ROBERT MADDEN HILL, Circuit Judge:
Marshall DeWayne Williams was convicted on three counts related to the planting of a pipe bomb which killed Williams’ stepfather, Ward S. Keeton, Sr. We vacate the life sentence given Williams on count one and remand for resentencing, and we affirm in all other respects.
I. Facts
A jury found Williams guilty on each of the three counts on which he was tried. Count one charged that he maliciously destroyed a coin-operated newspaper dispenser by means of an explosion which resulted
in the death of Keeton.
Count two charged Williams with possession of an unregistered “firearm,” the pipe bomb.
Count three charged that Williams made this firearm without the required regulatory approval.
The district court sentenced Williams to life imprisonment on count one and to two terms of ten years imprisonment on each of counts two and three, with these two terms to run concurrently with one another and consecutively to count one.
Evidence adduced at trial showed that Keeton was killed on January 27, 1984, when he opened a newspaper dispenser located adjacent to the apartment complex where he lived. The dispenser was rigged with a mechanism which activated a pipe bomb inside the dispenser. The resulting explosion of the pipe bomb killed Keeton and destroyed the machine.
Keeton had married Williams’ mother, Clara, in September 1983, and they lived together with Williams, Williams’ wife and child, Williams’ younger brother, and Mike Cornett, Williams' younger cousin, in a rented house in Mesquite, a suburb of Dallas. In early November, Keeton moved out and contacted his attorney. Keeton told the attorney that he wanted a divorce because he had made a “terrible mistake” in marrying Clara and was fearful of his wife’s family. On the date Keeton filed for divorce, he told Williams’ aunt that he had tapes to show that Clara, Williams, and Williams’ sister were plotting to kill him for his money. Keeton moved into the apartment complex where he was later
killed, and Clara joined him shortly thereafter.
In January 1984 Clara called Keeton’s attorney to tell him to drop the divorce action because she and Keeton were reunited. On January 18 Keeton executed a designation of beneficiary form for a company life insurance policy, naming Clara as beneficiary. Clara evidently knew about the policy and a few days after Keeton’s death talked to a company official about how to file claims for insurance benefits.
During the same month, Williams persuaded a friend to give him a ride to a plumbing shop to buy some steel pipe. Williams bought a length of two-inch steel pipe with threaded ends and two end caps. His cousin Cornett later saw the pipe and end caps in a dresser drawer at the house in Mesquite, together with a shoe box, a rat trap, and a small cannister. When Cornett inquired about it, Williams said it was an “experiment,” and later told Cornett the same thing when he saw the same items lying on the kitchen table, together with a piece of wood, shotgun primers, string or wire, a hammer, and nails. Williams, a former member of the Marine Corps, had completed all the lessons (but not the final exam) in a Marine correspondence course on land mine warfare and demolition; the course book had instructions on the design of a pressure-release firing device known as a “mouse trap” bomb.
On the morning of Keeton’s death, January 27, 1984, Williams’ brother and Cornett arose about 10:30 a.m. and found Williams watching television. Cornett testified Williams told him that Keeton had been killed and that it would be on the news at noon, which it was. According to Cornett’s account, Williams then informed them that he had put a bomb in the newspaper stand, having watched Keeton go the dispenser at the same time on previous mornings. Williams allegedly said that he had sat across the street and watched the explosion.
Cornett testified that Clara then asked them to rent a truck to remove items from Keeton’s apartment, and that she told them they were moving to Houston. On the next day, January 28, Williams went to a truck rental agency and mentioned to the salesman that it was his “father” who had been killed in the newsstand bombing. According to the salesman, Williams told him Keeton went to the newspaper dispenser every morning, and Williams laughed and said “that would teach him to get habits, won’t it.” Williams then rented a truck for a one-way trip to Houston.
After renting the truck, Williams went with his younger brother and Cornett to Keeton’s apartment, and they loaded the contents of the apartment into the truck. During the loading of the truck, Williams spoke to neighbors at the complex and discussed among other things the possible responsibility of the Ku Klux Klan for the bombing. Williams mentioned to one of the neighbors that he had entered Keeton’s apartment before the police did and had removed a Ku Klux Klan membership plaque belonging to Keeton. When the police entered the apartment shortly after the bombing, they found three prominently placed “love notes” from Clara to Keeton asking Keeton to call her on Friday, January 27, the day of his death.
After loading additional items in the rented truck from the Mesquite residence, Williams, his brother, Cornett, and a friend drove to Houston. On the following Monday, Williams rented a house in Crosby, Texas, near Houston, for an amount roughly twice the rental on the Mesquite house. Williams gave a cash deposit, and his father (Clara’s first husband) guaranteed the rent. Williams told the realtor that he was moving because his employer had granted his request for a transfer by offering to transfer him to the Houston area. However, Williams called his supervisor in Dallas to tell him that he had to miss a day of work in order to help his parents move some items in Houston, but that he would be back into work the next day. In fact, Williams had not requested a transfer, been transferred, or otherwise sought employment in the Houston area.
After returning to Mesquite for another load, Williams and Clara cooperated with
the ongoing homicide investigation, consenting to a search where boards, nails, paint, and tools were recovered from the Mesquite house. Wood and nails recovered from the bomb scene matched these samples taken in the search. Williams, during an interview with a Dallas police officer, stated that his uncle, Billy Jeff Cornett, had made the bomb that killed Keeton. However, Billy Jeff proved to have a well corroborated alibi and was not prosecuted.
II. Life Sentence
Williams first contends that the district court exceeded statutory limits by sentencing him to life imprisonment on count one. The statute prohibiting the malicious destruction of property used in interstate commerce provides that if death results, a violator “shall also be subject to imprisonment for any term of years, or to the death penalty or to life imprisonment as provided in section 34 of this title.” 18 U.S.C. § 844(i).
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ROBERT MADDEN HILL, Circuit Judge:
Marshall DeWayne Williams was convicted on three counts related to the planting of a pipe bomb which killed Williams’ stepfather, Ward S. Keeton, Sr. We vacate the life sentence given Williams on count one and remand for resentencing, and we affirm in all other respects.
I. Facts
A jury found Williams guilty on each of the three counts on which he was tried. Count one charged that he maliciously destroyed a coin-operated newspaper dispenser by means of an explosion which resulted
in the death of Keeton.
Count two charged Williams with possession of an unregistered “firearm,” the pipe bomb.
Count three charged that Williams made this firearm without the required regulatory approval.
The district court sentenced Williams to life imprisonment on count one and to two terms of ten years imprisonment on each of counts two and three, with these two terms to run concurrently with one another and consecutively to count one.
Evidence adduced at trial showed that Keeton was killed on January 27, 1984, when he opened a newspaper dispenser located adjacent to the apartment complex where he lived. The dispenser was rigged with a mechanism which activated a pipe bomb inside the dispenser. The resulting explosion of the pipe bomb killed Keeton and destroyed the machine.
Keeton had married Williams’ mother, Clara, in September 1983, and they lived together with Williams, Williams’ wife and child, Williams’ younger brother, and Mike Cornett, Williams' younger cousin, in a rented house in Mesquite, a suburb of Dallas. In early November, Keeton moved out and contacted his attorney. Keeton told the attorney that he wanted a divorce because he had made a “terrible mistake” in marrying Clara and was fearful of his wife’s family. On the date Keeton filed for divorce, he told Williams’ aunt that he had tapes to show that Clara, Williams, and Williams’ sister were plotting to kill him for his money. Keeton moved into the apartment complex where he was later
killed, and Clara joined him shortly thereafter.
In January 1984 Clara called Keeton’s attorney to tell him to drop the divorce action because she and Keeton were reunited. On January 18 Keeton executed a designation of beneficiary form for a company life insurance policy, naming Clara as beneficiary. Clara evidently knew about the policy and a few days after Keeton’s death talked to a company official about how to file claims for insurance benefits.
During the same month, Williams persuaded a friend to give him a ride to a plumbing shop to buy some steel pipe. Williams bought a length of two-inch steel pipe with threaded ends and two end caps. His cousin Cornett later saw the pipe and end caps in a dresser drawer at the house in Mesquite, together with a shoe box, a rat trap, and a small cannister. When Cornett inquired about it, Williams said it was an “experiment,” and later told Cornett the same thing when he saw the same items lying on the kitchen table, together with a piece of wood, shotgun primers, string or wire, a hammer, and nails. Williams, a former member of the Marine Corps, had completed all the lessons (but not the final exam) in a Marine correspondence course on land mine warfare and demolition; the course book had instructions on the design of a pressure-release firing device known as a “mouse trap” bomb.
On the morning of Keeton’s death, January 27, 1984, Williams’ brother and Cornett arose about 10:30 a.m. and found Williams watching television. Cornett testified Williams told him that Keeton had been killed and that it would be on the news at noon, which it was. According to Cornett’s account, Williams then informed them that he had put a bomb in the newspaper stand, having watched Keeton go the dispenser at the same time on previous mornings. Williams allegedly said that he had sat across the street and watched the explosion.
Cornett testified that Clara then asked them to rent a truck to remove items from Keeton’s apartment, and that she told them they were moving to Houston. On the next day, January 28, Williams went to a truck rental agency and mentioned to the salesman that it was his “father” who had been killed in the newsstand bombing. According to the salesman, Williams told him Keeton went to the newspaper dispenser every morning, and Williams laughed and said “that would teach him to get habits, won’t it.” Williams then rented a truck for a one-way trip to Houston.
After renting the truck, Williams went with his younger brother and Cornett to Keeton’s apartment, and they loaded the contents of the apartment into the truck. During the loading of the truck, Williams spoke to neighbors at the complex and discussed among other things the possible responsibility of the Ku Klux Klan for the bombing. Williams mentioned to one of the neighbors that he had entered Keeton’s apartment before the police did and had removed a Ku Klux Klan membership plaque belonging to Keeton. When the police entered the apartment shortly after the bombing, they found three prominently placed “love notes” from Clara to Keeton asking Keeton to call her on Friday, January 27, the day of his death.
After loading additional items in the rented truck from the Mesquite residence, Williams, his brother, Cornett, and a friend drove to Houston. On the following Monday, Williams rented a house in Crosby, Texas, near Houston, for an amount roughly twice the rental on the Mesquite house. Williams gave a cash deposit, and his father (Clara’s first husband) guaranteed the rent. Williams told the realtor that he was moving because his employer had granted his request for a transfer by offering to transfer him to the Houston area. However, Williams called his supervisor in Dallas to tell him that he had to miss a day of work in order to help his parents move some items in Houston, but that he would be back into work the next day. In fact, Williams had not requested a transfer, been transferred, or otherwise sought employment in the Houston area.
After returning to Mesquite for another load, Williams and Clara cooperated with
the ongoing homicide investigation, consenting to a search where boards, nails, paint, and tools were recovered from the Mesquite house. Wood and nails recovered from the bomb scene matched these samples taken in the search. Williams, during an interview with a Dallas police officer, stated that his uncle, Billy Jeff Cornett, had made the bomb that killed Keeton. However, Billy Jeff proved to have a well corroborated alibi and was not prosecuted.
II. Life Sentence
Williams first contends that the district court exceeded statutory limits by sentencing him to life imprisonment on count one. The statute prohibiting the malicious destruction of property used in interstate commerce provides that if death results, a violator “shall also be subject to imprisonment for any term of years, or to the death penalty or to life imprisonment as provided in section 34 of this title.” 18 U.S.C. § 844(i). The referenced section provides that a convicted defendant “shall be subject also to the death penalty or to imprisonment for life, if the jury shall in its discretion so direct____” 18 U.S.C. § 34. Williams argues that since the issue of punishment was never submitted to the jury, the district court was not authorized to impose a life sentence. The parties agree that the death penalty portions of the statutes were invalidated as a result of
Furman v. Georgia,
408 U.S. 238, 92 S.Ct. 2726, 33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972), and subsequent cases.
The government concedes that section 34 does not authorize the district court to sentence Williams to life imprisonment, but argues instead that the court was so empowered by section 844(i). In the government’s view, the phrase “any term of years” in section 844(i) includes life imprisonment. The government contends that life imprisonment constitutes a term of years, conceptually definite though unknown as to the precise number. We reject such a construction of section 844(i).
The district court was without power to impose a life sentence. Generally, this court will not review the severity of a sentence imposed within statutory limits absent a gross abuse of discretion.
United States v. Adi,
759 F.2d 404, 411 (5th Cir.1985). Here, however, under the clear meaning of the combination of sections 844(i) and 34, Williams may be sentenced by the district court only to “any term of years” and not to life imprisonment in the absence of a jury recommendation or jury waiver.
See United States v. McFillin,
487 F.Supp. 1130, 1133 (D.Md.1980). The elimination of the death penalty provision does not mean that the power to sentence a defendant has passed to the court and has been taken away from the jury.
Id.
at 1132-33. To include life imprisonment within the phrase “any term of years” is contrary to the unambiguous statutory language. Absent the recommendation of the jury, this sentence was improper and must be vacated and the cause remanded to the district court for resentencing.
See United States v. Hansen,
755 F.2d 629, 631 (8th Cir.1985).
III. Instructions on Flight
Williams next contends that the district court erred in instructing the jury as follows:
Intentional flight of a person immediately after a crime has been committed is not, of course, sufficient in itself to establish his guilt but is a fact which, if proved, may be considered by you, in the light of all the other evidence in the case, in determining [guilt] or innocence. Whether the defendant’s conduct in this case constituted flight is exclusively for you to determine. And if you do so determine, whether or not that flight showed a consciousness of guilt on his
part, and the significance to be attached to that evidence, are also matters exclusively [within] your province.
In your consideration of any evidence of flight, if you should find that there was any flight, you should also consider that there [may] be reasons for this which are fully consistent with innocence. There may be many reasons for a person to be reluctant to be interviewed by law enforcement agents, which are perfectly innocent reasons, and which in no way show any consciousness of guilt on the part of that person. Also, a feeling of guilt does not necessarily reflect actual guilt of a crime you may be considering. You should always bear in mind that the law never imposes on a defendant in a criminal case the burden or duty of calling any witnesses or producing any evidence.
Williams objected to this instruction at trial, and argues that it was improper because the evidence did not show that his move to the Houston area was prompted by any consciousness of guilt on his part. Williams contends that he was merely following his mother Clara’s directions. Williams submits that his return to Keeton’s apartment the day after the bombing, coupled with his later cooperation with Dallas police, indicates a lack of consciousness of guilt.
The government correctly points out that evidence of an accused’s flight is generally admissible as tending to establish his guilt.
United States v. Borders,
693 F.2d 1318, 1324 (11th Cir.1982),
cert. denied,
461 U.S. 905, 103 S.Ct. 1875, 76 L.Ed.2d 807 (1983);
United States v. Ballard,
423 F.2d 127, 133 (5th Cir.1970). Williams did not object at trial to the admission of evidence concerning his move to the Houston area, nor does he now challenge that evidence as inadmissible. Williams does not contend that he was unaware at the time of the move that he was or could be the subject of a criminal investigation, nor does he claim that there was a significant delay from the commission of the crime to the time of the move — two factors recognized as weakening the probative value of flight evidence.
See Borders,
693 F.2d at 1325-26.
Moreover, the circumstances of Williams’ move indicated a consciousness of guilt. Clara testified that it was not her idea to move, stating that “the kids” — Williams, Williams’ brother, and Cornett— were instead responsible. Williams rented the truck on the morning after Keeton’s death, and drove to the Houston area that night after loading large amounts of furniture from Keeton’s apartment and the Mesquite house. The house Williams rented in Crosby was roughly twice as expensive as the house in Mesquite, even though being in arrears for the rent was one of the ostensible reasons for the move. Williams apparently lied to the realtor and to Williams’ supervisor about the circumstances of his presence in the Houston area. Williams’ return to the scene of the crime, as well as his later cooperation with police, may indicate either a lack of consciousness of guilt or an attempt to avert suspicion.
Once the evidence of flight was properly admitted, the district court did not err in giving the limiting instructions to the jury. Instructions substantially similar to the ones given here have been upheld.
United States v. Stewart,
579 F.2d 356, 359 & n. 3 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied,
439 U.S. 936, 99 S.Ct. 332, 58 L.Ed.2d 332 (1978). These instructions cautioned the jury not to place exclusive reliance on the evidence of flight but to consider possible innocent reasons for Williams’ actions, and they made the jury aware that it was for them to determine whether the evidence proved flight. Under these circumstances, it was not reversible error for the court to give limiting instructions on flight rather than to refrain from any comment.
Borders,
693 F.2d at 1327.
IV. Lesser Included Offenses
Williams finally contends that the district court erred in failing to instruct the jury that he could be convicted of a lesser included offense.
Williams argues that count one necessarily includes the elements of count three, and that count three necessarily includes the elements of count two. Williams cites
Keeble v. United States,
412 U.S. 205, 208, 93 S.Ct. 1993, 1995, 36 L.Ed.2d 844, 847 (1973), which held that a federal defendant “is entitled to an instruction on a lesser included offense if the evidence would permit a jury rationally to find him guilty of the lesser offense and acquit him of the greater.” Williams concedes that the instructions correctly set out the elements of each offense charged in the three counts.
The lesser included offense doctrine is well established in federal law.
See Keeble,
412 U.S. at 208, 93 S.Ct. at 1995, 36 L.Ed.2d at 847;
Sansone v. United States,
380 U.S. 343, 349, 85 S.Ct. 1004, 1009, 13 L.Ed.2d 882, 887 (1965). Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 31(c) codified the preexisting law: “The defendant may be found guilty of an offense necessarily included in the offense charged or of an attempt to commit either the offense charged or an offense necessarily included therein if the attempt is an offense.” While the doctrine developed at common law to assist the prosecution in cases where the evidence failed to establish some element of the offense charged, a defendant is also entitled to a lesser included offense instruction where warranted by the evidence.
Keeble,
412 U.S. at 208, 93 S.Ct. at 1995, 36 L.Ed.2d at 847.
The district court did not err in omitting the proposed lesser included offense instruction. The court made it clear to the jury that it had the option of convicting Williams on any, all, or none of the three counts charged:
The indictment in this case contains three counts. A separate crime or offense is [charged] in each of the three counts of the indictment. Each charge, and the evidence pertaining to it, should be considered separately. The fact that you may find the defendant guilty or not guilty of any of the offenses charged should not affect your verdict as to any other offense charged.
Williams has not claimed that the jury might have rationally found him guilty of some lesser
uncharged
offense while acquitting him of a greater
charged
offense.
Moreover, neither of the elements of count three are included in count one; one need not have manufactured a bomb or failed to receive regulatory permission to do so in order to destroy property by means of an explosive under count one. The offenses of unlawful possession (count two) and unlawful manufacture (count three) of a destructive device, while containing common elements, may be tried together, although consecutive maximum sentences may not be imposed.
United States v. Kaplan,
588 F.2d 71, 74-75 (4th Cir.1978),
modified sub nom. United States v. Seidel,
620 F.2d 1006 (1980);
see Rollins v. United States,
543 F.2d 574, 575 (5th Cir.1976). Williams’ sentence was amended by the district court to provide concurrent ten-year terms on counts two and three to comply with this rule.
Y. Conclusion
Accordingly, Williams’ convictions on all three counts are affirmed, as the district court did not err in its instructions to the jury. Williams’ life sentence is vacated, however, and this cause is remanded for resentencing on count one.
AFFIRMED in part; VACATED in part and REMANDED.