Defendant appeals as of right his jury trial convictions of first-degree home invasion, MCL 750.110a(2); larceny of a firearm, MCL 750.357b; felon in possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f; and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, MCL 750.227b. Defendant argues that his trial was not timely under the interstate agreement on detainers (IAD), MCL 780.601 et seq. However, we conclude that the 120-day time limit of that statute was satisfied, delays in the proceedings below having resulted from efforts to accommodate defendant. We affirm.
*242 At the time he was charged with the offenses in this case, defendant was serving a prison sentence in New York. Michigan authorities requested custody of defendant pursuant to the IAD. Defendant was released into the custody of Michigan authorities on September 29, 2003, but was not brought to trial until February 24, 2004, 149 days later. Defendant brought a pretrial motion to dismiss, arguing that dismissal of all charges was required because the IAD mandated that he be tried within 120 days. But, after excluding from the calculation of the 120-day time limit two delays caused by defendant, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss, finding that the commencement of defendant’s trial was timely. Defendant now appeals the trial court’s denial of that motion and his subsequent convictions.
We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s decision on a motion to dismiss.
People v Herndon,
“The IAD is a uniform law which prescribes procedures by which a prisoner may demand the prompt disposition of charges pending against him in a state other than the one in which he is imprisoned and
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prescribes procedures by which a state may obtain, for trial, a prisoner who is incarcerated in another state.”
People v Malone,
trial shall be commenced within one hundred twenty days of the arrival of the prisoner in the receiving state, hut for good cause shown in open court, the prisoner or his counsel being present, the court having jurisdiction of the matter may grant any necessary or reasonable continuance. [MCL 780.601, art IV(c).]
Failure to strictly comply with the 120-day provision requires the trial court to dismiss any charges brought against the defendant under the IAD.
People v Harlan,
Here, the trial court excluded two periods from its calculation of the 120-day time limit within which defendant must be brought to trial under the IAD: October 14, 2003, to November 4, 2003, and November 4, 2003, to November 18, 2003. The first delay of 22 days between October 14, 2003, and November 4, 2003, occurred when defense counsel requested an adjournment of the preliminary examination to adequately research potential defenses and so the presiding judge could disqualify himself because he was the elected prosecutor at the time the charges were filed against *244 defendant. On appeal, defendant takes issue with the lack of record evidence of defense counsel’s request for an adjournment. However, at the hearing on defendant’s motion to dismiss, the parties did not dispute the fact that defense counsel requested an adjournment in chambers. Thus, the trial court specifically found that the 22-day delay was excluded from the IAD time limit calculation because it was at defendant’s request and for his accommodation. Under Meyers, this was not erroneous.
Further, the trial court’s decision was warranted because the 22-day delay resulted, in part, from the initial judge’s self-disqualification. This Court has affirmed a trial court’s decision in a similar case. In Malone, supra at 399, the defendant’s case was delayed because the district judge assigned to preside over the scheduled preliminary examination disqualified himself on the basis of a conflict of interest. This Court concluded that the delay caused by the district judge’s disqualification was “in accommodation of defendant’s interests,” and determined that the length of the delay was properly excluded from the IAD time limit calculation. Id. Similarly here, it was beneficial to defendant that he not have his preliminary examination before a judge who, while a prosecutor, had filed the charges at issue. The delay resulting from the judge’s disqualification and replacement was in accommodation of defendant’s interests.
The second delay, between November 4, 2003, and November 18, 2003, occurred when the preliminary examination was adjourned after defense, counsel withdrew because of a conflict of interest upon realizing that he had previously represented the victim in a civil matter. Although Michigan has not specifically addressed the effect of an attorney’s withdrawal on the
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IAD timing requirements, cases from other jurisdictions support the trial court’s conclusion in this case. Recently, in
State v Rieger,
Although these precedents from other jurisdictions are not binding on this Court, we find them to be persuasive. See
People v Coy,
*246 Accordingly, any delay resulting from that type of request is properly excluded from the 120-day time limit calculation under the IAD. The trial court did not err by excluding the 13-day period (not counting November 4 twice, and not counting November 18, the day on which the preliminary examination was scheduled) caused by defense counsel’s withdrawal from its time limit calculation.
The trial court’s attributions of delay were not clearly erroneous, and the trial court properly excluded the two periods from the calculation of the 120-day time limit. Excluding the tolled days from the total days defendant was in custody, his trial started 114 days after he arrived in Michigan. Defendant was timely brought to trial under the IAD, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s motion to dismiss.
We affirm.
