Leonard Peltier appeals the district court’s 1 denial of his renewed motion under Rule 35 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure to reduce the sentences imposed on him in 1977. We affirm.
Twenty-five years ago, following a five-week jury trial, the district court sentenced Mr. Peltier to two consecutive life terms in prison for the first degree murder of two FBI agents. The government tried the case on alternative theories, asserting that Mr. Peltier personally killed the agents at point blank range, or that if Mr. Peltier had not personally killed the agents he was guilty as an aider and abettor. We affirmed the conviction and sentences on direct appeal.
United States v. Peltier,
In order to take advantage of this opportunity for a “second round” under Rule 35(b), a defendant was required to file his or her motion for reduction of sentence within 120-days of a critical event: for Mr. Peltier that event was the United States Supreme Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of certiorari on March 5, 1979. This 120-day requirement has been said to be jurisdictional, and the rules of criminal procedure specifically prohibited the district court from enlarging the 120-day filing period.
See United States v. Addonizio,
Following the Supreme Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of certiorari, Mr. Peltier filed a timely motion under Rule 35(b) for reduction of sentence. Mr. Pel-tier’s “second round” before the sentencing judge was unsuccessful; the district court denied his motion on October 4, 1979. We believe that in the present case the district court correctly concluded that it was without authority to consider Mr. Peltier’s renewed motion under Rule 35(b) because Mr. Peltier filed it more than twenty-two years after the 120-day filing period had expired.
In the face of what seems to be a pretty plain prohibition against extending the 120-day filing period, Mr. Peltier suggests that, where equity so requires, district courts have fashioned ways to extend their authority to reduce sentences under Rule 35(b). Those cases, however, involve circumstances where a defendant made a good faith attempt to comply with the prescribed time limit, but for reasons wholly beyond his control (for example, his reliance on an affirmative statement by the court, his reliance on a statement in a letter sent to him by the United States Attorney, or a delay by prison authorities in mailing what would have been a timely motion) his Rule 35 motion did not timely reach the court.
See United States v. Blanton,
Mr. Peltier also intimates that because (in his view) the government prevented him from presenting material evidence to the sentencing court on the occasion of his original Rule 35 motion, equity requires that the district court extend the 120-day time limit so that he may have an opportunity to present this evidence in support of his motion to reduce his sentences. The evidence to which Mr. Peltier refers is the “new” ballistics information that emerged belatedly in hearings conducted in 1985 when he filed for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. In that earlier proceeding we stated that:
The record as a whole leaves no doubt that the jury accepted the government’s theory that Peltier had personally killed the two agents, after they were seriously wounded, by shooting them at point blank range with an AR-15 rifle ... The critical evidence in support of this theory was a casing from a .223 caliber Remington cartridge recovered from the trunk of [the car of one of the murdered agents] ... The district court, agreeing with the government’s theory ... sentenced Peltier to two consecutive life sentences.
United States v. Peltier,
Even if we were to accept Mr. Peltier’s current assertion that the government prevented him from presenting this ballistics information to the sentencing court at the time of his original Rule 35 motion, we could not find that equity requires the district court to consider his renewed Rule 35 motion. Mr. Peltier has been aware of this “new” ballistics information since 1985, and equity does not support extending the 120-day fifing period for the seventeen years it has taken Mr. Peltier to file his renewed Rule 35 motion.
We also find it necessary to reject Mr. Peltier’s suggestion on appeal that he may obtain relief under Rule 35(a), which, in relevant part, authorizes the district court “to correct an illegal sentence at any time.” The crux of Mr. Peltier’s argument on this issue is that the sentencing court would have imposed concurrent rather than consecutive sentences if it had been aware of the ballistics information rehearsed above. Mr. Peltier, however, misunderstands the meaning of “illegal sentence” under Rule 35(a). “Sentences subject to correction under [Rule 35(a) ] are those that the judgment of conviction did not authorize.”
United States v. Morgan,
We believe that Mr. Peltier’s argument, properly characterized, is not that his sentences were themselves illegal. The argument is that his sentences were imposed in violation of his due process rights because they were based on information that was false due to government misconduct. Under the relevant portion of Rule 35(a), it is true, the court “may correct a sentence imposed in an illegal manner within the time provided ... for the reduction of sentence [under Rule 35(b) ].” But as we have already explained, Mr. Peltier’s motion for relief under Rule 35(b) is time-barred.
We further believe that Mr. Peltier’s reliance on
United States v. Tucker,
We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Peltier’s renewed Rule 35 motion.
Notes
. The Honorable Paul A. Magnuson, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
