Appellant Jose Sandoval appeals his conviction for concealment and sale of narcotics in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 174 (repealed 1971). The primary question before us is whether Sandoval’s right to a speedy trial under the Sixth Amendment has been violated. Sandoval was arrested for selling heroin and cocaine to undercover federal agents on September 10, 1970. Released on $15,000 bond shortly after his arrest, Sandoval was indicted by a federal grand jury on September 30, 1970. He did not appear in court for arraignment on October 26, 1970, and remained at large for almost twenty-one years, until his arrest on April 19,1991. He was arraigned on the original indictment shortly thereаfter, 1 and convicted on all counts following a jury trial.
I. Discussion
A. Sixth Amendment speedy trial claim.
Sandoval claims that the lengthy
gap
between his arrest and indictment in September 1970 and his trial in June 1991 violated his right to a speedy trial. The Sixth Amendment provides that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. We review Sandoval’s Sixth Amendment speedy trial claim de novo.
United States v. Wallace,
The seminal case in this area is
Barker v. Wingo,
The Court noted that courts and prosecutors have primary, but not exclusive, responsibility for seeing that cases go to trial.
Id.
Therefore, when the defendant seeks to "avoid detection by American authorities” and any post-indictment delay can be attributed to him, he waives the right to a speedy trial.
United States v. Wangrow,
A finding of waiver is implicit in the district court’s oral ruling on Sandoval’s motion to dismiss:
I do find ... that Mr. Sandoval purposely absented himself from the proceedings of this court. He did not voluntarily submit himself to it, although he was not constantly here in the United States to avail himself of that proceeding here in the United States, although he did return to the United States, which is uncontrovert-ed by the [government]. I don’t find that this would cause the government to have any form of notice to have Mr. Sandoval found to bring him to justice in this trial.
Sandoval ER at 35. 6
Other courts dealing with a fugitive’s Sixth Amendment speedy trial claim, rather than focusing on waiver, have looked first to the cause of the post-indictment delay, typically permitting the government to justify the delay by showing the defendant’s purposeful absence.
E.g., United States v. Mitchell,
However, use of this balancing framework, where the defendant hаs been a fugitive from justice, seems inconsistent with Barker*s insistence that “delay ... attributable to the defendant,”
Barker,
Nonetheless, Sandoval assumes that the balancing framework should be applied to him. He argues that he was not truly unavailable for trial, and that if the government had exercised due diligence it could easily have located him and avoided violating his speedy trial right.
See, e.g., Rayborn,
On the other hand, an accused does not waive her Sixth Amendment sрeedy trial right by failing to assert it.
Barker,
Doggett v. United States,
— U.S.-,
Accepting the notion that the government has some obligation, even in a case like this, to find a fugitive defendant and bring him to trial, we find that the district court was not clearly erroneous in holding that the government satisfied its obligation in this case. There is no rеquirement that law enforcement officials “make heroic efforts to apprehend a defendant who is purposefully avoiding apprehension.” Ray
born,
As important, and unlike the accused in Doggett, Sandoval was well aware of the indictment against him. He skipped bail and became a fugitive to avoid prosecution. On the record before us, we find no violation of Sandoval’s Sixth Amendment speedy trial right. 8
B. Entrapment instruction.
Sandoval also claims that
United States v. Russell,
*486 We conclude that Russell did not change entrapment law. The opinion of the Court is unambiguous on this point:
This Court’s opinions in Sorrells v. United States, [287 U.S. 435 ,53 S.Ct. 210 ,77 L.Ed. 413 (1932) ], and Sherman v. United States, [356 U.S. 369 ,78 S.Ct. 819 ,2 L.Ed.2d 848 (1958) ], held that the principal element in the defense of entrapment was the defendant’s predisposition to commit the crime. Respondent- argues that the jury’s refusal to find entrapment ... should be overturned and the views of Justices Roberts and Frankfurter, in Sorrells and Sherman, respectively, which make the essential element of the defense turn on the type and degree of governmental conduct, be adopted as the law.
We decline to overrule these cases.
Russell,
The district court’s decision in Sandoval’s case to give a supplemented version of Ninth Circuit Model Jury Instruction 6.02, rather than Sandoval’s proposed instruction, did not violate the ex post facto clause. 9
C. District court’s response to jury question.
During its deliberations, the jury sent the trial judge a note, which read: “The jury requests the following: Because of the interpretation of the defendant, the jury would like to know if it is possible to review the defendant’s testimony.” Sandoval ER at 41. The district judge told the lawyers that he was “prepared to go forward and have [Sandoval’s] testimony reread to the jury.” Id. Sandoval’s attorney inquired as to the possibility of getting the jury to narrow its request. Id. He objected to a re-reading “in toto.” Id. at 42.
After being questioned by the judge, the jury sent another note, which read: “The jury requests the following: One, Sandoval’s testimony about meeting under the bridge; two, Sandoval’s testimony about meеting in a car prior to the arrest at the time the kilo was purchased.” Id. at 44. The judge told the lawyers that he had directed his court reporter to “identify portions of the transcript within Sandoval’s testimony which reflects the bridge and car incident”; those portions would be “reread to the jury.” Id.
We review for abuse of discretion the “decisiоn to honor a request that the court reporter read his notes of certain testimony for the jury’s benefit after deliberation has begun.”
United States v. Birges,
Sandoval’s counsel objected to the district court’s dеcision to have certain portions of the transcript re-read, submitting that the jurors’ memories should control. Nonetheless, the court directed the court reporter to read back to the jury those parts of the testimony responsive to the jury’s communication. The district court noted that the reporter could not simultaneously “report that which he’s reading.” Sandoval ER at 46. However, following the re-reading, the court explicitly found that the portions read were those “that the court finds to be an appropriate response” to the jury’s inquiries. Id. He also cautioned the jury to remember that “all the testimony offered, all the exhibits received *487 into evidеnce, is for you to consider in determining guilt or innocence.” Id.
The district court’s decisions regarding the re-reading of portions of the testimony do not amount to an abuse of discretion.
See Birges,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A second indictment was filed against Sandoval on May 24, 1991, charging one count of bail jumping in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3150. Sandoval pled guilty to this charge on July 19, 1991; this appeal is unrelated to the 1991 indictment.
. For whatever reason, different standards of review are employed depending on the district court’s resolution of a motion to dismiss for constitutional speedy trial reasons. A dismissal is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
United States
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
One recent case appears to mix the two review standards, citing
Sears,
a dismissal case counseling abuse of discretion review, as authority for de novo review.
United States v. Gonzalez-Sandoval,
. Under
Doggett v. United States,
— U.S.-, -,
. "The principal purpose of the speedy trial clause is to protect the accused from unnecessary delay
on the part of the government
in bringing the accused to trial.”
United States v. Diacolios,
. In
Wangrow,
the Eighth Circuit ruled that the almost 19-year gap between December 1970, the date the government learned of Wangrow's incarceration in Mexico, and September 1989, the date he went to trial on the indictment stemming from his January 1967 arrest, did not violate the defendant's speedy trial right.
Wangrow,
. As the government points out, the Speedy Trial Act of 1974 requires the trial of an indicted defendant within 70 days of arraignment. 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1) (1988); see also id. § 3164(b) (accused held in custody awaiting trial must be tried within 90 days of the “beginning of such continuous detention”). The Act specifically excludes "[a]ny period of delay resulting from the absence or unavailability of the defendant” in computing the time within which the trial must begin. Id. § 3161(h)(3)(A). A defendant is “absent” when he attempts to "avoid apprehension or prosecution or his whereabouts cannot be determined by due diligence.” Id. § 3161(h)(3)(B).
Sandoval’s arrest and indictment, of course, predate the Act.
. The petitioner in
Smith v. Hooey
was incarcerated in a federal prison when he was indicted on a state charge. He repeatedly requested— initially by letter, later by more formal motions, and then by filing a motion to dismiss for want of prosecution—that the state court system provide him with a speedy trial.
Smith
v.
Hooey,
The petitioner’s federal imprisonment did not matter so much as his insistence that the state courts resolve the charges against him, one way or another. In comparing the underlying facts to hypothetical situations, the Court noted that there could be “no doubt that if the petitioner in the present case had been at large for a six-year period following his indictment, and had repeatedly demanded that he be brought to trial, the State would have been under a constitutional duty to try him."
Id.
at 377,
. Sandoval also contends that the post-indictment, pretrial delay violated his Fifth Amendment due process right. He relies entirely on the authority of
United States
v.
Valentine,
As
Arnold v. McCarthy,
. The district court gave the following instruction:
A person is entrapped when the person has no previous intention to violate the law and is persuaded to commit a crime by government agents.
On the other hand, where a person is already willing to commit a crime, it is not entrapment if government agents merely provided an opportunity to commit the crime.
The government has the burden of proof to show no entrapment existed beyond a reason: able doubt.
Government ER at 173.
