Appellants, defendants in the District Court, petitioned for rehearing with a suggestion for rehearing
en banc.
At the time of such petition,
Grady v. Corbin,
Our mandate, delayed by appellants’ timely petition for rehearing, has not issued. In light of Dixon, and before the decision becomes final, it is properly the subject of our sua sponte reconsideration. 1 Upon such reconsideration, the court ORDERS as follows:
Section IIB of the opinion,
*367
In
Dixon,
the Supreme Court renounced the “same-conduct” test enunciated in
Grady
2
,
and reaffirmed the analysis in
Blockburger v. United States,
At least in eases of cumulative punishment,
Blockburger
has been considered a yardstick of legislative intent.
See e.g., Missouri v. Hunter,
Despite the awkward fit between
Block-burger
and this case, the larger lesson drawn from the Supreme Court’s recent overturning of
Grady
and reassertion of
Blockburger
is that the double jeopardy clause will not bar either cumulative punishment or successive pi’osecution where each charged offense differs in one substantive respect from each other charge. As announced in
Dixon,
“[the inquiry is] whether each offense contains an element not contained in the other; if not, they are the ‘same offence’ and double jeopardy bars additional punishment and successive prosecution.”
Dixon
, — U.S. at -,
Applying the “same-elements” test to this case, we are satisfied that the four Florida district court charges which we upheld in the original panel opinion under the more rigorous Grady standard are clearly sustainable under the looser Dixon/Blockburger approach. In the original opinion, we overturned the single charge of murder for hire on double jeopardy grounds because we found that the charge required proof of the same conduct as was prosecuted in the attempted murder charge. However, under the “same-elements” test, the murder for hire charge is sustainable. A critical statutory element of murder for hire is the promise of remuneration. 18 U.S.C. § 1958(a) (1989). A charge of attempted murder under the Puerto Rico code requires no proof of such an element, although it does require proof of an act unequivocally directed at the offense. P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 33 § 3121 (1989). Thus, each statute contains an element different from the other. While we previously concluded that the two charges impermissibly placed Rafael and Luis Sanchez twice in jeopardy for the same criminal behavior, we must conclude under Dixon that the charges are statutorily distinct.
No member of this panel nor other Judge in regular active service on the Court having requested that the Court be polled on rehearing en banc, the suggestion of rehearing en banc is denied.
The opinion of the district court is REVERSED as to its conclusion that Puerto Rico and the United States are separate sovereigns and is AFFIRMED in all other *368 respects. 3
Notes
. The government filed an untimely petition for rehearing which came to us contemporaneously with the opinion in
United States v. Dixon,
- U.S. -,
.
Grady
required that in addition to the
Block-burger
test, the government must satisfy a “same-conduct” test to avoid the double jeopardy bar.
Grady,
. All other parts of the opinion remain unchanged.
