The appellant, David B. Barash, was convicted on 26 of the 32 counts of an indictment which charged him with payment of bribes or illegal gratuities to five employees of the Internal Revenue Service, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 201, 201(b) and 201(f) and of 26 U.S.C. § 7214(a) (2). On January 28, 1966, he was sentenced to one year and one day on each of the counts on which he was convicted, all to be served concurrently. On appeal these judgments of conviction were reversed by this court and the case was remanded for a new trial. United States v. Barash,
While Barash’s appeal from judgments entered after his second trial were
sub judice
before a panel of this court, the court, on November 27, 1968, filed its en banc decision in United States v. Coke,
Barash was denied certiorari on his direct appeal and thereafter on November 13, 1969 he moved in the District Court under Rule 35, F.R.Crim.P. for the correction and reduction of his sentence on the ground that the punishment, including the time to be served, the fines, suspended sentences and probation with its conditions, was more severe than the punishment meted out after his first trial. The district court reduced the time to be served from 9 to 7 months but otherwise denied the motion on the assumption that the holdings in Coke and Pearce apply only to sentences of imprisonment and do not apply to fines or to sentences suspended as part of an order for a period of probation. We are of the opinion that this was error.
It should be expressly pointed out, however, that there is not the slightest suggestion or shred of evidence of any vindictiveness on the part of the sentencing judge following the second trial. Moreover he reduced the period of imprisonment immediately to be served from a year and a day to seven months. But on review this court must consider the maximum which the appellant might be required to serve under the terms of the judgment.
In countering appellant’s contention that his second sentence is illegal because of its increased severity, the Government argues that Barash waived his right to complain of the illegality of the sentence because of his failure to raise the issue on his appeal from the second conviction.
1
Although
With regard to the merits, we think it clear that the district court’s determination that the holdings in
Pearce
and
Coke
are limited to increased prison terms is incorrect. The rationale behind those decisions is that a convicted criminal defendant, fearing a declared or undeclared state policy to discourage attacks on judgments of conviction or that a vindictive judge might increase his sentence following retrial if there were a reversal on appeal, might be deterred from exercising his right to appeal or his right collaterally to attack his conviction. North Carolina v. Pearce,
Where, as in the present case, no basis or reason appears which would justify the court in imposing a more severe sentence after the new trial, the mere change in kind or type of punishment imposed after the new trial, as compared with that ordered after the first trial, presents difficulties and problems of its own. The combination of terms of imprisonment to be served, suspended sentences and maximum periods of probation, together with fines for part of which the appellant was to stand committed until paid, and the payment of the remainder of which was a condition of probation — all of which made up the punishments imposed after the second conviction — have to be compared with the concurrent sentences of one year and a day imposed on the counts after the first conviction. The appellant claims that those ordered after the new trial were the more severe. The Government takes the position that they were not. There is some evidence that the court after retrial was seeking to deal more leniently with the appellant — at least so far as the terms of imprisonment ordered to be served were concerned. If the appellant were unable to pay his fines, however, his
As an exercise of our supervisory power over the administration of federal justice we, therefore, hold that after retrial, a sentencing judge is bound, absent the justifying circumstances set out in Pearce and Coke, to follow the kind, as well as to stay within the bounds of the degree of severity, of the punishment imposed following the first trial, unless there are extremely compelling reasons which demand a change in the type of penalty in the interests of justice, in which event such reasons shall fully and affirmatively appear on the record. Thus while he may impose a lesser amount of whatever punishment was set the first time around, no exchange may be made between the various types of available penalties, except that the execution of such identical or lesser sentence may be suspended and a term of probation imposed.
[6] Accordingly in the present case the sentences imposed after retrial are declared illegal and must be and are vacated;
3
the order of the district court
Notes
. The Government, quite correctly, does not attempt to argue that these principles should not be given retroactive application. At the time of the
Colee
decision we determined that its principles were to apply “to all federal defendants who after successful appeal were convicted and given a longer sentence.”
. This problem has received most extensive consideration in opinions of the Court of Military Appeals, because the convening authority has the power to review sentences of courts-martial under 10 U.S.C. § 864 (formerly 50 U.S.C. § 651) and there is also a provision, 10 U.S.C. § 863(b) (formerly 50 U.S.C. § 650(b)), that, with certain exceptions, “no sentence in excess of or more severe than the original sentence may be imposed” if the convening authority disapproves of the sentence set by the court-martial. In his concurring opinion in Kelley the late Judge Brosman noted the difficulty of comparing for severity various types of sentences:
“It would seem to follow that it is open to a court-martial to find punishments, if any, no more severe than that previously adjudged within each category— but that its members may not go outside that category’s limits. And why? For the plain reason that, as a logical proposition one may not — one cannot save for the roughest sort of practical purpose— compare chalk with cheese.
“For purposes of administrative simplicity, therefore, I believe that no effort should be made to equate wholly different types of penal action.” 5 U.S. M.C.A. at 264.
. The appellant cites United States v. Sacco,
In the present case the appellant is attacking a sentence which he claims is illegal and which we hold to be void and of no effect. Yet he argues that because he was serving it, he is entitled to have the seven months sentence, which is highly favorable to him, declared valid and the remainder declared invalid. But he cannot have it both ways.
