Lead Opinion
This appeal is from the district court’s denial of habeas relief to convicted murderer Terry Kent Ringstaff. A divided panel of this Court determined that Ringstaff s right to a speedy trial had been violated when the State delayed prosecuting him pending a decision by the Alabama Supreme Court on the validity of Alabama’s death penalty statute, a portion of which had been struck as unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court just nine days after Ringstaff's arrest in this case. Ringstaff v. Howard,
The key to the decision in this case is whether the defendant had to show prejudice from the delay in bringing him to trial. If he had to make such a showing, he loses. If he does not have this burden, he wins. In Barker v. Wingo,
In this case, the length of delay was concededly sufficient to require further inquiry. Ringstaff was brought to trial and convicted of murder somе 23 months following his arrest, a period which this Court assumes raises Sixth Amendment concerns, although there is no precise time for the constitutional right to a speedy trial to be implicated. Barker v. Wingo,
Seven of the 23 months are attributable to the defendant’s request for a psychiatric evaluation and are excused from the speedy trial computation. United States v. O’Bryant,
Just as the courts have found reasonable the delay while pretrial motions and interlocutory appeals are resolved, it was reasonable for the Government to wait until this very important issue of law was settled before bringing Ringstaff to trial. See United States v. Loud Hawk,
These cases all hold that if the delay had occurred because the legal issue was being determined by pretrial procedures in this case, that delay would be justified in the speedy trial context. Where the issue was being promptly pursued in other litigation, it was not unreasonable fоr the Government to wait, rather than to attempt to litigate the issue in this case, and necessarily every other capital murder case pending, in order to forestall an automatic speedy trial problem.
There is no evidence that the delay was due to bad faith or a dilatory purpose by the Government. See Loud Hawk,
The courts should not lightly dispense with the actual prejudice requirement because to do so necessarily results in the
Where the delay was not the result of bad faith or a deliberate attempt to “hamper the defense,” and was a reasonablе and efficient use of judicial resources, a defendant is required to show he suffered actual prejudice in order to prevail. The Court in Barker identified three interests which the speedy trial right was designed to protect: “(i) to prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize anxiety and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the possibility that the defense will be impaired.”
The only evidence of impairment to his defense was Ringstaff’s testimony that he was unable to contact a particular witness named “Larry” who could have established an alibi for him. The problem he cites goes to the fact of his incarceration and not to the length of time between his arrest and trial. It is at least arguable that more time, not less, was needed in order for Ringstaff to find this man and that his only claim is that he should have been free during the intervening period. He has not raised any issue concerning his pretrial detention. At any rate, as the district court found and Ringstaff himself concedes, there were several alibi witnesses who did testify as to his whereabouts on the date of the murder and “Larry’s” testimony would be merely cumulative of the testimony already presented at trial.
Because Ringstaff has shown no actual prejudice, the district court’s denial of his writ of habeas corpus was proper.
AFFIRMED.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Today, this Court effectively deletes from the Constitution a goodly portion of the speedy trial guarantee. I am constrained to dissent.
I. INTRODUCTION
Numerous cases currently on the docket of the United States Supreme Court present important and widely applicable issues of criminal law аnd procedure. See, e.g., Florida v. Wells, cert. granted, — U.S. -,
The significance of this survey should be obvious. The en banc majority’s decision in this case authorizes Alabama, and by extension Georgia and Florida, to hold any pretrial detainee indefinitely until some arguably relevant legal issue is decided in a case pending before a state or federal appellate court. No matter how vociferously a defendant demands his constitutional right to a speedy trial, the state may delay and delay and delay in anticipation of the “guiding star”
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Barker Framework
The Supreme Court, in Barker v. Wingo,
The majority does not dispute that factors one and three under Barker weigh heavily against the state. As the majority notes, nine of the 23 months of delay are attributable to the state’s decision to await the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision in Beck v. State,
Thus, the majority correctly defines the question presented in this case as being whether factor two under Barker — the reason for the delay — weighs heavily against the state.
B. The Reason for Delay
This case turns on the legitimacy of the reasons for the state’s refusal to try Ring-staff pending the Alabama Supreme Court’s Beck decision. The majority accepts the state’s contention that it exercised “commendable caution and circumspection”
In 1972, the Alаbama capital sentencing framework, along with that of most other states, was effectively struck down by Furman v. Georgia,
The real motive behind the decision to wait was established with abundant clarity during oral argument before the original panel of this Court:
JUDGE JOHNSON: The only reason you waited, isn’t it, is that under the statute that the Supreme Court left the State of Alabama with, the trial court might not have considered giving Ring-staff the death penalty ...
BRENDLE (FOR THE STATE): Right.
JUDGE JOHNSON: And you were waiting for the Supreme Court of Alabama to hold that it was severable so that you could still ask for the death penalty.
*1548 BRENDLE: Right, Your Honor.
The state was unable to cite any justification for this strategy:
CHIEF JUDGE RONEY: For other reasons, though, do you have any authority that the state can wait to prosecute until the law clears up as far as ...
BRENDLE: I haven’t run across a case, Your Honor.
An examination of the record with the aid of everyday common sense leaves little doubt that the state refused to bring Ring-staff to trial until it could confidently ask that he be put to death. In view of the above-quoted interchange, I find utterly inexplicable the majority’s characterization of this finding as being based on mere “speculation” unsupported by the record.
This reason for delay weighs heavily against the state. Indeed, I find it hard to conceive of a more unsavory tactical delay. See Barker,
C. Prejudice
Even if the majority were correct in its analysis of the first three factors under Barker, I could not agree with its conclusion that Ringstaff necessarily suffered no actual prejudice from the state’s delay. The majority focuses exclusively on whether the delay in Ringstaff’s trial hampered his defense. Barker establishes, however, that a defendant may suffer prejudicе in at least three ways:
Prejudice, of course, should be assessed in the light of the interests of defendants which the speedy trial right was designed to protect. This Court has identified three such interests: (i) to prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize anxiety and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the possibility that the defense will be impaired.
Barker,
The record before this Court is incomplete with regard to the first two considerations noted in Barker. Some evidence, such as Ringstaff’s psychiatric examination, may indicate that his incarceration had a prejudicial effect on him. Without a complete record, including a copy of the psychiatrist’s report and additional testimony, I cannot conclude with any confidence that he suffered no prejudice. I think it proper to take judicial notice, as has the Supreme Court, of conditions in Alabama criminal detention facilities. See Dothard v. Rawlinson,
III. CONCLUSION
It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that a dominant factor in the majоrity’s disposition of this case is the admittedly “severe remedy of dismissal of the indictment when the right has been deprived.” Barker,
For the foregoing reasons, I dissent and would grant the writ.
Notes
. Because the Alabama Supreme Court does not publish orders granting review, it is not certain which of these appeals will be given plenary consideration.
. See Ringstaff v. State,
. As the majority notes, seven of the 23 months' delay are attributable to Ringstаffs own request for a psychiatric evaluation, and need not be considered.
. See Ringstaff,
. It is true that following the United States Supreme Court’s Beck decision, the Alabama Supreme Court chose to order retrial of all pre-Beck capital convictions found to have violated Beck. See Beck v. State,
Ringstaff would not have been in the same posture as the pre-Beck capital defendants, had he been tried and convicted promptly and sentenced to death, and had the Alabama Supreme Court subsequently invalidated the entire death penalty statute. Because the United States Supreme Court’s Beck decision followed Ring-staffs arrest by only one week, he would have received the Beci-mandated lesser-included-offense instruction (just as he eventually received it at his actual, much-delayed trial). Furthermore, because of the hypothetically invalidated death penalty statute, death would not have been available to the state on retrial. Thus, Ringstaff would have been in the precise posture of those capital defendants whose sentences were commuted to life following Fur-man.
. Seven of the state’s 16 months of delay were unexplained, despite the fact that the state’s case was fully prepared and it was ready to proceed. Under Barker, negligence is wеighted less heavily than a deliberate or tactical delay. See
