Defendant Leonard Bobby Ortega (“Ortega”) appeals his conviction for pos *329 session of a firearm by a convicted felon in violation of 18 U.S.C.A.App. § 1202(a)(1). Ortega seeks a new trial and vacation of the sentence imposed by the district court.
I.
On September 24, 1986, law enforcement officers who had been looking for a suspect in a red car responded to a report by Investigator James Page of the Hidalgo County Sheriffs Office that Page had observed a red car at a trailer near the sheriffs office in Edinburg, Texas. The officers converged at the scene. As the officers were about to approach the trailer to inquire about the red car, they saw the suspect car turn onto the dirt road that ran by the trailer and drive past them. The officers followed the car until it stopped and then saw Ortega get out of the passenger side. The officers pulled up behind the car, got out, and approached Ortega. Investigator Rogers of the McAllen Police Department testified that he saw Ortega pull a gun from his waistline and crouch down. Rogers stated that he called out to the other officers, “he has got a gun,” and then saw Ortеga throw the gun under the car. Ortega was arrested, and the officers recovered a Llama .380 caliber semiautomatic revolver from underneath the car.
Ortega was charged in a one-count indictment with violating 18 U.S.C.A.App. § 1202(a)(1) by “knowingly and unlawfully possessing, in commerce, and affecting commerce, a firearm,” after having been convicted of three felonies. 1 The case was tried on November 3, 1987, in the District Court for the Southern District of Texas, and Ortega was convicted. On December 9, 1987, Ortega was sentenced to seven years imprisonment. Ortega filed a notice of appeal the same day.
On January 4,1988, while the appeal was pending, the Government filed a motion to resentence Ortega because § 1202(a)(1) provides that a defendant who has three previous convictions “shall be ... imprisoned not less than fifteen years.” On March 2, 1988 Ortega was resentenced to the statutorily provided minimum of fifteen years. Ortega filed a second notice of appeal on March 9, 1988.
Ortega raises three issues on appeal. First, Ortega asserts that the district court erred in instructing the jury on the theory of constructive possession of the firearm whеn no evidence was presented at trial to support that theory. Second, Ortega argues that the district court failed to instruct the jury on all elements of the offense. Third, Ortega maintains that the district court did not have jurisdiction, after the notice of appeal was filed, to correct his sentence.
II.
A. Did the Jury Instruction on Constructive Possession Constitute Plain Error?
Ortega contends first that the district court erred in instructing the jury on the theory of constructive possession.
2
A
*330
judge may not instruct the jury on a charge that is not supported by evidence.
United States v. Blevins,
However, since Ortega did not object to the instruction at trial, the faulty instruction will not be grounds for reversal unless it rises to the level of plain error. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b);
United States v. Graves,
In determining whether a faulty jury instruction rises to the level of plain error, we do not examine the instruction in a vacuum. Rather,
We review claimed deficiencies in a jury charge by looking to the entire charge as well as the arguments made to the jury. Our inquiry is whether in the context of the true trial scene the jury was given incorrect instructions. This is a common sense approach that recognizes that the jury charge does not stand alone for separаte examination; that the charge is part of a larger picture of what the jury was told.
United States v. Chagra,
Ortega relies on
United States v. James,
a Sixth Circuit case which also involved an erroneous jury instruction on constructive possession of a firearm. In
James,
the Sixth Circuit concluded that the instruction was not harmless error. In that case, the jury had been presented with conflicting testimony regarding the defendant’s actual possession of the gun. While the police officers testified that they had seen the defendant holding the gun, the defendant took the stand and “flatly contradicted the officers’ testimony.”
Ortega argues that the jury in his case was similarly confronted with conflicting evidence, and that the erroneous instruction permitted the jury to convict him without deciding conclusively whether he was in actual possession of the gun.
We believe that James is distinguishable. No evidence was presented to contradict Rogers’ testimony that he saw Ortega holding the gun. While defense counsel tried to establish doubt that the object Rogers saw was a gun, Rogers asserted persistently that he had seen Ortega draw a gun. Rogers’ testimony was corroborated by Officer Guerrero who testifiеd that he heard Rogers yell “something to the effect, ‘watch it, he has got a gun.’ ”
*331
We agree with the Government that this case is more similar to
United States v. McCoy
in which the Seventh Circuit found an erroneous constructive possession instruction harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
This case is also similar to McCoy in that there is no evidence that the jury was confused by the erroneous instruction. As in McCoy, “the Government’s position throughout the trial ... was that [Ortega] was in actual possession of the firearm.” Id. at 398. In his opening argument, the prosecutor told the jury that it would hear testimony that “one of the officers saw [Ortega] pull a weapon from his belt.” Similarly, in his closing argument, the prosecutor explained the different theories of possession but stated “in this case I believe what we have is actual, sole, possession.” The prosecutor then reviewed Rogers' testimony that he had actually seen the defendant draw a weapon.
Given the Government’s consistent adherencе to a theory of actual possession, and the uncontroverted evidence supporting that theory, we cannot conclude that the constructive possession instruction constituted plain error. Considering the erroneous instruction in the context of the trial as a whole, we conclude instead that the “jury undoubtedly would have convicted the defendant of actual possession.”
McCoy,
B. Did the District Court Fail to Instruct the Jury on the Essential Elements of the Crime?
Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury that it had to find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had three prior convictions for robbery or burglary.
This court held in
United States v. Davis,
Ortega asserts that the jury instruction was erroneous because it simply referred to the indictment, rather than еxplicitly stating that the Government had to prove all three convictions, and that the three convictions had to be for robbery or burglary or both.
4
Again, Ortega did not object to the instruction at trial, nor did he propose any instructions of his own.
5
Our analysis is therefore limited once again to determining whether the district court's instructions constituted plain error.
Graves,
The record does disclose some confusion regarding the elements of this offense. At the beginning of the trial, dеfense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s reference in opening argument to Ortega’s prior convictions. In a bench discussion, defense counsel argued that “the enhancement sections of this indictment are for the Court’s consideration. Any information to the jury regarding that I think is prejudicial to my client.” The judge responded that the Government had only to prove one of the felony convictions and the court would consider the others in order to determine whether Ortega’s sentence would be enhanced. Despite this initial holding, the trial did not proceеd on the theory that the Government had only to prove one of the convictions, and the jury was never so instructed. 6
The prosecutor presented evidence of all three prior convictions in the form of fingerprint records, known as “pen packages,” which are made in connection with each criminal case. A McAllen police officer who worked as a “latent print examiner” testified that the fingerprints in each of the three pen packages were those of Ortega. In closing argument, the prosecutor referred to the three previоus felony convictions alleged in the indictment, and to the evidence introduced to establish each of the convictions. 7 On the other hand, defense counsel, in his closing argument, conceded that Ortega had a record and never directly challenged the Government’s evidence of the three previous convictions. He focused instead on the possession element.
While the jury instructions did not enumerate the three prior convictions, the court did instruct the jury that it had to find “that the defendant, before he possessed the firearm, had been convicted of the offenses alleged in the indictment.” Moreover, earlier in the instruction, the court stated that in the indictment, “the grand jury alleges that the defendant, having been convicted of three felony offenses, *333 had in his possession a firearm which traveled in interstate commerce.” (emphasis added).
It is plain error for a judge to fail to instruct the jury on all the essential elements of a crime, even though such an instruction is not requested.
United States v. Musgrave,
Ortega raises a further argument on this issue. While conceding that this panel is bound by Davis, Ortega contends that “[sjhould this court ultimately retreat from its deсision in Davis," he is entitled to a new trial because the admission of evidence regarding his prior convictions would have been improper and prejudicial. Because we hold that Davis controls this ease, 9 we do not reach the issue whether admission of Ortega’s three prior convictions would be harmless error if Davis were not controlling. 10
C. Did the District Court have Jurisdiction to Correct Defendant’s Sentence while an Appeal was Pending?
Finally, Ortega contends that because an appeal of the conviction was pend *334 ing, the district court did not have jurisdiction to correct his sentence from the seven years originally imposed to the fifteen years prescribed by the statute. 11 We disagree.
Ortega relies on
United States v. Garrett,
That principle, however, was explicitly rejected in
United States v. Hitchmon,
The divestiture of jurisdiction rule is a judicially created prudential principle “designed to avoid the confusion and waste that might flow from putting the sаme issues before two courts at the same time.” 9 J. Moore & B. Ward,
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶ 203.11 at 3-44 n. 1 (1987 & Supp. 1988). The principle should not be employed formalistically “to defeat its purposes, nor to induce needless paper shuffling.”
Id.; see also Dunbar,
If we were to hold that the district court did not have jurisdiction to correct Ortega’s sentence, we would have to remand the case to the district court to do what it has already done—that is, to increase Ortega’s seven-year sentence to the fifteеn-year minimum required by law. This would be precisely the type of formalistic application of the divestiture of jurisdiction rule that commentators have criticized, and that we properly rejected in Dunbar and Hitch-mon. 12
In order to avoid applying the divestiture of jurisdiction rule in a fashion inconsistent with its purposes, we recognized in
Dunbar
that “a decision whether jurisdiction exists in a trial or appellate court or both, can be the product of reasoned choice.”
Id.
at 987 (quoting
Hitchmqn,
In Dunbar, we considered the competing conсerns of allowing a case to proceed to trial in violation of a defendant’s constitutional right not to be subjected to double jeopardy and the risk on the other hand that defendants would use frivolous double jeopardy motions to “unilaterally obtain a trial continuance at any time prior to trial.” Id. We concluded that these competing concerns would be best accomodated by implementing a theory of dual jurisdiction. Id. at 989.
The implications of allowing a district court to correct an illegal sentence pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35(a) are less severe on both sides. Postponing consideration of a Rule 35(a) motion would not disrupt the district court’s proceedings as severely as postponing a trial at the last minute. On the other
*335
hand, no constitutional right of the defendant would be infringed by correcting a sentence that would later be vacated if the defendant’s appeal of the conviction was successful.
13
In fact, correcting an illegal sentence as soon as possible would
reduce
the risk of violating the defendant’s constitutional rights.
See Breest v. Helgemoe,
As in
Dunbar,
we conclude that these concerns militate against a rigid application of the divestiture of jurisdiction rule. We are not alone in deciding that a district court may, under the old Rule 35(a), correct an illegal sentence while an appeal is pending. In
Doyle v. United States,
In
Doyle,
the defendant had been given overlapping sentences for armed robbery and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. The Supreme Court subsequently held that such overlapping sentences were illegal. The district court then vаcated the illegal sentence and resentenced the defendant for armed robbery alone, as required by law.
Similarly, Ortega’s original seven-year sentence was illegal in that it was less than the minimum sentence prescribed by § 1202(a)(1) for defendants who have three prior convictions. The trial judge noted himself that the defendant would automatically be subject to an “enhanced” sentence because the jury had been required to find as part of its verdict that the defendant had three prior convictions. As in Doyle, the original sentence was clearly “There was no uncertainty аbout what the trial court would do under Rule 35(a) or about what this court would do on appeal.” Id. at 1198. We agree with the Ninth Circuit that under the circumstances, “[allowing correction by the trial court could avoid confusion and waste.” Id.
In holding that the district court had jurisdiction to correct Ortega’s sentence, we do not endorse a broad expansion of the “dual jurisdiction” theory. While we have rejected formalistic application of the divestiture of jurisdiction rule, we have also recognized the need to avoid jurisdictional chaos.
In
Dunbar,
we held that the district court had not erred in proceeding to trial while a frivolous doublе jeopardy motion was pending in the court of appeals.
Similarly, while the Ninth Circuit held in
Doyle
that the district court had jurisdiction to correct the defendant’s illegal sentence while an appeal was pending, the court recognized the need to make clear the allocation of jurisdiction in future cases involving this situation.
We also note that this situation is not likely to be replicated in the future. Rule 35(a) has been revised so that with respect to all crimes committed after November 1, 1987, a district court may correct a sentence only on remand from an appellate court. Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(a); 3 C. Wright, Federal Practice & Procedure § 581 at 77 (Supp.1988). Our decision today will therefore apply only to the few cases to which the old Rule 35(a) applies.
III.
We hold (1) that while the district court erred in instructing the jury on the theory of constructive possession, the faulty instruction did not rise to the level of plain error, (2) the district court did not fail to instruct the jury as to the essential elements of the crime, and (3) the district court had jurisdiction to corrеct the illegal seven-year sentence to conform to the fifteen-year minimum required by § 1202(a)(1).
The conviction and sentence are therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 1202(a) provides in relevant part:
Any person who—
(1) has been convicted by a court of the United States or of a State or any political subdivision thereof of a felony ...
and who receives, possesses, or transports in commerce or affecting commerce, after the date of enactment of this Act, any firearm shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned for not more than two years, or both. In the case of a person who receives, possesses, or transports in commerce or affecting commerce any firearm and who has three previous convictions by any court referred to in paragraph (1) of this subsection for robbery or burglary, or both, such person shall be fined not more than $25,000 and imprisoned not less than fifteen years....
. The judge instructed the jury that:
Constructive possession is also recognized. For example, you can send someone from Harlingen, Texas, to go across the border to go get something for you and you don’t have actual possession of that. But if you exercise dominion and control over that thing that you sent them to go get you, you are in constructive possession. And the law charges you with possession of that particular matter so long as you have dominion or control. You don’t have to be in actual possession. So long as you have both the power and intention at a given time to exercise dominion or control over a thing, either directly or through another person or persons, it is constructive possession.
.
Davis
was rejected by most other circuits, and has since been superseded by statute.
See United States v. Pirovolos,
In 1986, Congress repealed § 1202, and reenacted the relevant provisions as 18 U.S.C. § 921 et seq. As part of the revision and reorganization of the stаtute, Congress separated the provisions relating to offenses and penalties. Congress thus clarified that multiple prior convictions are not an element of the offense that must be found by the jury, but are instead to be considered by the court in setting the defendant’s sentence. Now, the underlying offense is defined as possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Section 924(e)(1) which prescribes the penalties for violation of § 922(g) provides that "a person who violates § 922(g) and has three previous convictions ... shall be fined not less than $25,000 and imprisoned not less than fifteen years."
However, the repeal and amendment of § 1202 was not effective until November of 1987, more than a year after Ortega’s arrest and more than two months after his indictment.
In
United States v. Holley,
we held that when Congress set the effective date for the repeal and amendment of a statute 180 days after its enactment, the repeal and amendment were not intended to apply to pending cases.
We further held that even when an amendment to a statute
appears
to correct а faulty interpretation of the statute by the courts, we are not free, in a case governed by the law as it existed prior to the amendment, to annul the earlier interpretation of the statute.
Id.
at 353. Although we were referring in
Holley
to the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the statute, it is equally well-established that a panel of this court may not overrule an earlier decision of this court.
E.g., Penry v. Lynaugh,
. The disputed instruction reads as follows:
What do you have before you? All right. Before you can find the defendant guilty of the charge as alleged in the indictment, you must find necessary things that I am going to now outline to you beyond a reasonable doubt.
First, that he knowingly possessed the firearm which had been placed in commerce or affected commerce; that he knowingly possessed the firearm in question, all right, that had been placed in commerce or affects commerce, from one country to another, from one State to another. That he had possession of the firearm in question. I am going to define possession for you in just a moment.
In addition to that, that the defendant, before he possessed the firearm, had been convicted of the offenses alleged in the indiсtment, which are all felony offenses under the laws of the State of Texas.
. Defense counsel suggested that "maybe" an instruction on lesser included offenses should be given, but did not formally request that instruction, or object to the instructions that were given.
. The court appeared to be unsure whether § 1202(a)(1) should be treated as an enhancement statute or as a separate offense. At the close of the trial, the judge stated that the government had filed a motion to enhance, which would be automatic if the jury returned a verdict of guilty "because the jury has been given three convictions as part of their verdict.”
Under Davis, the trial proceeded properly. Davis requires that the jury, rather than the court, find that the defendant has three prior convictions.
. Ortega asserts that the prosecutor suggested to the jury that they had only to find that Ortega was a convicted felon. Given that the prosecutor went on to discuss all three of the convictions, we think Ortega takes this comment out of context.
. Ortega argues that the error could not be harmless because defense counsel "repeatedly contested the government’s proof’ of the prior convictions. This argument is singularly unpersuasive. The govеrnment’s proof of all three convictions consisted of pen packages and defense counsel contested the proof of all of the convictions on essentially the same grounds, without singling out any particular conviction as lacking the necessary proof. The jury would therefore have found all or none of the government's evidence persuasive. There is absolutely no basis for believing that the jury could have found that the defendant had been convicted of one of the prior offenses, but not the others.
. The repeal of § 1202, and the enactmеnt of its replacement, § 921 et seq, make reconsideration of Davis unnecessary—unless this court decides that Davis should be overruled for the benefit of defendants whose cases were decided before the repeal took effect.
. Ortega notes that the Seventh Circuit confronted this issue in
Pirovolos.
In the absence of any guiding authority from the Seventh Circuit, the district court had been forced to choose between two irreconcilable interpretations of the statute adopted by different circuits.
Piro-volos,
While we do not endorse the Seventh Circuit’s harmless error analysis, we note that the evidence of Ortega’s prior convictions consisted solely of the pen packages. Thus, as in Pirovo-los, no damaging details of the offenses reached the jury. The Seventh Circuit's decision is therefore not particularly helpful to Ortega’s argument.
. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35(a) provides for the correction of illegal sentences. The Rule was completely revised in 1984, but the new Rule applies only to offenses committed after Novеmber 1, 1987. Because Ortega’s offense was committed in September of 1986, the old Rule 35(a) applies to this case. The old Rule 35(a) provides that "[t]he court may correct an illegal sentence at any time.” Despite the broad language, it is of course necessary that the district court have jurisdiction over the case in order to correct a sentence.
.
See
9 J. Moore & B. Ward,
Moore's Federal Practice
¶ 203.11 at 3-52-54 (criticizing panel decision in
Hitchmon
as "ritualistic” application of transfer of jurisdiction rule). The panel in
Hitchmon
held that the district court had not properly dismissed a pending appeal before proceeding with a new trial and remandеd the case for a
third
trial.
. Because the Double Jeopardy Clause “is a guarantee against twice being put to
trial
for the same offense,” the defendant’s constitutional rights may be abridged simply by allowing the district court to proceed.
Dunbar,
.
See also United States v. Schiffer,
