*194 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER RE: SPEEDY TRIAL ACT DISMISSAL
This case involves the question of whether a violation of the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. 3161(c)(1) requires an indictment’s dismissal with or without prejudice. After a review of the record, which included errors by the government as well as by this Court, I conclude that a dismissal with prejudice is appropriate in this case. As I describe below, this is a deeply flawed prosecutiоn — from the Boston police officer who lied in court, to the prosecutor who justified a blatantly illegal search, and then failed to act timely after the First Circuit concluded that the search could be salvaged notwithstanding the lies and the initial illegal entry. And those errors are compounded by this Court’s delay in deciding defendant’s motion, аll the while the defendant was in jail. Given these circumstances, to allow this prosecution to continue would not advance the administration of justice; it would undermine it.
I.BACKGROUND
On June 4, 2003, Earl Dessesaure was indicted on four charges: (Indictment of Earl Dessesaure, June 4, 2003, document # 7.) He has been in federal custody since his arrest, over four years.
1. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) — Felon in Possession of Ammunition;
2. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) — Possession with Intent to Distribute a Controlled Substance;
3. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) — Possession with Intent to Distribute a Controlled Substance; and
4. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A) — Possession of a Firearm in Furtherance of a Drug Trafficking Crime.
Dessesaure filed a motion to suppress the fruits of two searches — a warrantless search of his car and a search pursuant to a warrant of his home — litigation which involved an evidentiary hearing and substantial briefing. On April 13, 2004, the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence was granted in part and denied in part.
See United States v. Dessesaure,
My suppression decision was based on two extremely troubling fact findings: First, I found that the search of Desses-aure’s apartment was conducted by officers without a warrant or facts excusing a warrant under the guise of “freezing the scene.” The rationale was, in а word, absurd: The officers illegally searched the house and then called back to the district attorney’s office with the evidence they found in order that it may be included in the warrant application.
Dessesaure II,
The government appealed; the First Circuit reversed,
see United States v. Dessesaure,
One other issue deserves comment. Taking it as true that the officers lied (оver the government’s protest that this is an unfair characterization), the district court was understandably unhappy.
The record shows more than a touch of frustration and building tension. At least some members of the Boston Police Department may have mistakenly believed that they were free, absent a search warrant or exigent circumstances, to enter a dwelling in order to ‘freeze’ the scene. The district court was quite correct to state strongly that this is not the law:
There is no question that the police had no ‘right to freeze’ the Quincy apartment where that meant entering it, looking around, searching, all the while ostensibly waiting for someone to get a warrant. Nothing in First Circuit оr Supreme Court ease law remotely justifies such a step. Nor should it. Searching without a warrant, on the assumption that the magistrate will no doubt agree with the officers that there is probable cause to search that location at that time, makes a mockery of Fourth Amendment protection. The warrant, and the review it requires, is rеduced to a technicality.
Dessesaure III,
Rather, the Court parted company with by the lower court by concluding that there was probable cause without the tainted evidence. And, more significantly, the Court found “that even if there had been no illegal entry, there is no evidence these officers would not have sought a warrant.”
Dessesaure III,
The First Circuit decided Dessesaure III on November 30, 2005, and denied en banc review on February 28, 2006. Nothing further happened in this case until June 6, 2006, three months later, when defendant filed a letter requesting appointment of counsel to try to appeal the Court of Aрpeals decision to the Supreme Court (document # 51). The letter was obviously untimely.
During a status conference held on June 29, 2006, this Court asked the parties whether the Speedy Trial Act had been violated. The government filed a brief conceding the violation but calling for a dismissal without prejudice. The defendant filed a brief calling for a dismissаl with prejudice.
This Court had the matter under advisement for far too long, in part because of its struggle with the question of when and whether to dismiss an indictment with prejudice. I have concluded that a dismissal with prejudice is appropriate in this case.
I. ANALYSIS
A. Legal Standard
The Speedy Trial Act (“STA”) requires that a defendant be tried within seventy days of the latest of either the filing of an indictment or information, or the first appearance before a judge or magistrate.
See United States v. Barnes,
When determining whether to dismiss the indictment with or without prejudice, this Court considers: “(1) thе seriousness of the offenses; (2) the circumstances leading to the delay; (3) the impact reprosecution would have on the administration of justice and the enforcement of the Speedy Trial Act; and (4) any related miscellaneous factors, including whether the delay resulted in actual prejudice to the defendant.”
Barnes,
B. Speedy Trial Calculation
The government claims that the seventy-day limit prescribed by the STA was only exceeded by twenty-one days. (PL Br.l.) This is not accurate. The government has failed to include all of the necessary non-excludable days in its calculation.
The government only included days between the Court of Appeals mandate (March 7, 2006) and the filing of defendant’s
pro se
request for an appointment of counsel (June 6, 2006).
3
This period totals ninety-one days, exceeding the seventy-day limit by 21 days. However, the government fails to include the non-excludable days that accrued prior to the government’s appeal. 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(E) states that any “delay resulting from any interlocutory appeal” shall be excluded “in computing the time within which the trial of any such offense must commence.” Such time is excluded from the STA calculation, to be sure, but the clock is not reset to day one.
See Henderson,
*197 In an order dated July 22, 2003, Magistrate Judge Collings determined that between the date the indictment was returned, June 4, 2003, and August 29, 2003, there were eighteen non-excludable days (document # 12). All days between August 29, 2003, and this Courts filing of a Memorandum and Order partially granting and partiаlly denying defendant’s motion to suppress evidence on April 13, 2004, were excludable. However, there were no pending motions or stays between April 13, 2004, and May 5, 2004, and, therefore, these twenty-one days are not excludable. When all of the non-excludable days are added together, the total is 130 days. This is sixty days past the proscribed seventy-day limit. 4
Added to the prosecutor’s delay is this Court’s delay in evaluating the matter, nearly a year. The time period, in short, is substantial, all the while the defendant is in jail.
C. Remedy for Violating the STA
In evaluating whether to dismiss the indictment with or without prejudice, see 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2), the Court considers each of the Barnes factors as outlined in Section A above. However, the most significant Barnes factor in determining the appropriate remedy in this case pertains to concerns about the administration of justice and the length of delay.
1. The Seriousness of the Offenses
The first step of the analysis is assessing the seriousness of the alleged crimes.
See Barnes,
As a general matter, the First Circuit has held that “[b]y their very nature, drugs-for-profit offenses are extremely serious.”
Hastings,
2. The Reason for the Violation
The next factor that this Court needs to examine is the reason for the violation' — • whether it is intentional or inadvertent.
See Barnes,
The government is also corrеct that the second factor tips in favor of dismissal without prejudice.
See United States v. Medugno,
3. The Administration of Justice and the STA
The gоvernment argues that dismissing this ease without prejudice would facilitate the administration of justice. (Gov.Br.3-4.) It argues that because “Congress did not intend any particular type of dismissal to serve as the presumptive remedy,” the facts of this case favor dismissal without prejudice.
Id.
(citing
United States v. Taylor,
I disagree. This was a flawed prosecution in many respects: 1) A Boston police officer lied to the Court, discarded his notes before his testimony, notes which could well have contradicted his testimony, and relied on informants whosе reliability was questionable. 2) The government made a number of troubling arguments apparently ratifying that conduct — arguing that the officers had the right to “freeze” an apartment, even though that meant illegally searching it and using the fruits of that search for the warrant application. At one point, the government went so far as to suggest that this Court was wrong to impose the same standards on state officials participating in a federal investigation as on federal officials, that somehow the constitution should mean something different when state officials are concerned. 5 3) After the appeal, the government failed to restart the prosecution in a timely fashion. 4) The Court delayed this decision for too long.
Nor is it clear that reprosecution would be as easy as the government suggests. In a letter to this Court, after the First Circuit’s reversal, defendant expressed his interest in applying for certiorari to have the First Circuit’s decision reviewed by the Supreme Court. Clearly, he missed the deadline for such a petition. The issues thаt would be raised by such an appeal are important: whether the second Murray factor (i.e., would the officers have gotten a warrant if they had not uncovered contraband during the illegal search) is a question of law or fact; and whether the First Circuit was correct in finding that the warrant would have been sought in any event where that finding was bаsed in part on the testimony of an officer whom this Court found not credible. Defendant may well re-raise these issues should the case be reprosecuted in order to appeal them to the Supreme Court.
To allow the government to continue this prosecution, saved yet again from its own *199 blatant errors, would be make a moсkery of the STA and the criminal justice system as a whole. This is especially true since the defendant has been incarcerated since the issuance of the indictment.
4. Length of Delay and Prejudice to Defendant
The government argues that the delay in this case does not require a dismissal with prejudice. To be sure, courts have rarely found that the length of the violation alone rеquires a dismissal with prejudice.
See, e.g., Barnes,
II. CONCLUSION
The government and the Court have violated the Speedy Trial Act by failing to bring defendаnt to trial within seventy days of defendant’s indictment. This case is hereby DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. I did not make that finding lightly. In
Dess-esaure I,
I described in great detail why Bro-derick’s testimony was inconsistent with the testimony of other officers on the scene, reports that were filed, and why it was of a piece with Broderick’s cavalier attitude to this investigation.
Dessesaure I,
. I also found incredible Broderick's comments about certain admissions made by the defendant during booking.
Dessesaure
I,
. In this calculation, I have assumed that defendant’s request for counsel is a pretrial motion. As such, the Speedy Trial Clock is tolled until the Court rules on this issue.
. While the 130 non-excludable days is the only relevant factor for considering if the STA was violated, the actual length of the overrun is relevant for a later discussion of the factors regarding whether this case should be dismissed with or without prejudice.
. “The government suggests that the Court wrongfully [sic] anаlyzed the local investigation as if it were the equivalent of 'an intensive, three-year DEA probe.' If by that it means that the Court applied the same federal constitutional standards to this local prosecution that it would have applied to any federal investigation, the government is correct. That is precisely the point.”
Dessesaure II,
. Of the very few that have found a violation,
United States v. Rivas,
Next, the district court concluded that the impact of reprosecution of the defendants would be severe in this case because it would "completely negаte the beneficent purposes intended to be accomplished by the Act,” and, thus dismissal with prejudice was warranted. Id. Again, the First Circuit found that the district court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing with prejudice.
In contrast, in
United States v. Hastings,
the district court originally dismissed the charges without prejudice.
