Wаyne Wilson (“Wilson”) and Danny Ray Trosper (“Trosper” or “Danny Ray”) robbed two Indiana banks in August 1988. On the first occasion, Wilson waited in the getaway car while Trosper entered the El-ston Bank & Trust of Crawfordsville and took $3,200 at gunpoint. Wilson and Tros- *623 per fled to Lebanon, Indiana, where they checked into a Dollar Inn and split the proceeds. Wilson then left, but before doing so, called Trosper’s brother, Hulon Trosper, and asked him to retrieve . Danny Ray from the motel. Hulon and his wife, Carla, picked Danny Ray up and took him to a neighboring town, where they checked into another motel and helped him dye his hair another color. Of course, by this time, Danny Ray let Hulon and Carla in on his misdeed.
Just one week later, Wilson and Trosper selected the Mid-States Bank of Lebanon for a repeat performance. This time Tros-рer waited in the getaway car while Wilson entered the bank and took $6,250 at gunpoint, using the same weapon as Trosper used before, a Rossi Interarms revolver. After the robbery, Wilson went to the home of his stepfather, Richard Basham, and asked if he could stay with him for awhile; Basham agreed, and helped Wilson unload and store his.luggage in the garage. Later that day, Wilson’s stepbrother, James Basham, а local deputy sheriff, learned that Wilson was wanted by the FBI. James Basham went and found Wilson and convinced him to surrender to the FBI. Wilson signed a consent form permitting the FBI to search his car (which was parked at Richard Basham’s home) and Richard Basham signed a consent form permitting the FBI to search his garage. Richard Basham was at work during the search of his garage; however, earlier, when he went to hаng the clothes inside Wilson’s luggage, he removed a revolver he discovered inside the luggage and turned it over to the FBI on the advice of his son James Basham.
A grand jury returned a five-count indictment, charging Wilson and Trosper with two counts of bank robbery, 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) and (d), and with two counts of using a firearm in the commission of a violent crime, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), and charging Hulon Trosper with one count of being an accessory after the fact. 18 U.S.C. § 3. Danny Ray and Hulon Trosper decided to plead guilty and to cooperate with the government, while Wilson chose to have his case tried to a jury. Just before trial, the government successfully sought a superseding. indictment against Wilson, adding two additional counts — one for each of the two robberies — for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g) and 924(e).
The government’s case consisted primarily of the testimony of Danny Ray, Hulon, and Carla Trosper, along with Wilson’s girlfriend, Sharon Ritchie, all of whom inculpated Wilson in the robberies. In addition, Richard Basham testified that he found the revolver, in Wilson’s luggage, and the manager of the Dollar Inn in Lebanon testified that Wilson checked into his motel on the date of the .first robbery.
Wilson chose to represent himself at trial, although the court providеd him with standby counsel. He elected not to take the stand; his only witness was an inmate from the Marion County Jail who testified that he overheard a conversation between Trosper and Wilson, in which Trosper exculpated Wilson in the bank robberies. Trosper refuted this testimony and a jury found Wilson guilty on all six counts. The district court sentenced Wilson to 600 months in prison. On appeal, Wilson challenges his conviction аnd sentence. We affirm his conviction, but vacate his sentence and remand for resentencing.
I.
Wilson first argues he was unfairly prejudiced by the district court’s decision to grant the government a continuance two weeks before his first scheduled trial date. We review this ruling under the abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Vega,
After debriefing Trosper on July 12, 1989, the government notified the court on-July 14, 1989, that it wished to seek a superseding indictmеnt against Wilson. The government had learned, among other things, that Wilson owned the revolver us.ed in the robberies and that it was in his possession at all relevant times. Trosper also confirmed that Wilson had two prior armed robbery convictions, one in 1975 in Kentucky, and one in 1979 in Indiana, mak *624 ing it a federal violation for him to carry a firearm. 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g) and 924(e). Because the next grand jury was not scheduled to convene until July 25, 1989, the day Wilson’s trial was scheduled to begin, the government sought a continuance so that all charges against Wilson could be tried together. The court obliged, rescheduling the trial for August 30, 1989; in the interim, a grand jury added the two new charges against Wilson.
Wilson’s counsel filed an objection, alleging that the government knew of his prior convictions from the onset of the case and, thus, had no legitimate basis to seek a cоntinuance. Wilson surmises the government sought this continuance in order to gain an unfair tactical advantage on the eve of trial. The continuance gave the government time to bring additional charges against Wilson, which in turn allowed the jury to hear of Wilson’s two prior felony convictions, and also permitted the government to seek a substantially increased sentence against him, all of this amounting tо an “unfair tactical advantage.” Wilson borrows this quoted language from
United States v. Samples,
Here, Wilson shows neither an impermissible motive nor any prejudice resulting from the continuance. The government sought a continuance because of scheduling difficulties with the grand jury; the continuance avoided thе possibility of a superseding indictment being returned on the day Wilson’s trial began, and thus avoided the need to conduct two trials arising out of a common set of facts. Faced with scheduling difficulties, the court reasonably granted the continuance to avoid duplicative trials.
See, e.g., United States v. Asubonteng,
Wilson also fails to show any prejudice from the delay. Prior to the July 14 continuance, the court granted continuances to Wilson on four separate occasions, and on August 10, 1989, granted him a fifth, continuing the trial to September ‘ 26, 1989. Finally, on September 29, 1989, the court continued’the trial on its own to November 6, 1989. Wilson fails to offer
any
evidence that the July 14 continuance — the one that permitted the government to seek a superseding indictment — impaired his ability to mount a defense.
Compare United States v. Rojas,
II.
Wilson next argues the district court committed reversible error by failing to rule on his motion to suppress evidence. Before trial, Wilson apparently thought that his post-arrest аdmissions to the FBI (which were never introduced at trial) were tainted by his warrantless arrest, and that the revolver was tainted by an unlawful search of his stepfather’s garage.
Wilson first raised this issue in a motion filed on October 11, 1988. The court scheduled a hearing for November 1, 1988, but before that date arrived, Wilson retained new counsel and the hearing had to be canceled. Wilson dropped the matter until shortly after his arraignment on the superseding indictment, when his standby counsel informed the court that Wilson wished to raise some suppression issues. Counsel informed the court that, in his view, Wilson had no factual basis for the motion but, notwithstanding these reservations, the court allowed Wilson to present his motion orally. Wilson argued, among other things, that he was arrested without a warrant and that his stepfather did not voluntarily consent to a sеarch of his garage and assented only after FBI threats to put him in jail as an accomplice. The government responded that it did not need a warrant because it had probable cause and that Wilson had no standing to object to the search of his stepfather’s garage. After listening to these arguments, the court announced it would first conduct voir dire — apparently, the jury venire was present during this whоle exchange — and then hold an evidentiary hearing outside the presence of the jury to flesh out this standing issue. That hearing never took place.
Wilson argues the court committed reversible error by failing to rule on this motion or to conduct an evidentiary hearing.
See Battle v. United States,
We conclude that Wilson in effect waived this issue at trial by failing to call to the court’s attention the lack of a ruling on his suppression motion and by failing to object when the government moved to introduce the revolver into evidence. In
United States v. Taglia,
We will not consider a waived issue on appeal unless it is clear from the record that plain error was committed.
*626
See United States v. Percival,
III.
Wilson also contends his two convictions for possession of a firearm as a convicted felon, under §§ 922(g) and 924(e), violate the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment. He claims these convictions were based on possession of the same firearm,. for an uninterrupted period, amounting to multiрle convictions for a single violation of the statute.
The double jeopardy clause protects against multiple punishments for the same crime,
North Carolina v. Pearce,
While Wilson apparently perсeived some double jeopardy defect in the superseding indictment before trial, he never attempted to bring it to the court’s attention for redress. Indeed, he made efforts to preserve the purported error. For example, Wilson filed a pro se motion asking the court to stop his appointed counsel from filing a motion to sever the superseding counts from the original counts, appаrently — from the language of the motion — because he saw a double jeopardy problem between the firearms counts contained in the original counts and those contained in the superseding counts. (Wilson raises a different double jeopardy argument on appeal, which we discuss below.) In Wilson’s view, severance of the two would allow the government to drop charges on the originаl counts, and only pursue the superseding counts, putting an end to the double jeopardy problem and thus to his strategy of tainting his entire conviction. Wilson continued this strategy by filing a motion to proceed totally pro se, asserting that he wished to stop his appointed counsel, once and for all, from interfering with this strategy by filing any motions to dismiss or sever the superseding counts.
These two motions confirm that Wilson chose not to challenge the superseding indictment before or during trial for purely tactical reasons. This is precisely the sort of maneuver we sought to forestall by adopting the waiver rule in Griffin. By sitting on the double jeopardy issue, Wilson denied the government a chance to deal *627 with it before trial. See id. at 682. At any rate, Wilson raises a new double jeopardy argument on appeal. In his pretrial motions, he discerned a defect between the original and superseding fireаrms charges; on appeal he challenges a defect between the two firearms charges added in the superseding indictment.
IV.
Wilson next challenges his two convictions for using a firearm in the commission of a violent crime under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). This statute contains a mandatory enhanced prison term for defendants, like Wilson, who use a firearm in a crime of violence a second time. Wilson asks us to overturn our decision in
United States v. Bennett,
We decline the invitation. Only one other circuit has confronted this issue,
United States v. Hamblin,
V.
In Wilson’s reply brief he alleges that his sentence under § 924(c) violates the
ex post facto
clause of the constitution. U.S. Const. Art. I, § 9, cl. 3; Art. I, § 10, cl. 1. We generally decline to consider issues raised for the first time in a reply brief, Circuit Rule 28(f);
cf. Dribeck Importers, Inc. v. G. Heilman Brewing Co.,
Wilson correctly points out that in August 1988, when the robberies took place, § 924(c) carried a 10, rather than 20-year mandatory sentence for a second firearms infraction. (Congress amended the provision on November 18, 1988.) At Wilson’s sentencing hearing, all parties assumed the 20-year term applied, and Wilson was sentenced accordingly. This constitutes plain error. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b). Although the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 requires courts to apply the guideline in effect оn the date offenders are sentenced, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(4) and (5), this provision is, of course, subject to the constraints of the
ex post facto
clause.
See Miller v. Florida,
Here, the amended statute clearly disadvantages Wilson (doubling the mandatory portion of his sentence) and it was applied retroactively to his сriminal conduct. In drawing this conclusion, we recognize our dicta in
United States v. Bader,
Affirmed in Part, Vacated in Part, and Remanded.
