Defendant-appellant Alejandro Correa appeals from the sentence imposed on him by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Raymond J. Dearie, District Judge) following remand for resentencing after we vacated two of the three counts of conviction against him. In resentencing Correa, the district court departed upward on the remaining count. Cor-rea challenges this upward departure as based on grounds that were not considered at the first sentencing and therefore in violation of his rights to due process and to be free from double jeopardy. He further claims that the sentence is invalid because it is unreasonable and violates the law of the case. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
The facts of this case are set forth in detail in
United States v. Atehortva,
All of the charges for which Correa was originally convicted centered around a kidnapping conspiracy to recover unpaid drug debts. At trial, the government relied primarily on the testimony of Alexander Guzman, an accomplice witness who was directly in charge of the kidnapping. Guzman testified that in the fall of 1990, he agreed to help Julian Atehortva collect a $150,000 debt from *682 Steve Zackson and Peter Lagatta, who had failed to pay for a delivery of five kilograms of cocaine. When Zackson failed to pay off the debt after two meetings with Guzman and Atehortva, Guzman agreed to assist Ate-hortva in kidnapping Zackson to collect the debt as ransom. According to Guzman, El Tuso, a neighbor whom Atehortva asked to kidnap Zackson, told them cryptically about a good friend who “was very good for this type of thing.” El Tuso was referring to Correa, who ultimately joined in the kidnapping.
In December of 1990, Guzman, El Tuso, and Correa kidnapped Lagatta at gunpoint and held him in a house in Queens, where he was told he would be kept until ransom money was paid. Correa and El Tuso remained with Lagatta while Guzman and Ate-hortva demanded $200,000 in ransom from Zackson. The next day El Tuso ended his role in the kidnapping.
Three days after Lagatta’s abduction, Zackson still had not come up with the money. Eventually, Zackson agreed to meet Atehortva and Guzman to deliver $50,000 and the deed to Lagatta’s house for Atehortva to hold as security until the balance of the ransom was paid. The kidnappers were unaware that many of Zackson’s conversations with them had been taped. At the designated meeting point, when Zackson went to the trunk of his car purportedly to retrieve the money and deed, federal agents arrested Guzman. Atehortva escaped in his car.
Guzman agreed to cooperate and took the agents to the house where Lagatta was being held. Atehortva’s car was parked outside. The agents saw Atehortva leave the house and enter his car. Soon thereafter Lagatta and Correa emerged from the house and walked toward Atehortva’s ear. At this point, shots were exchanged between the agents and Correa. A car driven by a federal agent then struck Correa to prevent him from shooting another agent at close range. Correa was arrested.
Correa was indicted for conspiring to possess and distribute cocaine (count one), 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(b)(1)(A), on the theory that the kidnapping was “intended to further his co-conspirators’ ability to sell cocaine.”
Atehortva,
Judge Dearie sentenced Correa to 295 months imprisonment. For count one, the district court enhanced the base offense level of thirty-two by two levels for obstruction of justice. U.S.S.G. § 3C1.2. 1 The district court also departed upward an additional two levels because “a higher degree of culpability” than recklessness was involved, § 3C1.2, Application Note 2, resulting in a sentence of 235 months for count one. The court then grouped count two with count one, § 3D1.2(e), and, pursuant to the mandate of § 5G1.2(b), imposed the statutory maximum of 120 months for count two to run concurrently with the 235-month sentence for count one. Finally, Correa received the mandatory, consecutive sixty-month sentence for count three, resulting in a total sentence of 295 months.
On appeal, we vacated the convictions for counts one (drug conspiracy) and three (use of a firearm in relation to a drug-trafficking crime). While we easily found the evidence sufficient to prove that Correa “knowingly participated in a kidnapping,” we concluded that the evidence was insufficient “to allow a jury rationally to conclude that [he] knew of the existence of the [cocaine conspiracy] and knowingly joined and participated in it.”
Atehortva,
At the resentencing hearing, the government argued for an upward departure for count two on the basis that 1) the “guideline range does not adequately account for Cor-rea’s participation in an armed, drug-related kidnapping” and 2) it “does not adequately *683 reflect the severity of the assault, in that Correa fired at the agents at close range and would have done so again if he had not been incapacitated by another law enforcement officer.” Without any departure, the sentencing range for count two would have been thirty-three to forty-one months based on § 2A2.2(a), a five-level enhancement for discharge of a firearm under § 2A2.2(b)(2)(A)), and a criminal history category of I.
Judge Dearie departed from the guidelines range and resenteneed Correa at the statutory maximum of 120 months. He noted that he was neither considering new information nor increasing the sentence, but simply “considering the same compelling facts that warranted the departure in the first instance, the original sentence.” Moreover, he added, he was “not in essence changing the sentence, beyond the substantial reduction mandated by the Court of Appeals.” Correa appeals from this sentence.
DISCUSSION
Correa challenges the new sentence on the basis that the district court based the upward departure on factors it did not con-, sider in setting the initial sentence. Specifically, Correa contends that this upward departure 1) violated his rights to due process, 2) subjected him to double jeopardy, 3) was prohibited by the law of the case, and 4) was plainly unreasonable.
The bulk of Correa’s appeal rests on the doctrine articulated in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
In
Pearce,
the Supreme Court found that a defendant’s due process rights were violated because a harsher sentence was imposed after he succeeded on appeal. Due process, the Court observed, “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] that a defendant be freed of apprehension of such a retaliatory motivation on the part of the sentencing judge.”
Id.
at 725,
The Court has narrowed the scope of the
Pearce
doctrine over the years to emphasize that the goal is to prevent the “ ‘evil’ ” of “ “vindictiveness of a sentencing judge,’ ” and not simply “ ‘enlarged sentences after a new trial.’ ”
Alabama v. Smith,
*684
In
United States v. Coke,
we held, in the wake of
Pearce,
that because “the prospect of an increased sentence on retrial is sufficiently threatening to the assertion of defendants’ rights,” increased sentences should be strictly limited “to cases truly calling for [them].”
Correa recognizes that the case before us “presents a variant on the traditional Pearce and Coke arguments” both because our previous dismissal of counts one and three “necessarily resulted in a sentence which is lower than that which Mr. Correa received when he was first sentenced” and because of the sentencing restrictions imposed on the district court pursuant to § 5G1.2, which required the court to impose the statutory maximum for count two at the original sentencing. Correa nevertheless argues that because the new sentence was based entirely on information available at the first sentence, one could infer that “the efforts by both the government and the district court to restore as much of the prior sentence as possible were the product of vindictiveness, or at least appear to be the product of vindictiveness.” Consequently, he contends that Pearce and Coke apply because they express the goal of preventing actual vindictiveness and a reasonable apprehension of vindictiveness against a defendant for challenging his first conviction. We disagree.
The most compelling factor in our decision is the fact that the actual sentence for count two was not altered in the slightest, notwithstanding the upward departure. In
Knapp v. Leonardo,
a habeas petitioner had initially been convicted of murder in the second degree, a class A-I felony under New York law, and sentenced to twenty-five years to life.
Petitioner claimed that sentencing him as a persistent felony offender “resulted in a vindictive penalty for exercising his right to appeal.” Id. We affirmed the district court’s rejection of this argument primarily because the sentence was “identical, not harsher.” Id. Likewise, Correa’s sentences on count two before and after appeal are identical. In addition, Correa’s total sentence of imprisonment was reduced from 295 months at the first sentencing to 120 months at the second.
Correa argues, though, that because the upward departure for count two was based only on evidence that was available at the first sentencing, but not considered at that time by the district court, we should presume vindictiveness and apply the logic of Coke and Pearce, even if the sentence was not actually increased. We disagree for several reasons.
First, we do not fault the government or the district court for not articulating grounds for departure on count two prior to the original sentencing. At that time, there was no reason to consider grounds for departure for count two; the sentence was already automatically set at the statutory maximum be *685 cause counts one and two were grouped pursuant to § 3D1.2. Consequently, the district court was required to fix a sentence for count two (to run concurrently with the sentence for count one) that was “the lesser of the total punishment and the applicable statutory maximum.” § 5G1.2, Commentary. In this case, the lesser of the two was the statutory maximum of 120 months.
Once we reversed on counts one and three, however, the grouping guideline that led to the statutory maximum for count two no longer applied. Thus, it was now appropriate for the government and the district court to focus on count two in the context of Cor-rea’s repeated shooting at federal agents from close range and his involvement in the kidnapping. Indeed this rationale does not seem to be lost on Correa. He argues that because the sentence for count two was automatic, his “failure to object to that sentence at the original proceedings could in no way be viewed as a waiver of the right to object to a sentence above the guideline range at the re-sentencing.” This reasoning applies equally to the district court’s failure to consider, and the government’s failure to advance, grounds for departure as to count two since any arguments with respect to count two at the original sentence were purely academic.
In
Knapp,
we followed the same rationale. Our rejection of the vindictiveness argument was based in part in the view that it would have been superfluous to classify the defendant as a persistent felony offender at the first sentencing because his conviction already resulted in a sentence of twenty-five years to life.
Second, Correa’s argument assumes that if the district court’s actions had not been constrained by the grouping requirement of § 3D1.2 at the first sentencing, it would not have upwardly departed on count two at the second sentencing. Nothing in the record supports this assumption. To the contrary, the district court expressly stated at the second sentencing that “had Mr. Correa been acquitted of the drug conspiracy and the related count, the Court would have likewise departed on the basis of the same virtually unassailable facts.”
Third, Correa overlooks the fact that, unlike in Coke and Pearce, this case does not involve a retrial resulting in the same conviction. Rather, the resentencing was based on a conviction solely on one count instead of three. When the offenses of conviction are the same and the sole difference at the second sentencing is an increased sentence, there is at least a basis for presuming vindictiveness. No such presumption arises where, as here, the court considers a departure on a single count after the only other two counts have been dismissed.
We find that because the resentencing was based on a different set of circumstances, the court was free to consider grounds for departure it had not contemplated in the first sentencing proceeding. That is, the resen-tencing proceeding was appropriately treated as a de novo sentencing, for the remand did not specifically limit the scope of resentenc-ing.
See United States v. Duso,
Courts have generally treated resentencing hearings as opportunities for de novo hearings when resentencing occurs as a result of misapplications of the sentencing guidelines. We believe the same principle applies here. When a defendant challenges convictions on particular counts that are inextricably tied to other counts in determining the sentencing range under the guidelines, the defendant assumes the risk of undoing the intricate knot of calculations should he succeed.
Cf. Duso,
Finally, Correa’s position disregards the fact that the district court had originally departed upward with regard to count one based on Correa’s “higher degree of culpability” than recklessness in shooting at the agents, which was the same conduct that the court viewed as “attempted murder” at the resentencing hearing. Thus, to prohibit the court from considering enhancements or departures at the resentencing based upon this conduct would be a windfall for Correa since it would leave out of the sentencing equation a fact that played a critical part in his initial sentence: that he repeatedly shot at the agents from close range. Furthermore, in vacating counts one and three, we concluded that the evidence was insufficient to support a jury’s finding beyond a reasonable doubt that Correa knew that the kidnapping was drug related. We never ruled out, however, that drug relatedness could be factored in at sentencing when relevant conduct was considered and where the standard is the lower one of a fair preponderance of the evidence. In addition, we never questioned the sufficiency of the evidence as to Correa’s involvement in the kidnapping. To the contrary, we observed that the evidence was sufficient to indicate that Correa “knowingly participated in a kidnapping.”
Atehortva,
For all of these reasons, we find no basis for concluding that the district court acted vindictively in considering grounds for the upward departure on count two that were not considered at the original sentence.
We now turn to whether, apart from any claim of vindictiveness, the Sentencing Guidelines authorized the upward departure in this case. It is settled that “[a] sentencing court may impose a sentence outside the guidelines if the court finds ‘that there exists an aggravating or mitigating circumstance of a kind, or to a degree, not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the guidelines.’ ”
United States v. Khan,
Judge Dearie described two grounds for departure: (1) the defendant’s participation in a kidnapping and (2) his shooting at the special agents with intent “to seriously injure, if not mortally injure” them or at least “with a gross indifference to [their] fives and safety.” We note first that this conduct was not adequately taken into account by the guidelines applicable to Correa’s conviction on count two. Thus, the district court appropriately turned to guidelines that are most analogous to the relevant conduct warranting a departure — §§ 2A2.1 and 2A4.1.
See United States v. Rodriguez,
As to the first ground for departure, there was sufficient evidence to indicate by at least a preponderance of the evidence that Correa “knowingly participated in a kidnapping.”
Atehortva,
With regard to the second ground for departure, Correa argues that because he
*687
was not indicted for attempted murder of a federal official under 18 U.S.C. § 1114, attempted murder should not have been a basis for departure. We disagree. “[P]roof of unconvieted conduct by a preponderance of the evidence is a sufficient threshold basis for an upward departure.”
United States v. Gigante,
Based on these two independent grounds for departure, we conclude that the departure was reasonable. We reject Correa’s argument that the sentence was unreasonable because it was roughly three times the maximum of the guideline range. The reasonableness of the departure is measured according to analogous guidelines, not in relation to the underlying offense.
We have reviewed Correa’s remaining claims under the double jeopardy provision of the Fifth Amendment and the law of the ease doctrine and find them to be without merit. The Supreme Court and this court have clearly held that the double jeopardy provision has no application in this context.
See Pearce,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the sentence imposed by the district court.
Notes
. All section numbers refer to the United States Sentencing Guidelines unless otherwise noted.
