The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is not
violated when.a state prosecutor carries out a threat made during
plea negotiations to have the accused reindicted on more serious
charges on which he is plainly subject to prosecution if he does
not plead guilty to the offense with which he was originally
charged. Pp.
434 U. S.
360-365.
(a)
"[T]he guilty plea and the often concomitant plea bargain are
important components of this country's criminal justice system.
Properly administered, they can benefit all concerned."
Blackledge v. Allison, 431 U. S.
63,
431 U. S. 71.
Pp.
434 U. S.
361-362
(b) Though to punish a person because he has done what the law
allows violates due process,
see North Carolina v. Pearce,
395 U. S. 711,
395 U. S. 738,
there is no such element of punishment in the "give-and-take" of
plea bargaining as long as the accused is free to accept or reject
the prosecutor's offer. Pp.
434 U. S.
362-364.
(c) This Court has accepted as constitutionally legitimate the
simple reality that the prosecutor's interest at the bargaining
table is to persuade the defendant to forgo his right to plead not
guilty, and, in pursuing that course here, the prosecutor did not
exceed constitutional bounds. Pp.
434 U. S.
364-365.
547 F.2d 42, reversed.
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
MARSHALL, .JJ., joined,
post, p.
434 U. S. 365.
POWELL, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
434 U. S.
368.
Page 434 U. S. 358
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question in this case is whether the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment is violated when a state prosecutor
carries out a threat made during plea negotiations to reindict the
accused on more serious charges if he does not plead guilty to the
offense with which he was originally charged.
I
The respondent, Paul Lewis Hayes, was indicted by a Fayette
County, Ky., grand jury on a charge of uttering a forged instrument
in the amount of $88.30, an offense then punishable by a term of 2
to 10 years in prison. Ky.Rev.Stat. § 434.130 (1973) (repealed
1975). After arraignment, Hayes, his retained counsel, and the
Commonwealth's Attorney met in the presence of the Clerk of the
Court to discuss a possible plea agreement. During these
conferences, the prosecutor offered to recommend a sentence of five
years in prison if Hayes would plead guilty to the indictment. He
also said that, if Hayes did not plead guilty and "save the court
the inconvenience and necessity of a trial," he would return to the
grand jury to seek an indictment under the Kentucky Habitual
Criminal Act, [
Footnote 1] then
Ky.Rev.Stat. § 431.190 (1973) (repealed 1975), which would subject
Hayes to a mandatory sentence of
Page 434 U. S. 359
life imprisonment by reason of his two prior felony convictions.
[
Footnote 2] Hayes chose not to
plead guilty, and the prosecutor did obtain an indictment charging
him under the Habitual Criminal Act. It is not disputed that the
recidivist charge was fully justified by the evidence, that the
prosecutor was in possession of this evidence at the time of the
original indictment, and that Hayes' refusal to plead guilty to the
original charge was what led to his indictment under the habitual
criminal statute.
A jury found Hayes guilty on the principal charge of uttering a
forged instrument and, in a separate proceeding, further found that
he had twice before been convicted of felonies. As required by the
habitual offender statute, he was sentenced to a life term in the
penitentiary. The Kentucky Court of Appeals rejected Hayes'
constitutional objections to the enhanced sentence, holding in an
unpublished opinion that imprisonment for life with the possibility
of parole was constitutionally permissible in light of the previous
felonies of which Hayes had been convicted, [
Footnote 3] and that the prosecutor's decision to
indict him as a habitual offender was a legitimate use of available
leverage in the plea-bargaining process.
Page 434 U. S. 360
On Hayes' petition for a federal writ of habeas corpus, the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky
agreed that there had been no constitutional violation in the
sentence or the indictment procedure, and denied the writ.
[
Footnote 4] The Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed the District Court's
judgment.
Hayes v. Cowan, 547 F.2d 42. While recognizing
"that plea bargaining now plays an important role in our criminal
justice system,"
id. at 43, the appellate court thought
that the prosecutor's conduct during the bargaining negotiations
had violated the principles of
Blackledge v. Perry,
417 U. S. 21, which
"protect[ed] defendants from the vindictive exercise of a
prosecutor's discretion." 547 F.2d at 44. Accordingly, the court
ordered that Hayes be discharged "except for his confinement under
a lawful sentence imposed solely for the crime of uttering a forged
instrument."
Id. at 45. We granted certiorari to consider
a constitutional question of importance in the administration of
criminal justice. 431 U.S. 953.
II
It may be helpful to clarify at the outset the nature of the
issue in this case. While the prosecutor did not actually obtain
the recidivist indictment until after the plea conferences had
ended, his intention to do so was clearly expressed at the outset
of the plea negotiations. Hayes was thus fully informed of the true
terms of the offer when he made his decision to plead not guilty.
This is not a situation, therefore, where the prosecutor, without
notice, brought an additional and more serious charge after plea
negotiations relating only to the original indictment had ended
with the defendant's insistence on pleading not guilty. [
Footnote 5] As a practical matter, in
short, this
Page 434 U. S. 361
case would be no different if the grand jury had indicted Hayes
as a recidivist from the outset, and the prosecutor had offered to
drop that charge as part of the plea bargain.
The Court of Appeals nonetheless drew a distinction between
"concessions relating to prosecution under an existing indictment,"
and threats to bring more severe charges not contained in the
original indictment -- a line it thought necessary in order to
establish a prophylactic rule to guard against the evil of
prosecutorial vindictiveness. [
Footnote 6] Quite apart from this chronological
distinction, however, the Court of Appeals found that the
prosecutor had acted vindictively in the present case, since he had
conceded that the indictment was influenced by his desire to induce
a guilty plea. [
Footnote 7] The
ultimate conclusion of the Court of Appeals thus seems to have been
that a prosecutor acts vindictively and in violation of due process
of law whenever his charging decision is influenced by what he
hopes to gain in the course of plea bargaining negotiations.
III
We have recently had occasion to observe:
"Whatever might be the situation in an ideal world, the fact is
that the guilty plea and the often concomitant plea bargain are
important components of this country's criminal justice system.
Page 434 U. S. 362
Properly administered, they can benefit all concerned."
Blackledge v. Allison, 431 U. S.
63,
431 U. S. 71.
The open acknowledgment of this previously clandestine practice has
led this Court to recognize the importance of counsel during plea
negotiations,
Brady v. United States, 397 U.
S. 742,
397 U. S. 758,
the need for a public record indicating that a plea was knowingly
and voluntarily made,
Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.
S. 238,
395 U. S. 242,
and the requirement that a prosecutor's plea-bargaining promise
must be kept,
Santobello v. New York, 404 U.
S. 257,
404 U. S. 262.
The decision of the Court of Appeals in the present case, however,
did not deal with considerations such as these, but held that the
substance of the plea offer itself violated the limitations imposed
by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Cf.
Brady v. United States, supra at
397 U. S. 751
n. 8. For the reasons that follow, we have concluded that the Court
of Appeals was mistaken in so ruling.
IV
This Court held in
North Carolina v. Pearce,
395 U. S. 711,
395 U. S. 725,
that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
"requires that vindictiveness against a defendant for having
successfully attacked his first conviction must play no part in the
sentence he receives after a new trial."
The same principle was later applied to prohibit a prosecutor
from reindicting a convicted misdemeanant on a felony charge after
the defendant had invoked an appellate remedy, since, in this
situation, there was also a "realistic likelihood of
vindictiveness.'" Blackledge v. Perry, 417 U.S. at
417 U. S.
27.
In those cases the, Court was dealing with the State's
unilateral imposition of a penalty upon a defendant who had chosen
to exercise a legal right to attack his original conviction -- a
situation
"very different from the give-and-take negotiation common in
plea bargaining between the prosecution and defense, which arguably
possess relatively equal bargaining power."
Parker v. North Carolina, 397 U.
S. 790,
Page 434 U. S. 363
397 U. S. 809
(opinion of BRENNAN, J.). The Court has emphasized that the due
process violation in cases such as Pearce and Perry lay not in the
possibility that a defendant might be deterred from the exercise of
a legal right,
see Colten v. Kentucky, 407 U.
S. 104;
Chaffin v. Stynchcombe, 412 U. S.
17, but rather in the danger that the State might be
retaliating against the accused for lawfully attacking his
conviction.
See Blackledge v. Perry, supra at
417 U. S.
26-28.
To punish a person because he has done what the law plainly
allows him to do is a due process violation of the most basic sort,
see North Carolina v. Pearce, supra at
397 U. S. 738
(opinion of Black, J.), and for an agent of the State to pursue a
course of action whose objective is to penalize a person's reliance
on his legal rights is "patently unconstitutional."
Chaffin v.
Stynchcombe, supra at
412 U. S. 32-33, n. 20.
See United States v.
Jackson, 390 U. S. 570. But
in the "give-and-take" of plea bargaining, there is no such element
of punishment or retaliation so long as the accused is free to
accept or reject the prosecution's offer.
Plea bargaining flows from "the mutuality of advantage" to
defendants and prosecutors, each with his own reasons for wanting
to avoid trial.
Brady v. United States, supra at
397 U. S. 752.
Defendants advised by competent counsel and protected by other
procedural safeguards are presumptively capable of intelligent
choice in response to prosecutorial persuasion, and unlikely to be
driven to false self-condemnation. 397 U.S. at
397 U. S. 758.
Indeed, acceptance of the basic legitimacy of plea bargaining
necessarily implies rejection of any notion that a guilty plea is
involuntary in a constitutional sense simply because it is the end
result of the bargaining process. By hypothesis, the plea may have
been induced by promises of a recommendation of a lenient sentence
or a reduction of charges, and thus by fear of the possibility of a
greater penalty upon conviction after a trial.
See ABA
Project on Standards for Criminal Justice, Pleas of Guilty § 3.1
(App.Draft 1968);
Page 434 U. S. 364
Note, Plea Bargaining and the Transformation of the Criminal
Process, 90 Harv.L.Rev. 564 (1977).
Cf. Brady v. United States,
supra, at
397 U. S. 751;
North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U. S.
25.
While confronting a defendant with the risk of more severe
punishment clearly may have a "discouraging effect on the
defendant's assertion of his trial rights, the imposition of these
difficult choices [is] an inevitable" -- and permissible --
"attribute of any legitimate system which tolerates and encourages
the negotiation of pleas."
Chaffin v. Stynchcombe, supra,
at
412 U. S. 31. It
follows that, by tolerating and encouraging the negotiation of
pleas, this Court has necessarily accepted as constitutionally
legitimate the simple reality that the prosecutor's interest at the
bargaining table is to persuade the defendant to forgo his right to
plead not guilty.
It is not disputed here that Hayes was properly chargeable under
the recidivist statute, since he had, in fact, been convicted of
two previous felonies. In our system, so long as the prosecutor has
probable cause to believe that the accused committed an offense
defined by statute, the decision whether or not to prosecute, and
what charge to file or bring before a grand jury, generally rests
entirely in his discretion. [
Footnote 8] Within the limits set by the legislature's
constitutionally valid definition of chargeable offenses, "the
conscious exercise of some selectivity in enforcement is not, in
itself, a federal constitutional violation" so long as "the
selection was [not] deliberately based upon an unjustifiable
standard such as race, religion, or other arbitrary
classification."
Oyler v. Boles, 368 U.
S. 448,
368 U. S. 456.
To hold that the prosecutor's desire to induce a guilty plea is an
"unjustifiable standard," which, like race or religion,
Page 434 U. S. 365
may play no part in his charging decision, would contradict the
very premises that underlie the concept of plea bargaining itself.
Moreover, a rigid constitutional rule that would prohibit a
prosecutor from acting forthrightly in his dealings with the
defense could only invite unhealthy subterfuge that would drive the
practice of plea bargaining back into the shadows from which it has
so recently emerged.
See Blackledge v. Allison, 431 U.S.
at
431 U. S.
76.
There is no doubt that the breadth of discretion that our
country's legal system vests in prosecuting attorneys carries with
it the potential for both individual and institutional abuse.
[
Footnote 9] And broad though
that discretion may be, there are undoubtedly constitutional limits
upon its exercise. We hold only that the course of conduct engaged
in by the prosecutor in this case, which no more than openly
presented the defendant with the unpleasant alternatives of
forgoing trial or facing charges on which he was plainly subject to
prosecution, did not violate the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
While cross-examining Hayes during the subsequent trial
proceedings, the prosecutor described the plea offer in the
following language:
"Isn't it a fact that I told you at that time [the initial
bargaining session] if you did not intend to plead guilty to five
years for this charge and . . . save the court the inconvenience
and necessity of a trial and taking up this time that I intended to
return to the grand jury and ask them to indict you based upon
these prior felony convictions?"
Tr. 194.
[
Footnote 2]
At the time of Hayes' trial, the statute provided that "[a]ny
person convicted a . . . third time of felony . . . shall be
confined in the penitentiary during his life." Ky.Rev.Stat. §
431.190 (1973) (repealed 1975). That statute has been replaced by
Ky.Rev.Stat. § 532.080 (Supp. 1977), under which Hayes would have
been sentenced to, at most, an indeterminate term of 10 to 20
years. § 532.080(6)(b). In addition, under the new statute, a
previous conviction is a basis for enhanced sentencing only if a
prison term of one year or more was imposed, the sentence or
probation was completed within five years of the present offense,
and the offender was over the age of 18 when the offense was
committed. At least one of Hayes' prior convictions did not meet
these conditions.
See n 3,
infra.
[
Footnote 3]
According to his own testimony, Hayes had pleaded guilty in
1961, when he was 17 years old, to a charge of detaining a female,
a lesser included offense of rape, and as a result had served five
years in the state reformatory. In 1970, he had been convicted of
robbery and sentenced to five years' imprisonment, but had been
released on probation immediately.
[
Footnote 4]
The opinion of the District Court is unreported.
[
Footnote 5]
Compare United States ex rel. Williams v. McMann, 436
F.2d 103 (CA2),
with United States v. Ruesga-Martinez, 534
F.2d 1367, 1370 (CA9). In citing these decisions, we do not
necessarily endorse them.
[
Footnote 6]
"Although a prosecutor may in the course of plea negotiations
offer a defendant concessions relating to prosecution under an
existing indictment . . . he may not threaten a defendant with the
consequence that more severe charges may be brought if he insists
on going to trial. When a prosecutor obtains an indictment less
severe than the facts known to him at the time might permit, he
makes a discretionary determination that the interests of the state
are served by not seeking more serious charges. . . . Accordingly,
if after plea negotiations fail, he then procures an indictment
charging a more serious crime, a strong inference is created that
the only reason for the more serious charges is vindictiveness.
Under these circumstances, the prosecutor should be required to
justify his action."
547 F.2d at 11 15.
[
Footnote 7]
"In this case, a vindictive motive need not be inferred. The
prosecutor has admitted it."
Id. at 45.
[
Footnote 8]
This case does not involve the constitutional implications of a
prosecutor's offer during plea bargaining of adverse or lenient
treatment for some person other than the accused,
see ALI
Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure, Commentary to § 350.3, pp.
614-615 (1975), which might pose a greater danger of inducing a
false guilty plea by skewing the assessment of the risks a
defendant must consider.
Cf. Brady v. United States,
397 U. S. 742,
397 U. S.
758.
[
Footnote 9]
This potential has led to many recommendations that the
prosecutor's discretion should be controlled by means of either
internal or external guidelines.
See ALI Model Code of
Pre-Arraignment Procedure for Criminal Justice §§ 350.3(2)-(3)
(1975); ABA Project on Standards for Criminal Justice, The
Prosecution Function §§ 2.5, 3.9 (App. Draft 1971); Abrams,
Internal Policy: Guiding the Exercise of Prosecutorial Discretion,
19 UCLA L.Rev. 1 (1971).
MR JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR.
JUSTICE MARSHALL join, dissenting.
I feel that the Court, although purporting to rule narrowly
(that is, on "the course of conduct engaged in by the prosecutor in
this case,"
ante this page), is departing from, or at
least restricting, the principles established in
North
Carolina v.
Page 434 U. S. 366
Pearce, 395 U. S. 711
(1969), and in
Blackledge v. Perry, 417 U. S.
21 (1974). If those decisions are sound and if those
principles are salutary, as I must assume they are, they require,
in my view, an affirmance, not a reversal, of the judgment of the
Court of Appeals in the present case.
In
Pearce, as indeed the Court notes,
ante at
434 U. S. 362,
it was held that "vindictiveness against a defendant for having
successfully attacked his first conviction must play no part in the
sentence he receives after a new trial." 395 U.S. at
395 U. S. 725.
Accordingly, if, on the new trial, the sentence the defendant
receives from the court is greater than that imposed after the
first trial, it must be explained by reasons
"based upon objective information concerning identifiable
conduct on the part of the defendant occurring after the time of
the original sentencing proceeding,"
other than his having pursued the appeal or collateral remedy.
Id. at
395 U. S. 726.
On the other hand, if the sentence is imposed by the jury and not
by the court, if the jury is not aware of the original sentence,
and if the second sentence is not otherwise shown to be a product
of vindictiveness,
Pearce has no application.
Chaffin
v. Stynchcombe, 412 U. S. 17
(1973).
Then later, in
Perry, the Court applied the same
principle to prosecutorial conduct where there was a "realistic
likelihood of
vindictiveness.'" 417 U.S. at 417 U. S. 27. It
held that the requirement of Fourteenth Amendment due process
prevented a prosecutor's reindictment of a convicted misdemeanant
on a felony charge after the defendant had exercised his right to
appeal the misdemeanor conviction and thus to obtain a trial de
novo. It noted the prosecution's "considerable stake" in
discouraging the appeal. Ibid.
The Court now says, however, that this concern with
vindictiveness is of no import in the present case, despite the
difference between five years in prison and a life sentence,
because we are here concerned with plea bargaining where there is
give-and-take negotiation, and where, it is said,
ante
Page 434 U. S. 367
at
434 U. S. 363,
"there is no such element of punishment or retaliation so long as
the accused is free to accept or reject the prosecution's offer."
Yet, in this case, vindictiveness is present to the same extent as
it was thought to be in
Pearce and in
Perry; the
prosecutor here admitted,
see ante at
434 U. S. 358
n. 1, that the sole reason for the new indictment was to discourage
the respondent from exercising his right to a trial. [
Footnote 2/1] Even had such an admission
not been made, when plea negotiations, conducted in the face of the
less serious charge under the first indictment, fail, charging by a
second indictment a more serious crime for the same conduct creates
"a strong inference" of vindictiveness. As then Judge McCree aptly
observed, in writing for a unanimous panel of the Sixth Circuit,
the prosecutor initially "makes a discretionary determination that
the interests of the state are served by not seeking more serious
charges."
Hayes v. Cowan, 547 F.2d 42, 44 (1976). I
therefore do not understand why, as in
Pearce, due process
does not require that the prosecution justify its action on some
basis other than discouraging respondent from the exercise of his
right to a trial.
Prosecutorial vindictiveness, it seems to me, in the present
narrow context, is the fact against which the Due Process Clause
ought to protect. I perceive little difference between
vindictiveness after what the Court describes,
ante at
434 U. S. 362,
as the exercise of a "legal right to attack his original
conviction,"
Page 434 U. S. 368
and vindictiveness in the "
give-and-take negotiation common
in plea bargaining.'" Prosecutorial vindictiveness in any context
is still prosecutorial vindictiveness. The Due Process Clause
should protect an accused against it, however it asserts itself.
The Court of Appeals rightly so held, and I would affirm the
judgment.
It might be argued that it really makes little difference how
this case, now that it is here, is decided. The Court's holding
gives plea bargaining full sway despite vindictiveness. A contrary
result, however, merely would prompt the aggressive prosecutor to
bring the greater charge initially in every case, and only
thereafter to bargain. The consequences to the accused would still
be adverse, for then he would bargain against a greater charge,
face the likelihood of increased bail, and run the risk that the
court would be less inclined to accept a bargained plea.
Nonetheless, it is far preferable to hold the prosecution to the
charge it was originally content to bring and to justify in the
eyes of its public. [
Footnote
2/2]
[
Footnote 2/1]
In
Brady v. United States, 397 U.
S. 742 (1970), where the Court, as a premise, accepted
plea bargaining as a legitimate practice, it nevertheless
observed:
"We here make no reference to the situation where the prosecutor
or judge, or both, deliberately employ their charging and
sentencing powers to induce a particular defendant to tender a plea
of guilty."
Id. at
397 U. S. 751
n. 8.
See also Colon v. Hendry, 408 F.2d 864 (CA5 1969);
United States v. Jamison, 164 U.S.App.D.C. 300, 505 F.2d
407 (1974);
United States v. DeMarco, 401 F.
Supp. 505 (CD Cal.1975),
aff'd, 550 F.2d 1224 (CA9
1977),
cert. denied, post, p. 827;
United States v.
Ruesga-Martinez, 534 F.2d 1367, 1369 (CA9 1976).
[
Footnote 2/2]
That prosecutors, without saying so, may sometimes bring charges
more serious than they think appropriate for the ultimate
disposition of a case, in order to gain bargaining leverage with a
defendant, does not add support to today's decision, for this
Court, in its approval of the advantages to be gained from plea
negotiations, has never openly sanctioned such deliberate
overcharging or taken such a cynical view of the bargaining
process.
See North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U. S.
25 (1970);
Santobello v. New York, 404 U.
S. 257 (1971). Normally, of course, it is impossible to
show that this is what the prosecutor is doing, and the courts
necessarily have deferred to the prosecutor's exercise of
discretion in initial charging decisions.
Even if overcharging is to be sanctioned, there are strong
reasons of fairness why the charges should be presented at the
beginning of the bargaining process, rather than as a filliped
threat at the end. First, it means that a prosecutor is required to
reach a charging decision without any knowledge of the particular
defendant's willingness to plead guilty; hence the defendant who
truly believes himself to be innocent, and wishes for that reason
to go to trial, is not likely to be subject to quite such a
devastating gamble, since the prosecutor has fixed the incentives
for the average case.
Second, it is healthful to keep charging practices visible to
the general public, so that political bodies can judge whether the
policy being followed is a fair one. Visibility is enhanced if the
prosecutor is required to lay his cards on the table with an
indictment of public record at the beginning of the bargaining
process, rather than making use of unrecorded verbal warnings of
more serious indictments yet to come.
Finally, I would question whether it is fair to pressure
defendants to plead guilty by threat of reindictment on an enhanced
charge for the same conduct when the defendant has no way of
knowing whether the prosecutor would indeed be entitled to bring
him to trial on the enhanced charge. Here, though there is no
dispute that respondent met the then-current definition of a
habitual offender under Kentucky law, it is conceivable that a
properly instructed Kentucky grand jury, in response to the same
considerations that ultimately moved the Kentucky Legislature to
amend the habitual offender statute, would have refused to subject
respondent to such an onerous penalty for his forgery charge. There
is no indication in the record that, once the new indictment was
obtained, respondent was given another chance to plead guilty to
the forged check charge in exchange for a five-year sentence.
MR. JUSTICE POWELL, dissenting.
Although I agree with much of the Court's opinion, I am not
satisfied that the result in this case is just, or that the
Page 434 U. S. 369
conduct of the plea bargaining met the requirements of due
process.
Respondent was charged with the uttering of a single forged
check in the amount of $88.30. Under Kentucky law, this offense was
punishable by a prison term of from 2 to 10 years, apparently
without regard to the amount of the forgery. During the course of
plea bargaining, the prosecutor offered respondent a sentence of
five years in consideration of a guilty plea. I observe, at this
point, that five years in prison for the offense charged hardly
could be characterized as a generous offer. Apparently respondent
viewed the offer in this light and declined to accept it; he
protested that he was innocent, and insisted on going to trial.
Respondent adhered to this position even when the prosecutor
advised that he would seek
Page 434 U. S. 370
a new indictment under the State's Habitual Criminal Act which
would subject respondent, if convicted, to a mandatory life
sentence because of two prior felony convictions.
The prosecutor's initial assessment of respondent's case led him
to forgo an indictment under the habitual criminal statute. The
circumstances of respondent's prior convictions are relevant to
this assessment, and to my view of the case. Respondent was 17
years old when he committed his first offense. He was charged with
rape, but pleaded guilty to the lesser included offense of
"detaining a female." One of the other participants in the incident
was sentenced to life imprisonment. Respondent was sent not to
prison, but to a reformatory, where he served five years.
Respondent's second offense was robbery. This time, he was found
guilty by a jury, and was sentenced to five years in prison, but he
was placed on probation and served no time. Although respondent's
prior convictions brought him within the terms of the Habitual
Criminal Act, the offenses themselves did not result in
imprisonment; yet the addition of a conviction on a charge
involving $88.30 subjected respondent to a mandatory sentence of
imprisonment for life. [
Footnote
3/1] Persons convicted of rape and murder often are not
punished so severely.
No explanation appears in the record for the prosecutor's
decision to escalate the charge against respondent other than
respondent's refusal to plead guilty. The prosecutor has conceded
that his purpose was to discourage respondent's assertion of
constitutional rights, and the majority accepts this
characterization of events.
See ante at
434 U. S. 358
n. 1,
434 U. S.
364.
It seems to me that the question to be asked under the
circumstances is whether the prosecutor reasonably might have
charged respondent under the Habitual Criminal Act in the first
place. The deference that courts properly accord the
Page 434 U. S. 371
exercise of a prosecutor's discretion perhaps would foreclose
judicial criticism if the prosecutor originally had sought an
indictment under that Act, as unreasonable as it would have seemed.
[
Footnote 3/2] But here the
prosecutor evidently made a reasonable, responsible judgment not to
subject an individual to a mandatory life sentence when his only
new offense had societal implications as limited as those
accompanying the uttering of a single $88 forged check and when the
circumstances of his prior convictions confirmed the
inappropriateness of applying the habitual criminal statute.
[
Footnote 3/3] I think it may be
inferred that the prosecutor himself deemed it unreasonable and not
in the public interest to put this defendant in jeopardy of a
sentence of life imprisonment.
There may be situations in which a prosecutor would be fully
justified in seeking a fresh indictment for a more serious offense.
The most plausible justification might be that it would have been
reasonable and in the public interest initially
Page 434 U. S. 372
to have charged the defendant with the greater offense. In most
cases, a court could not know why the harsher indictment was
sought, and an inquiry into the prosecutor's motive would neither
be indicated nor likely to be fruitful. In those cases, I would
agree with the majority that the situation would not differ
materially from one in which the higher charge was brought at the
outset.
See ante at
434 U. S.
360-361.
But this is not such a case. Here, any inquiry into the
prosecutor's purpose is made unnecessary by his candid
acknowledgment that he threatened to procure, and in fact procured,
the habitual criminal indictment because of respondent's insistence
on exercising his constitutional rights. We have stated in
unequivocal terms, in discussing
United States v. Jackson,
390 U. S. 570
(1968), and
North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.
S. 711 (1969), that
"
Jackson and
Pearce are clear, and subsequent
cases have not dulled their force: if the only objective of a state
practice is to discourage the assertion of constitutional rights,
it is 'patently unconstitutional.'"
Chaffin v. Stynchcombe, 412 U. S.
17,
412 U. S. 32 n.
20 (1973). And in
Brady v. United States, 397 U.
S. 742 (1970), we drew a distinction between the
situation there approved and the
"situation where the prosecutor or judge, or both, deliberately
employ their charging and sentencing powers to induce a particular
defendant to tender a plea of guilty."
Id. at
397 U. S. 751
n. 8.
The plea-bargaining process, as recognized by this Court, is
essential to the functioning of the criminal justice system. It
normally affords genuine benefits to defendants as well as to
society. And if the system is to work effectively, prosecutors must
be accorded the widest discretion, within constitutional limits, in
conducting bargaining.
Cf. 434
U.S. 357fn2/2|>n. 2,
supra. This is especially true
when a defendant is represented by counsel and presumably is fully
advised of his rights. Only in the most exceptional case should a
court conclude that the scales of the bargaining are so unevenly
balanced as to arouse suspicion. In this case, the prosecutor's
actions denied respondent due
Page 434 U. S. 373
process because their admitted purpose was to discourage and
then to penalize with unique severity his exercise of
constitutional rights. Implementation of a strategy calculated
solely to deter the exercise of constitutional rights is not a
constitutionally permissible exercise of discretion. I would affirm
the opinion of the Court of Appeals on the facts of this case.
[
Footnote 3/1]
It is suggested that respondent will be eligible for parole
consideration after serving 15 years.
[
Footnote 3/2]
The majority suggests,
ante at
434 U. S.
360-361, that this case cannot be distinguished from the
case where the prosecutor initially obtains an indictment under an
enhancement statute and later agrees to drop the enhancement charge
in exchange for a guilty plea. I would agree that these two
situations would be alike
only if it were assumed that the
hypothetical prosecutor's decision to charge under the enhancement
statute was occasioned not by consideration of the public interest,
but by a strategy to discourage the defendant from exercising his
constitutional rights. In theory, I would condemn both practices.
In practice, the hypothetical situation is largely unreviewable.
The majority's view confuses the propriety of a particular exercise
of prosecutorial discretion with its unreviewability. In the
instant case, however, we have no problem of proof.
[
Footnote 3/3]
Indeed, the Kentucky Legislature subsequently determined that
the habitual criminal statute under which respondent was convicted
swept too broadly, and did not identify adequately the kind of
prior convictions that should trigger its application. At least one
of respondent's two prior convictions would not satisfy the
criteria of the revised statute; and the impact of the statute,
when applied, has been reduced significantly in situations, like
this one, where the third offense is relatively minor.
See
ante at
434 U. S. 359
n. 2.