would not have moved for a mistrial had not the prosecutor threatened to introduce the excluded confession and the testimony of Jamison, Sr.’s wife if appellants took the stand, but we can find no fault with the prosecutor’s making it clear that he would use whatever evidence was legally available to the government. As for the trial judge, apart from acceding to the mistrial motion, his actions were primarily confined to advising defense counsel for his own benefit of the difficulties to which he had exposed his clients in light of the Harris case. Nor do we find that defense counsel was in any way pressured into moving for a mistrial. 6 The judge had not mentioned the possibility of a mistrial before defense counsel moved for one. 7 *412 The prosecutor’s only response to the motion was that he was “ready to go to the jury right now” and “in a real good position,” a reasonable construction of these remarks being that he opposed a mistrial. 8
Appellants argue, however, that their motion for a mistrial should be judged for its effectiveness in preventing a double jeopardy claim as if i+ were a “waiver” of their constitutional right to have their guilt or innocence determined at the first trial. They contend that under Johnson v. Zerbst,
*413
To treat mistrial motions as waivers of double jeopardy protection would be to require among other things that it be established that the defendant himself concurred in such motions, fully comprehending all his alternatives.
See
Cross v. United States,
Ill
Although free to reprosecute appellants after their first trial was aborted, the government was not necessarily free to reindict them for a more serious crime than had been originally charged. On the contrary, we have concluded that, under the line of Supreme Court cases which began in 1969 with North Carolina v. Pearce,
In Pearce the court considered the question of whether a defendant who successfully attacks his conviction but is later retried and reconvicted may constitutionally receive a more severe sentence at his second trial than at his first. The Court rejected two theories by which such sentence increases would have been absolutely prohibited: (1) that successful appellants were thereby subjected to double jeopardy and (2) that the practice denied them the equal protection of the laws. Instead the Court based its decision on the possibility that a defendant might be the victim of “vindictiveness . . . for having successfully attacked his first conviction.” Due process was held to require that such vindictiveness play no part in the reconviction sentence, and was further held to require “that a defendant be freed of apprehension of such retaliatory motivation on the part of the sentencing judge.” The Court continued:
In order to assure the absence of such a motivation, we have concluded that whenever a judge imposes a more severe sentence upon a defendant after a new trial, the reasons for his doing so must affirmatively appear. Those reasons must be based upon objective information concerning identifiable conduct on the part of the defendant occurring after the time of the' original sentencing proceeding. And the factual data upon which the increased sentence is based must be made part of the record, so that the constitutional legitimacy of the increased sentence may be fully reviewed on appeal.
The Court has subsequently made clear that the question of whether in a particular situation due process requires such explicit justification for reconviction sentence increases turns on the likelihood that vindictiveness would otherwise play a part and that potential appellants would otherwise fear that it would. On facts which were similar to
*414
those of
Pearce,
the Court in Moon v. Maryland,
For a time it was uncertain whether due process required that criminal defendants be shielded as well from the danger of prosecutorial vindictiveness, and specifically from increases in the offense charged.
Chaffin
suggested that prosecutorial vindictiveness was not to be feared, at least insofar as it might bring about an increased sentence through increased sentence recommendation.
See
Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
supra,
at 27 n. 13,
We think the Supreme Court has now settled the question in Blackledge v. Perry,
The government attempts several distinctions of
Blackledge.
The first is that the increase in charge in that ease was from a misdemeanor to a felony and carried a possible sentence increase of eight years,
12
whereas the increase in charge in the case before us was from second to first degree murder, both of which crimes are felonies and both of which carry a maximum potential sentence of life imprisonment.
13
Because of this difference, it is argued, a “realistic likelihood of vindictiveness” was present only in
Blackledge.
However, the Supreme Court in
Blackledge
in no way relied on the fact that the increase in charge in that case was from a misdemeanor to a felony. It referred to the “more serious collateral consequences” of a felony conviction only by way of suggesting that its result in the ease would have been the same had there been no possibility of more lengthy incarceration but
only
an increase from misdemeanor to felony.
The fact that in a particular case the actual impact on the defendant of a charge increase is slight is, of course, not determinative, any more than the fact that a prosecutor may not in fact have acted out of vindictiveness, for the evil to which Pearce is directed is the apprehension on the defendant’s part of receiving a vindictively-imposed penalty for the assertion of rights. Moreover, we would hesitate to distinguish Pearce even in a ease where the only possible prejudicial effect of the charge increase was minimal. The difficulty of drawing the line between those charge increases which do and do not carry sufficient potential impact to require restrictions of the kind imposed in Pearce persuades us that all charge increases should in this respect be treated alike.
The government also attempts to distinguish
Blackledge
as a case in which the right whose exercise could be chilled by potential vindictiveness was an “absolute” right, whereas the mistrial which defendants sought in this case was within the discretion of the trial judge to grant. However, the right to a trial
de novo
in North Carolina’s two-tier system is “absolute” only in the sense that the statute providing for a new trial provides that no error need be alleged; it may be that North Carolina could deny such a new trial entirely.
Cf.
Griffin v. Illinois,
The question for us, therefore, is whether to differentiate between attacks which defendants make on the fairness of criminal proceedings before and after they are complete. We decline to draw such a distinction, primarily because of its “implications . . . for the sound administration of justice.” United States v. Tateo,
supra,
We conclude then that
Pearce
and
Blackledge
require restrictions on increased charges after mistrials. This does not mean that a higher charge can never be brought. Such a flat prohibition was explicitly rejected in
Pearce,
The course adopted in
Pearce
was to require that the appropriate authority, in that case the sentencing judge, justify his harsher treatment of the defendant in a way which negated the possibility of vindictiveness. There is then the question of how this approach is to apply in the context of increases in the charged offense. It would appear that the reasons for such increases, as well as their factual bases, must be made a part of the record at the time the higher indictment is filed with the court. As to what reasons might be sufficient to justify a sentence increase, one such reason was referred to in
Blackledge,
namely, that the more serious charge could not have been brought when the lesser one was because the elements of the more serious crime were not at that time present, as where the victim of an assault had not yet died, raising the possible charge to one of homicide. Blackledge v. Perry,
Since this record is devoid of any illumination of the reasons why the first degree murder charge was brought, we can only conclude that the reindictment of appellants for first degree murder denied them due process and that their convictions of that charge cannot stand. In light of our disposition of appellants’ double jeopardy claims, the government is free to institute new proceedings consistently with this opinion. At oral argument we invited comment on the question of whether we might remand with directions to enter convictions for second degree murder. Though we do not doubt our authority to do this in certain circumstances,
see
Austin v. United States,
The judgment of the District Court is, except for the conviction of Jamison, Jr., for carrying a dangerous weapon, reversed and the case is remanded with directions to dismiss the indictments of appellants for first degree murder.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. It is unclear from the record whether the prosecutor intended to call Mrs. Jamison ! erself or to offer an out-of-court statement made by her concerning her husband’s and stepson’s involvement in the crime. Tr. 25-27. Apparently, he intended to offer the testimony only by way of impeachment of the Jamisons’ testimony, though the record also fails to make clear whether he limited its potential use in this way purely as a matter of tactics or because he thought it likely to be admissible only as impeachment evidence.
. Appellants’ joint motion to dismiss the indictment for first degree murder was made at the opening of tl.eir trial, two clays after they had entered pleas of not guilty. Fed. R.Crim.P. 12 requires, on pain of waiver, that a motion challenging the indictment be made “before the plea is entered.” It also provides, however, that, “the court may permit it to be made within a reasonable time thereafter,” and though there is some suggestion that the trial judge in this case did not consider appellants’ motion “timely,” Tr. 4-7, we do not consider ourselves barred by such a minor delay from considering such a fundamental flaw in the indictment as is asserted here.
. Appellant Jamison, Jr., lias raised no objection to his conviction for carrying a dangerous weapon, and we see none. Accordingly, that conviction stands.
. A claim based specifically on the danger of vindictiveness is suggested by the discussion in the older Jamison’s brief at 47-59. However, it is not clearly distinguished therein from a claim (number (3) in our enumeration) based on the possibility of a charge increase without regard to motivation. Br. appellant Jamison, Sr., at 47-59. AAre regard the two theories as distinct for the reason that, the “unconstitutional conditions” theory seemingly applies regardless of the reason for the increase in charged offense and thus implies a complete ban on such increases, which, as our opinion demonstrates, the vindictiveness theory does not. It should also be noted that neither appellant’s brief did, nor could, draw support from Blackledge v. Perry,
. Jamison, Jr’s, objections to adult sentencing are, of course, not mooted simply by our reversal of his first degree murder conviction ; presumably he also appeals the adult sentence lie received because of Lis unchallenged conviction of the deadly weapon charge. However, the one-year sentence which he received for carrying a deadly weapon has now been fully served, having run concurrently with his life sentence for murder. No relief would be available, therefore, even assuming that the sentence was improper.
Cf.
Dorszynski v. United States,
. United States v. Walden,
. It is argued that the trial judge in effect forced defendants to move for a mistrial by limiting them to “five or six minutes” to discuss the alternatives. Apart from the fact that the trial judge’s impatience seems entirely justified, a recess having just been taken to allow defense counsel to study tire question, t..ere is no suggestion that the trial judge expected a decision within five minutes on whether to make a mistrial motion, which possibility had not been discussed. It appears from the record, rather, *412 that defendants were simply being asked to decide whether to continue with their defense as counsel had just outlined it. It may well be that if counsel had asked for more time to discuss a mistrial motion with his clients, it would have been granted.
. Appellants offer several possible prosecu-torial motives for provoking a mistrial and ask us to infer from these a “preconceived plan” to do so. We would be extremely reluctant to draw such an inference wit’.out more direct evidence even if we were persuaded that a strong motive existed to seek a mistrial, and in this case we are not so persuaded. Appellants speculate that the prosecutor wished to increase the indictment and believed that he could do so after a mistrial but not after a conviction; but we doubt that the prosecutor could have been so sure that the outcome of this appeal (prohibiting such an increase after mistrial) would be other than it is. As for the suggestion that the prosecutor wished to strengthen his case and bring it a second time, he stated that he thought himself “in a real good position” at the first trial, and in fact the government did not substantially alter or improve its case when it was brought again four months later. In any event it is hardly the normal prosecutor’s wish after completing the presentation of a patently convincing case to start over in the hope of making some improvement. Appellants also suggest that the prosecutor wished to avert a conviction which he expected would be reversed because of the conflict of interest present in defense counsel’s representation of both defendants. Even if we assumed that the possibility of such a reversal was foreseen, we do not suppose that a prosecutor ordinarily begins to yearn for a mistrial at the first sign of possibly reversible error.
. Johnson v. Zerbst,
supra,
which involved an alleged waiver of the right to counsel, defined a valid waiver as “an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or privilege.”
. Though we have not found it necessary in this opinion to reach the challenges which appellants make to their charge increases on the basis of double jeopardy and the concept of “unconstitutional conditions,” we note that appellants in
Chaffin
made substantially identical challenges to their sentence increases and that these challenges were rejected by the Supreme Court. Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
supra
at 23-24, 29-35,
. Several courts have simply passed over incidents of possible prosecutorial vindictiveness without discussion of
Pearce’s
applicability to the prosecutor.
See
Taylor v. United States,
. The penalty for the misdemeanor of assault with a deadly weapon, of which Perry was first convicted, was a fine, imprisonment of not more than two years, or both. N.O.Gen.Stat. § 14-33 (b), (e) (1969), as amended, N.O.Gen.Stat. § 14-33 (b), (c) (Supp.1973). The penalty for the felony of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill and inflict serious injury, of which Perry was subsequently convicted, was a fine, inl-prisonment of not more than ten years, or both. N.O.Gen.Stat. §§ 14-2, 14-32 (a) (1969), as amended §§ 14-2, 14-32 (a) (Supp.1973).
. D.C.Code § 22-2404 (1973).
See also
Furman v. Georgia,
. See note 13 supra.
. There are other distinctions that might be drawn between the right to seek a mistrial and the right to seek post-conviction review. It might be thought that a prosecutor is less likely to wish to penalize a defendant for seeking a mistrial, which results in less of a burden upon prosecutorial resources than does a successful appeal. However, the distinction all but vanishes in a case, such as the one before us, where the prosecution’s presentation was completed before the mistrial was declared. It might also be argued that the undoing of an actual conviction uniquely provokes prosecutorial vindictiveness. If defendant is seeking a mistriak however, there is by hypothesis some error in the trial of which the prosecutor may not wish to lose the benefit. In any case the likelihood of vindictiveness seems if anything greater in the usual mistrial situation than in
Blackledge,
where the indictment for a felony rather than a misdemeanor in the superior court was easily explained in non-vindictive terms by the fact that a felony charge could not be brought in the inferior court. See Blackledge v. Perry,
. The majority in
Blaehledge
explicitly rejected the dissent’s suggestion that Perry’s anee with the restrictions on increased sen-case be remanded for resentencing in accord-tence imposed by
Pearce. See
Blackledge v. Perry,
