The Government appeals from the dismissal of Herrera’s indictment. The court below held that the Government’s decision to proceed to trial on the indictment, in the face of Herrera’s willingness to accept the Government’s earlier offer to рermit a guilty plea to a lesser charge, constituted vindictive prosecution. We reverse.
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FACTS
On June 15, 1978, George Ralph Herrera and three co-defendants were indicted on ten counts of racketeering, conspiracy, and transportation оf stolen property. 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 1962(c), 1962(d), 2311, 2315. 1 All four defendants originally entered pleas of not guilty. After a number of continuances, a trial date was eventually set for October 23, 1979. By the time the date arrived, however, Herrera’s co-defendants had all changed their pleas to guilty pursuant to sealed plea agreements.
Herrera’s counsel began plea negotiations with the Government in October 1979, shortly before the scheduled trial date. On October 22, opposing counsel met in Phoenix, Arizona and tentatively agreed that Herrera would plead guilty to one felony count if he could be assured that he would not lose his California contractor’s license as a result. If it appeared that a felony conviction would result in Herrera’s losing his contractor’s license, the parties agreed that Herrera would plead guilty to a misdemeanor. Counsel for the Government subsequently determined that a felony conviction would cause Herrera to lose his license, and notified Herrera that a misdemeanor plеa would be acceptable. Believing that a plea agreement had been reached, the parties cancelled the trial set for the following day.
It is at this point that the parties’ dispute begins. Herrera contends that the Government agrеed to stipulate, pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(C), that Herrera would receive no fine and no jail time as a result of his misdemeanor plea. 2 The Government, in contrast, contends that it agreed at most to recommend no fine and no jail time. 3 Such a recommеndation would not have been binding on the trial court. Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(B).
On November 19, 1979, after it had become obvious that the parties disagreed as to the terms of the plea agreement, Herrera filed a motion to compel specific performance of what he believed the agreement to be. The court below denied the motion, apparently concluding that no plea agreement had been reached. 4 The following day, Herreras counsel telephoned counsel for the Government and stated that Herrera was willing to accept “the Government’s deal”; Herrera would plead guilty in exchange for the Government’s recommendation of probation. The Government replied by letter that in order to “protect against further misunderstandings” it would “respond in writing to any written plea proposals” Herrera might submit, and that “[ujnless a formal proposal is submitted, we anticipate proceeding to trial ... on January 22, 1980.” Herrera never submitted a written plea proposal.
On January 15, 1980, Herrera filed a new motion to compel specific performance of a *961 plea agreement. This time, Herrera attempted to enforce the agreement on the terms originally offered by the Government: a misdemeanor plea in exсhange for a recommendation of probation. In the alternative, Herrera moved to dismiss on the ground of prosecutorial delay. The court did not rule on Herrera’s motion for specific performance but, characterizing the Government’s conduct as “vindictive prosecution of an outrageous nature,” dismissed the indictment with prejudice. 5 The court denied the Government’s motion for reconsideration, and the Government brought this appeal.
II
VINDICTIVE PROSECUTION
In
North Carolina v. Pearce,
A defendant’s right to due process is violated whenever the Government “increases the severity of alleged charges in response to the exercise of constitutional or statutory rights.”
United States v. Burt,
When the defendant is given a heavier sentence or when the charges against him are increased in retaliation for the exercise of some right, the defendant has clearly been penalized for his action. Stated another way, had the defendant nоt chosen to exercise the right, the sentence or charge would have remained at its original level. We are unable to conclude that Herrera has been penalized within the intendment of the cited cases. Herrera was indicted only onсe, in June of 1978. After Herrera’s unsuccessful attempt to enforce his version of the plea agreement, the Government decided to try him on the original ten-count indictment. At no time had any of the charges against Herrera been dismissed, nor had the Governmеnt ever represented to Herrera that any charges would be dismissed. The Government thus did not “increas[e] the severity of alleged charges” against Herrera when it decided to proceed to trial. 6
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Herrera argues that when the Government offered to accept a misdemeanor plea, “the ‘ante’ had been reduced to misdemeanor level,” and the Government’s decision to try Herrera on the felony counts then “upp[ed] the ante,”
Blackledge v. Perry,
We find further support for this conclusion in
Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
As we see it, Herrera’s claim of Government wrongdoing is in the alternative: first, if a plea agreement was reached, the Government failed to carry out its part of the bargain; and second, if a pleа agreement was not reached, the Government discontinued plea negotiations and refused to permit Herrera to enter a guilty plea to a misdemeanor. 7
On the record before us, we do not reach the issue of whether there was a рlea agreement.
8
We note that one remedy for breach of a plea agreement is specific performance,
Santobello v. New York,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The charges stemmed from an alleged scheme to convert to the defendants’ own use sоme $5.5 million in union health insurance funds. Had Herrera been found guilty on all counts, he could have been sentenced to over fifty years in prison.
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(C) provides that the Government may, as part of a plea bargain, “agree that a specific sentеnce is the appropriate disposition of the case.” When such an agreement has been made the trial court may accept or reject the whole, but it may not accept the defendant’s guilty plea and impose a sentenсe greater than that agreed upon. Fed. R.Crim.P. 11(e)(2), (3).
. The Government asserts in its brief that it did not agree to make any recommendation if Herrera pled guilty to a misdemeanor. The court below found, however, that the Government “offered to grant the defendant the right to plead to a misdemeanor with a recommended sentence ... of probation.” This finding is not contradicted by any of the Government’s affidavits, nor did the Government object to it in open court.
. The court stated that it had a policy of not allowing the Government to agree to a sentence under Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(C). The court then held that Herrera had failed to prove that the Government violated a plea agreement. Finally, the court informed Herrera that he had the option “as I understand the [Government’s plea] offer, to plead to a misdemeanor with the Government’s recommendation of probation ... or proceed to trial on the felony counts as scheduled.”
. The court ruled that
So far as the Court knows, there have been no facts or chаnges of circumstances which would raise this case from the level of the probation misdemeanor that the Government originally evaluated it as, and the Government’s position now that they are going to proceed to a three-week trial on a multicount felony indictment with a defense counsel paid by the Government and some 30 to 40 witnesses from all over the country, as I understand, and possibly even from Europe, at Government expense, with a jury of 12 peopie plus alternates sitting for that period of time, to the extent of many, many thousands of dollars, can only be characterized by the Court as vindictive prosecution of an outrageous nature which the Court does not intend to put up with.
. We do not mean to suggest that a defendant may claim vindictive prosecution only when he has been resentenced or reindicted on heavier charges. There may be other factual settings in which a finding of vindictive prosecution would be justified. We simply hold that the Government’s decision to proceed to trial on an
*962
indictment, after offering to accept a guilty plea to a lesser charge, does not constitute vindictive prosecution because it does not increase the threat to the defendant in any way.
Cf. United States v. Ruesga-Martinez,
. At oral argument, counsel for Herrera asserted that the issue in this case was actually whether Herrera had been denied a speedy trial. During the course of the proceedings below, Herrerа filed two motions to dismiss for prosecutorial delay. The first such motion was denied on November 19, 1979, and the court below made no ruling on the second. We therefore conclude that the issue is not before us.
.
Compare Virgin Islands v. Scotland,
