United States v. Mark Clark , 816 F.3d 350 ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 14-10735        Document: 00513416022          Page: 1    Date Filed: 03/11/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    ______________                    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 14-10735
    FILED
    March 11, 2016
    ______________
    Lyle W. Cayce
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                                       Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    MARK ANTHONY CLARK,
    also known as Kevin Frank Carter,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    ______________________
    Before JONES and SMITH, Circuit Judges, and FITZWATER *, District Judge.
    FITZWATER, District Judge:
    Defendant-appellant Mark Anthony Clark (“Clark”)—who is serving two
    mandatory life sentences for drug offenses—appeals the district court’s 2014
    amended judgment reflecting the dismissal in 1998 of one of five counts of
    which Clark was convicted and sentenced, without conducting a resentencing
    hearing and enabling Clark to rely on the Supreme Court’s decisions in
    Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    (2000), and Alleyne v. United States, ___
    U.S. ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
    (2013), to challenge the mandatory life sentences. We
    affirm.
    *   District Judge of the Northern District of Texas, sitting by designation.
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    No. 14-10735
    I
    Clark was convicted by a jury in 1995 of the offenses of conspiracy to
    possess with intent to distribute 100 grams or more of methamphetamine
    (count 1); possession with intent to distribute 100 grams or more of
    methamphetamine          (count    2);   possession     with     intent    to   distribute
    amphetamine (count 3); using and carrying a firearm in relation to a drug
    trafficking crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1) (count 4); and possession
    of a firearm by a felon who was then a fugitive from justice (count 5). Because
    Clark had three prior convictions for felony drug offenses that had become
    final, 1 he was sentenced to mandatory terms of life imprisonment on counts 1
    and 2. He was also sentenced to 235 months’ imprisonment on count 3, 60
    months’ imprisonment on count 4, and 120 months’ imprisonment on count 5.
    The district court ordered the sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5 to run
    concurrently with one another, and the sentence on count 4—the § 924(c)(1)
    conviction—to run consecutively to the sentences on all other counts.
    Clark appealed, challenging, inter alia, his § 924(c)(1) conviction on
    count 4 on the basis of the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Bailey v.
    United States, 
    516 U.S. 137
    (1995). We affirmed Clark’s convictions on counts
    1, 2, 3, and 5. United States v. Clark, 
    1998 WL 127844
    , at *1 (5th Cir. Mar. 10,
    1998) (per curiam) (unpublished opinion) (“Clark I”).                  We reversed his
    conviction on count 4 and remanded for a new trial on the “carry” prong of
    § 924(c)(1), holding that “[a]lthough the evidence may support Clark’s
    conviction under the ‘carry’ prong of § 924(c)(1), . . . the jury may have rendered
    1 The government filed an information charging, inter alia, that Clark was subject to
    a mandatory life sentence under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) with reference to counts 1 and 2
    because he committed the offenses alleged in those counts after having been convicted of
    three prior felony drug offenses.
    2
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    a guilty verdict because of the liberal pre-Bailey instructions on what
    constituted ‘use’ of a firearm in relation to drug trafficking.” 
    Id. We affirmed
    Clark’s conviction on count 4 in all other aspects, stating, in pertinent part:
    “Clark’s conviction on this count [count 4] is REVERSED.             The case is
    REMANDED to the district court for a new trial on the ‘carry’ prong of the
    statute. In all other aspects, Clark’s conviction is AFFIRMED.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
          On remand, the district court set the case for trial. The government
    moved under Fed. R. Crim. P. 48 to dismiss count 4 rather than retry Clark on
    that count, citing the length of the sentences imposed on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5.
    The district court granted the motion and dismissed count 4 by order on May
    18, 1998. The district court did not conduct a resentencing hearing on the
    remaining counts that were affirmed on appeal, or file an amended judgment.
    On March 15, 1999, within one year of the date the district court filed its
    order dismissing count 4, Clark filed a motion for habeas corpus relief under
    28 U.S.C. § 2255, which the district court denied. From 1999 to 2014, Clark
    initiated a number of unsuccessful collateral attacks on his conviction: the
    § 2255 motion; a request to this court for a certificate of appealability, which a
    judge of this court denied; a “Petition for Writ of Coram Nobis/Vobis, Audita
    Querela, Mandamus, to Recall the Mandate, and for All Other Extraordinary
    Relief for which Petitioner is entitled,” denied by the district court, case
    dismissed, and affirmed by this court; a Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) motion, which the
    district court construed as a successive § 2255 motion and denied, and as to
    which a judge of this court denied a certificate of appealability; and a motion
    for authorization to file a § 2255 motion based on Alleyne v. United States and
    Rosemond v. United States, ___ U.S. ___, 
    134 S. Ct. 1240
    (2014), which we
    denied.
    3
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    In May 2014, nearly 16 years after his convictions on counts 1, 2, 3, and
    5 were affirmed and count 4 was dismissed, Clark filed in the district court a
    “Motion to Be Orally Resentenced and to Allow the New Oral Sentencing
    Proceedings Reflect the New Written Judg[]ment.” Clark for the first time
    complained that he had yet to be resentenced to reflect a new oral and new
    written judgment and sentence. He maintained that he was entitled to be
    present when the district court orally resentenced him; that his presence and
    the presence of counsel were needed to determine any post-sentence conduct
    that might lower his sentence under the sentencing package once the district
    court orally vacated count 4 from the sentencing package; and that his
    presence was necessary so that he could make any objections required to be
    made at the new oral sentencing. Clark also requested that he be informed of
    his right to appeal from the new oral and new written judgment, and he
    requested a new presentence report (“PSR”) and a new sentencing hearing with
    constitutional representation, so that count 4 could be orally removed from the
    sentencing package and the written judgment would reflect this change.
    The district court granted Clark’s request to enter an amended judgment
    reflecting the dismissal of count 4, but it concluded that no new sentencing
    hearing was required or needed. The district court reasoned:
    Defendant’s sentence will not change in relation to the
    other counts that were affirmed by the Fifth Circuit.
    Although Defendant contends that he is entitled to be
    present for the pronouncement of a new oral sentence,
    precedent in the circuit states that he is not so
    entitled. Here, the Judgment is being amended to
    reflect the dismissal of Count 4. The modification to
    the judgment does not result in a change that is more
    onerous, and Defendant’s presence is not required to
    correct the judgment.
    4
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    Finally, Defendant requests that he be informed
    of his appellate rights. The Court makes the finding
    that because the convictions on the remaining counts
    have already been affirmed by the United States Court
    of Appeal[s] for the Fifth Circuit “in all other aspects,”
    any appeal on those grounds would be futile and not
    taken in good faith.
    June 12, 2014 Order (citations omitted).
    The district court entered an amended judgment on June 12, 2014,
    ordering, in pertinent part: “[t]he sentence imposed on September 1, 1995,
    having been remanded solely as to Count 4 by the Fifth Circuit, the Judgment
    is amended as follows: Count 4 dismissed on Motion by the Government on
    05/15/1998 and Order by the Court on 05/18/1998.”         In the imprisonment
    portion, the amended judgment ordered:
    The defendant is hereby committed to the
    custody of the United States Bureau of Prisons to be
    imprisoned for a term of Life imprisonment on Count
    1; Life imprisonment on Count 2; 235 months on Count
    3; and 120 months on Count 5. All of Counts 1, 2, 3,
    and 5 are to run concurrently; and 60 months on Count
    4 to be served consecutively to any other term of
    imprisonment. (Count 4 dismissed on Motion by the
    Government on 05/15/1998 and Order by the Court on
    05/18/1998.)
    Am. Judg. 2 (emphasis omitted). This appeal followed.
    II
    Clark contends that the district court denied him the right to counsel, to
    be present for sentencing, and to be heard through allocution when it entered
    the amended judgment without conducting an oral resentencing at which
    Clark was present and represented by counsel. He maintains that the district
    5
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    court conducted a summary resentencing proceeding that violated Rules 43
    and 32 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, his Sixth Amendment
    rights, and his Fifth Amendment due process rights. Clark also posits that he
    is entitled to challenge his life sentences on counts 1 and 2, because the law of
    the case doctrine is subject to an exception when there has been an intervening
    change of law by a controlling authority, and the Supreme Court’s intervening
    decision in Apprendi—decided after this court’s decision in 1998 and before the
    entry of the amended judgment in 2014—represents such a change.
    The government responds that Clark was not entitled to a hearing at
    which he was present, represented by counsel, and had the opportunity to
    allocute, because the district court when entering the amended judgment did
    not resentence Clark, it merely modified the existing sentence to reflect the
    dismissal of count 4 and the deletion of the corresponding sentence. The
    government posits that the district court was not obligated to resentence Clark
    on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5 because Clark I and the parties’ manifested
    understanding of it confirmed that this court affirmed Clark’s convictions and
    sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5, and the sentence on count 4 was independent
    of the other counts and not the product of a sentencing package.            The
    government also contends that the amended judgment did not require
    resentencing because the district court was imposing a less onerous sentence
    on the counts that had been affirmed. Alternatively, the government asserts
    that the entry of the amended judgment was a ministerial act to memorialize
    the sentences previously formulated without objection. It maintains that, if
    this court reaches the Apprendi argument, Clark cannot establish any effect
    on his substantial rights.
    Clark’s appeal presents two issues: first, whether when the district court
    entered the amended judgment, Clark was entitled to a resentencing hearing
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    at which he was present, represented by counsel, and had the opportunity to
    be heard; and, second, whether this court’s reversal and remand of Clark’s
    conviction and sentence on count 4 entitled Clark to challenge anew at a
    resentencing hearing his sentences on other counts on remand.
    III
    We turn first to the question whether Clark was entitled to a
    resentencing hearing at which he was present, represented by counsel, and
    had the opportunity to be heard. We decide this question de novo. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Lampton, 
    158 F.3d 251
    , 255 (5th Cir. 1998) (reviewing de novo
    defendants’ contention that their absence at hearing on motion for new trial
    violated Sixth Amendment and Rule 43).
    A
    “[A] defendant’s presence in court is not required every time judicial
    action is taken to correct a sentence.” United States v. Erwin, 
    277 F.3d 727
    ,
    730 (5th Cir. 2001).
    A defendant’s right to be present when the district
    court alters his sentence depends on the type of action
    the district court is taking. If the district court is
    imposing a new sentence after the original sentence
    has been set aside, the defendant is entitled to be
    there. However, a defendant is not entitled to be
    present when the district court merely modifies an
    existing sentence.
    United States v. Patterson, 
    42 F.3d 246
    , 248-49 (5th Cir. 1994) (per curiam)
    (citations omitted).
    We have long recognized the distinction between
    proceedings in the district court that modify an
    existing sentence and those that impose a new
    sentence after the original sentence has been set aside.
    In the former instance, the presence of the defendant
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    usually is not required, unless the modification makes
    the sentence more onerous. In the latter instance,
    however, we have consistently held that a defendant’s
    rights to be present and to allocute at sentencing,
    which are of constitutional dimension, extend to
    resentencing proceedings.
    United States v. Moree, 
    928 F.2d 654
    , 655-56 (5th Cir. 1991) (footnotes
    omitted).
    B
    We hold that when the district court entered the amended judgment, it
    modified Clark’s existing sentence in a manner that was not more onerous;
    that is, it corrected a discrete portion of the sentence that it had already
    rendered, that had been reversed on appeal, and the underlying count for
    which had been dismissed on the government’s motion on remand. The district
    court did not impose a new sentence after the original sentence had been set
    aside.
    That this is what occurred here is illustrated by Patterson and Erwin. In
    Patterson defendant Cecil Ray Patterson (“Patterson”) was convicted of
    possession of a firearm as a felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), and
    carrying a firearm in connection with a crime of violence, in violation of 18
    U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). 
    Patterson, 42 F.3d at 247
    . The district court found that
    Patterson qualified as a career offender and sentenced him to 366 months’
    imprisonment on the § 922(g) conviction, and a consecutive term of 60 months’
    imprisonment on the § 924(c)(1) conviction. 
    Id. at 247-48.
    On appeal, we
    vacated his sentence and remanded for a determination of whether his prior
    convictions constituted crimes of violence. 
    Id. at 248.
    On remand, the district
    court conducted a resentencing, held that Patterson did not qualify as a career
    offender, and resentenced Patterson as an armed career criminal. The district
    8
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    court entered an order and judgment on resentencing that reduced Patterson’s
    sentence to 327 months’ imprisonment on the § 922(g) conviction and did not
    change the remainder of the sentence. 
    Id. Shortly after
    resentencing, the
    district court filed a corrected order and judgment on resentencing that vacated
    Patterson’s § 924(c)(1) conviction. Except for deleting all reference to the
    § 924(c)(1) conviction, the corrected order and judgment was identical to the
    original order and judgment. 
    Id. Patterson appealed
    the corrected order, arguing, inter alia, that the
    district court erred by not holding another hearing before entering the
    corrected order and judgment, because he was entitled at the hearing to object
    to the PSR before the district court entered the corrected order and judgment.
    
    Id. We disagreed,
    explaining that, in the corrected order and judgment, the
    district court was not imposing a new sentence. 
    Id. at 249.
    Instead, it was
    correcting a discrete portion of the order and judgment that it had already
    rendered. The order and judgment on resentencing had not been vacated or set
    aside. The sole change that the corrected order made was to vacate Patterson’s
    § 924(c)(1) conviction and remove from the sentence all reference to that
    conviction.   Accordingly, we concluded that Patterson had no right to be
    present or to be heard before the district court entered the corrected order. 
    Id. In Erwin
    defendant Bonnie Burnette Erwin (“Erwin”) was convicted of
    multiple offenses related to drug activities, including conspiracy and engaging
    in a continuing criminal enterprise (“CCE”). 
    Erwin, 277 F.3d at 729
    . The
    district court sentenced Erwin to a term of life imprisonment on the CCE
    conviction plus 120 years on the other substantive offenses and ordered that
    the sentences run consecutively.     
    Id. On direct
    appeal, we reversed his
    conviction on a conspiracy count. Because we concluded that the conspiracy
    charge was a lesser-included offense of a CCE, and Erwin had already been
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    convicted of a CCE offense, we held that Erwin could not be retried for
    conspiracy. We affirmed his conviction in all other respects. 
    Id. On remand,
    the government moved to dismiss the conspiracy charge, and the district court
    amended the judgment, dismissing the conspiracy count with prejudice. 
    Id. Thereafter, during
    an eleven-year period, Erwin filed numerous,
    unsuccessful motions seeking to set aside his convictions or obtain a new trial.
    
    Id. Eventually, he
    filed a motion requesting that the district court amend the
    original judgment and commitment order to reflect that his conspiracy count
    had been dismissed by the Fifth Circuit. 
    Id. at 730.
    In response, the district
    court filed an amended judgment that deleted any reference to the conspiracy
    conviction and reduced Erwin’s sentence to life imprisonment for the CCE
    conviction plus 105 years on the remaining offenses. 
    Id. Erwin appealed
    the amended judgment. While the appeal was pending,
    the Supreme Court held in Richardson v. United States, 
    526 U.S. 813
    (1999),
    that to convict a defendant of a CCE violation, the jury must unanimously
    agree as to which specific violations make up the “continuing series” and
    “violations” underlying the CCE offense. 
    Id. at 816.
    Thereafter, Erwin filed a
    motion for new trial in the district court, and, later, through appointed counsel,
    he filed a memorandum of law in support of a resentencing and his motion for
    new trial. Erwin argued that the district court deprived him of his right to due
    process by entering the amended judgment without providing him an
    appropriate resentencing hearing and notice. After the district court denied
    Erwin's motion for a new trial, his appeal from that order was consolidated
    with his earlier appeal from the amended judgment. 
    Id. We affirmed
    Erwin’s conviction and sentence.           Regarding Erwin’s
    assertion that he was deprived of due process when the amended judgment
    was entered without a resentencing hearing and notice, we began by
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    addressing the requirements of Rule 35. 
    Id. We explained
    that Rule 35(a)
    required a court to correct a sentence that was determined on appeal to have
    been imposed in violation of the law. We also concluded that a defendant’s
    presence in court was not required every time judicial action was taken to
    correct a sentence. Although Rule 43(a) provided that the defendant must be
    present when the sentence was imposed, the defendant’s presence was not
    required at a reduction of sentence under Rule 35. 
    Id. at 730-31.
    We then
    referred to our decision in United States v. Pineda, 
    988 F.2d 22
    (5th Cir.1993),
    in which we held that this exception applied to a downward correction of an
    illegal sentence under Rule 35(a). 
    Id. at 731
    (citing 
    Pineda, 988 F.2d at 23
    ).
    We quoted our conclusion in Pineda that “where the entire sentencing package
    has not been set aside, a correction of an illegal sentence does not constitute a
    resentencing requiring the presence of the defendant, so long as the
    modification does not make the sentence more onerous.” Id. (quoting 
    Pineda, 988 F.2d at 23
    ).
    Turning to the district court’s conclusion that Erwin was not entitled to
    a resentencing hearing when the court was not imposing a new sentence, but
    was instead simply modifying an existing sentence, we quoted our holding in
    Patterson that “‘[a] defendant’s right to be present when the district court
    alters his sentence depends on the type of action the district court is taking.’”
    
    Id. (quoting Patterson,
    42 F.3d at 248) (alteration in original).         Based on
    Patterson, which, in turn, cited Moree, we explained that “[a] defendant is
    entitled to be present when the district court is imposing a new sentence after
    the original sentence has been set aside; however, a defendant does not have a
    right to be present when his sentence is merely modified by the district court.”
    
    Id. Applying these
    precedents to Erwin’s case, we concluded that his due
    process rights were not violated.
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    Here, the district court modified Erwin’s sentence in
    accordance with this Court’s reversal of the conspiracy
    count and the affirmation of the district court decision
    in all other respects. Erwin’s conviction was reduced
    from life plus 120 years to life plus 105 years. We have
    found that such a downward correction of an illegal
    sentence does not constitute resentencing requiring
    the presence of a defendant. Thus, Erwin was not
    entitled to a resentencing hearing, and therefore, his
    due process rights were not violated.
    
    Id. As in
    Patterson and Erwin, in the instant case the amended judgment
    simply modified Clark’s sentence in accordance with this court’s reversal of
    count 4, our affirmance of Clark’s convictions and sentences on the remaining
    counts, and the dismissal of count 4 on remand based on the government’s
    motion. On the direct appeal from Clark’s convictions and sentence, we held
    that “with one exception, no reversible error was committed.” Clark I, 
    139 F.3d 899
    , at *1. We rejected Clark’s challenge to the denial of his motion to suppress
    on the basis that the warrantless stop and search of his truck was supported
    by probable cause, id.; his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support
    his conviction for conspiracy, id.; his challenge to the district court’s failure to
    sequester the witnesses because he failed to establish plain error, id.; his
    suggestion that the government failed to comply with § 851(a), id.; and his
    contention that the district court failed to follow the procedures mandated by
    § 851(b) because, if true, it would amount only to harmless error, 
    id. We concluded,
    however, that Clark’s conviction on count 4—a violation of
    § 924(c)(1)—must be reversed. 
    Id. Citing our
    decision in United States v.
    Wilson, 
    116 F.3d 1066
    (5th Cir. 1997), we held that “[a]lthough the evidence
    may support Clark’s conviction under the ‘carry’ prong of § 924(c)(1), [the
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    conviction could not stand] because the jury may have rendered a guilty verdict
    because of the liberal pre-Bailey instructions on what constituted ‘use’ of a
    firearm in relation to drug trafficking.”     
    Id. (bracketed material
    added).
    Regarding count 4, we held that “Clark’s conviction on this count is
    REVERSED. The case is REMANDED to the district court for a new trial on
    the ‘carry’ prong of the statute. In all other aspects, Clark’s conviction is
    AFFIRMED.”       
    Id. (citation omitted).
       We then concluded our opinion:
    “AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.” 
    Id. It is
    apparent that in Clark I we affirmed Clark’s convictions and
    sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5, and we reversed only his conviction on count
    4 and remanded for a new trial on that count alone. There was no retrial
    because the government moved to dismiss that count rather than retry Clark.
    When the district court granted Clark’s motion in 2014 and entered the
    amended judgment eliminating the sentence on count 4, it was correcting an
    illegal sentence by eliminating a conviction on a count that had been reversed
    on appeal and later dismissed on the government’s motion. The district court
    did not resentence Clark.
    Because the entry of the amended judgment was not the imposition of a
    new sentence, and the sentence modification did not make the sentence more
    onerous, Clark’s presence was not required under Rule 43, and Clark was not
    entitled to a hearing at which he was present, represented by counsel, and had
    the opportunity to be heard.
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    C
    Clark attempts to distinguish Moree, Patterson, and Erwin 2 on the basis
    that, at the time those cases were decided, it was possible under Rule 43 to
    correct a sentence when required by an appellate court, and to sentence the
    defendant in absentia, at least when the sentence was reduced. Although the
    basis for this argument evolves from Clark’s opening brief and reply brief to
    his Rule 28(j) letter, he ultimately posits that the pre-1998 version of Rule 43
    authorized in absentia action when a remand was made under Rule 35(a), thus
    distinguishing Moree, Patterson, and Erwin from Clark’s case, to which a
    different version of Rule 35 applies. 3
    Clark’s attempt to distinguish Moree, Patterson, and Erwin is misplaced.
    Although in Moree we noted the potential confusion arising from the interplay
    between amended Rule 35 and Rule 43, we found it unnecessary to resolve the
    possible problems arising from this confusion because our precedents provided
    the answer. 
    Moree, 928 F.2d at 655-56
    (stating that “[f]ortunately, we need
    resolve none of [the potential problems] here” because                      “[w]e have long
    recognized the distinction between proceedings in the district court that modify
    an existing sentence and those that impose a new sentence after the original
    sentence has been set aside,” and holding that “[i]n the former instance, the
    presence of the defendant usually is not required, unless the modification
    2He also attempts to distinguish United States v. Rainwater, 317 Fed. Appx. 431 (5th
    Cir. 2009) (per curiam), an unpublished opinion of this court, on the same basis.
    3 In his opening brief, Clark relied on the pre-2002 version of Rule 35 to distinguish
    Moree, Patterson, and Erwin, although he cited the 1998 amendment to Rule 43 in a footnote.
    Likewise, in his reply brief, he relied on the pre-2002 version of Rule 35, again citing the 1998
    amendment to Rule 43 in a footnote. In his Rule 28(j) letter, however, in an apparent attempt
    to overcome the force of the government’s Rule 28(j) letter, Clark refines his position to rely
    primarily on the pre-1998 version of Rule 43.
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    makes the sentence more onerous”). In other words, our holding in Moree did
    not turn on the particular version of Rule 35.                  Clark cannot distinguish
    Patterson on this basis because that decision did not involve Rule 35 or 43. And
    although Erwin cited and quoted Rules 35 and 43, it relied more on the
    holdings of Pineda and Patterson than it did the particular version of Rule 35
    or 43. See 
    Erwin, 277 F.3d at 730-31
    .
    In his Rule 28(j) letter, Clark cites the Advisory Committee Note to the
    1998 Amendment to Rule 43 to support his assertion that he had the right to
    be present when the district court entered the amended judgment. But the
    Advisory Committee Note confirms that the Committee viewed our opinion in
    Moree as illustrating the proper distinction between a sentence modification
    and a resentencing. See Rule 43 advisory committee’s note (1998 amendments)
    (citing Moree). 4 Nothing in the 1998 amendment to Rule 43(c)(4) undercuts
    4   The Advisory Committee Note stated, in pertinent part:
    The amendment to Rule 43(c)(4) is intended to address
    two issues. First, the rule is rewritten to clarify whether a
    defendant is entitled to be present at resentencing proceedings
    conducted under Rule 35. As a result of amendments over the
    last several years to Rule 35, implementation of the Sentencing
    Reform Act, and caselaw interpretations of Rules 35 and 43,
    questions had been raised whether the defendant had to be
    present at those proceedings. Under the present version of the
    rule, it could be possible to require the defendant’s presence at a
    “reduction” of sentence hearing conducted under Rule 35(b), but
    not a “correction” of sentence hearing conducted under Rule
    35(a). That potential result seemed at odds with sound practice.
    As amended, Rule 43(c)(4) would permit a court to reduce or
    correct a sentence under Rule 35(b) or (c), respectively, without
    the defendant being present. But a sentencing proceeding being
    conducted on remand by an appellate court under Rule 35(a)
    would continue to require the defendant’s presence. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Moree, 
    928 F.2d 654
    , 655-656 (5th Cir. 1991)
    (noting distinction between presence of defendant at
    15
    Case: 14-10735      Document: 00513416022        Page: 16     Date Filed: 03/11/2016
    No. 14-10735
    the distinction we drew in Moree, or in Patterson or Erwin, both of which cite
    Moree. This means that these precedents cannot be distinguished on the basis
    that they were decided when the pre-1998 version of Rule 43 was in effect.
    Moreover, we note that the Fourth Circuit cited our opinion in Erwin
    when deciding a case in which the original sentencing and the entry of the
    amended judgment (without resentencing) both took place after the 1998
    amendment to Rule 43. See United States v. Hadden, 
    475 F.3d 652
    , 667, 668
    (4th Cir. 2007) (citing 
    Erwin, 277 F.3d at 731
    ). Although Hadden decided
    questions in the context of a § 2255 habeas petition and is distinguishable on
    that basis, it is instructive nonetheless because of its reasoning and its
    conclusion that Rules 32 and 43 did not apply to Hadden’s case since the
    district court did not conduct a resentencing. And Hadden, like the instant
    case, addressed whether resentencing was required after a § 924(c) conviction
    and consecutive sentence were vacated and the other counts and sentences
    were left undisturbed.
    D
    Clark also maintains that the district court was required to resentence
    him because his aggregate sentence on all counts—the “sentencing package”—
    was “unbundled” when we reversed his conviction on count 4 and remanded
    for a new trial on the “carry” prong. We disagree.
    In some cases, when we reverse convictions or sentences on fewer than
    all counts, the aggregate sentence must be unbundled, and the defendant must
    modification of sentencing proceedings and those hearings that
    impose new sentence after original sentence has been set aside).
    Rule 43 advisory committee’s note (1998 Amendments).
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    No. 14-10735
    be resentenced on all counts. See, e.g., United States v. Bass, 104 Fed. Appx.
    997, 1000 (5th Cir. 2004) (per curiam). This occurs when the sentences or
    counts are interrelated or interdependent—for example, when the reversal of
    the sentence on one count necessarily requires the review of the entire
    sentence. This is not the case here. Counts 1 and 2 carried mandatory life
    sentences, and count 4 carried a mandatory minimum sentence that by statute
    had to be imposed consecutively to the sentences on all other counts. See 18
    U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). The district court ordered the sentences on counts 1, 2, 3,
    and 5 to run concurrently with one another, but, as required by statute, it
    ordered the sentence on count 4 to run consecutively to all other counts. On
    appeal, we affirmed Clark’s convictions and sentences on all counts except
    count 4. Our reversal of count 4 did not unbundle any sentencing package of
    which count 4 was a part. Accordingly, the district court was not obligated to
    resentence Clark on the basis that the sentencing package had become
    unbundled.
    IV
    We now consider whether our reversal and remand of Clark’s conviction
    and sentence on count 4 entitled Clark to challenge anew at a resentencing
    hearing his sentences on other counts on remand. We review this question de
    novo. See, e.g., United States v. Roussel, 
    705 F.3d 184
    , 201 (5th Cir. 2013)
    (stating that Apprendi challenges to sentences are reviewed de novo); United
    States v. Teel, 
    691 F.3d 578
    , 583 (5th Cir. 2012) (stating that this court
    “review[s] de novo a district court’s application of the remand order, including
    whether the law-of-the-case doctrine or mandate rule forecloses the district
    court’s actions on remand.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted));
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    No. 14-10735
    United States v. Carales-Villalta, 
    617 F.3d 342
    , 344 (5th Cir. 2010) (stating
    that because issue concerned interpretation of scope of this court’s appellate
    mandate, and “whether the law-of-the-case doctrine or mandate rule forecloses
    the district court’s actions on remand,” it should be reviewed de novo).
    A
    Clark maintains that our reversal and remand of count 4 rendered his
    sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5 open to challenge on remand, and that,
    because the district court did not convene a resentencing hearing or appoint
    counsel to represent him, he was improperly precluded from relying on two
    intervening Supreme Court decisions: Apprendi and Alleyne. According to
    Clark, Apprendi and Alleyne are properly considered “intervening” because his
    convictions on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5 were not yet final at the time these cases
    were decided. The government responds that Clark was not resentenced on
    remand; under the law of the case doctrine, the district court was not permitted
    to revisit Clark’s sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, or 5; and both intervening cases
    were decided long after Clark’s convictions became final in 1998, when the
    district court dismissed count 4.
    B
    The law of the case doctrine prohibits a district court from reviewing or
    deciding issues that have been decided on appeal, whether expressly or by
    implication. 
    Teel, 691 F.3d at 582
    . A district court is authorized on remand
    only to review “those discrete, particular issues identified by the appeals court
    for remand.” United States v. Lee, 
    358 F.3d 315
    , 321 (5th Cir. 2004); see also
    United States v. Marmolejo, 
    139 F.3d 528
    , 531 (5th Cir. 1998) (“The only issues
    on remand properly before the district court are those issues arising out of the
    correction of the sentence ordered by this court.”). The district court must
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    No. 14-10735
    “implement both the letter and the spirit of the appellate court’s mandate and
    may not disregard the explicit directives of that court.”       United States v.
    Matthews, 
    312 F.3d 652
    , 657 (5th Cir. 2002). The district court may exceed the
    appellate mandate, however, when “there has been an intervening change of
    law by a controlling authority.” 
    Id. A defendant
    can challenge his sentence
    based on an intervening change of law that has occurred before his conviction
    is final. Griffith v. Kentucky, 
    479 U.S. 314
    , 316 (1987).
    Neither Apprendi nor Alleyne is reasonably considered intervening law
    because neither case was decided until after Clark’s convictions and sentences
    became final. On direct appeal, we affirmed his convictions and sentences on
    counts 1, 2, 3, and 5, and remanded solely for a new trial on count 4 (charging
    a violation of § 924(c)). Clark I, 
    139 F.3d 899
    , at *1. On remand, the district
    court was only authorized to retry, or otherwise dispose of, count 4. Under the
    law of the case doctrine, the district court was not authorized to entertain
    challenges to Clark’s sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5, considering that this
    court had affirmed them on direct appeal. The district court granted the
    government’s motion to dismiss count 4. When it dismissed count 4, Clark’s
    convictions and sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5 became final. The entry of
    the amended judgment at that point would have been a ministerial act because
    our affirmance of the convictions and sentences on 1, 2, 3, and 5 dictated the
    sentences to be imposed on remand. See, e.g., Hall v. Moore, 
    253 F.3d 624
    , 627
    (11th Cir. 2001) (quoting Golden v. Newsome, 
    755 F.2d 1478
    , 1483 n.9 (11th
    Cir. 1985)) (“Obviously, where the precise sentence for a particular offense is
    mandatorily fixed by law such that its imposition is merely a ministerial
    ceremony, with no discretion to be exercised by the sentencing judge, the
    absence of counsel at such a proceeding could not possibly be prejudicial.”).
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    C
    What transpired between 1998 and 2014 corroborates the finality of
    Clark’s convictions and sentences on counts 1, 2, 3, and 5 in 1998. Clark
    initiated several collateral attacks on the judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. It
    is a jurisdictional requirement of § 2255 that the conviction and sentence being
    challenged are final. See, e.g., Jones v. United States, 
    453 F.2d 351
    , 352 (5th
    Cir. 1972) (per curiam) (holding that collateral attack under § 2255 was
    premature where direct appeal of defendant’s conviction was still pending).
    And Clark filed his first habeas petition within one year of the date the district
    court dismissed count 4, in an apparent attempt to comply with the applicable
    one-year limitations period. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f) (providing that “1-year
    period of limitation” applies to motions under § 2255).       Moreover, despite
    Clark’s multiple attempts to obtain collateral relief from his convictions and
    sentence, at no point until 2014, when Clark filed his motion to be resentenced,
    did Clark, the government, the district court, or, for that matter, we question
    whether Clark’s convictions and sentences were final.
    Accordingly, because Clark’s convictions and sentences became final
    before Apprendi and Alleyne were decided, the law of the case doctrine
    precluded Clark from relying on them to challenge his sentences on other
    counts of which he had been convicted. He was not entitled to a resentencing
    hearing before the district court entered the amended judgment so that he
    could make Apprendi- and Alleyne-based challenges to the sentences on other
    counts.
    *   *    *
    For the reasons explained, the amended judgment is AFFIRMED.
    20