OPINION OF THE COURT
When this appeal first came to this court for review,
United States v. Busic,
In light of the subsequent decision of the Supreme Court in
Simpson v. United States,
The defendants thereupon successfully petitioned the Supreme Court of the United States for writs of certiorari to this court.
I.
Because the facts are fully and clearly set forth in this court’s initial opinion,
United States v. Busic,
[Defendants] Anthony LaRocca, Jr. and Michael Busic were tried together on a multicount indictment charging drug, firearms and assault offenses flowing from a narcotics conspiracy and an attempt to rob an undercover agent. The evidence showed that in May 1976 the two arranged a drug buy with an agent of the Drug Enforcement Administration who was to supply $30,000 in cash. When the agent arrived with the money, LaRocca attempted to rob him at gunpoint. The agent signalled for reinforcements, and as other officers began to close in LaRocсa fired several shots at them. No one was hit and the agents succeeded in disarming and arresting LaRocca. Busic was also arrested and the officers seized a gun he was carrying in his belt but had not drawn. Additional weapons were found in the pair’s automobile.
A jury in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania convicted [defendants] of narcotics and possession of firearms counts, and *943 of two counts of armed assault on federal officers in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 111— LaRocca as the actual triggerman and Busic as an aider and abettor, and thus derivatively a principal under 18 U.S.C. § 2. In addition, LaRocca was convicted of using a firearm in the commission of a federal felony in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1), and Busic was convicted of carrying a firearm in the commission of a federal felony in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(2). Each [defendant] was sentenced to a total of 30 yеars, of which five resulted from concurrent sentences on the narcotics charges, five were a product of concurrent terms on the firearms and assault charges, and 20 were imposed for the § 924(c) violations.
Busic v. United States,
The issue before us now, as briefed by the parties, is whether in light of
Simpson v. United States,
The defendants 1 argue that at no time have they challenged the validity of the section 111 convictions or have they or the Government challenged the sentences imposed under section 111. Further, they maintain that the sentencing court cannot correct the section 111 sentences under Rule 35 because the sentences were nоt illegal and it cannot modify them because more days than the 120 allowed by Rule 35 have passed. They also contend that because the maximum permissible sentence under section 111 for an assault on a federal officer without a weapon is three years, the additional two years of their five year sentences must be enhancements for the use of weapons, precluding further enhancement. 2 Defendants argue that every federal court of appeals, including this one, has rejected on grounds of double jeopardy the position advanced by the Government that defendants be resentenced for a term in excess of the initial sentence. 3 Moreover, Busic contends *944 that the Government’s failure to cross-appeal or cross-petition for a writ of certiorari in this case procedurally bars it from even raising the question of resentencing.
On the other hand, the Government argues that the district court could have sentenced each defendant to 10 years imprisonment on each of the assault counts (counts six and seven) because of their use of a deadly weapon. Instead, the court sentenced them to five years imprisonment concurrent on each count under section 111 and 20 years imprisonment under section 924(c) (counts eighteen and nineteen respectively) because of the use of firearms. If the sentences under section 924(c) are vacated, the Government’s argument continues, the defendants will have had their sentences for the armed assaults on federal officers reduced from 25 years imprisonment to five years because of the intervening decision of the Court in Simpson v. United States, supra. In support of this contention the Government presents a twofold argument. First, it urges that contrary to existing case law, this court should hold that when a defendant’s punishment on one or more counts arising out of the same criminal conduct is vacated, the defendant may be resentenced on the other related counts. Second, the Government maintains that the sentences imposed under counts 6 and 7 may be increased because defendants had in fact not yet begun to serve them.
II.
Although the principle underlying the Double Jeopardy Clause
4
has ancient roots, its constitutional basis appears to be predicated upon the three common law pleas of
autrefois acquit, autrefois convict,
and pardon.
United States v. Scott,
the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found guilty.
Green v. United States,
It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. And it protects against multiple punishments for the same offense.
North Carolina v. Pearce,
The Supreme Court has consistently treated acquittals on the facts of the case differently from sentencing for double jeopardy purposes.
See United States v. DiFrancesco, —
U.S. —, —,
The terms of the Double Jeopardy Clause, however, are not self-defining and the Supreme Court has never applied them absolutely when a first trial did not end in an acquittal on the facts.
See United States v.
DiFrancesco, — U.S. at —,
[although review of any ruling of law discharging a defendant obviously enhances the likelihood of conviction and subjects him to continuing expense and anxiety, a defendant has no legitimate claim to benefit from an error of law when that error could be corrected without subjecting him to a second trial before a second trier of fact.
Id.
at 345,
In mistrial cases, the Court has also followed a similar rationale. As early as
United States v. Perez,
*946
Also, by contrast with the Court’s consistent treatment under double jeopardy jurisprudence of verdicts of acquittal as a bar to a subsequent trial for the same offense, the Supreme Court has held that a final sentence entered by the trial court does not bar an increase in sentence following a retrial for the same offense.
Stroud v. United States,
This court has also had occasion to consider the increase of a sentence previously imposed. In
United States v. Bozza,
In Bozza, the sentence was invalid on its face; in the instant case, the sentence was invalid as applied. Otherwise, there is no double jeopardy difference between the two cases. The Government here does not seek imposition of multiple punishments for the same offense but only remand to the district court for resentencing on the section 111 counts subject to (1) the maximum penalties prescribed by Congress in that statute, and (2) the restriction that the new sentence for the armed assault offenses not exceed the original aggregate sentence imposed for those offenses. 8 The Government does not seek to couple a new and complete sentence to the sentence initially imposed by the district court. It merely seeks a single, authorized sentence to replace the sentence held by the Supreme Court to be invalid. The new sentence will be based on the record as initially compiled by the sentencing judge without any new evidence or remand for further fact finding.
In
North Carolina v. Pearce,
In the case at bar the defendants contend that they did not appeal their section 111 convictions and the sentences imposed, and the Government did not cross-appeal. However, it is evident that the district court structured its sentence on the erroneous assumption that punishment for the defendants’ conduct could be distributed under both section 111 and section 924(c). In fact, the court imposed the heaviest punishment under section 924(c). When the defendants successfully appealed their convictions under section 924(c) and obtained reversals, the court’s sentencing plan, based on the aggregate conviction for the criminal assault on the federal officers with firearms, was thwarted. In such a case, where the sentences were interdependent, we bеlieve an appellate court, vacating one of those sentences, can vacate the other sentence even if its imposition is not specifically raised on appeal. 10 There is nothing in the history or the policies of the Double *948 Jeopardy Clause that justifies the denial of resentencing when the sentence has been spread erroneously over counts that have been declared invalid. On the other hand, resentencing under such circumstances should reduce the possibility of disparate and irrational sentencing.
III.
The Double Jeopardy Clause appears to have been drafted with common law jeopardy principles in mind.
See United States v. Wilson,
Since our decision in
United States v. Bozza, supra,
this court, however, has had before it a number of cases which have held that an increase in the severity of punishment upon resentencing offended the Double Jeopardy Clause. In
United States v. Fredenburgh,
We concluded that the sentences imposed after remand contravened our direction in
Gallagher I
and violated Fredenburgh’s rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause. Citing our earlier decision in
United States v. Welty,
Added punishment under a valid sentence simply because the defendant has successfully shown the invalidity of the sentence under another count is a plain violation of the constitutional protection. It may not be justified because the sentencing judge would have imposed the higher penalty if he had been aware of the invalidity of the sentence imposed on the other counts.
An examination of
Fredenburgh
and the cases relied upon by it persuades us that they were influenced by the now discredited decisions in
Ex Parte Lange,
United States v. Benz, supra, is also inapplicable to the case at bar. We improvidently relied on dictum in Benz that a sentence may not be amended to increase the term of punishment because it subjects the defendant to double punishment. Benz, however, involved the power of the district court which had imposed a sentence of imprisonment upon a defendant to amend the sentence by reducing the term of imprisonment, although the defendant had already commenced service of the sentence. The broad dictum of Benz is inexplicable and appears to be based upon a misreading of Ex Parte Lange. The dictum has since been rejected by the rationale of the Court in Bozza v. United States, supra.
[T]he fact that the petitioner has been twice before the judge for sentencing and in a federal place of detention during the five hour interim cannot be said to constitute double jeopardy.... The Constitution does not require that sentencing should be a game in which a wrong move by the judge means immunity for the prisoner.
Bozza v. United States,
The very recent case of
United States v.
DiFrancesco, — U.S. —,
In the instant case, the defеndants were convicted by a jury of serious offenses. In structuring the plan of sentencing, the trial judge did not impose the maximum sentence permitted by statute on the armed assault crimes committed by the defendants but chose to spread his sentence over each of the counts upon which defendants had been convicted, allocating the heavier period of imprisonment to the convictions under section 924(c)(2). Vacating all of the assault sentences as urged now by the Government in light of the Court’s reversal of the convictions under section 924(c)(2) and permitting resentencing on the convictions which are affirmed does not offend the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Constitution because another trial is not required. No additional record needs to be made. Resentencing does not permit the prosecution a “second crack” at supplying evidence. As in
United States v. Wilson, supra,
it involves merely a correction caused by an error of law “without subjecting [the defendants] to a second trial before a second trier of fact.”
Upon resentencing, the district court would now be able to impose sentence knowing that section 924(c)(2) is not available to it for sentencing in this case. If it elects to augment the term of imprisonment on the armed assaults committed in violation of section 111, such increase would not constitute double punishment. The defendants are not twice punished for the same offense. “To hold otherwise would allow the guilty to escape punishment through a legal accident.”
Pollard v. United States,
If the guarantee against double jeopardy “imposes no restriction upon the length of a sentence imposed upon reconviction,”
North Carolina v. Pearce,
We see no plausible reason why the double jeopardy provision should bar resentencing in the circumstances presented here. Such a sentence is not barred by the rule regarding acquittals after a jury verdict or the rule relating to double punishment. As in
Pearce, supra,
the defendants instituted the appellate proceedings which rendered the armed assault sentences impermissible and which gives rise to the need for resentencing. This is not a case in which the Government instituted action to augment the defendants’ punishment; there is no “act of governmental oppression of the sоrt against which the double jeopardy clause was intended to protect."
United States v. Scott, supra,
The defendants argue, however, that where the Court has permitted resentencing,
Bozza v. United States, supra,
and
Murphy v. United States,
[T]here is no substantive basis for distinguishing on multiple punishment grounds between the increase in a valid sentence condemned in the Benz dictum and the increase of an invalid sentence upheld in Bozza. Since in both instances the punishment initially imposed has been increased, there is no meaningful punishment related difference between the two situations. Similarly, there is no difference in terms of “multiple punishment” between the increase of an existing sentence and the increase of an initial sentence through the imposition of a more severe sentence following retrial — a course held in Pearce to comport with the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Stern, Government Appeal of Sentences, 18 Am.Crim.L.Rev. at 74 (footnotes omitted). In this connection, the Government contends that the Double Jeopardy Clausе does not bar a defendant from being resentenced on the outstanding counts if his conviction on the other counts is overturned on his appeal, provided the new sentence is within the maximum penalty authorized by statute *952 for each count and does not exceed the aggregated sentence originally imposed for such criminal conduct. 13
The Government finds support for this contention in the recent decision of the Fifth Circuit in
United States v. Hodges,
[t]he resentencing at issue here, . .. which must necessarily do no more than reduce the punishment appellant would otherwise be subjected to, cannot be characterized in any meaningful sense as “multiple punishment.” Rather, the whole thrust of our decision today is to require a single, lawful punishment for a single offense.
In the case at bar resentencing also will necessarily not exceed the punishment previously meted out to defendants under the aggregate sentence. The 20-year sentences imposed under section 924(c) are reversed and must be vacated. If they are resentenced under the enhanced penalty provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 111, the maximum term of imprisonment may not exceed ten years on any count. The sentences imposed for the armed assault were anchored in section 924(c). That anchor has been uprooted in this case. As in the case of a defendant who has received an illegal sentence, there is no double jeopardy reason why the trial judge should not in these circumstances also have an opportunity to reconstruct his sentencing plan. Vacating the sentence and permitting resentencing is merely “an effort to cope with errors of the kind that will always occur, regardless how refined a procedural system may be. It is designed to serve a state interest that cannot be adequately served by any alternative means.” Westen, The Three Faces of Double Jeopardy, supra note 2, at 1044.
Balancing the defendants’ right to a sentence not in excess of that prescribed by law is the societal interest in punishing them when their guilt has been established after a fair trial.
See United States v. Tateo, supra,
We therefore hold that when a defendant has been conviсted after trial and sentenced under a multi-count indictment and on appeal his conviction and sentence as to certain counts is set aside because such counts enhanced the sentence for the predicate felony which contained its own enhancement provision, the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy does not preclude vacating the sentence on the predicate felony counts and the imposition of a new sentence by the trial judge on the remaining counts, which may be greater than, less than, or the same as the original sentence. 14
Accordingly, the sentences imposed upon the defendants under section 924(c) and section 111 will be vacated. The case will be remanded to the district court for resentencing under section 111 on counts six and seven and for dismissal of counts eighteen and nineteen.
Notes
. Both defendants have jointly filed a pro se brief and counsel for Busic has separately filed a supplemental brief. We treat the arguments in both briefs as made in behalf of both defendants.
. Each defendant was convicted of two counts of violations of section 111 and each received concurrent five-year sentences on each of the two counts. They are correct that imposition of a five-year sentence on a single count would be legal only if use of a deadly weapon was proved. See 18 U.S.C. § 111 (1976). But had they received consecutive sentences on the two counts, each could have received sentences totalling six years, even if use of a deadly weapon was not proved. Id.
. The cases in this circuit cited by
Busic
are
United States v. Fredenburgh,
Cases from other circuits cited by
Busic
are, in order of circuit,
United States v. Frady,
The holdings in these cases may be subject to reexamination following the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
United States v. DiFrancesco,
— U.S. —,
. The Double Jeopardy Clause of the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution provides: “nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.”
. Of course, if the mistrial is caused by a calculated attempt to abort the trial because of the lack of evidence or to harass the defendant, the Double Jeopаrdy Clause will bar retrial.
See United States v. Dinitz,
. The Supreme Court’s view that sentencing determinations are not to be treated with the same finality as acquittals previously had been decided in
Trono v. United States,
. The Court distinguished
Ex Parte Lange,
. Defendants argue that
United States v. Addonizio,
. The Court in
North Carolina v. Pearce, supra,
noted that the imposition of a heavier sentence upon reconviction for the explicit purpose of punishing the defendant because he successfully had his original conviction set aside would be a flagrant violation of the fourteenth amendment.
. We note that in this case the question of vacation of sentences was argued before the Suprеme Court.
See Busic v. United States,
. There is no double jeopardy objection to altering the sentence even after service of a sentence has begun. Those courts who believed that commencement of the service of the sentence restricted the trial court’s power to correct or amend a sentence have relied on a dictum in
United States v. Benz,
. Because defendants’ initial composite sentences would not be increased by their analysis on resentencing, the due process protections against vindictiveness alluded to in
North Carolina v. Pearce, supra,
are inapplicable here. Furthermore, because the appeal could not result in a higher sentence than that originally imposed, there could be no deterrent to an appeal. Even if there were, the possibility that a defendant might be deterred from the exercise of a legal right to appeal does not violate the due process clause,
see Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
. The Government asserts that it is unrealistic to believe that the original sentenсe created any expectation in the defendants that they would not be imprisoned for more than five years on the section 111 counts. In the Government’s view, it is the aggregate sentence imposed, not the component parts, that gives rise to the defendants’ expectation of punishment. The Double Jeopardy Clause does not require that considerations other than a defendant’s reasonable expectations be disregarded. There is a societal interest in the appropriate punishment of felons who commit crimes of violence. Furthermore, a defendant’s expectations of the length of his sentence are no more worthy of protection than his expectations when a trial judge grants a post-verdict motion for dismissal of an indictment or for a judgment of acquittal, a situation in which, if the government is successful on apрeal, the defendant’s expectations are defeated. See
United States v. Wilson,
. On the record before us, we need not express any opinion whether the new aggregate sentence may be greater than the original sentence.
To the extent that our decisions in
United States v. Fredenburgh, supra
Because this decision overrules prior precedents of this court, in accordance with our Internal Operating Procedures, Chapter VIII, C, we entered an order on December 2, 1980, directing that the case be considered en banc. In light of the subsequent decision of the Supreme Court in United States v. DiFrancesco, supra, providing a further basis for this opinion, we vacated the order directing en banc consideration.
