John Osif appeals his conviction for second degree murder pursuant to a plea agreement that provided for a fifteen year sentence. Before this plea, Osif was tried and convicted of first degree murder. On appeal his conviction was reversed,
At issue is whether the district court erred in (1) not requiring the government to reoffer a previously rejected plea offer *1405 and (2) failing to find vindictiveness in the government’s refusal to reoffer its original plea agreement after Osif successfully appealed his conviction. While the standard of review in a vindictive prosecution case is not clear in this circuit, 1 we would reach the same result in this case regardless of our standard of review.
First, we note that a defendant does not have a constitutional right to a plea bargain,
Weatherford v. Bursey,
Turning to Osif’s claim of vindictiveness, the vindictive prosecution doctrine does not apply when neither the charge’s severity nor the sentence is increased.
United States v. Brooklier,
Further, vindictiveness is not present if there are independent reasons or intervening circumstances to justify the prosecutor’s action.
Gallegos-Curiel,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. As we noted in
United States v. Gann,
. Although Osif relies on
Blackledge
v.
Perry,
