US v. McIntosh, 2009 WL 2611294 (August 27, 2009)
The defendant pleaded guilty to an indictment alleging drug and firearm charges and the district court accepted the plea. However, before the defendant was sentenced, the government realized that the wrong date of offense was alleged in the indictment. It, therefore, secured a second indictment from the grand jury with the correct date. The defendant moved to dismiss this second indictment as barred by the Double Jeopardy clause, but the district court denied this motion. The defendant conditionally pleaded guilty to the second indictment. The district court then dismissed the first indictment, accepted the plea on the second, and sentenced the defendant to 120 months imprisonment. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit determined that the defendant’s first plea, accepted unconditionally by the district court, was a conviction and jeopardy had attached therefore the second indictment for the same offense violated the Double Jeopardy clause. The appellate court found that the district court erred when it denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss the second indictment. Finding that the error in the original indictment was one of form, not substance, and thereby not fatally defective, the Court vacated the defendant’s judgment of conviction and remanded it back to the district court with instructions to dismiss the second indictment.
