Contreras-Subias pled guilty to possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and money laundering. Due to a mistake in the phrasing of his plea agreement and in the sentence based on it, his prison term as worded was to run both concurrently with and consecutively to another federal sentence he was already serving. The clear intention of the plea agreement and the sentencing judge was that the new sentence run consecutive to the old sentences. Contreras-Subias moved for correction, asking that the “consecutive” provisions be vacated. The district court corrected the sentence by deleting the “concurrent” provisions, which resulted in a total prison term equal to that specified in the plea agreement. Contreras-Subias timely appeals the district court’s correction of his sentence.
*1343 We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
BACKGROUND
On October 29, 1990, Contreras-Subias pled guilty to charges of conspiracy to possess marijuana with intent to distribute (21 U.S.C. § 846) and money laundering (18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(l)(B)(i)). At that time, he was already serving sentences for convictions in other districts, as follows:
1) Central District of California: Ten-year term (imposed 8/88).
2) Central District of California: Three-year term, consecutive to term 1) (imposed 12/88).
3) District of Utah: Five-year term, concurrent with term 1) (imposed 8/89).
4) Eastern District of Oklahoma: Fifteen-year term, concurrent with terms 1) and 2) (imposed 6/89).
The plea agreement specifically contemplated a sentence which would, when combined with these preexisting sentences, “produc[e] the effect of a term of 30 years measured from April 1, 1988.” 1 This was to be achieved by giving Contreras-Subias a 14-year, 3-month term to be served consecutive to the 16-year term he was already serving for the Oklahoma conviction. 2
However, the language used in the plea agreement, and in the district court’s December 10, 1990 judgment and commitment order, specified not only that the sentence be consecutive to the Oklahoma term, but also that it be concurrent to terms Contreras-Subias was serving for convictions in the Central District of California and the District of Utah, themselves concurrent to the Oklahoma term. 3 In effect, then, Contreras-Su-bias would have to serve the December 10 sentence twice: beginning immediately, as a concurrent term to the California and Utah sentences; and then again, as a consecutive term to the Oklahoma sentence.
Contreras-Subias filed a motion to correct this sentence on the grounds that it violated the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. He argued that the proper remedy was to delete the “consecutive with the Oklahoma sentence” provision, thus drastically reducing his total jail time. The district court agreed that the sentence was illegal, but rejected Contreras-Subias’ suggestion as to the proper correction. Finding that “the entire’sentence is invalid” due to “internal inconsistency,” Order of July 8,1992 at 4, the court resentenced the defendant to a 14r-year, 3-month term which was to run consecutive to the Oklahoma term, but not concurrently with the other terms. This resulted in a total jail term of 30 years, as specified in the plea agreement.
DISCUSSION
Contreras-Subias argues that the district court’s sentence correction exceeded its authority under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35, and violated the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution. He also argues that even if the district court did not err in deleting the concurrent portion of his sentencé, he is entitled to credit for the time he has served under it. These arguments present issues of constitutional and statutory interpretation, which we review de novo.
United States v. Kinsey,
I. The District Court’s Authority to Correct Sentences
The relevant version of Rule 35(a)
4
provides that “[t]he court may correct an illegal sentence at any time.” Fed.R.Crim.P.
*1344
35(a). A sentence that is “so ambiguous that it fails to reveal its meaning “with fair certainty’ ” is illegal.
United States v. Alverson,
Contreras-Subias attempts to avoid the harsher result from resentencing by arguing that where a sentence is composed of legal and illegal portions, Rule 35 grants the district court authority to vacate the illegal portion, but not to increase the legal portion to “make up” for the lost time.
United States v. Jordan,
In
Jordan,
two defendants were convicted of nineteen counts of mail fraud. The district court sentenced them to 19 terms of 12 years, to be served concurrently, for a total jail time of 12 years. Defendants subsequently brought a motion under Rule 35(a) for resentencing, based on the fact that the statutory maximum sentence for each count of mail fraud was five years. The district court, agreeing that the initial sentence was illegal, resenteneed defendants to 6 consecutive 2-year terms, thus preserving the 12 years total jail time. We reversed, holding that “the district court could only change the sentences by lopping off the illegal excess; it did not have the authority to order the corrected sentences to run consecutively.”
Kennedy
presented another situation where a group of sentences were illegal because they exceeded statutory máximums, and where in correcting the error the district court had tried, by shortening the terms but converting them from concurrent to consecu-five, to preserve the total length of jail time initially contemplated. We found that the initial, illegal sentences “were not absolutely void, but were void only as to the illegal or excessive portions thereof.”
The
Kennedy-Jordan
line of cases
5
is factually inapposite to the present case, because those cases contemplate situations in which a sentence was composed of legal and illegal “portions,” so that the illegal part could be cleanly “lopped off.”
Jordan,
[sjtanding alone, the “consecutive” portion would be valid. Standing alone, the “concurrent” portion would be valid. Together, the two portions present the type of internal inconsistency that renders an entire sentence invalid due to the ambiguity.
Order of July 8, 1992, at 4. The district court thus properly vacated Contreras-Subias’ entire sentence, and resenteneed him.
See Kinsey,
We see no reason to extend the
Kennedy-Jordan
cases to the present factual situation. This is not a ease where we need fear establishing a rule which penalizes defendants for challenging illegal sentences by exposing them to the risk of having their other, legal sentences increased by the court in order to “make up” for the vacated illegal sentences.
United States v. De Leo,
In Contreras-Subias’ case, the intent of all the parties was spelled out in the plea agreement in clear and certain terms: the goal of sentencing was “to produce the effect” of an overall 30-year term. The sentence as actually pronounced, however, was illegally ambiguous in its entirety. The district court acted properly in correcting the sentence so that it corresponded exactly to the sentence to which Contreras-Subias agreed.
II. Double Jeopardy
Contreras-Subias argues that he began serving his illegal sentence immediately after sentencing’ (as it was to run concurrently to sentences he was already serving), and that it was therefore a violation of the Double Jeopardy clause for the district court to vacate it and re-impose a term to run consecutive to the Oklahoma sentence he is currently serving. He claims he is being forced to serve time in two separate terms for a single offense.
We have already noted that correcting an ambiguous sentence is clearly within the district court’s power under Rule 35. In
United States v. Alverson,
under certain circumstances, correction pf an illegal sentence does not violate double jeopardy, even if the corrected sentence increases the punishment.... This rule holds even where the defendant has begun to serve the original sentence.
Id.
at 347;
see also Kinsey,
Alverson clearly authorizes the kind of correction made in this case. Indeed, the plea agreement in this case makes even a stronger case for correction (in Alverson the judge corrected the sentence based solely on his subjective intent at the initial sentencing).
The eases cited by Contreras-Subias are unconvincing. In
Ex Parte Lange,
can the court vacate [an illegal] judgment entirely, and without reference to what has been done under it, impose another punishment on the prisoner on the same verdict? To do so is to punish him twice for the same offense.
Id. at 175, 18 Wall at 175. Lange is inapplicable here, however, because Contreras-Su-bias is not exposed to the same threat of being twice punished. First, as discussed above, due to the internal contradiction in his sentence, it is impossible to say that he indeed started serving it. Indeed, it is more reasonable to say that the truly mistaken part of the sentence was the “concurrent” language, and thus that, if anything, he has not started serving it. Second, since during the time between the original and corrected sentences he was already serving time for his prior convictions, it is not strictly correct to say that the district court’s correction results in a double punishment. As the district court noted, “defendant would have been in prison serving time on the other sentences in *1346 any event.” Order of July 8, 1992, at 8. Whereas in Lange the defendant was undeniably worse off after the resentencing, in this case Contreras-Subias’s position will be unchanged.
Later cases cited by defendant, which allegedly develop the
“Lange/Benz
proscription on double jeopardy sentence enhancement,” Appellant’s Br. at 11, are similarly inapplicable.
United States v. Earley,
Contreras-Subias also argues that his double jeopardy rights were violated by the re-sentencing because he had developed an “expectation of finality” in the sentence which he purportedly began serving as a concurrent term to his pre-existing sentences. On this basis he argues that the “consecutive” portion of his term should have been vacated, not the “concurrent” portion.
It is true that a defendant’s double jeopardy rights with respect to sentencing in part derive from his or her expectation that “[a] sentence, once imposed and commenced, will not later be enhanced.”
United States v. Jones,
First, the sentence was illegal; “there can be no expectation of finality as to sentences that are illegal.”
United States v. Edmonson,
III. Credit for Time Already Served
Contreras-Subias contends he is entitled to “credit” for the time he has served between December 10, 1990 (original sentencing date), and July 8, 1992 (date of corrected sentence). He argues that since his sentence was to be “concurrent” to sentences he was already serving, he has been serving time on it since the original sentencing.
The court below rightly rejected this argument, saying, “the Court will not grant the defendant ‘credit,’ because the Court recognizes that the defendant would have been in prison serving time on the other sentences in any event.” Order of July 8, 1992, at 8. Moreover, for the reasons enumerated in the double jeopardy discussion above, Contreras-Subias could have no legitimate expectation of finality in a sentence which was illegally ambiguous, and which he himself challenged *1347 as illegal. Indeed, it is more than likely that he understood the “concurrent” and not the “consecutive” language in his sentence to be mistaken, as it was out of line with the specific terms of the plea agreement.
In sum, Contreras-Subias is not being made to serve any time twice under the corrected sentence, and is not being deprived of “credits” he would otherwise have had. The corrected sentence puts him in the exact situation he expected when he signed his plea agreement.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The date of defendant's first arrest, in Salt Lake City.
. The 9 months needed to effect the 30-year term is the time Contreras-Subias spent in custody between his arrest and first conviction.
. At oral argument the parties agreed that the “concurrent" language had been inserted, at defense counsel’s request, during an earlier stage of the plea negotiations, and that the parties had not realized, once their negotiations became a final agreement, that the language resulted in a self-contradictory sentence.
.The offenses to which Contreras-Subias pled guilty were committed before the United States Sentencing Guidelines became effective; the pre-1987 version of Rule 35 thus applies.
.
See also, e.g., United States v. Minor,
.
But cf. United States v. Lundien,
