United States v. Jermel Lewis ( 2014 )


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  •                                    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ______
    No. 10-2931
    ______
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    JERMEL LEWIS,
    a/k/a STAR,
    a/k/a PR-STAR,
    a/k/a P
    Jermel Lewis,
    Appellant
    ______
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (E. D. Pa. 2-08-cr-00161-003)
    District Judge: Honorable J. Curtis Joyner
    ______
    Argued May 27, 2014
    Before: RENDELL, FISHER and CHAGARES,
    Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed: September 9, 2014)
    Paul J. Hetznecker, Esq. ARGUED
    Suite 911
    1420 Walnut Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Arlene D. Fisk, Esq.
    Robert A. Zauzmer, Esq. ARGUED
    Office of United States Attorney
    615 Chestnut Street
    Suite 1250
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    ______
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ______
    2
    FISHER, Circuit Judge.
    This case requires us to determine the applicable
    standard of review for situations where a district court has
    imposed a mandatory minimum sentence based upon facts
    that were never charged in the indictment or found by a jury
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Such errors occur when a
    sentence is imposed in violation of the rule recently set forth
    in Alleyne v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
     (2013).
    Appellant Jermel Lewis challenges his sentence and contends
    that the failure of the indictment to charge
    an Alleyne element, combined with Alleyne error in jury
    instructions and at sentencing, is structural error. We hold
    that Alleyne error of the sort alleged here is not structural and
    is instead subject to harmless or plain error analysis under
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 52. We conclude that the
    District Court’s error in Lewis’s case was harmless and will
    therefore affirm.
    I.
    Although this case has a lengthy history, the facts are
    largely undisputed. Lewis and his co-defendants Glorious
    Shavers and Andrew White (collectively, “defendants”)
    committed an armed robbery of an unlicensed after-hours
    “speakeasy” in North Philadelphia on November 8, 2005.
    The defendants committed the robbery by pointing firearms at
    the customers and employees, ordering them to the floor, and
    threatening to shoot them. Shavers and White were arrested
    shortly after the robbery, and Lewis was apprehended at a
    later time.
    Shavers and White were charged on March 20, 2008
    with Hobbs Act robbery in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1951
    (a),
    and with using and carrying a firearm during and in relation
    3
    to a crime of violence, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c). On
    July 10, 2008, a superseding indictment charged Lewis with
    the same offenses and added attempted witness tampering
    charges against all three defendants. On August 20, 2009, a
    second superseding indictment added additional witness
    tampering charges and a count of conspiracy to commit
    Hobbs Act robbery against all three defendants. Count three
    of the Second Superseding Indictment—the only count at
    issue here—provided that the defendants “knowingly used
    and carried, and aided and abetted the use and carrying of, a
    firearm, that is: (1) a shotgun; (2) a Smith & Wesson, .38
    caliber, Special, six-shot revolver, serial number D479345,
    and four live rounds of ammunition; and (3) a handgun,
    during and in relation to a crime of violence.” App. at 71.
    The defendants were tried in the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania beginning on September 9, 2009.            The
    government presented testimony from Brian Anderson, who
    was a patron at the speakeasy the night of the robbery. He
    identified Lewis as “a heavier light-skinned guy, [who] had
    another type of handgun—I think it was black—in his hand.”
    App. at 876. That person “stood in the doorway with the gun
    on everybody.” 
    Id.
     Anderson positively identified Lewis at
    trial.
    The government also presented testimony from
    Alberto Vazquez, another patron at the speakeasy at the time
    of the robbery. Vazquez identified Lewis at trial as “the
    general, the leader,” who “had a black 9-millimeter or .45
    caliber. . . . It was a black automatic weapon. He pulled it out
    of his right side pocket, of the hood pocket.” App. at 968-69.
    Vazquez further testified that Lewis’s gun was “pointed at
    [Vazquez] and pointed at several other people.” App. at 970.
    At one point Lewis “pulled [Vazquez’s] shirt up, [and] put the
    4
    gun to [his] stomach.” App. at 971. Vazquez identified
    Lewis as the defendant who robbed him that night.
    The District Court instructed the jury that Lewis was
    charged with “using and carrying a firearm during the crime
    of violence.” App. at 2019-21. The jury found all three
    defendants guilty of the Hobbs Act violations and the §
    924(c) violation, but Lewis was acquitted of all witness
    tampering charges. Lewis was ultimately sentenced to a term
    of incarceration of 141 months to be followed by five years of
    supervised release. The term consisted of 57 months’
    incarceration on each of two Hobbs Act counts, to run
    concurrently with one another, and 84 months’ incarceration,
    the mandatory minimum term of imprisonment, on the § 924
    count for brandishing a firearm as set forth in 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c)(1)(A)(ii), 1 to run consecutively.
    Following sentencing, defendants appealed to this
    Court. We vacated Shavers’s and White’s witness tampering
    convictions and Shavers’s eight-year term of supervised
    release, but affirmed the remaining convictions and Lewis’s
    sentence. United States v. Shavers, 
    693 F.3d 363
     (3d Cir.
    2012). The Supreme Court granted defendants’ petition for a
    writ of certiorari, vacated our judgment, and remanded for
    further consideration in light of its decision in Alleyne.
    Shavers v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2877
     (2013).
    The government now concedes that the District Court
    erred in imposing an enhancement on Shavers and White for
    obstruction of justice pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1, and those
    1
    Section 924(c)(1)(A) imposes differing mandatory
    minimum sentences depending upon whether the defendant
    “uses or carries,” “brandish[es],” or “discharge[s]” a firearm
    during a crime of violence or drug trafficking crime.
    5
    cases have been remanded to the District Court for
    resentencing. The government continues to oppose Lewis’s
    Alleyne argument, however, which is the only issue remaining
    in this appeal.
    II.
    The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 3231
    , and we have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . Allegations of constitutional error at sentencing are
    subject to plenary review. United States v. Barbosa, 
    271 F.3d 438
    , 452 (3d Cir. 2001). “When the defendant has made a
    timely objection to an error and [Federal Rule of Criminal
    Procedure] 52(a) applies, a court of appeals normally engages
    in a specific analysis of the district court record . . . to
    determine whether the error was prejudicial.” United States
    v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 734 (1993).
    III.
    Our discussion proceeds in three parts. First, we
    examine the law of structural error as it has been developed
    and applied to errors under Alleyne and its predecessor,
    Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
     (2000). Second, we
    address Lewis’s particular arguments for finding structural
    error in this case. Third, because we conclude that no
    structural error occurred, we discuss why the Alleyne error in
    this case was harmless.
    A.   Structural         error        jurisprudence        and
    Apprendi/Alleyne
    Two bodies of law govern our structural error analysis.
    The first includes Apprendi and Alleyne and sets forth the rule
    that applies to Lewis’s situation—that facts increasing a
    mandatory minimum sentence must be charged in an
    indictment, presented to a jury, and found beyond a
    6
    reasonable doubt. The second arises from the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
     (1999),
    and considers the extent to which some constitutional errors
    are “structural” such that they affect the fundamental fairness
    of criminal proceedings and require automatic reversal.
    1.     Apprendi and Alleyne
    Apprendi arose in the context of New Jersey’s hate
    crime law, N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:44-3(e). That law permitted
    judges to increase a defendant’s maximum sentence based
    upon a factual finding by a preponderance of the evidence
    that a crime was committed for the purpose of intimidating
    the victim based upon race. Apprendi, 
    530 U.S. at 468-69
    .
    Apprendi was sentenced to twelve years’ imprisonment after
    the trial judge increased his statutory maximum term from ten
    to twenty years pursuant to the hate crime statute. 
    Id.
     at 470-
    71. The Supreme Court determined that such an increase was
    unconstitutional and held that “[o]ther than the fact of a prior
    conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime
    beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted
    to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. at 490
    .
    In arriving at its conclusion, the Court rejected the distinction
    between an element of a crime and a sentencing factor that
    increased the potential maximum sentence. 
    Id. at 478-81
    .
    According to the Court, both types of facts are subject to the
    same constitutional protections. 
    Id. at 490
    .
    Thirteen years later, the Supreme Court addressed the
    corollary issue to that presented in Apprendi; that is, the
    appropriate standard of proof for facts that increase the
    statutory mandatory minimum penalty. The defendant in
    Alleyne was charged with, among other crimes, using or
    carrying a firearm in relation to a crime of violence, in
    violation of § 924(c)(1)(A). 
    133 S. Ct. at 2155
    . At trial, the
    7
    jury convicted Alleyne of using or carrying a firearm, but
    made no finding regarding whether the firearm was
    brandished. 
    Id. at 2156
    . The District Court nevertheless
    found that Alleyne brandished the firearm by a preponderance
    of the evidence—as was the practice at that time—thus
    triggering the seven-year mandatory minimum sentence in §
    924(c)(1)(A)(ii). Id.
    The Alleyne Court extended the logic from Apprendi to
    include those facts that increase the statutory minimum.
    Alleyne, 
    133 S. Ct. at 2160
     (“While Harris [v. United States,
    
    536 U.S. 545
     (2002)] limited Apprendi to facts increasing the
    statutory maximum, the principle applied in Apprendi applies
    with equal force to facts increasing the mandatory
    minimum.”). Just as the facts at issue in Apprendi created a
    new penalty by increasing the statutory ceiling, so too did the
    facts in Alleyne that increased the floor. 
    Id.
     The Court thus
    held “that facts that increase mandatory minimum sentences
    must be submitted to the jury” and found beyond a reasonable
    doubt. Id. at 2163. Both Apprendi and Alleyne are watershed
    decisions that continue to have a substantial impact on
    sentencing law, as will be discussed below.
    2.     Structural error jurisprudence
    The Supreme Court has recognized that “‘most
    constitutional errors can be harmless.’” Neder, 
    527 U.S. at 8
    (quoting Arizona v. Fulminante, 
    499 U.S. 279
    , 306 (1991)).
    In general, if a defendant “‘had counsel and was tried by an
    impartial adjudicator, there is a strong presumption that any
    other [constitutional] errors that may have occurred are
    subject to harmless-error analysis.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Rose v.
    Clark, 
    478 U.S. 570
    , 579 (1986)) (alteration in original). The
    types of errors identified by the Supreme Court as
    “‘structural’ and thus subject to automatic reversal [are] ‘very
    8
    limited.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 468 (1997) (listing structural errors as: the complete
    denial of counsel; a biased trial judge; racial discrimination in
    the selection of a grand jury; denial of self-representation at
    trial; denial of a public trial; and a defective reasonable doubt
    instruction)).
    In Neder, the Supreme Court held that a jury
    instruction that omits an element of an offense is subject to
    only harmless error review. 2 
    527 U.S. at 15
    . In that case, the
    defendant was charged with several counts of fraud, but the
    district court failed to instruct the jury on the element of
    “materiality.” 
    Id. at 4
    . In reviewing the error, the Supreme
    Court acknowledged that “[u]nlike such defects as the
    complete deprivation of counsel or trial before a biased judge,
    an instruction that omits an element of the offense does not
    necessarily render a criminal trial fundamentally unfair or an
    unreliable vehicle for determining guilt or innocence.” 
    Id. at 9
    . As such, the Court looked to other cases involving
    omission or “misdescription” of an element, and to situations
    where Sixth Amendment violations occurred because the
    jury, for various reasons, failed to return a “complete verdict”
    on each element of an offense. 
    Id.
     at 10-13 (citing California
    v. Roy, 
    519 U.S. 2
     (1996) (per curiam) (omission from jury
    instruction); Carella v. California, 
    491 U.S. 263
     (1989) (per
    curiam) (jury applied an unconstitutional mandatory
    conclusive presumption); Pope v. Illinois, 
    481 U.S. 497
    (1987) (jury rendered a finding on the wrong element)).
    Despite these errors, the Court in each prior instance
    2
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 52(a) defines harmless
    error review and provides that “[a]ny error, defect,
    irregularity, or variance that does not affect substantial rights
    must be disregarded.”
    9
    reviewed for harmlessness, thus supporting the conclusion in
    Neder that Sixth Amendment errors arising from a jury
    verdict are not structural defects.
    This Court first addressed the implications of structural
    error in the context of Apprendi in United States v. Vazquez,
    
    271 F.3d 93
     (3d Cir. 2001) (en banc). The defendant in
    Vazquez was charged with conspiring to possess and
    distribute “more than 5 kilos of cocaine” in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 846
     and 841. 
    Id. at 96
    . Neither the government
    nor the defendant requested an instruction requiring the jury
    to find a particular quantity of cocaine, but the judge at
    sentencing found by a preponderance of the evidence that
    nearly two kilograms of cocaine were attributable to the
    defendant, and he was sentenced to twenty-four years’
    imprisonment. 
    Id. at 96-99
    .
    On appeal we concluded that the defendant’s sentence
    violated Apprendi because it was imposed based upon a drug
    quantity finding that increased his guidelines sentence above
    the twenty-year statutory maximum. 
    Id. at 99
    . Applying
    plain error review, 3 we accepted that the district court erred
    and that the error was plain, but engaged in a lengthy
    discussion about whether the error affected the defendant’s
    3
    When a party fails to preserve an issue for appeal we review
    for plain error, which requires a showing of “‘(1) error, (2)
    that is plain, and (3) that affect[s] substantial rights. If all
    three conditions are met, an appellate court may then exercise
    its discretion to notice a forfeited error, but only if (4) the
    error seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity, or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.’” Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 99
    (quoting Johnson, 
    520 U.S. at 466-67
    ).
    10
    substantial rights. 4 Id. at 99-100. We addressed that issue in
    three parts.
    We first characterized Apprendi error as a combination
    of both trial and sentencing error rooted in the Due Process
    Clause and Sixth Amendment’s notice and jury trial
    guarantees. Id. at 101. In so concluding, we noted that
    Apprendi error involves the interplay between errors both at
    sentencing—“imposing a sentence beyond the prescribed
    statutory maximum”—and at trial—“failing to submit an
    element of the offense to the jury.” Id. “On the one hand, the
    trial error exists only because of the sentencing error. On the
    other hand, the sentencing error cannot occur without the trial
    error. Thus, an appropriate remedy must recognize that each
    Apprendi violation is both a trial and a sentencing error.” Id.
    This conclusion allowed us to review the entire trial record
    when considering whether “we [could] say beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the sentence would have been the same
    absent the trial error.” Id. We also noted that the combined
    trial and sentencing error paradigm comported with Supreme
    Court precedent in Neder and Johnson (which both addressed
    trial errors) insofar as “in those cases the trial error resulted in
    a constitutional defect, necessitating an inquiry as to whether
    the defendant’s substantial rights were affected.” Id. at 102.
    We next addressed structural error. Relying heavily
    upon the structural error jurisprudence enunciated in Neder,
    we concluded that Apprendi error, as a sentencing and trial
    4
    Importantly, we acknowledged that the substantial rights
    prong of the plain error analysis is “essentially identical” to
    harmless error analysis, “with the exception of the burden of
    proof.” Vazquez, 271 F.3d at 100. The Government has the
    burden of proof under harmless error, while the defendant has
    the burden under plain error. Id.
    11
    error, is not structural. Id. at 103. In support, we identified
    decisions recognizing that both trial error and sentencing
    error can be harmless. Id. (citing Neder, 
    527 U.S. at 9
     (trial
    error harmless); Jones v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 373
    , 402-05
    (1999) (sentencing error harmless)). Because the errors had
    been found harmless individually, we determined that they
    remained harmless even in conjunction with each other.
    Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 103
    .
    Finally, based upon our review of the trial record, we
    concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant’s
    sentence would have been the same had the jury been
    properly instructed with respect to drug quantity. 
    Id. at 104
    .
    The Apprendi error did not affect the defendant’s substantial
    rights and was, therefore, harmless. 
    Id.
    Several Supreme Court decisions since Vazquez have
    continued to explore the interplay between Apprendi and
    structural error. The Supreme Court addressed Apprendi in
    the context of indictment and trial error in United States v.
    Cotton, 
    535 U.S. 625
     (2002). The indictment in that case
    failed to allege a specific drug quantity that could have led to
    enhanced penalties under 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (b), and the jury
    was likewise not instructed to make a specific finding with
    respect to drug quantity. 
    Id. at 628
    . Cotton was nevertheless
    sentenced in violation of Apprendi above the statutory
    maximum based upon the trial judge’s factual findings. 
    Id.
    No party objected to these errors. 
    Id. at 627
    .
    In assessing Cotton’s case, the Supreme Court rejected
    the notion that the failure to allege drug quantity in the
    indictment was a “jurisdictional defect” that required
    automatic reversal. 
    Id. at 629-31
    . Reviewing for plain error,
    the Court avoided the question of whether Apprendi error is
    structural and held instead that Cotton’s claim failed under
    12
    the fourth prong of plain error review. 
    Id. at 632-33
    . The
    Court noted that the drug quantity evidence was
    “‘overwhelming’ and ‘essentially uncontroverted,’” and thus
    did not affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation of
    judicial proceedings. 
    Id. at 633
     (quoting Johnson, 
    520 U.S. at 470
    ). In concluding, the Court recognized that:
    Respondents emphasize that the
    Fifth Amendment grand jury right
    serves a vital function in
    providing for a body of citizens
    that acts as a check on
    prosecutorial power. No doubt
    that is true. . . . But that is surely
    no less true of the Sixth
    Amendment right to a petit jury,
    which, unlike the grand jury, must
    find guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt. The important role of the
    petit jury did not, however,
    prevent us in Johnson from
    applying the longstanding rule
    “that a constitutional right may be
    forfeited in criminal as well as
    civil cases by the failure to make
    timely assertion of the right.”
    13
    Id. at 634 (quoting Yakus v. United States, 
    321 U.S. 414
    , 444
    (1944)). 5
    The most recent Supreme Court decision in this area is
    Washington v. Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. 212
     (2006), which held
    that error premised on Blakely v. Washington, 
    542 U.S. 296
    (2004) 6 is not structural and is subject only to harmless error
    review. Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. at 222
    . Recuenco is as close as
    the Supreme Court has come to deciding the issue in this
    case. The indictment in Recuenco charged the defendant with
    assault with a deadly weapon and the jury found him guilty of
    the same. 
    Id. at 215
    . Despite the jury’s finding that the
    defendant committed the assault with a “deadly weapon”
    (which was subject to a one-year sentencing enhancement)
    the trial court applied a three-year sentencing enhancement
    for assault with a “firearm.” 7 
    Id.
     The Supreme Court found
    the error to be harmless and reaffirmed its holding in
    Apprendi that sentencing factors and elements are both
    afforded similar constitutional protections. 
    Id. at 220
    .
    5
    The Supreme Court also explicitly passed on deciding the
    question at issue in this case, i.e., “whether the omission of an
    element of a criminal offense from a federal indictment can
    constitute harmless error,” in United States v. Resendiz-
    Ponce. 
    549 U.S. 102
    , 104 (2007) (resolving the issue on
    other grounds).
    6
    Blakely involved the application of Apprendi to a state
    criminal conviction. 
    542 U.S. at 301
    .
    7
    The indictment did acknowledge that the defendant
    possessed a handgun by charging “intentiona[l] assault . . .
    with a deadly weapon, to-wit: a handgun.” Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. at 215
    . The charge, however, was assault with a deadly
    weapon, not assault with a firearm. 
    Id.
    14
    The Supreme Court also rejected the argument that the
    sentencing court’s finding amounted to “a directed verdict of
    guilt on an offense (assault in the second degree while armed
    with a firearm) greater than the one for which the jury
    convicted him (assault in the second degree while armed with
    any deadly weapon).” 
    Id. at 221
    . In doing so, the Court
    analogized to Neder and noted that “[b]ecause Neder’s jury
    did not find him guilty of each of the elements of the offenses
    with which he was charged, its verdict is no more fairly
    described as a complete finding of guilt of the crimes for
    which the defendant was sentenced than is the verdict here.”
    
    Id.
     (noting that the differences between Recuenco’s case and
    Neder should not be given “constitutional significance”). The
    Court concluded by holding that “[f]ailure to submit a
    sentencing factor to the jury, like failure to submit an element
    to the jury, is not structural error.” 
    Id. at 222
    .
    With these legal principles in mind, we now consider
    whether Alleyne error of the sort alleged by Lewis is
    structural or if it is subject only to review for harmlessness.
    B.     Alleyne error is not structural error
    In concluding that the Alleyne error in this case is not
    structural, we must address Lewis’s argument that his case is
    unique because the indictment failed to allege the brandishing
    element. As a result, he maintains that he was charged and
    convicted of a different crime (use and carrying a firearm)
    than that for which he was sentenced (brandishing a firearm).
    This issue represents a subtle difference from the facts in
    Vazquez, which involved an indictment that charged the
    15
    proper drug quantity. 8 Despite this difference, we find that
    the rationale in Vazquez, along with subsequent Supreme
    Court precedent, clearly establishes that the Alleyne error in
    this case is not structural.
    1.     Alleyne error and structural error
    We note at the outset that Lewis faces an uphill battle
    with respect to structural error. The Supreme Court has
    acknowledged a strong presumption that constitutional errors
    are harmless, and that structural error exists only in a “limited
    class of cases.” Neder, 527 U.S. at 8 (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Bearing these general principles in mind, we
    now turn to our decision in Vazquez, which held that the
    analogous Apprendi error is not structural.
    The primary difference between the facts of this case
    and those in Vazquez is the addition of error at the indictment
    8
    We recognize that Vazquez addressed Apprendi error, but
    find its reasoning equally applicable to cases implicating
    Alleyne. See United States v. Lara-Ruiz, 
    721 F.3d 554
    , 557
    (8th Cir. 2013) (applying same standards under both Apprendi
    and Alleyne error).
    16
    stage. 9 In Vazquez, the indictment charged a drug quantity
    that implicated a heightened statutory maximum penalty,
    whereas the indictment in Lewis’s case failed to charge the
    “brandishing” element in § 924(c)(1)(A)(ii). The addition of
    the indictment error in this case implicates the Fifth
    Amendment right to indictment by a grand jury. We relied in
    Vazquez on the fact that Apprendi error was “grounded in the
    Due Process Clause and the Sixth Amendment’s notice and
    jury trial guarantees.” Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 101
    . Alleyne
    recognized the same. 
    133 S. Ct. at 2156
     (“The Sixth
    Amendment provides that those ‘accused’ of a ‘crime’ have
    the right to a trial ‘by an impartial jury.’ This right, in
    conjunction with the Due Process Clause . . . .”). Although
    neither specifically acknowledged it, we see no principled
    reason why the Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights recognized
    9
    Lewis characterizes the error in this case as having occurred
    at the indictment, trial, and sentencing phases of proceedings.
    In one sense this is incorrect because the indictment, jury
    charge, and verdict were all consistent with respect to the
    “use and carrying” element of § 924. Viewed that way, the
    error that occurred in this case was limited to sentencing,
    where the District Court imposed the sentence for
    brandishing. Error that occurs only at sentencing is not
    structural. See, e.g., Jones, 
    527 U.S. at 402-05
    . As discussed
    above, however, this “sentencing-error-only” interpretation is
    inconsistent with our holding in Vazquez that Apprendi error
    (along with the corollary Alleyne error) is both trial and
    sentencing error. 271 F.3d at 101-02. Because Lewis does
    not seriously challenge the application of the harmless error
    test (and thus concedes that he loses under harmless error
    review regardless of when that error occurred), we need not
    resolve the issue today.
    17
    as potentially harmless in both Vazquez and Alleyne cannot
    also be read to include the Fifth Amendment right to a grand
    jury indictment.
    Supreme Court precedent in this area strongly supports
    our conclusion. Neder, like Vazquez, found that a defective
    jury instruction on an essential element of the offense was
    subject only to harmless error review. 527 U.S. at 15. The
    underlying constitutional error identified in Neder was, of
    course, the deprivation of the Sixth Amendment right to a
    jury trial on that element. Id. at 12. Although Neder was
    limited to the Sixth Amendment right and did not consider the
    grand jury right under the Fifth Amendment, the Supreme
    Court nevertheless acknowledged that “most constitutional
    errors can be harmless.” Id. at 8 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The Neder Court, in listing the errors it has deemed
    to be structural, likewise made no mention of the Fifth
    Amendment right to a grand jury indictment. Id.
    Recuenco, on the other hand, extended the reasoning in
    Neder and found no structural error in a situation where the
    indictment did not charge a required element. 
    548 U.S. at 222
    . In fact, Recuenco provides the missing link between this
    case and our analysis in Vazquez because it recognized that
    errors in an indictment can be harmless. 10 Because Vazquez
    10
    We acknowledge that the indictment in Recuenco did
    mention that a firearm was present, even though the actual
    charge was only for assault with a deadly weapon. We find
    this point to be irrelevant, however, because the indictment in
    this case also contained allegations of brandishing, albeit not
    in so many words. See discussion at Section III.C., infra. To
    the extent that the indictments in this case and in Recuenco
    contained sufficient allegations in substance if not in form,
    the two cases are indistinguishable.
    18
    based its holding upon Supreme Court precedent finding that
    sentencing and trial error are subject to review for
    harmlessness, Recuenco now allows us to extend that
    rationale and conclude that omission of a sentencing factor
    from an indictment is likewise subject only to harmless error
    review. Because errors occurring at the indictment, trial, and
    sentencing phases of proceedings are subject to harmless
    error review individually, we conclude that the three in
    conjunction likewise can be harmless. See Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 103
    . In short, we see no reason why the differences
    between this case and Vazquez should be given
    “constitutional significance.” Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. at 220
    .
    Our conclusion is also supported by Cotton,
    which ultimately held that the Sixth Amendment petit jury
    right, like the Fifth Amendment grand jury right, “serves a
    vital function . . . as a check on prosecutorial power.” 
    535 U.S. at 634
    . It went on to state that the Sixth Amendment
    petit jury right was “at least as important” as the Fifth
    Amendment grand jury right. 
    Id.
     The Court, therefore,
    implied that it would not treat Fifth Amendment indictment
    error differently than Sixth Amendment trial error because
    the Fifth Amendment grand jury right is no more
    sacrosanct—and thus no more worthy of heightened
    protection—than the Sixth Amendment right that is subject
    only to harmless error review.
    Similarly, we are persuaded by the government’s
    compelling argument highlighting the nature of the Fifth
    Amendment grand jury right as it compares to the Sixth
    Amendment right to a petit jury.             Specifically, the
    government notes that, unlike the right to a petit jury: (1) the
    Fifth Amendment grand jury right has not been deemed so
    fundamental as to be applicable to the states by way of the
    Fourteenth Amendment; (2) the grand jury is not the final
    19
    arbiter of the facts, and must only find facts by a
    preponderance of the evidence; and (3) the petit jury provides
    far greater protection for the accused by operating in public,
    relying upon admissible evidence from both the prosecution
    and the accused, and voting unanimously to convict.
    The government contends that, based upon the factors
    listed above, the Sixth Amendment right to a petit jury
    provides more robust protections that go to the “‘framework
    within which the trial proceeds,’” and is thus more worthy of
    protection under the ambit of structural error than the Fifth
    Amendment grand jury right. Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 103
    (quoting Fulminante, 
    499 U.S. at 310
    ). Yet, despite these
    important considerations, the Supreme Court has never
    extended the structural error doctrine to include an
    abridgment of the Sixth Amendment right of the type at issue
    in this case. See Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. at 222
     (“Failure to
    submit a sentencing factor to a jury . . . is not structural
    error.”); Neder, 
    527 U.S. at 15
     (“The omission of an element
    [from a jury instruction] is an error that is subject to harmless-
    error analysis.”). Given the comparative weaknesses in the
    Fifth Amendment right, the Supreme Court is therefore less
    likely to find structural error in a situation like Lewis’s. We
    agree with the government that this consideration weighs in
    favor of applying harmless error review in this case.
    Finally, we note that our decision comports with that
    of every court of appeals to have addressed this issue in the
    context of Alleyne error. See United States v. Harakaly, 
    734 F.3d 88
    , 94-95 (1st Cir. 2013) (noting that “[i]n light of the
    long line of cases subjecting preserved Apprendi errors to
    harmless-error review, there would appear to be no basis for
    finding Alleyne error to be one of those rare cases to which
    harmless-error review does not apply”); United States v.
    McKinley, 
    732 F.3d 1291
    , 1295-96 (11th Cir. 2013) (applying
    20
    plain error review of Alleyne error in which indictment and
    jury charge both involved use or carrying of a firearm, but
    sentence was for brandishing); 11 United States v. Mack, 729
    11
    We note that almost none of the decisions Lewis cites in his
    brief involve Apprendi error—which is the most closely
    analogous situation to his case. This omission is unsurprising
    because courts of appeals have “almost uniformly held that
    the failure of the indictment to include the Apprendi-element,
    like the failure to submit that element to the jury, [is] subject
    to harmless error review.” 5 Wayne R. LaFave et al.,
    Criminal Procedure § 19.3(a) (3d ed. 2007). Indeed, courts of
    appeals routinely subject Apprendi errors at both the
    indictment and conviction stage to harmless or plain error
    review. See United States v. Confredo, 
    528 F.3d 143
    , 156 (2d
    Cir. 2008) (finding that Apprendi errors stemming from
    indictment omissions are reviewed for harmless error); United
    States v. Perez-Ruiz, 
    353 F.3d 1
    , 14, 17 (1st Cir. 2003)
    (finding that preserved Apprendi errors are reviewed for
    harmless error); United States v. Mackins, 
    315 F.3d 399
    , 405-
    06, 409-10 (4th Cir. 2003) (recognizing applicability of
    harmless error review to Apprendi error); United States v.
    Baptiste, 
    309 F.3d 274
    , 277 (5th Cir. 2002) (recognizing a
    change in circuit precedent and applying harmless error
    review to Apprendi error in indictment); United States v.
    Stewart, 
    306 F.3d 295
    , 318-21 (6th Cir. 2002) (rejecting
    structural error argument and applying harmless error review
    to alleged Apprendi error); United States v. Jordan, 
    291 F.3d 1091
    , 1095-96 (9th Cir. 2002) (applying harmless error where
    drug quantity was neither alleged in the indictment nor
    proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt, but concluding
    that record was not sufficient to demonstrate that error was
    harmless); United States v. Adkins, 
    274 F.3d 444
    , 454 (7th
    
    21 F.3d 594
    , 606-09 (6th Cir. 2013) (rejecting structural error
    argument and analyzing Alleyne error for plain error); United
    States v. Kirklin, 
    727 F.3d 711
    , 718-19 (7th Cir. 2013)
    (applying plain error review to alleged Alleyne error); Lara-
    Ruiz, 721 F.3d at 557-58 (recognizing that Apprendi errors
    (and by extension, Alleyne errors) are not structural, but
    reversing on ground that defendant failed to meet plain error
    Cir. 2001) (recognizing that Apprendi errors of failing to
    allege a drug quantity in an indictment are subject to harmless
    error review); Vazquez, 271 F.3d at 103 (finding that
    Apprendi error is not a structural defect); United States v.
    Smith, 
    240 F.3d 927
    , 930 (11th Cir. 2001) (recognizing that
    harmless error review applies to Apprendi errors);United
    States v. Anderson, 
    236 F.3d 427
    , 429 (8th Cir. 2001)
    (applying harmless error review to alleged Apprendi error).
    Because courts have consistently analyzed Apprendi errors
    under the paradigm set forth in Rule 52 (either under plain
    error or harmless error), that practice is persuasive for finding
    that structural error is not applicable in the present case. See
    Harakaly, 734 F.3d at 94 (“Since Alleyne is an extension of
    the Apprendi doctrine, the same standards should apply to
    Alleyne errors.”).
    22
    standard). 12 Absent any authority to the contrary, harmless
    error review is appropriate in this case.
    In light of the foregoing, we hold that when an
    indictment fails to charge a sentencing factor or element of an
    offense and the jury fails to find the same beyond a
    reasonable doubt, the resulting Alleyne error is not structural.
    When properly preserved, such error is reviewed for
    harmlessness under Rule 52(a).
    2.     Lewis’s due process, automatic reversal, and
    constructive amendment arguments
    Before we apply the harmless error test, we must
    address Lewis’s remaining arguments that, even if Alleyne
    error is not structural, reversal and remand is necessary in his
    case. He asserts three arguments: First, that due process
    considerations require reversal where a defendant was
    charged and convicted of a crime different than that for which
    he was sentenced; second, that the “automatic reversal” rule
    requires remand in this case; and third, that his sentence
    12
    Lewis cites extensively to the Eighth Circuit’s decision in
    Lara-Ruiz, but we find that his reliance is misplaced in the
    context of his structural error argument. That case explicitly
    rejected the application of structural error with respect to both
    Apprendi and Alleyne. Lara-Ruiz, 721 F.3d at 557 (“This
    circuit has held that Apprendi errors do not create structural
    error that would require per se reversal. . . . Given this
    background, and considering that Alleyne was decided to
    reconcile statutory minimums with the Court’s reasoning in
    Apprendi . . . it follows that review pursuant to Rule 52’s
    standards should be applied to this case.” (citations omitted)).
    Structural error was therefore not at issue in Lara-Ruiz.
    23
    reflects an impermissible constructive amendment of the
    indictment. We address each argument below.
    Due process
    Lewis first relies upon the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Dunn v. United States for the proposition that “appellate
    courts are not free to revise the basis on which a defendant is
    convicted simply because the same result would likely obtain
    on retrial.” 
    442 U.S. 100
    , 107 (1979). Dunn, he contends,
    identifies due process concerns in this case that require
    reversal. We disagree. Dunn is distinguishable because it
    involved a challenge to the defendant’s conviction on grounds
    that the indictment was insufficient to support the conviction.
    Dunn turned on whether an interview in an attorney’s
    office constituted an “ancillary” proceeding as used in 
    18 U.S.C. § 1623
    . 13 
    442 U.S. at 102
    . The indictment charged
    that the statements made in the attorney’s office were false
    because they were inconsistent with the defendant’s prior
    testimony before a grand jury. 
    Id. at 103-04
    . The district
    court and the court of appeals upheld the conviction based
    instead on inconsistencies between the defendant’s grand jury
    testimony and his testimony at an evidentiary hearing (not his
    statements in the attorney’s office). 
    Id. at 104-05
    .
    The Supreme Court reversed, concluding that the
    statements made in the attorney’s office were not “ancillary”
    to a court proceeding. 
    Id. at 113
    . Because the indictment
    13
    Section 1623 states, in pertinent part, that “[w]hoever under
    oath . . . in any proceeding before or ancillary to any court or
    grand jury of the United States knowingly makes any false
    material declaration . . . shall be fined under this title or
    imprisoned not more than five years, or both.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1623
    (a).
    24
    relied solely on the statements in the attorney’s office, it
    failed to state an offense within the scope of the statute. 
    Id. at 107
    . The facts alleged in the indictment against Dunn
    therefore did not support a finding of any criminal conduct,
    even though other facts developed at trial did. Lewis, on the
    other hand, does not challenge his conviction in this appeal.
    Indeed, there is no dispute over whether the indictment stated
    an offense. This fact alone is sufficient to distinguish Dunn
    and render it inapplicable to this case.
    Moreover, although Dunn did recognize the potential
    due process pitfalls associated with an insufficient indictment,
    its holding is consistent with ours today for two reasons.
    First, Dunn was decided before the acknowledgement in
    Neder that most constitutional errors can be harmless. Courts
    now apply harmless error review even where the indictment
    fails to include a sentencing factor. See Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. at 221-22
    . To the extent that Dunn did not recognize that
    constitutional errors can be harmless, it should be limited to
    its facts and not be broadly applied to situations like Lewis’s.
    Second, neither Neder nor Apprendi cited Dunn, nor has the
    Supreme Court found reversal to be necessary when an
    indictment fails to charge an element of the offense. See, e.g.,
    Cotton, 
    535 U.S. at 629-33
     (holding that failure to allege an
    element in the indictment is not a “jurisdictional defect” that
    requires automatic reversal where evidence of the missing
    element       was     “overwhelming”        and      “essentially
    uncontroverted”). In light of the subsequent Supreme Court
    precedent, we conclude that the due process concerns
    addressed in Dunn only arise in situations where an
    indictment fails to charge any offense. It is thus not
    controlling in this case.
    25
    Automatic reversal
    Lewis’s second argument is that we should apply the
    so-called “automatic reversal rule” to the Alleyne error in this
    case. He again relies upon decisions that predate Neder and
    Apprendi in support, and we reject it on the basis that none of
    the decisions he cites are analogous to this case.
    Much like Dunn, the decisions Lewis cites in support
    of automatic reversal involved defective indictments that
    failed to allege any criminal conduct. See United States v.
    Wander, 
    601 F.2d 1251
    , 1258-59 (3d Cir. 1979) (failure to
    allege a subsequent overt act in a prosecution for violation of
    the Travel Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1952
    (a)); United States v. Beard,
    
    414 F.2d 1014
    , 1015 (3d Cir. 1969) (failure to allege
    “unlawful or fraudulent intent” in prosecution for interstate
    transport of stolen property, 
    18 U.S.C. § 2314
    ); United States
    v. Manuszak, 
    234 F.2d 421
    , 422-23 (3d Cir. 1956) (failure to
    allege “the specific place or facility from which the goods
    were taken” in prosecution for theft of goods from an
    interstate shipment of freight pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 659
    );
    see also United States v. Pickett, 
    353 F.3d 62
    , 67-68 (D.C.
    Cir. 2004) (failure to allege that false statements were made
    “within an ‘investigation or review’” in a prosecution for
    making false statements, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
    ); United States v.
    Du Bo, 
    186 F.3d 1177
    , 1179 (9th Cir. 1999) (failure to allege
    that defendant acted knowingly or willingly in a prosecution
    under the Hobbs Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1951
    ). Lewis’s reliance on
    these cases misses the mark because they all address
    situations where there was no criminal conduct alleged, and
    thus the indictment was susceptible to dismissal pursuant to
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(b)(3), or arrest of
    26
    judgment pursuant to Rule 34(a). 14 That is not the situation
    here, where Lewis does not challenge his indictment or
    conviction, and where both assert a valid § 924 offense.
    Because courts of appeals almost universally apply harmless
    error in Apprendi and Alleyne situations, we reject Lewis’s
    contention that automatic reversal is appropriate in this case.
    Constructive amendment
    Lewis’s final argument is based upon the Eighth
    Circuit’s decision in Lara-Ruiz, which addressed Alleyne
    error under the plain error standard and found that substantial
    rights were affected where the defendant “was sentenced for a
    statutory crime different from that which the jury found him
    guilty.” 721 F.3d at 558 (addressing situation where the
    defendant was convicted of using a firearm under § 924 but
    was sentenced for brandishing). We reject Lewis’s argument
    because we find Lara-Ruiz’s reasoning to be inconsistent with
    our interpretation of the substantial rights inquiry under
    harmless error.
    14
    Courts have even applied harmless error where a defect in
    the indictment could be grounds for dismissal. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Cor-Bon Custom Bullet Co., 
    287 F.3d 576
    ,
    580-81 (6th Cir. 2002) (failure to allege an affirmative act in
    a tax evasion case is harmless error); United States v.
    Corporan-Cuevas, 
    244 F.3d 199
    , 201-02 (1st Cir. 2001)
    (finding that failure to allege an element when there is
    question as to whether the element is “essential” is subject to
    harmless error); United States v. Mojica-Baez, 
    229 F.3d 292
    ,
    311 (1st Cir. 2000) (finding that the failure to allege an
    essential element of the offense in the indictment is subject to
    harmless error review where the indictment otherwise gives
    the defendant notice of the charges against him).
    27
    Without explicitly characterizing it as such, the court
    in Lara-Ruiz appears to have arrived at the outcome in that
    case by finding a constructive amendment of the indictment.
    Constructive amendment “occurs where a defendant is
    deprived of his ‘substantial right to be tried only on charges
    presented in an indictment returned by a grand jury.’” United
    States v. Syme, 
    276 F.3d 131
    , 148 (3d Cir. 2002) (quoting
    United States v. Miller, 
    471 U.S. 130
    , 140 (1985)). We have
    found constructive amendments to be “‘per se reversible
    under harmless error review.’” United States v. Daraio, 
    445 F.3d 253
    , 259-60 (3d Cir. 2006) (quoting Syme, 
    276 F.3d at 136
    ); see also Stirone v. United States, 
    361 U.S. 212
    , 217-19
    (1960) (seminal decision recognizing constructive
    amendment). 15 In essence, the Eighth Circuit emphasized the
    dissonance between the indictment and conviction, on the one
    hand, and the sentence imposed, on the other.
    We are not persuaded by Lewis’s argument based
    upon Stirone and its progeny because we have suggested in
    dictum that constructive amendments are not structural errors.
    Syme, 
    276 F.3d at
    155 n.10 (“We note, however, that it is
    doubtful that constructive amendments are structural errors as
    the Supreme Court has defined that category. . . . Notably,
    15
    Stirone relied heavily upon the earlier decision in Ex Parte
    Bain, 
    121 U.S. 1
     (1887). Bain, however, was later overruled
    by Cotton “insofar as [Bain] held that a defective indictment
    deprives a court of jurisdiction.” Cotton, 
    535 U.S. at 631
    .
    Lewis relies on United States v. Spinner, which, like Bain,
    found automatic reversal to apply on grounds that “the
    indictment in [Spinner’s] case was jurisdictionally defective.”
    
    180 F.3d 514
    , 516 (3d Cir. 1999). Reversal for jurisdictional
    reasons is now prohibited by the holding in Cotton, and
    Spinner is thus of limited utility in this case.
    28
    neither Johnson nor Neder cited Stirone or listed constructive
    amendments as one of the narrow class of recognized
    structural errors.”). “Courts viewing the Apprendi-element
    pleading error as essentially presenting a constructive
    amendment issue . . . distinguish the Stirone precedent . . . in
    the course of supporting application of a harmless error
    standard.” LaFave et al., Criminal Procedure § 19.3(a)
    (citing, inter alia, McCoy v. United States, 
    266 F.3d 1245
    ,
    1253-54 (11th Cir. 2001) (finding that Apprendi errors are not
    constructive amendments subject to automatic reversal under
    Stirone, but instead represent, at most, a variance subject to
    harmless error review)). We agree with this approach and
    likewise reject Lara-Ruiz’s constructive amendment
    argument.
    Multiple courts of appeals have similarly rejected the
    notion that the Stirone constructive amendment rule requires
    per se reversal in Apprendi cases. See McCoy, 
    266 F.3d at 1253-54
    ; Mojica-Baez, 
    229 F.3d at 310-11
     (rejecting an
    argument seeking automatic reversal under Stirone and noting
    that “there is no reason to think the grand jury would have
    had any trouble in rendering an indictment specifying the
    weapons used, and there was no variance”). McCoy provides
    two reasons why automatic reversal is not necessary in
    Apprendi/Alleyne error situations. First, Apprendi errors do
    not present “typical” indictment problems, i.e., where the
    indictment fails to state any offense; instead, the indictment in
    an Apprendi case “still charges a complete federal offense.”
    McCoy, 
    266 F.3d at 1253
    . Second, the court rejected the
    notion that any variance in an Apprendi case is so substantial
    as to require automatic reversal. 
    Id. at 1253-54
    . Specifically,
    the court noted that “Stirone involved a material difference
    between the facts alleged in the indictment in support of that
    element—extortion in the transportation of sand from other
    29
    states into Pennsylvania—and the facts shown at trial—
    extortion in the transportation of steel from Pennsylvania into
    Michigan and Kentucky.” 
    Id.
     at 1253 (citing Stirone, 
    361 U.S. at 213-14
    ). This difference in proof “materially
    broadened and altered [the indictment] to such a significant
    extent as to constitute an entirely new or different theory of
    the case.” 
    Id.
     No such difference in proof exists in Alleyne or
    Apprendi cases, where the only difference is with respect to a
    particular statutory subsection that aggravates the punishment
    imposed, not the entire “theory of the case.” 
    Id.
     We agree
    with the reasoning in McCoy that constructive amendment
    does not apply to the facts of this case and ultimately
    conclude that Lewis’s substantial rights were not affected.
    C.     Harmless error standard
    We now determine whether the facts of this case
    demonstrate that the sentence imposed for brandishing was
    harmless error. 16 Lewis makes no argument with respect to
    the factual basis for finding harmless error, but the
    government identifies several facts in the record indicating
    that both the grand and petit juries in this case would, absent
    the Alleyne error, have found beyond a reasonable doubt that
    Lewis brandished a firearm.
    In the context of Apprendi error, particularly where the
    defendant challenges the sentence imposed (as is the case
    here), we have defined the substantial rights inquiry as
    “determining whether [the sentence] would have been the
    16
    We questioned whether Lewis objected to the
    “brandishing” element at sentencing for purposes of
    preserving his Alleyne argument on appeal. The government
    concedes this point and we are thus satisfied that review for
    harmless error is appropriate. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a).
    30
    same absent the failure to submit [the brandishing element]
    for a jury determination.” Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 104
    . That
    determination must be made beyond a reasonable doubt, and
    the government bears the burden of proof. Id.; Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 734
    . Because Lewis also alleges error at the
    indictment stage, we first consider whether the grand jury, if
    asked, would have charged him with brandishing a firearm.
    With respect to the indictment, there is no question
    that the grand jury did in fact find that the brandishing
    element was satisfied. The Second Superseding Indictment,
    in the context of the Hobbs Act count, alleges that the
    defendants “point[ed] firearms at the customers and
    employees, order[ed] them to the floor, and threatene[d] to
    shoot them.” App. at 70. Section 924 defines “brandishing”
    as “to display all or part of the firearm, or otherwise make the
    presence of the firearm known to another person, in order to
    intimidate that person, regardless of whether the firearm is
    directly visible to that person.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c)(4). The
    allegations already in the indictment, therefore, are more than
    sufficient to satisfy the brandishing element. The government
    is correct that had prosecutors asked the grand jury to include
    this language in the § 924(c) count it would have been
    included and would have eliminated any defect with respect
    to the indictment. Any error with respect to the indictment
    was, therefore, harmless.
    The evidence adduced at trial was likewise sufficient
    to demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that Lewis’s
    sentence would have been the same absent the failure to
    submit the brandishing element to the jury. See Vazquez, 
    271 F.3d at 104
    . The government met its burden by presenting
    testimony from Anderson and Vazquez, both of whom
    confirmed that Lewis was one of the three men who entered
    the speakeasy and “stood in the doorway with the gun on
    31
    everybody.” App. at 876. Vazquez testified that the gun was
    “pointed at [him] and pointed at several other people,” App.
    at 970, and at one point Lewis “pulled [Vazquez’s] shirt up,
    [and] put the gun to [his] stomach.” App. at 971. He
    reported “fearing for his life.” App. at 1044-45.
    Lewis essentially concedes that this record evidence
    supports the District Court’s finding that he brandished a
    firearm during the robbery, and we agree that the testimony
    supports that conclusion. See Neder, 
    527 U.S. at 17
     (finding
    error to be harmless “where a reviewing court concludes
    beyond a reasonable doubt that the omitted element was
    uncontested and supported by overwhelming evidence”).
    Indeed, Lewis presents no evidence to rebut the government’s
    showing at trial. The testimony from Anderson and Vazquez
    clearly demonstrates that Lewis went beyond mere “use” of a
    firearm, and instead brandished it as per the requirements of §
    924(c)(4). It is safe to conclude, therefore, that in light of the
    “‘overwhelming’ and ‘uncontroverted’ evidence” in support
    of the brandishing element that, had the jury been properly
    instructed on that element, it would have found that element
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Any resulting error was therefore
    harmless.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons we will AFFIRM the
    sentence imposed by the District Court.
    32
    RENDELL, Circuit Judge, dissenting
    Jermel Lewis was sentenced for the crime of
    brandishing a firearm in relation to a crime of violence, when
    he had been not been indicted for, and the jury had not
    convicted him of, that crime. The District Court improperly
    sentenced Lewis in accordance with a mandatory minimum of
    seven years. Had this error not occurred, Lewis would have
    been sentenced with a mandatory minimum of five years. I
    submit that this constitutes reversible error that is not
    harmless, because it violated Lewis’s Sixth Amendment
    rights, as clearly announced in Alleyne, and the resulting
    sentence was more harsh than it should have been.
    At the outset, I note that Alleyne’s pronouncement –
    which is controlling here – was made without the issue of
    structural or harmless error having been discussed. Perhaps it
    was not raised, or perhaps a sentencing error concerning the
    mandatory maximum or minimum – based on facts not found
    by the jury – was so clearly a harmful violation of the Sixth
    Amendment that it made the very idea of harmless error
    unthinkable. I also note that the jurisprudence in the area of
    structural versus harmless error, discussed below, is very
    nuanced and we lack specific guidance in the area before us.
    Thus, we must reason as best we can in this difficult, but
    important, area of the law.
    We begin with the understanding that what happened
    here was without a doubt wrong, and a wrong of
    constitutional significance. The issue then is how wrong and
    what to do about it. In Alleyne, an identical violation required
    a remand “for resentencing consistent with the jury’s verdict.”
    
    133 S. Ct. 2151
    , 2164 (2013). I suggest that here, no matter
    what lens of review governs our reasoning, whether for
    harmless or structural error, the result must be the same. The
    District Court’s sentence must be vacated and Lewis
    resentenced with the correct mandatory minimum; Alleyne
    requires no less.
    I. Sentencing Error
    The most straightforward way to reason to this result is
    to first concede, for the sake of argument, that harmless error
    review governs (though I challenge this at length below). But
    it is critical to locate precisely what type of error is at issue.
    The error here was that Lewis was not sentenced “consistent
    with the jury’s verdict,” as Alleyne requires. 
    Id.
     The Alleyne
    Court did not order a new trial, so that the missing
    brandishing element could be proven to the jury, but rather
    required a resentencing, thus properly regarding the error as
    having occurred at the sentencing phase, and harmlessness
    here must be judged from that vantage point. How can
    Lewis’s sentence, imposing a mandatory minimum of seven
    years, be harmless, when without the brandishing finding the
    mandatory minimum would have been five years?
    The error caused by the District Court was not, as it
    was not in Alleyne, a trial error. Had it been, the majority’s
    look back at what the evidence revealed at trial would be an
    appropriate exercise in testing for harmlessness. But it is not
    the proper inquiry here. I suggest, after Alleyne, that given
    the nature of the error before us, the question is simply
    whether Lewis was prejudiced by his unconstitutional
    sentence. He clearly was.
    2
    Our     precedent      concerning      non-constitutional
    sentencing errors confirms this conclusion. In United States
    v. Langford, 
    516 F.3d 205
    , 216 (3d Cir. 2008), we held that
    where a district court uses an erroneous Guidelines range at
    sentencing, “[t]he record must show that the sentencing judge
    would have imposed the same sentence under a correct
    Guidelines range, that is, that the sentencing Guidelines range
    did not affect the sentence actually imposed.” That inquiry
    involves only an examination into the district court’s
    statements at sentencing, to determine whether it would have
    imposed the same sentence even absent the Guidelines error.
    
    Id. at 219
    . We do not delve into the facts of a defendant’s
    conviction, to determine whether the improper sentence could
    somehow be justified. Thus, it appears that if Lewis had
    framed his challenge as one asserting that the District Court
    improperly calculated his Guidelines range, the case would be
    remanded for resentencing. The same should occur pursuant
    to his challenge of the far more serious constitutional
    violation: that the District Court sentenced him for an
    uncharged, unproven crime. 1
    In justifying its use of the trial record to uphold
    Lewis’s sentence, the majority relies heavily on our 2001
    opinion in Vazquez, where we determined that an Apprendi
    error was both a trial and a sentencing error. 
    271 F.3d 93
     (3d
    1
    Indeed, we are bound by statute to remand under such
    circumstances. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 3742
    (f)(1) (“If the court of
    appeals determines that . . . the sentence was imposed in
    violation of law or imposed as a result of an incorrect
    application of the sentencing guidelines, the court shall
    remand the case for further sentencing proceedings with such
    instructions as the court considers appropriate . . . .”).
    3
    Cir. 2001) (en banc). Of note, Vazquez was a close case, with
    six of our thirteen judges agreeing with Judge Sloviter’s view
    in dissent that – as I again posit – Apprendi and therefore
    Alleyne involve errors that require us to decide whether what
    occurred at sentencing was harmless. As Judge Sloviter
    noted, courts have routinely remanded for resentencing when
    an Apprendi error occurs. 
    Id. at 120
     (Sloviter, J. dissenting).
    Distinguishing Johnson and Neder, relied upon by the
    majority in Vazquez, and again cited by the majority today,
    Judge Sloviter recognized that:
    In neither case was the sentence at
    issue; rather the issue was
    whether to uphold or reverse the
    jury’s verdict of guilty. Here, we
    must decide whether an increase
    in prison time as a result of the
    error affects the defendant’s
    substantial rights. As a result,
    those cases are inapposite here.
    
    Id. at 121
    .
    I joined Judge Sloviter's dissent and also wrote
    separately to emphasize that at no point did Apprendi indicate
    that such an unconstitutional sentence might be harmless
    simply because judges find it justified. 
    Id. at 130
     (Rendell, J.
    dissenting). The same can be said for Alleyne. As Judge
    Sloviter concluded in Vazquez: “An error that will cause a
    defendant to spend four plus years more in prison than
    statutorily authorized by the jury’s verdict necessarily
    adversely affects the defendant’s substantial rights.” 
    Id. at 120
     (Sloviter, J dissenting). This is an even clearer case for
    4
    remand than Vazquez, which was examined for plain error, as
    here we review Lewis’s appeal de novo, requiring only
    “harm” under Fed. R. Crim. Pro. 52(a).
    Even leaving aside Judge Sloviter’s persuasive
    reasoning in Vazquez, that case is materially distinguishable
    in a way that should alter the result here. In Vazquez the
    indictment properly alleged that the defendant had conspired
    to possess and distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine.
    271 F.3d at 101. The Vazquez court therefore determined that
    the case involved a “trial error, which occurred when drug
    quantity was not submitted for a jury determination.” Id.
    (emphasis in original). Thus, it was at least arguable in that
    case that an error had occurred at trial because the jury was
    not asked to find the crime alleged in the indictment.
    But, in Alleyne as here, there was no trial error. There
    was nothing wrong with the count of the indictment charging
    Lewis with a using or carrying violation. There was similarly
    no omission at trial, in the jury charge or on the verdict sheet.
    And once the jury had been instructed, and had convicted
    Lewis of using or carrying a gun in relation to a violent crime,
    the District Court was required to sentence him pursuant to
    the applicable five year mandatory minimum. This the Court
    failed to do. Instead, it violated Lewis’s due process and
    Sixth Amendment rights when it sentenced him for an offense
    not found by the jury. In sum, Lewis was charged, tried and
    convicted of one complete crime, but the District Court
    sentenced him for a different offense. This was a pure and
    simple sentencing error.
    Looking just to the length of Lewis’s prison term, if
    the error had not been committed he would have been
    5
    sentenced for his crime of conviction, such that his sentence
    would have been likely shortened by two years. This alone
    constitutes clear prejudice and, therefore, reversible error.
    See United States v. Promise, 
    255 F.3d 150
    , 160 (4th Cir.
    2001) (finding prejudice where defendant was sentenced for
    term in excess of that charged or found by jury).
    More fundamentally, it is inherently prejudicial for a
    defendant to be sentenced for a crime of which he was neither
    charged nor convicted. The Eighth Circuit recognized this
    point in deciding one of the few other cases involving an
    Alleyne violation where a defendant was sentenced for a
    crime that was neither alleged in the indictment nor submitted
    to the petit jury. United States v. Lara-Ruiz, 
    721 F.3d 554
    (8th Cir. 2013). That court examined the case from the
    perspective of sentencing error, and held correctly that the
    defendant there was prejudiced “because he was sentenced
    for a statutory crime different from that which the jury found
    him guilty.” 
    Id. at 558
    .
    The Supreme Court has long upheld this elementary
    principle. In Cole v. State of Arkansas, two defendants were
    charged and convicted of promoting an unlawful assemblage,
    but on appeal the state supreme court affirmed the conviction
    pursuant to a different offense involving the use of violence.
    
    333 U.S. 196
     (1948). In a unanimous opinion the Supreme
    Court reversed. It found that the state supreme court had
    “affirmed [defendants’] conviction as though they had been
    tried and convicted of a violation of [section 1] when in truth
    they had been tried and convicted only of a violation of a
    single offense charged in [section 2], an offense which is
    distinctly and substantially different from the offense charged
    in [section 1].” 
    Id. at 202
    . The Court added, “[i]t is as much
    6
    a violation of due process to send an accused to prison
    following conviction of a charge on which he was never tried
    as it would be to convict him upon a charge that was never
    made.” 
    Id. at 201
    . In this case, Lewis was sent to prison on a
    brandishing charge which was never made and on which he
    was never tried.
    That this violates the basic guarantee of due process
    has been repeatedly reaffirmed both by the Supreme Court
    and the Third Circuit. Dunn v. U.S., 
    442 U.S. 100
    , 106
    (1979) (“To uphold a conviction on a charge that was neither
    alleged in an indictment nor presented to a jury at trial
    offends the most basic notions of due process.”) 2; Jackson v.
    Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 314 (1979) (“It is axiomatic that a
    conviction upon a charge not made or upon a charge not tried
    constitutes a denial of due process.”); Lambert v. Blackwell,
    
    387 F.3d 210
    , 246 (3d Cir. 2004) (“[A] defendant’s due
    process rights are violated when his conviction is affirmed on
    2
    The majority misconstrues Dunn. The Court there noted
    that the defendant had been charged and convicted on the
    basis of false statements made in an interview in September,
    but the Tenth Circuit affirmed the conviction on the basis of
    testimony made in October. 445 U.S. at 106. The Court held
    that “appellate courts are not free to revise the basis on which
    a defendant is convicted simply because the same result
    would likely obtain on retrial.” Id. at 107. Thus, the
    conviction had to stand or fall on the sufficiency of the charge
    presented to the jury, namely the September statements alone.
    The relevance of that case is obvious: “[f]ew constitutional
    principles are more firmly established than a defendant’s right
    to be heard on the specific charges of which he is accused.”
    Id. at 106.
    7
    an offense that he was not charged with and that was not
    presented to the jury or court that tried him.”).
    Alleyne itself adhered to this understanding. Writing
    for the Court, Justice Thomas found that:
    It is obvious, for example, that a
    defendant could not be convicted
    and sentenced for assault, if the
    jury only finds the facts for
    larceny, even if the punishments
    prescribed for each crime are
    identical. One reason is that each
    crime has different elements and a
    defendant can be convicted only if
    the jury has found each element of
    the crime of conviction.
    
    133 S. Ct. at 2162
     (emphasis added). The Court proceeded to
    hold that “similarly,” a brandishing offense constitutes a
    “separate, aggravated offense” from a using or carrying
    offense. 
    Id.
     Thus, pursuant to Alleyne, sentencing a
    defendant for brandishing when he was only convicted of
    using or carrying, is not materially different from sentencing
    a defendant for assault if he was only convicted of larceny.
    In sum, Supreme Court precedent establishes that
    sentencing a defendant for an uncharged, untried crime
    constitutes reversible error. It is equally clear that a
    defendant is prejudiced where an appellate court affirms a
    conviction or sentence upon anything other than the crime in
    the indictment and jury verdict. To condone Lewis’s
    8
    sentence here as merely “harmless error” would violate both
    fundamental precepts of our criminal justice system. 3
    Indeed, the majority’s exercise, in determining
    whether there was sufficient evidence of brandishing at trial
    to render the error harmless, guts the essence of Alleyne.
    There, the Court concluded that:
    The District Court imposed the 7–
    year     mandatory       minimum
    sentence based on its finding by a
    preponderance of evidence that
    the firearm was “brandished.”
    Because      the    finding     of
    brandishing increased the penalty
    to which the defendant was
    3
    Comparing this violation to a constructive amendment
    further establishes the necessity of resentencing. “An
    indictment is constructively amended when, in the absence of
    a formal amendment, the evidence and jury instructions at
    trial modify essential terms of the charged offense in such a
    way that there is a substantial likelihood that the jury may
    have convicted the defendant for an offense differing from the
    offense the indictment returned by the grand jury actually
    charged.” United States v. Vosburgh, 
    602 F.3d 512
    , 532 (3d
    Cir. 2010). “Constructive amendments are per se reversible
    under harmless error review . . . .” United States v. Daraio,
    
    445 F.3d 253
    , 260 (3d Cir. 2006). I cannot reconcile our
    established precedent concerning constructive amendment
    with the majority’s decision. Going forward, constructively
    amending the indictment during trial is per se reversible, but
    the same act during sentencing may be harmless.
    9
    subjected, it was an element,
    which had to be found by the jury
    beyond a reasonable doubt. The
    judge, rather than the jury, found
    brandishing,     thus     violating
    petitioner's Sixth Amendment
    rights.
    Id. at 2163-64. The look back to the trial record that the
    majority performs perpetuates the very error deemed to be
    reversible in Alleyne: judges substituting their view for the
    jury verdict, and thereby imposing a sentence which violates
    the Sixth Amendment. In so doing, today’s decision
    impermissibly designates both the indictment and petit jury
    verdict a “mere preliminary to a judicial inquisition into the
    facts of the crime the State actually seeks to punish.” Blakely
    v. Washington, 
    542 U.S. 296
    , 307 (2004) (emphasis in
    original).
    The lesson of Alleyne is that juries, not judges, must
    find the elements of a crime that support the sentence
    imposed. The majority’s harmlessness exercise completely
    upends this principle, finding that judges can determine
    statutory elements from the facts in a trial, and uphold a
    sentence in direct conflict with the indictment and verdict.
    For that reason, even under a harmless error standard, I would
    vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
    II. Charging Error
    As noted above, the majority’s analysis proceeds from
    an entirely different premise: the sentence is fine as long as
    10
    the other “errors,” namely charging errors and trial errors,
    were all harmless. I do not endorse this mode of analysis and
    Alleyne certainly did not rule on that basis, having discussed
    the deficient indictment (which also failed to allege
    brandishing) only as it related to the conclusion that
    brandishing constitutes an element of a distinct crime. At no
    point in that opinion did the Court characterize the issue as a
    charging or trial error.
    It is clear why that was the case. To deem this a case
    of trial error, one must hold that error infected every aspect of
    Lewis’s proceedings except for the sentence itself. That is,
    the majority assumes that the grand jury charge, the petit jury
    charge, the verdict sheet and the verdict itself were all in
    error, but then says those errors are subjected to a
    harmlessness inquiry, rather than a finding of structural error.
    This analysis turns the case on its head, in defiance of both
    logic and common sense.
    But even if we were to view the case upside down, as
    the majority insists we must, the errors at issue then become
    clearly structural. Specifically, how can the failure to charge
    a crime, for which a defendant is later sentenced, not infect
    the entire proceedings so as to be structural error? In 2006,
    the Supreme Court granted certiorari on the exact question the
    majority addresses today: whether a materially defective
    indictment can constitute harmless error. Yet in that case,
    United States v. Resendiz-Ponce, 
    549 U.S. 102
     (2007), the
    Court avoided the question, instead deciding that the
    11
    indictment at issue was adequate. We are therefore left
    without any binding precedent on this issue. 4
    The majority’s assessment of the relevant case law in
    this area is selective and incomplete. First, the majority cites
    to our holding in Vazquez where we held that the Apprendi
    violation there, the failure to submit a drug quantity to a jury,
    constituted harmless error. Yet the majority concedes that
    Lewis’s case is significantly different from Vazquez as here
    we have the “addition of error at the indictment stage.” (Maj.
    Op. at 17.) Given that we characterized Vazquez as a case
    involving both trial error and sentencing error, under the
    majority’s view this case involves indictment error, trial error
    and sentencing error all of constitutional magnitude. Thus,
    even under the majority’s formulation, a constitutional error
    affected Lewis’s case from beginning to end.
    I agree with the majority when it acknowledges that
    Vazquez does not control the analysis here, as it did not
    concern a materially defective indictment. (Maj. Op. at 17.)
    Perhaps recognizing this yawning gap in case law, the
    majority relies most heavily on Washington v. Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. 212
     (2006), urging that it “provides the missing link . . .
    because it recognized that errors in an indictment can be
    harmless.” (Maj. Op. at 18.) This is incorrect. The majority
    opinion in Recuenco never once mentions errors in an
    4
    The circuit split that compelled the Court to take the case
    still remains. Compare United States v. Higgs, 
    353 F.3d 281
    ,
    305-06 (4th Cir. 2003) (reviewing defective indictment for
    harmless error) with United States v. Inzunza, 
    638 F.3d 1006
    ,
    1016-17 (9th Cir. 2011) (“A defective indictment is a
    structural flaw not subject to harmless error review.”)
    12
    indictment, the Fifth Amendment, or the defendant’s right to
    a grand jury, and it is obvious why. That case concerned a
    state prosecution which involved an information, rather than
    an indictment. Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. at 224
     (Ginsburg, J.
    dissenting).
    Further, the Court there noted that the defendant had
    attempted to “characterize[e] this as a case of charging error,
    rather than of judicial factfinding.” 
    Id.
     at 220 n.3. But, the
    Supreme Court of Washington had looked only to whether the
    lack of a petit jury finding on a sentencing factor was
    structural error. The Supreme Court therefore decided to
    “treat” the case “similarly.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, the sole
    holding of Recuenco was the uncontroversial proposition that,
    “[f]ailure to submit a sentencing factor to the jury, like failure
    to submit an element to the jury, is not structural error.” 
    Id. at 222
    . In sum, the majority opinion in Recuenco does not deal
    at all with the issue of indictment error, and accordingly could
    not have “recognized” that “errors in an indictment can be
    harmless.” Recuenco is not the “missing link” the majority is
    searching for.
    Yet the majority agrees with the Government and
    reiterates its claim that the Sixth Amendment is “more worthy
    of protection under the ambit of structural error than the Fifth
    Amendment grand jury right.” (Maj. Op. at 20.) This is a
    dubious proposition at best, and has never been propounded
    by any opinion of the Supreme Court or our court. 5 Vazquez,
    5
    The majority overlooks the fact that indictments safeguard
    not only the Fifth Amendment guarantee of charging by a
    grand jury, but also the Sixth Amendment right to “to be
    informed of the nature and cause of the accusation.” U.S.
    13
    seemingly cited by the majority as authority for this idea, says
    nothing of the sort. 6
    The question is not which Amendment is more worthy
    of protection. The issue before us is simply whether a
    specific type of constitutional violation is significant enough
    Const. amend. VI; see, e.g., United States v. Radowitz, 
    507 F.2d 109
    , 111-12 (3d Cir. 1974) (finding that an “indictment:
    (1) fulfills the Sixth Amendment ‘apprisal’ requirement by
    providing a defendant with notice of the charges against him
    in order that he may prepare a defense . . . .”).
    6
    I disagree with the majority’s claim that, in Cotton, the
    Court “implied that it would not treat Fifth Amendment
    indictment error differently than Sixth Amendment trial
    error . . . .” (Maj. Op. at 19.) In fact, the issue before the
    Court was waiver of rights, and the Court briefly compared
    the two Amendments only to note the “longstanding rule ‘that
    a constitutional right may be forfeited in criminal as well as
    civil cases by the failure to make timely assertion of the
    right . . . .’” 
    535 U.S. at 634
     (quoting Yakus v. United States,
    
    321 U.S. 414
    , 444 (1944)). In other words, the Court
    clarified that both Fifth and Sixth Amendment violations may
    be waived, and thus reviewable only for plain error, due to a
    failure to timely object. That is not at issue here, as both
    parties agree that Lewis timely asserted his Fifth Amendment
    rights. Cotton does not speak to the question before us, nor
    does it “imply” any answer, as the Court explicitly did “not
    resolve” the question of whether defective indictments could
    constitute structural error. Id. at 632.
    14
    to constitute structural error. 7 It is this question, left
    unaddressed by the majority, to which I now turn.
    The Supreme Court has used varying language in
    categorizing constitutional errors. 8 In one of the more recent
    7
    I note separately that the majority’s claim of uniform
    agreement with other circuits is misplaced. The Ninth Circuit
    has maintained that a deficient indictment is structural error.
    United States v. Inzunza, 
    638 F.3d 1006
    , 1016-17 (9th Cir.
    2011). In addition, three of the cases cited by the majority
    either involved a proper indictment or simply did not address
    the issue of whether a defective indictment would constitute
    structural error, and thus provide no support for the majority’s
    position. See United States v. Mack, 
    729 F.3d 594
    , 607 (6th
    Cir. 2013); United States v. Kirklin, 
    727 F.3d 711
    , 716 (7th
    Cir. 2013); United States v. McKinley, 
    732 F.3d 1291
    , 1295
    (11th Cir. 2013). The fourth case, United States v. Harakaly,
    
    734 F.3d 88
    , 94 (1st Cir. 2013), concerned a guilty plea and
    the issue of structural error was raised only on reply, such that
    the court devoted only a few sentences to the analysis. It is
    also worth noting that the majority here cited some of these
    cases to note that they had reviewed an Alleyne claim for
    plain error, perhaps under the assumption that structural
    errors are automatically reversible even when not timely
    raised, and thus not amenable to plain error review. This is
    incorrect. Cotton itself noted that the question of structural or
    harmless error is resolved at step three of the plain error
    review process, but decided not to answer that question
    because step four resolved the case. Thus, even structural
    errors are reviewed for plain error if not timely raised.
    8
    I note that Stirone v. U.S., 
    361 U.S. 212
    , 219 (1960) found a
    deficient indictment to be “far too serious to be treated as
    15
    and concise summaries, Puckett v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 129
    , 140 (2009) outlined three factors which it used to
    determine whether a plea breach was a structural error:
    whether it (1) necessarily rendered a trial unfair or unreliable
    for determining guilt or innocence, (2) defied analysis by
    harmless-error standards by affecting the entire adjudicatory
    framework, and/or (3) presented difficulty in assessing the
    effect of the error, more than for other errors subject to
    harmless error review.
    Factors two and three indicate that if an error can be
    plausibly reviewed for harmlessness, then it should be. As
    such, we must first determine how harmless error review of a
    deficient indictment would proceed, before deciding whether
    such a review is workable. The original formulation of
    harmless error in Chapman was “whether it appears beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not
    contribute to the verdict obtained.” 386 U.S. at 24 (internal
    quotation omitted). In other words, the Chapman harmless
    error standard was developed for use in the trial context, and
    requires a judgment that the error did not affect the jury’s
    verdict. The majority appears to agree that this is the proper
    inquiry, such that any harmless error review must take into
    account the total effect of a defective indictment. That is,
    harmless error review in this context would require a court to
    ask whether the indictment error contributed to the petit jury
    verdict.
    nothing more than a variance and then dismissed as harmless
    error.” However, as this case preceded Chapman and the
    development of the harmless error doctrine, I cannot assume
    that it controls the question faced today.
    16
    With this in mind, we examine the three factors the
    Puckett Court cited to determine whether a deficient
    indictment constitutes structural error. First, there can be no
    doubt that a deficient indictment affects the entire
    adjudicatory framework, and consequently defies analysis by
    harmless error standards. In Arizona v. Fulminante, the Court
    listed certain structural errors that affect the entirety of trial,
    such as deprivation of counsel and a biased trial judge. 
    499 U.S. at 309
    . The Court noted that “[t]he entire conduct of the
    trial from beginning to end is obviously affected by the
    absence of counsel for a criminal defendant, just as it is by the
    presence on the bench of a judge who is not impartial. . . .
    Each of these constitutional deprivations is a similar
    structural defect affecting the framework within which the
    trial proceeds, rather than simply an error in the trial process
    itself.” 
    Id. at 309-10
    .
    It is hard to think of a more “structural defect” than
    one affecting the indictment, which initiates and provides the
    foundation for a federal criminal trial. See Kaley v. United
    States, 
    134 S. Ct. 1090
    , 1097 (2014) (“This Court has often
    recognized the grand jury’s singular role in finding the
    probable cause necessary to initiate a prosecution for a
    serious crime.”) Prosecutors are barred from informally
    amending or materially varying from the indictment; it puts
    the defendant on notice of the charges against him, protects
    him from double jeopardy, and serves as the direct
    interposition of the public in the charging process.
    Further, it is axiomatic that a trial proceeds according
    to the crimes as described in the indictment. The defendant
    will attempt to rebut the crimes alleged and impeach
    testimony relating to the listed elements of those crimes. He
    17
    would have no call to even consider whether to attack
    evidence with regard to any omitted element. This is
    especially so where, as here, the indictment alleges one
    complete crime, which lacks an element of an uncharged,
    distinct offense. From indictment to conviction, neither
    Lewis nor any similarly situated defendant would foresee the
    need to defend against such a separate offense, asserted only
    at the sentencing phase. In short, it is clear that a deficient
    indictment affects the entire framework of the trial and defies
    analysis by harmless error standards.
    Next, we consider the related question of whether this
    error presents special difficulty in assessing prejudice. It
    clearly does. In United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, the Court
    found that denial of counsel of one’s choice constituted
    structural error. 
    548 U.S. 140
     (2006). In so concluding the
    Court held that:
    It is impossible to know what
    different choices the rejected
    counsel would have made, and
    then to quantify the impact of
    those different choices on the
    outcome of the proceedings . . . .
    Harmless-error analysis in such a
    context would be a speculative
    inquiry into what might have
    occurred in an alternate universe.
    
    Id. at 150
    . Similarly, here, assessing prejudice flowing from
    a faulty indictment would require sheer speculation into the
    possible decisions of the defendant and trial counsel if a
    different crime had been charged. Just as in Gonzalez-Lopez,
    18
    to determine what would have happened if a proper
    indictment had been entered, we would need to enter “an
    alternate universe.” 9
    The last factor, whether a defective indictment renders
    a trial unfair or unreliable, requires the least analysis. In
    failing to put a defendant on notice of the elements of those
    charges against him, through a deficient indictment, the
    defendant is disadvantaged and has no reason to contest such
    omitted elements at trial. Further, enabling the prosecution or
    Court to change the crime charged without formal process,
    either at trial or sentencing, undermines any notion of fairness
    in an adversarial context. There can be no doubt that a
    material defect in the foundation of the trial necessarily
    renders it an unfair and unreliable vehicle for determining
    guilt or innocence.
    In short, a defective indictment satisfies all of the
    criteria used to determine structural error, such that it is not
    reviewable for mere harmlessness. See United States v.
    Inzunza, 
    638 F.3d 1006
    , 1016-17 (9th Cir. 2011) (“A
    defective indictment is a structural flaw not subject to
    9
    The majority overlooks this issue in conducting its own
    harmless error analysis. It examines the testimony presented
    at trial and concludes that a brandishing charge was
    sufficiently proven. In fact, a harmless error inquiry would
    require a showing, beyond a reasonable doubt, that
    brandishing would still have been proven if the indictment
    had properly alleged that crime. The inherently speculative
    nature of such an inquiry presents special difficulty in
    assessing prejudice, thus satisfying this structural error
    criterion.
    19
    harmless error review.”). This conclusion stands firmly upon
    Alleyne, which held that where a brandishing charge is neither
    alleged in the indictment nor charged to the jury, such an
    error requires a remand “for resentencing consistent with the
    jury’s verdict.” 
    133 S. Ct. at 2164
    . In that case, the Court did
    not pause to consider the issue of harmless error. Its
    precedent, however, clearly dictates that where an indictment
    lacks the offense for which the defendant is later sentenced,
    structural error has occurred. I dissent from the majority’s
    conclusion to the contrary.
    III. Conclusion
    Over a decade ago in Vazquez, I noted that the logic in
    that decision would mean that the “government can charge
    and convict a defendant of manslaughter, but sentence him
    for murder, and, as long as the government produced
    evidence at trial that would support that sentence, we would
    not notice or correct the error under [plain error review] and
    require resentencing in accordance with the jury’s verdict.”
    271 F.3d at 130 (Rendell, J. dissenting). Today the majority
    goes beyond even that dire prediction as it upholds a sentence
    for a crime different from that of conviction, under de novo
    review. Under the majority’s reasoning, and contrary to
    Alleyne, a district court may now sentence a defendant
    pursuant to an improper mandatory minimum, in violation of
    the Sixth Amendment, and we would be obligated to uphold
    the sentence if we, an appellate court, find the evidence at
    trial to have been sufficient. In short, today’s decision strikes
    at the very heart of the jury trial and grand jury protections
    afforded by the Constitution.
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    But perhaps I am wrong. Perhaps we live in a brave
    new world where judges may determine what crimes a
    defendant has committed without regard to his indictment or
    jury verdict, and sentence him accordingly. Or maybe
    Alleyne does not really mean what it says, when it proclaims
    brandishing and carrying offenses to be separate and distinct
    crimes, and that a defendant is entitled to be sentenced
    consistent with the jury’s findings. But I take the Supreme
    Court at its word.      Until clearly instructed otherwise, I
    maintain that different crimes are just that, and district court
    judges cannot sentence a defendant to an uncharged crime
    simply because the evidence fits, nor can an appellate panel
    affirm such a sentence because they find that the evidence
    fits. I adhere to the principle that both appellate and trial
    judges are required by the Constitution to respect, and
    sentence according to, a valid jury verdict, and on this basis I
    respectfully dissent.
    21