Aftеr a jury trial in the district court, Paul Porter was convicted on one count of conspiracy with intent to distribute marijuana, a violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(6), and 846 (1982). Porter appealed to this court, and we rulеd that the district court had erred by admitting into evidence certain inculpatory statements made by Porter to DEA agents. We vacated the judgment of conviction and remanded Porter’s casе to the district court for further proceedings.
United States v. Porter,
The district court denied Porter’s motion, indicating that it would permit a new trial. While apparently believing that a retrial was proper even if the government’s original case were legally insufficient without the illegal evidence, the court indicated that it thought the remaining evidence here was, in fact, legally sufficient to go to the jury.
Porter took this interlocutory appeal from the court’s denial of his motion to dismiss thе indictment, relying on
Abney v. United States,
I.
We begin by disagreeing with the parties’ characterization of the issue on appeal. They have framed it as being what evidenсe a court should consider when assessing the sufficiency of the evidence for double jeopardy purposes. We see the proper inquiry to be whether it is open to a defendаnt in these circumstances to raise a double jeopardy claim at all based upon the purported insufficiency of evidence at the first trial. The answer, we believe, is “no.”
In
Richardson v. United States,
Having established appellate jurisdiction, the Supreme Court then turned to defendant’s double jeopardy claim. It ruled that where a mistrial is ordеred because of a hung jury, defendant has no valid double jeopardy claim to prevent his retrial “[rjegardless of the sufficiency of the evidence at petitioner’s first trial.”
In concluding that defendant could be retried, the Court refused to read
Burks
as resulting in “the sweeping change in the law of double jeopardy which petitioner would have us hold.”
We believe that the reasoning of Richardson controls the instant appeal. It is true the Richardson decision focused on the circumstances surrounding a hung jury, but the principles upon which the Court relied are equally applicable here. Just as society has a strong interest in retrying a defendant after his jury cannot agree on a verdict, so it also has a strong interest in providing the government with a full and fair opportunity to prosecute a defendаnt whose conviction is reversed due to a trial error. The Supreme Court recognized as much in Burks, stating that
reversal for trial error ... does not constitute a decision to the effect that the government has failed to prove its case. As such, it implies nothing with respect to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. Rather, it is a determination that a defendant has been convicted through a judicial process which is defective in some fundamental respect____ When this occurs, the accused has a strong interest in obtaining a fair readjudication of his guilt free from error, just as society maintains a valid concern for insuring that the guilty are punished.
Of equal importance, cases reversed for trial error do not pose “ ‘an unacceptаbly high risk that the Government, with its superior resources, will wear down the defendant’ and obtain a conviction solely through its persistence,”
Tibbs v. Florida,
Applying
Richardson
to the case at bar, we affirm the retrial order. Porter cannot argue that the vacating of his conviction for legal error, on direct appeal from his first trial, marked the end to his original jeopardy; the dоctrine of continuing jeopardy, implicit in
United States v. Ball,
Thus, we hold that where a conviction has been reversed due to trial error and a new trial ordered, and where, after remand, defendant raises a double jeopardy claim to bar his retrial, neither the district court, nor this court on an Abney appeal, need examine thе sufficiency of the evidence at the first trial. 2 The situation is, of course, entirely different when the initial conviction was reversed on direct appeal for insufficiency of evidence. In suсh event, Burks prohibits a retrial.
The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. In Burks, the Supreme Court held that where an appellate court has set aside a conviction solely because of insufficient evidence, forcing a defendant to stand retriаl would violate the double jeopardy clause.
. Our decision is consistent, in practical effect, with the outcome in cases in five other circuits.
See, e.g., United States v. Key, 725
F.2d 1123, 1127 (7th Cir.1984);
Linam v. Griffin, 685
F.2d 369, 373-74 (10th Cir.1982),
cert. denied,
Although Richardson leads us to a different analysis than was employed in these cases, the practical result is much the same, sinсe by counting the illegally admitted evidence those courts in virtually all instances would deny the validity of double jeopardy claims based on the theory that the prosecution’s evidence at the first trial was insufficient. In light of Richardson, we merely hold that where the first conviction was vacated for legal error, not insufficiency of evidence, the concept of continuing jeopardy rules out a double jeopardy claim based on purported insufficiency of evidence at the first trial.
