OPINION OF THE COURT
Orlando Canel and Jose Figueroa appeal from judgments of sentence imposed following their conviction, in a jury trial in the District Court of the Virgin Islands, of violations of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (1976) (conspiracy), 18 U.S.C. § 2314 (1976) (transporting in commerce checks obtained by fraud), 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (1976) (wire fraud), and 18 U.S.C. §§ 1001 and 2 (1976) (false statements to an agency of the United States). Their principal contention on appeal is that they could not constitutionally be tried in the District Court of the Virgin Islands for violations of federal criminal statutes of general application. They also make several objections to the sufficiency of the evidence and the manner in which the trial was conducted. We affirm.
I.
The charges of which Canel and Figueroa were convicted arose out of purchases of two truck-tractors by the Government of the Virgin Islands, Division of Roads and Highways. Mr. Canel was the Director of that Division at the time of the purchase, and Mr. Figueroa was the seller. The trucks were formerly owned by Tri-County Truck Sales, a bankrupt Puerto Rico company. In essence the fraudulent scheme involved representations to various officials of the Virgin Islands Government that Figueroa was the “administrator” of the bankrupt company, and that by dealing with him instead of soliciting competitive bids the government would be obtaining the vehicles at “rock bottom prices.” In fact, Figueroa had no connection with the administration of the bankrupt company, but purchased the trucks from it at prices significantly lower than the prices charged the government. Canel and Figueroa succeeded in convincing Virgin Islands officials that normal purchasing practices should be bypassed in order to prevent the “administrator” from disposing of the bargain, trucks elsewhere.
II.
Canel and Figueroa make two distinct challenges to the power of the District Court of the Virgin Islands to try them for violations of Title 18 of the United States-Code, neither of which has merit. The first is that only an article III judge may preside at the trial, wherever it may be held, of a charge of violating the United States criminal laws of general application. The second is that the trial of a criminal charge before a judge enjoying the limited tenure afforded to judges of the District Court of the Virgin Islands violates due process.
*896 A. The Article III Contention
The appellants’ argument that life-tenured judges must preside at criminal trials under federal criminal statutes of general application is predicated upon the recent opinion of the Supreme Court in
Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipeline
Co.,-U.S.-,
In
Palmore v. United States,
We recognize the distinction. We note, however, that Congress has made no provision for a United States District Court for the Virgin Islands. It has only provided for a District Court of the Virgin Islands.
See United States v. George,
Recognizing that
Northern Pipeline
must realistically be read as a disavowal by the majority of some of the more expansive statements in Justice White’s
Palmore
opinion respecting congressional power to dispense with article III judges in sanctioning contexts, we find nothing in it suggesting
*897
any erosion of the
Canter
holding. Congress obviously could, as it has in the District of Columbia and in Puerto Rico,
1
provide for life-tenured judges for federal as distinct from local matters. Outside the geographical limits of the states which are members of the federal union, however, the tenure and compensation guarantees of article III, section 1 have been recognized for too long to be matters of legislative grace rather than constitutional right for this court to hold otherwise. Other courts which have explicitly considered the question have reached the same conclusion.
See Government of the Canal Zone v. Scott,
B. The Due Process Contention
The appellants predicate their due process contention on 48 U.S.C. § 1614(a) (1976), which provides that the judges of the District Court of the Virgin Islands “shall hold office for terms of eight years ... unless sooner removed by the President for cause.” They point out that nowhere in the Organic Act or elsewhere is cause for removal defined. Thus, they urge, the judges of the district court are at all times subject to the possibility that the federal executive may attempt to apply the removal provision in section 1614(a) in an arbitrary manner. Moreover, even if the President leaves the judge alone during the term, there is always the problem of failure of reappointment if the actions of a given judge are less than satisfactory to the Department of Justice.
Appellants’ objections to the removal and term tenure features of section 1614(a) have been regarded seriously in some quarters. A leading commentator has observed:
If judicial independence is of vital importance in the states, it is hard to see why it is not equally valuable to the territories. The district judges there try persons for crimes against the United States. They hear civil cases in which the United States is a party. They should be able to decide such cases fearlessly and impartially, without being dependent upon the Department of Justice for their continued tenure. Unfortunately instances are not unknown of territorial judges who have not been reappointed, under circumstances where it appears that they have been denied reappointment because of decisions displeasing to the appointing authority. So long as these judges have limited tenure, the possibility of such abuse, or apparent abuse, will persist. The granting to these judges of tenure during good behavior, as was recently done for Puerto Rico, would be desirable.
C. Wright, Law of Federal Courts § 11, 49 (4th ed. 1983) (footnotes omitted). Even if one were to posit that section 1614 (a) is an undesirable statute, it is a long jump to holding that a trial before judges appointed under it violates due process of law. No authority has been called to our attention holding that defects in the process whereby judges may be removed or reappointed can be relied upon by litigants to challenge the capacity of those judges to render decisions satisfying due process. Indeed it seems likely that such a doctrine would undermine the authority of many state courts to function. Thus we reject appellants’ contention that the recognized defects in section 1614(a) are of due process dimensions for litigants.
III.
Appellants’ remaining contentions need not long detain us. Both defendants contend that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a finding of guilt on any count. Our examination of the record discloses otherwise. Mr. Canel urges that the court should have granted him a new trial for prejudicial joinder. There was no pre-trial motion for a severance, and on this record we cannot hold that a post-verdict denial of a motion for a new trial on this ground was an abuse of discretion. Mr. Canel also contends that a statement taken from him was
*898
introduced in evidence in violation of
Massiah v. United States,
IV.
The judgments appealed from will therefore be in all respects affirmed.
Notes
. See 28 U.S.C. § 133 (1976 & Supp. V 1981) (providing for appointment of district judges).
