A federal grand jury indicted defendant-appellee Bobby Glenn Dyal on three counts of mailing threatening letters, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 876. Dyal moved to dismiss the indictment with prejudice on the ground that the dismissal, two years earlier, of a criminal complaint alleging the same offenses bars this prosecution. The district court granted the motion, and the government appeals. Concluding that the district court abused its discretion by dismissing the indictment, we reverse.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On June 12, 1985, the government filed a criminal complaint charging that, in May and June of 1985, Dyal sent to John Wallace Gibbs via the United States Postal Service three written communications directing Gibbs to transfer $50,000.00 to a bogus account at the bank at which Gibbs worked and to leave at a designated place an automated-teller-machine card which would facilitate withdrawal of the funds. The communications threatened harm to Gibbs and his family if the instructions were not followed. Dyal was arrested and subsequently released on bond.
About one week later, Assistant United States Attorney John J. Brandfass began plea negotiations with one of Dyal’s attorneys, Dennis Rehak, who proposed that Dyal plead guilty to a misdemeanor. After checking the relevant statutes, on July 12, 1985 Brandfass rejected the plea suggested by Rehak but proposed a guilty plea to one felony count of violating 18 U.S.C. § 876. Brandfass also noted during the July 12 conversation that the thirty-day period allotted by the Speedy Trial Act (“STA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3161(b), to procure an indictment on the June 12, 1985 complaint was about to run. Rehak agreed that, so long as negotiations continued, Dyal would not move for dismissal under the STA.
On July 25,1985, Rehak informed Brand-fass that Dyal would not plead guilty to the *426 felony count. Brandfass advised Rehak that, due to the constraints of the STA and the apparent breakdown of plea negotiations, the government would move to dismiss the complaint and present the case to the grand jury at a later date. Brandfass completed a preprinted dismissal order then commonly used by the United States Attorney’s Office in the Middle District of Florida. He forwarded the form to the district court for the magistrate’s signature. No memorandum of law was attached, no written motion was submitted, no notice was given Dyal, and no opportunity to be heard was afforded him. On August 1, 1985, without benefit of a hearing or a written recitation of the government’s reasons for dismissal, the magistrate signed the form order dismissing the complaint. A copy of the order was mailed to Rehak. Brandfass’ superiors subsequently directed his attention to more pressing matters, and the Dyal case lay dormant until finally, in late 1987, it was assigned to AUSA Susan Daltuva. On December 8, 1987, the grand jury returned the aforementioned indictment.
Dyal moved to dismiss the indictment with prejudice on two grounds. First, he argued that the government’s dilatory or intentional acts had resulted in a delay in seeking an indictment which delay had hindered preparation of his defense.
1
Upon the authority of
United States v. MacDonald,
II. DISCUSSION
The district court’s order appears to rest upon two conclusions: first, that the government has an affirmative duty to set forth contemporaneously with a Rule 48(a) motion its reasons for seeking dismissal,
regardless
of whether the district court requests a contemporaneous recitation; and, second, that, even if Rule 48(a) places no such burden on the government but, instead, entitles it to a presumption of good faith in seeking dismissal, the evidence adduced at the hearing on Dyal’s motion rebutted that presumption and showed that the government dismissed the complaint in order to harass Dyal. Although we will not disturb the dismissal of an indictment under Fed.R.Crim.P. 48 absent a showing that the district court abused its discretion,
United States v. Strayer,
A. The Requirements of Rule 48(a)
As adopted by the Supreme Court, Rule 48(a) provides:
The Attorney General or the United States attorney may by leave of court file a dismissal of an indictment, information or complaint and the prosecution shall thereupon terminate. Such dismissal may not be filed during the trial without the consent of the defendant.
Fed.R.Crim.P. 48(a) (emphasis added). The parties agree that the question whether Rule 48(a) requires the government contemporaneously to state its reasons for *427 seeking dismissal turns on the interpretation of the words “leave of court.”
The government concedes that the “leave of court” requirement is a check on the power of the Executive to dismiss prosecutions but asserts that the executive branch nevertheless remains the first and presumptively best judge of whether a pending prosecution should be terminated. Thus, the government concludes that it is entitled to a presumption of good faith in seeking dismissal and that a pretrial motion to dismiss under Rule 48(a) should be granted absent evidence of motivations contrary to the public interest.
Dyal contends that the words “leave of court” would be meaningless unless understood to require the government first to provide the court reasons for granting leave. Because the court’s decision whether to grant leave to dismiss is reviewable on appeal from a final judgment, Dyal argues, reasons must accompany the government’s request so that a reviewing court can determine from the record whether the district court abused its discretion by granting leave to dismiss without prejudice.
Both parties rely on
United States v. Derr,
In
Salinas,
the government moved to dismiss the charges immediately before the jury was sworn, stating only that a superseding indictment would be sought. After the district court dismissed the jurors, the government filed another, almost identical, indictment. During arraignment on the second indictment, the AUSA admitted that he dismissed the earlier charges only because he was dissatisfied with the jury that had been empaneled. The defendant unsuccessfully moved for dismissal of the second indictment, and the Fifth Circuit reversed, observing that “[although the burden of proof is not on the prosecutor to prove that dismissal is in the public interest, the prosecutor is under an obligation to supply sufficient reasons — reasons that constitute more than ‘a mere conclusory interest.’ ”
[t]he record in this case reveals sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption that the Government made the motion to dismiss the indictment in good faith. Faced with discontent with the jury as the Government’s sole reason for dismissal, this Court has no choice but to vindicate the purpose of Rule 48(a) to protect the defendant’s rights. The record on appeal exposed that the true reason for dismissal was in derogation of [the] defendant's] ... rights.
In
Derr,
the government moved to dismiss an indictment on the day of trial, stating only that dismissal would “best meet the ends of justice.” Over defense objection and without further inquiry, the district court granted the motion. Two and a half years later, a grand jury returned another indictment charging the defendant with the same offenses. The court dismissed the second indictment, reasoning that it had abused its discretion by granting the earlier motion without requiring the government to present a factual basis for dismissal. Relying upon
Salinas,
the Tenth Circuit reasoned that, in order to honor the purpose of Rule 48(a) to prevent harassment of the defendant, “the trial court at the very least must know the prosecutor’s reasons for seeking to dismiss the indictment and the facts underlying the prosecutor’s decision.”
Although each of these cases suggests that the better practice is for the government to state its reasons for seeking dismissal contemporaneously with its motion to dismiss under Rule 48(a), neither holds that the failure to do so necessitates dismissal of a subsequent prosecution with prejudice.
Salinas
’ holding that the indictment should be dismissed with prejudice was not predicated simply upon the government’s failure to state contemporaneously its reasons for seeking dismissal at the outset — but, rather, upon its efforts to use Rule 48(a) for the purpose of achieving a tactical advantage in jury selection. When the government’s true purpose in dismissal was exposed, the “record ... reveal[ed] sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption that the Government made the motion to dismiss the indictment in good faith.”
Derr did not mandate dismissal of subsequent indictments; we merely determined that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the motion to dismiss. In addition, our holding on the remedy in Derr was clearly limited to its particular facts and circumstances.
Moreover, irrespective of the holdings of the Salinas and Derr courts, Dyal’s argument simply overstates the case. Ascertainment of the government’s reasons for seeking dismissal generally will be possible, as it was in this case, at a hearing on a defendant’s motion to dismiss a subsequent prosecution with prejudice. Thus, even where, as here, the defendant was not afforded an opportunity to contest the original dismissal, a hearing on a motion to dismiss a subsequent indictment would enable the district court to evaluate the government’s reasons for dismissing a pri- or prosecution and afford the appellate court a sufficient record upon which to review that evaluation. Thus, the absence of a contemporaneous statement of the prosecutor’s reasons for seeking dismissal, while sure to complicate the determination whether a subsequent indictment should be dismissed, does not insulate from appellate review the district court’s earlier decision whether to grant leave to dismiss.
We conclude that, in the dismissal of an indictment, information or complaint under Rule 48(a), the government is entitled to a presumption of good-faith. Thus, as the Fifth Circuit recently held in
United States v. Welborn,
B. Dyal Has Not Rebutted the Presumption of “Good Faith”
Our review of the record leads us to conclude that Dyal has failed to rebut this presumption of good faith, as he adequately demonstrated neither bad faith nor prejudice. Although the trial judge found that Brandfass sought dismissal in order to harass Dyal into pleading guilty to some yet-to-be-determined charge, the record suggests that the court based its finding on the unstated proposition that the passage of two and one half years constitutes prima facie evidence of an intent to harass *429 the defendant. We reject such a presumption, and, because nothing in the record affirmatively suggests that Brandfass sought dismissal of the initial complaint in order to achieve a tactical advantage in derogation of the defendant’s rights or for the purpose of harassment, we consider the district court’s finding of bad faith clearly erroneous.
Brandfass admitted that both he and defense counsel had neglected to note that the STA’s thirty-day period within which to seek an indictment had expired. Although he also acknowledged that, following dismissal of the complaint, his attention was directed to other matters by his superiors, he testified that his sole reason for seeking dismissal was to further investigate the case. Although Dyal relies heavily upon the testimony of the FBI case agent, who testified that he was ready to present the case to the grand jury in July of 1985, the decision whether to present the charge to the grand jury was Brandfass’, and it is his judgment — not the case agent’s — that is important. Moreover, Brandfass’ testimony was corroborated by each of the succeeding AUSAs assigned to this case, who testified that further investigation was needed in order to present the case to the grand jury. Nothing in the record supports the district court’s implication that Brandfass intended to employ the threat of a subsequent indictment as a weapon to induce a guilty plea.
Neither does the record show that Dyal suffered prejudice from the district court’s failure to require a statement of reasons as a condition of dismissal of the 1985 complaint. As the Fifth Circuit noted in
Welbom,
in order to justify recharacterization of a prior dismissal as one with prejudice, the defendant must show that the failure of the court to require a contemporaneous statement of reasons for dismissal prejudiced the defendant’s subsequent ability to show that the government indeed acted in bad faith.
The government has no constitutional duty to indict as soon as the prosecutor has probable cause to believe that the defendant is guilty.
United States v. Lovasco,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the cause is REMANDED to that court with instructions to reinstate the indictment.
Notes
. Neither Dyal's motion nor his arguments before the district court specifically invoked the fifth amendment’s due-process clause, the sixth amendment’s speedy-trial clause, or the Speedy Trial Act.
.
Lovasco,
