ORDER
Thе opinion in the above-captioned matter filed on February 8, 2011, and published at
At slip opinion page 2363 [
At slip opinion page 2364 [
Move existing footnote 2 to after <at 462. > in above-inserted text.
Within footnote 2, delete all text following <at 381)) >.
Replace existing sentence beginning at slip opinion page 2364 [
At slip opinion page 2364 [
At slip opinion page 2365 [
At slip opinion page 2365 [
The panel has voted to deny the petition for panel rehearing. Judges Gould and Callahаn have voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc, and Judge Korman has so recommended. The full court has been advised of the petition for rehearing en banc and no judge has requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc. Fed. R.App. P. 35. The petition for panel rehearing and the petition for rehearing en banc are denied.
No future petitions for rehеaring or rehearing en banc will be entertained.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
OPINION
Jay Kent’s appeal of his conviction and sentence for drug distribution offenses requires us to decide two questions: First, once a defendant has stated before the district court his or her intention to enter a guilty plea, is it an abuse of that court’s discretion to accept a prosecutor’s filing of enhanced charges against the defendant? Second, does a prosecutor act with impermissible vindictiveness when he or she makes good on a plea bargaining threat to enhance charges against a defendant, despite the defendant’s willingness to plead guilty unconditionally? Answering both questions in the negative, we affirm Kent’s conviction and sentence.
I
Kent delivered 22.7 grams of crack cocaine to an FBI source on July 16, 2008, in San Francisco. He was arrested and charged by indictment for conspiring to possess with intent to distribute five grams or more of crack cocaine and possessing with intent to distribute five grams or more of crack cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(l)(A)(iii), and 841(b)(l)(B)(iii). The Government did not initially file an information pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 851 alleging Kent’s prior felony convictions, which filing would have very *910 substantially raised the penalty range applicаble to Kent’s sentence, as it would be changed from between five and forty years, absent the prior felonies, to between ten years and life imprisonment.
After an initial exchange of discovery, Assistant United States Attorney Drew Caputo told Kent’s attorney, Daniel Blank, that the Government sought Kent’s cooperation as an informant as part of a plea agreement, and that the Government would filе the § 851 information if Kent pushed the case toward trial. Blank asked if the Government would file the § 851 information if Kent agreed to plead guilty without cooperating as an informant. Caputo answered, according to Blank, that Caputo believed it would not. 1
Several days later, Blank left a voicemail message for Caputo conveying Kent’s intention to plead unconditionally to the indictment, as well as Kent’s lack of interest in a cooperation agreement. Caputo then called back to tell Blank that the Government intended to file the § 851 information unless Kent agreed to cooperate, despite his willingness to plead guilty. Caputo next mailed a letter to Blank, dated February 10, 2009, memorializing the Government’s position:
[W]e intend to file an information alleging your client’s prior felony drug convictions unless Mr. Kent agrees to plead guilty pursuant to a plea agreement entered into with the United States. At present, the only plea agreement that the United States is prepared to contemplate entering into with your client is a cooperation agreement.
The United States characterizes this as an offer in the context of plea negotiations, but Blank argues that formal negоtiations were never initiated, or, stated differently, that Blank never began negotiating a plea agreement.
Further communications between counsel occurred when they arrived for a status conference in the district court and before the district judge on February 25, 2009. Upon their arrival to court, Blank told Caputo that his client would, at that hearing, seek to enter an unconditional guilty plea. The advantage he sought to exploit in offering a surprise plea was to prevent the Government from enhancing charges against Kent by filing the § 851 information.
Blank began the proceeding by saying, “Good afternoon, your Honor. Daniel Blank on behalf of Mr. Kent. Mr. Kent is in custody. He is hoping to plead today.” Within moments, Caputo unequivocally responded:
[T]he United States is going to file right now an Information for increasеd punishment by reason of prior felony drug conviction under 21 United States Code Section 851.... I’m handing the original to your [Honor’s] deputy clerk. I’m handing a service copy to Mr. Blank ..., and I would ask that the Court arraign Mr. [Kent] on that 851 information in the sense of notifying him of the increased punishment that’s specified in paragraph 5 of the information in advance of his entry of the open guilty plea.
In other words, Caputo sought tо file, in court, a paper copy of the § 851 information, which had not yet been filed electronically. Blank objected to the courtroom filing, and urged that the district court take Kent’s plea before accepting the information. Blank proposed that the court allow the parties an opportunity to prepare briefs, after which the court would decide *911 whether to accept filing of the information before entry of the plea. In a long colloquy with the attorneys, the court stated its view that filing was a party’s unilateral act, accepted the information as filed, and instructed Caputo to deliver the document to the clerk’s office for electronic docketing. Blank then opted to defer his client’s plea until the parties had briefed whether the now-filed informаtion should be struck.
The parties next appeared before the district court to present argument as to whether the § 851 information should be struck for prosecutorial vindictiveness. Although it was not disputed that the Government filed the § 851 information in response to Kent’s stated intention to plead guilty unconditionally rather than pursuant to a cooperation agreement, the district court denied Kent’s motiоn to strike the information. Months later, Kent, with the Government’s consent, entered conditional guilty pleas, reserving his right to appeal the issues described above. At a subsequent hearing, the district court sentenced Kent to ten years imprisonment, which is the enhanced mandatory minimum sentence.
Kent timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a).
II
We first address whether the district court erred in accepting the courtroom filing of the § 851 information after Kent had said he wanted to enter a guilty plea. “[Jjudges exercise substantial discretion over what happens
inside
the courtroom,”
United States v. Simpson,
Federal and local rules govern the proper mode of filing. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 49 states that filing must be made “in a manner provided for a civil action.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 49(d). The corollary civil rule, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5, provides, “A paper is filed by delivering it ... to a judge who agrees to accept it for filing, and who must then note the filing date on the paper and promptly send it to the clerk.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 5(d)(2). Further, “[a] court may, by local rule, allow papers to be filed ... by electronic means.... ” Fed.R.Civ.P. 5(d)(3). The Northern District of California’s applicable local rule provides, “In any case subject to electronic filing, all documents required to be filed with the Clerk shall be filed electronically on the ECF web site, except as ... authorized otherwise by the court.” N.D. Cal. Gen. Ord. 45(VI)(A) (emphasis added). Here, the district court’s dеcision to authorize the courtroom filing of an information was entirely permissible under these controlling rules.
Kent relies upon Ninth Circuit precedents that bar district courts from rejecting entered pleas.
E.g., Garcia-Aguilar v. U.S. Dist. Ct. for S. Dist. of Cal.,
A district court need not drop everything to сonduct a Rule 11 colloquy the moment a defendant offers to enter a guilty plea. “All federal courts are vested with inherent powers enabling them to manage their cases and courtrooms effectively. ...”
Aloe Vera of Am., Inc. v. United States,
Ill
We next address whether a prosecutor who carries out a plea bargaining threat to enhance charges against a defendant, despite the defendant’s willingness to plead guilty unconditionally, acts with impermissible vindictiveness.
A
For more than two decades, our vindictive prosecution cases have said that the standard of review is unsettled in this circuit.
E.g., United States v. Gann,
B
“A prosecutor violates due process when he seeks additional charges solely to punish a dеfendant for exercising a constitutional or statutory right.”
United States v. Gamez-Orduno,
For good reasons, the Supreme Court has urged deference to pretrial charging decisions. “In the course of preparing a case for trial, the prosecutor may uncover additional information that suggests a basis for further prosecution or he simply may come to realize that information possessed by the State has a broader significance. At [the pretrial] stage ..., the prosecutor’s assessment of the proper extent of prosecution may not havе crystalized.”
Goodwin,
Accordingly, in the context of pretrial plea negotiations, “vindictiveness will not be presumed simply from the fact that a more severe charge followed on, or even resulted from, the defendant’s exercise of a right.”
Gamez-Orduno,
We reject Kent’s argument that we should apply a more lenient rule when enhanced charges do not arise from the context of explicit plea negotiations. Our cases do not draw this distinction,
Austin,
Kent’s argument fails for a second reason: The enhanced charges in his case
did
arise in the plea negotiation context. By letter to Kent’s attorney dated February 10, 2009, the Government made a plea offer, threatening to file the § 851 information “unless Mr. Kent agrees to plead guilty pursuant to ... a cooperation agreement.” At the February 25th hearing, Kent effectively rejected this plea offer by stating his intention to enter an uneondi
*914
tional plea rather than cooperate. In response, the United States carried out its plea threat by filing the § 851 information. Kent offers no authority for the untenable proposition that a defense attorney who does not respond to a written plea offer has unilaterally opted out of negotiations. Our cases suggest just the opposite.
See, e.g., Gamez-Orduno,
C
Although a presumption of vindictiveness is unavailable in this case, a defendant may still establish vindictive prosecution by adducing direct evidence that punitive motives precipitated the harsher charges.
See Goodwin,
Kent argues that a prosecutor may carry out a plea bargaining threat of enhanced charges only when a defendant has refused to plead guilty, not when he or she has rejected other Government conditions. Our precedent has rejected this position. In
United States v. North,
we stated, “The gоvernment may, in the course of plea bargaining, offer to reduce charges or threaten reindictment under more serious charges, and it may make good on either promise.
It may do the same in seeking cooperation in related prosecutions.”
We have sanctioned the conditioning of plea agreements on acceptance of terms apart from pleading guilty, including waiving appeal,
United States v. Navarro-Botello,
*915
“[U]nder our system of separation of pоwers, the decision whether to prosecute, and the decision as to the charge to be filed, rests in the discretion of the Attorney General or his delegates, the United States Attorneys.”
United States v. Edmonson,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Caputo disputes that he said this. However, the United States has said that this disputed fact is immaterial, and that Kent’s account may be taken as true in resolving this appeal.
.
See also United States v. Austin,
. We recently said in a related context in United States v. Morris:
Unlike
Bordenkircher,
the government’s offer was conditioned on Morris's testifying in
*915
another trial. But we have repeatedly held that deals conditioned on cooperation are permissible.
See, e.g., United States v. Gardner,
