Michael Taylor appeals his convictions for possessing with intent to distribute hashish, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1982); possession of a firearm by a felon, 18 U.S.C. app. § 1202 (1982); and possession of a firearm without a serial number. Id. He claims that his conviсtions were the product of prosecutorial vindictiveness. We disagree and affirm.
On March 31, 1982, FBI agents arrested Taylor at his apartment in Atlanta, Georgia on a federal fugitive warrant from the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The agents, with Taylor's consent, searched his apartment and seized cocaine, hashish, a revolver, and a “pen gun.” After Taylor expressed a desire to dispose of all the federal charges pending against him by pleading guilty in one proceeding, he was indicted in the Northern District of Georgia on one count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, and the case was transferred to the Eastern District of Pennsylvania pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 20. Taylor declined to plead guilty in that court, however, and consequently his cocaine case was transferred back to the Northern District of Georgia.
Taylor thereafter moved to suppress the cocaine the FBI agents had seized from his apartment. A magistrate, following an evi-dentiary hearing, denied his motion, concluding that he had consented to the search. Pursuаnt to a stipulation, the case was tried to the district court on the record made at the suppression hearing. The court found Taylor guilty of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and sentenced him tо fifteen years imprisonment, the maximum sentence for that offense. On appeal, however, we reversed, concluding that the evidence was sufficient to prove mere simple possession, a misdemеanor, not possession with intent to distribute, a felony.
United States v. Taylor,
Shortly thereafter, Taylor was indicted on the four felony counts now before us, based on the hashish and firearms the agents seized, along with the cocaine, from Taylor’s apartment on March 31, 1982. These four charges exposed Taylor to a maximum possible punishmеnt of twenty-seven years imprisonment. Taylor moved to dismiss the indictment on the ground of prosecutorial vindictiveness. The motion was referred to a magistrate. The magistrate held an evidentiary hearing and concluded that the government had failed to prove lack of prosecutorial vindictiveness. He therefore recommended that the district court dismiss the indictment.
The government objected to the magistrate’s rеcommendation, and the district court took additional testimony. It concluded that there was no prosecutorial vindictiveness, rejecting the magistrate’s contrary recommendation, and denied Taylor’s mоtion to dismiss the indictment.
Following a bench trial, Taylor was convicted as charged and sentenced to a total of ten years imprisonment, with a fifteen-year special parole term. This appeаl followed.
Taylor contends that the government failed to carry its burden of showing, by objective evidence, no vindictiveness in its decision to prosecute him on the four additional charges following his successful аppeal of his cocaine conviction. He maintains that these additional charges were known to the government and could have been brought at the time it charged him with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.
The government argues, in response, that the initial indictment was based on Taylor’s agreement to plead guilty in Pennsylvania under Rule 20, and that that indictment was not superseded by an enlarged indictment prior to trial due to an agreement between the parties to allow Taylor to litigate the validity of the FBI *1513 search and to preserve that issue for appellate review. The government therefore сlaims that its motive in indicting Taylor for the additional offenses was not to punish him for his successful appeal but to ensure that he received a sentence commensurate with his criminal activity, as contemplated in the agreement leading to the original trial stipulation.
In recommending that Taylor’s indictment be dismissed, the magistrate cited
United States v. Goodwin,
A prosecutor’s decision to reindict a defendant is limited by the due process clause.
Blackledge v. Perry,
In
United States v. Goodwin,
When a prosecutor adds a new charge for relatively separate and distinct criminal conduct that occurred in the same “spree of activity,” a defendant’s due process rights are offended only if there is actual vindictiveness as opposed to the mere apprehension of vindictiveness.
United States v. Thomas,
At the hearings below, the prosecutor testified that he initially charged only the cocaine offense because he thought a possible maximum fifteen-year sentence was sufficient, given Taylor’s agreement to plead guilty under Rule 20. Unquestionably, the government could have added the additional charges following Taylor’s refusal to pleаd guilty under Rule 20.
Borden-kircher v. Hayes,
Under these circumstances, thе district court correctly concluded that the prosecutor’s motivation for indicting Taylor on additional charges was to secure a conviction and sentence commensurate with his assessment of Tаylor’s criminal conduct and not to penalize him for taking an appeal. A prosecutor’s charging decision does not impose an improper “penalty” on a defendant unless it results from the defendаnt’s exercise of a protected legal right, as opposed to the prosecutor’s normal assessment of the social interests to be vindicated by the prosecution.
Spence,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
For this reason we deem it unnecessary to decide whether to adopt the "totality of the circumstances” test utilized by the Fifth Circuit in
United States v. Krezdorn,
