14‐2428‐cr
United States v. Bert
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 ____________________
4
5 August Term, 2014
6
7 (Argued: April 27, 2015 Decided: September 10, 2015)
8
9 Docket No. 14‐2428‐cr
10
11 ____________________
12
13 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
14
15 Appellee,
16
17 v.
18
19 RAHEEM BERT, aka Raheen Linwood, aka Radio,
20
21 Defendant‐Appellant.
22
23 ____________________
24
25 Before: JACOBS, POOLER, and HALL, Circuit Judges.
26
27 Appeal from the judgment of the United States District Court for the
28 Eastern District of New York (Mauskopf, J.), convicting defendant Raheem Bert
29 of possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number, in violation of 18
1
1 U.S.C. § 922(k), and being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, in
2 violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The Speedy Trial Act was violated when the
3 district court allowed eleven months of unexcluded time to accumulate while
4 Bert remained in custody with his suppression motion under advisement.
5 Because we conclude that the district court abused its discretion by dismissing
6 Bert’s indictment without prejudice to his reprosecution, we reverse the district
7 court’s judgment and remand with instructions to vacate Bert’s conviction and
8 dismiss the indictment with prejudice.
9 Reversed and remanded.
10 Judge Jacobs dissents in a separate opinion.
11 ____________________
12 JAMES DARROW, New York, NY, for Defendant‐
13 Appellant Raheem Bert.
14
15 DOUGLAS M. PRAVADA, Assistant United States
16 Attorney (Amy Busa, Assistant United States Attorney,
17 on the brief), for Kelly T. Currie, acting United States
18 Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Brooklyn,
19 NY, for Appellee.
20
21
22
2
1 POOLER, Circuit Judge:
2 Defendant Raheem Bert appeals his conviction in the United States District
3 Court for the Eastern District of New York (Mauskopf, J.), after a jury found him
4 guilty of possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number, in violation of 18
5 U.S.C. § 922(k), and being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, in
6 violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The Speedy Trial Act was violated when the
7 district court allowed eleven months of unexcluded time to accumulate while
8 Bert remained in custody with his suppression motion under advisement. On
9 appeal, Bert argues that the district court abused its discretion by dismissing his
10 indictment without prejudice rather than with prejudice, thereby permitting his
11 reprosecution. Bert also claims the district court erred in finding no violation of
12 his Sixth Amendment speedy trial rights and in denying his motion to suppress.
13 For the reasons that follow, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment dismissing
14 the indictment without prejudice and do not reach Bert’s remaining arguments.
15 BACKGROUND
16 On January 19, 2012, Bert was arrested in the hallway outside his
17 girlfriend’s apartment at 55 Holland Avenue, a Staten Island building
18 participating in New York City’s Field Trespass Affidavit Program. Earlier that
3
1 evening, Officer John Fahim and Officer Besim Pelinku received a radio report
2 that five black males were trespassing at 55 Holland Avenue. Upon arriving at
3 the building, the officers encountered Bert, another black male, and a woman
4 standing and talking in the hallway of the 10th floor. After detaining the three
5 suspects pursuant to Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968), Officer Fahim observed that
6 Bert had a gun on his person. A struggle ensued between Officer Fahim and Bert,
7 during which Bert dropped the gun out of the 10th floor window. See United States
8 v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RRM), 2014 WL 358983, at *2‐3 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 3, 2014). The
9 officers subsequently arrested Bert, who has remained continuously detained
10 since that evening.
11 Bert appeared in New York state court the following day. On January 30,
12 2012, after his state charges were reduced, Bert was transferred to federal
13 custody. He first appeared in the Eastern District of New York on February 16,
14 2012, on a two‐count indictment charging him with possessing a firearm with an
15 obliterated serial number, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(k), and being a felon in
16 possession of a firearm and ammunition, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
17 By motion filed June 25, 2012, and supplemented by four additional
18 submissions over the next six months, Bert sought to suppress statements he
4
1 made to law enforcement on the evening following his arrest and during his
2 transfer to federal custody.1 Government witnesses testified that, during these
3 exchanges, Bert had boasted that he could not be prosecuted because the gun
4 recovered from outside the 10th floor window was not operable. In his
5 suppression motion, Bert argued that admitting these statements would violate
6 his rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments because they were the fruits
7 of his unlawful seizure, made in the absence of a Miranda warning, or not
8 preceded by a knowing and voluntary waiver of his Fifth Amendment rights.
9 The district court convened a one‐day suppression hearing on November 20,
10 2012. The transcript of that hearing was corrected, pursuant to the government’s
11 request, over the next two months.
12 On February 1, 2013—after the matter had been fully briefed and the
13 hearing transcript corrected—the district court took Bert’s suppression motion
14 under advisement. During the twelve months that followed, Bert remained in
15 prison, presumptively innocent, with no apparent activity in his case. The docket
16 sat idle until February 3, 2014, over a year later, when the district court denied
1
Bert also initially moved to suppress the gun, the gun’s magazine, and
Officer Fahim’s observations, but he withdrew this portion of his suppression
motion at an October 31, 2012 status conference. Bert, 2014 WL 358983, at *6.
5
1 Bert’s suppression motion in its entirety.
2 On February 20, 2014, Bert filed a motion to dismiss the indictment with
3 prejudice on the basis that he had not been brought to trial within the timeframe
4 required under the Speedy Trial Act, and alleging that the delay violated
5 his constitutional rights under the Sixth Amendment’s Speedy Trial clause. The
6 government conceded that the Speedy Trial Act had been violated, but argued
7 that the dismissal should be without prejudice, as authorized by 18 U.S.C.
8 § 3162(a)(1).
9 Ruling from the bench, the district court rejected Bert’s constitutional
10 argument, but concluded that the indictment must be dismissed pursuant to 18
11 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2), because the delay violated the Speedy Trial Act. After
12 “quickly tick[ing] through the factors in the statutory analysis,” the district court
13 found that “all of the factors tip[ped] in favor of the government’s position on
14 [the] motion.” It therefore ordered that the dismissal of the indictment be without
15 prejudice to Bert’s reprosecution.
16 That same day, the government re‐indicted Bert on identical charges. A
17 three‐day trial commenced on May 19, 2014, and the jury returned a verdict of
18 guilty on both counts. The district court then sentenced Bert principally to a term
6
1 of 120 months’ imprisonment, which he is currently serving.
2 Bert appealed, arguing that the district court abused its discretion by
3 dismissing the indictment without prejudice.2 For the reasons explained below,
4 we agree.
5 DISCUSSION
6 I. Violation
7 The Speedy Trial Act mandates that a criminal defendant must be brought
8 to trial within 70 days of the filing of the indictment or the defendant’s initial
9 appearance, whichever occurs later. See 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1). If that deadline is
10 not met, the Act provides that the indictment “shall be dismissed on motion of
11 the defendant.” 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2).
12 The Act excludes delays due to certain enumerated events from the 70‐day
13 indictment‐to‐trial period. See 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h). In this case, the parties agree
14 that the district court properly excluded the period of time from when the motion
2
Bert could not have immediately appealed the dismissal of the indictment
without prejudice because that judgment was neither a “final order” within the
meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291, nor a collateral order. Rather, a dismissal without
prejudice is a “step toward final disposition of the merits of the case [that] will . . .
be merged in [the] final judgment,” Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S.
541, 546 (1949), and therefore only became appealable after Bert was convicted
and sentenced.
7
1 was filed until it was taken under advisement, 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(D), as well
2 as the first thirty days that it was under advisement, 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(H). It
3 is similarly undisputed that the remaining eleven months that the motion was
4 pending were not excluded. Accordingly, the Act’s 70‐day indictment‐to‐trial
5 period (commonly referred to as the “speedy trial clock”) was exceeded by
6 approximately nine months.
7 In the year that Bert’s suppression motion remained under advisement,
8 several key dates passed with no activity in his case. Bert’s speedy trial clock
9 began to run on March 4, 2013, when the 30‐day advisement period ended. His
10 speedy trial clock expired 70 days later, on May 13, 2013. The district court’s
11 six‐month list came and went in September of 2013, still with no activity in Bert’s
12 case. It was not for another five months that the district court ultimately denied
13 the motion. At no point did the government alert the district court to any speedy
14 trial issues or propose excluding any of the time that accumulated in the interim.
15 Accordingly, neither party contests that a violation of the Speedy Trial Act
16 occurred. Nor do they question the statute’s unambiguous mandate that the court
17 was required to dismiss the indictment upon Bert’s motion. The only question
18 before us, therefore, is whether the district court abused its discretion in
8
1 permitting Bert’s reprosecution by dismissing the indictment without prejudice.
2 Bert argues that the district court failed to consider or properly weigh the 18
3 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2) factors in deciding that dismissal without prejudice was
4 warranted. He further contends that dismissal with prejudice is the only
5 appropriate remedy under the circumstances because the delay at issue here was
6 lengthy, the product of “administrative neglect,” United States v. Stayton, 791 F.2d
7 17, 22 (2d Cir. 1986), and presumptively prejudicial given that he remained
8 incarcerated while the motion was pending.
9 II. Remedy
10 It is well established that “Congress did not intend any particular type of
11 dismissal to serve as the presumptive remedy for a Speedy Trial Act violation.”
12 United States v. Taylor, 487 U.S. 326, 334 (1988); accord United States v. Caparella,
13 716 F.2d 976, 980 (2d Cir. 1983). Rather, “[t]he determination of whether to
14 dismiss an indictment with or without prejudice is committed to the discretion of
15 the district court.” United States v. Wilson, 11 F.3d 346, 352 (2d Cir. 1993).
16 The Act does, however, set out factors that a district court must consider in
17 choosing between the two remedies:
18
19 In determining whether to dismiss the case with or without prejudice, the
9
1 court shall consider, among others, each of the following factors: the
2 seriousness of the offense; the facts and circumstances of the case which
3 led to the dismissal; and the impact of a reprosecution on the
4 administration of this chapter and on the administration of justice.
5
6 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2). “In addition to these statutory factors, the Supreme Court
7 has indicated that prejudice to the defendant should also be considered.” Wilson,
8 11 F.3d at 352 (citing Taylor, 487 U.S. at 334)).
9 A district court is not free simply to exercise its equitable powers in
10 fashioning an appropriate remedy for a violation of the Speedy Trial Act, Taylor,
11 487 U.S. at 332–33, but “must carefully consider those factors as applied to the
12 particular case and, whatever its decision, clearly articulate their effect in order to
13 permit meaningful appellate review,” id. at 336. “To permit appropriate appellate
14 review, the district court should explicate as clearly as possible the bases for its
15 conclusions as to each factor.” United States v. Giambrone, 920 F.2d 176, 180 (2d
16 Cir. 1990). “Although the role of an appellate court is not to substitute its
17 judgment for that of the trial court,” the factors identified in the statute call for
18 “more substantive scrutiny” in order to determine “whether [the] district court
19 has ignored or slighted a factor that Congress has deemed pertinent to the choice
20 of remedy.” Taylor, 487 U.S. at 336–37. We will not lightly disturb “the district
10
1 court’s judgment of how opposing considerations balance,” as long as all “the
2 statutory factors are properly considered, and supporting factual findings are not
3 clearly in error.” Id. at 337.
4 The district court in this case appropriately identified all of the statutory
5 factors it was required to consider in determining whether the remedy for the
6 conceded Speedy Trial Act violation should be dismissal with or without
7 prejudice. We must therefore assess whether, in ruling that all factors tip in favor
8 of dismissal without prejudice, the court sufficiently considered each factor (i.e.,
9 did not “slight” any factor), and whether it reached its conclusion with respect to
10 each factor based on the application of sound legal authority to adequate factual
11 findings. See id. (“A judgment that must be arrived at by considering and
12 applying statutory criteria . . . constitutes the application of law to fact.”). As we
13 have noted on many occasions, “‘abuse of discretion’ is a distinctive term of art
14 that is not meant as a derogatory statement about the district judge whose
15 decision is found wanting. It is more properly understood as referring to
16 occasions where, after examining trial court records, an appellate court reaches
17 the informed judgment that a ruling is based on an erroneous view of the law or
18 on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence.” United States v. Park, 758 F.3d
11
1 193, 199–200 (2d Cir. 2014) (quotation marks omitted).
2 A. Seriousness of the Offense
3 In determining to dismiss the indictment without prejudice, the district
4 court found that the crime with which Bert was charged was “a very serious
5 offense” and “a violent crime.” It pointed to the lengthy period of incarceration
6 Bert potentially faced as well as the harm that he posed to others during his
7 encounter with the police. On appeal, Bert does not contest that the district court
8 correctly found that this first factor tips in favor of dismissal without prejudice.
9 But the seriousness of the crime must “be weighed against . . . the seriousness of
10 the delay,” Stayton, 791 F.2d at 21 (internal citation omitted), because “[w]here
11 the crime charged is serious, the sanction of dismissal with prejudice should
12 ordinarily be imposed only for serious delay,” United States v. Simmons, 786 F.2d
13 479, 485 (2d Cir. 1986).
14 B. Seriousness of the Violation
15 It is firmly established that the length of the delay, as “a measure of the
16 seriousness of the speedy trial violation,” Taylor, 487 U.S. at 340, is a critical
17 consideration when determining whether to dismiss an indictment with or
18 without prejudice. For example, when reversing a dismissal with prejudice in
12
1 United States v. Taylor, the Supreme Court faulted the district court for ignoring
2 “the brevity of the delay and the consequential lack of prejudice” to the
3 defendant who, by failing to appear, had caused the Act’s 70‐day
4 indictment‐to‐trial period to be exceeded by only 14 nonexcludable days. 487 U.S.
5 at 343. Echoing this concern, in United States v. Hernandez, this Court held that
6 dismissal with prejudice would not be warranted where the Act’s 30‐day
7 arrest‐to‐indictment period was exceeded by 14 nonexcludable days after the
8 defendant, who was out on bond, had absconded. 863 F.2d 239, 240 (2d Cir.
9 1988). We reasoned that permitting reprosecution would be appropriate because
10 “[t]he offense was concededly serious, the delay was concededly short, there was
11 no evidence of bad faith or a pattern of neglect, and the defendant failed to
12 demonstrate any prejudice from the delay.” Id. at 244. By contrast, in United States
13 v. Stayton, we ordered dismissal with prejudice largely based on the “dominating
14 consideration” of “the sheer length” of the 23‐month delay between voir dire and
15 trial, concluding that “the enormity of the delay [was] sufficient alone to tip [the]
16 second factor in favor of dismissal of the indictment with prejudice.” 791 F.2d at
17 22–23.
18 The district court in this case acknowledged “the length of time that the
13
1 Court took ultimately to decide the motion to suppress,” describing it as
2 “lengthy.” Special App’x at 29. The court’s discussion of the length of the delay
3 went no further, however. It did not include, for example, a calculation or
4 acknowledgment of the actual time that the motion remained under advisement,
5 any evaluation of the severity of this delay or how this “lengthy” period of time
6 compared to delays in other cases, nor did it address whether this factor weighs
7 in favor of dismissal with or without prejudice.3 We conclude, therefore, that the
8 seriousness of the violation was “slighted” and not “properly considered,”
9 Taylor, 487 U.S. at 337, and we proceed to a fuller examination.
10 At the time the district court issued its ruling, Bert’s motion had been
11 under advisement for over a year, and Bert’s speedy trial clock had been expired
12 for 266 days (almost 9 months). It is beyond cavil that this delay—which amounts
13 to almost nine times the period of time automatically excluded for the resolution
14 of such motions, see 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(H), and almost four times the length of
15 the speedy trial clock itself, see 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1)—is serious. Indeed, the cases
3
In discussing prejudice to the defendant, the district court acknowledged
the length of the violation while factoring Bert’s silence during the nine‐month
period after his speedy trial clock expired against him. See Special App’x (“But,
again here, there was no complaint by the defendant for the nine months that we
are talking about . . .”).
14
1 in which this Court has held in favor of dismissal without prejudice have
2 uniformly involved substantially shorter periods of delay. See, e.g., Wilson, 11
3 F.3d at 352 (affirming dismissal without prejudice where defendants had
4 consented to continuances, which were belatedly executed, leading to “at most
5 forty‐two days” of unexcused delay in filing indictments); United States v. Wells,
6 893 F.2d 535, 539–40 (2d Cir. 1990) (reversing dismissal with prejudice where “the
7 district court failed to consider whether the 32‐day delay in indictment . . . caused
8 any prejudice to Wells,” who had failed to appear while out on bond, and had
9 “not complained of any prejudice whatsoever”); Simmons, 786 F.2d at 485
10 (ordering dismissal without prejudice for delay between indictment and trial of
11 “almost four months, a significant portion [of which] was excludable”); United
12 States v. Kiszewski, 877 F.2d 210, 214 (2d Cir. 1989) (recognizing that delay was
13 “certainly not minor” where the 70‐day indictment‐to‐trial period may have been
14 exceeded by as many as 130 days, but finding this fact alone did not necessitate
15 dismissal with prejudice because “the bulk of the delay was apparently caused
16 by unusual circumstances concerning a conflict of interest on the part of
17 defendant’s prior attorney,” and leaving open the possibility that a “similar delay
18 might weigh more heavily in another case”). The length of the delay in this case
15
1 renders this a serious violation of the Speedy Trial Act, see Taylor, 487 U.S. at 340,
2 and militates in favor of dismissal with prejudice.
3 C. Facts and Circumstances Leading to Dismissal
4 As to the facts and circumstances leading to the delay, the court stated:
5 It was the court that caused the delay. There was no bad faith by the
6 government. If anything, the government didn’t press forward and ask for
7 the interest of justice exclusion, but their failure to do so was not . . . gross
8 neglect or [a] pattern of neglect or an attempt to circumvent the Speedy
9 Trial Act to gain some benefit for the government or to flout the standards
10 and the requirements of the Speedy Trial Act. On the Court’s part, there
11 was no attempt . . . to manipulate the speedy trial clock.
12
13 Special App’x at 30. After discussing several other factors, the court returned to
14 the reason for delay, stating:
15 I have already discussed the facts and circumstances of how the delay
16 occurred. Here, too, there is no bad faith on the part of the government.
17 This was not a pattern of delay on the part of the government. There [were]
18 no intentional acts on the part of the government to delay this case. Again,
19 the Court takes the weight, if you will, for the delay here. Again, there was
20 no intention on the Court to somehow circumvent, manipulate or
21 otherwise intentionally or in bad faith delay this action.
22
23 Special App’x at 32–33.
24 The district court’s discussion of the reason for the delay is premised
25 implicitly on two erroneous interpretations of the governing legal standards:
26 first, that the absence of bad faith, intentional delay, or some other form of
16
1 heightened scienter is dispositive of this statutory factor; second, that a delay
2 attributable to the court and not to the government tips this factor in favor of
3 dismissal without prejudice. Both of these premises are contrary to governing
4 precedent.
5 The sanction of dismissal with prejudice does not always require a finding
6 of “evil motive.” Caparella, 716 F.2d at 980. On the contrary, this statutory factor
7 may tip in favor of dismissal with prejudice in situations where the delay is
8 attributable to mere “administrative neglect” or clerical oversight. Stayton, 791
9 F.2d at 22; see also Taylor, 487 U.S. at 338 (“We do not dispute that a truly
10 neglectful attitude on the part of the Government reasonably could be factored
11 against it in a court’s consideration of this issue . . .”). As the Supreme Court has
12 explained in the context of a Sixth Amendment speedy trial challenge,
13 “[a]lthough negligence is obviously to be weighed more lightly than a deliberate
14 intent to harm the accused’s defense, it still falls on the wrong side of the divide
15 between acceptable and unacceptable reasons for delaying a criminal prosecution
16 once it has begun.” Doggett v. United States, 505 U.S. 647, 657 (1992).
17 We have held that negligent conduct by the court or the government,
18 “renders the second factor [(reason for the delay)] neutral, at best” where the
17
1 “delay [is] not overly long” and there has been no showing of prejudice.
2 Simmons, 786 F.2d at 486. But see Caparella, 716 F.2d at 980 (“[G]iven the
3 government’s negligent conduct, . . . we conclude that the second factor militates
4 in favor of dismissal with prejudice.”). The Supreme Court has likewise
5 instructed that, in the absence of prejudice or significant delay, courts should
6 only preclude reprosecution of a serious crime upon a showing of “something
7 more than an isolated unwitting violation,” such as a finding of “bad faith” or a
8 “pattern of neglect.” Taylor, 487 U.S. at 339. But where the delay is indisputably
9 grave and not a result of the defendant’s own conduct, Taylor, 487 U.S. at 343,
10 dismissal with prejudice may be appropriate without such a finding, see United
11 States v. Russo, 741 F.2d 1264, 1268 (11th Cir. 1984) (“[W]here the violation is
12 substantial, a negligent failure to comply with the Act will not suffice to justify
13 retrial.”). A rule that limited the sanction of dismissal with prejudice exclusively
14 to cases involving bad faith would contravene the well‐established principle that
15 “[t]he Speedy Trial Act does not indicate a preference as between dismissals with
16 and dismissals without prejudice.” Giambrone, 920 F.2d at 180 (citing Taylor, 487
17 U.S. at 334).
18 Also mistaken is the assumption that the second statutory factor tips in
18
1 favor of dismissal without prejudice whenever a speedy trial violation is caused
2 by the court and not the government. To the contrary, the Speedy Trial Act “is as
3 much aimed at the delay caused by judicial congestion and mismanagement as it
4 is aimed at the deliberate stalling of counsel.” United States v. Pringle, 751 F.2d
5 419, 429 (1st Cir. 1984)). “‘The Act controls the conduct of the parties and the
6 court itself during criminal pretrial proceedings. Not only must the court police
7 the behavior of the prosecutor and the defense counsel, it must also police itself.’”
8 Stayton, 791 F.2d at 20 (quoting Pringle, 751 F.2d at 429); see also United States v.
9 Moss, 217 F.3d 426, 432 (6th Cir. 2000) (“[T]he purposes of the Act would be
10 thwarted if courts do not adjust their day‐to‐day procedures to comply with its
11 requirements”); United States v. Ramirez, 973 F.2d 36, 39 (1st Cir. 1992) (“When a
12 STA violation is caused by the court or the prosecutor, it weighs in favor of
13 granting a dismissal with prejudice.”). District courts must hold themselves
14 accountable for ensuring their own compliance with the Speedy Trial Act’s
15 requirements. A district court may not merely assume responsibility for a speedy
16 trial violation, deny an improper motive, and weigh this statutory factor in favor
17 of dismissal without prejudice without offering further explanation.
18 We do not doubt that the violation here was caused by a simple
19
1 administrative oversight at one of the busiest and most productive district courts
2 in the country, and we proceed under that assumption. On this record, however,
3 assume is all that we can do, and our deference to the district court’s analysis of
4 this factor is limited because it made no factual findings supporting its
5 conclusions.4 The district court did not, for instance, provide any insight into the
6 reasons for the “lengthy period of time” it concededly took in deciding the
7 motion, other than to disavow any bad faith. On the record before us and in the
8 absence of factual findings by the district court, the actual cause for the serious
9 delay in resolving this relatively routine motion to suppress remains opaque.
10 Several of our sister circuits have recognized that dismissal with prejudice
11 may serve as an appropriate remedy under analogous circumstances involving a
12 district court’s administrative neglect. For instance, in United States v. Moss, the
13 Sixth Circuit reversed a district court’s dismissal without prejudice where the
14 defendant’s suppression motion had remained under advisement for
4
The district court did comment that “there had been the need to correct
the transcript as well as the need to address the motion itself.” Special App’x at
30. We do not assign any weight to this explanation because it reflects apparent
confusion as to the timeline of this prosecution. The hearing transcript was
corrected before the district court took the suppression motion under
advisement. This task, therefore, could not have occupied any of the subsequent
year that elapsed before the district court issued its decision.
20
1 approximately ten months without explanation. 217 F.3d at 431. In United States
2 v. Russo, the Eleventh Circuit similarly ordered dismissal with prejudice where
3 several months of unexcluded time accumulated while defendant’s pretrial
4 motion remained under advisement. 741 F.2d at 1267. And in United States v.
5 Ramirez, the First Circuit affirmed a dismissal with prejudice where defendants’
6 pretrial motions remained under advisement for 81 days, despite the fact that
7 “[n]othing unusual occurred in th[e] case. The district court merely lost track of
8 the STA deadline, in the midst of attending to its many other cases.” 973 F.2d at
9 38.
10 Of course, we accept the district court’s finding that neither the
11 government nor the court acted out of any nefarious or underhanded motive.
12 Bad faith, however, is not a prerequisite to ordering dismissal with prejudice. We
13 commend the district court’s honest and unequivocal acceptance of responsibility
14 for the delay. But the mere fact that a speedy trial violation is attributable to the
15 court and not the government does not expunge that violation, nor does it
16 automatically render the violation any less serious. Neither the record nor the
17 district court’s ruling provides us with any explanation for the court’s serious
18 delay in ruling on a motion that does not appear to present any novel legal
21
1 questions or distinct factual complexity. In light of the seriousness of the Speedy
2 Trial Act violation in this case, the absence of any explanation beyond mere
3 administrative neglect weighs in favor of dismissal with prejudice.
4 D. Prejudice to Defendant
5 “‘Although the absence of prejudice [to the defendant] is not dispositive,’ it
6 can be ‘another consideration in favor of permitting reprosecution.’” Wells, 893
7 F.2d at 540 (quoting Taylor, 487 U.S. at 341). The length of the delay has a bearing
8 on the issue of prejudice: “The longer the delay, the greater the presumptive or
9 actual prejudice to the defendant, in terms of his ability to prepare for trial or the
10 restrictions on his liberty.” Taylor, 487 U.S. at 340.
11 The district court concluded, and Bert concedes, that he did not suffer any
12 actual prejudice in his ability to mount a defense at trial, but that is not the only
13 type of prejudice that is relevant to this inquiry:
14 Inordinate delay between public charge and trial, wholly aside from
15 possible prejudice to a defense on the merits, may seriously interfere
16 with the defendant’s liberty, whether he is free on bail or not, and
17 may disrupt his employment, drain his financial resources, curtail
18 his associations, subject him to public obloquy, and create anxiety in
19 him, his family and his friends.
20
21 Taylor, 487 U.S. at 340–41 (internal alterations and quotation marks omitted).
22
1 The district court alluded to this brand of prejudice when it asserted that
2 the court was not “minimizing the incarceration to the defendant,” Special App’x
3 at 33, but then proceeded to discount the likelihood that Bert suffered any
4 prejudice in light of his failure promptly to alert the court after his speedy trial
5 clock had expired. Pointing to United States v. Siembida, No. 05‐cr‐366 (PKC), 2007
6 WL 4267192 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 3, 2007), an unpublished district court memorandum
7 and order, the court here suggested “that where the defendant does not come
8 forward and assert his rights he is more interested in a dismissal of his case than
9 vindicating his rights under the Speedy Trial Act.” Special App’x at 34. We
10 conclude that the district court’s cursory discussion of non‐trial prejudice was
11 insufficient. See Moss, 217 F.3d at 431–32 (holding that the district court erred by
12 neglecting to address any non‐trial prejudice suffered by the defendant,
13 including the impact of his incarceration on his life circumstances).
14 It is well established that a criminal defendant has “no obligation to take
15 affirmative steps to insure that [he will] be tried in a timely manner.” United
16 States v. Tunnessen, 763 F.2d 74, 79 (2d Cir. 1985). It is the court and the
17 government that bear the affirmative obligation of insuring the speedy
18 prosecution of criminal charges. United States v. Vasquez, 918 F.2d 329, 336 (2d Cir.
23
1 1990). A criminal defendant can only waive his speedy trial rights by failing to
2 invoke them before trial or plea. See 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2); see also United States v.
3 Gambino, 59 F.3d 353, 360 (2d Cir. 1995) (“The legislative history of the Act
4 confirms the importance of the non‐waiver rule.”). Thus, while the district court
5 was entitled to construe Bert’s delay in noticing the violation as evidence that he
6 did not suffer actual prejudice, this fact was not fatal to his claim, nor should it
7 have been the end of the court’s inquiry into prejudice. See Stayton, 791 F.2d at 22
8 (declining to decide “whether, and if so, how seriously” the 23‐month delay
9 prejudiced the defendant, where “the enormity of the delay is sufficient alone to
10 tip this second factor in favor of dismissal of the indictment with prejudice”). The
11 district court gave insufficient consideration to the issue of non‐trial prejudice
12 when it concluded that by failing to speak up, Bert—who was incarcerated
13 during the entire one‐year period during which his motion was
14 pending—evinced a lack of such prejudice. The sheer length of the delay at issue
15 here was presumptively prejudicial, see Doggett, 505 U.S. at 652 n.1, particularly
16 because Bert remained incarcerated throughout the time the docket sat idle.
17
24
1 E. Impact of Reprosecution on the Administration of the Act and on
2 the Administration of Justice
3
4 Analyzing the impact of reprosecution on the administration of the Speedy
5 Trial Act, the district court summarily concluded “the fact that the government
6 will have to reindict here served as a deterrent, particularly here where there is
7 no bad faith or intentional conduct or pattern on the part of the government” and
8 Bert’s crime is serious. Special App’x at 33. Again, the district court’s findings are
9 inadequate to satisfy our “more substantive scrutiny.” Taylor, 487 U.S. at 337.
10 It is beyond question that “[d]ismissal without prejudice is not a toothless
11 sanction.” Taylor, 487 U.S. at 342. But it is equally doubtless that the sanction of
12 dismissal with prejudice has more bite. See id. (“It is self‐evident that dismissal
13 with prejudice always sends a stronger message than dismissal without
14 prejudice, and is more likely to induce salutary changes in procedures, reducing
15 pretrial delays.”). Although the less severe sanction “imposes some costs on the
16 prosecution and the court,” Zedner v. United States, 547 U.S. 489, 499 (2006), “the
17 prosecutor may of course seek—and in the great majority of cases will be able to
18 obtain—a new indictment,” id.; see also 18 U.S.C. § 3288 (providing that even if
19 “the period prescribed by the applicable statute of limitations has expired, a new
25
1 indictment may be returned . . . within six calendar months of the date of the
2 dismissal”). Consequently, “if the government suffers only dismissals without
3 prejudice on motion of the defendant, it in effect gains successive 70‐day periods
4 in which to bring the defendant to trial.” Giambrone, 920 F.2d at 180.
5 The Act’s purpose of expeditiously bringing criminal cases to trial would
6 not be served by assuring those charged with this responsibility that they need
7 not fear the more severe sanction—no matter how egregious the violation—as
8 long as they refrain from intentional efforts to circumvent the Act. The burden on
9 courts and prosecutors of reindicting a defendant is, at a minimum, not
10 substantially more onerous than the routine business of ensuring vigilant
11 compliance. Accordingly, “the knowledge that a violation could potentially result
12 in [dismissal with prejudice] gives the prosecution a powerful incentive to be
13 careful about compliance,” Zedner 547 U.S. at 499, which would be absent under
14 a regime requiring a showing of bad faith. Preserving the threat of dismissal with
15 prejudice in cases of administrative neglect also furthers the Act’s purpose by
16 incentivizing courts to police their own dockets. “While not all violations of the
17 Speedy Trial Act warrant a dismissal with prejudice, the purposes of the Act
18 would be thwarted if courts do not adjust their day‐to‐day procedures to comply
26
1 with its requirements.” Moss, 217 F.3d at 432.
2 Furthermore, under a regime that limited the more severe sanction
3 exclusively to cases of intentional misconduct, criminal defendants would have
4 little incentive to alert the court to administrative oversights that held no
5 conceivable promise of precluding reprosecution. See Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S.
6 514, 521 (1972) (noting “[d]elay is not an uncommon defense tactic”); accord
7 Caparella, 716 F.2d at 981 (“[A] defendant might find it advantageous to play a
8 waiting game hoping, for example, that government witnesses may disappear or
9 become forgetful.”). The complacency of criminal defendants would not,
10 however, further the purposes of the Act, which “serves not only to protect
11 defendants, but also to vindicate the public interest in the swift administration of
12 justice.” Bloate v. United States, 559 U.S. 196, 211 (2010).
13 “[T]here is a societal interest in providing a speedy trial which exists
14 separate from, and at times in opposition to, the interests of the accused.” Barker,
15 407 U.S. at 519. The Act’s demand that justice be swiftly administered serves the
16 public interest by, among other things, avoiding extended pretrial delays, which
17 may “impair[ ] the deterrent effect of punishment,” Zedner, 547 U.S. at 501, or
18 “risk the loss of important evidence,” Giambrone, 920 F.2d at 181. “Whenever [a
27
1 prosecution]—for whatever reasons—falls short of meeting the Act’s
2 requirements, the administration of justice is adversely affected.” Ramirez, 973
3 F.2d at 39. “Certainly, the public is the loser when a criminal trial is not
4 prosecuted expeditiously, as suggested by the aphorism, ‘justice delayed is
5 justice denied.’” Gambino, 59 F.3d at 360.
6 It is also clear that the administration of justice—and certainly of the
7 Act—would be well served by whatever actions the court may need to undertake
8 in order to avoid future speedy trial violations. In light of the fact that the district
9 court did not acknowledge or explain the administrative neglect that we assume
10 caused the delay, we cannot determine the likelihood of repeated violations, and
11 we lack any indication of potential administrative changes this violation should
12 have prompted.
13 Up to this point in our analysis we have focused on the district court’s role
14 in permitting the speedy trial violation in this case. We have done so largely
15 because the court fell on the sword by finding that it, and not the government,
16 was to blame. While we do not disturb the court’s finding, we cannot adequately
17 address this final factor of the statutory analysis without shifting the spotlight
18 back to the government.
28
1 Even though prosecutors do not “bear the burden of monitoring the court’s
2 compliance with the [Act] in absence of an announced rule, district courts do
3 look to prosecutors for assistance as officers of the court.” Ramirez, 973 F.2d at 39.
4 As a nation, we demand a great deal from our United States District Courts and
5 the judges who are called to serve on them. District courts in this Circuit and
6 across the country shoulder heavy and complex caseloads—the Eastern District
7 of New York more so than most.5 Given the myriad of administrative demands
5
The Administrative Office of the United States Courts publishes Federal
Court Management Statistics on an annual basis. These statistics reveal that the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (“E.D.N.Y.”) has
one of the busiest dockets not only in this Circuit, but among all 94 district courts
in the nation. The data covering the 12‐month period ending on March 31, 2014
(which encompasses the majority of the period of delay in this case), reveals the
following: The E.D.N.Y. was ranked second in this Circuit and eleventh
nationally with respect to percent change in total filings over the previous year.
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES COURTS, FEDERAL COURT
MANAGEMENT STATISTICS OF THE DISTRICT COURTS (March 2014). The E.D.N.Y.
ranked second in this Circuit and twenty‐second nationally with respect to total
filings per active judgeship (and first in this Circuit and thirteenth nationally in
civil filings). The amount of time and attention the court must devote to these
filings varies greatly, however, and in terms of weighted filings per active
judgeship, the E.D.N.Y. outpaced all other districts in this Circuit, and ranked
eighth nationally. The 2014 statistics also reveal that the E.D.N.Y. had 838
pending cases per active judgeship, placing second in this Circuit and seventh
nationally. Despite this workload, the E.D.N.Y. terminated 515 cases per active
judgeship, placing it second in this Circuit and thirty‐eighth nationally. The pace
of judicial life in that district has not slowed down in the time since it ruled on
Bert’s motion to suppress, ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES COURTS,
29
1 that accompany these tasks, and in light of the government’s “affirmative
2 obligation to insure the speedy prosecution of criminal charges,” Vasquez, 918
3 F.2d at 336, we agree—emphatically—that “it is wise for prosecutors to be alert to
4 [Speedy Trial Act] calculations in order to aid the court in its enforcement” of that
5 Act, Ramirez, 973 F.2d at 39. Once a motion has been taken under advisement the
6 government may not simply wash its hands of any further involvement and be
7 assured the benefit of dismissal without prejudice in the event that the Speedy
8 Trial Act is violated due to the court’s administrative neglect. Although the
9 government is not required to monitor and notify the court of impending and
10 expired speedy trial deadlines, any such action on the part of the government is
11 properly taken into consideration when evaluating “the facts and circumstances
12 of the case which led to the dismissal,” 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2), and may weigh in
13 favor of dismissal without prejudice.
14 In this case, the government did not notify the court that the speedy trial
15 deadline was approaching or had passed. It took no action whatsoever in this
16 case during the year in which Bert’s motion was under advisement. Cf. Stayton,
FEDERAL COURT MANAGEMENT STATISTICS OF THE DISTRICT COURTS (March 2015),
and that court is presently operating with three of its fifteen seats vacant.
30
1 791 F.2d at 18 (“During this [sixteen month delay], the assistant United States
2 attorneys on the case sent seven reminder letters to the court and went so far as
3 to make a motion for a decision on this and several other pending pretrial
4 motions.”).
5 Given the extended administrative neglect by the court and the
6 government in allowing the case to stagnate for almost a year while Bert was
7 incarcerated, we conclude that the government’s interest in administering justice
8 by prosecuting Bert’s firearms offenses is outweighed by the impact that
9 permitting reprosecution would have on the administration of justice and of the
10 Speedy Trial Act.
11 * * *
12 As determined above, the district court did not adequately consider several
13 of the statutory factors relevant to its choice of remedy under the Act, to wit: the
14 seriousness of the Speedy Trial Act violation as measured by length of the delay,
15 the facts and circumstances that led to the need for dismissal, nontrial prejudice
16 suffered by the defendant, and the impact of reprosecution on the administration
17 of the Act and on the administration of justice. Its ruling was also premised on a
18 mistaken interpretation of governing law. Accordingly, the determination to
31
1 order dismissal of Bert’s indictment without prejudice constituted an abuse of
2 discretion.
3 The district court’s conclusion that all of the factors tipped in favor of
4 dismissal without prejudice was also flawed. As the district court recognized,
5 Bert was charged with a serious crime, there was no bad faith on the part of the
6 court or the government, and no claim of trial prejudice. Regardless, the Speedy
7 Trial Act violation was grave, unjustified by what we assume was mere
8 administrative neglect, and presumptively prejudicial to the incarcerated
9 defendant. Barring reprosecution in this case will have a more positive and
10 substantial impact upon the administration of justice—and most certainly on
11 improved administration of the Speedy Trial Act—than would permitting the
12 prosecution to proceed. We conclude, therefore, that Bert’s conviction should be
13 reversed and the indictment against him dismissed with prejudice. Because of
14 our disposition of this issue, it is unnecessary to address the other arguments Bert
15 asserts in this appeal.
16
32
1 CONCLUSION
2 For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed,
3 and the case is remanded with instructions to vacate Bert’s conviction and
4 dismiss the indictment with prejudice.
5
33
DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
The majority opinion recites the applicable standards and rules; and if they
were followed, I would sign the opinion of the Court. Then again, it would come
out the other way.
The only issue presented is whether the district court had discretion to
dismiss this case under the Speedy Trial Act (as it did) without prejudice. The
delay was occasioned by a one‐year interval in which the district court
considered a suppression motion that was complicated, ramified, and virtually
outcome‐determinative.
As the majority opinion recites, the decision to dismiss with prejudice (or
without) was confided by Congress to the discretion of the district court. This
Court lacks power to substitute our own judgment (even if ours were superior).
See Maj. Op. at 9‐10. Since the seriousness of the crime is one salient
consideration, it matters that the majority undoes police work that resulted in the
conviction of a felon who had been using drugs, possessed a firearm with an
obliterated serial number, was carrying it in the hallway of a residential building,
and tossed the gun from the hallway window to land (and possibly go off) in a
courtyard where residents had a right to be.
There are several first principles:
(1) As between dismissal with prejudice and without, “neither remedy
[is to be] given priority,” United States v. Taylor, 487 U.S. 326, 335
(1988);
(2) “[d]ismissal without prejudice is not a toothless sanction,” id. at 342;
and
(3) “dismissal of a criminal indictment is a drastic remedy which should
not be lightly considered,” United States v. Fox, 788 F.2d 905, 909 (2d
Cir. 1986).
In light of those principles and the district court’s discretion, the relevant
considerations militate so strongly against dismissal with prejudice that I can see
no basis for revisiting the district court’s ruling‐‐let alone for reversal. In a
nutshell, the majority opinion does a bad job of weighing the relevant factors
(which it should not be doing in the first place), unfairly criticizes the United
States Attorney’s Office to create the spurious impression of institutional
breakdown, and relies on circumstances that fail to distinguish this case from
those that are dismissed without prejudice.
2
I
Two officers responded to a report made by the security guard of a
residential building, and encountered on arrival two men in the lobby who
admitted they did not live in the building, and who were directed to leave. The
security guard told the officers that more trespassers were on the tenth and
twelfth floors. In the tenth floor hallway, the officers saw Bert and two others,
who claimed that they were visiting a friend in Apartment 10L. The resident of
10L disclaimed knowledge of the group (or did not answer) until Bert told her:
“Tell them you know me,” which she did. Disbelieving the response that Bert
had prompted and observing Bert pacing back‐and‐forth with his body turned
away from the officers, one of the officers drew his gun and asked to see Bert’s
hands. The other officer saw Bert adjust his sweatshirt, revealing a gun, and
remove the gun from his waistband as he moved toward the open hallway
window. He moved to handcuff Bert. When Bert began to struggle, a magazine
released from the gun fell to the floor, and the gun hit the window and fell to the
ground outside, where it was recovered by the police officers.
En route to the precinct, Bert (who was not Mirandized) began singing
songs and asking after his gun. One of the officers in the police car asked Bert
3
what gun he was talking about; Bert did not respond and went back to singing.
Later, Bert said he would reveal where other guns were if he were released.
After being given warnings at the precinct, Bert inquired as to whether the
gun was still operable, observing that he could not be charged with possessing a
loaded firearm because the magazine had been ejected, and that the firearm
probably could not be found to be in working order because he had thrown it out
a tenth‐floor window. A bit later, Bert predicted that he would beat the case
because the firearm was inoperable. Eventually, he was charged with being a
felon in possession of a firearm and with possession of a firearm with an
obliterated serial number.1 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), (k).
On June 25, 2012, Bert filed his suppression motion. The district court’s
resolution of that motion caused the delay that violated the Speedy Trial Act.
The motion, never simple, became increasingly complex as the government
responded to the motion, Bert supplemented his arguments, six witnesses
testified at the hearing, and post‐hearing submissions proliferated. See infra
1
Bert’s prior felony convictions were for Tampering with a Witness in the
Second Degree, Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Third
Degree‐‐Narcotic Drug with Intent to Sell, and Criminal Possession of a Weapon
in the Third Degree. See Gov’t Opp’n to Mot. to Dismiss on Speedy Trial at 1 n.1,
United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 17, 2014).
4
pages 12‐14.
One year after the close of these proceedings, concerning a score of
contentious issues, the district court denied the suppression motion in a 24‐page
opinion. The court ruled that the “police had the requisite level of suspicion of
wrongdoing at all times, and that their actions were therefore reasonable under
the circumstances,” United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐001 (RRM), 2014 WL 358983,
at *6 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 3, 2014); “there was no Fourth Amendment violation with
respect to the encounter” in the hallway, id. at *9; none of Bert’s statements were
fruit of unconstitutional conduct, id.; Bert’s statements en route to the precinct
were voluntary and initiated by Bert, id.; and Bert understood his Miranda rights
when he waived them, id. at *10. The district court made further and additional
findings with respect to other contentions by Bert and responsive arguments
advanced by the prosecution.
After the suppression motion was denied, Bert moved to dismiss with
prejudice, citing his statutory and constitutional rights to a speedy trial. Def.
Mot. to Dismiss on Speedy Trial, United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM)
(E.D.N.Y. Feb. 21, 2014). The statutory speedy trial clock began to run on
March 4, 2013, 30 days after the last brief was filed on the suppression motion.
5
See 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(D), (H). Because Bert was not brought to trial within 70
days thereafter, the government conceded a statutory violation, see id.
§ 3161(c)(1), but argued there had been no constitutional violation and that
dismissal under the Act should be without prejudice to reprosecution.
The district court found no constitutional violation and dismissed without
prejudice. After reindictment, a three‐day jury trial resulted in a conviction on
both counts, and Bert was sentenced principally to ten years’ imprisonment.
II
In deciding between dismissal with prejudice and without, the district
court must consider statutory factors: seriousness of the offense; the facts and
circumstances that led to dismissal; and the impact on the administration of the
Act and on the administration of justice. 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2). The court must
also consider the length of the delay, Taylor, 487 U.S. at 340; Maj. Op. at 12‐13,
and the prejudice to the defendant, United States v. Wilson, 11 F.3d 346, 352 (2d
Cir. 1993).
These guides to discretion overlap considerably in this case. The district
court’s opinion fully justifies its exercise of discretion in favor of dismissal
6
without prejudice.
A
As to the seriousness of the offense, the majority concedes (as it must) that
an offense involving a firearm with an obliterated serial number, carried in a
residential hallway, is serious indeed. The majority opinion treats this issue in a
perfunctory way as uncontested; but the district court’s opinion explains its
ruling in appropriate and compelling detail:
It is a violent crime. The defendant possessed a loaded and defaced
firearm. He’s a felon in possession of a firearm . . . . The defendant is
facing a ten‐year and a five‐year statutory maximum on each count.
The government calculates his guidelines as a level 28. The
defendant is in criminal history category number four, based on
three prior arrests, including a prior arrest for possession of a
weapon. The defendant faces a lengthy period of incarceration here
and, in addition to this just being a straight possession case, as the
evidence at the suppression hearing showed, the defendant didn’t
behave passively during the encounter that led to his arrest. He
tried to secret the gun or get rid of the gun, through a window, and
in doing so struggled with the arresting officer, putting himself, the
officer and the bystanders in harm’s way.
Special App. at 31‐32.
7
B
As to the facts and circumstances of the speedy trial violation, the length of
the delay is important. The district court itself acknowledged that “[i]t was the
Court that caused the delay,” and “concede[d]” that the delay was “lengthy.”
Special App. at 29‐30.
The majority opinion treats the twelve‐month delay as decisive in itself.
But the cases on which the opinion relies (Maj. Op. at 14‐15) offer no support, as
demonstrated in the margin.2
2
To the contrary, three cases relied on by the majority emphasize the
district court’s discretion, and the role of the district court in weighing all the
relevant factors in arriving at its determination (which the district court did here).
See United States v. Wilson 11 F.3d 346, 352‐53 (2d Cir. 1993); United States v.
Wells, 893 F.2d 535, 538‐40 (2d Cir. 1990); United States v. Kiszewski, 877 F.2d
210, 213 (2d Cir. 1989). In United States v. Simmons, 786 F.2d 479, 485‐86 (2d Cir.
1986), this Court weighed the factors only because the district court had not had
the occasion to conduct its own analysis, having found no violation of the Act.
Moreover, in each of these cases, this Court found that dismissal without
prejudice was appropriate, and/or deferred to the district court’s determination.
See, e.g., id. at 485 (“[W]e note that there is no presumption in favor of dismissal
with prejudice in this circuit.” (citing United States v. Caparella, 716 F.2d 976, 979
(2d Cir. 1983))).
While Wilson, Wells, and Simmons ruled that the brevity of delay weighed
in favor of dismissal without prejudice, none of those cases can be construed to
hold that some longer delay would end the inquiry and compel the opposite
result. And in Kieszewski, we affirmed the district court’s dismissal without
prejudice despite a “not minor” delay, because of the salience of the other
8
“[I]n the absence of a factually supported finding of bad faith or a pattern
of neglect by the local United States Attorney, an ‘isolated unwitting violation’ of
the Speedy Trial Act cannot support a decision to dismiss with prejudice.”
United States v. Hernandez, 863 F.2d 239, 244 (2d Cir. 1988) (quoting Taylor, 487
U.S. at 339); see also United States v. Wells, 893 F.2d 535, 539 (2d Cir. 1990)
(same). There is no issue of bad faith in this case. All that happened is that a trial
judge in one of the busiest courts in the nation failed to make an easily justifiable
finding that the delay needed to decide a complex and ramified suppression
motion was in the interest of justice. Nor is there anything to suggest that the
local United States Attorney’s Office has engaged in a pattern of neglect or a
“demonstrably lackadaisical attitude.” United States v. Giambrone, 920 F.2d 176,
180 (2d Cir. 1990). The district court specifically found to the contrary‐‐that the
failure to seek exclusion of time pending decision of the suppression motion was
“not . . . part of [a pattern of] gross neglect or . . . an attempt to circumvent the
Speedy Trial Act to gain some benefit for the government or to flout the
standards and requirements of the Speedy Trial Act.” Special App at 30.
relevant factors, including the seriousness of the offense, the failure of the
defendant to present evidence of prejudice, and the inadvertence of the violation.
877 F.2d at 214‐15.
9
Although it was hardly necessary, the district court also disclaimed any attempt
on its part to manipulate the clock. Id.
The majority opinion is not to the contrary. It adduces some out‐of‐Circuit
cases that discussed only the period of delay, from which the majority draws a
shaky inference that the length of delay is all that matters. See Maj. Op. at 20‐21.
But the majority does not discuss how the other factors cut, such as the absence of
bad faith or a pattern of neglect. What we have here is the “isolated unwitting
violation” referenced in Taylor. One swallow does not a summer make.
C
As to prejudice, Bert claims none; and the majority falls back upon the
presumption that prejudice comes with delay. However, since prejudice is
assumed in every case of delay, the presumption does not usefully distinguish
between cases that should be dismissed with prejudice, or without. The majority
concedes that the “district court was entitled to construe Bert’s delay in noticing
the violation as evidence that he did not suffer actual prejudice.” Maj. Op. at 24.
The absence of actual prejudice militates against a windfall for Bert by way of
dismissal with prejudice.
10
D
The interest of justice is surely disserved by the release onto the streets and
hallways of Staten Island of a man who has now twice been convicted of firearms
violations. So much for getting guns off the streets.
As to the interest in enforcement of the Speedy Trial Act, the majority’s
impulsive gift of dismissal with prejudice (in the absence of bad faith or abuse)
can only subvert public respect for the Act.
I agree with the majority that the Act serves important ends and must be
enforced, and that it is integral to the administration of justice. But the majority
implicitly assumes that the Act is disserved or impaired unless dismissal is with
prejudice; and that assumption violates the background principles that dismissal
without prejudice is not toothless, that the Act embodies no preference as to
whether dismissal should be with prejudice or without, and that the choice is
confided to the discretion of the district court.
III
Among other errors in the majority opinion, it casts the twelve‐month
delay as egregious by discounting the suppression motion as one “that does not
11
appear to present any novel legal questions or distinct factual complexity.” Maj.
Op. at 21‐22. That observation is rebutted by the following (compressed)
procedural account.
Bert moved to suppress the gun, the ammunition, and his post‐arrest
statements on the grounds that the officers lacked a basis for stopping him and
that the weapon and statements were fruit of the poisonous tree. See Def. Mot. to
Suppress at 5, United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. June 25,
2012). He also argued that his Miranda waiver was not knowing and voluntary
because he had been high on angel dust. Id. at 7.
The government opposition argued that the police had the minimal level of
objective justification required to establish reasonable suspicion to stop Bert, and
that Bert “initialed . . . a written Miranda form [indicating] that he understood
each of those rights” and “gave no indication that he did not understand those
rights nor that he was so high that he could not understand those rights.” Gov’t
Opp’n to Mot. to Suppress at 3, 9‐10, United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM)
(E.D.N.Y. July 13, 2012). Furthermore, “[w]hen he was questioned following his
Miranda waiver, he gave specific and detailed answers that were appropriate to
the questions that were asked.” Id. When the defendant was taken into federal
12
custody nearly two weeks after his arrest, he again waived his Miranda rights in
writing.3 Id. at 4.
Bert reasserted his arguments on reply, Def. Reply Br., United States v.
Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. July 23, 2012), and made a supplemental
submission arguing (inter alia) that his “case was federalized in order to secure
[his] cooperation with ongoing state investigations,” so that his statements to
federal agents were “the product of exploitation of the illegality of the initial
stop.” Def. Suppl. Submission in Supp. of Mot. to Suppress at 3, United States v.
Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. Aug. 16, 2012) (internal quotation marks and
alterations omitted).
At the suppression hearing held November 20, 2012, the government
adduced testimony from three police officers (including the arresting officers), a
detective, and a special agent. The defense called an investigator with the
Federal Defenders’ Office. The parties filed numerous post‐hearing submissions.
See Def. Post‐Hr’g Mem., United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y.
3
A further argument by the government was that Bert failed to show the
requisite possessory interest in the firearm and ammunition. Gov’t Opp’n to
Mot. to Suppress at 5, United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. July
13, 2012).
13
Dec. 13, 2012); Gov’t Post‐Hr’g Mem., United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM)
(E.D.N.Y. Dec. 13, 2012); Def. Post‐Hr’g Mem. Reply, United States v. Bert, No.
12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. Dec. 19, 2012); Def. Suppl. Post‐Hr’g Mem., United
States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. Jan. 25, 2013); Gov’t Post‐Hr’g
Mem. Reply, United States v. Bert, No. 12‐CR‐100 (RJM) (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 1, 2013).
By my count, the district court’s opinion on the suppression motion
decides a dozen issues of fact and law, and applications of law to fact‐‐issues
arising out of several ambiguous encounters: one in the hallway, one in the squad
car, one at the precinct, another in the squad car, and one in the Pretrial Services
office of the federal courthouse. See generally United States v. Bert, 2014 WL
358983, at *2‐6. The district court’s 24‐page opinion resolves the myriad issues in
a taut and businesslike way. The delay in deciding that motion violates the
Speedy Trial Act, but cannot be said to embarrass the district court.
* * *
In short, the delay was an isolated instance; there was no bad faith or
pattern of delay or misconduct by the prosecutors, or by the judge, or by the
court as a whole; and, under the circumstances, no incentive for abuse can be
identified, let alone be said to arise, such that the administration of justice and the
14
Act requires dismissal with prejudice when the district court has found
otherwise.
15