The Interstate Agreement on Detainers Act (the “Agreement”), 18 U.S.C. app. pp. 545-48 (1982), provides a mechanism by which a prosecutor in one jurisdiction, the “[receiving [s]tate,”
id.
art. 11(c), may secure the presence of a prisoner who is serving a sentence in another jurisdiction, the “[sjending [sjtate,”
id.
art. 11(b), in order to try him on charges pending in the receiving state,
id.
art. IV(a). Once the receiving state commences criminal proceedings through this mechanism, the Agreement affords the prisoner certain protections. Article IV(c) provides- that the prisoner’s trial in the receiving state must be commenced within 120 days of his arrival there. Article IV(e) provides that, once the receiving state obtains custody of the prisoner, it must try him prior to returning him to his “original place of imprisonment.” In this case, defendant-appellant Michael Roy seeks dismissal of a federal indictment charging him with three counts of unlawful possession of firearms on the ground that, in proceeding against him on those charges, the Government violated his rights under articles IV(c) and IV(e) of the Agreement. The District Court for the District of Connecticut (Robert C. Zampano, Judge) rejected Roy's arguments and, accordingly, denied his motion to dismiss the indictment.
United States v. Roy,
Background
Since the District Court’s opinion carefully recounts the chronology of the events leading up to this appeal,
Previously, on February 28, 1983, the Government had obtained a writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendum (“writ”) and an “order to produce” based on the writ directing that Roy be produced before the District Court in Bridgeport. 3 Roy was initially produced for arraignment on March 2, 1983, and returned to Somers the same day, one day before the detainer was lodged against him. The events giving rise to Roy’s claim that the Government violated article IV(e) took place on April 4 and 5, 1983. On April 4, pursuant to another “order to produce” based on the writ, Roy was brought before the District Court for a hearing on his motion to suppress the weapons seized from his car. The hearing ended after 5:00 p.m. The marshals decided not to return Roy to Somers that night because, knowing Roy had escaped from the custody of federal marshals in Illinois, they believed that it would be imprudent to undertake after dark the three-hour journey from Bridgeport to Somers. The marshals were also concerned that, if Roy was returned to Somers at night, he would be deprived of an evening meal. Accordingly, with the approval of officials at Somers CCI, Roy was lodged overnight at the Bridgeport jail and returned to Somers at 12:30 p.m. on April 5. Roy contends that the Government violated article IV(e) by failing to return him to Somers on April 4.
On August 9, 1983, the District Court granted Roy’s motion to suppress,
United States v. Roy,
Discussion
Initially, we are confronted by the Government’s assertion that the Agreement does not apply in this case. Relying on cases holding that the Agreement does
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not protect pretrial detainees,
see, e.g., United, States v. Reed,
In
United States v. Ford,
The Agreement protects prisoners who are “serving a term of imprisonment,” art. IV(a), in a member jurisdiction 4 and who have detainers lodged against them based on charges pending in another member jurisdiction. The Agreement has put in place a set of “cooperative procedures” designed to “encourage the expeditious and orderly disposition” of those pending charges. Art. I. In addition to supplying prosecutors with a set of formal rules by which they can obtain custody of a defendant incarcerated in another state, art. IV, the Agreement affords protection to a prisoner whose custody is secured under those rules, art. IV(c), (e), and provides all prisoners with a means by which to clear their records of detainers, art. III.
The provisions in issue here further the overall purposes of the Agreement. By assuring the prisoner that his trial in the receiving state will be handled expeditiously, the speedy trial provision of article IV(c) reduces the uncertainties created by the pending charges.
See United States v. Chico, 558
F.2d 1047, 1048 (2d Cir.1977),
cert. denied,
In light of this background, we reject the Government's argument that the Agreement does not apply in this case. First, we agree with the District Court that there is no merit to the Government’s position that the Agreement does not protect Roy because, in addition to serving his prior Connecticut sentence, he was also
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awaiting trial on pending Connecticut charges. The cases holding that a pretrial detainee is not “serving a term of imprisonment” within the meaning of the Agreement have reasoned that such detainee lacks a sufficient interest in the rehabilitation programs of the confining jurisdiction to justify invocation of the Agreement.
See, e.g., United States v. Reed, supra,
Second, we reject the Government’s argument that in light of
United States v. Mauro, supra,
the Agreement is inapplicable because Roy was produced in federal court pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus
ad prosequendum.
In
Mauro,
the Supreme Court held that a writ of habeas corpus
ad prosequendum,
though similar to a detainer in that it permits a federal court to compel the presence of a state prisoner for trial on federal criminal charges, does not constitute a detainer for purposes of the Agreement but does constitute a “written request for temporary custody” within the meaning of article IV of the Agreement. In reaching this decision, the Supreme Court carefully reviewed the nature of the writ and the purposes of Congress in adopting the Agreement. The Court concluded that when “the United States obtains state prisoners by means of a writ of habeas corpus
ad prosequendum,
the problems that the Agreement seeks to eliminate do not arise.”
United States v. Mauro, supra,
The Government reads
Mauro
as establishing a rule that depends on the sequence of the issuance of a writ and the lodging of a detainer; in the Government’s view, the Agreement applies only when a writ is issued after a detainer is lodged. Because in this case the writ that authorized Roy’s initial and subsequent appearances in the District Court issued prior to the lodging of the detainer, the Government argues that under
Mauro
the Agreement is inapplicable to this case. We agree with the Government that the sequence of events determines whether the Agreement applies, but we conclude that the critical date to be compared to the date the detain-er is lodged is not the date the writ issues but the date the prisoner is brought to federal court pursuant to the writ. The rulings with respect to the three prisoners before the Supreme Court in
Mauro
illustrate the point. If, as occurred with Mauro and Fusco, a prisoner is initially brought to federal court pursuant to a writ at a time when no detainer has been lodged, the Agreement does not apply.
Having decided that the Agreement governs this case, we turn to the question whether it has been violated. Roy first argues that the Government did not bring him to trial within the 120-day period specified in article IV(c) of the Agreement. Specifically, Roy suggests that the time during which the Government pursued an interlocutory appeal of the District Court’s order to suppress the evidence seized at Roy’s arrest should not be excluded from the Agreement’s speedy trial computation. We conclude that the District Court properly excluded this time.
Article VI(a) of the Agreement provides that the running of the 120-day time period “shall be tolled whenever and for as long as the prisoner is unable to stand trial, as determined by the court having jurisdiction of the matter.” We have interpreted this language to “exclude all those periods of delay occasioned by the defendant.”
United States v. Scheer,
[T]he submission of the defendant’s motion to suppress for a definitive ruling was not complete until after [the District] Court’s decision on the matter was reviewed by the Court of Appeals by way of the interlocutory appeal taken by the government. If the government did not seek the review, a trial would have been pointless because all the incriminating evidence against Roy had been suppressed. The appeal was taken in good faith, ... there was no deliberate attempt to delay the trial, and the appeal obviously was not frivolous. Under these circumstances, the orderly and plenary resolution of the crucial issues raised in Roy’s motion to suppress included not only the proceedings before [the District] Court, but also included the appellate proceedings that tested the validity of the defendant’s legal position as adopted by [the District] Court.
Roy’s final argument is that article IY(e) of the Agreement requires dismissal of the indictment against him because, following his appearance in federal court, he was not returned to his “original place of imprisonment” until noontime the next day. In
United States v. Chico, supra,
In
Chico,
this Court noted two factors in the course of ruling that the Agreement had not been violated: The prisoners there “were never imprisoned by the federal government,”
Furthermore, we believe that a finding of violation on the circumstances of this case would oblige the Government in future cases to act in conflict with the fundamental purposes of the Agreement. Whenever a prisoner could not be returned safely to his original place of imprisonment on the day of his required attendance in federal court, the Government would be forced to keep the prisoner in its custody throughout the period necessary for final resolution of the federal charges; to do otherwise would risk dismissal of the indictment for technical noncompliance with the Agreement. This practice would frequently result in incarceration for several weeks or months in local jails, often in disadvantageous “holdover” status, thereby unnecessarily interrupting the rehabilitation of the prisoner and bringing about the very evil that the Agreement was enacted to prevent. Construing the Agreement to have been violated in the circumstances of this ease, thereby precipitating serious interruption of rehabilitative programs, would not comport with the requirement that the Agreement should be “liberally construed so as to effectuate its purposes.” Art. IX.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The plea agreement also preserved a Fourth Amendment claim, previously decided adversely to Roy on an interlocutory appeal by the Government,
see United States v. Roy,
. This detainer was one of several filed against Roy during the time he was incarcerated at Hartford CCC and Somers CCI. On December 8, 1982, a federal detainer based on an escape charge pending in the Northern District of Illinois was lodged at Hartford CCC. On January 28 and 29, 1983, respectively, detainers were filed at Somers by California authorities, based on a murder charge, and by Massachusetts authorities, based on a robbery charge. On June 14, 1983, Roy was transported to California for prosecution on the murder charge. The charge was dismissed on June 22, and Roy was returned to Somers on August 2. On September 12, 1983, a federal detainer was filed against Roy based on a bank robbery indictment pending in the Middle District of Florida. Roy was taken to Florida on October 24, 1983, and was acquitted on the bank robbery charges on May 27, 1984. Roy was returned to Somers CCI on June 8 and filed the motion to dismiss underlying this appeal on June 15.
. The writ required state officials to turn Roy over to the United States Marshal for his initial arraignment on March 2, 1983, "or from time to time thereafter as the case may be adjourned to.” Once a writ has been issued, subsequent court appearances are obtained by means of an “order to produce” issued by the United States Attorney to the United States Marshal. In this case, an order to produce was issued even for the initial appearance.
. Both the United States and the State of Connecticut are member jurisdictions.
