On June 2, 1971, appellant Ralph De Simone was indicted for conspiring with others to violate former sections 173 and 174 of Title 21, United States Code, prohibiting the importation of narcotic drugs. The indictment alleged that the conspiracy had lasted from approximately December 1, 1967 until the date of filing of the indictment, and it specified four overt acts performed in furtherance of the conspiracy. The last of these was alleged to have taken place on May 17, 1971. De Simone pleaded not guilty.
In January 1972, after three days of trial before Judge John M. Cannella and a jury in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, De Simone changed his plea to guilty. This followed uncontradicted testimony of conspiratorial activity occurring prior to May 1, 1971, which De Simone acknowledged, when he changеd his plea, to be true. On March 20, 1972, Judge Cannella sentenced De Simone to ten years in prison and fined him $20,000, pursuant to the provisions of 21 U.S.C. § 174 (minimum mandatory five-year sentence) and 26 U.S.C. § 7237 (d) (no probation, no parole). However, both 21 U.S.C. §§ 173, 174 and 26 U.S.C. § 7237(d) had been repealed as of May 1, 1971 by the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act, §§ 1101(a)(2), (b)(4)(A), 84 Stat. 1291, 1292 (Drug Control Act). Under the new law, 21 U.S.C. §§ 801 et seq., there is neither a general minimum sentence requirement nor a blanket ban on probation or parole in such narcotic cases. Immediately after sentencing, De Simone’s attorney asked the court to “note my objection to the defendant De Simone being sentenced under 173 and 174” on the ground that the sentencing provisions of the new Drug Control Act should have been applied. De Simone, who is now serving his sentence, appeals.
De Simone’s two principal arguments concern that portion of former section 7237(d) that denied parole to a defendant convicted under 21 U.S.C. §§ 173, 174. 1 Appellant first asserts that the no-parole rule of section 7237(d) does not apply to a defendant sentenced after repeal of the section even though his criminal conduct occurred before repeal. The key statutory provisions bearing on this question are two so-called savings clauses. The new Drug Control Act states in section 1103(a):
Prosecutions for any violation of law occurring prior to the effective date of section 1101 [repealing, inter alia, 21 U.S.C. §§ 173, 174] shall not be affected by the repeals or amendments made by such section ... or abated by reason thereof.
In addition, there is a general federal savings clause, first enacted in 1871, at 1 U.S.C. § 109, which provides in relevant part:
The repeal of any statute shall not have the effect to release or extinguish *1198 any penalty, forfeiture, or liability incurred under such statute, unless the repealing Act shall so expressly provide, and such statute shall be treated as still remaining in force for the purpose of sustaining any proper action or prosecution for the enforcement of such penalty, forfeiture, or liability.
Appellant argues that after May 1, 1971 neither clause “saves” the no-parole rule of section 7237(d). As to the •'former, appellant asserts that the term “prosecutions” in section 1103(a) does not cover matters relating to parole. As for the latter, appellant says Congress intended to supercede section 109 by section 1103(a) and, in any event, the no-pаrole provision of section 7237(d) is a “procedural” matter to which section 109 does not apply.
That section 1103(a) applies to sentencing is now well-settled in this circuit. See,
e. g.,
United States v. Ross,
Appellant’s argument is a substantial one, but we conclude that it should be rejected. It is true that none of the cases in this Court, cited above, discuss specifically whether the no-parole rule of section 7237(d) is saved by section 1103 (a). However, the tenor of
Ross
certainly implies rejection of appellant’s view. In
Ross,
we regarded “parole or probation” as both part of the same process, and “as alternatives to prison.”
Turning to the effect of section 109,
Ross
seems even more in point since it clearly held that “§ 7237(d) is .
*1199
the type оf statute which § 109 was intended to save.” Id. See also United States v. Fiotto, supra; United States v. Bradley,
supra; cf.
United States v. Taylor,
De Simone next argues that even if the no-parole provision of section 7237(d) applies to post-repeal convictions for acts performed before repeal, it cannot apply to а conspiracy continuing after the effective date (May 1, 1971) of the new law. We have not previously dealt with this precise problem, since the earlier cases, cited above, did not involve offenses that continued after May 1, 1971. Nonetheless, this case does not seem significantly different from prior ones. It is true that the indictment alleged a conspiracy extending for about one month beyond the date of repeal of section 7237 (d) and that it specified one overt act occurring after repeal. But section 1103 (a) applies to “[p]rosecutions for any violation of law occurring prior to the effective date of section 1101 . . . .” In this case, a conspiracy was commenced several years before the effective date of the new provision and three of the four overt acts cited in the indictment took place during that period. Hence there is no question that a “violation of law [occurred] prior to” May 1, 1971. This violation is the basis of the indictment, and the fact that the conspiracy continued for a time aftеr the change in law does not take the case beyond the reach of section 1103(a). 4
Appellant directs our attention to several decisions that have upheld sentencing for conspiracy under a law allowing longer sentences that had been enacted during the conspiracy.
E. g.,
Huff v. United States,
Appellant’s final arguments are jurisdictional. He claims, apparently for the first time, that thе district court could not try him for violating sections 173 and 174, because the conspiracy had continued beyond the date of repeal and included during its latter period a significant overt act. Therefore, according to appellant, the indictment and sentenсing could only be under the new Drug Control Act. But although this point.goes to the conviction itself rather than merely to the sentence, we view it as essentiallly the same as De Simone’s immediately preceding argument regarding a change of law during an on-going conspiracy. Othеr than the dissenting opinions in Rosenberg v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. This focus on parole is understandable. Since Judge Cannella actually imposed a sentence under the prior statute greater than the mandatory five-year minimum, it is not likely that even under the more flexible provisions of the new Drug Control Act the judge would have granted De Simone probation or a shorter prison term. But under the new Act the judge could not have denied parole.
. At
Parole arises after the end of the criminal prosecution, including imposition of sentence.
. See 18 U.S.O. § 4208(a).
. For the same reasons, section 109 seems applicable as well.
. The court in United States v. Jackson,
siipra,
appears to have relied, at least in part, on the fact that the bulk of the conspiracy there in question, including four of the five overt acts alleged, took place after the effective date of the new law. See
. In Rosenberg, the issue was whether a stay of execution granted by Justice Douglas shоuld be vacated. Appellants claimed that the Atomic Energy Act, cli. 724, § 10(b)(2), (3), CO Stat. 166, as amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2274r-75, enacted during their conspiracy and requiring a jury recommendation and a finding of intent to injure the United States as predicates to the imposition of the death penalty, should hаve been applied in their ease. The Court held that their argument raised no substantial question and it vacated the stay. Justices Frankfurter, Black and Douglas dissented.
. Compare § 1103(a) with § 1103(b). The latter is explicitly limited to “seizures or forfeitures and injunctive proceedings commenced prior to the effective date of” the new law. If Congress had intended to limit § 1103(a) in the same manner, it presumably would have said so.
