After a jury found Michael Corbitt guilty of participating in a RICO conspiracy, Cor-bitt was sentenced under pre-Sentencing Guidelines law to a twenty-year prison term. About two and a half years after this sentence was imposed, the government asked the district court to resentence Corbitt, arguing that his original sentence was illegal because it should have been imposed under the Guidelines. The district court granted the government’s motion and resentenced Cor-bitt under the Guidelines, again to a twenty-year term but effectively increasing the actual prison time he must serve by a period that could range from about four to ten years. Corbitt appeals the resentencing, claiming that it was sought too late in the day. We agree.
I.
On June 12, 1989, a jury found Michael Corbitt and two codefendants, Alan Masters and James Keating, guilty of conspiracy under the federal RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization) statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). (Masters and Keating also were convicted of substantive RICO charges.) We have described the details of their crimes before,
see United States v. Masters,
Dianne Masters disappeared on March 19, 1982, and her body, beaten and shot, was found nine months later in the trunk of her car which had been driven into a canal. Cor-bitt likely was involved in the disposal of Dianne Masters’ body and certainly was involved in a plan to hide her murder. For several years, the murder investigation led nowhere, largely because of the conspirators’ efforts. When the case broke and the perpetrators finally were brought to justice, the jury found, among other things, that Corbitt, Masters and Keating conspired to conduct a racketeering enterprise in order to conceal their actions relating to Dianne Masters’ murder. All three defendants were sentenced under pre-Guidelines law on August 28, 1989. Corbitt received the statutory maximum sentence of twenty years but would have been eligible for parole after serving as little as a third of that period.
All three defendants appealed their convictions, and Masters and Keating challenged their sentences, arguing (improvidently for their cause, as accurate calculation would have shown) that they should have been sentenced under the rubric of the Sentencing Guidelines. Neither the government nor Corbitt appealed his sentence. We affirmed all the convictions but vacated Masters’ and Keating’s sentences as they requested. Noting that our opinion in
United States v.
Fa-
From the turn of events in Keating’s and Masters’ cases, the government realized that if it could somehow reopen Corbitt’s sentencing it would likely succeed in also having him resenteneed under the more severe strictures of the Guidelines. Understanding that the current version of the Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure governing correction of sentences, Rule 35, facially does not offer an opportunity to revisit Corbitt’s sentence, 3 the government waited for an opening to argue as convincingly as possible that the more wide-open provisions of old Rule 35 should apply to Corbitt’s case. 4 This chance came, the government felt, when on February 4, 1992, Corbitt filed a motion for reduction of sentence under the provisions of old Rule 35(b). 5 Buoyed by what it perceived to be a concession that old Rule 35 applies to Cor-bitt’s case for all purposes, the government filed its “Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence” on March 20, 1992, invoking old Rule 35(a). Acting on the motion, the district court explicitly found that the RICO conspiracy extended beyond November 1, 1987, to the date of the indictment and consequently resenteneed Corbitt under the Guidelines. This appeal followed.
II.
A.
For starters, the government and Corbitt contest which version of Rule 35 should properly apply to the government’s motion. If the newer Rule applies, as Corbitt insists, its language is clear that the district court had no authority to resentence him. The case was not on remand nor did the court act within seven days of the original imposition of sentence, and, as Corbitt points out, the Rule does not provide for sentence correction outside of such circumstances.
See United States v. Daddino,
We agree that old Rule 35(a) applies to the government’s motion. Rule 35 was amended as part of the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 — the legislation which brought us the Sentencing Guidelines — and its revised form was to be applicable to offenses committed on or after November 1, 1987, the date on which the Guidelines went into effect. See Act of Dec. 26, 1985, Pub.L. 99-217, § 4, 99 Stat. 1728; Act of Oct. 12, 1984, Pub.L. 98-473, Title II, § 235, 98 Stat. 2015. Old Rule 35(a) remained applicable to offenses committed before November 1, 1987.
Corbitt claims that the government cannot, out of one side of its mouth, claim that his RICO conspiracy continued beyond November 1, 1987, while, out of the other, seek resentencing under the authority of a Rule dedicated to offenses committed prior to that date. Nevertheless, despite any seeming incongruity in its positions, the government acted properly in choosing to invoke old Rule 35(a). Corbitt’s original sentence was a pre-Guideline sentence in all respects. At the time of trial and sentencing, there was no finding in the record that Corbitt’s crime continued beyond the effective date of the Guidelines and new Rule 35, and the district court accordingly deemed him convicted of a pre-November 1, 1987 offense. That characterization obtained through the date on which the government filed its motion. Thus, old Rule 35 was the only means available to anyone by which to seek correction of the original sentence. Corbitt properly made his motion for reduction under that Rule; likewise, the government was right to utilize the same Rule in seeking sentence correction. That the alleged defect in the sentence was in fact based on an assertion that the offense continued beyond November 1, 1987, cannot alter the fact that the government sought correction of a pre-Guidelines sentence. The only accessible avenue for relief was the one that went out from the status of the original sentence as it existed at the time of the motion. The government’s desired destination — in fact, a change in that status — could not control the proper path to be taken. In short, old Rule 35 is applicable to attempts to examine pre-Guidelines sentences, even if the relief sought is resentenc-ing under the Guidelines.
Cf. United States v. Kohl,
B.
While we conclude that old Rule 35(a) was the appropriate vehicle for the government’s effort to reexamine the pre-Guideline sentence in this case, we hold that, even under that more forgiving rule, the district court erred in resenténcing Corbitt. The court only had authority to correct an illegal sentence. Corbitt’s sentence, however, was a legal sentence when imposed and remained legal until and beyond the time the government filed its motion to correct. Only a
Now, it is true that under old Rule 35(a) the district courts had broad authority to reexamine the legality of a sentence long after it was originally imposed. Furthermore, although “the underlying objective of rule 35 [was] to ‘give every convicted defendant a second round before the sentencing judge,’ ” Fed.R.Crim.P. 35,1983 Amendment, advisory committee note (quoting
United States v. Ellenbogen,
On the other hand, it also has oft been said that an old Rule 35(a) inquiry in particular is limited to the record,
see, e.g., Semet v. United States,
Moreover, we disagree with the
Moskovits
conclusion that traditional interpretations of Rule 35 were of such a limited reach as to countenance, under the authority of the rule, the making of additional factual findings that would justify substituting a new sentence for the sentence originally sought and imposed. While the “public interest in seeing that defendants are lawfully sentenced by courts that have properly assumed jurisdiction” is strong enough to override the “importance of finality in our judicial system” in the case of facially illegal sentences,
United States v. Henry,
Hill v. United States,
In addition, it makes no difference that the importance of a finding about the conspiracy’s termination date may not have been apparent at the time of the original sentencing because
Fazio
had yet to be decided. First of all, when Corbitt was sentenced, case law indicating that straddle conspiracies warrant Guidelines sentencing was already on the books in other circuits.
See, e.g., United States v. Stewart,
More fundamentally, even an unanticipatable development in the law in a direction favorable to the government cannot turn an old Rule 35(a) motion into something which it is not — an opportunity for the government to reopen sentencing fact finding. The rule simply does not represent a staging ground for that kind of sweeping invasion into the finality of sentences. Given that Rule 35 has always been considered a defendant-oriented rule, it is especially difficult to believe that a change in law favorable to the government could be a basis under 35(a) for renewing fact finding at the government’s request. Authorizing such an intrusion into a convicted defendant’s repose would be, to say the least, highly unusual,
see Teague v. Lane,
III.
For these reasons the judgment of the district court is vacated and Corbitt’s original pre-Guidelines sentence imposed by the district court on August 28, 1989, is reinstated.
Vacated.
Notes
. All who are interested in the Hollywood version of this stoiy must wait until NBC rebroadcasts its four-hour miniseries “Deadly Matrimony” which originally aired on November 22 and 23, 1992.
. The indictment charged an ongoing conspiracy — that is a conspiracy that lasted through the date of the indictment, which came after November 1, 1987 — but a finding to that effect was not necessarily subsumed in the jury’s verdict. The only necessary time-related finding was that the conspiracy continued until at least five years (the length of the applicable limitations period) prior to the indictment' — that is, until June 15, 1983.
. Rule 35(a) now allows a court to correct on remand a sentence that is determined on appeal to be either illegal, a result of incorrect application of the guidelines, or unreasonable. Rule 35(c) permits the sentencing court, within 7 days after the imposition of sentence, to correct arithmetical, technical or other clear errors in sentencing. (Rule 35(b) provides for the reduction of sentence for changed circumstances on a motion of the government within one year of sentencing.)
. Old Rule 35(a) permits a sentencing court to "correct an illegal sentence at any time and ... correct a sentence imposed in an illegal manner within [120 days of sentencing, affirmance or denial of certiorari ]."
. Also only applicable to pre-November 1, 1987, offenses, old Rule 35(b) permitted a defendant to make a motion for reduction in sentence, or the court to reduce sentence without motion, within 120 days of sentencing or adverse appellate disposition.
. Old Rule 35(a) distinguishes an "illegal sentence” from a "sentence imposed in an illegal manner” and permits the district court to upset the latter only within a limited period after sentencing, which indisputably in this case had long since elapsed. While Congress has distinguished an illegal sentence from a sentence imposed as a
. Of course, the findings in Masters' and Keat-ings’ resentencing after remand in Masters I cannot be applied to Corbitt's case.
. New evidence, however, always could be considered in an old Rule 35(b) motion for reduction in sentence, as a 35(b) motion was essentially a "plea for leniency addressed to the discretion of the sentencing court,” Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 586, at 398-99.
. The taking of new evidence as part of an old Rule 35(a) motion, however, is not a frequently documented practice. This is not surprising as the old Rule existed for most of its days under a regime devoid of substantive law of sentencing.
Not until the rise of mandatory mínimums and the Sentencing Guidelines were judges required to make factual findings as part of the sentencing decision. Only then could there be such a thing as new evidence that could confute the legality of sentences without challenging the validity of underlying convictions.
Nonetheless, the
Moskovits
court believed that the broad language in the 1983 Rule 35 advisory committee note, quoted
supra
at 8, indicates an attack on the legality of a sentence could come from beyond the face of the record.
See Moskovits,
. Note that a defendant has a statutory remedy, 28 U.S.C. § 2255, (under which new evidence piay be considered,
see United States v. Frye,
. It was in response to this ruling that Congress amended Rule 35 to also permit challenges, for a limited period after sentencing or affirmance, to sentences “imposed in an illegal manner.”
See
. The fact that this determination can be, and in fact was, based solely upon old evidence is not significant. Old Rule 35(a) simply does not envision additional development of the record from within or without.
. Thus, we will not explore any double jeopardy or due process concerns potentially implicated by the circumstances of this case.
