delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе defendant, Constantine J. Stanitz, was charged with attempted unlawful possession of a controlled substance (720 ILCS 5/8— 4(a) (West 2004); 720 ILCS 570/406(b)(3) (West 2004)). The State appeals an order dismissing the charge with prejudice, based on a finding that the defendant was denied his statutory right to a speedy trial (see 725 ILCS 5/103 — 5(a) (West 2004)). The State argues that the trial court erred in holding that the speedy-trial term continued to run after the State voluntarily surrendered custody of the defendant to federal authorities in Cook County. We affirm.
On July 26, 2004, the defendant was charged by information with attempting to obtain a drug prescription by using a false name. At some point before September 30, 2004, he was arrested and jailed. An order dated August 10, 2004, appointing the public defender to represent the defendant, noted that the defendant was in custody. On September 30, 2004, the defendant filed a demand for a speedy trial. The demand stated that he was incarcerated.
On April 11, 2005, the defendant moved to dismiss the charge. He relied on section 103 — 5(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code), which, as pertinent here, states, “Every person in custody in this State for an alleged offense shall be tried by the court having jurisdiction within 120 days from the date he was taken into custody unless delay is occasioned by the defendant ***.” 725 ILCS 5/103— 5(a) (West 2004). The motion alleged the following facts. On January 4, 2005, thе defendant answered ready for trial, but, on the State’s motion, the trial was continued to January 26, 2005. (The common-law record confirms this allegation.) On January 18, 2005, federal officials removed the defendant from the Du Page County jail to the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago to await trial on a federal charge. Thus, he could not appear for trial on January 26, 2005, which was the 119th day after he filed his speedy-trial dеmand. However, the defendant remained in the State’s custody because he had never been released on bail. Therefore, he was not brought to trial within the statutory 120-day term.
In response, the State argued that it lost custody of the defendant when he was transferred to Cook County to await trial on the federal charge. The State contended that the state speedy-trial term was tolled until the federal case was resolved and the defendant was returned to the State’s custody.
On May 26, 2005, the trial court held a hearing on the defendant’s motion. The court concluded that, because the defendant had not been tried within 120 days, he had been denied his statutory right to a speedy trial. Therefore, the court dismissed the charge.
The State moved to reconsider. The State’s motion alleged that, on January 18, 2005, “federal officials removed the defendant from the Du Page County Jail and placed him in custody” in Cook County pending the disposition of the federal charge, making him “unavailable” for the January 26, 2005, trial date in this case. The State cited cases in which defendants who were initially taken into custody on federal charges were later charged with state offenses. See People v. Arsberry,
In response, the defendant argued that Arsberry and Neumann were distinguishable because, in each case, the defendant was already in custody on a federal charge before the State ever charged him or took him into custody. Therefore, when the defendant in Arsberry or Neumann was taken into federal custody, section 103 — 5(a) of the Code had not been triggered. Thus, Arsberry and Neumann did not address the issue here: whether the State’s voluntary surrender of the defendant to federal authorities tolled the speedy-trial term that had already commenced. In contending thаt it did not, the defendant reasoned that, if the State chose to relinquish custody of him, the delay resulting from its choice was not chargeable to him.
At a hearing on the State’s motion, the defendant noted that he had been in the Du Page County jail when he was released to the federal authorities. He claimed that he had been in custody continuously since September 30, 2004. The trial court denied the State’s motion to reconsider, explaining that the speedy-trial clock began to run on September 30, 2004, and that, because any delay resulting from the State’s decision to surrender the defendant to federal custody was not chargeable to him, it did not toll the 120-day period. The State timely appealed (see 210 Ill. 2d R. 604(a)).
On appeal, the State again argues that, when the defendant was transferred from the Du Page County jail to Cook County to await trial on the fedеral charge, the 120-day speedy-trial term of section 103 — 5(a) of the Code was tolled. Because the construction and the application of the statute to undisputed facts raise questions of law, our review is de novo. See People v. Wooddell,
We note that, at the trial level, both parties and the court apparently assumed that the speedy-trial clock began to run when the defendant filed his demand on September 30, 2004. However, this was probably incorrect. A formal demand is required only under section 103 — 5(b) of the Code, which entitles a defendant who is on bail or recognizance to be tried within 160 days from the datе that he demands trial. 725 ILCS 5/103 — 5(b) (West 2004). A defendant who is in custody is automatically entitled to be tried within 120 days from the date that he was taken into custody; no demand is necessary. 725 ILCS 5/103 — 5(a) (West 2004); People v. Cooksey,
The defendant was incarcerated at least as early as August 10, 2004. Conceivably, the continuous 120-day period of incarceration ended in December 2004, as the sole continuance before then was granted on the State’s motion. Assuming that the statutory period expired in December 2004, the charge should have been dismissed then, and we would have to affirm the judgment without considering the effect of the State’s surrender of the defendant in January 2005.
However, we choose not to affirm the trial court on this basis. At the trial level, the defendant never contended that he was continuously incarcerated for 120 days commencing August 10, 2004, or even that the speedy-trial clock started to run before September 30, 2004. The defendant’s failure to raise this argument deprived the State of any opportunity to prove that the speedy-trial clock did not start to run before September 30, 2004. Therefore, although the record strongly suggests that the defendant was entitled to a dismissal of the charge even before he was surrendered to federal authorities in January 2005, we shall not decide this matter. See Hux v. Raben,
We now turn to the State’s argument on appeal. The State appears to concede that the defendant started section 103 — 5(a)’s clock running on September 30, 2004, when he filed his speedy-trial demand. However, the State contends that the voluntary surrender of the defendant to federal authorities on January 18, 2005, tolled the statutory period and that the speedy-trial clock will not restart until the federal charge is resolved. Relying in part on People v. Swartz,
The speedy-trial statute “must be liberally construed and its salutary provisions cannot be frittered away by technical evasions.” People v. Fosdick,
On March 20, 1959, the defendant was removed to a federal prison in Michigan to serve his sentence on the federal charge. On December 28, 1959, after he had been released from federal prison, the forgery charges were reinstated. On February 15, 1960, the defendant moved to dismiss the charges, asserting that the State had violated a statute requiring that one who was placed into custody on a criminal charge be tried within four months after the commitment, unless the delay was attributable to him. Swartz,
The supreme court agreed with the defendant that he was entitled to have the charges dismissed, even though fewer than four months had elapsed between the reinstatement of the charges and the filing of the defendant’s motion to dismiss, and even though the defendant had been continuously in state custody for fewer than four months. The court relied on the speedy-trial statute and on the “want of prosecution” statute. As pertinent, the latter provided that, when a person was imprisoned (or, as the court held, jailed) in Illinois, and, during his term of incarceration, another charge was pending in the county in which he was sentenced, he had to be brought to trial on the untried charge within four months, unless he caused the delay. Swartz,
The court recоgnized that the defendant was transferred to federal prison within a month after the forgery charges were initially brought and that he had been incarcerated there until about 21fe months before he moved to dismiss the forgery charges. Nonetheless, the court determined that the transfer of the defendant to the federal prison did not toll the four-month period. The defendant was incarcerated for more than four months after the initiаl forgery charges were filed, and the delay in excess of the statutory period was not attributable to him. Neither the voluntary dismissal and reinstatement of the forgery charges nor the transfer of the defendant to the federal prison freed the State of its obligation to provide the defendant a speedy trial. In the supreme court’s words:
“The record discloses that the Federal authorities had consented to the State’s rеtention of custody over the defendant and that they would not remove him to the Federal penitentiary until the State had terminated [its] actions against him. In such a case, the State cannot evade the statute by refusing to prosecute the defendant and by voluntarily relinquishing control of him to the Federal authorities.” (Emphasis added.) Swartz,21 Ill. 2d at 282 .
Swartz did not construe or apply the present speedy-trial statute. However, the supreme court later cited Swartz in stating that section 103 — 5(a)’s term is not tolled by one county’s “voluntary relinquishment of the prisoner to another county.” People v. Christensen,
Courts in other jurisdictions have reasoned similarly in holding that a statutory speedy-trial term is not tolled by the voluntary surrender of the defendant to a different jurisdiction. In People v. Wimer,
The court of appeals held that the defendants had been denied their statutory right to speedy trials. The court rejected the State’s contention that the delay between the date that each defendant was surrendered to California and the date that he was returned to Colorado should be excluded from the speedy-trial calculus. The State contended that the delay was chargeable to the defendants because “their presence for trial could nоt be obtained.” Wimer,
In State v. Steele,
The Nebrаska Supreme Court reversed. After excluding the delays that were clearly attributable to the defendant, the court concluded that the six-month period expired on November 2, 1999. Because the statutory exception for delays attributable to the defendant’s unavailability applied only if the defendant’s unavailability was attributable to him and not the State (Steele,
The reasoning of Wimer and Steele applies here. When the federal authorities sought custody of the defendant, he was already in the State’s custody, and his statutory right to a speedy trial had been triggered. The State voluntarily surrendered the defendant, knowing full well of his statutory entitlement to a speedy trial. Thus, as in Swartz, Wimer, and Steele, the delay occasioned by the State’s own decision to surrender the defendant must be charged to the prosecution and not the defendant. Hence, the speedy-trial clock continued to run after the surrender, and the defendant was denied his right to a speedy trial.
Neumann and Arsberry, on which the State relies, are distinguishable. In Neumann, the defendant was charged in October 1982 аnd arrested in November 1982 on several state charges. At the time of his arrest, he was already in federal custody, awaiting sentencing on a federal conviction. On November 12, 1982, the defendant demanded a speedy trial on the state charges. However, he was kept in federal custody until late February 1983. His trial began on March 14, 1983. Neumann,
Neumann’s reasoning is sound. As is true now, section 103 — 5(a) applied only if a defendant was in state custody (see Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 38, par. 103 — 5(a)). Thus, its 120-day term could not have commenced before the State ever obtained custody of the defendant. However, Neumann simply says nothing about whether a defendant who has been taken into state custody, and thus has started section 103 — 5(a)’s speedy-trial clock running, may be charged with the delay that results when the State later transfers custody of him to another jurisdiction.
In Arsberry, the defendant was arrested on October 10, 1989; his trial was originally set for July 9, 1990; and, after further delays that he conceded were attributable to him, he was tried on October 16, 1990. The Arsberry opinion notes that, on three dates in December 1989, the defendant failed to appear in court because he was in federal custody. The opinion then states, “This term inclusive of the above dates is not charged to defendant. The 120-day statutory period does not run while the defendant is in the custody of the Federal government. (People v. Neumann (1986),
Insofar as Arsberry might be read to set out a blanket rule that section 103 — 5(a)’s term is tolled whenever a defendant is committed to federal custody, we elect not to follow it. Not only would such a holding be inconsistent with Swartz, but it would also go beyond anything that is implied by Neumann. Moreover, allowing the State to stop the speedy-trial clock by voluntarily surrendering custody of the defendant instead of holding him for trial would violate Fosdick’s command to construe the speedy-trial statute liberally so that its protections are not “frittered away” by “technical evasions.” Fosdick,
Under Swartz and the persuasive foreign аuthority that we have cited, the State could not evade its speedy-trial obligations by its own decision to surrender the defendant to the federal authorities. Because the voluntary surrender did not toll the speedy-trial term of section 103 — 5(a) of the Code, the defendant was not brought to trial within the time required by the statute, and the trial court properly dismissed the charge with prejudice.
The judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
O’MALLEY and KAPALA, JJ., concur.
