In this carjacking case, the district court ruled that the government could not seek the death penalty, citing the government’s failure to abide by its own policies and by local court rules. The government appeals. Finding appellate jurisdiction over the matter, we hold that the district court abused its discretion when it failed to consider whether there was prejudice to the defendants. We can discern no prejudice on the record. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s order striking the Notice of Intent to Seek a Sentence of Death.
1. Facts
In November, 2006, a federal grand jury in Puerto Rico indicted Rodney Lopez-Matias, Eduardo Riera-Crespo, and Raymond Alers-Santiago for conspiracy to commit carjacking through deadly force and carjacking resulting in death. 1 The indictment contained a “Notice of Special Findings” for each defendant, laying out findings that qualified the case for the *152 death penalty as well as statutory aggravating factors. See 18 U.S.C §§ 3591 & 3592. The government never filed a Certificate of Death Penalty Case (“Certificate”), as required by District of Puerto Rico Local Criminal Rule 144.2(b) (“Local Rule”). 2
In December, the government provided four days’ notice of a meeting of the Attorney General’s Committee on Capital Cases (“Capital Review Committee”) to be held December 22, 2006, at which defendants could present mitigating evidence. Riera-Crespo was still at large. The other two men had appointed counsel, but not the “learned counsel” required for capital cases. 3 Lopez-Matias’s counsel asked the government to delay the meeting until learned counsel had been appointed, but the request was denied. No one presented any mitigating evidence at the meeting.
Riera-Crespo was apprehended just before the end of 2006. On January 17, 2007, Assistant United States Attorney Bazán wrote to each defense attorney, directing that any “information or argument that counsel wishes to present as a basis for not seeking the death penalty ... should be submitted ... forthwith.” Learned counsel had been appointed for Lopez-Matias and Alers-Santiago at that point, but only a few days previously. Riera-Crespo was not provided learned counsel until January 19, two days after AUSA Bazán’s letter.
Two weeks later, on January 31, the Attorney General authorized the United States Attorney to seek the death penalty. Accordingly, the government filed a Notice of Intent to Seek a Sentence of Death (“Notice”) on February 6, 2007. The defendants all moved to strike the Notice, on the ground that they had been denied a meaningful opportunity to present mitigating evidence.
The district court heard argument about the motion to strike on February 21, 2007. At the hearing, the government again offered the defendants a chance to present mitigating evidence and seek reconsideration, an offer the government repeated at oral argument before us. The district court struck the Notice, citing two grounds in its written Opinion and Order dated February 22, 2007: first, because the defendants had no meaningful chance to present mitigating evidence before the government made its decision; and second, because the government failed to follow the Local Rule and file the Certificate. 4 The government appeals.
2. Jurisdiction
This court has appellate jurisdiction where a district court strikes a No
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tice.
5
United States v. Acosta-Martinez,
3. Standard of Review
When the district court dismisses an indictment or a portion thereof, we review conclusions of law de novo, factual findings for clear error, and the ultimate ruling for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Kelley,
4. Local Rule 144.2(b)
The district court struck the Notice primarily based on the violation of Local Rule 144.2(b), a matter it raised sua sponte. The Local Rule provides that “[u]pon the filing of a Criminal Complaint or Indictment in a case in which the maximum possible penalty is death, the United States Attorney shall file, with the Clerk of Court, a Certificate of Death Penalty Case.... ” District of Puerto Rico Local Rule 144.2(b). The language of the Local Rule is mandatory, but the government nonetheless failed to file the Certificate. 7
Local court rules carry the force of law.
See Air Line Pilots Ass’n v. Precision Valley Aviation,
In reviewing the dismissal of the Notice, we are mindful of Rule of Criminal Procedure 52(a): “Any error, defect, irregularity or variance that does not affect substantial rights must be disregarded.”
Id.
The Supreme Court in
Bank of Nova Scotia v. United States,
“As a general matter, a district court may not dismiss an indictment for errors in grand jury proceedings unless such errors prejudiced the defendants.”
Bank of Nova Scotia,
In
Bank of Nova Scotia,
the Court indicated that its conclusion would not reach cases of prosecutorial misconduct, or other situations “in which the structural protections of the grand jury have been so compromised as to render the proceedings fundamentally unfair....”
Id.
at 257,
5. United States Attorneys’ Manual
The district court agreed with the defendants that they had not been provided a meaningful opportunity to present mitigating evidence before the government filed the Notice, as required by the United States Attorneys’ Manual (“Manual”). The Manual contains guidelines for determining whether to seek the death penalty. United States Attorneys’ Manual §§ 9— 10.010-10.190. These are widely known as the “death penalty protocols.” Under the death penalty protocols, defense counsel must be provided a “reasonable opportunity” to present mitigating evidence to the United States Attorney before he or she makes a recommendation whether to seek the death penalty. Id. at § 9-10.050. If the United States Attorney recommends seeking the death penalty, the Capital Review Committee also reviews the case and makes a recommendation. Id. at § 9-10-120. The Committee can also review, on its own initiative, any case in which the United States Attorney recommends against seeking the death penalty. 10 Id. This procedure culminates in recommendations to the Attorney General, who decides whether to seek the death penalty. The Manual then in force provided that counsel “shall be provided an opportunity” to present mitigating evidence to the Capital Review Committee. 11 And the section entitled “Review of Recommendations Not to Seek Death Penalty” warns that “[n]o decision to seek the death penalty shall be made without affording defense counsel an opportunity to present evidence and argument in mitigation....” Id. at § 9-10.055.
We need not consider whether counsel had such an opportunity here. The Manual by its terms makes those procedures mandatory. But the first page of that manual warns that the guidelines do not create any rights.
The Manual provides only internal Department of Justice guidance. It is not intended to, does not, and may not be relied upon to create any rights, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law by any party in any matter civil or criminal. Nor are any limitations hereby placed on otherwise lawful litigative prerogatives of the Department of Justice.
United States Attorneys’ Manual, § 1.100. As the district court acknowledged, we have held that similar Department of Justice guidelines, “not mandated by statute or the constitution, do not confer substantive rights on any party.”
United States v. Craveiro,
We conclude that a violation of the Manual, by itself, would not give rise to the sanction imposed here. We are reluctant to interfere with internal prosecutorial measures by elevating internal guidelines to the level of a guarantee to defendants. Our reluctance stems from a respect for the separation of powers, and also from practical concerns. If the government were to be punished for violations of its own internal guidelines, it would be more likely to write less exacting guidelines, or none at all.
Because we determine that a simple violation of the Manual does not create a basis for dismissing the Notice, we decline to reach the issue of whether these facts constitute a breach of the death penalty protocols. We therefore express no opinion about whether four days’ notice of a meeting held before the appointment of learned counsel would constitute a “reasonable opportunity,” nor do we consider whether AUSA Bazán’s invitation to submit mitigating information and argument after the meeting would have cured such a defect, if one existed.
This is not to say that a finding of systemic violation of the Manual or of prosecutorial misconduct in failure to abide by the Manual could never give rise to any sanction. It is only to say that, standing alone, the government’s failure to follow the procedures set forth in the Manual cannot serve as the basis for the sanction imposed here. We have, when confronted with “the violation of a policy which does not justify a case-related judicial sanction and yet which appears immune to expressions of judicial dissatisfaction,” indicated that we will refer such violations to the Department of Justice’s Office of Professional Responsibility, and require of that Office “a report concerning the steps the Department proposes to take to police its internal policy guidelines and to discipline those of its employees who choose not to follow them.”
United States v. Pacheco-Ortiz,
6. Prejudice
The district court went beyond its allowable discretion in striking the Notice without making a finding that prejudice was caused by the government’s breach of the Local Rule. Further, a prejudice finding would confront three interrelated obstacles. First, it appears as though the purpose of the Local Rule was met in this case. Second, any prejudice to the defendants caused by the inability to present mitigating evidence at the Meeting would have to be traceable to some other violation of a rule or statute, as the Manual that mandates the Meeting is not a source of rights. Finally, the government has repeated its offer to allow the defendants another chance to present mitigating evidence. In order for there to be prejudice to the defendants, this second chance must be somehow defective in this particular case, a matter difficult to judge in the abstract.
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Prejudice to the defendants, in the context of grand jury irregularities, exists when “it is established that the violation substantially influenced the grand jury’s decision to indict, or if there is grave doubt that the decision to indict was free from the substantial influence of such violations.”
Bank of Nova Scotia,
We can discern no prejudice because the only identified purpose of the Local Rule was met by other means. The district court mentioned only one purpose of the Local Rule but implied that there were others: “One of the purposes of this rule is to provide clear notice to defendants and the court that the defendants have been charged with death-eligible crimes and, therefore, may be entitled to certain rights, such as the right to learned counsel.” The Certificate may indeed have other purposes but none are identified in the Opinion and Order nor in the text of the Local Rule itself. “Clear notice” itself may provide defendants with benefits other than timely appointment of learned counsel, but again none are identified.
Learned counsel was appointed even without the Certificate. And timely filing of the Certificate would not on these facts have enabled learned counsel to prepare for the mitigation meeting on December 22, nor for later submission of mitigating evidence in January as outlined in AUSA Bazán’s letter. Below, the defendants argued for a 270-day continuance to conduct a mitigation investigation. If the Certificate had been filed and learned counsel somehow appointed the day the defendants were arrested, there would have been less than two months to prepare for the meeting. Assuming the 270-day request was a good-faith estimate of the required time, two months would have been inadequate from the defendants’ perspective. 13 And for Riera-Crespo, who was not even in custody when the December 22 meeting took place, failure to file the Certificate could have made no practical difference. Even if learned counsel could be appointed for a defendant who has not yet been arrested, a mitigation investigation — a highly personalized, fact-specific inquiry about the defendant’s past and present circumstances — likely could not be meaningfully conducted -without the defendant’s input.
There might indeed be prejudice in the defendants’ inability to present mitigating evidence at the Meeting or to obtain a postponement of the Meeting. But there is nothing at this stage in the proceedings to indicate that compliance with the Local Rule would have changed this circumstance. Nor is there any way to determine whether the mitigating evidence, had any been presented, would have changed the government’s decision.
If there were any prejudice, and that prejudice stemmed from the violation of the Local Rule or another valid source of rights, it might still be cured by the government’s later reconsideration. The gov
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ernment offered, in the letter and at the hearing, to allow the defendants more time to submit mitigating evidence.
14
If that opportunity constitutes a real second chance — as good as the first — to influence the government’s decision, it is hard to imagine how the defendants could have been prejudiced by missing the initial meeting.
See Frye,
It is possible that the chance for reconsideration is no substitute for the ability to present mitigating evidence at the original Meeting. The United States Attorneys’ Manual instructs reviewers to “limit the evaluation to determining if the changed facts and circumstances, had they been known at the time of the initial determination, would have resulted in a decision not to seek the death penalty.” Id. at § 9-10.150. Thus, according to the Manual, there is no precedential weight to the earlier decision in a reconsideration, and the defendant is not required to carry a heavier burden than at the original determination. But the government cannot rely on this provision of the Manual as a guarantee of no' prejudice. The Manual, as the government argues elsewhere, confers no substantive rights on defendants. Should the defendants put forward new substantive mitigating evidence at a reconsideration, then perhaps the efficacy of the reconsideration process can be meaningfully questioned. We note that, even should the reconsideration prove prejudicial, the defendants would still have to prove that the prejudice was caused by the violation of the Local Rule. We are at a loss to imagine how this might be the case, but we leave open the possibility.
The district court is clearly aware of the solemnity of proceedings that might result in an execution. We do believe that when the stakes are so high, a smaller quantum of prejudice may justify a sanction. And, as discussed above, striking the Notice is not quite as serious as dismissing the indictment altogether, and so perhaps still less prejudice is required. We are also mindful that the mere possibility of a death sentence has serious effects. It changes the bargaining calculus in plea negotiations,
see In re Sterling-Suárez,
7. Conclusion
Because the United States Attorneys’ Manual cannot create substantive rights for defendants, and because the district court did not allude to any prejudice caused by the government’s failure to abide by District of Puerto Rico Local Rule 144.2(b), the Order striking the Notice of Intent to Seek a Sentence of Death is vacated. The Notice is reinstated, subject to further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 371 concerns conspiracy, 18 U.S.C. § 2119 concerns carjacking, and 18 U.S.C. § 2119(3) concerns carjacking resulting in death.
. "Upon the filing of a Criminal Complaint or Indictment in a case in which the maximum possible penalty is death, the United States Attorney shall file with the Clerk of Court, a Certificate of Death Penalty Case, thereby identifying the criminal matter as a capital case for purposes of this Rule.” Local Rule 144.2(b). The rest of Local Rule 144.2 similarly concerns appointment of counsel and case management in capital cases.
. "Learned counsel” is shorthand for the "counsel learned in the law applicable to capital cases” required by statute. See 18 U.S.C. § 3005; see also District of Puerto Rico Local Rule 144.2(d).
. Although the district court referred to the importance of representation of learned counsel "at such a critical stage in the proceedings” as the Capital Review Committee meeting, we do not read the Opinion and Order as finding that the Capital Review Committee meeting is a "critical stage” in the proceedings as that term is used in Sixth Amendment right-to-counsel analysis.
See, e.g., Maine v. Moulton,
. We have appellate jurisdiction, so we do not accept the parties’ invitation to consider mandamus.
. The four other circuits to have considered the matter have come to the same conclusion.
See United States v. Frye,
. In its Opinion and Order, the district court wrote that the government had made a "decision to flout” the Local Rule. Other than the bare fact that the Certificate was never filed, the record contains no suggestion of intentional noncompliance. The district court did cite two other cases in the last ten years where it struck a Notice.
See United States v. Gómez-Olmeda,
.There is, of course, another source of rule-making power: the "inherent power” of the courts.
See Stern v. United States Dist. Court,
. Dismissal of the Notice is not as extreme as dismissal of an indictment. The government may still seek a conviction and the serious penalty of life imprisonment. However, our appellate jurisdiction, as noted above and as we held in
Acosta-Martinez,
. Therefore the filing of the Notice might be against the recommendation of the United states Attorney responsible for the case.
. The current Manual replaces this language with an admonition that "[n]o final decision to seek the death penalty shall be made if defense counsel has not been afforded an opportunity to present evidence and argument in mitigation.” Id. at § 9-10.120. While we note that this seems to be a stronger statement, the change makes no difference to our analysis. Concluding as we do that the Manual confers no substantive rights on criminal defendants, it does not matter how strong the statement in the Manual might be.
. Should constitutional rights be implicated the standard might well be different.
See Chapman v. California,
. At oral argument, learned counsel attested that six months to one year is required to assemble and present mitigation evidence.
. The government reiterated at oral argument that it is still willing to entertain mitigating evidence.
. The Manual does state, “The death penalty may not be sought, and no attorney for the Government may threaten to seek it, solely for the purpose of obtaining a more desirable negotiating position.” Id. at § 1-10.110. This statement is, of course, an implicit recognition of the power of a possible death sentence to induce a guilty plea. It should also function as a safeguard against misuse of the death penalty authorization in this way. But it would be fantasy to think the admonition dilutes the negotiating leverage created by the threat of capital punishment.
