The denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss on the ground of vindictive prosecution was not error.
I
While, generally, claims of prosecutorial vindictiveness are not reviewable on appeal because they constitute an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291,
United States v. Hollywood Motor Car Co.,
II
The Government may not either threaten to increase charges in order to discourage a defendant from exercising a statutory or constitutional right or follow through on such a threat.
United States v. DeMarco,
This legitimate prosecutorial aim was not converted into a threat or expression of hostility by the district attorney’s reference to the penalty carried by the federal charge of possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, which was more severe than that carried by the parallel state charge. The prosecutor was not indicating that he would choose between two penalties and select the more severe; rather, a more severe penalty would be the unavoidable consequence of his proper effort to gain a federal sale and possession conviction in lieu of a state conviction for the same offense.
Ill
In the absence of a threat or evidence of hostility, no vindictive prosecution occurred in this case, despite the ultimate inclusion in the federal indictment of new charges of conspiracy and aiding and abetting interstate travel to promote illegal activity.
The role of a separate sovereign in bringing the increased charges minimizes the likelihood of prosecutorial abuse.
Cf. United States v. Robison,
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
