This federal death penalty case returns to this court for the second time in less than a month. We have jurisdiction under either the collateral order doctrine or, alternatively, in mandamus. We have expedited the consideration of this case to enforce our previous mandamus order that this case should proceed expeditiously to trial. Because the district court has improvised a procedure at odds with the Federal Death Penalty Act, we VACATE the order of the district court that, the case proceed to trial with a non-death-penalty-qualified jury, and re-order that the case proceed promptly to trial.
BACKGROUND
A detailed explanation of the background of this case is available, in our earlier mandamus opinion,
In
re
United States,
Pertinent to the matter now before us, this court granted the government’s petition for mandamus only a month ago to prevent the district court from giving an unauthorized jury instruction, harmful to the government, as a sanction for its refusal to comply with the court’s' also-unauthorized discovery orders. This court vacated the discovery orders and ordered the district court to proceed immediately to trial. Moreover, our order indicated that it should be read to
include[ ] using the current [death penalty qualified] jury pool, each member of which has obeyed his civic duty and gone through the laborious process of completing the questionnaires submitted by counsel. If trial is not commenced within thirty days, the Government may seek further mandamus relief to that end.
Id.,
Back in the district court, however, the case did not proceed to trial. The district court agreed to stay the trial while Williams sought certiorari review in the Supreme Court of the United States. When informed of the delay this would cause, the judge stated that if the government took longer than a week to respond to Williams’s certiorari petition, she was “letting the jury go.” Hr’g Tr., Jan. 24, 2005, at 49. The judge told the parties that she was presiding over another criminal trial scheduled to begin April 1, 2005, and which was expected to last over four months, and that if that case began first, the parties would need to “get in line.” Id. at 52. Concerned about the possibility that the district court would release the 250-person venire pool, and thus violate the explicit order of this court, the government moved to commence jury selection and requested a status conference.
Williams filed a response opposing the government’s motion to commence jury selection, in which he reasserted a motion, previously denied, that requested the court to empanel a non-death penalty-qualified jury to hear the guilt/innocence phase of trial. At the status conference on Friday, February 4, 2005, the district court revisited this motion and granted it. In so do *280 ing, the district court asserted that “good cause” existed under 18 U.S.C. § 3593(b)(2)(C) (discussed infra) to proceed to trial the following Monday with a non-death penalty-qualified jury. The district court ruled that the “good cause” consisted of “[t]he case management problems that have arisen in this case because of the government’s interlocutory appeal of this court’s discovery rulings.” Status Conf. Tr. at 19.
The United States objected to this ruling as inconsistent with the Federal Death Penalty Act. The district court rejected this objection and declined to enter a stay. The United States filed a timely notice of appeal and requested a stay from this court February 4, 2005. We granted that stay on February 5 to review the instant appeal.
JURISDICTION
This court has appellate jurisdiction pursuant to the collateral order exception to the final judgment rule or, alternatively, as a matter of mandamus. 1
“An appealable collateral order is an order that conclusively resolves an issue separate from the merits of the controversy, is effectively unreviewable on appeal from final judgment, and is too important to be denied review.”
Arnold v. State Farm Fire and Cas. Co.,
The district court’s decision to order immediate trial before a non-death penalty-qualified jury satisfies all three requirements of the collateral order doctrine. First, the district court’s order conclusively resolved that Williams’s guilt would be tried before a non-death penalty-qualified jury. Second, the decision involved a key determination made by the district judge concerning the procedure imposed by the Federal Death Penalty Act. That issue, whether a unitary jury is required unless one of four statutorily described circumstances is present, is unrelated to the merits of the case and is likely to recur. Third, the order is effectively unreviewable at the government’s instance on appeal if the defendant is not convicted of capital murder, or, if having been convicted of capital murder, he is not sentenced to death.
In the alternative, mandamus is appropriate.
Cf. United States v. Whittaker,
Hence, if jurisdiction does not lie under the collateral order doctrine, mandamus jurisdiction would exist. The district court’s bifurcated jury order is essentially unreviewable, and based on our analysis of the Federal Death Penalty Act, the Government has a clear and indisputable right to relief. A writ of mandamus is also appropriate given the seriousness of the issue, the trial court’s plainly erroneous interpretation of the statute, and the fact that this court specifically invited the Government to seek further mandamus relief in the event the district court failed to comply with our previous order.
DISCUSSION
A. Federal Death Penalty Act
The Federal Death Penalty Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3593, establishes explicit procedures for juries in federal capital cases. A bifurcated procedure is used under which the guilVinnoeence phase of trial is separated from the sentencing phase. If a jury trial is conducted during the first phase, the sentencing hearing “shall be conducted — before the jury that determined the defendant’s guilt.” Id. at § 3593(b)(1) (emphasis added). Only in four limited circumstances may a different or new jury be empaneled solely for sentencing: (A) where the, defendant pleads guilty; (B) where “the defendant was convicted after a trial before the court sitting without a jury”; (C) where “the jury that determined the defendant’s guilt was discharged for good cause”; or (D) where, after initial imposition of the sentence, reconsideration is necessary. Id. at § 3593(b)(2)(A)-(D).
Last October, the district court denied Williams’s motion to empanel a non-death-qualified jury for the guilt/innocence phase. Reversing herself on February 4, she invoked subsection (b)(2)(C).and granted that request to balance the government’s desire for a speedy trial with Williams’s plea to await the outcome of his certiorari petition. The judge invoked “case management problems” as sufficient “good cause” under this provision. In two ways, this determination violated the plain language of the Federal Death Penalty Act. 2 As noted, the law provides in mandatory terms,.that the same jury shall be empaneled for both phases of the trial. This language aligns practice under the federal death penalty law with the general practice in capital cases, which are ordinarily tried before a unitary jury. As Williams concedes, constitutional challenges by defendants^ to unitary capital jury procedures have failed. 3 The proce *282 dure prescribed by the statute is both compelling and compelled.
Second, the court’s ruling misinterprets the narrow exception to a unitary jury requirement adopted in' § 3593(b)(2)(C). The provision states:
The hearing shall be conducted ... before a jury empaneled for the purpose of the [sentencing] hearing if ... the jury that determined the defendant’s guilt was discharged for good cause.
The “good cause” language pertains to discharging a jury that has already decided the defendant’s guilt. To reach this language, or the scenario contemplated by the statute, a motion would need to be made following a determination of guilt by the jury after trial. For example, if the jury found the defendant guilty, and then, before the sentencing phase, certain members were disqualified because of their exposure to outside influences, a district court could entertain a motion to discharge the jury and could find “good cause” to grant such a motion. The provision does not allow a pretrial option for a bifurcated jury-
We reject Williams’s associated argument that he can or did “waive”'the provision for a unitary jury. ' Williams frames the procedural question as one of “discretion, not an issue of rights .... ” Where there is no statutory right, however, there can be no waiver. The plain language of the statute confers no right on a defendant to choose a unitary or bifurcated jury, although it does allow him to forgo a jury altogether in the guilt/innocence phase (pursuant to consent by the government and approval of the court under Fed.R.Crim.P. 23), or with the government’s agreement in the penalty phase. Id. at § 3593(b)(3). The very existence of such explicit alternatives, together with the narrow circumstances specified for a bifurcated jury, demonstrate that Congress intended to give no option, only commands, with regard to a unitary jury.
Finally, Williams argues that choosing a death penalty-qualified jury would be prejudicial to him were his pending petition for certiorari granted. 4 Williams contends that proceeding in compliance with our mandamus order may result in wasted time and resources if that process is later halted by the Supreme Court. This argument is unavailing. The mandate of the previous order has issued and controls unless the Supreme Court says otherwise. If Williams wished to prevent voir dire from going forward, he could have petitioned *283 the Supreme Court for a stay of trial pending resolution of his certiorari petition. He has not done so.
Alternatively, as the government urged to the district court, the court could have undertaken the selection of a death-qualified jury but delayed swearing in the jury, and triggering jeopardy, until the Supreme Court disposes of the certiorari petition. A grant of certiorari would afford a valid ground for a stay and for the court to decline to swear in the jury. A denial of certiorari, of course, would not affect the continuation of proceedings. Williams’s request that the district court judicially amend the Federal Death Penalty Act to resolve this procedural non-problem is unfounded.
B. Request to Reassign
In one paragraph of its appellate brief, the government has requested this court to exercise supervisory power to order reassignment of this case. The government cites this court’s caselaw concerning the extraordinary remedy of reassignment, but it does not argue explicitly how the standards set forth in the caselaw apply here. For that reason alone, we must deny the government’s request at this time.
See, e.g., See
Fed. R.App. P. 28(a)(9)(A) & (B);
Foster v. Townsley,
It is imperative to note, however, that the district court’s actions in response to the prior mandamus petition could arguably be construed as having thwarted this court’s order that the case proceed to trial “within thirty days” of January 12, 2005. Our order was entered in light of two facts. First, 250 citizens have had to fill out onerous death-penalty-jury questionnaires and have been kept at bay, unable to conduct their lives on a-normal schedule, pending their being called for this case. Second, the government indicated that many witnesses who are aliens are being detained in this country until the trial occurs.
See, e.g., In re United States,
We decline to draw the conclusion that the court acted other than in good faith with respect to our order. Nor are we persuaded that the court is unable to exercise impartial judgment as this prosecution continues.
Cf. United States v. Andrews,
Notes
. It is arguable that the court's order is appealable pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731 as, in effect, a "dismissal” of the death eligible portion of the indictment.
See United States v. Frye,
. When interpreting statutes, we begin with the plain language used by the drafters.
See Crandon
v.
United States,
.
See Gregg v. Georgia,
. Williams’s pleadings in the trial court also purported to rely on a recent federal district court decision, now on appeal, that authorized a bifurcated jury in a death penalty case.
United States
v.
Green,
