Aftеr resolving preliminary issues regarding this court’s jurisdiction over Appeal No. 77 — 2158 and our scope of review, the remaining questions are whether defendant has a valid double jeopardy claim; whether defendant was prosеcuted under an unconstitutional statute; whether the plea bargaining process is unconstitutional; and whether defendant suffered a manifest injustice by reason of his having received a substantially longer sentence than eithеr of two co-defendants.
*310 Defendant-appellant, Thomas D. Gaert-ner (defendant or Gaertner), pleaded guilty to four counts of interstate travel to promote a business involving a controlled substance, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1952(a)(3), 2; and pleaded guilty to six counts of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. The statutory maximum punishment Gaertner could have received pursuant to his guilty pleas was fifty years imprisonment with a twelve year special parole term, and $130,000.00 in fines. The district court imposed an aggregate sentence of ten years imprisonment with a special parole term of four years.
Counsel newly appointed in this court has filed a motion for leave to withdraw, accompanied by a no-merit brief in conformity with the requirements of
Anders v. California,
I. Jurisdiction
By order entered August 29, 1977, the district court denied defendant’s pre-trial motions in their entirety. On October 5, 1977, five days after Gaertner’s sentencing, court-appointed counsel sought leave to file a late notice of appeal in order to appeal from the district court’s pre-trial rulings, and the tendered notice of appeal was filed at that time by the district court clerk. Unable to find excusable neglect for counsel’s lаte filing, the district court on October 14, 1977, denied leave to file the notice of appeal late. Thereafter, on October 21, 1977, counsel filed a second notice of appeal, again attempting to аppeal from the district court’s pre-trial rulings, and appealing from the latest order refusing to permit late filing of the first notice of appeal.
The October 5,1977, notice of appeal provides on its faсe that the appeal is taken from the district court’s pre-trial order entered August 29, 1977. However, since the order sought to be appealed from is interlocutory (with the exception of the double jeopardy ruling, аs to which see
Abney
v.
United States,
Defendant was not required to appeal the double jeopardy ruling simply because he may have done so, and Gaertner was within his rights to delay an appeal pending final resolution of the case in the district court. Similarly, the fact that the double jeopardy ruling was immediately appealable did nоt perforce legitimatize other pre-trial rulings for immediate appeal.
Abney v. United States, supra,
For all these reasons, we believe the notice of appeal filed on October 5, 1977, which is five days after sentence and judgment of conviction, is within the 10-day time limit prescribed by Rule 4(b) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure for filing notice of appeal, and is, therefore, timely and effective to vest this court with jurisdiction. Because the initial notice of appeal is timely, Gaertner’s second appeal (No. 77-2159, which is an appeal from the district court’s decision refusing late filing of the notice of appeal) is hereby rendered moot.
II. Scope of Review
Our sсope of review is limited both by Gaertner’s guilty plea and the record before us.
A. Guilty Plea
“The
Brady
trilogy
[Brady v. United States,
stand for the proposition that counseled guilty pleas inevitably ‘waive’ all antecedent constitutional violations. * * * A guilty plea . . . simply renders irrelevant those constitutional violations not logically inconsistent with the valid establishment of factual guilt and which do not stand in the way of conviction, if factual guilt is validly established. Here, however, the claim [of double jeopardy] is that the State may not convict petitioner no matter how validly his factual guilt is established. The guilty plea, therefore, does not bar the claim.
Menna v. New York, supra,
After
Menna,
Gaertner may clearly raise on appeal his double jeopardy claim, despite his plea of guilty.
See Green v. Estelle,
We believe Gaertner’s speedy trial claim, whether based upon the Sixth Amendment or the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, is not open for our review after pleas of guilty. The purpose of a prompt trial is to guarantee that the accused’s right to a fair trial is not substantially prejudiced by pre-trial delay, or, put another way, to lend assurance that factual guilt is validly established. Speedy trial violations preclude the establishment of guilt by trial, but a finding of guilt by a proper plea remains a viable option. Simply, the establishment of guilt is not logically inconsistent with speedy trial violations, and does not prevent the government from invoking the criminal process, so long as there is no trial.
United States v. O’Donnell,
B. The Record
Our scope of review is also limited by the record on appeal in our consideration of Gaertner’s claim that he failed to knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily enter pleas of guilty. To explain, this appeal pertains to guilty pleas to the aforementioned marijuana charges, but Gaertner also pleaded nolo contendere to a tax law violation charge before another district judge. 1 The thrust of Gaertner’s claim is that the district judge who received the nolo plea failed to approve the prosecutor’s recommendation of a sentence concurrent with the sentence impоsed for the marijuana convictions, and that Gaertner’s pleas to the marijuana charges were thereby rendered involuntary because the concurrent sen *312 tences he understood would be recommended did not thereafter materialize.
While noting that Gaertner does not claim the prosecutor did not make the recommendation as promised, nor that he did not understand that the sentencing judge was not bound by the prosecutor’s recommendation, we do not reach the merits of Gaertner’s claim because it is based upon factual matters outside the record of proceedings now before us.
Part III. The Merits
We now proceed to review Gаertner’s claims of double jeopardy, prosecution under an unconstitutional statute, unconstitutionality of the plea bargaining process, and his claim of manifest injustice by reason of disparate sentences.
A. Double Jeopardy
Gaertner claims his federal prosecution is barred by his prior State of Wisconsin conviction for the same acts, noting that had he been convicted of the federal offenses first, as was one co-defendant, the state charges would have been barred. Wis.Stat. § 161.45 (1975). Gaertner has not been placed in jeopardy twice and the federal prosecution is not barred.
Abbate v. United States,
B. Prosecution Under Unconstitutional Statute
Gaertner claims the statute under which he was prosecuted (21 U.S.C. § 841(а)(1)) is unconstitutional because marijuana, which he believes to be less harmful than alcohol and tobacco, is arbitrarily and irrationally classified as a controlled substance. We agree with the district court that Congress’ classification is rational and that the statute is constitutional.
United States v. Rodriguez-Camacho,
C. Plea Bargaining Process
It does not appear that Gaertner raised this claim of unconstitutionality of the plea bargaining process before the district court, and he has nоt made any serious attempt to advance an argument in support of his claim to this court. Addressing the question nonetheless, we believe Gaertner’s contention is frivolous.
See Santobello v. New York,
D. Disparate Sentences
We are again limited by the record before us, which does not include any portion of the record of proceedings had for two co-defendants. Gaertner, in his filings in this court, offers that one co-defendant, “Barber,” pleaded guilty to one conspiracy count аnd received, from a district judge other than the one who sentenced Gaertner, a term of probation. “Blank,” the other co-defendant, pleaded guilty to multiple marijuana and tax law violation charges and reсeived three years imprisonment, with a two-year special parole term, from the same district judge who sentenced Barber.
As the sentencing judge recognized, Gaernter has a prior conviction for marijuana possession for which he received a three-year sentence. 2 Blank, a man thirty-eight years of age, had no prior convictions. The sentencing judge considered Gaertner’s criminal record, the fact that he was аt liberty on bail when these offenses were committed, and that Gaertner had “played a very special leading role” in transporting some three thousand pounds of marijuana for street distribution within a six-week period. Under thе circumstances, Gaertner suffered no manifest injustice by reason of the sentence he received as compared to those of his co-defendants.
Part IV. Conclusion
Court-appointed counsel is granted leave to withdrаw and defendant’s request *313 for appointment of new counsel is denied. Due to the frivolous nature of the claims raised in Appeal No. 77-2158, and this court having uncovered no meritorious claim after an independent exаmination of the entire record on appeal, the Clerk is directed to enter judgment affirming the district court’s judgment of conviction and sentence. Appeal No. 77-2159 is dismissed as moot.
Notes
. An appeal from this conviction is pending. United States v. Gaertner, No. 78-1574 (7th Cir. filed May 2, 1978).
. An appeal from this conviction remains pending. United States v. Gaertner, No. 75-1938 (7th Cir. filed Oct. 14, 1975). Gaertner has chosen to prosecute this appeal pro se. Numerous extensions have been granted to him, and his appellant’s brief has not been filed.
