Finding a violation of Stanley Porter’s constitutional right to a speedy trial, the trial court granted Porter’s motion to dismiss his indictment. The Court of Appeals affirmed, see
State v. Porter,
1. Porter was arrested on November 12, 2000, for molesting one of his minor children. The State first indicted Porter on December 29, 2000, and then re-indicted him on August 31, 2001, for aggravated child molestation and other crimes. Porter was released on bond. More than four years later, on November 15, 2005, an arrest warrant was issued for Porter based on new allegations of child molestation against another of his children that occurred while he was on bond. On February 23, 2005, after Porter failed to appear in court regarding the 2001 indictment, the trial court issued a bench warrant. Porter remained a fugitive until his arrest in April 2006. In May 2006, he was indicted on the new charges of child molestation. In July and November 2007, Porter, while represented by counsel, filed pro se demands for trial on the 2001 indictment.
The trial court scheduled both indictments for trial on December 9, 2008, and again on December 16, but the trial dates were continued at defense counsel’s request. On January 15, 2009, Porter filed motions to dismiss both indictments for violation of his constitutional right to a speedy trial under the United States and Georgia Constitutions. On January 21, 2009, the trial court held a single hearing on the two motions. On January 27, 2009, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss the 2006 indictment; Porter did not appeal that order. Two weeks later, the court granted the motion to dismiss the 2001 indictment; the State appealed that order. The Court of Appeals affirmed, and we granted certiorari to review that decision.
2. (a) The Constitutional Framework
The basic framework for deciding speedy trial claims under the federal and state constitutions is well settled. See
Barker v. Wingo,
If this threshold is passed, the trial court must balance four factors: “[1] whether delay before trial was uncommonly long, [2] whether the government or the criminal defendant is more to blame for that delay, [3] whether, in due course, the defendant asserted his right to a speedy trial, and [4] whether he suffered prejudice as the
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delay’s result.”
Doggett,
“have no talismanic qualities” and “must be considered together with such other circumstances as may be relevant” given the animating principles behind the speedy trial guarantee. Thus, the second stage of the constitutional speedy trial analysis requires courts to “engage in a difficult and sensitive balancing process” and “necessarily compels them to approach speedy trial cases on an ad hoc basis.”
Ruffin,
The trial court’s weighing of each factor and its balancing of all four factors — its ultimate judgment — are reviewed on appeal only for abuse of discretion. See
State v. Lattimore,
We see several errors in the application of this framework to Porter’s speedy trial claim by the trial court and the Court of Appeals, some of which are significant enough to necessitate remand of the case.
(b) The Threshold Inquiry
Both the trial court and the Court of Appeals concluded that the pre-trial delay in this case was sufficient to trigger analysis of the Barker factors. That conclusion is correct.
However, we note that the Court of Appeals erred in calculating the delay in this case as the time “elapsed from the November 12, 2000 date of Porter’s arrest [to] his initial trial date, December 9, 2008” and in stating that “generally a delay of eight months or longer is presumptively prejudicial,” citing
Giddens v. State,
(c) The Barker Factors
(1) Length of Delay
The Court of Appeals correctly noted that “[t]he State does not challenge the trial court’s finding that the pretrial delay at issue should weigh against the State as uncommonly long.”
Porter,
(2) Reasons for the Delay
The trial court found that “some delay is attributable to the State,” based on the State’s dismissal of the original December 29, 2000, indictment and its later filing of a “succeeding indictment on August 31, 2001.” Other than this eight-month period, however, the trial court’s order does not discuss how the remaining delay of almost eight years should be attributed to or weighed against the State or Porter.
After a more detailed analysis of the reasons for the delay, the Court of Appeals determined that “approximately six years and eleven months of the delay [was] attributable to the government,” but that, due to defense counsel’s requests for continuances and Porter’s voluntary absence from court while he was a fugitive, about two years of the delay was attributable to Porter.
Porter,
In this respect, the State argues that Porter’s failure to appear for court in February 2005 and his subsequent fugitive status until April 2006 constitutes a waiver of his speedy trial right. We disagree. Although one of the cases on which the State relies holds that the accused waived his speedy trial right by fleeing the jurisdiction, the defendant there was a fugitive for the entire period of pre-trial delay. See
People v. Perez,
On the other hand, the year that Porter spent as a fugitive cannot be counted against the State, and indeed normally would be weighed heavily against Porter, because it usually reflects a defendant’s deliberate intent to delay trial. See
Doggett,
(3) Assertion of the Right to Speedy Trial
Relying on
State v. Lively,
It is true that the “timing, form, and vigor of the accused’s demands to be tried immediately” should be considered in determining the
weight
given to the assertion-of-the-right factor. See
Ruffin,
Thus, Porter’s January 2009 motion to dismiss was sufficient to assert his right to a speedy trial. However, he waited to assert that right for more than eight years after his arrest and almost eight years from his August 2001 re-indictment. Indeed, he did not assert
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his constitutional right until after two trial dates had been set and continued at his counsel’s request. Our cases hold that an extended delay in asserting the right to a speedy trial should normally be weighed
heavily
against the defendant. See, e.g.,
Brown v. State,
Here, however, the trial court’s order completely omitted this factor from its analysis.
1
Moreover, the Court of Appeals first erroneously stated that the trial court properly weighed this factor against Porter, see
(4) Prejudice
The final factor in the
Barker
analysis is prejudice to the defendant. The types of prejudice associated with an unreasonable delay before trial include “ ‘oppressive pretrial incarceration,’ ‘anxiety and concern of the accused,’ and ‘the possibility that the [accused’s] defense will be impaired’ by dimming memories and loss of exculpatory evidence.”
Doggett,
There was no claim of oppressive pre-trial incarceration in this case. However, the trial court’s order found that a pro se letter demanding trial that Porter filed in July 2007, while not legally effective to assert his speedy trial right, was evidence that the delay had caused Porter anxiety and concern.
2
This finding is not sup
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ported by the record. Porter never offered the letter into evidence at the hearing on the motions to dismiss, and even if he had, the letter would have been hearsay without probative value. See
Waldrip v. Head,
The trial court’s order also found that Porter presented “testimony” that one of his witnesses, “a close family member,” had died during the pre-trial delay, stated that the evidence this witness would have presented “would not be cumulative” of other available witnesses, and concluded that Porter therefore had shown “significant and substantial impairment to his defense.” However, the record shows that Porter did not testify at the hearing, but merely informed the trial court orally, apparently from his seat at counsel table, that two of his witnesses had died, one of the four on his witness list and another person not on his list. Thus, no actual evidence or appropriate proffer in the record establishes the death of any of Porter’s witnesses.
Moreover, even accepting that the witness discussed in the trial court’s order is deceased, Porter offered no evidence or proffer whatsoever as to what the witness would have testified about, why that testimony would have been favorable to Porter, or why the testimony would not have been cumulative of the three other witnesses on Porter’s witness list who, like the witness discussed in the order, were living in his house at the time of the alleged crimes and whose testimony also was not outlined. Accordingly, there was no basis for the trial court to conclude that the witness’s absence was actually prejudicial to Porter’s defense. See
Christian v. State,
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In its consideration of the prejudice factor, the Court of Appeals did not mention the trial court’s unsupported finding of Porter’s anxiety and concern, focusing exclusively on prejudice to the defense. Perhaps recognizing the lack of evidentiary support for the trial court’s finding of demonstrable impairment of Porter’s defense, the Court of Appeals pretermitted whether the trial court had correctly found such prejudice and instead ruled that the substantial delay in the case gave rise to a presumption of prejudice to the defense. See
Porter,
However, the Court of Appeals incorrectly suggested that a presumption of prejudice arises only after a certain extended period elapses. See
Porter,
(d) Balancing the Four Factors
As indicated above, the trial court’s order did not correctly conduct the balancing test required by Barker and our precedents. The court did not mention the assertion-of-the-right factor at all. Moreover, while it attributed some delay (eight months) to the State, it did not address the remaining eight years of pre-trial delay, including the period in which Porter appears to have deliberately precluded trial as a fugitive, and it did not appear to weigh this factor *532 along with the others in reaching its conclusion that Porter’s speedy trial rights had been violated.
The Court of Appeals also failed to evaluate Porter’s delay in asserting his right to a speedy trial in the final balancing. See
Porter,
The Court of Appeals erred in stating that there was “actual,” as opposed to presumptive, prejudice to Porter’s defense. As discussed above, the record does not support the trial court’s finding of demonstrable prejudice. Moreover, the Court of Appeals’ focus on the presumption of prejudice to the exclusion of another Barker factor, Porter’s delay in asserting his right, strays from the flexible balancing test that is the ultimate focus of the Barker analysis.
The Court of Appeals did mention the assertion factor in stating that “[t]he State can rebut the foregoing presumption [of prejudice to the defense] by showing that the defendant acquiesced in the delay by failing to timely assert his right to a speedy trial or otherwise benefitted from the delay.”
Porter,
As the United States Supreme Court explained in Barker-.
We regard none of the four factors ... as either a necessary or sufficient condition to the finding of a deprivation of the right of speedy trial. Rather, they are related factors and must be considered together with such other circumstances *533 as may be relevant. In sum, these factors have no talismanic qualities; courts must still engage in a difficult and sensitive balancing process.
While this ad hoc approach may produce some apparent inconsistency of results, which may frustrate some courts and litigants, it is what our nation’s High Court has directed for analysis of Sixth Amendment speedy trial claims. In this case, the Court of Appeals acknowledged this delicate balancing test at the outset of its analysis, see
Porter,
(e) Exercise of Discretion
In any event, the Court of Appeals erred in not reversing the trial court’s judgment and remanding the case with direction. A trial court exercises substantial discretion in applying the
Barker
balancing test, and its ultimate judgment is reviewed on appeal only for abuse of that discretion. See
Williams,
As explained above, the trial court here clearly erred in its key
*534
factual findings regarding Porter’s anxiety and concern and actual impairment to his defense. The trial court’s order also reveals significant legal errors. It omitted any mention of the assertion-of-the-right
Barker
factor and attributed only eight months of delay to the State, without addressing the reasons for the nearly eight additional years of delay, including a year of delay caused, apparently deliberately, when Porter became a fugitive. As a result, the trial court could not properly balance the
Barker
factors, and the Court of Appeals could not properly affirm the trial court’s judgment. Instead, the Court of Appeals should have vacated the order and remanded the case for the trial court to exercise its discretion again using properly supported factual findings and the correct legal analysis, reflected in an adequate written order. See
Williams,
For these reasons, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ judgment and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We urge the Court of Appeals and the trial court to act as promptly as practicable on this matter, so that Porter may be discharged (if that is the appropriate outcome) or tried (if that is the appropriate outcome) on the very serious charges that have now been pending against him for more than a decade.
Judgment reversed and case remanded with direction.
Notes
The trial court’s unappealed order denying Porter’s motion to dismiss his 2006 indictment, which is in the record, was based on the same hearing and evidence as the order dismissing the 2001 indictment. In the unappealed order, the trial court weighed against Porter his non-assertion of his speedy trial right for only two years, whereas in the order we are reviewing, the court failed to mention Porter’s eight-year delay in asserting his right to a speedy trial on the 2000 charges. This contradiction makes no sense, except in considering that the two orders were drafted by counsel for the party that prevailed on each motion to dismiss - the State and Porter, respectively - and then signed, apparently unchanged, by the trial court. See also footnote 3 below.
This demand was filed while Porter was represented by counsel. For this reason, the trial court and the Court of Appeals correctly ruled that the demand had no legal effect. See Porter,
We note our serious concern that the tried court’s unappealed order on the 2006 indictment, see footnote 1, above, squarely contradicts the court’s order on the 2001 indictment with regard to prejudice from alleged missing witnesses. The hearing record shows that the defense contended that the witnesses who were allegedly missing with regard to the 2001 indictment were the same witnesses who were allegedly missing with regard to the 2006 indictment, as the same witnesses lived with Porter in the same apartment at the time of the crimes charged in both indictments. In the order denying dismissal of the 2006 indictment, the trial court stated that Porter alleged that two, not one, of his witnesses had died, and found that Porter “presented no evidence of their deaths” and “failed to present ‘specific evidence’ of how the loss of those witnesses impaired his ability to defend his case.” In fact, the court specifically ruled that “any testimony from the two allegedly deceased witnesses would be merely cumulative of testimony from the two live witnesses since all four resided in the *531 residence with the defendant when he exercised visitation with his daughters at the time of the offense.” (Emphasis in trial court’s order.) These findings are directly at odds with those in the ordering granting the motion to dismiss the 2001 indictment that we consider in this appeal.
Citing
United States v. Ingram,
