The United States appeals from the district court’s dismissal of the Fifth Superseding Indictment in this case. The government contends that the district court erred in concluding that the facts of this case warranted a presumption that the Fifth Superseding Indictment resulted from prosecutorial vindictiveness. We hold that no such presumption of vindictiveness was proper, but we remand' for the district court to make findings as to whether the Fifth Superseding Indictment was the result of actual vindictiveness.
Javado Barner was first indicted in this case on February 12, 2002. On May 13, 2002, Barner filed a motion to dismiss or redact the indictment. On May 16, 2002, Barner’s trial counsel moved to withdraw from representing Barner. On May 31, 2002, the magistrate judge granted trial counsel’s motion to withdraw. On that same day, substitute counsel was appointed.
A Fourth Superseding Indictment was returned against Barner on June 12, 2002. Count 1 of that indictment charged Barner and others with a conspiracy to possess cocaine, marijuana, and ecstasy with intent to distribute them and alleged that the defendants had obtained the narcotics by robbing people they thought were drug dealers. Barner was also charged with conspiracy to possess firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense (Count 2); possession of 500 grams or more of cocaine with intent to distribute it (Count 3); possession of firearms in furtherance of the drug trafficking crimes alleged in Count 3 (Count 4); four counts of using and carrying firearms in furtherance of the particular drug trafficking conspiracy charged in Count 1 (Counts 5-8); and possession of 30,000 pills of ecstasy with intent to distribute them (Count 9).
On July 12, 2002, Barner pleaded guilty to Counts 1 and 6, in return for which the government agreed to seek dismissal of the remaining counts and to recommend a sentence of 144 months’ imprisonment. All the other co-defendants also pleaded guilty and received sentences ranging from 57 months to 18 years, according to their respective culpability and cooperation, as assessed by the prosecutors.
However, rather than proceeding to sentencing under the plea agreement, Barner moved to withdraw his plea agreement on December 4, 2002, on the ground that he had received ineffective assistance of counsel, 1 and the court granted his motion on February 18, 2003.
*1313 On February 21, 2003, Barner’s new counsel filed a motion for leave to file additional pre-trial motions. On March 5, 2003, the district court gave Barner’s trial counsel ten days to file additional pre-trial motions.
On March 4, 2003, Barner’s counsel filed several motions, including a motion to dismiss counts and to redact the indictment, a motion to suppress certain statements, and a motion to dismiss three of the four remaining gun counts (Counts 5-8) because they all related to the single conspiracy charged in Count 1 and were therefore multiplicitous.
On July 18, 2003, Barner’s counsel filed a motion to dismiss the indictment based upon prosecutorial misconduct. 2 Barner alleged that the government had used perjured testimony before the grand jury. He requested a copy of the grand jury transcripts. In reply, the government emphasized that at the earlier suppression hearing, the government witness had admitted that he mistakenly testified before the grand jury about Barner’s involvement in one of the counts.
On September 26, 2003, the government moved to dismiss Counts 3 and 4 because it became clear that Barner was not present during the crimes alleged. The district court granted the government’s motion on the same day.
On October 17, 2003, the magistrate judge recommended granting Barner’s motion to dismiss three of the four gun counts for multiplicity; the government did not object to the recommendation, and the district court adopted it and dismissed the counts.
On February 4, 2004, the district court denied Barner’s motions to suppress and to dismiss the indictment based upon pros-ecutorial misconduct. As to the misconduct motion, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, finding that: (1) while the witness had made a mistake in his grand jury testimony, there was no evidence the witness knowingly provided false testimony; (2) there was no evidence that the prosecutor knew the witness had made a misstatement before the grand jury; and (3) once the government discovered the mistake, it moved to dismiss Counts 3 and 4 of the indictment (as well as overt act six of Count 1).
At about this same time, the district court set the case for trial on March 8, 2004. On February 9, 2004, the government sought a two-week continuance until March 22, 2004, stating that it needed the time to secure the presence of out-of-state witnesses. The district court continued the trial to March 29, 2004, but stated that it would not entertain any further continuance motions.
On March 17, 2004, the government obtained a Fifth Superseding Indictment against Barner, the only remaining defendant. In addition to the old drug trafficking conspiracy and ecstasy counts (now Counts 1 and 10), the new indictment added four Hobbs Act robbery counts based on the same robberies alleged in the old conspiracy count (now Counts 2, 4, 6 and 8), and four counts of using firearms in connection with a crime of violence (now Counts 3, 5, 7, and. 9). Each of the firearms counts was alleged in connection with one of the Hobbs Act counts.
Barner moved to dismiss the Fifth Superseding Indictment on the ground that it *1314 was the result of prosecutorial vindictiveness. On May 19, 2004, the magistrate judge recommended that Barner’s motion be denied. The magistrate judge found there was no evidence of actual vindictiveness. The magistrate judge also concluded that the facts did not trigger a presumption of vindictiveness and that, even if the presumption applied, the government rebutted it by showing that the Fifth Superseding Indictment reflected a decision to correct a mistake in the preceding indictment.
After conducting a hearing, the district court made no finding of actual vindictiveness, but determined that there should be a presumption of vindictiveness for the following reasons. First, the threshold conditions for such a presumption existed: Barner had exercised legal rights to withdraw his guilty plea and to challenge several counts of the indictment for multiplicity, and the prosecutor had subsequently increased the charges and the punishment for which Barner stood in jeopardy. Second, after obtaining a continuance for the avowed purpose of securing witnesses for trial, the government in fact used the additional time to obtain the new indictment. Third, the increased charges were not made in the context of plea bargaining, since the government made no plea offer to Barner between the time the charges in the Fourth Indictment were dismissed and the return of the Fifth Superseding Indictment and did not inform Barner that he would be reindicted. Fourth, Barner’s co-defendants, who pleaded guilty, received far lower sentences than the sentence Bar-ner would receive were he convicted on all the charges of the Fifth Superseding Indictment. In particular, the district court remarked that the ringleader and most culpable defendant, Johnathan Dale, had pleaded guilty to various charges of the Fourth Superseding Indictment and had been sentenced to 18 years’ imprisonment. In contrast, the court calculated Barner’s potential sentence under the Fifth Superseding Indictment at 103 years. Fifth, the district court compared Barner’s potential sentence under the new indictment to his potential sentence under the old indictment after the multiplicitous, counts had been dismissed, which it calculated at 12 years, rather than comparing all the prison time that the Fourth Superseding Indictment had originally charged, 3 which the parties stated at the hearing would have been either something in excess of 107 years (according to the prosecutor) or 87 years (according to Barner). Sixth, the court compared the potential sentence under the new indictment to what Barner would have received under the plea bargain he rejected, which was 12 years. Based on these factors, the court concluded that there was a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness in the case. 4
The district court dismissed the Fifth Superseding Indictment and ordered that Barner stand trial on the Fourth Superseding Indictment, minus the multiplic-itous counts.
The government appeals the dismissal of the Fifth Superseding Indictment, arguing that the law does not permit a presumption of vindictiveness in the circumstances *1315 of this case and that there was no evidence of actual vindictiveness.
I.
Although this Court has not explicitly determined the standard of review in prosecutorial vindictiveness cases, “[t]he dismissal of an indictment on the ground of prosecutorial misconduct is a discretionary call; we therefore review the court’s action for an abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Jordan,
II.
“A prosecutor may seek a superseding indictment at any time prior to a trial on the merits,”
United States v. Cole,
A prosecutor’s decision to seek heightened charges after a defendant suc
*1316
cessfully appeals his conviction for the same conduct is presumed to be vindictive. In
Blackledge v. Perry,
While a prosecutor’s decision to seek heightened charges after a successful
post-trial
appeal is enough to invoke a presumption of vindictiveness, “proof of a prosecutorial decision to increase charges after a defendant has exercised a legal right does not alone give rise to a presumption in the
pretrial
context.”
United States v. Miller,
First, before trial the defendant may not have actually exercised a protected right. In
Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
But in
United States v. Goodwin,
Even though no presumption of vindictiveness applied in
Goodwin,
the Court explicitly left open the possibility that the defendant could prove actual vindictiveness in a pre-trial situation, without the help of a presumption, and that this would establish a due process violation.
Id.
at 384,
A.
The government contends that
Goodwin
set forth a categorical rule that the presumption of vindictiveness does not apply to a prosecutor’s decision to add charges based on the defendant’s pre-trial exercise of rights.
Goodwin
does indeed distinguish between pre- and post-trial exercise of rights, reasoning that aspects of the pre-trial situation make vindictiveness less likely and therefore militate against use of a presumption of vindictiveness. Although those same factors will be present in other pre-trial cases, nothing in the language or rationale of
Goodwin
rules out the possibility that a case could present additional factors that would make it appropriate to use the presumption in a pre-trial setting. Most courts have not read
Goodwin
as propounding a categorical rule against a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness in the pre-trial setting; instead, they have interpreted it as simply directing the courts to evaluate the “realistic likelihood of vindictiveness” in a particular factual situation, including a pre-trial situation, and to determine whether any facts make a presumption of vindictiveness proper.
E.g., Wilson,
This court has neither adopted nor rejected a per se rule that the presumption of vindictiveness cannot apply in a pre-trial setting. In Mays we discussed Goodwin’s analysis of the reasons against applying the presumption in pre-trial settings:
The Goodwin court was reluctant to invoke a presumption of vindictiveness in the pre-trial context, inasmuch as it might inflexibly fetter the prosecutor’s discretion. The Court recognized that acquisition of additional information or an increased appreciation of the facts previously available to the state might be an inducement to enhance the charges.457 U.S. at 381 ,102 S.Ct. at 2493 ,73 L.Ed.2d at 85 (1982). The Goodwin decision reaffirmed the prose-cutorial discretion recognized in Borden-kircher, supra, and functioned to remove the affirmative defense of vindictive prosecution in “pre-trial skirmishes between defense counsel and prosecution.” United States v. Mauricio,685 F.2d 143 , 147 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,459 U.S. 1074 ,103 S.Ct. 498 ,74 L.Ed.2d 638 (1982).
It is not necessary for us to decide today whether the presumption can ever arise in a pre-trial setting, because even assuming compelling facts could justify a presumption in a pre-trial setting, such facts would have to form a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness,
Goodwin,
B.
We must first determine whether Barner’s exercise of pre-trial rights was
*1319
followed by charges of increased severity. Barner exercised protected rights when he successfully challenged the multiplicitous counts, and shortly after the dismissal the government obtained new charges. The government does not dispute that there was a causal connection between the dismissal and the new indictment. However, the government contends that it had a legitimate interest in seeking to recharge the conduct that formed the basis of the dismissed counts. The prosecutor said at the hearing before the district court, “What the government has done that’s different is [the magistrate judge] said the gun counts can’t refer back to conspiracy. It’s got to be linked to a crime of violence. So I addressed that by putting in the crimes of violence.” The government’s attempt to obtain a new indictment that would charge the conduct correctly is analogous to conduct we held permissible in
United, States v. Taylor,
[T]he district court correctly concluded that the prosecutor’s motivation for indicting Taylor on additional charges was to secure a conviction and sentence commensurate with his assessment of Taylor’s criminal conduct and not to penalize him for taking an appeal.
Id.
at 1514.
Accord Krezdom,
Barner also mentions the withdrawal of his guilty plea as an exercise of rights that preceded the new charges. However, this change of plea occurred more than a year before the government obtained the Fifth Superseding Indictment and nothing indicates that there was any causal relationship between the withdrawal of guilty plea and the new indictment. Even if there were such a relationship, in
Bordenkircher,
the prosecutor explicitly obtained a new indictment because the defendant refused to plead guilty, and the Supreme Court held that this did not violate due process.
Barner’s brief also makes passing references to the “contentious history of this case,” Barner brief at p. 25, and lists his various pre-trial motions, including his motion to dismiss based upon prosecutorial misconduct for using perjured testimoify before the grand jury, id. at 21-22. The mere fact that a defendant has made pretrial motions is not sufficient to raise a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness, as Goodwin explained:
*1320 [A] defendant before trial is expected to invoke procedural rights that inevitably impose some “burden” on the prosecutor. Defense counsel routinely file pretrial motions to suppress evidence; to challenge the sufficiency and form of an indictment; to plead an affirmative defense; to request psychiatric services; to obtain access to government files; to be tried by jury. It is unrealistic to assume that a prosecutor’s probable response to such motions is to seek to penalize and to deter. The invocation of procedural rights is an integral part of the adversary process in which our criminal justice system operates.
Barner has adduced no special facts that would show that the pre-trial history of this case was so caustic that it could be expected to cause the prosecutor to behave improperly. In ruling on the prosecutorial misconduct motion, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s finding that Barner had not shown either that the grand jury testimony was perjured rather than mistaken or that the prosecutor had known of the mistake at the time of the testimony. Since Barner did not prevail on this motion, the government had no obvious reason for vindictive retribution.
Barner has not demonstrated that there was anything sufficiently unusual in the pretrial motions history of this case to distinguish it from Goodwin. Thus, assuming a presumption could arise in the pre-trial context, in addition to the threshold showing of exercise of rights followed by augmentation of charges, Barner would have to identify other factors that would raise a realistic likelihood of vindictiveness.
C.
The factors on which the district court relied were not legally cognizable evidence of vindictiveness. First, the district court in this case relied on comparisons between the punishment Barner faced in the Fifth Superseding Indictment and punishments offered and imposed pursuant to plea bargains, whereas Bordenkircher and Goodwin recognize such disparities as inherent in the plea-bargaining system. Reliance on this factor is therefore legal error.
The district court compared Barner’s sentence under the initial guilty plea to the much greater possible sentence were he to be convicted on all counts of the Fifth Superseding Indictment. This comparison cannot support the presumption, for it is commonplace that a defendant can expect to get a more favorable sentence from a plea bargain than from proceeding to trial and losing; were it otherwise, few defendants would forego their right to a trial.
Bordenkircher
expressly approved of the process of plea bargaining, with the prosecutor entitled to offer a shorter sentence in return for a plea or to threaten a longer sentence if the defendant goes to trial.
Similarly, the district court compared the sentences of Barner’s co-defendants who plea-bargained as against Barner’s *1321 possible sentence if he lost at trial. Again, the co-defendants who pleaded could expect to get favorable treatment from pleading, and this does not support a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness. The prosecutor stated at the hearing before the district court that the plea agreement which Barner entered and then rejected was comparable to the pleas offered the co-defendants who in fact pleaded and were sentenced in accordance with those agreements. Barner rejected the plea agreement because he wanted to go to trial, and his attorney was not authorized to enter another plea agreement. He is not now entitled to go to trial with some sort of assurance that if he loses he will not receive a longer sentence than those of his co-defendants who pleaded. The prosecutor stated at the district court hearing that if co-defendant Dale had gone to trial instead of pleading, he would have faced a sentence of 182 years.
The district court also erred in comparing Barner’s possible sentence under the Fifth Superseding Indictment to the sentence he could have received under the Fourth Indictment after the multiplicitous gun charges had been dismissed. This assumes the government had no right to recharge the conduct in a way that would survive a motion to dismiss; as we discussed at page 1577, supra, it was not improper for the government to try to correct its earlier error.
Another legal error resulted from the district court’s reliance on prosecutorial conduct which may in fact have been punishable for other reasons, but which does not support a presumption of vindictive motivation without some further evidence of causation. The district court relied on the fact that the government reindicted Barner during the time obtained by a continuance granted in order to secure its witnesses. Although the rule is that the government may seek a superseding indictment at any time before trial,
Cole,
The final legal error was the district court’s reliance on the fact that the government and Barner were not involved in plea negotiations. This factor cannot be the basis for a presumption of vindictiveness because the new charge in
Goodwin
also occurred “outside the context of plea negotiation,” but this fact did not convince the Supreme Court that a presumption of vindictiveness was appropriate there.
Since Barner has shown nothing more than his assertion of rights through pretrial motions, followed by augmentation of the charges against him, there are no compelling factors which would justify invoking the presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness. The district court erred in applying that presumption in this case.
*1322 III.
Goodwin
left open the possibility that a defendant not entitled to such a presumption might nevertheless be able to make a showing of actual vindictiveness.
Id.
at 384,
The district court’s dismissal of the Fifth Superseding Indictment is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Also on December 4, 2002, Barner's second trial counsel moved to withdraw. The district court granted the motion on December 9, 2002, and remanded the case to the magistrate judge for appointment of new counsel. On December 10, 2002, the magistrate judge *1313 appointed new counsel, Barner's third counsel.
. Barner signed the motion as the “Defendant, pro se.” Barner’s counsel signed the motion as "standby counsel.”
. Minus the counts the government dismissed voluntarily.
. In a footnote, the district court remarked on the "contentious history'' between the government and Barner, especially the fact that Bar-ner had filed numerous motions challenging the charges against him, including a motion alleging prosecutorial misconduct in failing to disclose perjury by a witness, of which Barner alleged the government was aware. However, the court did not say what weight, if any, it gave to this contentious history in deciding the presumption of vindictiveness would apply-
. There is some confusion among and within the other circuits regarding the proper standard of review for the ultimate question of whether to apply the presumption of vindictiveness.
Compare United States v. Wilson,
The disagreement is perhaps more apparent than real, for even under an abuse of discretion standard, errors of law receive no deference.
Little turns, however, on whether we label review of this particular question abuse of discretion or de novo, for an abuse-of-discretion standard does not mean a mistake of law is beyond appellate correction. A district court by definition abuses its discretion when it makes an error of law.
Koon v. United States,
.
Goodwin
also stated that even when the presumption applies, it may be rebutted by objective evidence justifying the prosecutor's action.
. We of course express no view as to whether Barner’s conduct was properly charged under the Hobbs Act, since the question was never raised; Barner does not contend that he was charged without probable cause.
