Defendants Rosen, Rew and Holmes were convicted of various charges involving conspiracy, attempt, and importation relating to the smuggling of marijuana to the United States from Jamaica. On appeal defendants claim (1) insufficiency of the evidence; (2) inconsistency of the evidence with the charges in the indictment; and (3) erroneous sentencing in that the statutory maximum sentence for importation or attempted importation was exceeded. We affirm the convictions but hold the statutory maximum sentences were exceeded, which the Government does not contest, and remand to the district court for resen-tencing.
Rosen and Rew are pilots who flew an aircraft to Jamaica on September 2, 1981, to pick up a load of marijuana, but returned empty a day later, apparently because of a scheduling problem. The plan to bring in the marijuana was devised by codefendants Holmes and Savage. After the Jamaican mishap, Rosen refused to continue in the scheme. Rew and Savage, presently a fugitive, and codefendant Webster, who testified for the Government and was not prosecuted in this action, planned a further smuggling flight, this time from Colombia. Testimony at trial indicated that Rew piloted this plane, which crashed in rural St. Lucie County with 28 bales of marijuana aboard on October 19, 1981.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the Government,
Glasser v. United States,
The defendants’ objective acts in attempting to import marijuana were unequivocal. The only reason Rosen and Rew returned empty-handed from Jamaica is that the marijuana was not ready when they arrived and the plane had picked up a military escort on the way down. Defendants’ acts clearly supported the attempt conviction.
See United States v. Mandujano,
As for Rew’s conviction of marijuana importation, the Government had to prove only that Rew aided and abetted the importation.
United States v. Brooks,
Rew’s claim that the Government failed to prove the substance found aboard the crashed airplane was marijuana is merit-less. The officers who investigated the crash scene were experienced and had identified marijuana on numerous prior occasions. Their testimony was sufficient for a reasonable jury to find the substance to be marijuana.
See United States v. Sanchez,
Holmes’ argument that a variance existed between the proof at trial and the indictment is based on an allegation that the evidence at trial proved two separate conspiracies while the indictment alleged only a single conspiracy. Whether one or multiple conspiracies are proven depends on whether the evidence demonstrates a “single enterprise.”
Kotteakos v. United States,
The Government agrees with defendant Holmes that the trial court erred in sentencing him to 12 years and fining him $25,000 on Count II, which charged him with intent to import marijuana. The maximum sentence for such a charge is five years imprisonment and a $15,000 fine. 21 U.S.C.A. §§ 960(b)(2); 963. The only dispute is whether the whole sentence should be remanded for resentencing on both counts in Holmes’ conviction or whether resentencing should be restricted to the one count. Holmes’ sentence was as follows:
FIVE (5) YEARS as to Count 1. It is adjudged that on Count 2 that the defendant is hereby committed to the custody of the Attorney General ... for imprisonment for a term of TWELVE (12) YEARS. It is the further order of this Court that the defendant is fined the sum of $15,000 as to Count 1, and $25,000 as to Count 2. The fine in Count 2 is cumulative to that in Count 1____
The court could possibly have given a heavier sentence on Count I. The enhanced penalty provision of 21 U.S.C.A. § 841(b)(6) was applicable there, because more than 1,000 pounds of marijuana was involved, but could not affect Count II.
The Third Circuit has held that in a direct appeal from multiple count criminal convictions, where the several sentences are interdependent, an appellate court may vacate all sentences even if only one is re
*766
versed on appeal.
United States v. Busic,
After a granting of rehearing, at which it was determined that LaRocca’s sentence could not be augmented under both section 111 and section 924(c), then a reversal and remand by the Supreme Court,
see Busic v. United States,
The circuit court in
Busic
carefully analyzed the issue for double jeopardy concerns and found none. There was no question of multiple punishments for the same offense, only a resentencing to replace a sentence held invalid by the Supreme Court.
Such is the case here. Holmes is challenging his entire conviction on direct appeal, not simply his sentence on Count II. His sentences are interdependent. They stem from the same criminal transaction.
Alleging that a double jeopardy violation will occur if the district court resentences him for a conviction on Count I, affirmed on this appeal, Holmes relies on
Chandler v. United States,
In our judgment, however, there is a difference between a collateral attack on a particular sentence under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35 or 28 U.S.C.A. § 2255, and a direct appeal from multiple count convictions. With a collateral attack, only a specific sentence on a specific count is before the district court. The narrow scope of review on a collateral attack is almost jurisdictional in nature. The court has power only over what is brought before it. On a direct appeal, however, none of the sentences has become final and the appellate court has all sentences before it. 28 U.S.C.A. § 2106. In Chandler, the conviction and sentence on the unchallenged count had been affirmed through the appellate process and was not before the district court on the *767 § 2255 petition. Here, all aspects of Holmes’ convictions and sentences are before the Court on this appeal.
The Government would have us rely on
Johnson v. United States,
In any event, we do not rely on Johnson, but follow here the careful reasoning of the Third Circuit in Busic as the correct rule on a direct appeal. Sentencing on a multi-count conviction is an interrelated and intertwined process because of the statutory provisions for concurrent and consecutive sentences. See generally, Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970, 21 U.S.C.A. § 801 et seq. Where an entire conviction is challenged on direct appeal, double jeopardy and due process are not implicated when all sentences, both proper and improper, are remanded, because of the holistic nature of the trial judge’s sentencing decision. Multiple count convictions present the trial judge with the need for a sentencing scheme which takes into consideration the total offense characteristics of a defendant’s behavior. When that scheme is disrupted because it has incorporated an illegal sentence, it is appropriate that the entire case be remanded for sentencing.
A similar problem affects the sentence of defendant Rew. Rew was sentenced as follows:
SEVEN (7) YEARS as to each of Counts 1, 2, and 3, said sentences to run concurrent with each other ... a special parole term of THREE (3) YEARS as to Count 2 and THREE (3) YEARS as to Count 3, said sentences to run consecutive to each other.
The defendant is fined the sum of $20,-000 as to Count 1, $15,000 as to Count 2, and $20,000 as to Count 3, said fines to be cumulative to each other.
The Government concedes that Rew’s fine under Count II exceeds the statutory minimum by $5,000. Because Rew’s improper seven-year sentence on Count II was to run concurrently with a properly imposed seven-year sentence under Count I, the Government contends that his sentence need not be reviewed due to the concurrent sentence doctrine.
See United States v. Whitaker,
Defendant Rosen’s motion to adopt the positions of his co-defendants was granted at oral argument. Thus even though his appellate brief failed to discuss the issue, we remand his sentences for the same reasons given above. Rosen was sentenced to eight years on Count II, three years over the statutory maximum, to run concurrently with an eight-year sentence on Count I and a two-year sentence on Count III. Although resentencing may not affect the extent of his sentence, it could, as in Rew’s case, interfere with parole so the concurrence sentence doctrine is not applicable.
*768 Defendants Holmes’, Rew’s and Rosen’s sentences on all counts are vacated and remanded to the district court for resen-tencing within the statutory maximum for each offense.
AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and REMANDED.
