United States v. Edward Jones , 858 F.3d 221 ( 2017 )


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  •                                     PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 15-4763
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    EDWARD DENNIS JONES,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, at
    Lynchburg. Norman K. Moon, Senior District Judge. (6:14-cr-00015-NKM-1)
    Argued: March 23, 2017                                          Decided: June 1, 2017
    Before MOTZ, THACKER, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
    Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge Thacker wrote the opinion, in which
    Judge Motz and Judge Harris joined.
    ARGUED: Abram John Pafford, PAFFORD LAW FIRM, PLLC, Lynchburg, Virginia,
    for Appellant. Erin Marie Harrigan Kulpa, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Charlottesville, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: John P. Fishwick, Jr.,
    United States Attorney, Craig J. Jacobsen, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF
    THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellee.
    THACKER, Circuit Judge:
    On October 10, 2012, Edward Jones (“Appellant”) pled guilty to a one count
    information in the Eastern District of Virginia alleging conspiracy to possess with intent to
    distribute cocaine. Per the information to which Appellant pled guilty, the Government
    alleged that from July 2012 to August 22, 2012, Appellant, along with two other people,
    conspired to purchase 17 kilograms of cocaine from a Drug Enforcement Agency
    Confidential Informant (“CI”) in Lynchburg, Virginia. Thereafter, on July 24, 2014,
    Appellant was indicted in the Western District of Virginia for, among other offenses,
    conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine. In that conspiracy, the Government
    alleged that Appellant along with others -- including the same two people involved in the
    conspiracy to which he had previously pled guilty in the Eastern District of Virginia --
    operated a vast drug trafficking organization in the Lynchburg, Virginia area from 1998
    through 2012.
    Appellant moved to dismiss the Western District of Virginia indictment on double
    jeopardy grounds. The district court denied the motion, reasoning that the longer time span
    and broader scope of the conspiracy alleged in the Western District of Virginia
    differentiated it from the conspiracy to which Appellant pled guilty in the Eastern District.
    We reverse. In the context of successive conspiracy prosecutions, we look at the
    characteristics of the conspiracy -- substantive violation, personnel, location, time span,
    and nature and scope -- to determine whether double jeopardy bars a second conspiracy
    prosecution. See United States v. Jarvis, 
    7 F.3d 404
    , 410–11 (4th Cir. 1993). In this case,
    there is substantial if not complete overlap on each element of our double jeopardy analysis.
    2
    We therefore hold double jeopardy bars Appellant’s follow-on prosecution in the Western
    District of Virginia for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine in violation
    of 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    .
    I.
    A.
    Kirkley Hotel Transaction
    In July 2012, Alejandro Martinez-Mata contacted a CI in Richmond, Virginia, to
    arrange a purchase of multiple kilograms of cocaine. After preliminary negotiations over
    the phone, co-conspirators Martinez-Mata and Roberto Sanchez-Rogue met the CI in
    Danville, Virginia. They agreed to a sale of 17 kilograms of cocaine for $30,000 a kilogram
    ($510,000    total).     Thereafter,    on   August     22,   2012,    Martinez-Mata      and
    Sanchez-Rogue met the CI at a restaurant in Lynchburg to consummate the deal. The CI
    and Sanchez-Rogue then proceeded to the Kirkley Hotel in Lynchburg, Virginia, where
    they met Appellant. All three walked into a hotel room where law enforcement officials
    were waiting and arrested Appellant and Sanchez-Rogue. Law enforcement officials
    confiscated $570,359.00 from Appellant (the “Kirkley Hotel Transaction”).
    On October 10, 2012, Appellant pled guilty in the Eastern District of Virginia to
    one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    . As a result, Appellant was sentenced to 135 months in prison.
    3
    B.
    The Lynchburg Conspiracy
    On July 24, 2014, Appellant was indicted in the Western District of Virginia for,
    among other offenses, one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine
    in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    . Appellant was indicted on the conspiracy count along with
    alleged co-conspirators Bryce Carter, Carlos Jackson, Jeroid Matthews, Tony Monroe,
    Tyrone Lewis, Lateef Jones, and Randall Falwell.
    In connection with this conspiracy count, the Government alleged that Appellant
    “was the leader of [a] drug trafficking organization which was responsible for distributing
    more than 1,000 kilograms of cocaine in the Lynchburg area over the span of
    approximately 14 years” from 1998 until 2012. Sentencing Memorandum, United States
    v. Carter, No: 6-14-cr-00015 (W.D. Va. March 7, 2017), ECF No. 353, 2–3 (hereinafter
    Carter Sentencing Memorandum). As alleged, the Lynchburg drug trafficking organization
    obtained cocaine from wholesale suppliers outside of Lynchburg, brought the cocaine to
    the Lynchburg area, and sold it to customers there.
    C.
    On November 24, 2015, Appellant moved to dismiss the Western District of
    Virginia indictment on double jeopardy grounds. Appellant argued that he previously pled
    guilty in the Eastern District of Virginia to the same conspiracy for which he was indicted
    4
    in the Western District. 1 The Government responded arguing that the conspiracies differed
    in co-conspirators, time span, and the nature and scope of the activities involved.
    The district court agreed with the Government.               Although the district court
    recognized the alleged conspiracies involved some of the same co-conspirators working in
    the same area at the same time to violate the same statute, it nevertheless concluded that
    the Government had identified two distinct conspiracies because the Kirkley Hotel
    Transaction “concerned a single drug transaction for seventeen kilograms of cocaine”
    completed over the course of approximately one month whereas the Lynchburg Conspiracy
    “concern[ed] . . . over 1,000 kilograms of cocaine during a fourteen year period.” J.A.
    183–84. 2
    This timely appeal followed. 3
    1
    The motion to dismiss also alleged prosecutorial vindictiveness but that is not part
    of this appeal.
    2
    Citations to the “J.A.” refer to the Joint Appendix filed by the parties in this appeal.
    3
    Although this appeal is interlocutory, we have jurisdiction over the appeal of the
    denial of a motion to dismiss an indictment on double jeopardy grounds pursuant to the
    “‘collateral order’ exception to the final-judgment rule.” Abney v. United States, 
    431 U.S. 651
    , 657 (1977); see Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 
    337 U.S. 541
    , 546–47 (1949)
    (“We hold this order appealable because it is a final disposition of a claimed right which is
    not an ingredient of the cause of action and does not require consideration with it.”).
    5
    II.
    This appeal presents a mixed question of law and fact which we review de novo.
    See United States v. Ford, 
    703 F.3d 708
    , 710 (4th Cir. 2013). Because the parties dispute
    the legal conclusion applied to the facts and not the facts themselves, this court reviews the
    district court’s conclusion de novo. See United States v. Goodine, 
    400 F.3d 202
    , 206 (4th
    Cir. 2005).
    III.
    “The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall
    ‘be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.’” Goodine, 
    400 F.3d at 206
     (quoting U.S. Const. amend. V). In the context of multiple conspiracies, the
    Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits dividing one overarching conspiracy into two separate
    counts. See United States v. MacDougall, 
    790 F.2d 1135
    , 1143–44 (4th Cir. 1986).
    In order to assess whether there are two distinct conspiracies, we look to the entire
    record and apply a “totality of the circumstances” test. See United States v. Ragins, 
    840 F.2d 1184
    , 1188 (4th Cir. 1988). In doing so, we examine five factors:
    1) time periods in which the alleged activities of the conspiracy occurred; 2)
    the statutory offenses charged in the indictments; 3) the places where the
    alleged activities occurred; 4) the persons acting as co-conspirators; and 5)
    the overt acts or any other descriptions of the offenses charged which indicate
    the nature and scope of the activities to be prosecuted.
    MacDougall, 
    790 F.2d at 1144
    .
    The defendant bears “[t]he initial burden of raising and pleading the double jeopardy
    claim.” Ragins, 
    840 F.2d at 1191
    . To meet this burden, the defendant must point to
    “substantial overlaps in the two charged conspiracies.” United States v. McHan, 
    966 F.2d
                     6
    134, 138 (4th Cir. 1992). If the defendant has demonstrated the double jeopardy argument
    is non-frivolous, the burden then shifts to the government. See 
    id.
     If the burden shifts, the
    government “must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the indictments refer to
    two separate criminal agreements.” Ragins, 
    840 F.2d at 1184
    .
    A.
    In this case, the district court concluded that Appellant “made a non-frivolous
    showing concerning Double Jeopardy.” J.A. 180. The Government has not challenged
    this conclusion. See Appellee’s Br. 9. In McHan, we deemed a defendant’s double
    jeopardy argument non-frivolous where a defendant demonstrated that both conspiracies
    involved the defendant and three others, purchasing marijuana in south Texas and bringing
    it to North Carolina, as well as the same statutory violation. See 966 F.2d at 138. Here,
    Appellant has shown that both conspiracies involved him and at least two other people in
    common, the distribution of cocaine in the Lynchburg area, the same substantive statute,
    and the same time period. Therefore, as in McHan, the substantial overlap here amounts
    to a non-frivolous argument. The burden shifts to the Government to demonstrate the
    existence of two separate and distinct conspiracies. See id.
    B.
    Analyzing our double jeopardy five factor test, we conclude that in this case the
    Government has failed at every turn to prove separate and distinct conspiracies. To the
    contrary, the Government has identified one large conspiracy to traffic cocaine in the
    Lynchburg area.
    7
    But, before reaching the factors individually, we first highlight a glaring,
    fundamental flaw in the Government’s legal analysis. The Government argues there were
    two conspiracies here because the Lynchburg Conspiracy “had an expanded scope, a
    broader reach, and a different object” than the Kirkley Hotel Transaction. Appellee’s Br.
    25. According to the Government, the different object was that the Lynchburg Conspiracy
    used many transactions on many occasions whereas the Kirkley Hotel Transaction was a
    “single transaction, on a single occasion.” Id. at 23; see id. at 22. This argument
    misconstrues our double jeopardy precedent.
    In the context of double jeopardy, we look to the degree of overlap not the degree
    of similarity to determine whether two charges are in reality a single offense. See, e.g.,
    MacDougall, 
    790 F.2d at 1148
    ; Ragins, 
    840 F.2d at
    1190–91; McHan, 966 F.2d at
    138–39. Indeed, the government could always separate a smaller piece from the larger
    conspiracy and that smaller piece would look dissimilar to the large piece. And that is what
    the Government has attempted to do here. Because the Lynchburg Conspiracy’s scope,
    reach, and object completely overlapped with the Kirkley Hotel Transaction’s scope, reach,
    and object, the Government has simply split one large conspiracy into a smaller and larger
    piece rather than identify two separate conspiracies. This is precisely what the Double
    Jeopardy Clause prohibits. The Double Jeopardy Clause cannot be avoided through artful
    pleading or “the simple expedient of dividing a single crime into a series of temporal or
    spatial units.” Brown v. Ohio, 
    432 U.S. 161
    , 169 (1977).
    8
    1.
    Substantive Offense, Time Period, and Geographic Scope
    a.
    In this case, both the information in the Eastern District of Virginia and the
    indictment in the Western District of Virginia alleged Appellant violated 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    .
    See J.A. 21–22, 59.     Thus, there is no dispute that Appellant committed the same
    substantive offense.
    b.
    Moreover, the alleged conspiracies occurred during the same time. The Kirkley
    Hotel Transaction lasted approximately one month, from July 2012 to August 22, 2012.
    Significantly, the Lynchburg Conspiracy indictment in the Western District of Virginia
    “span[ned] 14 years, from September 1998 to August 2012,” inclusive of the Kirkley Hotel
    Transaction. Appellee’s Br. 14; see J.A. 21. Therefore, the time in which the Lynchburg
    Conspiracy operated “completely embraced the time period covered” by the Kirkley Hotel
    Transaction. Jarvis, 
    7 F.3d at 411
    .
    c.
    Likewise, the Lynchburg Conspiracy’s geographic reach encompassed the entire
    area involved in the Kirkley Hotel Transaction. See United States v. Hoyte, 
    51 F.3d 1239
    ,
    1246 (4th Cir. 1995). According to the Government, the Lynchburg Conspiracy operated
    “primarily in the region around Lynchburg, Virginia, and extended into areas within the
    Eastern District of Virginia.” Appellee’s Br. 15. The Kirkley Hotel Transaction took place
    in Lynchburg with some communications reaching into the Eastern District of Virginia.
    9
    Thus, the substantive offense, time span, and geographic area factors weigh heavily
    in favor of a double jeopardy violation.
    2.
    Co-conspirators and Nature and Scope of Conspiracy
    The Government’s arguments fair no better with respect to the two remaining
    factors relevant to our double jeopardy analysis. This court will not allow the “government
    to subject an accused to repeated prosecutions for what is in reality the same criminal
    conspiracy, simply by selecting a different set of overt acts.” Ragins, 
    840 F.2d at 1188
    .
    To determine the overlap on the remaining factors, we must conduct a “full study of the
    indictments and evidence.” MacDougall, 
    790 F.2d at 1144
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    a.
    Here, a full study of the Government’s case reveals a serious and substantial overlap
    as to co-conspirators in this case. First, the Lynchburg Conspiracy used at least three of
    the four people identified in the Kirkley Hotel Transaction -- Appellant, Martinez-Mata,
    and Sanchez-Rogue. See J.A. 61; Appellee’s Br. 15–16 (“Four individual were involved
    in the [Kirkley Hotel Transaction]: Jones, Martinez-Mata, Sanchez-Rogue and a
    confidential informant . . . . Martinez-Mata and Sanchez-Rogue were involved [with Jones]
    as co-conspirators in the [Lynchburg Conspiracy].”). Of note, the CI was the fourth person
    and the only identified difference in persons involved. But the Government created that
    difference. We give little weight to a difference the government itself manufactures.
    10
    Moreover, in addition to the four co-conspirators identified, per the Eastern District
    information, the Kirkley Hotel Transaction involved “others known and unknown” who
    conspired to distribute 17 kilograms of cocaine. J.A. 59. These “others known and
    unknown” were in all likelihood members of the Lynchburg Conspiracy. 
    Id.
     Appellant
    was the leader of the Lynchburg Conspiracy. See J.A. 31. The Lynchburg Conspiracy had
    the ability to sell cocaine in amounts ranging from one gram to multiple ounces. If
    Appellant conspired with other people and purchased cocaine “with intent to distribute,”
    then the people with which he would have necessarily conspired with were quite logically
    the members of the Lynchburg Conspiracy.
    b.
    Likewise, the Lynchburg Conspiracy was also the probable source of the $557,455
    in cash that law enforcement seized during the Kirkley Hotel Transaction. See J.A. 62.
    The Government has “conservatively estimated” that, in the course of its existence, the
    Lynchburg Conspiracy trafficked in cocaine worth “at least $33 million dollars.” Carter
    Sentencing Mem. at 3. Moreover, although at oral argument the Government noted
    Appellant was gainfully employed, it admitted he was certainly not making over $500,000
    a year from such gainful employment and did not offer any plausible explanation where
    the money for the Kirkley Hotel Transaction could have come from other than the
    Lynchburg Conspiracy. See Oral Argument at 23:00-25:20, United States v. Jones, No.
    15-4763         (4th         Cir.        argued          March           23,         2017),
    http://coop.ca4.uscourts.gov/OAarchive/mp3/15-4763-20170323.mp3.
    11
    We do not leave our common sense at the courthouse door. When a leader of a drug
    trafficking network who traffics in millions of dollars of cocaine arrives with over
    $500,000 in cash to purchase cocaine, common sense indicates that money clearly came
    from his drug trafficking operations. Thus, it is not a leap for us to conclude that the money
    used to buy drugs in the Kirkley Hotel Transaction flowed from the Lynchburg Conspiracy.
    The Government -- which carries the burden to distinguish the Kirkley Hotel Transaction
    from the Lynchburg Conspiracy -- has offered no alternative explanation.
    c.
    Ultimately, the Government is left to hang its hat on what it says are important
    differences in the nature and scope of the alleged conspiracies, but its analysis in this regard
    is superficial. What the Government argues are differences are actually similarities. The
    Government posits that the Kirkley Hotel Transaction involved “negotiations between
    [Appellant] and some of his suppliers to exchange money for cocaine on a single occasion.”
    Appellee’s Br. 9.      The Government attempts to contrast this with the Lynchburg
    Conspiracy which “involved over a decade of cocaine distribution organized by
    [Appellant] through a network of drug dealers focused selling [sic] cocaine to hundreds of
    customers in and around Lynchburg, Virginia.” 
    Id.
     But, the only way the Lynchburg
    Conspiracy was able to acquire and distribute cocaine “to hundreds of customers” was
    through countless individual transactions, like where Appellant “exchange[d] money for
    cocaine” in the Kirkley Hotel Transaction. 
    Id.
     And, the reason Appellant purchased a
    large amount of cocaine in the Kirkley Hotel Transaction was to allow his “network of
    drug dealers” in the Lynchburg Conspiracy to continue “selling cocaine to hundreds of
    12
    customers.” 
    Id.
     The “single occasion” Kirkley Hotel Transaction was, in fact, wholly
    subsumed in the larger Lynchburg Conspiracy. 
    Id.
    Not only has the Government failed to distinguish the two conspiracies, but, the
    record amply demonstrates that based upon timing, the Eastern District Kirkley Hotel
    Transaction was part and parcel of the Lynchburg Conspiracy charged in the Western
    District. By summer 2012, the Government was closing in on the Lynchburg Conspiracy
    and disrupting its trafficking activities.   From late spring to summer of 2012, the
    Government seized over $25,000 in cash from the Lynchburg Conspiracy; confiscated over
    10 ounces of cocaine; made four controlled purchases; and arrested two co-conspirators.
    See Statement of Facts, United States v. Lateef Jones, No. 6:14-cr-00015 (W.D. Va. Dec.
    29, 2014), ECF No. 128; United States v. Jackson, No. 6:14-cr-00015 (W.D. Va. March
    31,    2015)     ECF       No.     194.           In   June     2012,     one     of    the
    co-conspirators charged in the Western District indictment told a potential drug purchaser
    that he could not make a sale because “his supplier was in trouble and they were waiting
    for that situation to be resolved.” Statement of Facts, United States v. Lewis, No. 6:14-cr-
    00015 (W.D. Va. Jan. 16, 2015), ECF No. 149.
    In arguing its double jeopardy case, the Government ignores the anomaly of a drug
    organization in operation for 14 years suddenly taking a risk with “one large purchase”
    from a new and unknown supplier. Appellee’s Br. 10. However, this anomaly can be
    readily explained when viewed in the context of the Lynchburg Conspiracy. With his drug
    supply in jeopardy and police close on his tail, Appellant needed a new source of cocaine.
    Therefore, Appellant’s co-conspirator Martinez-Mata contacted a new drug supplier and
    13
    found that supply. Appellant willingly provided the money to make the purchase at the
    Kirkley Hotel to keep the Lynchburg Conspiracy afloat. Viewed through this lens, again
    the Kirkley Hotel Transaction was not a separate conspiracy but rather an act in furtherance
    of the large conspiracy charged in the Western District.
    In fact, the Western District was investigating Jones for the full scope of the
    conspiracy which would have included the Kirkley Hotel Transaction, when Jones pled
    guilty. See Oral Argument at 20:40, United States v. Jones, No. 15-4763 (4th Cir. argued
    March 23, 2017), http://coop.ca4.uscourts.gov/OAarchive/mp3/15-4763-20170323.mp3
    (“Q: When the Government in the Eastern District of Virginia entered into a plea agreement
    with Mr. Jones was the Government also investigating him for the full scope of the
    conspiracy in the Western District of Virginia?” A: “Yes. It was and that is something
    that was acknowledged at the sentencing.”). In creating a plea in the Eastern District, the
    Government had Jones plead guilty to the small portion of the conspiracy that it could
    charge. The Western District then fashioned its indictment around the remaining part of
    the conspiracy. In the face of such a clear violation of double jeopardy, the government
    was left to argue before the district court:
    With regard to the double jeopardy argument, Your Honor, had [the Western
    District] charged this conspiracy first and then the Eastern District tried to
    charge their conspiracy, the defendant would have a valid point. I think his
    argument would have a lot of merit. That would be double jeopardy. But
    that’s not what they are asking. They are asking the Court to dismiss a drug
    conspiracy that lasted 14 years, over the course of a thousand kilos or more
    will be shown in trial, involving different coconspirators and different
    sources of supply, because the defendant pled guilty to one attempted
    purchase of cocaine in the Eastern District of Virginia.
    14
    J.A. 147–48. This is without merit. The law is clear that it does not matter which
    indictment is returned first, and the government cannot avoid double jeopardy by splitting
    one large conspiracy into two. See Brown, 
    432 U.S. at
    165–66. 4
    Indeed, we have already declared that double jeopardy bars a successive conspiracy
    prosecution in a materially indistinguishable situation. In United States v. Jarvis, a
    defendant was convicted of a conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine in the
    Southern District of Florida. See 
    7 F.3d 404
    , 407 (4th Cir. 1993). In that case, during a
    four day period in January 1990, Jarvis flew to Florida to purchase cocaine, arranged the
    purchase with undercover DEA agents, and made the purchase. As a result, Jarvis was
    convicted in the Southern District of Florida of conspiracy in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    .
    4
    The complete overlap in the nature and scope of the conspiracy and the
    Government’s full knowledge of the conspiracy when Appellant was indicted in the
    Eastern District distinguish this case from United States v. Cole, 
    293 F.3d 153
     (4th Cir.
    2002). In that case, the defendant was charged with one conspiracy where the only overt
    acts were two small-scale, domestic sales of cocaine and a separate conspiracy that
    involved the mass importation of drugs from Panama, distribution of those drugs, money
    laundering, and violent acts including murder. The substantial differences in the overt acts
    demonstrated a clear difference in nature and scope of the conspiracies. Based on this
    distinction, in addition to differences in the other four elements of our totality of the
    circumstances analysis, we concluded the government had identified two distinct
    conspiracies. But, in this case, as illustrated above, the Government is unable to point to
    any distinction in the overt acts and nature and scope of the conspiracies. In addition, in
    Cole, the government was unaware of key facts in its second conspiracy prosecution when
    it charged the first conspiracy. See 
    293 F.3d at 162
    . Therefore, the court could not find
    the government had artificially divided one conspiracy into two -- the sine qua non of a
    double jeopardy violation in the conspiracy context. The same is not true here. The
    Government has acknowledged that it was aware of the entirety of the conspiracy when it
    charged Appellant in the Eastern District of Virginia. The Government then fashioned the
    two indictments at issue to enable two separate convictions for one large conspiracy -- the
    precise sin the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits.
    15
    After that conviction, the Eastern District of Virginia charged Jarvis with an ongoing
    conspiracy from June 1988 to April 25, 1991, in which the conspirators purchased cocaine
    in Florida and smuggled it to the Eastern District of Virginia to be sold in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    . There, we found, “within each of the five factors enunciated in MacDougall
    and Ragins, there is considerable similarity between the Florida prosecution and the
    Virginia prosecution.” 
    Id.
     at 411–12. Based on the similarity, we “conclude[d] that
    Jarvis’s indictment on conspiracy charges in the Eastern District of Virginia was simply an
    attempt to reprosecute the defendant for an offense of which he already had been convicted
    in the Southern District of Florida.” 
    Id. at 412
    . The same is true here.
    Here, as in Jarvis, the “Government selected a single overt act from the series and
    prosecuted it as a separate conspiracy.” 
    7 F.3d at 412
    . Then, “the Government prosecuted
    [Appellant] again . . . this time attacking the entire conspiracy.” 
    Id.
     In this case, just as in
    Jarvis, the “series of overt acts charged in both” the Eastern and Western District of
    Virginia conspiracies “were bound together by a single agreement” to acquire and
    distribute cocaine. 
    Id.
     And, just as in Jarvis, the government’s attempt to re-prosecute
    Appellant violates the Double Jeopardy Clause.
    In sum, although the Government alleged two conspiracies, it has clearly only
    identified one large scale conspiracy aimed at obtaining and distributing cocaine. The
    Government’s position is not so much a principled legal argument as it is a post hoc
    rationalization for violating Appellant’s constitutional rights.
    16
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    17