Stеven Crawford and Randall Waggoner were convicted on one count of conspiring to transport illegal aliens, nine counts of transporting illegal aliens, and eleven counts of holding persons in involuntary servitude. 1 They appeal an order of the district court granting thе government’s Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(a) motion to correct sentence, claiming that the increase in punishment they received on resentencing violates their double jeopardy rights. 2 Concluding that resentencing was proper in this case, we affirm.
*255 I.
At the original sentencing proceeding, the district court judge addressed each defendant and gave each one an opportunity to respond, as required by Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(a)(1). The attorneys for the United States were not heard. Arguing that the denial of the government’s right of allocution under Rule 32(a)(1) had caused the sentеnces given the defendants to be imposed in an illegal manner, the United States appealed and petitioned for mandamus. We dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction and denied the writ of mandamus because we concluded that the alleged flaw in the sentencing proceeding did not justify extraordinary relief. In dismissing the appeal, we stated that the government was free under Rule 35 to apply for correction of sentence in the district court and that Rule 35’s 120-day period would begin anew on receipt of our mandate.
The United Stаtes then filed its Rule 35(a) motion to correct sentence. In granting the government’s motion, the district court noted that it had understood the government’s right to be heard and had not intended to deny it; but looking back at what had transpired and making an objective ruling in response to the Rule 35 motion, the court stated that the “overriding fact is that the government was not heard before sentence was pronounced on defendants Crawford and Waggoner when it apparently wished to be heard.” The court was therefore “of the opinion that the sentences were imposed in an illegal manner and that correction pursuant to Rule 35 is necessary.” The court vacated the sentences previously imposed, and, concluding that the appearance of justice would be more readily served if the defendants werе resentenced before another district judge, ordered the action transferred to the chief judge for the district for further proceedings as deelned appropriate. Greater sentences, see supra n. 2, were subsequently imposed.
The two primary issues raised in this appeal are: first, whether the district court erred in granting the government’s motion under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35; and, second, whether the resentencing of Crawford and Waggoner violated their double jeopardy rights under the Fifth Amendment. 3
II.
A.
The appellants concede that Fed.R. Crim.P. 32(a)(1) grants the government allocution rights equal to the rights grantеd defendants. 4 They assert, however, that the district court erroneously found that the United States was denied its right to allocute.
The record shows that, in the original sentencing proceeding, the district court discussed the presentence report with each defendant. The court then gave the defendants and their counsel each an opportunity to speak on behalf of the defendants. Immediately thereafter, the court began to discuss recommendations from the probation office concerning the defendants. The court then аddressed the attorney for the Justice Department, stating its opinion concerning the efforts of the government to reduce the number of illegal aliens entering the United States. The United States Attorney began to respond, but she was *256 stopped by the court and told that the court did not wish to hear from her. She repeated her attempt to speak several times but each time she was stopped by the court. When she began to cite the rules, the court responded that it did not care what the rules said concerning what the attorney was talking аbout. The court warned her that it could hold her in contempt under the rules if she said anything else. Immediately thereafter, the court imposed sentence on the defendants.
The appellants contend that, in finding that the United States had been denied its allocution rights, the district cоurt improperly “implied substance over form.” They argue that it is obvious from the transcript that the government’s attorney chose not to speak when its attorney standing at the lectern did not seek allocution rights. They contend that the United States Attorney that attempted to address the court was not at the lectern. They characterize her attempts to speak, as did the district court in its brief opposing the government’s petition for mandamus, as improper interruptions. We believe that in the Rule 35 hearing the district judge was entitled, whatever the рosition of the government attorneys in the courtroom might have been, to find that the court did not hear the government when it wished to be heard.
The district court in its order granting the Rule 35 motion found, in effect, that the court denied the United States its right to allocution. We review such factual determinations by the district court under the clearly erroneous standard.
Campbell v. United States,
B.
The appellants contend that their right not to be placed twice in jeopardy was violated when their punishment was enhanced in the resentencing proceeding. They argue that they had a legitimate expectation that their sentences were final because (1) they were not at fault in the original sentencing proceeding, and (2) absent statutory authority, their sentences could not be enhanced once they had begun to serve them. The United States countеrs that no such expectation exists when, as here, the sentence is challenged in a manner provided by law.
Appellants cite
Jones v. United States,
The Eleventh Circuit reversed the district court’s judgment in Jones, holding that the defendant’s “legitimate expectations with respect to the duration of his sentence were frustrated by resentencing.” Id. at 638. In so holding, the court explained that a sentence, onсe imposed and commenced, could not be enhanced unless modified according to statute or unless the defendant knowingly deceived the court. *257 Id. The sentence of the defendant in Jones was imposed legally and was not subject to attack on a Rule 35 motion. That is the difference between Jones and the present ease.
The Suprеme Court ended any question whether the government can challenge an illegal sentence in
United States v. DiFrancesco,
In
DiFrancesco,
the Supreme Court summarized the principles of double jeopardy as they apply to sentencing. First, the Court explained that double jeоpardy does not prevent review of a sentence just because its success might deprive a defendant of the benefit of a more lenient sentence.
Id.
at 132,
Turning to the question whether section 3576 violates the Double Jeopardy Clause, the Court pointed out that
United States v. Benz,
The appellants’ final argument thus rests on their ability to point to a distinction, for double jeopardy purposes, between an illegal sentence and a sentence that is illegally imposed. Although “Rule 35 burdens us with the аrtificial task of drawing [such] lines” in cases involving the question whether review of a sentence is subject to the 120-day limit of Rule 35(a) for sentences illegally imposed,
see United States v. Cevallos,
In affirming the order of the district court, we also rejеct the appellants’ argument that this case is controlled by
United States v. Henry,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See 18 U.S.C. § 371 (1982) (conspiracy to commit offense); 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(2) (1982) (knowingly transporting aliens within the United States in violation of law); 18 U.S.C. § 2 (1982) (principals); 18 U.S.C. § 1584 (1982) (holding persons in involuntary servitude).
. Crawford and Waggoner were each originally sentenced to five years' probation and fined $1,000 on the conspiracy count. They also received a sentence of five years’ probation on the eighteen remaining counts, to run concurrently with sentence on count one, and were fined an additional $1,000.
On resentencing, Crawford was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on each count, exсept one, with the sentences running concurrently. He was given credit for the time he had served on probation under his original sentence. He was sentenced to three year’s probation on the remaining count, to run consecutively to the five year term of imprisonmеnt. Additionally, he was fined $1,000 and ordered to pay restitution for wages owed to the workers he had been convicted of enslaving. He was given credit for any amount he had previously paid.
Waggoner’s punishment was the same as that imposed on Crawford, except his term of imрrisonment was four years and he was not made responsible for paying restitution to the former enslaved workers.
. Appellants also assert that the government’s original appeal was taken in bad faith and, therefore, that appeal should not be the basis for extеnding the 120-day time limit in Fed.R. Crim.P. 35(a). This contention was not raised in the district court and we decline to consider it here.
See Self v. Blackburn,
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(a)(1) states:
Imposition of Sentence. Sentence shall be imposed without unreasonable delay. Before imposing sentence the court shall
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(B) afford counsel an opportunity to speak on behalf of the defendant; and
(C) address the defendant personally and ask him if he wishes to make a statement in his own behalf and to present any information in mitigation of punishment. The attorney for the government shall have an equivalent opportunity to speak to the court.
