Of three persons jointly indicted for cocaine offenses, one pleaded guilty and two were convicted by a jury. Mark Higgins, who pleaded guilty, instructed his lawyer to appeal; counsel filed an Anders brief. As counsel concluded, Higgins lacks plausible appellate contentions. The unconditional plea surrendered any objection to the court’s pretrial decisions; the judge followed Fed. R.Crim.P. 11 when taking the plea; and the judge was entitled to conclude that Higgins supervised at least one other person, leading to a two-level enhancement and a sentence of 121 months’ imprisonment. We grant counsel’s motion to withdraw and dismiss Higgins’ appeal as frivolous. The other two appeals have only slightly more substance.
Thaddeus Harrison and Orlando Potts were tried twice. The first ended in a mistrial when the question “after the arrest of Thaddeus Harrison, what happened next?” led to this response by an agent of the DEA:
I applied for and received — Mr. Harrison was arrested at the scene. We asked him if he wanted to cooperate, and he was Mirandized. He stated he didn’t. Then we came back to our office ...
Before the agent could say more, Harrison’s lawyer objected. At defendants’ request, the district judge declared a mistrial, concluding that the agent’s statement was impermissible under
Doyle v. Ohio,
Defendants who request a mistrial relinquish their entitlement to a verdict by the jury then impaneled and may not use the double jeopardy clause to avoid a second trial.
United States v. Dinitz,
Hale
and
Doyle
do not forbid all mention at trial of
Miranda
warnings and the defendant’s response to them. They establish instead that silence following the receipt of
Miranda
warnings may not be used against a defendant. Silence may be no more than a response to the advice about one’s rights— and it is inappropriate to promise a defendant that he may remain silent yet turn silence against him at trial. See
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
At least Harrison did. The agent’s testimony did not concern Potts, whose lawyer originally opposed any mistrial. If Potts had maintained that position, he would have been entitled to conclude the trial and receive the verdict of the jury then impaneled. But after time for reflection Potts joined Harrison’s motion for a mistrial. At oral argument Potts’ lawyer asserted that he changed position only because the judge’s body language and tone of voice implied that he did not want to sever the charges against Potts and Harrison. Nothing in the transcript suggests that the judge bullied Potts into relinquishing his right to wind things up at the trial then under way. A judicial invitation to do so is entirely proper, if the choice remains in the defendant’s hands. Completion of the trial is the defendant’s right, to assert or to surrender. The judge’s reasons for preferring a joint trial, including conservation of trial time and a reduction in the demands made on witnesses, are legitimate. Potts may have thought that his own interests lay in the same direction. Often one defendant seeks to point the finger at another, which may work best if the other party is there for the jury to convict. Examining defense strategy, to which we are not privy, would be inappropriate. It is enough that Potts explicitly joined Harrison’s motion for a mistrial. Indeed, it would have been enough had Potts stood silently while Harrison argued for a mistrial.
United States v. Buljubasic,
Having received what he asked for, Potts cannot switch sides. Playing both sides of the street may be attractive for Potts but would be unfortunate for future defendants, for if a defendant who requested and got a mistrial could later avoid retrial by protesting that he didn’t really want one, judges would be even more reluctant to grant mistrials than they are already. The double jeopardy clause gives the defendant a right to “get a verdict if he wants one and keep it if he gets it”.
United States ex rel. Young v. Lane,
The second trial began on October 27, 1994. Six or seven days earlier, the prosecutor had told defense counsel that a fingerprint found on a package of cocaine matched Harrison’s recorded prints. Harrison’s lawyer interviewed the fingerprint expert on October 22 and conducted a vigorous cross-
*335
examination at trial — for the expert’s initial report of his work on the packaging did not mention any prints, and the prosecutor had told defense counsel that no fingerprint evidence would be used. Now Harrison asserts that the belated disclosure of the fingerprint violates the due process clause. See
Brady v. Maryland,
There is no constitutional right to pretrial discovery.
Wardius v. Oregon,
Affirmed
