Walter J. Lovett, Jr. appeals from the denial by the district court of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He currently is serving a ten-to-twenty-year sentence in the Massachusetts penitentiary at Walpole. His appeal presents questions of importance regarding the scope of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. 1
I
On June 17,1975, a complaint was filed in the Second District Court of East Worcester charging petitioner with the crime of “break[ing] and enterpng] in the nighttime a dwelling house . . . with intent therein to commit a felony ... in violation of G.L. c. 266 § 16 . . .. ” 2 Under Massachusetts law, jurisdiction over crimes charged under section 16 is lodged concurrently in the superior courts and the district courts. 3 Following a non-jury trial before the district court, petitioner was found guilty as charged. He was sentenced to two and one-half years to be served in the Worcester House of Corrections. Petitioner then exercised his right to appeal for a trial de novo in the Worcester County Superior Court. 4 Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 278, § 18.
*1004 While the appeal was pending, the Commonwealth obtained a grand jury indictment on the identical facts charging petitioner with the crime of “breaking and entering in the nighttime a dwelling house with intent to commit a felony” in violation of Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 266, § 15. 5 The superior courts have exclusive jurisdiction over section 15 offenses. See id. ch. 218, § 26.
Petitioner’s motion to dismiss the section 15 indictment was denied. He was convicted by a jury and sentenced to ten-to-twenty-years’ imprisonment. On the Commonwealth’s motion, the complaint upon which petitioner had been convicted in the district court was dismissed.
Petitioner’s conviction and sentence were affirmed by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. ,
Commonwealth v. Lovett,
— Mass. —, —,
Having exhausted his state remedies, petitioner filed a habeas corpus petition in the United States District Court for Massachusetts. Following a hearing, his petition was denied. No. 78-1809 (D.Mass. July 30, 1979). While denying petitioner’s motion for bail pending appeal, we authorized an expedited briefing schedule and argument. Order of August 27, 1979. We now reverse the district court.
II
In
Blackledge
v.
Perry,
The fact that the petitioner here technically may not have been indicted on a “more serious charge” is of little constitutional significance since due process principles apply to enhanced sentences as well as enhanced charges.
United States v. Mallah,
The present appeal involves an increased sentence resulting from what may well have been the vindictive action of the prosecutor. It therefore differs from the more typical situation where the increased penalty is meted out directly and solely by
*1005
the sentencing judge. Since
Pearce
requires us to review harsher sentences resulting from the decisions of sentencing judges, it follows that we must review harsher sentences resulting from the actions of the prosecutor, the defendant’s natural adversary whose job it is to obtain convictions. This is especially so since policies favoring judicial discretion and flexibility in sentencing, see
Colten v. Kentucky,
III
Having determined that the rule against prosecutorial vindictiveness.governs this appeal, we now consider whether due process has been denied to petitioner. It is settled law that “the Due Process Clause is not offended by all possibilities of increased punishment upon retrial after appeal, but only by those that pose a realistic likelihood of ‘vindictiveness.’ ”
Blackledge v. Perry,
Petitioner contends that he has been denied due process by reason of prosecutorial vindictiveness. In
Marano v. United States,
In
Blackledge,
the Court held that retaliatory motivation can apply as well to the prosecutor as to the judge. The Court flatly stated that every prosecutor “has a con
*1006
siderable stake” in discouraging appeals since each appeal expends scarce prosecuto-rial resources. Thus, “if the prosecutor has the means readily at hand to discourage such appeals — by ‘upping the ante,’ ” in this case by indicting the defendant in the hope of gaining an increased sentence, “the State can insure that only the most hardy defendants will brave the hazards of a
de novo
trial.”
The thrust of the decisions in
Pearce
and
Blackledge
is to safeguard the freedom of defendants to exercise their right of appeal. “The prophylactic rule is designed not only to relieve the defendant who has asserted his right from bearing the burden [of the prosecutor’s] ‘upping the ante’ but also to prevent chilling the exercise of such rights by other defendants who must make their choices under similar circumstances in the future.”
United States
v.
DeMarco,
The Commonwealth contends that since it was error to prosecute petitioner under section 15 in the district court, its course of action is immunized from due process attack. The Commonwealth’s argument was rejected by a unanimous panel of the Ninth Circuit in
United States v. De-Marco.
There, as here, “[t]he Government argue[d] that Blackledge [did] not control because . . . [the] second indictments grew out of
limits placed on the original indictment . . .
rather than any vindictiveness against the defendant.”
Petitioner should not now be penalized for any error of the Commonwealth in its fashioning of the original charge. “[I]t is the apprehension that there may be retaliatory action, not the procedural state of facts, which implicates due process rights. That the government failed to [bring the grand jury indictment] prior to defendants] assertion of the right to [trial
de
novo] because of . [a] mistake . does not alter the fact that the increased charge ‘appears vindictive.’ ”
United States v. Andrews,
In
Miracle v. Estelle,
IV
We thus have before us a significant due process interest to weigh against a minor or nonexistent prosecutorial interest. Therefore, apprehension of vindictiveness by the Commonwealth in the form of an indictment is sufficient to contravene due process. Compare
Commonwealth v. Lovett, —
Mass, at —,
The Court in
Blackledge
specifically conceded that there was “of course, no evidence that the prosecutor in this cáse acted in bad faith or maliciously,” and indicated that its earlier holding in
Pearce
“was not grounded on the proposition that actual retaliatory motivation must inevitably exist.”
The judgment is vacated and the cause remanded with instructions that the writ of habeas corpus be granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Petitioner also urges a violation of his right under the fifth amendment to protection against double jeopardy. We find it unnecessary to reach this claim.
. Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 266, § 16, provides:
Whoever, in the night time, breaks and enters a building, ship or vessel, with intent to commit a felony, shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for not more than twenty years or in a jail or house of correction for not more than two and one half years.
. The two-tier system of criminal courts has been utilized in Massachusetts since the Colonial Period. The first level consists of the district courts and the Municipal Court of the City of Boston. Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 218, §§ 1, 50. The district courts exercise original jurisdiction over all felonies carrying a maximum sentence of five years, certain other felonies carrying higher sentences, all violations of municipal ordinances, and all misdemeanors except those involving criminal libel.
Id.
§§ 16-19, 26, 28, 49. All other crimes must be prosecuted in the superior courts.
See Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
. Had petitioner
pleaded
guilty in the district court, he would not have been entitled to a trial
de novo
in the superior court, but could only have appealed his sentence. Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 278, § 18;
Morrissey v. Powell,
The Massachusetts system differs from similar systems in other states that afford defend
*1004
ants a jury trial at the first level. See
Colten v. Kentucky,
. Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 266, § 15, provides:
Whoever breaks and enters a dwelling house in the night time, with the intent mentioned in the preceding section, or, having entered with such intent, breaks such dwelling house in the night time, the offender not being armed, not arming himself in such house, with a dangerous weapon, nor making an assault upon a person lawfully therein, shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for not more than twenty years and, if he shall have been previously convicted of any crime named in this or the preceding section, for not less than five years.
. In
Pearce,
the defendant was convicted and sentenced to a prison term, which conviction was later set aside in a habeas corpus proceeding. On retrial, the defendant was again convicted, but the new sentence amounted to a longer total period of incarceration than that originally imposed.
. This was recognized by Mr. Justice Rehnquist, the lone
Blackledge
dissenter, who concluded contrary to the majority that any due process violation stemmed
solely
from the imposition of the longer sentence, rather than additionally from the indictment on a more serious charge.
. The Commonwealth suggests that
Colten
is authority for its contention that increased sentences imposed at the
de novo
level can never engender a violation of due process. This mis-characterizes the factual basis for
Colten,
which involved a trial
de novo
on an original complaint.
. Such punishment, in addition to the sentence, may include various collateral consequences.
Blackledge v. Perry,
. In
Pearce,
the Supreme Court undertook an exhaustive analysis of the circumstances in which a sentence might be increased on retrial, concluding that “a more severe sentence . . . must be based upon objective information concerning identifiable conduct on the part of the defendant occurring after the time of the original sentencing proceeding.”
In
Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
. The
Jackson
court went on to note that there were “at least two reasons for such a per se rule. First, It is difficult to prove in court the actual state of mind of a prosecutor during his exercise of discretion. And second, rein-dictments that look vindictive, even though they are not, may still make future defendants so apprehensive about the vindictiveness of prosecutors that they will be deterred from appealing their convictions.”
