Marcel Arevalo again attempts to appeal his sentence and conviction on two counts
I
After a ninety-four day trial, a jury convicted Arevalo on three of the seventeen charged counts, conspiracy and RICO conspiracy to distribute controlled substances. The jury found Arevalo not guilty on the remaining fourteen counts: one count of violating RICO, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), eight counts of violent crimes in aid of racketeering, 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a), and five counts of carrying and using a firearm in connection with a crime of violence or drug trafficking, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c).
Based on Arevalo’s criminal history and jury conviction, the Presentence Report calculated a Total Offense Level of 19 and a Criminal History Category of I, and recommended that the district court sentence Arevalo to between thirty and thirty-seven months of imprisonment. At the sentencing hearing, however, the district court made several findings of fact, and increased Arevalo’s Total Offense Level from 19 to 46. 1 Additionally, the district court used Arevalo’s juvenile delinquency adjudications to increase his Criminal History Category from I to II.
While the sentence applicable under the Sentencing Guidelines was life, the district court sentenced Arevalo on May 29, 2002, to 240 months — a sentence that corresponded with the twenty year maximum available for RICO violations. 18 U.S.C. § 1963(a). Arevalo filed a timely appeal in the district court on June 6, 2002. Fed. R.App. P. 4(b)(1)(A)®.
On December 12, 2003, Arevalo moved to voluntarily dismiss his appeal, stating in his supporting papers that:
I, ... having been advised of my right to appeal from the judgment of conviction and sentence ... and having discussed the matter with my attorney, do not desire to pursue my appeal of the said conviction and sentence and hereby waive any right to .appeal.
We granted his motion and dismissed his appeal on January 9, 2004. See Fed. R.App. P. 42(b) (“The circuit clerk may dismiss a docketed appeal if the parties file a signed dismissal agreement[.]”).
Almost seven months later, on August 2, 2004, Arevalo moved to reinstate his appeal. Arevalo argued that in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Blakely v. Washington,
On August 11, 2004, the Government filed a motion for reconsideration of the August 3, 2004, order reinstating Arevalo’s appeal. A motions panel subsequently denied the Government’s motion to reconsider reinstatement on August 16, 2004, and the Clerk of the Court assigned this panel to consider the merits of Arevalo’s reinstated appeal.
We dismiss Arevalo’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction because he cannot show why the time .limitation which prevents an appellate court from exercising jurisdiction over his untimely reinstated appeal can be avoided.
II
Under the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure 4(b), a defendant must file his or her appeal “within 10 days ... [of] either the judgment or the order being appealed!.]” Fed. R.App. P. 4(b). The time limits on filing a notice of appeal are “mandatory and jurisdictional.”
United States v. Houser,
A
We first consider the effect of an appeal, timely filed, but voluntarily dismissed. In these cases we believe that the approach taken by the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Circuits is most consistent with the purpose of the appellate rules. They have ruled that once an appeal is voluntarily dismissed, appellate courts no longer have jurisdiction over the merits of the appeal.
'As the Seventh Circuit explained:
A notice of appeal filed and dismissed voluntarily is gone, no more effective in conferring jurisdiction on a court than a notice never filed. Attempts to resurrect notices of appeal must be treated the same as belated notices of appeal. The time limits for filing an appeal require the losing party to choose between accepting the judgment and pursuing appellate review. The loser may not dither. Filing and dismissing an appeal prevents appellate review, and we do not think that it should place the judgment in limbo — open to review whenever the losing side changes its mind. The structure of the rules is set against such delay and uncertainty.
Barrow v. Falck,
B
Arevalo, however, did not simply obtain an order dismissing-his case, but
We adopt the Seventh Circuit’s solution as most consistent with the spirit of the appellate rules: “A motion to reinstate should be treated as a fresh notice, of appeal, effective if, time remains under Rule 4 and ineffective otherwise.”
Barrow,
Thus, an appellant who has voluntarily dismissed his appeal must move to reinstate within the time limits for filing a notice of appeal,
see, e.g., Barrow,
We have no jurisdiction over Arevalo’s appeal because he moved to reinstate his appeal seven months after his voluntary dismissal and well beyond the
Arevalo argued at the sentencing hearing that under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Moreover, notwithstanding his Apprendi claim, we reject Arevalo’s suggestion that he had no viable claims on appeal prior to the decisions in Blakely and Ameline. To the contrary, Arevalo specifically argues on appeal that the district court erred in denying his joint motion to suppress evidence obtained from wiretap interceptions — a claim of error on appeal that is completely unaffected by those two decisions. Nothing in either Blakely or Ame-line made this claim suddenly viable. Had Arevalo, wanted to pursue this claim on appeal, fie was well aware of it then and completely free to do so. He cannot now reinstate his appeal on that claim where he previously voluntarily dismissed it.
Our decision today is consistent with our prior holding in
Williams v. Boeing,
This case is different. Arevalo makes no allegátions, much less - provides any proof, that he was misled or that his counsel was negligent. The only thing that prevented Arevalo from pursuing his appeal was Arevalo himself. Arevalo could have pursued his Apprendi claim, his appeal of the district court’s order refusing to suppress the wiretap evidence, or both. Arevalo lost his opportunity for appellate review by voluntarily dismissing his appeal and failing to reinstate 'within the time limits prescribed by the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, not because of his attorney’s mistakes.
We note two curiosities regarding reinstating an appeal. First, the current version of Rule 4(b) says nothing about the appellate court’s power to reinstate a dismissed criminal appeal. Fed. R.App. P. 4(b). Second, we also note that Rule 26(b) precludes appellate courts from granting
We express no opinion on an appellate court’s power to reinstate an appeal or whether Rule 4’s silence precludes an appellate court from granting an extension or merely circumscribes its power to be consistent with the district court’s authority to grant an extension for good cause or excusable neglect. •
See Boeing,
Similarly, under Rule 4(b)(4), assuming arguendo that .it permits an appellate court, as opposed to the district court, to grant an extension .of time based on a finding of excusable neglect or good cause, Arevalo has made no such allegations, and certainly no showing, of . either. To the extent that Arevalo implies that there is good cause to reinstate his appeal because his sentehcing claims became viable only after Blakely and Ameline were announced, we have already rejected that •argument. See swpra at. 1238. Arevalo had sufficient basis to file and pursue his .appeal prior to Blakely and Ameline. He simply chose not to, and cannot now reinstate his appeal.
■ We conclude that an appeal timely filed, but voluntarily ¡dismissed, leaves us without jurisdiction to consider the merits where appellant has missed the procedural window for. reinstatement by failing to refile his notice of appeal before the prescribed time elapses or by failing to properly obtain a thirty-day extension for refiling from the district court, and where appellant makes no showing of excusable neglect.
DISMISSED.
Notes
. Specifically, the district court found beyond a reasonable doubt that Arevalo had been involved in the murders of Richard Serrano, Jose Martin Gutierrez, and Enrique Delgadil-lo, the conspiracy to murder Jesse Detevis, extortion, and drug distribution. The district court also found by a preponderance of the evidence that Arevalo conspired to distribute one-quarter kilogram of cocaine base.
. We note that a motions panel denied the Government's motion to reconsider the Appellate Commissioner's reinstatement of Areva-lo's appeal, effectively concluding that we had jurisdiction over the appeal. • Arevalo argues that under the "law of the case" doctrine this panel — the merits panel- — -is precluded from revisiting the reinstatement of his appeal because the motions p'anel denied the Government’s motion to reconsider. Although "the 'law of the case’ doctrine prevents reconsideration of issues that have been decided by the court, the merits panel has an independent duty to examine jurisdictional questions."
Hard v. Burlington N. R.R. Co.,
