Lead Opinion
OPINIONS EN BANC
Juan Pimienta-Redondo and Alfredo Pupo, defendants-appellants, were resen-tenced by the district court after we reversed their convictions for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute on one of two counts, affirmed on the second count, and remanded. United States v.
I. BACKGROUND
Pimienta-Redondo and Pupo, along with six codefendants, were charged with two counts of possessing controlled substances with intent to distribute pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 955a(a) (Count I) and § 955a(c) (Count II).
The jury found defendants guilty on both counts. The district court thereafter sentenced all defendants. Pimienta-Redondo received five years imprisonment on each count, and Pupo received six years on each, with all sentences running consecutively. Concurrent 5-year special parole terms and $50 special assessments were also imposed. The record reflects no contemporaneous explanation by the judge of her reasons for sentence selection.
On appeal, dеfendants (the present appellants included) contended, inter alia, that the crimes charged constituted a single offense. Upon reviewing the district judge’s instructions, a panel of this court concluded that “the jury was told in effect that an arrangement between Honduras and the United States could be the jurisdictional basis for a conviction on both counts.” Id. at 1216. Although recognizing that we had in the past construed 21 U.S.C. §§ 955a(a)-(d) as covering separate offenses, id. at 1218 (citing United States v. Christensen,
On remand, the district court sentenced Pimienta-Redondo to serve ten years on Count II and sentenced Pupo to twelve years on Count II. In addition, each was given a 5-year special parole term and assessed $50. Defendants appealed anew, asserting that the sentences were imposed in violation of their due process and double jeopardy rights. A panel of this court divided on the appeals. The panel majority, without reaching the double jeopardy ground, held that appellants had been denied due process. The dissent argued that the resentencing withstood the constitutional challenges. Subsequently, the panel opinion and dissent were withdrawn in order to permit the full court to consider appellants’ claims.
II. DUE PROCESS
A
Relying upon North Carolina v. Pearce,
Due process of law, then, requires that vindictiveness against a defendant for having successfully attacked his first conviction must play no part in the sentence he receives after a new trial. And since the fear of such vindictiveness may unconstitutionally deter a defendant’s exercise of the right to appeal or collaterally attack his first conviction, due process also requires that a defendant be freed of apprehension of such a retaliatory motivation on the part of the sentencing judge.
It is important that the Pearce principle not be blown out of proportion. Pearce does not flatly prohibit resentencing, or even enhancement of sentence, after the accused has taken an appeal or otherwise taken advantage of some legal right. See Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
It follows that more than chronal proximity is required to bring Pearce into play; the presumption does not apply indiscriminately to all instances of detrimental action treading close upon the heels of a defendant’s exercise of some legal right. See Goodwin,
B
We have employed the Pearce presumption to ensure against “ ‘a reasonable apprehension of vindictiveness,’ ” see Longval v. Meachum,
This case is a fair exemplar. Here, the district court’s adjustment of defendants’ sentences on remand, fairly evaluated, does not signal retaliatory animus. Indeed, the authority to reshape a sentence when multicount convictions garner mixed reviews on appeal—some affirmed, some reversed—looms as an integral component of the trial judge’s broad sentencing discretion.
Put another way, when a defendant is found guilty on a multicount indictment, there is a strong likelihood that the district court will craft a disposition in which the sentences on the various counts form part of an overall plan. When the conviction on one or more of the component counts is vacated, common sense dictates that the judge should be free to review the efficacy of what remains in light of the original plan, and to reconstruct the sentencing architecture upon remand, within applicable constitutional and statutory limits, if that appears necessary in order to ensure that the punishment still fits both crime and criminal. See Bentley,
Defendants place the cart before the horse by arguing that accepting the judge’s explanation would create an appearance of vindictiveness likely to chill the incentive to appeal convictions. The Supreme Court has ruled that unless vindictiveness (proven or reasonably presumed) underlies an enhanced sentence, any such “chilling effect” is without constitutional significance. See Chaffin,
Nor is this a case where a disadvantage, not adequately explicable by reference to the judge’s sentencing plan, has inured to defendants’ detriment. Quite the contrary seems true: the arguments in favor of allowing the trial court to wield discretion are strongest where, as here, retrofitting does not serve to work a net increase in the accused’s aggregate punishment. See, e.g., Gray,
Puрo’s situation exemplifies the lack of cognizable prejudice. He faces the same incarcerative prospect after the resentenc-ing (twelve years to serve on the affirmed count) as after the original sentencing (six years to serve on each of two counts, strung together consecutively). There has been no suggestion that his 12-year sentence exceeds the statutory maximum for the remaining count, or that retrofitting the sentence otherwise caused him some further detriment, say, postponing the likely date of parole or rendering good-time credits less attainable. In real-world terms, the sentence was not “enhanced” at all. Consequently, no reason existed to refrain from giving weight to the judge’s explanation. The same generalizations apply to Pimienta-Redondo.
On this record, then, we have not the slightest reason to doubt the judge’s explanation. The sentences imposed after remand were sufficiently within the integument of the district court’s original sentencing plan that neither Pupo nor Pimien-ta-Redondo could have had any reasonable
A simple illustration highlights the practical value of this approach and strongly suggests why it must be correct. Assume that the district judge had originally concluded that Pupo should spend six years in jail for his part in this drug-related enterprise, and had sentenced him to six years’ imprisonment on Count I and a term of probation on Count II. If the Pearce presumption applied, then Pupo would not spend a day behind bars after reversal of his Count I conviction.
III. DOUBLE JEOPARDY
The double jeopardy clause does not require a different result. In the past decade, the Supreme Court has largely allayed any double jeopardy concerns attendant to resentencing after appeal. See Pennsylvania v. Goldhammer,
In this case, the district court did not subject defendants to double jeopardy by adjusting their sentences on Count II. A defendant “has no legitimate expectation of finality in the original sentence^] when he has placed those sentences in issue by direct appeal and has not completed serving a valid sentence.” United States v. Andersson,
Where the defendant challenges one of several interdependent sentences (or underlying convictions) he has, in effect, challenged the entire sentencing plan.... Consequently, he can have no legitimate expectation of finality in any discrete portion of the sentencing package after a partially successful appeal.
Shue,
We need go no further.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 21 U.S.C. § 955a provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) Vessels of United States or vessels subject to jurisdiction of United States on high seas
It is unlawful for any person on board a vessel of the United States, or on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States on the high seas, to knowingly or intentionally manufacture or distribute, or to possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled substance.
(b) Citizens of United States
It is unlawful for a citizen of the Unitеd States on board any vessel to knowingly or intentionally manufacture or distribute, or to possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled substance.
(c) Vessels within customs waters of United States
It is unlawful for any person on board any vessel within the customs waters of the United States to knowingly or intentionally manufacture or distribute, or to possess with intent to manufacture or distribute, a controlled substance.
(d)Intent or knowledge of unlawful importation into United States
It is unlawful for any person to possess, manufacture, or distribute a controlled substance—
(1) intending that it be unlawfully imported into the United States; or
(2) knowing that it will be unlawfully imported into the United States.
. In Christensen, the defendant, a United States citizen, was aboard a vessel registered in the United States when the Coast Guard, finding over 50,000 tons of marijuana on board, seized the vessel in the vicinity of the Virgin Islands.
. Recent decisions suggest that Pearce likely prohibits enhanced sentences only when motivated by actual vindictiveness. See Wasman,
. The newly-mandated “guideline sentencing" which has overtaken the federal courts, see generally Mistretta v. United States, — U.S. -,
. There is some caselaw which—though perhaps distinguishable in terms of the breadth of the mandate emanating from the first appeal—may be read to stand for the proposition asserted by appellants. See United States v. Lewis,
. At resentencing, the judge did allude to her original intentions. Regarding Pimienta-Re-dondo, she stated:
Let me state, Mr. Redondo, to you that_ when I imposed the original sentence which was a total term of 10 years I thought of it long and hard, and I still think that was a fair sentence given your individual circumstances, your prior conviction, and [the] nature of the offense.
Now, today, I have re-thought that. I have re-thought it also after your allocution given to me today, and I have left a term of 10 years. I have considered your circumstances, I have considered the nature of the offense and the aggravating circumstance that you in the past committed this same type of offense.
Regarding Pupo, the judge said at resentencing:
And as in the case of Mr. Pimienta, I must express that I understand that the Court is not increasing the sentence, that the Court always intended this defendant for the offense committed to serve the period of years that I have imposed, that he has a prior conviction, and taking into account his individual background, his prior conviction, and the nature of this offense I believe on this single count this is a fair and a reasonable sentence.
Granted, it would have been preferable if the judge had articulated her sentencing plan earlier. Still, this omission was not constitutionally dispositive.
. It is no answer to suggest that district judges should guard against appellate disruption of sentencing packages by making all sentences run concurrently. The availability of consecutive, deferred, and/or suspended sentences, and their judicious use, have historically been important accoutrements of the district courts’ broad sentencing authority.
. We note that, for federal crimes committed after November 1, 1987, the Sentencing Reform Act requires district judges to explain their sentencing decisions in some detail. 18 U.S.C. § 3553(c) (Supp.1986); see also United States v. Golomb,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
We accept, with appreciation, the court’s concession that the test for this appeal is whether the circumstances of the district court’s resentencing could instill in appellants a “reasonable apprehension of vindictiveness” on the part of the judge. Longval v. Meachum,
We are perplexed, however, why the majority then proceeds to contradict directly the standard that it concedes is controlling. It states that “there must be some evidence of actual, or at least apparent, vindictive mоtivation before a due process violation can be claimed.” At 13-14. An “actual vindictiveness” requirement has been rejected by both the Supreme Court, see, e.g., Pearce,
The due process concerns underlying Pearce are no less prevalent in resentenc-ing after an appeal than they are in resen-tencing after reconviction for offenses reversed on appeal. See Robinson v. Scully,
The cases cited by the majority as evidence of a restrictive reading of Pearce do not modify this teaching one iota. In Chaffin, it was held permissible after a successful appeal for a different jury to give a higher sentence than the first jury because the second jury was not informed of the prior sentence. Chaffin,
In this case we cannot escape the conclusion that at least the potential for a reasonable apprehension of vindictiveness existed in the circumstances of the case at bar where the defendants were resentenced by the same judge who originally imposed sentence after their convictions were partially reversed on appeal due to an error in that judge’s instructions to the jury.
Pearce rеquires that we presume that the district judge increased the defendants’ sentences on count II in violation of their due process rights unless it is apparent from the record that the increased sentences were “based upon objective information concerning identifiable conduct on the part of the defendant occurring after the time of the original sentencing proceeding.” Pearce,
In resentencing Pimienta Redondo and Pupo, the district court did not rely upon any conduct on the part of the defendants occurring after the original sentencing procedure. App. at 15-16, 27. Rather, the court simply stated that the total period of incarceration imposed on each defendant for Count II was the same that it had originally intended to impose for the offenses committed.
Whether or not we would accept the word of a trusted and respected colleague is quite beside the point, for we are dealing with defendants’ reasonable fear of vindictiveness. Therefore we must distance ourselves from our own knowledge of the judge and view from a more remote point, and even with a jaundiced eye, post hoc explanations without record corroboration.
Some courts have held that where it is clear that a sentencing judge has increased a defendant’s sentence to comport with initial sentencing intentions, there is no presumption of vindictiveness. See United States v. Guevremont,
The record before us shows that the district court viewed counts I and II as two separate offenses. The court instructed the jury to view them as such, and the court imposed separate sentences for each offense, to run consecutively. From the government’s urgings at trial concerning the separate nature of the two counts and our prior decision in Christensen, see majority opinion at n. 2, supra, the district court was in all probability persuaded to view 21 U.S.C. § 955a(a) (Count I) as an offense involving any person on any vessel that the U.S. lawfully is able to seize and 21 U.S.C. § 955a(c) (Count II) as an offense involving vessels in U.S. customs waters.
The court majority, under the ground rules we have adopted — reasonable apprehension of vindictiveness — is compelled to say that such an expectation is unreasonable. This might be true in a case where one count was obviously the tаil and the other the dog. But the case at bar stands at least in a gray area where a defendant could reasonably believe that the court had made an independent sentence assessment for each count.
To talk, as the court does, about the sentencing court crafting “a disposition in which the sentences on the various counts form part of an overall plan” is really to say that the only stable factor in the “plan” is the bottom line, the total sentence to be served. The components can drop out of the picture, the “plan” can be radically reshaped, but the bottom line is sacrosanct.
The concept of permitting the “rеtrofitting” or rewriting of such a malleable, crafted overall plan is, we think, demeaning. Moreover, it is totally unnecessary to resort to such a fiction. The issue is not one that must be resolved by circumscribing what a defendant may reasonably apprehend. We realize that sentencing under the new guidelines may effectively moot such questions. But even apart from them, a court can easily avoid the troubling due process problems we face here by either (1) making clear at initial sentencing that each count would independently merit the total sentence given or (2) impose sentences to run concurrently on each count. Cf. McClain v. United States,
We do not think we would be faithful to the mandate of Pearce if we presumed an absence of vindictiveness in resentencing merely because, upon resentencing the defendants, the district court indicated that its original unstated intentions remained the same. But see United States v. Hagler,
Had the majority adopted a presumption for this type of situation and then proceeded to find that it had been rebutted here, we of course would be troubled given the absence of objective evidence indicating the judge’s original intentions. But at least this approach — apparently adopted by our brother Breyer in his concurrence — would have the benefit of limiting the damage. By refusing to adopt a presumption and requiring defendants to produce a smoking gun before recognizing the existence of the presumption, the majority has effectively foreclosed any possibility of defendants
For the above reasons we would vacate the increases in the defendants’ sentences on count II as violative of the defendants’ rights to due process of law.
. Bordenkircher,
. The record reveals only that the defendants were sentenced before the district judge in chambers. There is no sentencing transcript. Rather, "minutes” of the sentencing were entered on a form. Record at 194, 202. There is no indication that the sentencing judge viewed counts I and II as a single offense deserving of a cumulative sentence of ten years for Pimienta Redondo and twelve years for Pupo.
.The government asked the court to instruct the jury that count I charged an offense involving "any person on board any vessel in the high seas” possessing a controlled substance and in
Concurrence Opinion
with whom LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Chief Judge joins (concurring).
My review of the presentence report convinces me that the court’s original sentence rested upon the basic conduct at issue (possessing drugs with an intent to distribute them), and that it did not rest upon such technical matters as whether the “vessel” was “subject to the jurisdiction of the United States on the high seas” or was “within the customs waters of the United States” or both. That being so, I doubt that I would have remanded the case for resen-tencing initially. Regardless, since the basic conduct underlying both counts is the same, and since that basic conduct determined the sentence, it is virtually inconceivable that the similarity of old and new sentences could reflect “vindictiveness.” I therefore agree with the court.
