ORDER
This mаtter comes on for consideration of Defendant McCullah’s petition for rehearing and the government’s petition for rehearing with en banc suggestion in
United States v. McCullah,
A.
We disagrеe with the dissent’s analysis of the aggravating factors and reject the government’s argument that
Flores
is on point and that the factors do not overlap in this case.
Flores
involved multiple murders — the defendant personally killed one victim and hired others to kill the other two victims. For two of the victims, the jury found multiple (n)(l) aggravating factors, namely that the defendant “intentionally killed the victims” and that the defendant “intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victims be killed or that lethal force be employed against the victims.”
Flores,
The Fifth Circuit found that these factors were not duplicative under the facts in Flores stating:
[Ijntentionally killing and intentionally engaging in conduct intending that the victim be killed are not necessarily identical conduct. A defendant who personally murders a victim has a different mental state than one who pays others to kill. Similarly, a defendant who personally kills and hires others to assist him during the killing has more than one blameworthy intention. Although the ultimate goal is the same— the victim’s death — the defendant’s intentions as to how he will achieve that goal are not singular. It is not irrational for Congress to decide that a defendant with such a dual intent should be treated as more deserving of death than a defendant with only one.
Id.
At a glance it may seem that the same reasoning might apply to Defendant MeCullah, but a closer examination of the facts of
Flores
reveals the crucial distinctions. In
Flores,
the defendant attempted to have one of the victims killed on prior occasions before finally succeeding.
Id.
at 1351-52. These prior attempts supported the “engaging in conduct intending that the victims be killed” aggravating factor, which was separate and distinct from the “intentional killing” factor which pertained to the actual murder. Similarly, the other victim was tracked down by the defendant and his henchmen and interrogated by one of the defendant’s accomplices in the defendant’s armed presence. Then the defendant ordered the victim away, but evidently changed his mind and decided to kill him, shooting him numerous times. The jury may have found that the tracking down and the armed interrоgation by the accomplice supported the lethal conduct aggravating factor, separate from the actual shooting which supported the intentional killing factor. The Fifth Circuit’s reasoning endorses this
*1138
idea, stating “a defendant who personally kills and hires others to assist him during the killing has more than one blameworthy intention.”
Flores,
By contrast, the aggravating factors alleged in this case, which are different than those in Flores, overlapped because they were predicated upon the same acts by McCullah — namely, that McCullah identified the victim and drove him to the ambush site. First, the jury found as aggravating factors that McCullah “intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victim be killed or that lethal force be employed against the victim, which resulted in the death of the victim” and that McCullah “committed the offenses as to which he is charged in the indictment.” One of the offenses charged in the indictment was that McCullah “did intentionally kill an individual, or did intentionally counsel, command, induce, procure, or cause the killing of an individual, and such killing did result or happen.” The latter aggravating factor — “committed the offenses ... ”— necessarily includes the acts which support the first aggravating factor, which consisted primarily of driving the victim to the ambush site. The latter factor may be broader than the former, but the fact remains that the former is subsumed by the latter and thus is redundant.
Second, the jury in this case found as an aggravating factor that McCullah “intentionally engaged in conduct which he knows creates a grave risk of death and that such death results.” This factor largely duplicates the first aggravating factor, “intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victim be killed.... ” The same underlying conduct by McCullah — again the act of driving the victim to the ambush site — is used to support both factors.
Additionally, although ingenious, the government never suggested that “scouting the intended victim and rehearsing the plan ... and actually bringing the particular murder victim to the planned murder site,” were separate acts supporting the various aggravators. See Dissent at 1142. Driving the victim to the murder site (intentionally engaging in conduct intending the victim be killed) and driving the victim to the murder site (engaging in conduct which creates a grave risk of death) is still the same conduct. Likewise, driving the victim to the murder site (intentionally engaging in conduct intending the victim be killed) and driving the victim to the murder site (intentionally killing in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise) overlap. The same act can be described several ways, but it is still the same act.
As to the effect of duplicative factors, the dissent acknowledges that
Lowenfield,
It should also be noted that
Flores,
which the dissent endorses, recognized the invalidity of duplicative factors, relying upon
Randolph v. State,
B.
As to the Fulminante issue, unless we are prepared to elevate “form over substance,” the defense adequately alerted the trial court to the problem basеd upon its allegation of “outrageous,” i.e. improper, governmental conduct. This is a capital case— failure to say the “magic words” should not result in the affirmance of a death sentence which might not otherwise have been imposed.
On the merits, the government ignores the clear language of Fulminante and suggests that the key to that case is “the imminency of the threat of physical injury and the lack of means to avoid physical harm.” Aplee. Reh’g Petition at 14. However, the Supreme Court language is to the contrary:
Our cases have made clear that a finding of coercion need not depend upon actual violence by a government agent; a credible threat is sufficient. As we have said, “cоercion can be mental as well as physical, and ... the blood of the accused is not the only hallmark of an unconstitutional inquisition.”
Fulminante,
It is ordered as follows:
The defendant’s petition for rehearing is denied.
The government’s petition for rehearing is dеnied. In accordance with Fed.R.App.P. 35(b) the government’s suggestion for rehearing en banc was transmitted to all of the judges of the court who are in regular active service and a vote on the suggestion was taken. The government’s suggestion for rehearing en banc is denied for want of a majority. See Fed.R.App.P. 35(a).
STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, TACHA, BALDOCK, BRORBY, EBEL and MURPHY, JJ., voted to grant rehearing en banc.
STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting from the denial of the Petition for Rehearing filed by the United States and the denial of rehearing en banc.
The government has filed a petition for rehearing, with en banc suggestion, from our panel opinion in
United States v. McCullah,
BACKGROUND
Appellant John Javilo McCullah was convicted of committing a murder in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848(e), and he was sentenced to death following a bifurcated рenalty hearing. I summarize from the panel opinion the basic facts relevant to this petition.
Joseph “Eddie” Arvizu was the leader of a large California-based cocaine and marijuana trafficking operation. When a pick-up truck containing 100 kilograms of cocaine was stolen from one of the main distributors of the Arvizu organization, members of the organization determined to exact revenge by murdering the suspected thief, Avery Rogers. Mr. McCullah was enlisted to help kidnap and murder Mr. Rogers. The plan required Mr. McCullah to lure Mr. Rogers to an ambush site. The plan went awry, however, when Mr. Rogers refused to accompany Mr. McCullah, and Mr. McCullah brought one of Mr. Rogers’ employees, Jewell Leon Collins, to the ambush site where he was murdered.
Several months after this murder, a former member of the Arvizu organization, Gabriel Lozano, began cooperating with the government as an informant. On November 13, 1991, Mr. Lozano and Mr. McCullah had a conversation, secretly taped by Mr. Lozano, in which Mr. McCullah made inculpatory statements about the Collins murder. During this conversation, Mr. Lozano told Mr. McCullah that the Arvizu organization was planning to kill him because of the mix-up in the Collins murder, but offered to intercede on Mr. McCullah’s behalf if he — Mr. McCullah — would tell the truth concerning what happened in connection with that murder.
The panel opinion held that Mr. McCullah’s statements were coerced: “the threat and offer of protection by Mr. Lozano clearly coerced Mr. McCullah’s statements.”
McCullah,
The panel opinion also held that the court erred in submitting duplicative and cumulative aggravating factors to the jury. The district court submitted to the jury the following aggravating factors: (1) the 21 U.S.C. § 848(n)(1)(C) statutory aggravating factor that Mr. McCullah “intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victim be killed or that lethal force be employed against the victim, which resulted in the death of the victim;” (2) the § 848(n)(1)(D) statutory aggravating factor that Mr. McCullah “intentionally engaged in conduct which — (i) the defendant knew would create a grave risk of death to a person, other than one of the participants in the offense; and (ii) resulted in the death of the victim;” and (3) the non-statutory aggravating factor that Mr. McCullah “committed the offenses as to which he is charged in the indictment.”
1
The panel opinion found that § 848(n)(1)(C) and the non-statutory aggravating factor “substantially overlap with one another.”
McCullah,
The government’s petition argues that the panel’s decision on the duplicative aggravating factors and on the coerced statements is wrong.
DISCUSSION
The government’s argument is that: (1) the aggravating factors do not actually over
*1141
lap as applied to Mr. McCullah’s conduct and mental state, and even if they conceptually overlap to some degree, such conceptual overlap is permissible under
Lowenfield v. Phelps,
1. Are the Aggravating Factors Duplicative?
The government argues that Mr. McCullah, along with two of his codefendants, “engaged in various preparatory activities which, the jury evidently found, were intended to create a grave risk of death to an innocent person” under § 848(n)(l)(D), but that Mr. McCullah alone “played a decisive role in the series of events that directly culminated in Collins’ death.” Appellee’s Pet. for Reh’g at 8-9. 3 Among these latter activities were Mr. McCullah’s identification of Collins and his transportation of Collins to the murder site, from which conduct, the government argues, the jury evidently concluded that Mr. McCullah intentionally engaged in conduсt intending that the victim be killed or that lethal force be used under § 848(n)(l)(C). Thus, the two statutory aggravating factors addressed different conduct by Mr. McCullah and different mental states.
Similarly, the government argues there was no overlap in the district court’s submission of the (n)(l)(C) statutory aggravator— intentionally engaging in conduct intending that the victim be killed — along with the non-statutory aggravator that he committed the offenses charged in the indictment. The government argues that the latter non-statutory aggravating factor permits the jury to consider all the circumstances surrounding the offense, not just the narrow issue of Mr. MeCullah’s mental state when the murder was committed. The government therefore contеnds it is much broader than the (n)(l)(C) intent to kill statutory aggravating circumstance.
The government urges us to adopt the reasoning of the Fifth Circuit in
Flores.
In
Flores,
the defendant personally murdered one victim, and hired others to murder two other victims. With respect to two of the murders, the jury found that the defendant intentionally killed the victims under § 848(n)(1)(A), and that he “intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victims be killed or that lethal force be employed against the victims, which resulted in the death of the victims” under § 848(n)(1)(C).
Flores,
[Ijntentionally killing and intentionally engaging in conduct intending that the victim be killed are not necessarily identical conduct. A defendant who personally murders a victim has a different mental state than one who pays others to kill. Similar *1142 ly, a defendant who personally kills and hires others to assist him during the killing has more than one blameworthy intention. Although the ultimate goal is the same— the victim’s death — the defendant’s intentions as to how he will achieve that goal are not singular. It is not irrational for Congress to decide that a defendant with such dual intent should be treated as more deserving of death than a defendant with only one.
Id.
In my view, the same reasoning can apply to the two statutory aggravators presented to the jury in this case. Intentionally engaging in conduct intending that the victim be killed and intentionally engaging in conduct which creates a grave risk of death are not necessarily identical conduct nor do they necessarily involve the same mental state. Engaging in preparatory activities such as scouting the intended victim and rehearsing the plan which the defendant anticipates will result in the victim’s death, and actually bringing the particular murder victim to the planned murder site and turning
him over to
his killer, are not identical conduct nor do they involve identical intent, “[although the ultimate goal is the same.” Id.;
4
see also, e.g., Larzelere v. State,
For similar reasons, I disagree with the panel opinion’s conclusion that the district court erred in submitting to the jury both the statutory aggravating circumstance that Mr. McCullah “intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victim be killed,” § 848(n)(l)(C), and the non-statutory aggravating factor that Mr. McCullah “committed the offenses as to which he is charged in the indictment.” As the government points out, Mr. McCullah was charged with multiple offenses, one of which was the commission of murder. The jury was entitled to consider the whole circumstance of the crime, which is what the non-statutory aggravator was intended to permit it to do.
See Tuilaepa v. California,
— U.S. -, -,
2. If the Aggravating Factors are Partiаlly or Wholly Duplicative, does that Invalidate the Sentence?
The government argues that, even if the aggravators presented to the jury partially or wholly overlapped, no Eighth Amendment violation, or other violation of federal law, occurred. I agree with the government that Lowenfield, while not directly addressing this argument, certainly supports it.
In
Lowenfield,
the defendant was found guilty of three counts of first-degree murder, an essential element of which was that he intended “ ‘to kill or inflict great bodily harm
*1143
on more than one person.’ ”
Lowenfield,
The Supreme Court concluded that such duplication did not violate the Eighth Amendment, observing that “[t]he use of ‘aggravating circumstances’ is not an end in itself, but a means of genuinely narrowing the class of death-eligible persons and thereby channeling the jury’s discretion.”
Id.
at 244,
Mr. McCullah argues that
Lowenfield
is inapplicable because it did not involve allegedly duplicative aggravators in a weighing sentencing scheme, whereby the jury weighs the aggravating and mitigating circumstances, as the jury must in sentencing under § 848. He argues that
Stringer v. Black,
Stringer
involved the effect of an
invalid
aggravating factor on a sentence imposed in a weighing jurisdiction. The Court acknowledged that “the difference between a weighing State and a nonweighing State is not one of ‘semantics,’ ... but of critical importance.”
Id.
at 231-32,
In this case, there is no
invalid
factor.
Lowenfield
makes that clear. Thus, the jury was not permitted to consider something which it should not have considered at all. Rather, there are aggravating factors which arguably overlap to some degree.
Stringer
does not address the issue of duplicative or overlapping aggravators.
See Johnson v. Singletary,
I therefore agree with the Fifth Circuit in Flores that, while the four statutory aggravating factors in § 848(n)(l) all address the defendant’s mental state, it is not necessarily unconstitutiоnal or otherwise a violation of the statute to submit two of them to a jury imposing sentence on a defendant, because they can involve different conduct and mental states, as they did in this case. They are not inherently and always duplicative. And even if they are duplicative, duplicative aggravators are not necessarily invalid aggra *1144 vators requiring reversal of the sentence under Stringer.
Finally, even assuming the duplication was error, I agree with the Eleventh Circuit’s observation in
United States v. Chandler,
In carefully weighing the various factors at issue in this case, you are called upon to make a unique, individualized judgment about the appropriateness of sentencing the defendant to death. This is not a mechanical process, neither is it determined by raw numbers. You do not simply count factors. Instead, you must consider the quality of the factors.
In short, what is called for in weighing the various factors is not mathematical skills, but your careful, considered and mature judgment. At this final, weighing stage in the process, you are not called upon simply to find relevant factors. You are called upon to decide whether the defendant shall live or die.
R. Vol. 39 at 346;
see also Bradley,
3. Mr. McCullah’s Confession:
With respect to the coerced confession issue, Mr. McCullah argues that the highly fact-bound nature of that issue makes it a poor candidate for en banc review. The gov
*1145
ernment argues the panel opinion erred in concluding that Mr. McCullah’s statements to Mr. Lozano were involuntary under
Arizona v. Fulminante,
The panel opinion held that Mr. McCullah raised this issue “adequately, if ineloquently, ... by [his] allegation of ‘outrageous’ conduct.”
McCullah,
Furthermore, the district court’s order on Mr. McCullah’s motion to suppress, or prevent the admission of, evidence relating to the confession makes it clear that the issue of coercion was not raised below. The panel opinion justified its consideration of this issue in part because “[t]he trial court treated the two grounds [intoxication and governmental conduct] as distinct and addressed them separately.” Id. However, as with Mr. McCullah’s pleadings, nowhere did the court cite Fulminante or discuss any coercion resulting from Mr. Lozano’s statements. It also addressed the “outrageous” conduct claim only in very general terms:
[T]he court finds nothing improper about the government’s conduct in the method or means used in obtaining these statements from these defendants. Wide latitude is given to the government in investigating criminals and bringing them to justice. Certainly, the government agents’ conduct in obtaining these statements is not so egregious or outrageous as to rise to the level of a due process claim.
R. Vol. 3, Tab 390, at 6-7 (Order) (citations omitted).
Indeed, a critical factual issue in any analysis of the voluntariness of Mr. McCullah’s confession is what exactly he said in his taped conversation with Mr. Lozano, and what Mr. Lozano said to him. The district court listened to the tapes, which were not played for the jury, but made no specific findings as to the content of the conversation, other than that
they [Mr. Lozano and Mr. McCullah] rode around in the Porsche and talked about the other defendants, drug dealings, and the killing in Oklahoma which are the subjects of the indictment in this case. Lozano told defendant McCullah that he had heard that defendant McCullah was in trouble with defendant Eddie Arvizu because he, defendant McCullah, had botched the Oklahoma killing by killing the wrong person. Defendant McCullah indicated that he would go back to Oklahoma and kill the right person by himself.
Id. at 4. This further highlights the fact that the district court did not have before it the issue of whether Mr. McCullah’s confession was coerced because of Mr. Lozano’s threats and promises. The court made no findings relevant to that issue.
Finally, I have supplemented the record on appeal with the actual tapes of the conversation between Mr. Lozano and Mr. McCullah. 6 *1146 My review of the tapes explains why the issue of coercion was never raised below: the tapes simply fail to support the argument that Mr. McCullah’s confession was coerced.
For the foregoing reasons, I would grant the government’s petition for rehearing in this case and AFFIRM the death sentence imposed by the jury.
Notes
. Mr. McCullah was indicted on charges of: (1) committing murder in furtherance of a continuing criminal enterprise; (2) conspiring to possess with intent to distribute and conspiring to distribute in excess of five kilograms of cocaine and 100 kilograms of marijuana; (3) conspiring to travel and traveling in interstate commerce with intent that a murder-for-hire be committed.
. Mr. McCullah also argues that, because of intervening legislation which he believes supersedes § 848 and its sentencing scheme, the panel's ruling will have little impact on subsequent cases. He does concede that the issue is nonеtheless "of intense interest to those immediately involved with this case." Appellant’s Resp. to Gov’t’s Pet. for Reh’g at 2-3. Any error in our panel opinion makes this case appropriate for en banc review.
. In closing arguments to the jury in the penalty phase of the trial, the state described Mr. McCullah’s activities the day before the murder when he met with and took a test drive with the intended victim, Mr. Rogers, as well as his conduct in taking the actual victim, Mr. Collins, to the murder site. "This man, this man right here, John Javilo McCullah, more than any other, is responsible for the death of Jewell Leon Collins because he is the only one that knew of a coming death and could have stopped it.” R. Vol. 39 at 302.
. Although there were multiple victims in
Flores,
the jury found, with respect to two of the victims, that the defendant intentionally killed under § 848(n)(1)(A) and that he intentionally engaged in conduct intending that the victims be killed under § 848(n)(1)(C).
Flores,
. Ordinarily, when the submission of an aggravating factor to the jury is determined to be error, either appellate reweighing of the aggravating and mitigating factors or a harmless error analysis may permit the appellate court to affirm the sentence.
See Clemons v. Mississippi,
(3) The court shall affirm the sentence if it determines that—
(A) the sentence of death was not imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor; and
(B) the information supports the special finding of the existence of every aggravating factor upon which the sentence was based, together with, or the failure to find, any mitigating factors set forth or allowed in this section.
in all other cases the court shall remand the case for reconsideration under this section. The court of appeals shall state in writing the reasons for its disposition of the review of the sentence.
21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(3) (emphasis added). The government responds that nothing in the statute suggests that the ordinary harmless error rule of Fed.R.Crim.P. 52 has no application to cases arising under the statute.
I agree with Mr. McCullah that the statute unambiguously requires us to remand if we cannot affirm the sentence imposed. As the Supreme Court stated in
Clemons,
nothing in its opinion in
Clemons
should be interpreted as
compelling
appellate courts to reweigh or conduct a harmless-error analysis. The Court has simply held that "such procedures are constitutionally permissible."
Clemons,
. As indicated, the tapes were not played for the jury. The district court's order denying Mr. McCullah's motion in limine stated that the tapes were "introduced.'' Mr. McCullah refers to them in his Appendix as an Exhibit, and they were listed as such in other materials in the record, but it is not clear whether they were ever actually introduced and admitted into evidence. At trial, the court made the government choose between playing the tapes themselves for the jury and having Mr. Lozano testify as to their contents. The government elected to have Mr. Lozano testify. Thus, only the court listened to the *1146 actual tapes, prior to ruling on the defendants’ motions to suppress.
