Appellants Robert Bradley and Norman Speck were among twenty-one defendants indicted in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida pursuant to a twenty-nine count indictment filed on September 23, 1987 in which various marijuana and cocaine offenses were charged. The indictment contained twenty-one counts charging substantive cocaine-related offenses (Counts 1-3; 12-29). All twenty-one defendants were charged with one or more cocaine-related offenses. In addition, the indictment contained eight counts charging substantive marijuana-related offenses (Counts 4-11). Along with nine other of those defendants, Bradley and Speck were charged with relation to both marijuana and cocaine. 1
Owing to pleas of guilty and the fugitive status of two of the defendants, the case proceeded to trial against nine defendants, only two of whom, Speck and Bradley, were charged in any of the marijuana counts.
Prior to trial and during the first four and one-half days of testimony of the twenty-four day trial, defendants filed various severance motions. Speck and Bradley sought complete severance from co-defendants on the basis of prejudicial spillover. The remaining defendants requested the severing of the marijuana counts from the cocaine counts. 2 The district court did not *1485 rule with respect to any of those motions prior to trial. However, on the fifth day of testimony, that court severed the marijuana counts from the indictment pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 14 and continued the trial against the nine defendants in connection with the cocaine counts.
At the conclusion of trial, the jury acquitted Speck on each of the cocaine counts pursuant tо which he was charged; however, the jury failed to reach a verdict concerning any of the cocaine counts as to Bradley. In addition, the jury found five of the remaining seven defendants guilty as to at least one of the cocaine conspiracy charges, and failed to reach a verdict as to two others. 3
The trial court set the severed marijuana counts against Bradley and Speck apart for a subsequent trial, and denied appellants’ motions to dismiss those charges. Contending as they had below that retrial of those remaining counts is barred by the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, Bradley and Speck appeal. We affirm.
A. FACTS
The evidence adduced by the government at trial was that Bradley and Speck were active participants in extensive marijuana and cocaine smuggling operatiоns from 1984 to 1986. According to that evidence, Speck flew an aircraft containing marijuana from Jamaica into the United States as part of a smuggling operation in 1984. In connection with that operation, Bradley added additional fuel capacity, i.e., plumbed, to a second aircraft involved in the smuggling operation and made other repairs to that aircraft in addition to acting as a “spotter” for both aircraft as they arrived over the United States to determine if law enforcement aircraft were in pursuit. In May, 1986, the participants in the marijuana smuggling operation became involved with cocaine because dealing in cocaine was more lucrative. The cocaine operation ran from May, 1985 until May, 1986. Bradley continued to plumb, and provide repairs to, aircraft involved in the smuggling. In аddition, on at least one occasion, Bradley again acted as a “spotter” for aircraft returning to this country with cocaine. The government’s evidence also showed that Speck allowed aircraft owned by himself and his brother to be used in the smuggling operation, “plumbed” certain of those planes prior to takeoff, and “checked out” in one of his aircraft one of the pilots who wаs to fly in the smuggling operation.
B. APPEALABILITY
Under
Abney v. United States,
The district court, in denying appellants’ motion to dismiss the remaining charges agаinst them, stated that it regarded appellants’ double jeopardy claims as frivolous. In
United States v. Dunbar,
C. DOUBLE JEOPARDY PRINCIPLES
Speck and Bradley contend that retrial of the marijuana counts in this case
6
is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment because, under
United States v. Jorn,
“The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment protects a defendant in a criminal proceeding against multiple punishments or repeated prosecutions for the same offense.”
United States v. Dinitz,
D. WAIVER
Had the district сourt completely-severed appellants from the trial as they requested, they would clearly presently have no double jeopardy claim absent a showing that the government intended “to subvert” the protections afforded by the Double Jeopardy Clause by “goadpng them] into moving for a mistrial.”
Oregon v. Kennedy,
E. JOINDER
According to appellants, the necessity for some type of severance was occasioned not by circumstances arising unexpectedly at trial, but rather by the alleged initial mis-joinder of the cocaine and marijuana counts in the indictment, and the government’s refusal to give up the unfair advаntage obtained thereby after trial started and up to and including the severance action by the district court.
In the companion appeal arising from the same prosecution and trial as the within case,
United States v. John Weaver, et al.,
*1488 F. MANIFEST NECESSITY
Neither Bradley nor Speck has alleged — and the record does not reflect— any bad faith conduct on the part of the judge or the prosecutor, or any intent on the part of the prosecutor to provoke any of the defendants in the trial below into seeking a mistriаl. Quite the contrary, the record reveals that by joining all defendants and offenses into a single indictment, the prosecutor sought to try all of the defendants only once. Indeed, throughout the trial, the prosecutor opposed all of defendants’ various motions for severance or mistrial, and also opposed the trial court’s mid-trial severance decision. Unlike Jorn, supra, where the trial judge acted on his оwn motion in declaring a mistrial without the defendant’s consent and gave no consideration to the possibility of a trial continuance, the trial judge below scrupulously considered all of defendants’ and the prosecutor’s arguments before finally severing the marijuana counts under Fed.R.Crim.P. 14.
Appellants concede that some type of severance was manifestly necessary as a result of the improрer misjoinder in the indictment. The question arises, however, as to whether, when such joinder, as it was here, was caused not by bad faith but at most by bad judgment on the part of the prosecution and by an initial error by the district court in not ordering a severance before trial, Speck and Bradley are entitled
per se
to interpose the bar of double jeopardy to a new trial against them on the marijuana counts. The answer to that question is “no.” Initial perfection in such matters is not guaranteed to any defendant. And if error in joinder occurs under Fed.R.Crim.P. 8(b), the trial court is empowered to sever after trial starts under Fed.R.Crim.P. 14 if manifest necessity so requires. If that were not so, “mistrials caused by prosecutorial or judicial errors could never be followed by second trials, because it is never manifestly necessary to make a mistake. Yet ... а prosecutor’s blunder in drafting an indictment [can] supplfy] manifest necessity for a mistrial.”
United States v. Buljubasic,
Speck and Bradley also assert in this appeal that, in any event, the severance ordered by the district court was not manifestly necessary. We disagree. The classic formulation of what constitutes manifest necessity was advanced by Justice Story in
United States v. Perez,
In its order dismissing appellants’ motion to dismiss, the district court noted that “[a]s the trial progressed it became apparent to the court that it was difficult to separate the various conspiracies and that some severance was in order.” The reсord reflects that all defendants agreed at some time during the trial that some type of severance was absolutely necessary; they just could not agree with respect to who or what should be severed. It is also clear that the district court, before declaring a mistrial, listened to detailed argument, devoted substantial time to the issue, carefully weighed possible alternatives and took into acсount prejudice to the non-appellant defendants, judicial economy and the avoidance of multiple litigations regarding the same or similar offenses. And, as in
Gori,
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court soundly exercised its discretion in granting severance of the marijuana counts. Therefore, retrial of appellants upon the marijuana counts is not barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause. The district court’s denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss the marijuana counts is Affirmed, and the within case is Remanded to the district court for triаl of the marijuana counts.
Notes
. In the indictment, Speck and Bradley, plus seventeen others, were charged in Count Two with conspiracy to import at least one kilogram of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963. Count Three charged all defendants, including appellants, with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute at least one kilogram of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846.
Bradley and Speck, along with up to nine others who did not proceed to trial, were charged in Counts Four and Five, respectively, with conspiracy to import and conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 963 and 846, and in Count Ten with interstate travel to promote unlawful activity involving marijuana, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1952 and 2.
In addition, Bradley was charged in Count Thirteen with possession with intent to distribute at least one kilogram of cocaine, in viоlation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Speck was charged in Count Twenty with importation of at least one kilogram of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952(a) and in Count Twenty-One with possession with intent to distribute at least one kilogram of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
. In addition to Speck’s pretrial Motion for Severance Based Upon Prejudicial Joinder, which was adopted by Bradley, co-defendant Robert Fowlkes filed a pretrial motion to sever the *1485 marijuana counts, which he orally renewed at trial, and in which co-defendants Thomas Sikes, John Weaver, and Francis Scara joined. At that time, the district court indicated that all defendants would be considered as having joined in the motion unless they specifically indicated otherwise. The government opposed all severance motions.
. The separate appеals of Sikes and Weaver, who were convicted upon some of the cocaine charges, have been decided adversely to them in an opinion filed by this court today.
. Decisions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit prior to October 1, 1981 are binding as precedent in the Eleventh Circuit.
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. In that same Order in which it determined the double jeopardy claim to be frivolous, the court below stated: “The defendants who raise this issue [Speck and Bradley] have stated that they intend to appeal if their motion is denied. Although the court feels that this issue is frivolous, the court will sever out the defendant Donald Wilson for a separate trial since he is being held in pre-trial detention.” Thus, it would appear that the district court, in its discretion, decided not to proceed to trial against Speck and Bradley during the pendency of this appeal.
. The marijuana counts which were severed during trial and which remain pending against appellants are Counts Four, Five and Ten of the indictment.
. See note 3, supra.
