Legal Research AI

United States v. Ecker

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1996-03-08
Citations: 78 F.3d 726
Copy Citations
8 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                United States Court of Appeals
                            United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                For the First Circuit
                                         

No. 95-1898

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

         JOHN LEONARD ECKER, A/K/A LEONARD HOFFECKER,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                

                                         

                            Before

                     Selya, Circuit Judge,
                                                     
                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        
                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

Robert D. Richman, Assistant Federal Public Defender  (Minnesota),
                             
with  whom   Scott  F.  Tilsen,  Assistant   Federal  Public  Defender
                                      
(Minnesota),   and   Owen   S.   Walker,   Federal   Public   Defender
                                               
(Massachusetts), were on brief for appellant.
Mary Elizabeth  Carmody,  Assistant United  States Attorney,  with
                                   
whom  Donald  K.  Stern, United  States  Attorney,  was  on brief  for
                               
appellee.

                                         

                        March 8, 1996
                                         


          STAHL, Circuit Judge.  Appellant John L. Ecker asks
                      STAHL, Circuit Judge.
                                          

us  to rule that the  federal indictment against  him must be

dismissed  because he  has  been found  incompetent to  stand

trial and, having been found dangerous, has been indefinitely

committed  to federal  custody.   The  district court  denied

Ecker's  motion to  dismiss the  indictment.   Ecker appeals.

Because neither the relevant statutes nor caselaw require the

dismissal of the indictment, we affirm.

                              I.
                                          I.
                                            

                          BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND
                                                

          In   November  1989,  Ecker  was  indicted  in  the

District of  Massachusetts for possession  of a firearm  by a

felon in violation  of 18 U.S.C.   922(g).   Ecker has  prior

convictions for  assault with  a weapon, arson,  breaking and

entering, and burglary, and is therefore subject to the Armed

Career  Criminal Act,  18 U.S.C.    924(e); if  convicted, he

faces  a  mandatory minimum  prison  term  of fifteen  years.

After federal authorities  found that Ecker's  mental illness

rendered him incompetent to stand trial  and dangerous to the

public, he  was  committed to  the  custody of  the  Attorney

General  for hospitalization  under 18  U.S.C.    4246.   Now

Ecker seeks to dismiss the indictment charging him as a felon

in possession.

A.  Ecker's History in Federal Psychiatric Facilities
                                                                 

                             -2-
                                          2


          Ecker's history in  federal psychiatric  facilities

is  long and twisted;  full detail is  unnecessary to resolve

the  issue before  us, so  we summarize.   From  January 1990

through March  1993,  federal  authorities,  pursuant  to  18

U.S.C.   4241(d), conducted  seven competency evaluations  of

Ecker.  After five of these, Ecker was found incompetent, and

on  two occasions he was found competent.  Authorities at one

point reported that  Ecker "displayed excellent knowledge  of

the federal mental health statutes," and concerns were raised

that  his  mental  health  problems were  of  a  questionable

nature.     In  March  1993,  federal  authorities  concluded

"finally"  that Ecker was not competent for trial and that it

was unlikely  that he  would  regain competency  in the  near

future.

          The United States  District Court for the  District

of Massachusetts, where the  indictment was (and is) pending,

determined that there was no likelihood of  trial and ordered

the Federal  Medical Center  in  Rochester, Minnesota  ("FMC-

Rochester"),  to  determine  if   Ecker  was  dangerous   and

therefore subject to indefinite  commitment under 18 U.S.C.  

4246.     The  director  of  FMC-Rochester   did  find  Ecker

dangerous, and the United States Attorney for the District of

Minnesota  accordingly  instituted commitment  proceedings in

the  United  States  District   Court  for  the  District  of

Minnesota.   In  October 1993,  the Minnesota  district court

                             -3-
                                          3


ordered  Ecker  committed  to  the custody  of  the  Attorney

General  under section 4246, and the Court of Appeals for the

Eighth Circuit  affirmed.   United States  v. Ecker,  30 F.3d
                                                               

966, 971 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 679 (1994).
                                             

          In October  1994, the staff at  the Federal Medical

Center  in  Springfield, Missouri  ("FMC-Springfield"), where

Ecker  is currently  in custody,  filed an  annual  report of

Ecker's mental condition as required by 18  U.S.C.   4247(e).

The report  stated that Ecker  was "generally able  to answer

the  panel's  questions in  a  logical,  coherent, and  goal-

directed manner."  It went on, however, to conclude that "Mr.

Ecker  is  currently a  substantial  risk  to others  or  the

property  of  others  due  to  mental  illness."    The civil

commitment  statute,  18  U.S.C.     4246,  requires  Federal

authorities   to   place  Ecker   in  an   appropriate  state

institution  in his home  state, Massachusetts,  if possible.

Officials  at  FMC-Springfield,   however,  determined   that

Massachusetts would  not accept Ecker in  a state institution

because of the  pendency of  the federal  indictment.   Thus,

Ecker remains hospitalized at FMC-Springfield.

B.  The District Court Order on Ecker's Motion to Dismiss
                                                                     

          In the district  court, Ecker advanced two  grounds

for dismissal  of the indictment.   First, he  contended that

the statute under which  he was committed, 18 U.S.C.    4246,

requires,  upon commitment, dismissal of pending charges upon

                             -4-
                                          4


commitment.  Second,  he asserted  that the  pendency of  the

indictment interfered  with his purported right  to be placed

in a state institution, depriving Ecker of his constitutional

right to due process.  

          The district court denied Ecker's motion to dismiss

the indictment,  holding that the commitment  statute did not

require dismissal  of the indictment, finding  no support for

Ecker's  statutory  argument in  the statute's  language, its

legislative history,  or in caselaw.  The court also rejected

Ecker's due  process argument, concluding  that "the  statute

cannot be fairly read to confer a liberty interest, protected

by  the  Due Process  Clause of  the  Fifth Amendment  of the

United  States Constitution,  in being  committed to  a state

institution rather  than a `suitable facility'  chosen by the

Attorney General."

C.  Ecker's Appeal
                              

          Ecker  appeals the  district court's  order denying

his  motion to  dismiss  the indictment,  advancing only  the

statutory argument that  18 U.S.C.     4241 and 4246  require

dismissal.   Ecker has  abandoned the argument  he made below

that the pendency of the  indictment violates his due process

rights.   See United States v.  Zannino, 895 F.2d 1,  17 (1st
                                                   

Cir.)  (arguments  not  raised  squarely  are waived),  cert.
                                                                         

denied, 494 U.S. 1082 (1990).
                  

                             -5-
                                          5


                             II.
                                         II.
                                            

                          DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION
                                                

          A  district court's  resolution  of a  question  of

statutory  interpretation  engenders de  novo  review in  the
                                                         

court  of appeals.  Riva v. Massachusetts, 61 F.3d 1003, 1007
                                                     

(1st Cir. 1995).

          Ecker, at  the outset, concedes that  "[n]either 18

U.S.C.   42411 nor  18 U.S.C.   42462 addresses  what happens

                    
                                

1.  Section  4241  provides  procedures for  evaluation  of a
defendant's competency  to stand trial.   If the  court finds
the  defendant incompetent  after an  psychiatric examination
and a hearing, the court commits the defendant to the custody
of  the   Attorney  General.    The   Attorney  General  then
hospitalizes  the  defendant  for   up  to  four  months  "to
determine whether there is  a substantial probability that in
the foreseeable future he will attain the  capacity to permit
the  trial  to  proceed."    The  Attorney  General  may also
hospitalize the defendant for an "additional reasonable time"
beyond  four   months  if  the  court   finds  a  substantial
probability  that  competency  will  be  regained.    If  the
defendant  remains  incompetent  at  the end  of  those  time
periods,  the  defendant   is  subject   to  commitment   for
dangerousness  under  18 U.S.C.     4246.   If  not committed
thereunder, the defendant is released.  
          Section 4241 makes no  reference to the pendency or
dismissal of the indictment.

2.  Section   4246   provides   for   the    commitment   and
hospitalization  of  a dangerous  person  "whose  sentence is
about to expire,  or who has been committed to the custody of
the Attorney  General pursuant to section  4241(d) [i.e., due
to incompetency to stand trial], or against whom all criminal
charges have been dismissed solely for reasons related to the
mental  condition  of the  person."    Upon certification  of
dangerousness by  the director of the  hospital facility, the
court  conducts a hearing, and shall commit to the custody of
the Attorney General a  person "suffering from mental disease
or  defect as a  result of which  his release  would create a
substantial  risk  of  bodily  injury to  another  person  or
serious damage to  property of another."  Such  commitment is
of indefinite  duration, but  the Attorney General  must make

                             -6-
                                          6


to a pending indictment when a  defendant is determined under

section  4241 to be incompetent to stand trial and is subject

to indefinite  civil commitment  under section 4246."3   That

concession  is  virtually dispositive  of  Ecker's appeal  --

there  is nothing  in  the statute's  language that  requires

dismissal of a pending indictment.  The statutory  silence is

not surprising.   Congress, we have little doubt, intended to

leave the  decision about the disposition  of pending charges

to the case-by-case discretion of the prosecutors.

A.  Ecker's Arguments
                                 

          Although  conceding  that  the  statute  is silent,

Ecker  argues that  the structure  of the  relevant statutes,

their  legislative  history,  and   the  caselaw  compel  the

conclusion that  Congress intended to require  dismissal of a

pending indictment upon commitment.  We disagree, and address

each of  Ecker's arguments  in turn,  explaining why we  find

them unpersuasive.

                    
                                

reasonable  efforts place the person in  the custody and care
of the state in which the person is domiciled.
          Although  section  4246  recognizes  that  criminal
charges  may  be  dismissed  because  of  a  person's  mental
illness, there  is  nothing in  the language  of the  statute
requiring such dismissal.

3.  Nor do the statutes address the  pendency or dismissal of
an  indictment of  a  defendant  found long-term  incompetent
under  section 4241,  but not  found dangerous  under section
4246.

                             -7-
                                          7


          First, Ecker asserts that section 4246 applies only
                      

to individuals "who no longer realistically can be considered

to be awaiting  trial because there is  little possibility of

their  regaining  competency,"   quoting  United  States   v.
                                                                    

Charters, 829 F.2d  479, 485 (4th Cir.  1987) (not addressing
                    

dismissal  of  indictment), reh'g,  863  F.2d  302 (4th  Cir.
                                             

1988),  cert.  denied, 494  U.S.  1016  (1990).    From  that
                                 

premise, Ecker concludes that "Congress plainly intended that

the liberty of such a person would be  restricted only by the

requirements  of  section  4246,  not  as  a  result  of  the

continued pendency of an indictment."

          That argument  is unconvincing.  Ecker's liberty is

not restricted by the pendency of the indictment, but  rather

by section 4246 (which  authorizes his hospitalization).  The

only  effect  that  the  pending indictment  has  on  Ecker's

"liberty"  results  from  a  Massachusetts  state policy4  of

refusing  to accept  mentally ill  federal detainees  who are

subject to a pending federal indictment.  We fail to see  how

that  state policy, or its effect on Ecker, can indicate that

Congress intended  section 4246  to require dismissal  of any

pending indictment.

                    
                                

4.  The  record  and  the  parties' briefs  do  not  indicate
whether this "policy" is based on statute, regulation, or the
discretion  of state  officials.   The  district judge  below
assumed, without so finding,  that state officials refused to
accept Ecker, but the court based that assumption "on hearsay
and not on competent evidence."

                             -8-
                                          8


          Ecker's  second  argument  is  that   there  is  no

statutory mechanism to revisit the issue of competency once a

defendant  is  committed  as  dangerous  under  section 4246.

While recognizing that  section 4247 requires  annual reports

on the "mental condition" of a person committed under section

4246, he asserts that  such reports address dangerousness and
                                                                     

not  competency to  stand trial.   That  argument  finds some
                           

support  in the October  1994 annual  report on  Ecker, which

concluded that he was  still dangerous without addressing his

competency for trial on the pending indictment.  Ecker argues

that nothing in this  statutory scheme suggests that Congress

envisioned further competency determinations once a defendant

is indefinitely  committed as  dangerous under  section 4246.

This "unexplained gap," he  contends, indicates that Congress

must  have  intended  that  a  pending  indictment  would  be

dismissed  once   a   defendant  has   been   committed   for

dangerousness.

          We  agree  that  the  statute  does  not  expressly

address the  reevaluation of trial competency  of a defendant

committed as dangerous under section 4246.  The statute does,

however, provide for annual  reports by the facility director

"concerning the mental condition of the person and containing

recommendations    for   the    need   for    his   continued

hospitalization."   18  U.S.C.    4247(e)(1)(B).   This broad

requirement of a report on "mental condition" would seemingly

                             -9-
                                          9


allow the facility  director to  report to the  court that  a

defendant has regained competency.   Moreover, a defendant or

his  counsel may bring any relevant change in condition, or a

request  for  release, to  the  court's  attention through  a

motion for a hearing under section 4247(h).

          In  any  event,  it is  far  too  great  a leap  to

conclude  from this  asserted  shortcoming  in the  statutory

scheme that Congress intended to  require the dismissal of  a

pending indictment  once a  defendant has been  committed for

dangerousness.  Congress could plausibly have expected that a

prosecutor bent  on trying  a committed person  would file  a

motion   under  section   4241  for   a  new   evaluation  of

competency.5   On the other hand, the asserted "gap" might be

the result of simple oversight  or poor draftsmanship, due in

part,  perhaps,  to  an  expectation  that  prosecutors  will

usually  exercise their  discretion  to  dismiss  indictments

against persons committed under section 4246.  An appropriate

judicial response  to this statutory shortcoming  would be to

order further competency reevaluations if requested by either

the  government  or  a  defendant,  rather  than  a  judicial

rewriting  of   the  statute  to  require   dismissal  of  an

indictment that the prosecutor seeks to preserve.

                    
                                

5.  Section  4241 provides  in  relevant part:  "At any  time
after the commencement  of a prosecution  for an offense  and
prior to  the sentencing of  the defendant, the  defendant or
the  attorney  for the  Government may  file  a motion  for a
hearing to determine the mental competency of the defendant."

                             -10-
                                          10


          The  third  argument  advanced  by  Ecker  is  more

difficult to  decipher than  the preceding two.   He  asserts

that section  4246 was "clearly  designed" to deal  only with

persons  about  to  be  released from  the  federal  criminal

justice  system, and  therefore Congress  must  have intended

that  charges be dropped when a  defendant is committed under

section  4246.   Ecker  demonstrates this  "clear design"  by

pointing out  that  two of  the three  categories of  persons

covered  by section  4246 (those  whose sentence is  about to

expire and those against whom all charges have been dismissed

because  of   mental  illness)  are  no   longer  subject  to

punishment and  would be released  but for the  provisions of

section 4246.  Then  Ecker states that "it would  be strange,

indeed, to  include in the same  statute, without explanation

or separate  procedures, a group  of people still  subject to

indictment and trial."  It is more plausible, he argues, that

those defendants  subject to  section 4246 after  being found

incompetent  under section  4241  "would also  be subject  to

release due to the dismissal of the charges."  

          While  it is  perhaps  odd that  the statute  lacks

express  procedures  for  reevaluating the  competency  of  a

person  committed under  section 4246, it  would be  far more

"strange"   for  Congress  to   have  intended   a  statutory

requirement that an indictment be dismissed automatically  on

commitment,   yet  never  mention  that  requirement  in  the

                             -11-
                                          11


statute.   Again, all that  Ecker has done  is point  to some

ambiguities  in certain procedural  aspects of  section 4246,

and  then  attempt to  bootstrap  those  ambiguities into  an

implied   requirement  that  a  pending  indictment  must  be

dismissedwhenever thatstatute isinvoked. We arenot persuaded.

          As further support for  his third argument (that it

would  be  "strange" if  the  statute  did  not  require  the

dismissal  of  an  indictment),   Ecker  directs  us  to  the

statute's legislative history.  We are reluctant to take that

direction,  because a  court  "should resort  to  legislative

history . . . [only] when the words of a statute give rise to

ambiguity   or    when   they   lead   to   an   unreasonable

interpretation."   United States v. O'Neil, 11  F.3d 292, 297
                                                      

(1st Cir.  1993).  The words of the statutes at issue here do

neither.   In  an  abundance  of caution,  however,  we  have

reviewed  the legislative history cited  by Ecker and find it

to  contain  nothing  that  would lead  us  to  conclude that

Congress intended  the statute to require,  sub silentio, the
                                                                    

dismissal of pending charges.   See S. Rep. 225,  98th Cong.,
                                               

2d Sess.  (1984), reprinted in 1984  U.S.C.C.A.N. 3182, 3404-
                                          

36.   As the Supreme Court remarked in construing the federal

civil commitment statute  that preceded  the current  section

4246,  "this is a case for applying the canon of construction

of  the  wag  who  said,  when  the  legislative  history  is

                             -12-
                                          12


doubtful, go to  the statute."   Greenwood v. United  States,
                                                                        

350 U.S. 366, 374 (1956).

          As a fourth argument, and  as support for the first

three,  Ecker  quotes the  Eighth  Circuit's  opinion in  his

earlier  appeal  of his  commitment.    In rejecting  Ecker's

argument that it was unreasonable to hold him for nearly four

years before  committing him  under section 4246,  the Eighth

Circuit stated that: "At all times, Ecker remained subject to

criminal process calling for  a mandatory minimum sentence of

fifteen years imprisonment.   He remained subject to possible
                                                                         

trial  until the final judicial determination of incompetency
                                                                         

on April 16, 1993."  Ecker, 30 F.3d at  969 (emphasis added).
                                      

The  Eighth  Circuit, however,  was  not  concerned with  the

dismissal or validity of the indictment after Ecker's section

4246  commitment; the  issue  it faced  was  the duration  of

Ecker's  detention  for  determination  of  competency  under

section 4241, and whether that lengthy confinement  was a due

process  violation.   The  Eighth Circuit  had  no reason  to

consider whether  the indictment  remained valid after  Ecker

was  committed under  section 4246;  if the  quoted statement

addresses that question at all, it is mere dictum.

          Finally Ecker points out that  the executive branch

of the federal government is in a "peculiar position" because

section  4246  requires the  Attorney  General  to "make  all

reasonable efforts"  to place  Ecker in a  state institution,

                             -13-
                                          13


but the United States Attorney in Massachusetts is preventing

that  placement by not  dropping the indictment.   Ecker adds

that  "the continued  validity  of the  indictment interferes

with defendant's  statutory right to state  placement."  This

argument invites a number of  obvious rejoinders.  First, the

government  has  the  discretion  to  solve  the  dilemma  by

dismissing the charges.  Second, the Attorney General is only

required to make "reasonable efforts" to place Ecker in state

care.  The Massachusetts  policy denying placement of persons

under federal  indictment prevents Ecker's  placement, and we

would  not  conclude  (nor  does  Ecker  argue)  that  it  is

"unreasonable" not to drop the charges in order to facilitate

placement.   Third, while the  statute imposes a  duty on the

Attorney General to attempt to place Ecker with the state, we

do not conclude that it endows Ecker with a "right"  to state

placement.

          None of  Ecker's  statutory arguments  persuade  us

that Congress  intended sections 4241 and 4246 to require sub
                                                                         

silentio the dismissal of a pending indictment.
                    

B.  Caselaw
                       

          Our conclusion  is not  altered by our  analysis of

the few  relevant cases.  The district  court's order denying

Ecker's motion  to dismiss the indictment  is consistent with

the Supreme  Court's decision in Greenwood  v. United States,
                                                                        

350 U.S. 366 (1956).  The Court in Greenwood stated that "the
                                                        

                             -14-
                                          14


pending  indictment  persists" even  after the  defendant has

been  found  unlikely  to  recover competency  and  has  been

committed as dangerous.  Id. at 375.
                                        

          Although   Greenwood  was  not  decided  under  the
                                          

current  statutory scheme,  we  believe that  the holding  is

equally  valid under the new scheme.  The prior statutes were

strikingly  similar  to  the   current  ones.    The  primary

difference  relevant to this  appeal is  that the  old scheme

authorized detention  of an incompetent  indefinitely, "until

the accused shall be mentally competent to stand trial."  Law

of  Sept. 7,  1949,  ch. 535,    4246,  63  Stat. 686  (1949)

(current version at 18  U.S.C.   4246).  The  present statute

authorizes  detention of  an incompetent  defendant only  for

four months,  and then for  an additional reasonable  time if

there  is  a  substantial  possibility that  he  will  regain

competency.  This limitation  on the detention of incompetent

defendants was dictated by Jackson v. Indiana,  406 U.S. 715,
                                                         

738 (1972), which  struck down Indiana's  statute authorizing

indefinite commitment  of incompetent defendants who were not

dangerous as violative of due process.  See S. Rep. 225, 98th
                                                       

Cong., 2d Sess. (1984),  reprinted in 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3182,
                                                 

3418.   Thus, under the new scheme,  an incompetent defendant

must be released  after four months if  recovery is unlikely,

18 U.S.C.   4241(d), or else committed indefinitely  if found

dangerous,  18 U.S.C.     4246.   We  see nothing  about  the

                             -15-
                                          15


statutory changes  required by Jackson v.  Indiana,6 406 U.S.
                                                              

at  738, nor any other  change in the  statutory scheme, that

casts  doubt  on  Greenwood's  holding  that  the  indictment
                                       

survives  commitment, 350 U.S. at 375.  Nor does the pendency

of the  indictment beyond Ecker's commitment offend Jackson's
                                                                       

mandate  that a  permanently  incompetent  defendant must  be

released or else civilly committed.  See Jackson, 406 U.S. at
                                                            

738.

          Ecker attempts to advance his cause by misleadingly

quoting  a  recent  Ninth Circuit  case:  "The  fact that  an

indictment is  no  longer  in  place  is  irrelevant  to  the

governmental interests at stake:  `the control and  treatment

of  dangerous persons  within  the  federal criminal  justice

system who are  incompetent to stand trial.'"   United States
                                                                         

v. Sahhar, 56 F.3d  1026, 1029 (9th Cir.), cert.  denied, 116
                                                                    

S. Ct.  400  (1995).   Ecker  argues  that  the  governmental

interests  in his case, as in Sahhar, are fully vindicated by
                                                

                    
                                

6.  The Court stated in  Jackson v. Indiana that "[d]ismissal
                                                       
of charges  against an  incompetent accused has  usually been
thought  to be  justified on  grounds not  squarely presented
here: particularly, the Sixth-Fourteenth Amendment right to a
speedy  trial,  or the  denial  of  due  process inherent  in
holding pending  criminal charges indefinitely over  the head
of one who will never have a chance to  prove his innocence."
406  U.S. at 740 (citing  as support only  one state decision
and two federal district court decisions).  The Jackson Court
                                                                   
did  not reach  the issue  of dismissal of  charges, however.
Id.    Ecker has  not advanced  either  of these  grounds for
               
dismissal of his  indictment.  Moreover,  we will not,  based
solely on the quoted dictum in Jackson, attribute to Congress
                                                  
an  unspoken intent to  require that a  pending indictment be
dismissed.

                             -16-
                                          16


section 4246,  rendering the  indictment irrelevant.   But in

Sahhar, the indictment was dismissed before the appellant was
                                                       

committed; the  issue was whether it  was unconstitutional to

commit a person  under section 4246  after detaining him  for

longer than  the maximum term  of imprisonment for  the crime

charged.  Id.  at 1028.   The  Ninth Circuit  held that  such
                         

commitment was  constitutional given the federal  interest in

"control  and  treatment  of  dangerous  persons  within  the

federal criminal justice system"; the fact that an indictment

was no longer  in place  was "irrelevant"  to that  interest.

Id. at  1029.   The district  court had  erred in  "tying the
               

continuing validity of  appellant's non-punitive section 4246

commitment  to  the  punitive   objectives  of  the  original

criminal charge."  Id.   In other words, once  the indictment
                                  

was  dismissed,  the only  remaining government  interest was

public safety, not the punishment of the offender.  In no way

did Sahhar involve the question whether an indictment must be
                      

dismissed when a person is committed under section 4246.  

          Because  the  prosecutor  wishes  to  keep  Ecker's

indictment pending, the government  has a continuing punitive
                                                                         

interest in Ecker.  That interest is not addressed by section

4246   commitment,  which  terminates  if  Ecker's  condition

improves.   Ecker's  out-of-context quotation  of  Sahhar  is
                                                                     

disingenuous and does not enlighten.

                             III.
                                         III.
                                             

                             -17-
                                          17


                          CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION
                                                

          The relevant statutes are silent as to dismissal of

a pending indictment upon commitment for dangerousness.  None

of Ecker's arguments persuade  us that Congress intended that

upon  commitment under  section 4246  any  pending indictment

must  be  dismissed.    The district  court's  order  denying

Ecker's motion to dismiss the indictment is affirmed.
                                                                

                             -18-
                                          18