Case Information
*1 Before WILKINSON, GREGORY, and DUNCAN, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Wilkinson wrote the opinion, in which Judge Gregory and Judge Duncan joined. *2 COUNSEL ARGUED: Christine Madeleine Lee, OFFICE OF THE FED- ERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Roanoke, Virginia, for Appel- lant. Thomas T. Cullen, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Larry W. Shelton, Federal Public Defender, Roanoke, Vir- ginia, for Appellant. Timothy J. Heaphy, United States Attor- ney, Roanoke, Virginia, Ramin Fatehi, Special Assistant United States Attorney, Lucas E. Beirne, Third Year Law Intern, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Charlottesville, Virginia, for Appellee.
OPINION
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:
In this case, we must decide whether Rule 43 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure requires that a defendant be present at a pretrial hearing where the district court deter- mines whether the government violated its discovery obliga- tions and, if so, how to remedy the violation. After counsel for defendant Nicholas Gonzales-Flores filed a motion in limine seeking to exclude evidence as a sanction for the govern- ment’s alleged discovery violation, the district court denied the motion at a hearing that Gonzales-Flores did not attend and in which he did not otherwise participate. Gonzales- Flores now contends he should have been present. Because Rule 43 does not require a defendant to be present at a hearing on such a motion, however, we shall affirm his conviction and sentence.
I.
Throughout the fall of 2010, a joint federal-state narcotics task force investigated a conspiracy to distribute methamphet- *3 amine in the Western District of Virginia. After identifying Gonzales-Flores as the primary source of the drugs used in the conspiracy, members of the task force enlisted a confidential informant to conduct a controlled purchase of methamphet- amine from him. They also executed a search warrant at Gonzales-Flores’s home, where they found three grams of methamphetamine, digital scales, a nine-millimeter handgun and magazine, and $954 in cash.
Based on this and other evidence, federal prosecutors charged Gonzales-Flores, in February 2011, with various counts involving the distribution of methamphetamine, see 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a), 841(b)(1)(A), 841(b)(1)(C), 846, 856(a)(1), as well as with being an illegal alien and knowingly and intentionally possessing a firearm that had been shipped in interstate or foreign commerce, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)(A).
On June 14, 2011, two days before Gonzales-Flores’s jury trial on these charges was scheduled to begin, the government informed his counsel that it intended to call three expert wit- nesses. Gonzales-Flores’s counsel filed a motion in limine seeking to exclude the witnesses’ proposed testimony on the ground that the government had failed to provide timely and adequate disclosure of the testimony, as required by Rule 16(a)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The district court considered the motion the next day during a tele- phonic hearing in which an Assistant United States Attorney and Gonzales-Flores’s counsel participated. Although Gonzales-Flores was unaware of the hearing until after it occurred, and thus neither attended the hearing nor partici- pated in it by telephone, his counsel never objected to his absence.
Defense counsel argued at the hearing that the district court should remedy the government’s alleged Rule 16 violation by excluding its proposed expert-witness testimony. While insist- ing that any deficiencies in the disclosure of the witnesses’ testimony were excusable and that the testimony should there- *4 fore not be excluded, the government nevertheless expressed its willingness to agree to a continuance of the trial if Gonzales-Flores’s counsel requested one. The district court declined to consider a continuance or to exclude the expert- witness testimony. It found that the government’s belated dis- closure had in no way prejudiced the preparation of the defense, since Gonzales-Flores’s counsel could have reason- ably anticipated that the government would introduce expert testimony on the topics about which the three expert wit- nesses proposed to testify and could have prepared accord- ingly. The judge did, however, indicate his willingness to reconsider the motion in limine should "any prejudice" or "ev- idence of prejudice" arise during the course of the trial.
At trial, the government called the three expert witnesses who were the subject of the motion in limine, as well as a number of other lay and expert witnesses. The first expert, a forensic analyst, testified that the substance recovered during the search of Gonzales-Flores’s home was indeed metham- phetamine. The second expert, a law-enforcement officer familiar with the drug trade, testified that the various items recovered during the search were more consistent with a methamphetamine distribution scheme than with personal use of the drug. And the third expert, a firearms analyst, testified that the weapon recovered during the search was operable and had traveled in interstate commerce. Two additional expert witnesses corroborated the testimony of the forensic and fire- arms analysts. The government also called the confidential informant who had conducted the controlled purchase of methamphetamine from Gonzales-Flores; indicted and unindicted coconspirators who had purchased methamphet- amine from, and used the drug with, Gonzales-Flores; and a number of law-enforcement officers involved in the investiga- tion and arrest of Gonzales-Flores.
The jury convicted Gonzales-Flores of all the charged offenses except knowingly possessing methamphetamine with intent to distribute, convicting him instead of the lesser- *5 included offense of simple possession of methamphetamine. The district court sentenced Gonzales-Flores to a 180-month term of imprisonment and a five-year term of supervised release. This appeal followed.
II.
Gonzales-Flores challenges his conviction and sentence on the ground that the district court violated Rule 43 of the Fed- eral Rules of Criminal Procedure by ruling on his counsel’s motion in limine at a hearing from which he was absent. It bears emphasis that Gonzales-Flores does not contest the underlying merits of the district court’s ruling at the hearing (or, for that matter, any other ruling made by the district court during the entirety of the proceedings against him). The only issue before us is whether the district court erred by holding the hearing in Gonzales-Flores’s absence.
Because Gonzales-Flores’s counsel never objected to his
client’s absence from the hearing, we review Gonzales-
Flores’s claim under the familiar plain-error standard.
See
United States v. Rolle
,
A.
In determining the scope of Rule 43, we begin, as always,
with the rule’s text. Rule 43 first identifies certain stages of
a criminal prosecution at which a defendant must be "present"
*6
—to wit, "(1) the initial appearance, the initial arraignment,
and the plea; (2) every trial stage, including jury impanelment
and the return of the verdict; and (3) sentencing." Fed. R.
Crim. P. 43(a). We have consistently interpreted this provi-
sion in accordance with the plain meaning of its constituent
terms. For example, we have affirmed a defendant’s right to
be present for "jury impanelment,"
see United States v. Cama-
cho
,
There is a question whether the kind of pretrial hearing at issue in this case constitutes a "trial stage" within the meaning of Rule 43(a)(2) and is therefore at least in principle subject to Rule 43(a)’s presence requirement. It is not clear whether the requirement applies to any pretrial proceedings other than those specifically enumerated in Rule 43(a)(1)—namely, "the initial appearance, the initial arraignment, and the plea"— given that Rule 43(a)(2) implies that no "trial stage" precedes "jury impanelment." Compare, e.g. , United States v. Burke , 345 F.3d 416, 422-24 (6th Cir. 2003) (holding that Rule 43(a)(2) does not apply to pretrial hearings), with United States v. Johnson , 859 F.2d 1289, 1294-95 (7th Cir. 1988) (assuming that Rule 43(a)(2) applies to at least some pretrial proceedings). However, we can resolve the instant case on a more straightforward ground and therefore assume, without deciding, that a pretrial hearing on an alleged discovery viola- tion constitutes a "trial stage" subject to Rule 43(a)’s general presence requirement.
After identifying those stages at which a defendant must be present, Rule 43 proceeds to exempt specific kinds of pro- ceedings from this requirement. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 43(b). *7 As relevant here, Rule 43(b)(3) provides that a defendant need not be present at a "proceeding [that] involves only a confer- ence or hearing on a question of law." We hold that this exception encompasses a hearing to determine whether the government violated its discovery obligations under Rule 16 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and, if so, how to remedy the violation.
This conclusion follows from the plain text of Rule 43(b)(3). Although the provision leaves the term "question of law" undefined, the term typically refers to "[a]n issue to be decided by the judge, concerning the application or interpreta- tion of the law." Black’s Law Dictionary 1366 (9th ed. 2009). An issue can be a "question of law," moreover, "although it may turn on a factual point," so long as it "is reserved for the court and excluded from the jury." Id.
Whether the government violated Rule 16 and what remedy any violation might merit are both "questions of law," as so defined. To determine whether the government violated Rule 16, a district court need only decide the proper "interpreta- tion" of the relevant provision of the rule and the "applica- tion" of the provision to the government’s conduct. And while a district court enjoys broad discretion in deciding how to remedy a discovery violation, see Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(d)(2), that discretion is channeled into a discrete set of traditionally judicial inquiries concerning "the reasons for the govern- ment’s delay and whether it acted intentionally or in bad faith; the degree of prejudice, if any, suffered by the defendant; and whether any less severe sanction will remedy the prejudice and the wrongdoing of the government," United States v. Has- tings , 126 F.3d 310, 317 (4th Cir. 1997).
The questions at issue in a hearing on an alleged discovery violation thus turn on the meaning of Rule 16’s requirements and the remedies that may ensue from their breach. Insofar as these questions implicate any facts at all, they implicate the kinds of facts that concern the lawyers’ conduct during the lit- *8 igation itself, not facts that remain within the province of the jury, such as the credibility of a particular witness, the weight of a piece of evidence, or the ultimate guilt or innocence of the defendant. They therefore remain quintessentially legal questions, the kinds of questions district courts routinely resolve in managing criminal trials.
Consider the hearing held by the district court in this case. The lawyers for both sides agreed that the government had disclosed summaries of the expert witnesses’ proposed testi- mony only one day before the hearing (two days before Gonzales-Flores’s trial was scheduled to begin). The district court had to decide simply whether this delay violated Rule 16(a)(1)(G), a purely legal question. As for the remedial issue, the key question was whether the government’s delay had so prejudiced the preparation of Gonzales-Flores’s defense as to warrant exclusion or a continuance under Rule 16(d)(2). This, too, was largely a legal question, for it required the district court to consider whether, in the words of that court, "any lawyer would have hired an expert in this case on any of the[ ] issues" about which the government’s expert witnesses pro- posed to testify. In engaging in such analysis, the district court was exercising its judgment in light of its trial experience, as it must inevitably do in order to resolve the myriad legal issues that arise over the course of a criminal proceeding.
Our conclusion that a hearing on a discovery violation is "a conference or hearing on a question of law" is further bol- stered by the Advisory Committee’s statement that Rule 43’s general presence requirement "does not apply to hearings on motions made prior to or after trial." Fed. R. Crim. P. 43 advi- sory committee’s note 1. Since its original enactment, in 1944, Rule 43 has been amended six times, yet the Advisory Committee has never seen fit to revise, remove, or reject this statement. This supports our conclusion that the drafters of Rule 43 never intended the rule’s presence requirement to apply to pretrial hearings on the kinds of routine discovery issues that arose in this case.
*9
To be sure, as Gonzales-Flores notes, we review a district
court’s decision regarding whether a party has violated Rule
16, as well as its decision to order a particular sanction, for
abuse of discretion, a standard of review not uncommonly
reserved for decisions that involve some factual component.
See United States v. Young
,
Indeed, numerous rulings by district courts are reviewed for
abuse of discretion but are nevertheless thought to be legal in
nature.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Novak
, 607 F.3d 968, 972
(4th Cir. 2010) (jury instructions);
United States v. Basham
,
B.
The defendant points us to no court that has extended Rule
43’s presence requirement to the kind of hearing at issue in
this case. And for good reason. To begin with this court’s pre-
cedents, we have held Rule 43’s presence requirement to
apply to proceedings explicitly recognized by the plain lan-
guage of the rule,
see Lawrence
, 248 F.3d at 303-04
("sentencing");
Camacho
, 955 F.2d at 953 ("jury impanel-
ment"), or necessarily encompassed by its terms,
see Rolle
,
Moreover, we have applied Rule 43’s presence requirement
to serve a consistent purpose: ensuring the fair and accurate
resolution of the proceeding at issue. Thus, in holding that
Rule 43 guarantees a defendant the right to be present at voir
dire, we emphasized the various ways in which a defendant
might contribute to that proceeding, from "‘identify[ing] pro-
spective jurors that he knows’" to guarding against "‘particu-
lar local prejudices his lawyer does not know about.’"
Rolle
,
As other circuits have recognized, this purpose is not served where the proceeding at issue concerns a legal ques- tion, precisely the situation contemplated by Rule 43(b)(3). We find the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning on this point persua- sive:
If the proceeding at issue addresses or involves fac- tual questions, it is possible that the defendant’s absence would thwart a "fair and just hearing." By contrast, if the proceeding involves only legal ques- tions, the defendant’s absence would not impact his defense because it is likely he would not contribute any expertise on such matters.
United States v. Moe
, 536 F.3d 825, 830 (8th Cir. 2008)
(quoting
United States v. Gagnon
,
C.
To be clear, Rule 43 does not forbid a defendant to be pres- ent at proceedings exempted under Rule 43(b). It remains open to district courts to permit a defendant to appear even when Rule 43 does not require his presence. For any exempted proceeding, however, Rule 43 affords a district court the discretion to decide whether a defendant must be present in order for the proceeding to be conducted efficiently and fairly. Cf. Fed. R. Crim. P. 43 advisory committee’s note 3 (explaining that the provision now codified as Rule 43(b)(2) "leaves it discretionary with the court to permit defendants in misdemeanor cases to absent themselves and, if so, to deter- mine in what types of misdemeanors and to what extent"). The rule thereby recognizes and safeguards the traditional trial-management functions of district courts.
Were we to accept Gonzales-Flores’s invitation to extend
Rule 43’s presence requirement to hearings on discovery vio-
lations, we would risk subverting district courts’ trial-
management functions and thus the intent of Rule 43. For dis-
trict courts confront myriad routine procedural matters over
the course of a criminal trial. Nor is it "‘unusual for a judge
to call counsel into chambers and discuss matters of evidence,
the form of questions, instructions proposed, and other mat-
*13
ters looking to a more orderly trial, without having a defen-
dant present.’"
United States v. Barth
,
We thus hold that the district court did not violate Gonzales-Flores’s rights under Rule 43 by considering his counsel’s motion in limine in his absence. And because we conclude that the district court committed no error, we need not address the other prongs of the Olano test.*
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
*Gonzales-Flores also contends that his absence from the hearing on the
motion in limine violated the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amend-
ment and the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, each of which
guarantees a defendant the right to be present at certain critical stages of
the proceedings against him.
See United States v. Gagnon
,
