UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus JAMES MATHURIN, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 11-13211
D. C. Docket No. 1:09-cr-21075-MGC-1
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
(August 15, 2012)
Before WILSON, PRYOR, and MARTIN, Circuit Judges.
[PUBLISH]
Defendant-Appellant James Mathurin was convicted of a number of armed robbery and weapons charges. These convictions resulted from a five-month-long
This case requires us to decide the narrow question of whether the time during which plea negotiations are conducted is automatically excludable from the Speedy Trial Act‘s thirty-day window for filing an information or indictment. For the reasons that follow, we have concluded that the time during which plea negotiations are conducted is not automatically excludable.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the night of December 12, 2007, seventeen-year-old James Mathurin and Marckson Saint Fleur were arrested by police on suspicion that they had carjacked an Acura at gunpoint earlier that evening. That same night, Mr. Mathurin confessed his involvement in the Acura carjacking to police.1
In the days that followed, Mr. Mathurin began to tell the police about his involvement in a spree of other carjackings and armed robberies that had happened in Miami-Dade County over the previous months. For most of these crimes, Mr.
By May 2008, federal prosecutors were involved. On April 1, 2009, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida filed a juvenile information charging Mr. Mathurin with forty-nine offenses occurring between July 26, 2007 and December 12, 2007. That same day, the government also moved the District Court to transfer Mr. Mathurin for criminal prosecution as an adult for the acts set forth in the juvenile information. Based on the juvenile information, Mr. Mathurin was taken into federal custody on April 9, 2009 and made his initial appearance before a magistrate judge that day.
By the summer of 2009, plea negotiations were underway and, as part of those negotiations, Mr. Mathurin agreed to waive his right under the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act,
Mr. Mathurin claims that bilateral plea negotiations continued from that point until November 10, 2009. The government, however, asserts that plea negotiations continued until the end of December 2009.2 The government does not dispute that on November 10, 2009 Mr. Mathurin said to go ahead and indict him. But the government maintains that, at the conclusion of the November 10th meeting, Mr. Mathurin‘s defense counsel nonetheless asked that the indictment be delayed so that he could further discuss the government‘s offer with his client. After receiving evidence from both sides, the Magistrate Judge found that plea negotiations continued until December 22, 2009—the date of a status conference—when Mr. Mathurin clearly rejected the plea offer. A week after the status conference, on December 29, 2009, the grand jury returned an indictment
On April 28, 2010, Mr. Mathurin moved to dismiss all charges based on violations of the Speedy Trial Act. In response, the Magistrate Judge held a hearing on May 19, 2010. The Magistrate Judge ultimately recommended denying Mr. Mathurin‘s motion for relief under the Speedy Trial Act, as well as Mr. Mathurin‘s other motions to suppress inculpatory post-arrest statements, sever counts, and suppress identification testimony. Over Mr. Mathurin‘s objections, the District Court adopted the Magistrate Judge‘s recommendations.
After a trial, a jury found Mr. Mathurin guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit a robbery in violation of the Hobbs Act,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review a claim under the Speedy Trial Act de novo and review a district court‘s factual determinations on excludable time for clear error.” United States v. Williams, 314 F.3d 552, 556 (11th Cir. 2002).
III. DISCUSSION
The Speedy Trial Act (the Act) requires the government to file an indictment or information against a defendant within thirty days from the date on which he was arrested or served with a summons. See
A.
On December 29, 2009, the government indicted Mr. Mathurin. To determine whether the government timely indicted Mr. Mathurin in keeping within the Act, we must first establish when the statutory thirty-day period began.
When this issue was before the District Court, the government agreed that the thirty-day period began to run from August 27, 2009, the date of Mr. Mathurin‘s transfer.4 Now, it disputes this, and advances the theory that the Act‘s
B.
Although the time between August 27, 2009 and December 29, 2009 is more than thirty days, the government insists that it did not violate the Act. It claims that plea negotiations, which were ongoing throughout most of this period, toll the thirty-day speedy-indictment clock under the statute as “other proceedings concerning the defendant,”
Under this framework, the question for us is whether one of the subparagraphs of
Because subparagraph (G) addresses the automatic excludability of delays associated with plea agreements, the question of whether the delay in Mr. Mathurin‘s case is automatically excludable is determined entirely by the requirements of that subparagraph. And insofar as the District Court was never asked to review a proposed plea agreement during the relevant period, the government does not argue that the time during which plea negotiations were conducted here meets the requirements of subparagraph (G). We agree, and conclude that the governing limits of subparagraph (G) foreclose the government‘s claim that the delay arising from plea negotiations in this case is automatically excludable as “delay resulting from other proceedings concerning the defendant.”
Of course, we do not say that delay resulting from plea negotiations can never toll the speedy-indictment clock. Rather, we say only that such delay does not automatically toll the thirty-day period. It is clear Congress specifically
Significantly, this method of tolling the speedy-indictment clock for plea negotiations is more consistent with the structure and purpose of the statute because it avoids creating the kind of loophole that would exist under the government‘s view. The government reads the statute to mean that once the government and a defendant agree to negotiate a plea agreement, they may delay the process for as long as they wish, without having to get formal court approval. But the Supreme Court has made clear the purpose of the Act is “not only to protect defendants, but also to vindicate the public interest in the swift
Also, it is revealing that when Congress illustrated the types of “delay resulting from other proceedings” that would be automatically excludable under
C.
Even if Mr. Mathurin‘s rights under the Act were violated, the government argues that waiver and estoppel principles preclude Mr. Mathurin‘s Speedy Trial Act claim. For its waiver argument, the government advances the novel theory
As for estoppel, the government points out that “defense counsel encouraged and affirmatively sought the pre-indictment delay of which he now complains,” in order to argue that “Mathurin should now be barred from assailing the propriety of what he had earnestly requested.” In light of the Supreme Court‘s reasoning in Zedner v. United States, however, this argument also fails.
As we have said, Zedner made clear that because the Act is designed to advance not only a defendant‘s interest in a speedy trial, but also the public‘s interest in the same, see 547 U.S. at 500–01, 126 S. Ct. at 1985, it does not permit
Importantly, this is not a case in which the defendant asked the government to exceed the time limits of the Act. Before the indictment was filed, Mr. Mathurin‘s counsel simply asked the government for more time to consider a plea offer. That does not equal asking the government to exceed the time limits permitted by the Act, and so it is not “clearly inconsistent” with the position Mr. Mathurin now takes in seeking dismissal of the indictment. See id. at 505–06, 126 S. Ct. at 1988 (holding that earlier representation that a continuance was needed to gather evidence was not “clearly inconsistent” with later argument that continuance was not permissible under the Speedy Trial Act). That, in turn, is important because, as the Supreme Court noted in Zedner, a typical requirement
D.
We conclude that the time during which plea negotiations were conducted was not automatically excludable from Mr. Mathurin‘s speedy-indictment clock. That being the case, the government exceeded the maximum thirty-day delay for bringing the indictment. Under the Act, this means that the charges in the superseding indictment, as originally set forth in the juvenile information and later cited in the government‘s motion to transfer, must be dismissed.7 See
IV. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the District Court‘s denial of Mr. Mathurin‘s motion to dismiss, VACATE his convictions, and REMAND to the District Court with instructions to determine whether dismissal of the charges should be with or without prejudice.
Notes
Court: Okay. Let‘s back up. Okay. When did the time period for indictment begin? What date was that?
Government: If we count, the very first possible counting date would have been August 27th.
. . . .
Court: On August 27th he is certified as an adult?
Government: Correct.
Court: The thirty days starts to run, right?
Government: Correct.
Court: It is running?
Government: Yes, sir.
