MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter comes before the Court on the Government’s Motion for Reconsideration [Dkt. No. 127] of the Court’s July 8, 2008 Order and Memorandum Opinion granting without prejudice the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Indictment on Speedy Trial Act grounds.
See United States v. Ferguson,
As a threshold matter, Defendant argues that the Court’s order dismissing the indictment was final and cannot be reviewed by this Court because “[t]here is no provision for a ‘motion to reconsider’ under the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.”
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Opp’n at 2. Although, the Fedеral Rules do not specifically provide for motions for reconsideration in criminal cases, the Supreme Court has recognized, in
dicta,
the utility of such motions.
United States v. Dieter,
Building on the underpinning provided by
Dieter
and
Healy,
at least two Circuits have explicitly held, albeit in cаses involving challenges to sentences of imprisonment under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, that motions for reconsideration may properly be considered in criminal cases.
See United States v. Clark,
Given this authority, the Court will therefore proceed on the assumption that it may consider the Government’s motion for reconsideration. To prevail, the Government must demonstrate that (1) there has been an intervening change in controlling law; (2) there is new evidence; or (3) there is a need to correct clear error or prevent manifest injustice.
United States v. Libby,
It should be noted that both parties had ample opportunities to brief the Defendant’s Motion tо Dismiss. In addition to the Motion, Opposition, and Reply, the Court invited both sides to file supplemental briefs concerning the impact of the Court of Appeals’ recent decision in
United States v. Bryant,
The Government advances a number of arguments in its Motion for Reconsideration.
First, the Government argues that
Zedner v. United States,
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Nevertheless, the Government now attempts to draw a subtle but unpersuasive distinction between a prospective waiver of speedy trial rights and “affirmativеly requested continuances” that a defendant later cites as violations of his speedy trial rights. Mot. at 7-8. Under
Zedner,
this is a distinction without a difference. The Speedy Trial Act enumerates the specific categories of delay that are excludablе under its comprehensive scheme and “has no provision excluding periods of delay during which a defendant waives the application of the Act, and it is apparent from the terms of the Act that this omission was a considered one.”
Zedner,
In fact,
Zedner
rejected a very similar argument to the one now propounded by the Government. There, the Government argued that the defendant’s express waiver of his Speedy Trial Act rights in exchange for obtaining a continuance “ ‘induced the district cоurt to grant a continuance without making an express ends-of-justice finding.’ ”
Id.
at 504,
[W]e are unwilling to recognize an es-toppel based on petitioner’s promise not to move for dismissal because doing so would entirely swallow the Act’s no-waiver policy. We see little difference between granting a defendant’s request for a сontinuance in exchange for a promise not to move for dismissal and permitting a prospective waiver, and as we hold above, prospective waivers are inconsistent with the Act.
Id.
at 505,
Moreover, the one case that most strongly supports the Government’s argument — the Fourth Circuit’s 1994 decision in
United States v. Keith,
Second, the Government argues that the period of delay between February 11, 2008
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and May 5, 2008 should have been excluded under the Act. The Govеrnment initially argued that most of this period was properly excludable under 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(3)(A), which excludes any “period of delay resulting from the absence or unavailability of ... an essential witness,” because the Marshals Service was unable to transport two Govеrnment witnesses to the District of Columbia in time for trial on February 11, 2008. The Court concluded that the Government had failed to present any evidence explaining this failure by the Marshals Service and therefore failed to meet its burden of coming forward with evidenсe, under 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2), to support an exclusion of time under Section 3161(h)(3).
Ferguson,
Surprisingly, the Government seeks to reargue this point while simultaneously failing, once again, to submit any evidence in the form of declarations or affidavits from the Marshals Service to explain the delay.
3
For this reason, the one published case cited by the Government is easily distinguishable. In
United States v. Patterson,
The Government also challenges the Court’s finding that the unavailability of the two witnesses accounted' for only nine days of delay; that is, from February 11, 2008 to February 20, 2008.
See Ferguson,
Third, the Government presents new arguments purportedly explaining why two specific periods of time are, in fact, excludable under the Act: February 21, 2006 to March 2, 2006 and September 11, 2007 to September 18, 2007. The Government has provided no explanation for why these arguments were not raised previously, despite several opportunities to do so during the briefing of the Motion to Dismiss. It is now far too late in the proceedings to consider these arguments. Furthermore, the Government asks the Court to make factual findings concerning these сontinuances that the Court did not, in fact, make at the time and that it cannot, in good conscience, make at this late date.
See Zedner,
Finally, the Government сorrectly points out a minor error in the Court’s calculation of the excludable time for the period between February 6, 2006 and February 8, 2006, which the Court calculated as constituting two excludable days under the Act.
Id.
at 39-40. However, time excluded due to thе filing of a pretrial motion,
see
18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(F), includes the day on which the motion was filed.
United States v. Fonseca,
For these reasons, the Government’s Motion for Reconsideration [Dkt. No. 127] is denied. The stay of the Court’s July 8, 2008 Order dismissing the indictment without prejudice is lifted. The Defendant shall be released in this case. Because an immigration detainer has been lodged against the Defendant, a Bahamian citizen, he will remain in custody in the Unitеd States for the near future, permitting the Government sufficient time to either appeal this Order or to re-indict him. An Order shall accompany this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. However, as Judge Randolph stated in his concurrence in
Bryant,
"a defendant’s acquiescence in the delay bears on whether the court should dismiss with prejudiсe and thus allow the defendant to be reindicted.”
.
Keith
held on its specific facts that "if a defendant affirmatively consents to a motion for a continuance and the reasons for the granting of that motion as garnered from the record are sufficient to support a finding that the ends of justice would be met by granting the motion, the defendant cannot take advantage of that discrete period оf time covered by the continuance in asserting a violation of the Speedy Trial Act.”
Keith,
. For the very first time, the Government finally advised the Court in its July 24, 2008 Motion to Reconsider, at p. 16, that "[t]he Chief Deputy U.S. Marshal Service [sic] has agreed to testify ... to further explаin the reasons for the suspension of the flights."
. The two other unpublished cases cited by the Government do not appear to be on point. In one case, the district court apparently based its grant of a continuance on the ends of justicе exception found in Section 3161(h)(8)(A), and not on the unavailable witness exception, Section 3161(h)(3)(A).
See United States v. Thomas,
.As noted in the Court’s July 8, 2008 Memorandum Opinion, the parties in
Johnson
had already been asked to reschedule their trial date on one previous occasion to accommodate trial in this case.
See Ferguson,
