Edwаrd George Mitchell, a United States citizen who was extradited from Colombia, was convicted after a jury trial of arranging for the delivery of two kilograms of cocaine to undercover agents in Wisconsin. See 18 U.S.C. § 2, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (possession with intent to distribute); 21 U.S.C. § 846 (conspiracy to distribute). Mitchell was indicted on June 14, 1983, but not arraigned until July 18, 1990. Pretrial, Mitchell moved to dismiss the indictment on three grounds related to the post-indictment delay in bringing him to trial. He appeals the district court’s denial of his pretrial motions as well as the district court's refusal to provide the jury an instruction defining the term “reasonable doubt.” We affirm.
I. FACTS
Mitchell’s 1983 indictment at issue in this appeal was not his first experience with the criminal justice system. In August 1981, Mitchell was convicted of various drug chargеs and received a four-year sentence from a federal court in Texas. After serving approximately eighteen months of that sentence at the LaTuna Federal Correctional Institution in New Mexico, Mitchell was transferred to a halfway house in Texas in March 1983. While at the halfway house, Mitchell apparently arranged a cocainе transaction in Milwaukee, Wisconsin with Richard Peterson, whom Mitchell had met at LaTuna. Unfortunately for Mitchell, after leaving LaTuna Peterson became an informant for law enforcement authorities in the Milwaukee area. As a result of Peterson’s undercover operations, a federal magistrate in Wisconsin issued an arrest warrant for Mitchell on June 7, 1983 for arranging the delivery of two kilograms of cocaine. When federal marshals attempted to arrest Mitchell at the halfway house
Thereafter, the Milwaukee Drug Enforcement Administration office (DEA) took routine measures to locate and apprehend Mitchell. His exact whereabouts remained unknown until approximately July 1986, although the DEA believed that Mitchell had fled to Colombia (the home of his wife) and may have been hiding in Santa Marta. See Government’s Pretrial Motions Response App. 1-8. On July 31, 1986, Mitchell was arrested by DEA special agents and Colombian law enforcement officers in Santa Marta for possession of false Cоlombian immigration documents in the name of Phillip Goodman. Id. at App. 9. After his arrest, Mitchell admitted to a DEA agent that he had used Goodman’s name to conceal his true identity, that he was a fugitive “wanted” in the United States, that he was “tired of running,” and that he could probably bribe his way out of jail in Colombia. Id. Furthermore, local authorities also learned that he was thе subject of an outstanding Colombian arrest warrant for smuggling contraband goods. He was incarcerated in the Santa Marta jail and his case was turned over to the Colombian Customs Service. Id.
Concerned that Mitchell would obtain a release from jail through bribery, the DEA pursued the possibility of having Mitchell deported to face charges in the United States. During this timе, Colombia was in the midst of internal battles over extradition procedures. 1 Although a window of opportunity opened regarding extradition from Colombia on December 14, 1986, 2 the United States did not succeed in extraditing Mitchell before that window closed on June 25, 1987. 3 The United States requested a provisional detention of Mitchell on April 20, 1987 pending a formal extrаdition request, but that formal request apparently was never made. Mitchell was released from the Colombian jail on October 14, 1988. 4
' Extradition did not become a possibility again until August 10, 1989 when a decree was issued by the Colombian President authorizing extradition without a treaty. 5 On January 22, 1990 Mitchell was again placed in custody in Colombia, presumably at the United States’ behest, although the United States did not issue a formal request for provisional detention until January 29, 1990. A formal request for extradition was then filed by the United States on March 15, 1990; a request that Mitchell’s extradition be accelerated was filed on April 30, 1990. Finally, on July 17, 1990, Mitchell left Colombia and was arraigned before the district court the following day.
Mitchell filed motions to dismiss his indictment on three separate, though related, grounds. First, Mitchell claimed that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction due to the post-indictment delay in bringing
II. DISCUSSION
Mitchell’s first argument is that the district court erred by denying his request that the jury be instructed on the definition of “reasonable doubt.” This argument, however, is foreclosed by a long line of precedent in this circuit. We have consistently disapproved of instructions attempting to define “reasonable doubt” and have held that the refusal to instruct on the meaning of “reasonable doubt,” even where an acceptable instruction has been offered, is neither prejudicial nor reversible error.
See United States v. Hall,
Mitchell next argues thаt the district court erred in denying his pretrial motions seeking to abate his prosecution. He advances two principal claims in this regard. First, Mitchell claims that the district court erred in not dismissing his indictment for lack of personal jurisdiction due to the post-indictment delay in bringing him to trial {Speedy Trial Claim). Second, he claims that the district court erred in not dismissing his indictment because he was illegаlly removed from Colombia in violation of his due process rights as well as international and Colombian law {Illegal Removal Claim).
A. Speedy Trial Claim.
Mitchell contends that his indictment should have been dismissed because of the delay in bringing him to trial. Under the sixth amendment, criminal defendants have a right to a speedy trial. The government has a constitutional duty to make a diligent, good faith effort to bring a defendant to trial promptly.
Smith v. Hooey,
As to the first factor, the government wisely concedes that the seven-year delay between Mitchell’s indictment and trial is presumptively prejudicial, requiring further inquiry into the other three factors. Brief of Plaintiff-Aрpellee 7;
see United States v. Loud Hawk,
The second factor, however, cuts sharply against Mitchell. “A defendant’s claim that the government violated [his] right to a speedy trial is seriously undermined when the defendant, and not the government, is the cause of the delay.”
United States v. Blanco,
Furthermore, much of the delay between Mitchell’s release from custody in October 1988 and his re-arrest in January 1990 is due to the fact that extradition from Colombia was not possible during that time. The governmеnt is not duty-bound to pursue futile legal gestures to return the defendant for trial.
United States v. Walton,
As to the third
Barker
factor, which considers the timeliness of Mitchell’s assertion of his right to a speedy trial, Mitchell is in trouble here as well. He made no attempt to demand a trial, to waive extradition, or to otherwise seek to return to the United States for trial. His first assertion of his right to a speedy trial was in his pretrial motions. The only hint in the record of any reluctance on Mitchell’s part to remain a fugitive was that he told a DEA agent that he was “tired of running” when he was first arrested in 1986. Standing alone, this comment is insufficient to establish that Mitchell asserted his right to a speedy trial; Mitchell does not seriously argue otherwise. This renders this third factor a negative for Mitchell.
See United States v. Deleon,
Finally, as to the fourth factor, prejudice,
Barker
identified three interests protected by the speedy trial right: “(i) to prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize the anxiety and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the possibility that the defense will be impaired.”
Barker,
B. Illegal Removal.
Mitchell next argues that his removal from Colombia was illegal in that it violated Colombian and international law and offended “the canons of decency and fairness which American notions of justice hold dear.” Brief of Defendant-Appellant 23. He asks that we hold that the district court erred in not dismissing his case on the basis of illegal removal and rеverse his conviction. We decline to do so.
Although Mitchell’s brief is murky on this point, he seems to contend that the manner in which the United States brought him to trial violated his due process rights and thus requires that his prosecution be abated. The manner in which Mitchell was brought to trial, however, does not affect the ability of the government to try him. The Supreme Court has upheld this proposition for over 100 years, refusing to apply an exclusionary rule to the body of the defendant.
See Frisbie v. Collins,
Furthermore, to the extent that Mitchell alleges that his due process rights have been violated by this pretrial detention and conditions thereof, his argument is again unpersuasive. The stumbling block for Mitchell is that the pretrial detention he is complaining about occurred in Colombia at the hands of the Colombian government. Mitchell does not argue that once he was extradited to the United States his pretrial detention violated his rights. Therefore, any pretrial injury was inflicted by Colombia, not by the United States. Moreover, we have previously noted that “the remedy ... for violations of the due process clause during pre-trial detention is not the divestiture of jurisdiction, but rather an injunction or money damages.”
Matta-Ballesteros,
Last, Mitchell argues that his removal from Colombia violated Colombian and international law and that the district court erred in not abating his prosecution on that basis. Mitchell was returned to the United States for trial pursuant to an executive order of Colombia. Because Mitchell does not argue that his extradition violated the executive ordеr or any treaty, we need not decide whether he would have standing
III.
In sum, we find no error in the district court’s denial of Mitchell’s pretrial motions seeking to dismiss his indictment or in its refusal to provide the jury an instruction on the definition of “reasonable doubt.” Accordingly, Mitchell’s conviction is Affirmed.
Notes
. In 1982, a new extradition treaty between the United States and Colombia took effect which arguably would have required Colombia to surrеnder Mitchell to the United States. See Extradition Treaty with the Republic of Colombia, S. Treaty Doc. No. 97, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. (1981) (signed Sept. 14, 1979). The President of Colombia, however, refused to honor the treaty as a matter of "executive discretion.” See Mark A. Sherman, United States International Drug Control Policy, Extradition and the Rule of Law in Colombia, 15 Nova L.Rev. 661, 667-69 (1991). Although the President changed his position in 1984, the Cоlombian Supreme Court declared that the Colombian law approving the extradition treaty was “unenforceable because of a formal defect" on December 12, 1986. See id. at 680.
. On this date, the Colombian President signed a new law purporting to approve the law which had been struck down by the Supreme Court two days earlier. See Exhibits of Defendant-Appellant 37-38.
. On this date, the Colombian Supreme Court again declared the law approving the extradition treaty to be unenforceable. Id. at 37-43.
. The record leaves unclear the precise reason why Mitchell was released at this time. We note, however, that Colombia was not obligated, according to the treaty under which the United States sought extradition, to hold Mitchell for more than sixty days after provisional detention in the absence of a formal extradition request. See Extradition Treaty with the Republic of Colombia, Art. 11(3), S. Treaty Doc. No. 97, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. (1981).
. Decree No. 1860, Republic of Colombia (Aug. 10, 1989). See Defendant-Appellant’s Exhibits at 51.
. Whether this court should adopt a due process "shock-the-conscience" test is not a question that needs to be reached in this case. Even were we to adopt such a test, because of Mitchell's concession that the government did not torture or even abduct him (confirmed by our own review of the record), the conduct of the government in this case clearly is not comparable to official acts of torture, brutality or similar outrageous conduct present in cases where conduct was found to shock the consсience.
See, e.g., United States v. Russell,
. We note that in
United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez,
