Ewan Bryce, the defendant-appellant, appeals the district court’s resentencing following his initial conviction on two narcotics trafficking charges and successful appeal of one of these charges. On the defendant’s first appeal, this Court vacated one of the two charges for which defendant was convicted and remanded to the district court with general instructions that the defendant be resentenced. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the new sentence imposed by the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
In December 1997, a federal grand jury in Connecticut returned a two-count indictment charging the defendant with (i) conspiracy to distribute more than five kilo *252 grams of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (“Count 1”), and (ii) possession with intent to distribute and distribution of more than five kilograms of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (“Count 2”).
The defendant was released on bond and trial was scheduled to commence in mid-April, 1998. On March 15, 1998, a confidential informant, Jermaine Fitzpatrick (“Fitzpatrick”), who had assisted in the investigation of the case was murdered. The defendant’s drug trial went forward as scheduled and resulted in his conviction on both counts. In August 1998, the district court sentenced the defendant on each count to 124 months in prison followed by supervised release for five years, the sentences to run concurrently. The district court also ordered the defendant to pay a special assessment of $100 on each count.
The defendant appealed both counts of his conviction. In an opinion issued in August 1999, this Court affirmed the judgment on the conspiracy count, Count 1, reversed for insufficient evidence the judgment on the substantive count, Count 2, and remanded the case for resentencing.
See United States v. Bryce,
While defendant’s appeal of his two-count conviction was pending, he was indicted for murdering Fitzpatrick with intent to (i) prevent him from testifying at the drug trial, 18 U.S.C. § 1512(a)(1)(A), and (ii) retaliate against him for providing information to law enforcement officers, 18 U.S.C. § 1513(a)(1)(A). The murder case went to trial, with the defendant taking the stand during his trial. On the stand, Bryce admitted his involvement in cocaine trafficking (which he had denied during the drug case trial), but denied killing Fitzpatrick. The jury acquitted Bryce on the murder charge. Subsequently, pursuant to this Court’s August 24, 1999 decision, the defendant appeared before the district court judge for resentencing on the conviction stemming from the drug case trial.
Before resentencing, both sides submitted papers seeking a new sentence on the surviving count of conviction, Count 1. The government asked for a substantial increase in the sentence, arguing that the defendant killed Fitzpatrick to prevent him from testifying in the drug case brought by the government against the defendant. The defendant, on the other hand, sought a sentence reduction on the grounds that his testimony in the murder case entitled him to credit for acceptance of responsibility under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (the “Guidelines” or “U.S.S.G.”), and that he had suffered extraordinary emotional distress as a result of being charged with a capital offense he did not commit.
Neither side’s papers specifically addressed whether the new sentence on Count 1 could be altered if the sentences previously imposed on the two counts were not interrelated. Accordingly, a hearing was scheduled pending briefing on the issue. After the hearing, the district court sentenced the defendant de novo, and increased the offense level due to the district court judge’s finding that the defendant had murdered Fitzpatrick to thwart prosecution of his drug case. Upon resentenc-ing, the district court judge imposed the statutorily authorized maximum sentence of twenty years.
II. DISCUSSION
a. The Appellate Court’s Mandate
We review the district court’s decision
de novo, Irby v. New York City Transit
*253
Authority,
We find the defendant’s interpretation of this Court’s mandate, although plausible, to be unpersuasive. The mandate rule “compels compliance on remand with the dictates of the superior court and foreclose relitigation of issues expressly or
impliedly
decided by the appellate court.”
United States v. Zvi,
Our mandate was open. The defendant argues nevertheless that we were obliged to limit the scope of our mandate as to Count I because that count was untouched by the appellate court and because the two sentences were not interrelated. In support of this proposition, the defendant cites
United States v. Pisani,
In
Pisani,
this Court refused to remand the case for resentencing because the vacated counts of conviction were unrelated to the count that survived.
Id.
at 75-76. We have acknowledged that
Pisani
remains good law under the Guidelines.
See, e.g., United States v. Vasquez,
The principle that a defendant is sentenced as he stands before the court derives partly from the Guidelines requirement that relevant conduct must be taken into account in setting a defendant’s Guidelines range. See U.S.S.G. § 1131.3(a). 1 Because intervening cireum- *254 stances that qualify as relevant conduct are not considered by the appellate court, it is the role of the sentencing court to weigh them on remand. Thus, in Guidelines eases the district court may enhance even interrelated sentences if the departure from the prior sentence is predicated on relevant conduct.
Here, the record is replete with facts that demonstrate that the district court assessed new evidence upon which it rested its decision to resentence the defendant
de novo.
At the time of the initial sentencing, the government had intimated without alleging that Bryce had killed a government witness, Jermaine Fitzpatrick (“Fitzpatrick”), in an attempt to prevent him from testifying. However, the government did not have the means of proving that the defendant had killed Fitzpatrick for that purpose, because the key witness to the murder did not come forward until after the first sentence. As a result of this development, the government was able to elicit new information concerning the defendant’s relevant conduct that supported a sentence increase under the Guidelines.
See United States v. Watts,
The defendant argues that because the facts regarding Fitzpartick’s murder existed before the first sentencing hearing, the district court should either have used this information during the first sentencing hearing or not at all. However, new evidence that clearly implicates a defendant in a crime can also be considered as the intervening circumstances that a judge must consider during resentencing, notwithstanding that the suspicion existed earlier. In this case, further investigation and court proceedings provided new facts regarding the defendant’s conduct which the district court properly determined to be relevant in accounting for defendant’s increased sentence. Because the district court was presented with new evidence that it was obliged to consider, we find that the present case falls outside the ambit of Pisani.
The defendant in
Pisani
also presented a double jeopardy argument, which we were not required to reach, because we invalidated the enhanced remand sentence on other grounds.
Pisani,
“The Double Jeopardy Clause generally prohibits courts from enhancing a defendant’s sentence once the defendant had developed a legitimate ‘expectation of finality in the original sentence.’ ”
United States v. Triestman,
It cannot be said that the resentencing in this case upset any expectation of finality to which Bryce was entitled. On the original appeal, Bryce sought reversal or vacatur of both offenses of conviction, arguing that (i) the convictions relied on insufficient evidence, (ii) the district court made erroneous evidentiary rulings, and (in) the government improperly excluded a juror for racially-motivated reasons. Appellate success on the latter two arguments would have resulted in a vacatur of the judgment and a retrial, after which (if convicted) Bryce would have been sentenced as he
then
stood before the court.
See Pearce,
As it happened, Bryce challenged his conviction and sentence on appeal and did so until the date of the resentencing. Because Bryce exposed himself to the risk of an outcome no different than what in fact happened, he had no expectation of finality and can make no claim that he was “given a second punishment in a proceeding initiated against his will.”
United States v. Coke,
b. Estoppel
We do not find defendant’s estop-pel argument persuasive. The defendant argues that the government was judicially estopped from seeking an increased sentence on remand. We find that the government was not estopped from seeking an increased sentence when it sought a rehearing after the initial appeal. In September 1999, the government sought rear-gument for this Circuit’s order reversing Count 2 of defendant’s conviction. The defendant claims that the government made it a condition of its request for rear-gument that it would have no impact on his sentence as to Count 1. Speaking to the delay of finalizing defendant’s sentence if granted a reargument, the government stated:
This delay will not prejudice the defendant in any significant way, given that the Court originally imposed concurrent sentences for each of the two counts of conviction. Because the Court of Appeals affirmed one of the two convictions, the reversal of the other one will only result in the elimination of one of the $100 special assessments; it should not result in a reduced sentence. This is particularly true given that, for the remaining count of the conviction, the defendant is subject to a ten year mandatory minimum.
Nothing contained in the statement remotely suggests a promise that the government would not seek an increased sentence if there were intervening circumstances bearing on the defendant’s criminality. In fact, as is patently clear, *256 the statement is silent on the government’s position regarding intervening circumstances bearing on the defendant’s criminality. As such, defendant’s rebanee thereon for its estoppel argument is misplaced.
c. The Speedy Trial Act and the Sixth Amendment
We hold that the in the present ease, the intervening period of twenty-three months from the time of defendant’s first appeal to the final sentencing hearing did not constitute an unreasonable delay under the Speedy Trial Act. Defendant argues that the delay in imposing his. final sentence violated his rights under the Speedy Trial Act and the Sixth Amendment. We find this argument to be without merit.
The Speedy Trial Act provides that a defendant shah be afforded a trial within seventy days of indictment, first appearance, or after remand from an appeal. 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1)
&
(e). The Act makes no mention of sentencing, and creates no right to a “speedy sentencing”. Courts, however, acknowledge that the Sixth Amendment guarantee to a speedy trial applies to sentencing.
See Pollard v. United States,
We find that defendant’s right to a speedy sentencing was not violated.
3
First, the Speedy Trial act, by its plain terms, does not apply to sentencing. Second, the delay in sentencing was not unreasonable “in light of the pecuhar circumstances of [this] case.” The defendant calculated the twenty-three month period from the day of this Circuit’s first opinion in this case. After that date, this Circuit entertained a rehearing motion by the government, the district court conducted a new sentencing hearing, and the district court held an additional hearing on the mandate issue. All of these proceedings required further briefing by the parties. Given that this Circuit has found delays in sentencing longer than twenty-three months reasonable, we find that the delay here was also reasonable.
See Tortorello,
d. Due Process
Finaby, we hold that, on remand, the district court did not violate the defendant’s due process rights by increasing his sentence after his successful appeal. Due process of law “requires that vindictiveness against a defendant for having successfully attacked his first conviction must play no part in the sentence he receives after a new trial.”
Pearce,
In the instant case, the district court’s increased sentence satisfied the standards, articulated in
Pearce
and refined by
Was-man,
that protect against vindictive sentencing. It is clear that, on remand, the district court predicated its increased sentence on events which occurred subsequent to the original sentencing proceeding. Here, as a result of a new witness coming forward after the original sentencing proceeding, the government was able to elicit information implicating the defendant in Fitzpatrick’s murder. The district court found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant murdered Fitzpatrick before the first sentencing hearing.
Was-man
clearly establishes that the “subsequent actions or events” required by
Pearce
to overcome a presumption of vindictiveness need not be actions undertaken by the defendant. In
Wasman,
the Supreme Court upheld a sentence after appeal that accounted for a felony conviction entered between the two sentencing hearings. The Supreme Court did so despite the defendant’s argument that the events of the intervening felony occurred before the first sentencing hearing.
Wasman,
In addition, the district court’s increased sentence did not violate the supervisory rules we set forth in
Coke.
In
Coke,
we held that because “the prospect of an increased sentence on retrial is sufficiently threatening to the assertion of defendants’ rights,” increased sentences should be strictly limited “to cases truly calling for it”.
Coke,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the new sentence imposed by the district court.
Notes
. Section 1B1.3 of the Guidelines defines "relevant conduct” to include:
(1)(A) all acts and omissions committed, aided, abetted, counseled, commanded, induced, procured, or wilfully caused by the defendant: and (B) in the case of jointly undertaken criminal activity ... all reasonably foreseeable acts and omissions of others in furtherance of the jointly undertaken criminal activity. U.S.S.G § lB1.3(a).
Any conduct that is "relevant” to the instant offense under § IB 1.3 must be "taken *254 into account in the determination of the offense level for the instant offense.” Section 1B1.3 uses mandatory language: The instant offense’s base offense level, specific offense characteristic, and adjustments all “shall be determined on the basis of” the conduct § 1B1.3 defines as relevant. U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a) (emphasis added).
. We express no view as to the soundness of the resentencing if on the original appeal Bryce had (i) not challenged the conspiracy count, or (ii) raised only challenges that would result (if successful) in reversals with prejudice. Cf. McClain v. United States, 676 F.2d 915, 918 (2d Cir.1982) (holding that in a case involving non-interlocking sentences “imposition of a higher term on resentencing would pose a more difficult double-jeopardy problem than does this case”).
. Also we note that prior to this appeal, the defendant never once objected to the delay in sentencing.
