Edwin C. Hаrris was indicted for several bank robberies. Before trial, he discharged three attorneys. The court appointed a fourth attorney and warned Harris he would not get another opportunity to change counsel. On the morning of trial, Harris dischаrged his fourth attorney. The court refused to grant a continuance; instead, the court determined that Harris had waived his right to counsel. The court ordered him to proceed pro se, with his fourth attorney as stand-by counsel. After jury selection, Harris had an “outburst” in the jury’s presence. The court instructed the jury to disregard the outburst, and the trial proceeded. Harris was convicted and sentenced under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), which requires increased penalties for each subsequent conviction of using a firearm to cоmmit a crime of violence. He appeals and we affirm.
I. Facts
Harris robbed four banks in downtown Chicago between September 16, 1988 and November 9, 1990. He used threats in the first robbery, but never displayed a gun. In the ensuing three robberies — which took place оn August 10, October 9, and November 9, 1990 — he used a .38 caliber semiautomatic weapon. When the police caught Harris immediately after his fourth robbery, the weapon was fully loaded.
Between Harris’s arrest and indictment, the district court appointed two attorneys to represent him. The first withdrew after citing an “irreparable conflict” with Harris. The second provided representation through the time of indictment, but withdrew after telling the court that Harris was “unable to cooperate” and refused to take legal advice. Harris then privately retained an attorney who did not fare any better. Within a few months he also withdrew, citing “irreconcilable differences” with Harris. The district court then appointed a fourth attorney— *1454 John A. Meyer — and sсheduled a trial to begin on August 12,1991. The court warned Harris that he would not be given another opportunity to change attorneys.
Harris discharged Meyer on the morning that the trial was to begin, claiming that Meyer was a racist. Harris is black, and Meyer is white. Meyer moved to withdraw and also moved for a continuance so that Harris could retain new counsel. The court allowed Meyer to withdraw, but denied the motion for continuance. The court determined that Harris had waived his right to counsel and had еlected to proceed pro se. The court appointed Meyer as stand-by counsel, and the jury selection process commenced.
The perils of proceeding pro se are well exhibited by Harris’s next actions in the courtroom. After jury selection — in his first official actions on his own behalf — Harris made an impromptu speech to the jury claiming that he was a victim of racial discrimination and that he was being tried against his will. After speaking his piece, he climbed onto counsel table and screamed such things as “Kill me!” and “Shоot me!” He then made a sudden break for the door but court security officers restrained him. The court ordered a recess, after which the court instructed the jurors to disregard the outburst. The court then adjourned for the day. The next day, Harris made а belated motion for a mistrial based on his previous outburst. The court denied that motion, and the trial proceeded.
The government’s case at trial consisted mostly of eyewitness accounts and video surveillance footage of Hаrris’s bank robberies. In his defense, Harris conducted direct and cross-examinations of witnesses, and he gave the closing argument. Meyer made the opening statement. The jury deliberated for three hours, and found Harris guilty on all counts charged in the indictmеnt: one count of bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), three counts of armed bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) and (b), and three counts of using a firearm in the commission of a crime of violence in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). Later, the district court sentenced Harris. Section 924(c) includes a clause escalating the penalties for subsequent convictions under the statute and prohibiting the district court from imposing such penalties concurrently. Accordingly, the district court sentenced Harris to five yeаrs for his first violation of section 924(c), twenty years for his second violation, and twenty years for his third, with the three sentences to run consecutively.
Harris appeals his conviction and sentence, contending that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel; that the district court erred by failing to grant his request for a continuance on the morning of the trial; that the district court should have granted his motion for a mistrial after his outburst; and that the escalating sentences the court imposed under section 924(c) viоlated the statute.
II. Analysis
A. Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
Before appointing Meyer as the fourth attorney to represent him, the district court warned Harris: “[tjhat is going to be the end of it or you can represent yourself.” Harris waited until the morning of the trial to discharge Meyer. After allowing Meyer to withdraw, the district court determined that Harris had waived his right to counsel and had elected to proceed pro se. The court warned Harris about the dangers of self-representation, appointed Meyer as stand-by counsel, and prоceeded with the trial. Harris now contends that the district court denied him his constitutional right to be represented by an attorney.
In
United States v. Fazzini,
On appeal, we agreed with the district court’s conclusion that the defendant was not deprivеd of his right to counsel. We held that “it is not necessary that a defendant verbally waive his right to counsel; so long as the district court has given the defendant sufficient opportunity to retain the assistance of appointed counsel, defendant’s аctions which have the effect of depriving himself of appointed counsel will establish a knowing and intentional choice.”
Id.
at 642. We cited
United States v. Moore,
The same conditions of waiver are present in this case. Harris discharged four attorneys, the last on the morning of his trial. Before appointing the fourth attorney, the district judge warned Harris “[t]his is going to be the end of it or you can represent yourself.” Harris proceeded to fire his fourth attorney. Our decision in Fazzini controls. By his behavior, Harris waived his right to counsel.
B. Failure to Grant a Continuance
After discharging Meyer on the morning of the trial, the defendant requested a continuance to obtain a new attorney. The district court denied that request, and later explained its reasons in a written order:
Defendant cannot lay the blame on the court for his continued failure to get along with his attorneys or to obtain private counsel in a timely fashion. Having set aside time for trial and summoned witnesses, the court had discretion to deny defendant’s last-minute request for a continuance.
Harris appeals, contending that the district court’s failure to grant а continuance so that he could retain private counsel violated his Sixth Amendment right to an attorney.
The Supreme Court has held that “broad discretion must be granted trial courts on matters of continuances; only an unreasoning and arbitrary ‘insistenсe upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for a delay’ violates the right to the assistance of counsel.”
Morris v. Sloppy,
Harris’s persistent inability to get аlong with his attorneys was the only reason for delay. That is not a justification; it is simply a bad excuse. A reasonable person could conclude that Harris’s request for delay was not justified, and therefore, that the court’s insistence on expeditiоusness was appropriate. A district court should not be required to work its schedule to accommodate the type of insolence which Harris displayed. Our system provides a fair forum and expects parties to behave reasonably in that forum. If a party intentionally hamstrings his defense, fairness does not require that the court intervene to rescue him.
C. Outburst
The day after his outburst before the jury, Harris moved for a mistrial. The court denied that request. Harris now
*1456
claims that the district court erred by not grаnting a mistrial. We review a district court’s denial of a motion for a mistrial under an abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Chaussee,
D. Escalating Sentences
After the judgment of conviction, the district court applied section 924(c) and sentenced Harris to a total of forty-five years for the three times he used a gun to rob banks: five years on the first; twеnty years on the second; and twenty years on the third. Harris argues that Congress never intended the escalating sentencing scheme of section 924(c) to be applied to “subsequent” convictions arising from the same indictment. He reasons that the hаrsher punishment for the second and subsequent convictions provides a deterrent effect only if the criminal defendant is warned after his first conviction that the punishment will be harsher the next time. In this case, because Harris was sentenced at one time for the three bank robberies, he was never warned of the escalating punishment.
Harris faces an insurmountable obstacle in his theory of statutory construction: the text of the statute. The statute fails to make the distinction which Harris identifies. Instead, the statute unambiguously requires application of the escalating sentences, without regard to whether the defendant suffers the convictions at one proceeding or several. Harris argues that the statute is ambiguous and should be read tо provide a more lenient result. However, we rejected that argument in
United States v. Bennett,
III. Conclusion
Harris was not deprived of his right to counsel. He had several opportunities to be represented by counsel, but he rejected fоur lawyers. Nor did the district court abuse its discretion either in failing to grant a continuance so that Harris could obtain a fifth attorney, or in failing to grant a mistrial after his outburst. Also, the forty-five year sentence did not violate section 924(c). That statute unambiguously provides for escalating sentences in the ease of subsequent convictions for using a firearm to commit a crime of violence. The district court is
AFFIRMED.
