Gеrald Pittman was arrested and indicted on numerous charges of distributing crack cocaine and one charge of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon. After Pittman pleaded guilty to one of the drug charges and received a sentence that was significantly below that recommended by the Sentencing Guidelines, the government decided to prosecute Pittman on the remaining charges of the indictment. Pittman ended up pleading guilty to these charges as well, but argued that it would be inappropriate for the district court to increase his sentence because thе government’s decision to seek conviction on the remaining counts constituted vindictive prosecution. The district court rejected his argument and sentenced him to a significantly longer term of imprisonment. We affirm.
I. Background
From May to August of 2008, Gerald Pittman participated in several controlled crack cocaine purchases and one controlled gun purchase with an individual who was working undercover with the police. On September 17, 2008, the police arrested Pittman. Shortly after being placed under arrest, Pittman admitted that he had been selling small amounts of crack on a daily basis for several years. He agreed to cooperate with the police and participate in a crack-related sting operation that the police were planning. On September 19, 2008, Pittman broke his deal with the po *585 lice and ran from the scene of the sting оperation with the $2,000 in buy money the government had provided him. The police eventually tracked Pittman down and arrested him. After being arrested, he admitted to fleeing the controlled purchase, spending the buy money and intentionally evading the police.
On February 10, 2009, a federal grand jury returned аn indictment charging Pittman with six counts of distribution of crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). On February 17, 2009, Pittman was arraigned. He pleaded not guilty to all of the counts in the indictment.
On August 4, 2009, Pittman entered a guilty plea for one of the crack distribution counts pursuant to a written plea declaration. At the beginning of the plea colloquy, the district court sought confirmation that Pittman’s plea was not entered pursuant to a plea agreement and that Pittman understood that the United States could still choose to prosecute him for the other six charges of the indictment. Pittman stated that he understood that he did not have a plea agreement with the government and that he could be tried on the remaining counts, but that he still wished to plead guilty. When pleading guilty, Pittman admitted not only to the facts underlying onе of the distribution counts, but also to the facts underlying all of the other crack distribution counts. He did not admit to the facts underlying the firearm possession count.
On February 23, 2010, the district court held a sentencing hearing regarding the single charge to which Pittman had pleaded guilty. After hearing from both parties, the court sentenced Pittman to ninety-six months of imprisonment, to be followed by six years of supervised release. This sentence constituted a significant downward departure from the term of imprisonment recommended by the Sentencing Guidelines. At the close of the hearing, the government requested a status hearing concerning the remaining six counts of the indictment. The court granted the government’s request and scheduled a meeting for March 3, 2010. At this status hearing, the government notified the defendant and the court that it intended to prosecute Pittman on the six outstanding counts.
On March 29, 2010, Pittman pleaded guilty tо all six of the outstanding counts without a written plea agreement. On April 27, 2010, the district court held a sentencing hearing for these counts. At this hearing, Pittman argued that the government’s decision to prosecute him on the charges that remained after his initial guilty plea constituted prosecutorial vindiсtiveness. The court rejected Pittman’s argument, finding that he had been warned about what could occur prior to entering his first plea and that it was not illegal for the government to decide to proceed with prosecuting him after the first sentencing hearing. The district court sentenced Pittman to 120 months of imprisonment— the statutory minimum for the most serious charge — on all seven counts of the indictment, with all of the terms to run concurrently. Pittman seeks review of the district court’s sentence in accordance with 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a), asking us to find that the government’s decision to prosecute him after his initial sentеncing constituted vindictive prosecution and to set aside the sentence entered by the district court at the second sentencing hearing.
II. Discussion
Pittman’s sole argument on appeal asserts that the district court committed a reversible error when it rejected his vindictive prosecution claim. When consider
*586
ing whether a district court erred in this regard, we review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.
United States v. Jarrett,
In general, this court has considered a defendant’s prosecution to be vindictivе only if the defendant can show that the prosecution was pursued in retaliation for the defendant’s exercise of a legal right.
United States v. Cooper,
We have previously noted that a “pretrial claim of vindictive prosecution is extraordinarily difficult to prove,”
Segal,
Pittman argues that the district court’s dismissal of his vindictive prosecution claim was improper, asserting that the timing of thе government’s decision to prosecute him on the additional counts and the government’s statements before the district court constituted sufficient proof of animus. Pittman believes that this evidence established that the government decided to prosecute him on the remaining claims only bеcause the district court entered a below-Guidelines sentence at the initial sentencing hearing. Pittman contends that, because the government’s primary motivation in prosecuting him after his initial plea was its desire to see him receive a more severe punishment, the government’s actions were motivated by animus for him and his second sentence should be set aside.
Because Pittman’s argument strongly resembles one that this court considered in
United States v. Cooper,
We rejected Cooper’s argument, concluding that he had failed to submit evidence sufficient to support his claim.
Id.
at 856. Not only did we find that there was nothing particularly suspicious about the timing of the government’s prosecutorial actions, but we held that “even if there were ... evidence of suspicious timing alone does not indicate prosecutorial animus.”
Id.
(citing
Falcon,
Given our ruling in
Cooper,
the district court did not err in rejecting Pittman’s vindictive prosecution claim, since Pittman failed to present the court with objective evidence indicating that prosecutorial animus motivated the government’s decision to continue prosecuting him. While Pittman argues that he did, in fact, prove animus, none of the evidence that he points to provides sufficient support for his claim. First, Pittman cannot meet his evidentiary burden by merely relying on the timing of the gоvernment’s decision to prosecute him on all of the indictment’s pending charges, since our precedents clearly state that evidence of timing is insufficient to prove prosecutorial animus.
Id.
at 856;
Falcon,
Second, the mere fact that the government decided to go forward with proseсuting Pittman does not, in and of itself, indicate that the government’s actions were motivated by animus. While it is possible that the government’s decision to prosecute was based on some illicit motive, it is also possible that the decision was based merely on a desire to further the legitimate soсietal interest in imposing an adequate punishment for the crimes involved. The law in this circuit clearly establishes that, absent evidence establishing malfeasance, we are to accord the government’s pretrial decisions a presumption of propriety.
1
Jarrett,
Finally, the only other piecеs of evidence that Pittman discusses in his brief — the transcripts of the district court’s status and sentencing hearings — provide no support for his claim of vindictive persecution. Having reviewed these materials ourselves, we cannot find any indication that the decision to continue the prosecution resulted from any of the motivations that we have previously identified as improper. There are no indications in the transcripts that the government harbored unjustifiably negative feelings for Pittman or, more importantly, that any such feelings motivated it to prosecute Pittman on all of the charges set forth in the indictment. Nor are there signs that the prosecutor possessed a personal interest in the outcome of this case or sought to rehabilitate her earlier performance.
Perhaps in recognition of the fact that his claim does not fit within our vindictive prosecution jurisprudence, Pittman argues that we should expand our conception of prosecutorial animus to include situations where prosecutorial decisions are motivated by a desire to see defendants sentenced to significant terms of imprisonment. 2 We cannot accept Pittman’s invitation. Absent evidence to the contrary, we assume that the government’s motivation for punishing criminals is grounded in its pursuit of a number of legitimate state interests: the interest in protecting society from known law-breakers, the interest in deterring other individuals from committing similar crimes, the intеrest in expressing societal condemnation for those who violate the law, etc. Because of the impersonal nature of these considerations, prosecutorial decisions that are based on them are too principled to be vindictive.
While criminal defendants would undoubtedly prefer that we find that the mere potential for prosecutorial discontent is sufficient to undermine the presumptive legitimacy of a prosecutor’s decisions, doing so would fundamentally change the burden of proof we have imposed for malicious prosecution claims. Defendants must present evidence establishing that a pretrial prosecutorial decision was based on animus. Where, as here, they fail to meet this burden, it is proper for district courts to dismiss their vindictive prosecution claims.
III. Conclusion
For these reasons, the sentence imposеd by the district court is
Affirmed
Notes
. We reject Pittman’s contention that the government's decision to prosecute him on the remaining counts of the indictment should be entitled to the presumption of vindictiveness that we have accorded defendants who face more serious charges after sucсessfully appealing their original conviction.
See, e.g., United States v. Cooper,
. The trial transcripts make it clear that the government's goal in continuing to prosecute Pittman was to see him receive a prison sentence greater than the ninety-six month term that the court sentenced him to initially.
