Duffy v. State

URBIGKIT, Justice,

dissenting.

I. NATURE OF THE APPEAL

In 1984, Scott Lee Duffy, a young man imprisoned in Colorado for burglary, placed and received calls from an ex-girlfriend in Lander, Wyoming. These calls were used to plan the robbery of his widowed grandmother for funds to accomplish his escape in Colorado. At least three people participated in the July 4th break-in and robbery of Duffy’s grandmother. Within twenty-four hours, the ex-girlfriend was talking to the police. In short order, all the criminal participants were behind bars.

As a result of the phone calls from Colorado to Wyoming, Duffy was charged with aiding and abetting aggravated robbery and conspiracy to commit burglary. He was extradited to Fremont County, and the initial trial judge, having been removed at Duffy’s request, assigned the case to the judge who had tried the Hopkinson murder cases. Hopkinson v. State, 679 P.2d 1008 (Wyo.), cert. denied 469 U.S. 873, 105 S.Ct. 228, 83 L.Ed.2d 157 (1984); Hopkinson v. State, 664 P.2d 43 (Wyo.), cert. denied 464 U.S. 908, 104 S.Ct. 262, 78 L.Ed.2d 246 (1983); Hopkinson v. State, 632 P.2d 79, 166 (Wyo.1981), cert. denied 455 U.S. 922, 102 S.Ct. 1280, 71 L.Ed.2d 463 (1982), which also involved contention of a telephone call from incarceration to arrange a crime. The appointed public defender, whose office was 200 miles from Lander, was given, in best light, a difficult time by the successor judge.1

The trial judge sentenced Duffy to a maximum of twenty-five years and a minimum of twenty-four years, eleven months and twenty-nine days for aiding and abetting robbery. For conspiracy, Duffy was sentenced to a consecutive maximum term of ten years and a minimum of nine years, eleven months and twenty-nine days. The effect of this one day difference (actually two days with November sentencing date) was designed to foreclose options normally available to prison officials to control their crowded facility by providing the incentive of good time for cooperative behavior. Duffy v. State, 730 P.2d 754 (Wyo.1986) (Duffy I), Urbigkit, J., dissenting. The sentence tyas thirty-five years maximum and thirty-five years less four days minimum.

II. ISSUES PRESENTED ABOUT WHICH I DISSENT

In this second appeal, I again dissent from the decision of this court for several reasons. First, this case allows prosecutors to duplicate charges and hoist upon a defendant more punishment for a single criminal act than was intended by Wyoming’s legislature. Second, this case not only introduces “ripeness” to criminal prosecutions, which until now has been used to *835limit the availability of judicial review in administrative law cases, but the analysis offered considers only one prong to the two pronged ripeness test. Hardship on the individual, the second prong, is not even mentioned. Third, because our understanding of legislative intent determines whether or not the federal and state double jeopardy clauses have been violated, it seems prudent to openly reappraise our analytic capacity to discern legislative intent after Wyoming’s legislature had to step in to correct what was a complete misunderstanding of legislative intent in Duffy I, 730 P.2d 754.2

III. LITIGATIVE AND LEGISLATIVE HISTORY

My disaffinity remains unchanged regarding the Duffy sentence which was an effort by the trial court to change the Wyoming indeterminate sentencing system, including good time rights, into a determinate sentencing system. Some combination of my dissent in Duffy I and legislative recognition of the judicial misunderstanding in Duffy I of the clear intent of the law led to a change in the statute by Wyo.Sess. Laws ch. 157, § 3 (1987). W.S. 7-13-201 (emphasis added) provides:

Except where a term of life is required by law, or as otherwise provided by W.S. 7-13-101, when a person is sentenced for the commission of a felony, the court imposing the sentence shall not fix a definite term of imprisonment but shall establish a maximum and minimum term within the limits authorized for the statute violated. The maximum, term shall not be greater than the maximum provided by law for the statute violated, and the minimum term shall not be less than the minimum provided by law for the statute violated, nor greater than ninety percent (90%) of the maximum term imposed.

See Wyo.Sess.Laws ch. 157, § 6 (1987), which states “[t]he amendment to W.S. 7-13-201 made by this act does not apply to any criminal case in which the sentencing court has imposed a sentence prior to the effective date of the act.”

The legislature made the ninety percent differential requirement prospective only and avoided a legislative reversal of the Duffy sentence, the only case with such total aberration. That a judicial mistake was corrected prospectively by the legislature does not necessarily eliminate a constitutionally impermissible equal protection violation for the individual subject to the discriminatory result.3

Battles must inevitably end and the Duffy I issue of determinate sentencing is not presented in this narrowly confined W.R. Cr.P. 36 proceeding, except as to the basic underlying constitutional issue of equal protection.4 Duffy I determined the validi*836ty for Duffy of the determinate sentences as a matter of statutory construction and left unresolved constitutional issues including merger of the offenses first raised in oral argument. That double jeopardy issue was side-stepped in Duffy I for consideration by a W.R.Cr.P. 36 proceeding and is now presented for the double jeopardy-merger-duplicity questions. Obviously, other issues may be followed by a post-conviction-relief petition if filed before December 11, 1990, including conduct of the trial court and clear question of ineffectiveness of counsel. See Sword v. Shillinger, 782 P.2d 1117 (Wyo.1989), Urbigkit, J., dissenting.5

IV. RIPENESS

The claim that some presently presented arguments do not present cognizable claims that are ripe for our review seems inappropriate. We now apply an agency doctrine to criminal law review. We have before indicated “[t]he doctrine of ripeness is a judicially created limitation of the availability of judicial review in administrative law cases.” BHP Petroleum Co., Inc. v. State, Wyoming Tax Com’n., 766 P.2d 1162, 1164 (Wyo.1989). Even if we are about to do with ripeness what we have done to standing;6 surely, if we are going to apply the ripeness doctrine beyond review of an agency decision, we should evaluate ripeness along the lines which BHP Petroleum Co., Inc. indicates is proper. The rationale presented by the majority presents only that prong which evaluates the fitness of an issue presented for judicial review. See BHP Petroleum Co., Inc., 766 P.2d 1162. The second prong is necessary to evaluate ripeness by balancing the interests of judicial economy against the hardship of the party if judicial review is denied. While the majority presents no authority for the holding that Duffy’s desire to know how his sentence will be computed is not yet “ripe”, there is obviously a hardship on him which should be balanced even under the traditional “ripeness” doctrine.7

*837Difficulty is also encountered in determining what, in addition to the adaptation of the decision in Duffy I, this court now decides in Duffy II is determinative and not dicta and what further issues are actually left for the future Duffy III post-conviction relief, habeas corpus or writ of certiorari petitions. In initial discussion, the majority states:

We hold that there is no violation of the constitutional prohibitions against double jeopardy in this instance, and the plea of guilty is not abrogated by the failure of the district court to advise Duffy of the possibility of consecutive sentences. The record does not demonstrate that the issues relating to the constitutionality of the sentences imposed are ripe for review at this time. The denial by the district court of Duffy’s motion for correction of his sentences pursuant to Rule 36, W.R.Cr.P., is affirmed.

The majority, again in regard to maximum and minimum sentences and the present Duffy ninety percent rule in good time, states:

Duffy has not argued that he is entitled to be released now if his good time earned is deducted from his maximum sentence. Neither has he presented any evidence that would indicate that he is presently being denied any good time to which he would be entitled under the statute and the rules. Under those circumstances, Duffy’s argument does not present a cognizable claim that is ripe for our review. It will be appropriate for him to seek that relief when he can establish that the combination of good time added to the time served demonstrates that he has served the maximum term and is, entitled to release. The record does not demonstrate any invasion of a constitutional liberty interest at this time that would justify a conclusion that Duffy’s sentence is illegal.

The majority discussion appears to misunderstand the real issue of Duffy I and its continued effect since the subsequent adoption of the Duffy amendment. Originally, the legislature adopted an indeterminate sentencing process which, in its nature, gave discretion to the executive probation department. What the Duffy sentence did was to remove the legislatively directed system of indeterminate sentencing and consequent involvement of the executive through parole opportunities of the convicted individual. Special good time does not create a parole date; it only affects how much parole discretion is available to the executive. Regular good time reduces that discretion spread, while special good time increases the spread by lowering the minimum sentence and, as a consequence, only provides a right for the individual to be considered for parole but not a right to be released.

First, it should be understood that requiring regular good time to those eligible is routine and special good time is highly discretionary. Most likely, special good time will only be accrued when good time is earned; but, unlike regular good time, cannot be withdrawn. In this ease where Duffy was given the maximum sentence of thirty-five years for both minimum and maximum sentence, and assuming that he received maximum of both, e.g., good time — ten days per month and fifteen days special good time per month — he would be eligible for parole board review after an incarceration of seventeen years and nine months, and would be released after twenty-two years and four months flat time.8

The Duffy statute for the thirty-five year sentence as a ten percent differential would have required the minimum to be three and one half years less or not more than thirty-one years and six months, and would not have changed the flat time or maximum release date. It would have, *838however, increased the period during which parole could have been considered from four years and seven months to seven years and ten months.

What all of this means to Duffy, age twenty-two at sentencing in 1986, is if he was released from Colorado confinement at the earliest date, December 1986, which likely occurred, he would, by the Duffy rule, possibly be eligible for parole in 2004 at age forty or released in 2009 at age forty-five! By application of the Duffy statute, he could be considered for parole about three years earlier in 2001 at age thirty-seven. Obviously, all of this is subject to the governor’s power of commutation and the capacity of the state to continue to expand its prison system. At whatever age he might be released, after about twenty years in confinement, it should be expected he will continue to be a public charge in one way or another for the balance of his life. Most twenty-year firm sentences constitute a lifetime commitment for public responsibility unless surviving family can and will come to the rescue. All of this seems somewhat to escape the criteria of Wyo. Const, art. 1, § 15 which requires the “humane principles of reformation and prevention.” The issue in Duffy I was not the incidental and illustrative function of good time, it was the essential character of Wyoming indeterminate sentencing as a legislative decision which was rescinded by judicial abrogation. Cf. Board of Pardons v. Allen, 482 U.S. 369, 107 S.Ct. 2415, 96 L.Ed.2d 303 (1987).

In Duffy I, the issue of merger as an illegal sentence was furloughed to be considered under W.R.Cr.P. 36. With mandate issued in December 1986, Duffy followed on March 23, 1987 with a motion for corrected sentence and for sentence reduction pursuant to W.R.Cr.P. 36 contending that merger had occurred in the two offenses, that the sentence was impermissible under the separation of powers and the good time provisions of W.S. 7-13-423 (now W.S. 7-13-420), and that the sentence was illegal in that the defendant was not properly advised he could be subject to consecutive sentences totaling thirty-five years. A comprehensive brief in support of the motion was filed, but the relief requested was denied without hearing from which appeal is now presented as invited in Duffy I. When extracted from the considerable discussion of issues that are not now “ripe,” the principal thrust of the present majority decision is to validate the dual charges of conspiracy to commit burglary and aiding and abetting aggravated robbery as the point of decision.9

V. DOUBLE JEOPARDY, MULTIPLICITY, MERGER, AND LEGISLATIVE INTENT

A. Admittedly, the facts of this case add no sympathy for Duffy, but my concern is with the direction of Wyoming law. Apparently, Duffy had been involved with some sort of burglary incident with his grandmother’s house before. When the July 4, 1984 crime occurred, the Lander police immediately started to check out anyone in town who had previous contact with him. Telephone calls charged to the mother of his ex-girlfriend immediately led to Michele Frey.

After Ms. Frey’s confession, the two young male accomplices were in jail shortly thereafter. All contact with Duffy had been through Ms. Frey, a young mother, age twenty-one. She recruited Richard Sweaney and they jointly recruited Jeffery Warner, who acquired gloves and essentially “went along for the ride.” Frey drove and Sweaney broke into the house with a stolen gun, threatened and handcuffed the terrified elderly grandmother, gathered up *839the stolen goods, and returned to the ear to divide their loot.

Frey, arrested on July 5th, was charged with one count of aiding and abetting aggravated robbery, W.S. 6-2-401(a)(ii), (c)(ii). On November 14, 1984, she entered a plea of guilty to the charge and, on January 22, 1985, received a sentence of fifteen to twenty years with credit for time in jail on the minimum. After a modification motion, the penal sentence was reduced to ten to twenty years which she presently serves in the Wyoming Women’s Center.

Jeffery Warner, age nineteen, who obtained gloves for the offense, came back to the car before the burglary was committed. Also arrested within a day of the offense, he was likewise charged with aiding and abetting aggravated robbery. He pleaded guilty on August 14, 1984, and was sentenced on January 23, 1985 to a term of ten to fifteen years with credit on the minimum sentence. Subsequent modification also reduced his sentence to five to ten years.

Richard Sweaney, age nineteen, as the actual perpetrator of the crime, was also arrested and charged with armed robbery and kidnapping, W.S. 6 — 2—201(a)(ii). A merger argument was unsuccessfully made in defense and, on January 22, 1985, he changed his plea on both charges to guilty. On May 22, 1985, he was sentenced to ten to fifteen years on the aggravated robbery charge and fifteen to twenty years on the kidnapping charge with terms concurrent and credit awarded on the presentence confinement against the maximum sentences. A subsequent motion for sentence reduction was denied.

On July 6, 1984, in conjunction with the Frey, Sweaney and Warner complaints, a complaint was filed in county court against Duffy, charging him with aiding and abetting in the aggravated robbery and conspiracy with Frey and Sweaney to commit a burglary, an offense for which he was the only participant charged. Nothing happened to Duffy for nearly a year, when a detainer was served in Colorado where he remained in custody. Duffy requested disposition and was returned to Wyoming in June 1985, where he waived a preliminary hearing and entered pleas of innocent. A representative of the office of the public defender was appointed to represent him and, by his request, the case was reassigned resulting in designation of the other Ninth Judicial District Judge to hear the ease.

On October 15, 1985, Duffy appeared in court to change his plea and was immediately sentenced. The sentence for aiding and abetting the aggravated robbery was twenty-four years, eleven months and twenty-nine days to twenty-five years (compared to the sentence of the principal perpetrator earlier given of ten to fifteen years and the co-actors Frey, fifteen to twenty years as reduced before the sentence to ten to twenty years, and Warner, ten to fifteen years as reduced to five to ten years). He was additionally sentenced to not less than nine years, eleven months and twenty-nine days and no more than ten years for conspiracy to commit burglary for which offense, either conspiracy of or burglary, none of the actual participants were ever charged. These sentences were consecutive and consecutive to the Colorado confinement which provided no credit for his pre-incarceration time as credit on the Wyoming sentence. Consequently, the sentences in total were: Sweaney, who separately committed this heinous offense and aggravated by kidnapping, received a maximum sentence of fifteen to twenty years with credit on the maximum; Frey, who organized and coordinated the crime, a sentence of ten to twenty years with credit on the minimum; Warner, as the willing participant but not involved in the entry of the house, five to ten years with credit on the minimum; and Duffy, for aiding, not only a heavier sentence than any of the participants on the aggravated robbery, but a separate charge involving burglary for which none of the participants were charged, a total sentence maximum of thirty-five years and a minimum of thirty-five years less four days with no presentence confinement credit.10

*840Double jeopardy and multiplicity11 concepts in this improbable situation do invoke a one-of-a-kind case where commonly cited authority provides little relevance. But the basic result of creating two crimes out of one conduct, Pena v. State, 780 P.2d 316 (Wyo.1989), invades the entire philosophy upon which protection against double jeopardy was initially developed and subsequently invested into not only the constitution of the United States but also most states, including Wyoming. Ingenuity of prosecutors to multiply charges is documented by this case. We have a single transaction in which Duffy participated by telephone calls to his ex-girlfriend to rob his grandmother to acquire funds for his use to escape in Colorado. It is out of that transaction that potential separate trial charges raise the following double jeopardy questions:

1. Conspiracy to commit and aiding and abetting in the commission;
2. Conspiracy to commit and commission of the principal offense;
3. Aiding and abetting one and conspiracy to commit the other (the charge actually made);
4. Aiding and abetting both; and
5. Conspiracy to commit both.

Without including the actual commission of the offense in the computation, an interesting number of combinations as chargeable offenses can be extrapolated as well as the contention that at least four separate sentence-prone offenses could be charged for the one activity, e.g., aiding and abetting and conspiracy to commit burglary and aiding and abetting and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. Since the occurrence was further complicated by the principal perpetrator’s plea of guilty to kidnapping, a further aiding and abetting charge to that sequential occurrence could also be piled on.

B. My principal objection to the majority decision is in its inattention to the substantive characteristics of duplicity, double jeopardy and merger. I do not agree with this court’s present decision and continue to find improvident the direction previously initiated by State v. Carter, 714 P.2d 1217 (Wyo.1986) and continued by the lesser included offense division of Birr v. State, 744 P.2d 1117 (Wyo.1987).12 My concern comes from present discussion of this majority in attempting to reconcile the transactional test brought to bear by Justice Blume in State v. Tobin, 31 Wyo. 355, 226 P. 681 (1924), which continued until abrupt*841ly terminated by decision of this court in Carter, 714 P.2d 1217 to change to the Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299, 52 S.Ct. 180, 76 L.Ed. 306 (1932) presumed legislative intent test of separate evidence for each incident.13 Since Carter, 714 P.2d 1217, we have had a parade of complications in multiplied penalties for a single transaction. I have come to accept the fact that Wyoming, like most but surely not all states, has adopted this improvident pathway, see Schultz v. State, 751 P.2d 367 (Wyo.1988), but still reject the character of conduct to which dual criminal assessments are only wordsmanship to escape the limitations provided by both the Wyoming and United States Constitutions. People v. White, 41 Mich.App. 370, 200 N.W.2d 326 (1972), aff'd, 390 Mich. 245, 212 N.W.2d 222 (1973); Ashinsky v. State, 780 P.2d 201 (Okl.Cr.1989).14

In considering the morass of cases involving merger, multiplicity and double *842jeopardy infected by multiplied criminal statutes and nurtured by an accelerating habit of multiple charges, first reference should be made to the fundamental American case of Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163, 85 U.S. 163, 171, 21 L.Ed. 872 (1873) (quoting The Commonwealth v. Olds, 5 Littell 137), where that court, after a comprehensive review of the history and essence of the constitutional protection against double jeopardy, repeated:

“[Tjhat every person acquainted with the history of governments must know that state trials have been employed as a formidable engine in the hands of a clomi-nant administration.... To prevent this mischief the ancient common law, and well as Magna Charta itself, provided that one acquittal or conviction should satisfy the law; or, in other words, that the accused should always have the right secured to him of availing himself of the pleas of autrefois acquit and autrefois convict. To perpetuate this wise rule, so favorable and necessary to the liberty of the citizen in a government like ours, so frequently subject to changes in popular feeling and sentiment, was the design of introducing into our Constitution the clause in question.”

That court then concluded:

There is no more sacred duty of a court than, in a case properly before it, to maintain unimpaired those securities for the personal rights of the individual which have received for ages the sanction of the jurist and the statesman; and in such cases no narrow or illiberal construction should be given to the words of the fundamental law in which they are embodied.

Ex parte Lange, 85 U.S. at 178, 21 L.Ed. 872.

Additionally, by oath and responsibility, this court cannot abstain from the jurisdiction which has been conferred to sustain the rights guaranteed not only by the United States Constitution, but more immediately by the Wyoming Constitution. As Justice Scalia stated for the United States Supreme Court in New Orleans Public Service, Inc. v. Council of City of New Orleans, — U.S. -, 109 S.Ct. 2506, 2512, 105 L.Ed.2d 298 (1989) (quoting Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. 264, 6 Wheat. 264, 404, 5 L.Ed. 257 (1821)), “ ‘[w]e have no more right to decline the exercise of jurisdiction which is given, than to usurp that which is not given.' ”

C. There are a multitude of cases which are quite similar in factual circumstances which involve burglary and robbery. My uneasiness about this case is the observable ineffectiveness of counsel in relinquishing the armor of double jeopardy by the entry of a plea to these duplicated charges.15 Axiomatic as a result of this decision, aiding and abetting can similarly accommodate the separate criminal offense of conspiracy, since aiding and abetting is in essence conspiratorial in conduct. This majority adds gloss but no real substance by taking one aspect of the transaction and attaching conspiracy to it without any particular rhyme or reason and then separately applies aiding and abetting to another aspect of the same criminal event. This is only done to create two crimes out of one. This observation was also recognized by the Vermont court in State v. Perry, 563 A.2d 1007, 1010 (Vt.1989):

“[T]he same act may constitute two separate crimes, and, if they are not so related that one of them is a constituent part, or necessary element, in the other, so that both are in fact one transaction, a prosecution and conviction may be had for each offense.” State v. Parker, 123 Vt. 369, 371, 189 A.2d 540, 541-42 (1963).

See also State v. White, 322 N.C. 506, 369 S.E.2d 813 (1988), where robbery and larceny could not be divided to create two sepa*843rately punishable crimes and Vines v. United States, 540 A.2d 1107 (D.C.App.1988), kidnapping and armed robbery with confinement momentary and co-existence.

This appeal does not require extricating conspiracy from commission of the principal offense for merger or double jeopardy assessment. We have here two inchoate or agglutinative offenses for which the identical evidence was used. Conspiracy and aiding and abetting under Wyoming law are inchoate offenses, drawing criminal responsibility from the categorized offense. Ño individual can be guilty of a crime of conspiracy unless it relates to the intended commission of a crime and aiding and abetting only denominates a participant for responsibility when the criminal act is committed. Aiding and abetting and conspiracy as applied here are separate characterizations of the same conduct directed to assess separate responsibility for the same criminal misconduct. The penalties in both cases are the same as the designated offense. See W.S. 6-1-304 and 6-1-201.

Within the mass of cases,16 authority can be found for every position taken except no case like this one is found invoking conspiracy to commit the burglary and aiding and abetting the more serious aggravated robbery which was a product of the burglary. Using the methodology of this occurrence, we reach a stage of ingenuity of prosecution until division of cases into segments become almost limitless and particularly so if magnification by the inchoate offenses of conspiracy and aiding and abetting are introduced. The broad issue is fundamental to double jeopardy — conviction and dual sentencing for one criminal event. The more specific question here invokes the relationship of burglary to the offense of aggravated robbery as those separate statutes are impacted by the inchoate offenses of conspiracy and aiding and abetting. The basic issue that should have been resolved is whether the burglary, which progressed into the robbery, can be separately charged or should the maximum sentence for Duffy have been limited to the one offense maximum of twenty-five years.

A magnificent play on words defined in legislative intent is invoked in these thousands of cases. I dissent because what we do is conceptually vacuous and logically indefensible. Burglary in this case involved illegal entry with intent to commit a felony. The felony committed in this case was aggravated robbery. It would have been exactly the same in this case if Duffy had been charged with the offense he committed, aiding and abetting aggravated burglary. However, by charging down to burglary, the prosecutor was dividing up what was otherwise a unitary offense involving the same evidence of what occurred and consequently achieving consecutive sentences exceeding statutory máximums as a penalty. This is what our forefathers feared when they constitutionally provided prohibitions against double jeopardy as being twice sentenced for one offense or twice tried for the same offense. Comment, Twice in Jeopardy, 75 Yale L.J. 262 (1965).17

*844D. What Duffy does not present as issues are separate charges of conspiracy and the principal offense. With the exception of a few jurisdictions where conspiracy may still be considered a lesser included offense, the general and accepted rule, including justification in the idea of sequential events as separable crimes, is that separate charges and separate sentences can be achieved by the dichotomy of conspiracy to commit and commission of the principal offense. Pereira v. United States, 347 U.S. 1, 74 S.Ct. 358, 98 L.Ed. 435 (1954); United States v. Finazzo, 704 F.2d 300 (6th Cir.), cert. denied 463 U.S. 1210, 103 S.Ct. 3543, 77 L.Ed.2d 1392 (1983); State v. Johns, 184 Conn. 369, 439 A.2d 1049 (1981); People v. Carter, 415 Mich. 558, 330 N.W.2d 314 (1982); State v. Carey, 285 N.C. 509, 206 S.E.2d 222 (1974). Compare, however, Garcia v. State, 774 P.2d 623 (Wyo.1989) and Schultz, 751 P.2d 367 with Birr, 744 P.2d 1117, where in the latter case, the separately chargeable conspiracy was not charged instead of the lesser included offense as a constituent of the felony murder.

Aiding and abetting as an inchoate offense with identical exposure for criminal punishment as the principal offense can also be filed separately from conspiracy without creating a double jeopardy constitutional violation. This principle follows from the nature of conspiracy being sever-able from the principal offense since aiding and abetting is identically treated as a principal offense. United States v. Herbert, 698 F.2d 981 (9th Cir.), cert. denied 464 U.S. 821, 104 S.Ct. 87, 78 L.Ed.2d 95 (1983); United States v. Valencia, 492 F.2d 1071 (9th Cir.1974); State v. Spearin, 477 A.2d 1147 (Me.1984); Carter, 330 N.W.2d 314; People v. Hamp, 110 Mich.App. 92, 312 N.W.2d 175 (1981). Cf. United States v. Mourad, 729 F.2d 195 (2nd Cir.), cert. denied 469 U.S. 855, 105 S.Ct. 180, 83 L.Ed.2d 114 (1984), cert. denied 472 U.S. 1007, 105 S.Ct. 2700, 86 L.Ed.2d 717 (1985). See also Garrett v. United States, 471 U.S. 773, 105 S.Ct. 2407, 85 L.Ed.2d 764, reh’g denied 473 U.S. 927, 106 S.Ct. 20, 87 L.Ed.2d 698 (1985) and United States v. Thomas, 887 F.2d 1341, 1345 (9th Cir.1989).

Case law, where consecutive sentences were not provided, does not present the same duplicate punishment concerns within the double jeopardy prohibition. See People v. Ratcliffe, 124 Cal.App.3d 808, 177 Cal.Rptr. 627 (1981).

Likewise, sequentially and severable criminal events for separate crimes are not presented by this case as justification for a double application of statutory sentences. State v. Washington, 132 Ariz. 429, 646 P.2d 314 (1982); State v. Lindsey, 446 So.2d 1074 (Fla.1984); State v. Mendonca, 68 Haw. 280, 711 P.2d 731 (1985); State v. Hill, 10 Kan.App.2d 607, 706 P.2d 472 (1985); State v. Roudybush, 235 Kan. 834, 686 P.2d 100 (1984); State v. Dubish, 234 Kan. 708, 675 P.2d 877 (1984); Wilson v. Com., 695 S.W.2d 854 (Ky.1985); Hunnicutt v. State, 755 P.2d 105 (Okl.Cr.1988), to be compared with State v. Ah Choy, 780 P.2d 1097 (Hawaii 1989).

Separate victims of criminal conduct are also not presented. People v. Adams, 128 Mich.App. 25, 339 N.W.2d 687 (1983). See the comparison of robbery constituting multiple offenses with multiple victims and burglary as only one offense in State v. Hodges, 386 N.W.2d 709 (Minn.1986).

E. What Duffy II does present in terms of double jeopardy is prosecution of a non-sequential event transactionally limited to one course of behavior. The crime was committed by telephone calls made in advance of any criminal action. There was only one victim in the burglary/robbery crime. The charges filed essentially invoke a lesser included offense to the aggravated robbery. The occurrence progressed from initial burglary as an integrated event with one interest of the criminal. That interest produced a course of events leading to a robbery. Two inchoate offenses were pros-ecutorially created out of the same action for which consecutive sentences were given to exceed the maximum permitted for any single charged offense.

This case also presents dual crimes charged in a circumstance where a lesser included offense concept is implicated by a burglary occurrence for the purpose of *845commission of the aggravated robbery. To be compared are the duplication denied cases, State v. Bartowsheski, 661 P.2d 235 (Colo.1983); State v. Flynn, 14 Conn.App. 10, 539 A.2d 1005, cert. denied — U.S. -, 109 S.Ct. 226, 102 L.Ed.2d 217 (1988); Borges v. State, 415 So.2d 1265 (Fla.1982); Ah Choy, 780 P.2d 1097; Strong v. State, 538 N.E.2d 924 (Ind.1989); Carey, 206 S.E.2d 222 and the singularly important and well considered case of Corbin v. Hillery, 74 N.Y.2d 279, 545 N.Y.S.2d 71, 543 N.E.2d 714, cert. granted — U.S. -, 110 S.Ct. 362, 107 L.Ed.2d 349 (1989). See also Mourad, 729 F.2d 195.

The federal bank robbery cases are informative by including a concept which prohibits duplicitous charging of incidents of that course of criminal conduct. United States v. Moore, 688 F.2d 433 (6th Cir.1982); United States v. Lawson, 683 F.2d 688 (2nd Cir.1982); United States v. Leek, 665 F.2d 383 (D.C.Cir.1981); United States v. Wright, 661 F.2d 60 (5th Cir.1981).

In this case, the majority agrees that lesser included offenses cannot be used to create a second punishment:

In later cases, the Supreme Court has held that the same evidence may not be used to sustain multiple offenses in separate proceedings if one was a lesser included offense of the other. Illinois v. Vitale, 447 U.S. 410, 100 S.Ct. 2260, 65 L.Ed.2d 228 (1980); Harris v. Oklahoma, 433 U.S. 682, 97 S.Ct. 2912, 53 L.Ed.2d 1054 (1977); Brown, 432 U.S. 161 [97 S.Ct. 2221]. The thrust of these later opinions is that a defendant cannot be subjected to multiple trials for those included and greater offenses even though the offenses are supported by different evidence. The rule of these cases is that no different result is obtained by trying a lesser included offense separately from the greater offense than would ensue if they were tried together.

Unfortunately, the majority decision neither establishes what constitutes the lesser included offense nor explains why the burglary in this case fails to fit. The same problem exists where Birr, 744 P.2d 1117 does not fit with Garcia, 774 P.2d 623 and Schultz, 751 P.2d 367. See Duncan v. State, 183 Ga.App. 368, 358 S.E.2d 910 (1987); Reed v. State, 778 S.W.2d 313 (Mo.App.1989) and State v. Tesack, 383 S.E.2d 54 (W.Va.1989). See generally on lesser included offense, State v. Jeffries, 430 N.W.2d 728 (Iowa 1988); Corbin, 74 N.Y.2d 279, 545 N.Y.S.2d 71, 543 N.E.2d 714; Blair, Constitutional Limitations on the Lesser Included Offense Doctrine, 21 Am.Crim.L.Rev. 445 (1984); and Ettinger, In Search of a Reasoned Approach to the Lesser Included Offense, 50 Brooklyn L.Rev. 191 (1984).18

What we now do was decried by Justice Jackson in special concurrence in Krulewitch v. United States, 336 U.S. 440, 457, 69 S.Ct. 716, 725, 93 L.Ed. 790 (1949):

There is, of course, strong temptation to relax rigid standards when it seems the only way to sustain convictions of evildoers. But statutes authorize prosecution for substantive crimes for most *846evil-doing without the dangers to the liberty of the individual and the integrity of the judicial process that are inherent in conspiracy charges. We should disapprove the doctrine of implied or constructive crime in its entirety and in every manifestation. And I think there should be no straining to uphold any conspiracy conviction where prosecution for the substantive offense is adequate and the purpose served by adding the conspiracy charge seems chiefly to get procedural advantages to ease the way to conviction.

Excluding this case with its particularly egregious penal sentence, the factor most recognized in posturing for position in multiplicity crime charge filings is prosecutorial leverage where an adequately extended sentence is normally not a concern in Wyoming within the broad discretion and indeterminate sentence structure provided by the legislature. By this case, the third trip out into the “Sargasso Sea,” Carter, 714 P.2d 1217, Urbigkit, J., dissenting; Birr, 744 P.2d 1117, Urbigkit, J., dissenting, we achieve only a misshapen state constitutional instrument adopted by creating practical problems which are reflected in the thousands of recent criminal cases addressing multiplied criminal responsibility by severable charges.

First, we invoke a legislative intent in each decision without practical factual bases to what was the intent. No coherent framework for analysis is provided as witnessed by Birr as the lesser included offense was added in felony murder compared to Schultz and Garcia where a separately distinguishable offense was adopted for the justified dual sentence, even though in all three cases, it didn’t make a particle of difference except for an editorial comment since effective control of the time to be spent for each of the convicted individuals was vested in the governor’s office within whose power neither the legislature nor the court can trespass.

The second problem defined in the Survey of Developments in North Carolina Law, 1986, 65 N.C.L.Rev. 1121, 1286-87 (1987) (footnotes omitted) is that in entangling courts

“in this Sargasso Sea,” the Hunter rule effectively gives them a great deal more discretion by allowing the courts to derive the formulas for themselves. A court can, for example, stress a particular factor or look closely at one aspect of the legislative history to reach and buttress its conclusion. There is also much more room for speculation regarding the intent of the legislature now that the courts have no mechanical test to apply. Most significant of all, the decision of a state supreme court on this topic is virtually unreviewable. * * *
A third practical problem is that the rule increases prosecutorial discretion. When the legislature proscribes a certain act in several statutes and permits multiple punishment, the prosecutor gains a great deal of leverage in the plea bargaining process. If five convictions are possible instead of one, it is much easier for a prosecutor to bargain with a defendant by agreeing to drop one or more of the counts brought against the defendant. Because plea bargaining plays such an important role in criminal law, it is possible that prosecutors will want to use this leverage to help secure deals more advantageous to the State. Thus, the Hunter rule encourages prosecutors to bring more charges than they intend to prosecute in order to gain a better bargaining position.

In the context of the proper responsibility of the United States Supreme Court to develop the law for future heritage, we fall error to the admonition of Justice Jackson in Krulewitch, 336 U.S. 440, 69 S.Ct. 716, of the temptation to sustain conviction as a goal in itself and to forego protecting constitutional rights.

Missouri v. Hunter, 459 U.S. 359, 103 S.Ct. 673, 74 L.Ed.2d 535 (1983), even in United States constitutional terms, may weave a wavy bright line for its purposes, but I also consider the heritage of the justice delivery system in Wyoming not circumscribed by the United States Supreme Court in voicing its perspective of the United States Constitution. First, it should be noted that Hunter is different. *847There, the state court found a legislative intent for cumulative punishment which is totally absent here. Otherwise, we reach that supposition by top dressing an uncluttered fact with a presumed intent by Block-burger presumption or otherwise.

F. In addressing the constitutional protection against double jeopardy, we need to recognize that two constitutions are involved. The federal double jeopardy clause need not be interpreted identically with our state double jeopardy clause since the state clause was adopted nearly a century later than the United States Constitution.19

I find meaning in Professor Keiter’s observation that “[djuring the Wyoming Constitutional Convention debates there were only two references to United States Supreme Court decisions.” Keiter, An Essay on Wyoming Constitutional Interpretation, XXI Land & Water L.Rev. 527, 543 n. 88 (1986).

Professor Keiter also recognizes:

For several reasons, however, the state courts have wisely begun to reexamine their practice of incorporating federal constitutional doctrine into their own jurisprudence. * * *
The historical circumstances surrounding adoption of the United States Constitution are not remotely similar to the historical circumstances surrounding adoption of many states’ constitutions, particularly those like Wyoming that were adopted long after the colonial era had ended. It therefore makes no sense to incorporate an interpretation attributable to the original framers of the federal Constitution into a state’s own constitutional jurisprudence. Similarly, in the absence of an indication that a state’s constitutional framers looked to Supreme Court precedent in framing a provision, there is no reason to assume that Supreme Court doctrine influenced them during their deliberations.

Id. at 543 (footnotes omitted).

I am not confined to abject reliance on the borrowed interpretative model for Wyoming constitutional implementation. To secure effective guidance is to require consistent direction. Serious scholarship suggests we should more adequately rely on state court decisions to interpret our state constitution and not on the changeability of federal adaptations manifested by confusing and denying constitutional rights. Witness need only be taken in the trend lines and variances found in those cases. Commencing with Ex parte Lange, 85 U.S. 163, we need only follow Ebeling v. Morgan, 237 U.S. 625, 35 S.Ct. 710, 59 L.Ed. 1151 (1915); United States v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp., 344 U.S. 218, 73 S.Ct. 227, 97 L.Ed. 260 (1952); Gore v. United States, 357 U.S. 386, 78 S.Ct. 1280, 2 L.Ed.2d 1405, reh’g denied 358 U.S. 858, 79 S.Ct. 13, 3 L.Ed.2d 92 (1958); North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 89 S.Ct. 2072, 23 L.Ed.2d 656 (1969); Brown v. Ohio, 432 U.S. 161, 97 S.Ct. 2221, 53 L.Ed.2d 187 (1977); Whalen v. United States, 445 U.S. 684, 100 S.Ct. 1432, 63 L.Ed.2d 715 (1980); Albernaz v. United States, 450 U.S. 333, 101 S.Ct. 1137, 67 L.Ed.2d 275 (1981); Hunter, 459 U.S. 359, 103 S.Ct. 673; and most recently, United States v. Broce, 488 U.S. 563, 109 S.Ct. 757, 102 L.Ed.2d 927 (1989) to ascertain how little we can establish as a permanent, consistent enforcement of this constitutional right prohibiting double jeopardy which, in history, predates the United States Constitution by at least 500 years and probably had its initiation in Roman and Grecian law more than a millennium earlier.

Furthermore, we are even informed how thin the waiver veneer can be. See also the recognition “that the ‘waiver’ rationale is a ‘conceptual abstraction’ which obscures rather than illuminates the underlying clash of societal and individual interests.” Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784, 812, 89 S.Ct. 2056, 2071, 23 L.Ed.2d 707 (1969), Harlan, J., dissenting. See also United States v. Tateo, 377 U.S. 463, 84 S.Ct. 1587, 12 L.Ed.2d 448 (1964), where Justice Harlan wrote the opinion for the court, and its

*848predecessor, Ball v. United States, 163 U.S. 662, 16 S.Ct. 1192, 41 L.Ed. 300 (1896). The literature is extensive, but among the scholarly reviews one can find thought and persuasion in Pote, A Closer Look at the Supreme Court and the Double Jeopardy Clause, 49 Ohio St. L.J. 799 (1988); Thomas, Multiple Punishments for the Same Offense: The Analysis After Missouri v. Hunter or Don Quixote, The Sargasso Sea and the Gordian Knot, 62 Wash.U.L.Q. 79 (1985); Comment, supra, 75 Yale L.J. 262; Note, Criminal Procedure — Consecutive Sentences For Felony Murder and the Underlying Felony: Double Jeopardy or Legislative Intent? Birr v. State, 744 P.2d 1117 (Wyo.1987), XXIII Land & Water L.Rev. 603 (1988); and Survey, supra, 65 N.C.L.Rev. 1121.

G. Representative cases can be found in abundance where the state courts have drawn the line against fracturing a criminal transaction into too many crimes. One of the more attentive courts is illustrated by Hunnicutt, 755 P.2d at 109-110 (emphasis in original):

The fifth amendment guarantee against double jeopardy protects against multiple punishments for the same offense. North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 717, 89 S.Ct. 2072, 2076, 23 L.Ed.2d 656 (1969). Courts have generally used two tests in deciding whether a conviction violates the multiple punishment component of the double jeopardy prohibition. Under the “same evidence test,” the question to ask is “whether each of the offenses charged requires proof of an additional fact that is not necessary to the other.” Johnson v. State, 611 P.2d 1137, 1140 (Okla.Crim.App.1980), cert. denied 449 U.S. 1132, 101 S.Ct. 955, 67 L.Ed.2d 120 (1981), rehearing denied, 450 U.S. 1026, 101 S.Ct. 1734, 68 L.Ed.2d 221 (1981). Therefore, an act can violate more than one statute if each statute requires proof of an additional fact that the other does not, and multiple punishments are not prohibited, even though each offense may arise from the same act or criminal episode. Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299, 304, 52 S.Ct. 180, 182, 76 L.Ed. 306
(1932). Under the “same transaction test,” one must determine “whether the offenses charged were parts of the same criminal act, occurrence, episode or transaction” and, if so, multiple punishments should be barred by the double jeopardy clause. Johnson, 611 P.2d at 1141.

When the pros and cons of each test were considered in Johnson, it was noted that just “because we treat the double jeopardy issue in one case by using one test [does not mean that] this Court will not apply the other test in appropriate cases.” Id. at 1144. The Court made clear its purpose when it said:

[W]e merely follow the collective wisdom of this Court’s prior decisions and elect the course which allows this Court to utilize the necessary tools to accomplish the task before it. In taking this course, we do nothing more than elevate the distinct purposes of the Double Jeopardy Doctrine to the equal dignity and reverence each [test] deserves.

Id. Based on the foregoing, we examine appellant’s situation to determine which test best serves the underlying purposes of the double jeopardy prohibition against multiple punishments for the same offense.

¡fc * # * * *
* * * The question remains, however, whether appellant can be convicted of two counts of one offense arising out of the same transaction. The answer depends on whether one determines that the “criminal episode involves separate and distinct offenses, consisting of different elements or dissimilar proof.” Weatherly v. State, 733 P.2d 1331, 1336 (Okla.Crim.App.1987). * * * Offenses are distinct and separate if they “are not mere means to some other ultimate objective, nor are they offenses included in some other offense, nor are they merely different incidents or facets of some primary offense.” Weatherly, 733 P.2d at 1336-37 (citing Clay v. State, 593 P.2d 509, 510 (Okla.Crim.App.1979)).

In interesting conclusion, the court stated:

[A] prosecutor cannot stack multiple charges in situations such as this, to *849“offer[] the jury a choice — a situation which is apt to induce a doubtful jury to find the defendant guilty of the less serious offense rather than to continue the debate as to his innocence. Cichos v. Indiana, 385 U.S. 76, 81, 87 S.Ct. 271, 273, 17 L.Ed.2d 175 (1966) (Fortas, J., dissenting from dismissal of certiorari).

Id. at 111.

Other cases include State v. Eppler, 362 N.W.2d 315 (Minn.1985), multi-item shoplifting is one criminal offense and Hodges, 386 N.W.2d 709, burglarious entry of one dwelling justifies only one burglary conviction where the three persons were present in the house, which incidentally did not affect his 238 month sentence for felony murder where no consecutive sentences were given. The Michigan court in Adams, 339 N.W.2d at 689 deleted one of the two convictions for possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. Also looking at the facts of the occurrence, conviction for both burning a dwelling and arson of insured property was reversed for the second concurrent sentence in People v. Kedziora, 125 Mich.App. 150, 336 N.W.2d 460 (1983) by concluding the criminal could not be guilty of burning insured property without committing arson.

For the fatal beating of a child, the defendant was convicted and sentenced for murder, involuntary manslaughter, reckless homicide, battery, child neglect and criminal confinement in Strong, 538 N.E.2d 924. The court related that only one killing and only one sentence could be imposed for the killing and reversed all convictions except murder and criminal confinement. The exceptionally detailed case of Corbin, 74 N.Y.2d 279, 545 N.Y.S.2d 71, 543 N.E.2d 714 considered successive prosecutions of driving while under the influence and vehicular homicide with double jeopardy applied to deny the successive prosecutions. Cf. Nowack v. State, 774 P.2d 561 (Wyo.1989).

A three count conviction of theft, attempted theft and entering a vehicle with intent to commit theft was reduced by application of offense inclusion to one charge in Carter v. State, 162 Ga.App. 44, 290 S.E.2d 143 (1982). See likewise Tompkins v. McMickle, 172 Ga.App. 62, 321 S.E.2d 797 (1984), aggravated assault merged into attempted armed robbery. The court applied alternative tests for dual sentence preclusion by both an analysis of the facts presented (factual review) and the charges presented as a matter of law (legal review). Hambrick v. State, 256 Ga. 148, 344 S.E.2d 639 (1986). Carey, 206 S.E.2d 222 presented the included felony of armed robbery merged into the felony murder crime, but the conspiracy charge remained a viable additional charge.

By statutory provision, the transaction rule was abrogated expressly in Florida, but the statute retained the exclusion of lesser included offense. Borges, 415 So.2d 1265. These principles were then addressed in Lindsey v. State, 416 So.2d 471, 472 (Fla.App.1982), rev’d on other grounds, but otherwise affirmed on this issue, 446 So.2d 1074 (Fla.App.1984) of “how many ways a single criminal episode may be carved up to sustain separate crimes and sentences * * V’ The court authenticated a sentence of burglary, robbery and false imprisonment. See also Lindsey, 446 So.2d 1074. Those decisions were followed by Carawan v. State, 515 So.2d 161 (Fla.1987), which considered dual convictions of aggravated battery and attempted manslaughter. The Florida constitutional clause of double jeopardy is identical to that of Wyoming. The court recognized that the power to define offenses and punishment was in the legislature.

“The argument seems to us irresistible, and we do not doubt that the Constitution was designed as much to prevent the criminal from being twice punished for the same offence as from being twice tried for it.”
Indeed, the prohibition against double jeopardy was aimed as much at the evil of multiple punishments for single offenses as at the evil of retrial for the same offense.

Id. at 164 (quoting Ex parte Lange, 85 U.S. at 173 and citing Note, A Definition of Punishment for Implementing the Double Jeopardy Clause’s Multiple-Punish-*850merit Prohibition, 90 Yale L.J. 632, 635 n. 16 (1981)).

The court further recognized:

At the same, however, we recognize that the power to define crimes and punishments in derogation of the common law inheres in the legislative branch, * * *, subject to constitutional imitations. It is presumed, however, that this legislative prerogative is not exercised by punishing the same offense under more than one statutory provision, since the legislature can achieve the same result with greater economy by merely increasing the penalty for the single underlying offense. Thus, before reaching the question of any possible constitutional violation, courts necessary must first determine what the legislature intended to punish and precisely how.

Carawan, 515 So.2d at 164. The court addressed three main rules of statutory construction for application:

The first is that absent a violation of constitutional right, specific, clear and precise statements of legislative intent control regarding intended penalties.
The second rule is that, in the absence of any clearly discernible legislative intent, the court begins by using the test established in Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299, 52 S.Ct. 180, 76 L.Ed. 306 (1932), to assist in determining this intent. * * * Simply stated, the Blockburger test compares the elements of the crimes in question. * * *
The third rule is that courts must resolve all doubts in favor of lenity toward the accused.

Id. at 165. Lenity is described as “ ‘a fundamental rule of statutory construction, i.e., that criminal statutes shall be construed strictly in favor of the person against whom a penalty is to be imposed.’ ” Id. at 166 (quoting Palmer v. State, 438 So.2d 1, 3 (Fla.1983)). The court then recognized:

At the outset, we conclude that the preeminence of legislative intent means that Blockburger necessarily is only the first step in the court’s analysis. Although Blockburger creates a presumption as to the actual legislative intent, it is not a blind presumption that may be applied without regard to other relevant evidence of the true intent. It would be absurd indeed to apply Blockburger, which was meant to help determine legislative intent, in a way that actually defeats what reason and logic dictate to be the intent. As has been noted, an exclusive Blockburger analysis sometimes leads to a result contrary to common sense. * * *
We find that unreasonable results sometimes may be achieved by applying no rule of construction other than Block-burger to determine the intent behind a facially ambiguous penal statute. As our courts frequently have noted, the true intent may be discerned in the circumstances and documentation accompanying a law’s enactment, it’s evidence purpose, the particular evil it seeks to remedy, the fact that it seeks to protect a particular class or remedy a special problem, or other relevant factors. * * * Accordingly, after first applying the Blockburger test, the court then must consider the presumption so created in light of any relevant factors that may indicate a contrary legislative intent.

Carawan, 515 So.2d at 167 (footnote omitted). The court further notes “whére there is a basis for concluding that the legislature intended a result contrary to that achieved by the Blockburger test, a conflict arises that requires resort to the third rule of construction applicable to this problem, the rule of lenity.” Id. at 168. In this regard, Florida’s lenity requirement constituted a rule of construction coequal to Blockburger with both provisions related in purpose since both provide guidelines for the construction of ambiguous statutes. After considering past precedent, the court then found that attempted manslaughter and aggravated battery address the same evil which was predicated upon one single underlying act.20 The case was remanded *851to vacate either the manslaughter or aggravated battery conviction. See likewise Meadows v. State, 534 So.2d 1233 (Fla.App.1988) and State v. Smith, 245 Kan. 381, 781 P.2d 666 (1989), aggravated battery and first degree murder.

In Flynn, 539 A.2d 1005, interference with a police officer was found to be a lesser included offense of assault on a police officer and, consequently, more than one conviction offended the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. However, the third count conviction in the case of reckless endangerment did not.

The test for California cases is whether a course of criminal conduct is divisible and therefore gives rise to more than one act within the California statutory scheme to be determined by the intent and objectives of the actor, which is at least a part, albeit expanded, of the lesser included offense principle. In the case of Neal v. State, 55 Cal.2d 11, 9 Cal.Rptr. 607, 357 P.2d 839 (1960), cert. denied 365 U.S. 823, 81 S.Ct. 708, 5 L.Ed.2d 700 (1961), dual attempted murder constituted two offenses in the arson occurrence. The arson, however, when included with those two offenses and tested on appellate review by habeas corpus as an issue not raised on initial appeal, constituted a jurisdictional decision. The arson conviction was deleted. The same decisional process followed in People v. Bauer, 1 Cal.3d 368, 82 Cal.Rptr. 357, 461 P.2d 637 (1969), cert. denied 400 U.S. 927, 91 S.Ct. 190, 27 L.Ed.2d 187 (1970), where the defendant was convicted of burglary, robbery, grand theft and auto theft. Intent and objective as constituents of an indivisible transaction applied to offenses of robbery and auto theft foreclosed any dual sentence. The prior car theft burglary case of People v. Churchill, 255 Cal.App.2d 448, 63 Cal.Rptr. 312 (1967) was disapproved. Ratcliffe, 124 Cal.App.3d 808, 177 Cal.Rptr. 627 continued the examination of the intent and objective of the perpetrator to be applied to false imprisonment and kidnapping to establish a test to delivery whether separate punishment could be provided.

The Kentucky court in Gilbert v. Com., 637 S.W.2d 632 (Ky.1982), cert. denied 459 U.S. 1149, 103 S.Ct. 794, 74 L.Ed.2d 998 (1983) considered convictions of attempted kidnapping, first degree wanton endangerment and first degree robbery of one female victim and rape and the kidnapping and robbery of another female. Possession and use of a pistol was not an offense separate from first degree robbery and, with the event of robbery close in distance and brief in time, required reversal of wanton endangerment and attempted kidnapping of one victim. In Wilson, 695 S.W.2d 854, a sequential application of the proof necessary to demonstrate the statutory elements of each offense permitted dual conviction of robbery and assault where the shooting occurred after the robbery had been completed. Polk v. Com., 679 S.W.2d 231 (Ky.1984).

Aggravated assault and armed robbery provided the same result in Washington, 646 P.2d 314 where the shot was fired after the robbery had been completed as a sequential event. An earlier shot was denied as a basis for assault as too intertwined with the elements of armed robbery. The rule for Washington in determination of statutory intent to define a single crime which may be committed by different means or to define two crimes stated:

“[TJhere may be many factors that will aid the court, such as [1] title of the act; [2] whether there is a readily perceivable connection between the various acts set forth; [3] whether the acts are consistent with and not repugnant to each other; [4] and whether the acts may inhere in the same transaction.”

State v. Arndt, 87 Wash.2d 374, 553 P.2d 1328, 1331 (1976) (quoting State v. Kosanke, 23 Wash.2d 211, 213, 160 P.2d 541, 542 (1945)).

Conduct of an egregiously bad husband and his array of convictions were addressed in Dubish, 675 P.2d 877, where the *852man was convicted of inflicting aggravated kidnapping, aggravated sodomy, aggravated battery and making a terrorist threat against his wife. Multiplicity was considered as the danger of receiving more than one sentence for one offense in review, and it was recognized “[t]he State may not split a single offense into separate parts. Where there is a single wrongful act it generally will not furnish the basis for more than one criminal prosecution.” Id. at 880. The sequential and geographically separated events justified three separate convictions. The sodomy offense was set aside for other reasons. Roudybush, 686 P.2d 100 followed with the separate and severable examination, different time and different place or different marijuana, which was the test applied. See Smith, 781 P.2d 666. Taylor v. State, 710 P.2d 1019 (Alaska App.1985) revealed the chil-drens’ non-support crime could not be segmented for separate convictions. Stacking was again rejected in Hunnicutt, 755 P.2d 105 for four offenses of selling two pistols. See State v. Fox, 98 Or.App. 356, 779 P.2d 197 (1989), where attempted murder and attempted assault merge with attempted aggravated felony murder and only a single judgment of conviction was proper under the thesis of double jeopardy preclusion.

Within the waves of case law which beat upon the subject in current adjudication, perhaps the most thoughtful analysis was provided by Justice Exum of the North Carolina Supreme Court in his dissent in State v. Gardner, 315 N.C. 444, 340 S.E.2d 701, 714 (1986) which, in my perspective, identifies the environment even though the case does not specifically tell whether maximum consecutive sentences were provided:

I concede that under Missouri v. Hunter, 459 U.S. 359, 103 S.Ct. 673, 74 L.Ed.2d 535 (1983), the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution does not preclude punishing this defendant for both felonious breaking or entering and felonious larceny, of which, we must assume, the breaking or entering is an essential element, so long as our legislature so intended.
I think Hunter was incorrectly decided. It is based, in my view, on a misapplication of principles formulated by the United States Supreme Court in earlier eases and designed to resolve double jeopardy questions other than the one presented here and in Hunter. The misapplication is understandable because as the Supreme Court itself acknowledged in Albernaz v. United States, 450 U.S. 333, 343, 101 S.Ct. 1137, 1144-45, 67 L.Ed.2d 275, 284 (1981), its “decisional law in the [double jeopardy] area is a veritable Sargasso Sea which could not fail to challenge the most intrepid judicial navigator.” Now a majority of our Court has, by slavishly following Hunter and misapplying some of the same precedents there relied on, determined to entangle itself in this Sargasso Sea even after being forewarned by the Court which created it and decided Hunter based upon it. Forewarned, for the majority, is not, alas, to be forearmed.
I concede, of course, that we are bound by Hunter insofar as we must decide this case under the Double Jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment. We are not bound to follow Hunter and are free to follow our own precedents on the subject insofar as we base decision on the double jeopardy prohibition contained in the * * * North Carolina Constitution.

The concern expressed by Justice Exum reflects the determined view for Wyoming enunciated by Justice Blume sixty-six years ago in Tobin, 31 Wyo. at 368, 226 P. 681, where the transactional understanding of criminal responsibility was identified:

“[T]he several acts are considered as so many steps or stages in the same affair, and the offender may be indicted as for one combined act in violation of law; and the proof of either of the acts mentioned in the statute and set forth in the indictment will sustain a conviction.”

It is completely unjustified to now deny that wisdom by “finding” in what was not and, in the following cases, “reconstructing” what never existed. Without application of a characterization of preciseness of reasoning, what had really happened in *853Wyoming’s early criminal law history limited the prosecution to one charge for one course of events where there was only one victim. Jerskey v. State, 546 P.2d 173 (Wyo.1976); Dycus v. State, 529 P.2d 979 (Wyo.1974); Boyd v. State, 528 P.2d 287 (Wyo.1974), cert. denied 423 U.S. 871, 96 S.Ct. 137, 46 L.Ed.2d 102 (1975); Jackson v. State, 522 P.2d 1286 (Wyo.1974); Dorador v. State, 520 P.2d 230 (Wyo.1974); Loddy v. State, 502 P.2d 194 (Wyo.1972), cert. denied 414 U.S. 1134, 94 S.Ct. 877, 38 L.Ed.2d 760 (1974).

Acceptance of the differentiated questions of successive prosecution driving under the influence and felony homicide elicited in Nowack, 774 P.2d 561; see, however, Corbin, 543 N.E.2d 714, does not take me to a contrary persuasion. Neither do I find the felony murder dual sentence persuasive where the court adopted a very restricted minority position. Birr, 744 P.2d 1117, Urbigkit, J., dissenting. Cf. Lauthern v. State, 769 P.2d 350 (Wyo.1989); Gardner, 340 S.E.2d 701; and Note, supra, XXIII Land & Water L.Rev. 603. Finally, this court just continues to be wrong in permitting the use of lesser included offense for dual punishment. Lauthern, 769 P.2d 350.

Rephrased in early terms from our heritage in ruling case law, we find stated in People v. Cook, 236 Mich. 333, 210 N.W. 296, 296-97 (1926) (quoting 8 R.C.L. 143):

“Stated in another form, if there was one act, one intent, and one volition, and the defendant has been tried on a charge based on such act, intent, and volition, no subsequent charge can be based thereon, though the crimes involved in the two proceedings are entirely different.”
* * * ⅞: ⅜ *
The rule is general that, where one offense is a necessary element in, and constitutes part of, another, and both are in fact on transaction, an acquittal or conviction of one should bar the prosecution for the other.
It is obvious that the offenses charged in the two informations are one and the same, and in fact here constitute one transaction; that, under facts undisputed, one is a necessary element in, and a part of the other, and an acquittal or conviction of one bars the prosecution of the other.

Particularizing a difference in Cook was involvement of successive prosecutions, although the case remained as a basic premise in constitutional law for double jeopardy.

The principle was similarly addressed by the Supreme Court of Washington in Arndt, 553 P.2d at 1334 (quoting Com. v. Colonial Stores, Inc., 350 S.W.2d 465, 467 (Ky.1961)):

“Doubts in the construction of a penal statute will be resolved in favor of lenity and against a construction that would produce extremely harsh or incongruous results or impose punishments totally disproportionate to the gravity of the offense; so in case of ambiguity the construction will be against turning a single transaction into multiple offenses.”

We have no actual evidence here in Duffy II that the legislature intended the initial burglary to be punished in addition to the robbery. This lack of intent to double up is strengthened where the same aggravating factor can be applied to burglary as to robbery and where applied to achieve the identical scope of punishment. See W.S. 6-2-401, larceny with force or injury as aggravated robbery as compared with larceny with force or injury while involved in the burglary, W.S. 6-3-302. In each case, we have the same elements, force or injury, the connective offense and statutory punishment provided not less than five years nor more than twenty-five years. In Wyoming, life or death sentences are almost the only cases where ordered confinement exceeds twenty-five years.21 Any change *854should be made by the legislature and not by prosecutorial and judicial ingenuity.

VI. WHAT DOES DUFFY II STAND FOR?

An indiscriminate and indeterminate net is created lacking certainty whether woven to catch whales or minnows. If the justice delivery function of the double jeopardy intent case law is to recognize the right of the legislature to establish prohibited criminal conduct, that rationality and consistency must be applied to Blockburger elements and evidence as well as concurrent and successive trials. There are two ways to increase the detriment to be assessed for conviction of criminal conduct. The first is to statutorily, judicially, or administratively increase confinement time. The second is to divide up the criminal behavior into separately punishable crimes. The first is a legitimate exercise of society’s decision. The second attacks the basic constitutional interest long followed with its accommodative ancient history prohibiting double jeopardy. Unfortunately, the constitutional interest is disregarded when the mindlessness of today intermixes both. In first approach, decision and discretion are examined by the legislature and the judiciary. Operationally, the second “answer” accomplishes a proven delegation to the prosecution as the result to be achieved. In the real world within the criminal justice delivery system, this is called leverage.

Among the multitude of inconsistent pathways chosen to segregate the violated double jeopardy right from responsibility for actual commission of more than one offense, I would find the double jeopardy application of the New Jersey court in State v. Yoskowitz, 116 N.J. 679, 563 A.2d 1 (1989) an alternative application of the elements on the evidence test to have most narrowly achieved a determinably consistent and essentially validated result. See likewise State v. Moore, 109 N.M. 119, 782 P.2d 91, 99, cert. denied 109 N.M. 54, 781 P.2d 782 (1989).

VII. CONCLUSION

In principle, I disagree with the majority because a presumptive concept is applied to produce an absurd result. In historical concern, I differ because, with the legitimate and liberal creation of new crimes in the recent past by legislative enactment, we now add offense multiplication for prosecution to eliminate completely the legislative principle of similar punishment for identical offenses. The attitude of anything goes as a principle of criminal law administration is unacceptable.22 The legislature by statute and not the prosecution by duplicate charges should establish the maximum punishment for criminal conduct. As a society, we should return to the basic understanding of our fundamental constitutional concepts. In this case, it is the preclusion of double jeopardy.

Consequently, for Duffy II, I again dissent.

. Without belaboring the obvious in this record, the young female public defender was then subjected to trial court "antipathy” if not outright hostility. That subject will not be pursued as not now presented within this W.R.Cr.P. 36 second sequence appeal.

. The sentence Duffy received "is not 'indeterminate,' facially, definitionally or functionally, as that term of art is used * * *.” People ex rel. Harris v. Sullivan, 74 N.Y.2d 305, 546 N.Y.S.2d 821, 545 N.E.2d 1209, 1211 (1989).

. I do not find from Dorman v. State, 665 P.2d 511 (Wyo.1983) countervailing authority since the Dorman sentence of ten to twelve years would fit within an indeterminate sentencing system and is within the ninety percent rule subsequently enacted. Duffy I is the first case found as decided after the enactment of the current good time statute, W.S. 7-13-420. See Duffy I, 730 P.2d 754, Urbigkit, J., dissenting, appendix. The statute and accompanying rules in place when Dorman was decided were entirely different from the modernized good time provisions enacted after the extended legislative battle resolved by passage of Wyo. Sess. Laws ch. 49 (1984) (previously W.S. 7-13-423) and effectuated by the present rules.

.Since my dissent in Duffy I was written, there seems to remain some misunderstanding of the practical effects of good time compared to special good time. Good time reduces the maximum sentence and provides benefit by earlier release without discretionary action by the parole board. Special good time lowers the minimum sentence only to give authority to the parole board as a matter of discretion for acceptance and consequent earlier release. At this date of writing, by last status report for July, August and September, 1989, 30.9 percent of the prisoners received full good time; 17.7 percent received partial good time; and 51.4 percent received no good time credit. There were 14.4 percent of the prisoners beyond minimum sentences and consequently received no special good time allocation since its award would make no difference with discretion vested in the parole board for release date until the maximum sentence was reached requiring service of the sentence flat time. Special good time pro*836vides only potential parole release and no actual reduced sentence. Good time, conversely, reduces the maximum sentence and establishes the alternate release date if no parole rights are granted.

.The only significant issue decided by the plurality decision of Duffy I (except trial court sentencing discretion) was immediately reversed by the legislative enactment to correct the judicial misunderstanding of the Wyoming indeterminate sentencing system. Nowack v. State, 774 P.2d 561 (Wyo.1989); Lauthern v. State, 769 P.2d 350 (Wyo.1989); Birr v. State, 744 P.2d 1117 (Wyo.1987); Missouri v. Hunter, 459 U.S. 359, 103 S.Ct. 673, 74 L.Ed.2d 535 (1983); Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299, 52 S.Ct. 180, 76 L.Ed. 306 (1932). If we ascribe to "legislative intent” some monolithic will, it is only fair that we explain “[wjhich historical people count as the legislators^] How are their intentions to be discovered? When these intentions differ somewhat from one to another, how are they to be combined in the overall, composite institutional intention?” R. Dworkin, Law's Empire 315-16 (1986).

The utility of assuming legislative intent is not honored by these historical events. Blockburger does not actually address legislative intent with any logical persuasion; it only differentiates stated events as different. It announces that if something is different in some way, in some way it is different. The thesis of the case does not foresee whether the difference is a way that would be to the composite thoughtfulness of the legislature found to be significant. Consequently, rather than funded in logic, it relates to an applied fiction for adjudicatory decision.

. See Keiter, An Essay on Wyoming Constitutional Interpretation, XXI Land & Water L. Rev. 527, 533 (1986). Federal concerns for standing are based on the "case” or “controversy” requirement imposed by the federal constitution, Hast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 88 S.Ct. 1942, 20 L.Ed.2d 947 (1968); Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 204, 82 S.Ct. 691, 703, 7 L.Ed.2d 663 (1962). The Wyoming constitution has no such "case” or “controversy" requirement. Yet this court may be adopting federal constitutional standing requirements without sufficient exploration, justification or explanation. Armijo v. State, 678 P.2d 864 (Wyo.1984); Cremer v. State Bd. of Control, 675 P.2d 250 (Wyo.1984); Alberts v. State, 642 P.2d 447 (Wyo.1982); Washakie County School Dist. No. One v. Herschler, 606 P.2d 310 (Wyo.), cert. denied 449 U.S. 824, 101 S.Ct. 86, 66 L.Ed.2d 28 (1980); Budd v. Bishop, 543 P.2d 368 (Wyo.1975). The term has a disturbing connotation. Ripeness conveys a concept of olfactory intervention. Does it have to smell to justify judicial examination?

. To the extent that the trial court determinant sentencing finitely attacked the good time statute, W.S. 7-13-420, another more pervasive problem of ripeness and standing is created for any future test of validity since special good time — which becomes the issue in a determi*837nant sentence — only invokes parole board discretion and not guaranteed release time and no mechanically computed release time will ever mature as a litigable issue. Consequently, a hypothetical or conjectural "opportunity" is the only subject which can actually be addressed in inquiry.

. Obviously, this will not happen and Duffy may be facing a maximum flat time exposure of most, if not all, of the thirty-five years. See n. 10, infra. Attempted escape is not helpful to accruing either category of good time.

. Other issues noteworthy include consideration of inadequate advice of the possibility of concurrent sentences at sentencing as required by W.R.Cr.P. 15 and ineffectiveness of counsel. Either Duffy or his counsel were incompetent or they did not understand what they faced under the circumstances of the obvious bent of the trial court. Otherwise, they would never have pleaded out where the opportunity for consecutive sentences would have existed, as it did. Undoubtedly, Duffy did not expect his sentence would be more severe than that of the actual perpetrator, Richard Sweaney. With every opportunity available in trial and no benefit to the plea unless a bargain was reached, justification for what was done is de minimis.

. The anomalies were not to end there. The young public defender, on October 31, 1987, *840married her client, this appellant. Thereafter, in August 1988, according to a newspaper article included within the file material, during an overnight conjugal visit with his wife, Duffy climbed the fence from the prison grounds only to be captured the same day with a sprained ankle and cut hand. No charges were apparently filed for the escape, but the incident will no doubt have a direct effect on attainment of both good time and special good time benefits for sentence reduction.

Whether or not related to the marriage of a felon to his public defender, this case is pervaded by questions of ineffectiveness of initial trial counsel and subsequent appellate counsel, including peremptory challenge of the initial judge, guilty plea for two offenses before the successor judge and later confined scope of initial appeal. See Murray v. State, 776 P.2d 206 (Wyo.1989); Kallas v. State, 776 P.2d 198 (Wyo.1989); and Amin v. State, 774 P.2d 597 (Wyo. 1989). To be compared are Whitney v. State, 745 P.2d 902 (Wyo.1987) and Price v. State, 716 P.2d 324 (Wyo.1986) followed by Cutbirth v. State, 751 P.2d 1257 (Wyo. 1988) with Duffy I and what will now be Duffy II.

. Multiplicity and double jeopardy have been differently defined, although in usage it is frequently hard to tell the difference in practical application. Multiplicity is a practice of charging the commission of an offense in several counts. United States v. Swaim, 757 F.2d 1530 (5th Cir.), cert. denied 474 U.S. 825, 106 S.Ct. 81, 88 L.Ed.2d 66 (1985); State v. Smith, 245 Kan. 381, 781 P.2d 666 (1989). It is stated that the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure were drafted to discourage this practice. United States v. Allied Chemical Corp., 420 F.Supp. 122 (E.D.Va. 1976). See F.R.Cr.P. 7(c) and notes of advisory committee. See also F.R.Cr.P. 9.

Double jeopardy, as a constitutional protection, serves both to deny'dual conviction and successive prosecution for essentially the same crime. Breed v. Iones, 421 U.S. 519, 95 S.Ct. 1779, 44 L.Ed.2d 346 (1975). A claim of double jeopardy is fundamental. Ashinsky v. State, 780 P.2d 201 (Okl.Cr.1989); Comment, Twice in Jeopardy, 75 Yale L.J. 262 (1965). "Merger” again differs in concept as addressing the major and minor crime involving the lesser included offense concept. Black’s Law Dictionary 891-92 (5th ed. 1979).

. This is, however, a Birr case and not confined to a Blockburger-Carter intent interpretation analysis.

. Clearly, Blockburger as well as Wharton’s Rule, Jannelli v. United States, 420 U.S. 770, 95 S.Ct. 1284, 43 L.Ed.2d 616 (1975); People v. Carter, 415 Mich. 558, 330 N.W.2d 314 (1982), which also tests multiplicity for conspiracy cases, are not double jeopardy concepts. Both address interpretation of legislative intent. Garrett v. United States, 471 U.S. 773, 105 S.Ct. 2407, 85 L.Ed.2d 764, reh’g denied 473 U.S. 927, 106 S.Ct. 20, 87 L.Ed.2d 698 (1985); Beam v. Foltz, 832 F.2d 1401 (6th Cir.1987), cert. denied 485 U.S. 980, 108 S.Ct. 1278, 99 L.Ed.2d 489 (1988).

The separate evidence rule has an extended history. See Morey v. Com., 108 Mass. (12 Browne) 433 (1871). It is how the interpretative tool is applied that double jeopardy in result is now invaded. Double jeopardy itself has a history that can be traced to Henry II in 1176. 1 F. Pollock & F. Maitland, The History of English Law 444-57 (2nd ed. 1898). See also Albernaz v. United States, 450 U.S. 333, 101 S.Ct. 1137, 67 L.Ed.2d 275 (1981) and Whalen v. United States, 445 U.S. 684, 100 S.Ct. 1432, 63 L.Ed.2d 715 (1980).

. The author in Comment, supra n. 11, 75 Yale LJ. at 299-300 (emphasis added and footnotes omitted) states:

The urge to punish cumulatively is not of recent birth. In 1305, when Edward I sat upon the throne of England, the notorious traitors William Wallace and David of Wales were punished. Wallace was “drawn for treason, hanged for robbery and homicide and disembowelled for sacrilege, beheaded as an outlaw and quartered for divers depredations. ” David enjoyed a similar fate.

Since the fourteenth century, courts have exercised considerably more self-restraint. See 2 F. Pollock & F. Maitland, supra, n. 13.

The double jeopardy protection is under constant attack in directed extension of prosecutorial opportunity and extended judicial discretion.

I am disinclined to withdraw from supporting maintenance of the double jeopardy barrier. I will also not accept the author’s comment that "today the rule is more commonly revered than understood” or his contention for my application that the "sea of exceptions” "are the characteristic signs of Doctrinal senility.” Comment, supra n. 11, 75 Yale LJ. at 263-64.

I do not ignore the attribution of waiver most currently addressed for double jeopardy under the United States Constitution in United States v. Broce, 488 U.S. 563, 109 S.Ct. 757, 102 L.Ed.2d 927 (1989). The issue was addressed in initial appeal, albeit by jurisdictional reference to this proceeding. I find that the Menna v. New York, 423 U.S. 61, 96 S.Ct. 241, 46 L.Ed.2d 195 (1975) and Blackledge v. Perry, 417 U.S. 21, 94 S.Ct. 2098, 40 L.Ed.2d 628 (1974) exceptions to the waiver rule can be applied. Additionally, at least for this present consideration, I am completely disinclined to apply the Broce double jeopardy waiver by plea adaptation to a constitutional protection provided in the Wyoming Constitution. In that context for our state constitution, I would follow what Justice Blackmun said in dissent:

A guilty plea, for all its practical importance in the day-to-day administration of justice, does not bestow on the Government any power to prosecute that it otherwise lacks.

Broce, 488 U.S. at -, 109 S.Ct. at 768, 102 L.Ed.2d at 945. See also a quotation from Short v. United States, 91 F.2d 614, 624 (4th Cir.1937) as repeated by Justice Blackmun in Broce, 488 U.S. at -, 109 S.Ct. at 769, 102 L.Ed.2d at 947:

"The constitutional provision against double jeopardy is a matter of substance and may not be thus nullified by the mere forms of criminal pleading.”

Justice Blackmun further related:

" ‘The Double Jeopardy Clause is not such a fragile guarantee that ... its limitations [can be avoided] by the simple expedient of dividing a single crime into a series of temporal or spatial units.’ ” Sanabria v United States, 437 US [54], at 72, 57 L Ed 2d 43, 98 S Ct 2170 [at 2183], quoting Brown v Ohio, 432 US 161, 169, 53 L Ed 2d 187, 97 S Ct 2221 [2227] (1977). As we pointed out in Braverman v United States, 317 US 49, 52, 87 L Ed 23, 63 S Ct 99 [101] (1942), there may be a “single continuing agreement to commit several offenses.” On the face of the two indictments, there was clear support for a claim that prosecuting the second indictment was barred by double jeopardy.

Broce, 488 U.S. at -, 109 S.Ct. at 771, 102 L.Ed.2d at 949.

Essentially, however, we do not have a Broce case since the facts and the events are estab-*842Iished in this record and re-reference for fact finding is not required. See, for reference, Stuntz, Waiving Rights in Criminal Procedure, 75 Va.L.Rev. 761 (1989).

. It is no wonder this country has by all degrees a greater percentage of penal incarcerations than any other civilized nation when we take one act to create two offenses for dual incarceration responsibility. This country surely has an adequate number of miscreants as well as the number of unsolved or inadequately prosecuted crimes that it does not need to scratch to find two crimes for the same offense.

. A double jeopardy search through Westlaw in all states elicits 14,346 case entries.

. We have a case presently pending in this court where the defense to a civil action against a prosecutor and probation officer, when they are charged with wrongful incarceration of an individual by perjured statement, is immunity. The observation made for denial of civil relief is that criminal prosecution may be the more appropriate answer. It is interesting to apply the Duffy II principle of amoeba division to multiply charges and determine all possible criminal complaints that could be made against the prosecutor where the principal offenses most appropriately are W.S. 6-5-107, official misconduct; W.S. 6-5-202, accessory after the fact; and W.S. 6-5-301, perjury. Additionally, at least theoretically, charges could be made of conspiracy to commit each offense and aiding and abetting the other participants in the commission of the offense. Consequently, the maximum term that might be faced by those public officials for a false arrest by perjured statement could total twenty-seven years confinement and a $39,000 fine. Cf. Howard v. State, 762 P.2d 28 (Wyo.1988). This would not include the opportunities for federal prosecution when a state official commits perjury and uses the mail for improper purpose or possibly what the more ingenious prosecutor might find if they chose as charges to file against the prosecutor for claimed criminal misconduct. Gamesmanship of multiplied charges is a genie which may not be easily rebottled.

. The explicit issue of these double jeopardy cases where the court reaches to approve the division of criminal behavior into separate crimes is whether the court should look at the evidence used or only the charges presented without considering the evidence of what happened. It is not clear that the same analysis is used in comparing cases of successive prosecution with those of duplicate concurrent charging. This difference has, in essential form, an ancient history which is sometimes stated as the elements test or the evidence test, State v. Yoskowitz, 116 N.J. 679, 563 A.2d 1 (1989); or the required evidence test compared to the alleged evidence test, Comment, supra, 75 Yale L.J. at 271 (citing King v. Vandercomb & Abbott, 2 Leach 707, 168 Eng.Rep. 455 (1796)) and compared with Morey, 108 Mass. (12 Browne) 433.

In New Jersey, the two tests are alternative and supplies protection to the defendant facing a second prosecution on the same facts. Block-burger is considered to provide the element test and the New Jersey court discerned that Illinois v. Vitale, 447 U.S. 410, 420, 100 S.Ct. 2260, 2267, 65 L.Ed.2d 228, 238 (1980) re-examined Block-burger to produce the evidence test. Accord Thomas, The Prohibition of Successive Prosecutions for the Same Offense: In Search of a Definition, 71 Iowa L. Rev. 323 (1986) and Comment, State v. DeLuca: Reinterpreting Double Jeopardy Protection Against Successive Prosecutions, 41 Rutgers L. Rev. 443 (1988). See likewise Hambrick v. State, 256 Ga. 148, 344 S.E.2d 639 (1986).

. “Nor shall any person be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense." Wyo. Const, art. 1, § 11. “[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; * * U.S. Const, amend. V.

. The Florida court in Carawan, 515 So.2d at 170 n. 8 (emphasis in original) said “our holding *851applies only to separate punishments arising from one act, not to one transaction. An act is a discrete event arising from a single criminal intent, whereas a transaction is a related series of acts."

. The court should judicially notice records of the meeting of the interim sessions of the legislative judiciary committee with the primary purpose in that adaptation-of the newer criminal code, Wyo. Sess. Laws ch. 171 (1983); Wyo. Sess. Laws ch. 75 (1982); to realistically relate offense of equal significance to have prosecuto-rial ranges within similar amounts. As a result, the only offenses for which a punishment in excess of twenty-five years is now provided is murder, W.S. 6-2-101, death or life; second degree murder, W.S. 6-2-104, twenty years to *854life; kidnapping with physical harm, W.S. 6-2-201, twenty years to life; and sexual assault in the first degree, W.S. 6-2-306, five to fifty years. In next level of punishment, aggravated robbery, W.S. 6-2-401 and aggravated burglary, W.S. 6-3-301, comprise the only sentences reaching the twenty-five year maximum. Clearly, the ingenuity of the prosecutors and the acceptance by the courts are more effective than was the prescience of the legislature in trying to develop a rational, yet realistic, sentencing system. A history for legislative intent interpretation can be developed from actual events, even with the minimal records maintained within the Wyoming legislative processes.

. A reason for alarm is that in the face of signs of negation once again “one can't avoid thinking that perhaps there is a sad parallel between [the post-Civil War period] and now: Is the curve of events, this time, to retrace that which followed the Civil War?"

******
If we do stand at the threshold of a time that “will usher in a new and savage struggle between freedom’s believers and its destroyers," the ultimate outcome may well depend on the response of the judiciaries of the states.

Brennan, The Fourteenth Amendment, 25 Trial 24, 28 (1989) (footnotes omitted and quoting The Fourteenth Amendment, Centennial Volume, at 112, 114 (B. Schwartz ed. 1970)).