OPINION
Defendant Clarence David Schreane was convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(e) and was sentenced to a 327-month term as an armed career criminal. He argues that his conviction cannot stand because (1) he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial; (2) there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction; and (3) he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to confront a witness. He does not challenge his sentence. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
On December 17, 1997, Police Officer Charles Topping of the Chattanooga Police Department received a dispatch regarding a burglary in progress and was told to be on the lookout for two black men in a small red car. While en route to the scene, he observed a vehicle matching the description of the car parked on the side of the road not far from the location of the burglary. Two individuals were in the vehiсle.
Topping pulled up behind the vehicle and noticed that the occupants appeared to be arguing with one another. Immediately, the driver of the car, Willard Duckett, who is Schreane’s nephew, quickly exited the vehicle and started toward Topping while yelling, “He has a gun,” referring to Schreane, the passenger in the car. Topping drew his weapon and advised Duckett to approach slowly. Duckett appeared very nervous, scared, excited, and anxious to get away from the red vehicle. In fact, Duckett almost pushed Topping down trying to get away from the car. During this time, Duckett was speaking with a raised high-pitch tone of voice. Topping did not see Duckett drop or throw anything on the ground or kick anything underneath the vehicle as he was exiting the car.
Topping tried to calm Duckett down and brought him back to the patrol car where he searched him. While his attention was on Duckett, Topрing also had to watch Schreane, who remained in the passenger side of the car. In a few minutes, Officer Ervin Morgan arrived at the scene. He was warned by Topping that “There’s a gun somewhere,” at which point he drew his firearm and approached the parked vehicle. As Morgan proceeded toward the passenger side of the vehicle, he saw Schreane nervously shifting around inside the car. He also observed a firearm lying on the grass beside the closed passenger door. Although Morgan initially testified that the passenger window was rolled down when he approached, he later indicated that he could not remember the position of the window. Photographs taken by crime scene investigators showed that at the time of the extraction, the window was rolled up. Neither Morgan nor Topping saw the gun in Schreane’s possession.
After Schreane exited the vehicle, Morgan arrested him and placed him in the back of his patrol car. Topping then spoke with the defendant in order to ob *552 tain identifying information. Schreane asked if he could get the gun back and return it to his girlfriend, Shirley Torrega-no. He also stated that his girlfriend was not aware that he had her gun. Schreane further stated that the vehicle belonged to Torregano, which proved to be true. Schreane does not suggest that during his conversation with law enforcement he denied knowledge of the existence of the gun, that he accused Duckett of being the true possessor of the gun, or that he denied dropping the gun in the grass.
Torregano testified that she frequently loaned Schreane the car, but that on the day in question, she loaned the vehicle to Duckett in order for him to pick up the defendant from a bus station. She also testified that the firearm belonged to her and that she frequently kept it in her car for protection because she worked a night job in an unsafe neighborhood. According to Torregano, she told no one that she owned the firearm. At trial, the prosecution challenged her testimony regarding where she kept her firearm. It presented testimony from Sergeant Tara Pedigo, who questioned Torregano about the firearm found at the scene. Torregano told her that she kept the gun in a box in her home. Torregano never indicated to Pedigo that she kept the firearm in her car.
The weapon located beside the vehicle was later determined to be a .38 caliber derringer loaded with two rounds of ammunition. Crime scene investigators were unable to identify any fingerprints on the firearm.
Following the police investigation, Schreane was charged by the State of Tennessee for his participation in the burglary, as well as other unrelated state crimes. He was taken into state custody pending resolution of those offenses. On July 28, 1998, while still in state custody, a federal grand jury returnеd an indictment charging Schreane with being an armed career criminal in unlawful possession of a firearm, violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(e). Thereafter, the United States lodged a federal detainer against Schreane on July 30, 1998, with instructions to provide a copy of the de-tainer to Schreane.
On November 9, 1999, Schreane pled guilty to numerous violations of state law and received a nine-year prison sentence. Following sentencing, he was transferred to a state penal institution on November 17, 1999, but the United States Marshal’s Service was not notified of the disposition of his state case until July 20, 2000. When finally notified, the government immediately placed a second federal detainer, dated July 21, 2000, against Schreane. On July 27, 2000, the second detainer was personally served on Schreane, who signed for the detainer without demanding a speedy trial.
On October 17, 2000, the government filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus ad 'prosequendum, and the defendant was arraigned on the instant charges on November 15, 2000. On December 18, 2000, approximately four months and three weeks after being personally served with the second detainer, Schreane filed a motion to dismiss the indictment on speedy trial grounds. The district court denied the motion. On January 8, 2001, over two years and five months after the indictment, Schreane’s trial commenced. 1 He was convicted and subsequently sentenced to a 327-month term, to run consecutively with Schreane’s nine-year state prison sentence.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Speedy Trial
Schreane contends that the twenty-nine month delay between his indictment
*553
and trial violated his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial.
2
“In determining whether a defendant’s right to a speedy trial has been violated, an appeals court reviews questions of law de novo and questions of fact under the clearly erroneous standard.”
United States v. Smith,
The Sixth Amendment guarantees that, “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and publiс trial.” U.S. Const, amend. VI. The Supreme Court has articulated four factors that must be balanced in a speedy trial analysis.
See Barker v. Wingo,
1. Length of Delay
The first factor serves a dual function. First, it is a threshold requirement; if the delay is not uncommonly long, judicial examination ceases.
See Doggett,
2. Reason for the Delay
The second
Barker
factor focuses on the reason for the delay. Not all delays are susceptible to equal blame.
See Barker,
In the instant case, nothing in the record suggests—and Schreane does not argue — that the delay that occurred in the prosecution of this case was motivated by bad faith, harassment, or a governmental desire to seek a tactical advantage. Nonetheless, Schreane contends that the government is more to blame for the delay. To properly analyze this
Barker
factor, it is necessary to separate the total twenty-nine month delay into two time periods. The first time period is the fifteen and one-half month delay between federal indictment and imposition of Schreane’s state sentence. The second consists of all time periods subsequent to Schreane’s being sentenced in state court. This separation is necessary because the reason for the delay in each of the time periods favors a different party, with the first weighing in favor of the governmerftr and the second in favor of the defendant. Therefore, based on our
ad hoc
analysis,
see Barker,
The first delay in this case was approximately fifteen and one-half months, and it spanned from July 28, 1998, when a federal grand jury returned an indictment, to November 9, 1999, when Schreane was sentenced in state court. This delay was due to the obvious need to allow the defendant to be prosecuted by the State without interference by the federal government. “When a defendant violates the laws of several different sovereigns, as was the case here, at least one sovereign, and perhaps more, will have to wait its turn at the prosecutorial turnstile.”
Grimmond,
As the Fourth Circuit has explained, to require the federal government to prosecute an accused before state proceedings have run their course “would be to mire the state and federal systems in innumerable opposing writs, to increase inmate transportation back and forth between the state and federal systems with consequent additional safety risks and administrative costs, and generally to throw parallel federal and state prosecutions into confusion and disarray.”
United States v. Thomas,
The remaining thirteen and one-half month delay, which consists of all time periods after Schreane was sentenced in state court on or about November 9, 1999, was caused by a combination of reasons, which, when considered as a whole, weigh in favor of the defendant. These reasons include (1) the State’s apparent failure to notify the defendant of the first federal detainer; 4 (2) the State’s apparent failure to notify the United States of the disposition of the defendant’s case until eight and one-half months after the fact; (3) the federal prosecution’s failure to follow-up on the status of the defendant’s state proceedings for approximately eight and one-half months (from November 9, 1999, when the defendant was sentenced in state court to July 20, 2000, when state authorities *556 finally notified the United States of the disposition of his state case); (4) the federal government’s failure to move forward with its prosecution of the defendant during the nearly five and one-half month period between when the second detainer was lodged and when the defendant’s trial commenced on January 8, 2001; and (5) the defendant’s failure to invoke his speedy trial rights following receipt of the second federal detainer, which we discuss and weigh separately below in the third Barker factor despite its clearly contributing to the delay. Although neither party should be penalized by the first and second considerations as they appear to be the result of the State’s failure to properly handle the federal detainer, 5 the third and fourth reasons weigh in favor of the defendant.
The federal government was in a position to check on the status of the defendant’s state proceedings, but failed to do so. Although the government may have reasonably expected that the State would promptly notify it of the defendant’s availability, when the government failed to receive any notice after the passage of a considerable period of time, reasonable diligence requires the government to follow-up on the matter.
See Redd v. Sowders,
In sum, although not an exact science, based on the circumstances of this case, each of thé two roughly equivalent time periods in the twenty-nine month delay favors a different party. Thus, neither party is really “more to blame” for the total delay in this case. Cf. O’Dell, 247 F.3d at 670-71 (explaining that “any delay attributable to the government is balanced *557 by Defendant’s own strategic machinations”). Consequently, under our ad hoc analysis, the scales of justice remain more or less in equipoise when balancing this Barker factor. The scales tip against Schreane, however, once we consider that he failed to timely assert his speedy trial rights after receiving notice of his second federal detainer, one of the reasons we have already identified as contributing to the delay.
S. Defendant’s Assertion of his Speedy Trial Rights
Turning to the third factor of the
Barker
test, Schreane argues that because he did not know of his federal indictment before he was served with the second detainer on July 27, 2000, he could not have demanded a speedy trial any time before that date. To this argument, the government offers nothing in response. Accordingly, the defendant cannot be blamed for not invoking his right to a speedy trial before July 27, 2000.
See United States v. Brown,
Schreane concedes, however, that following the second detainer, he did not assert his right to a speedy trial in a timely fashion. As Schreane acknowledges, he “never invoked his right to a speedy trial ... until December 18, 2000,” when defense counsel filed a motion to dismiss the indictment less than one month before trial. Schreane’s four-month and three-week delay in invoking his speedy trial right weighs against him.
See Wilson,
4. Prejudice
The last
Barker
factor is concerned with the prejudice suffered by Schreane. A defendant must show that “substantial prejudice” has resulted from the delay.
White,
In the instant case, Schreane alleges that he has suffered only from the third form of prejudice. Specifically, he argues that the arresting officers’ testimony was cloudy on certain facts; that his girlfriend’s testimony was unfairly undermined by a rebuttal witness who was allowed to refer to investigatory notes; that his partner in crime, Duckett, was missing during trial; that his own memory of events had dimmed twenty-nine months after the fact; and that there may have been a loss of exculpatory evidence completely unknown to the defense. Based on the record before us, these alleged prejudices fall far short of showing that Schre-ane’s defense was somehow impaired by the delay that occurred in the prosecution of this case.
Contrary to Schreane’s assertion, the inability of Officers Topping and Morgan to remember particular facts, such as the presence of plastic gloves found outside of the driver’s side of the car
6
and whether the passenger window was rolled down during the arrest, did not undermine his defense; rather, it weakened the prosecution’s case. As the Supreme Court has observed, “[a]s the time between the commission of the crime and the trial lengthens, witnesses may become unavailable or their memories may fade. If the witnesses support the prosecution, its case will be weakened ... [as] it is the prosecution which carries the burden of proof.”
Id.
at 521,
Next, Schreane argues that he was prejudiced because Sergeant Pedigo, who was called to rebut Torregano’s testimony, was permitted to refer to investigatory notes of an initial interview with Torregano in which Torregano made inconsistent statements with her trial testimony. Schreane argues that Pedigo’s testimony made Tor-regano look as if she was lying when she was just suffering from a memory lapse. This argument is wholly meritless. Regardless of when a jury is empaneled for speedy trial purposes, as a matter of evi-dentiary law, a party is free to challenge a trial witness’s testimony with prior inconsistent statements.
See United States v. McCall,
Schreane also argues that the lapse in time between his indictment and trial resulted in Duckett’s “untimely absence.” However, a writ of habeas corpus
ad testificandum
was issued for Duckett prior to trial, and he was brought to a local jail two days before the trial began. If Schreane wished to call Duckett to testify hе was free to do so. Yet, “[p]resumably[,] only those declarants that neither side believes will be particularly helpful will not have been subpoenaed as witnesses” or called to testify once made available.
United States v. Inadi,
Finally, Schreane argues that the delay in this case dimmed his memory of events relevant to his defense and possibly resulted in the loss of unknown exculpatory evidence. Essentially, this is an argument that the delay of this case should in and of itself create a presumption of prejudice that weighs in favor of the defendant.
7
See Doggett, 505
U.S. at 655-56,
If “the government prosecutes a case with reasonable diligence, a defendant who cannot demonstrate how his defense was prejudiced with specificity will not make out a speedy trial claim no matter how great the ensuing delay.”
Howard,
In sum, after balancing the four Barker factors, only the first factor weighs in favor of Schreane, with the second favoring neither party, and the third and fourth weighing against the defendant. Considering all the factors as a whole, we find that Schreane’s Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial was not violated.
*560 B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Schreane argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). We review a claim of insufficient evidence using the same standard as the district court.
United States v. Beddow,
“To obtain a conviction pursuant to § 922(g)(1), the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) that the defendant has a prior conviction for a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year; (2) that the defendant thereafter knowingly possessed the firearm and ammunition specified in the indictment; and (3) that the possession was in or affecting interstate commerce.”
United States v. Daniel,
Actual or constructive possession is sufficient to give rise to criminal liability under § 922(g).
United States v. Murphy,
Although Schreane did not have physical possession of the gun at the time of his arrest, there was ample evidence from which the jury could infer that he knowingly possessed the weapon immediately prior to when Officer Morgan approached the vehicle. Schreane principally challenges two pieces of evidence introduced by the government. First, he contends that Duckett’s statement, “He has a gun,” was “blatantly false” and “clearly ... self-serving” because “[b]y the time Duckett approached Officer Topping, the firearm must have already been outside of the car.” 8 According to Schreane, “[a]ssuming that the gun must have been placed outside of the car before either officer arrived on the scene ... Duckett’s statement ... could have shed no credible light on who exercised dominion and control over the Derringer.” Second, Schreane contends that his self-incriminating statements regarding his possession of the gun and his desire to return it back to his girlfriend were unclear and open to interpretation. We disagree on both points.
When Officer Topping first pulled behind the vehicle in question, he observed the two passengers arguing. Immediately, Duckett, who was the driver of the vehicle, *561 darted out of the car and headed toward the officer exclaiming, “He has a gun!” 9 Topping described Duckett as being in a genuine state of panic, specifically describing him as very “nervous,” “scared,” “excited,” and anxious to “get away from the vehicle.” As Topping was distracted with Duckett, both trying to calm him down and conduct a pat-down search, the jury could have reasonably inferred that the defendant wiped the gun of his fingerprints and furtively cracked open the passenger door or rolled down the passenger window (assuming the window was rolled up) and dropped the weapon in the grass before Officer Morgan arrived on the scene. Because Topping was preoccupied with Duck-ett while standing on the driver side of his patrol car and behind the suspects’ vehicle, the jury could have reasonably inferred that from his poor vantage point, Topping would have had difficulty detecting any surreptitious activity on the part of Schre-ane. Thus, contrary to Schreane’s assertion, there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could infer that he dropped the gun that was within his exclusive possession after Officer Topping arrived on the scene.
When Officer Morgan arrived as backup, he testified that he observed the defendant moving about inside the car, which the jury could have reasonably inferred meant that the defendant was fiddling with the lever of the car window or the inside door handle. As Morgan approached the vehicle to extract the defendant, he discovered the gun in the grass next to the side door of the vehicle. Because the gun was later determined to be owned by Torregano— and not just a random gun lying around in the street coincidentally located in the grass next to where Duckett decided to park the car — clearly the defendant or Duckett had dominion and control over the firearm and dropped it outside. Officer Topрing testified that when Duckett exited the vehicle, Duckett did not throw anything outside the car or attempt to kick anything underneath the vehicle. In fact, Topping testified that because of the speed with which he exited the car, Duckett did not even have the opportunity to do so. Thus, the jury was justified to infer that Schreane, who was in close proximity to the discovered weapon, was in possession of the gun and decided to drop it outside.
Furthermore, Schreane does not deny that when he was placed in the back of the police cruiser, he asked Officer Topping if he could get the gun back and return it to his girlfriend. He also does not deny that he stated that his girlfriend was not aware that “he has it [i.e., the gun],” a clear admission that the firearm was in his immediate possession and that he exercised dominion and control over it before it was dropped on the ground. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, it is quite clear that the jury could have reasonably interpreted Officer Topping’s testimony to be that while in the cruiser, Schreane admitted to having been in possession of the gun and that his girlfriend was unaware that he had it. 10
*562
Moreover, although Torregano provided an innocent story to explain the presence of the firearm, namely, that she frequently kept the gun in her car for protection because she had a night job in an unsafe neighborhood,
11
the government rebutted this testimony with testimony from Sergeant Pedigo, who asserted that during the police investigation, Torregano stated only that she kept the gun in a box in her home. It is well settled that when a defendant “offer[s] an innocent explanation for the incriminating facts proved by the government, the jury [i]s free to disbelieve [it].”
United States v. Ledezma,
Finally, for purposes оf comparison, the facts of this case are similar to
United States v. Daniel,
In sum, when viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to return a guilty verdict on the indictment of being a felon in possession of a firearm.
C. Right to Confront a Witness
Schreane next argues that the district court erred in allowing Officer Topping to testify that during the stop Duckett exclaimed, “He has a gun,” referring to Schreane. He contends that the admission of this statement under the hearsay exception of excited utterances deprived him of his constitutional right to confront a witness. The district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Duckett’s statement as an excited utterance, and the admission of this statement did not violate the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment.
Schreane does not address whether Duckett’s statement qualifies as an excited utterance; instead, he seems to argue that regardless of whether Duckett was under the stress of excitement, the district court should have rejected the in
*563
troduction of Duckett’s spontaneous statement because it was a statement made by a co-defendant who “had a strong interest in shifting at least some of the responsibility for the burglary from himself onto [the defendant].” The flaw of this assignment of error is that it fundamentally misunderstands longstanding jurisprudential insight that excited utterances—in and of themselves and regardless of the source—contain “inherent guarantees of truthfulness,”
Hoggins v. Warden, Fort Pillow State Farm,
An excited utterance is defined as “[a] statement relating to a startling event or condition made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by thе event or condition.” Fed.R.Evid. 803(2). The rationale for this hearsay exception is that “such statements are given under circumstances
that eliminate the possibility of fabrication, coaching, or confabulation,
and that therefore the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement provide sufficient assurance that the statement is trustworthy and that cross-examination would be superfluous.”
Wright,
If Duckett’s statement qualifies as an excited utterance, which necessarily means that it carries sufficient indicia of reliability and trustworthiness, then the judicial inquiry is at an end. A criminal defendant’s right to confront witnesses is not violated by the introduction of hearsay testimony where either the hearsay statement “falls within a firmly rooted hearsay exception,” or where it is supported by “a showing of particularized guarantees of trustworthiness.”
Ohio v. Roberts,
An appellate court reviews all evidentiary rulings—including constitutional challenges to evidentiary rulings—under the abuse-of-discretion standard.
See General Electric Co. v. Joiner,
In
Haggins,
we held that a statement qualifies as an excited utterance if three elements are met. First, “there must be an event startling enough to cause nervous excitement.”
On the first element, Officer Topping observed Duckett and Schreane arguing in the car immediately after they had committed a burglary, a crime to which the defendant pleaded guilty in state court. Certainly, the burglary itself may constitute a startling event, but even if it did not, the subsequent verbal altercation between Duckett and Schreane (one where Schreane apparently threatened to use the gun on Duckett) qualifies as a startling event. Second, immediately upon observing the patrol car, Duckett jumped out of the vehicle аnd quickly approached Topping, yelling “He has a gun!” The short length of time between the burglary and the statement, and/or the argument and the vocalization, did not afford Duckett enough time to contrive a story for the officer’s benefit. 13 Last, Topping described Duck- *565 ett as being genuinely “nervous,” “scared,” “excited,” eager to “get away from the vehicle,” speaking in a “high-pitched voice” and in need of being “slowed down.” Duckett’s excited physical demeanor ^supports a finding that Duckett made his statement while still under the sway of excitement. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Duckett’s statement as an excited utterance, and, as a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule, the statement did not violate the Confrontation Clause. 14
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. His trial commenced two years, five months and eleven days after the indictment. For clarity, we refer to this delay as a twenty-nine month delay.
. Schreane does not allege that his rights were violated undеr the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3161-3174.
. Determining that there exists a valid reason for the government’s delay does not prevent a finding that a defendant’s right to a speedy trial has been violated.
See Grimmond,
. Although the district court found that Schreane was "informed” of the charges against him when the first detainer was lodged, there appears to be nothing in the record that supports this factual finding. An evidentiary hearing was not held on the issue and the defendant specifically challenges this finding on appeal. We need not determine whether this finding was clearly erroneous, however, because we assume for purposes of this claim that Schreane is correct that he did not have actual notice of this first detainer.
. Negligence on the part of the government, overcrowded courts or understaffed prosecutor officеs are examples of "neutral” reasons for delay that should weigh against the government.
See Barker,
. Although Schreane states that the plastic gloves were possibly exculpatory pieces of evidence, he has failed to show how the existence and location of these gloves somehow proves that he was not the possessor of the gun. Moreover, if these gloves were as important as Schreane makes them out to be, defense counsel was free to focus the jury’s attention on this evidence at trial.
. Of course, “presumptive prejudice cannot alone carry a Sixth Amendment claim without regard to the other
Barker
criteria[;] ... it is part of the mix of relevant facts, and its importance increases with the length of the delay.”
Doggett,
. Although Schreane challenges the introduction of this statement, as discussed infi-a, the district court did not err in allowing the jury to learn of this excited utterance.
. During the prosecution's opening statement, the jury heard Duckett’s full statement, namely, '‘You've got to help me. He’s got a gun. He's going to kill me. Put me in the car. Arrest me. Take me away. He’s got a gun.” At the conclusion of opening statements, the defense moved for a mistrial, which was denied. The district court, however, instructed the jury to disregard the prosecutor’s additional statements and not to consider those statements as evidence. On appeal, Schreane repeatedly refers to the prosecution’s statements to suggest prosecutorial misconduct. Pursuant to our holding in
United States v. Bess,
. Schreane complains that Officer Topping "did not elaborate on his statement." We *562 note, however, that through effective cross-examination, defense counsel could have sought any such "elaboration.”
. This testimony, however, does nothing to explain how the gun made its way to the grass outside the сar.
. Schreane's heavy reliance on
Bulls v. Jones,
. Even if Duckett had a “motive” to shift responsibility for the burglary, Duckett's statement did not concern the burglary, but rather, the defendant’s apparent threat to use the firearm against Duckett. The statement’s focus on the gun instead of the burglary is further proof that Duckett was reacting to a *565 startling event and was not fabricating a story to escape criminal responsibility.
. As indicated supra, although the defendant complains that he was denied the opportunity to subject Duckett to “intense cross-examination,” the record shows that Duckett was produced by the government and made available to the defense.
