Appellants Oreste Abbamonte, Joseph DelVecchio, and Guy DiGirolamo protest that count one of an indictment returned in the District of Connecticut alleging that they conspired to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute heroin has infringed their right to be free of double jeopardy because it charges a discrete part of a larger, multiple-controlled-substance, narcotics conspiracy for which they have already been convicted and sentenced. Ab-bamonte and DelVecchio earlier pled guilty in the Southern District of New York to a charge of conspiracy to distribute heroin, while DiGirolamo earlier pled guilty in the District of Connecticut to a charge of conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
Initially, the district court denied without a hearing defendants’ double jeopardy challenges to count one of the pending indictment. On appeal we reversed, holding that the showing made by defendants was sufficient to place on the prosecution the burden of showing that the conspiracies charged in the prior cases were not part of the overall conspiracy charged in the pending indictment, and we remanded for further proceedings on the double jeopardy claims.
See United States v. Abbamonte,
*22 We affirm on the basis of Judge Daly’s thorough opinion below in which he applied proper legal standards and, based on sufficient evidence, found the alleged conspiracies to be separate. We write further only because our prior decisions in this area have not made clear whether the proper measure of proof in these circumstances is the “preponderance of the evidence” test expressly invoked by the court below or a “clear and convincing evidence” test as now urged by defendants.
DISCUSSION
Even though we have previously considered numerous cases involving the double jeopardy ramifications of separately charged conspiracies, the proper standard to be applied to this issue appears not to have been clearly settled in our circuit. On the hearing following our remand, the district court required the government to establish separate conspiracies by a preponderance of the evidence.
See
In
United States v. Mallah,
For example, in addressing concerns like those raised by appellants here, the third circuit in
Inmon
concluded that “since the fifth amendment double jeopardy privilege is just that — a personal and waivable privilege — rather than an element of the crime, we think it inappropriate to require the government to prove the separateness of the offenses beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Affirmed.
