ORDER
On this day, the Court considered the Government’s “Brief in Response to Court’s Order Concerning Order of Dismissal” (“Brief’). The Government’s Brief followed an Order by the Court issued on October 31, 2007, requiring both parties to brief four issues related to the Government’s proposed “Order of Dismissal.” Court Order, Oct. 31, 2001 at 3, Ex. A. Specifically, the Court ordered both the Government and Defendant to brief: (1) how venue has now become proper in the
Having reviewed the Government’s Brief, the unique facts of the case, and the extant case law, the Court is unconvinced that granting the Government’s Order of Dismissal serves either the public interest in the fair administration of criminal justice or acts to preserve the integrity of the courts.
See In re Richards,
I. DISCUSSION
A. Standard
Until 1946, federal prosecutors had the unrestricted common-law right to terminate prosecution by entry of a
nolle prose-qui
without leave of court.
United States v. Salinas,
In
United States v. Cowan,
the Fifth Circuit undertook a sweeping examination of the history of Rule 48.
Cowan,
In a per curiam opinion released two years after
United States v. Cowan,
the
The words “leave of court” were inserted in Rule 48(a) without explanation. While they obviously vest some discretion in the court, the circumstances in which that discretion may properly be exercised have not been delineated by this Court. The principal object of the “leave of court” requirement is apparently to protect a defendant against prosecutorial harassment, e.g., charging, dismissing, and recharging, when the Government moves to dismiss an indictment over the defendant’s objection.
Rinaldi v. United States,
The
Rinaldi
Court maintained that the analytical. focus should not fall on “whether the decision to maintain the federal prosecution was made in bad faith,” but rather, should concentrate on “whether the Government’s later efforts to terminate the prosecution were similarly tainted with impropriety.”
Id.
So, despite the Court’s reluctance to define the precise contours of the district courts’ discretion under Rule 48, the Court did incorporate the growing sense among the Circuit Courts that Rule 48(a) serves principally to “protect a defendant against prosecuto-rial harassment.”
See id.
(quoting
United States v. Cox,
Thus, to invoke its discretionary authority under Rule 48(a), the district court must find that the Government has dismissed an indictment to harass or otherwise prejudice a defendant.
See United States v. Welborn,
B. Application
The proposed Order of Dismissal now before the Court presents an issue of first impression. Court Order, Oct. 31, 2001 at Ex. A. Namely, the Court must determine whether the Government, after prosecuting a defendant for over three years,
4
through a eight week trial that ended in a mistrial,
5
and after moving for severance of that defendant from the other defendants in the consolidated case
6
and having it denied by the Court,
7
may now move for dismissal of the Second Superceding Indictment
8
against that defendant in order to refer that case to another district to further prosecute the defendant.
9
The
First, the Court does not seek to encroach on the “primary duty of the Executive to take care that the laws are faithfully executed” 10 by compelling the prosecution of Defendant Sotelo. Indeed, the Court would endorse the Government’s proposed Order if it sought to dismiss the Second Superceding Indictment against Defendant Sotelo with prejudice. Conversely, should the Government seek to pursue the Second Su-perceding Indictment against Defendant Sotelo in front of this Court, the Court stands ready to try the case.
Second, the Court does not have a proper motion to dismiss before it. Rather, the Government presented the Court with its proposed Rule 48(a) Order without filing a motion to dismiss with the Clerk of Court. Court Order, Oct. 31, 2001 at Ex. A. As a consequence, opposing counsel has not had the opportunity to contest the proposed Order. Therefore, the various permutations and holdings regarding contested and uncontested motions in the case law offer only supplementary guidance.
Lastly, this Order seeks not to explore the parameters of how the public interest may be defined or invoked to deny a motion to dismiss under Rule 48(a), but instead, only to make manifest the unequivocal holdings of both the Supreme Court and the various Circuit Courts that the primary purpose of Rule 48(a) is to protect criminal defendants from prosecutorial harassment. Without imputing motives to the individual Government attorneys whatsoever, the Court cannot help but maintain that the history of this case and the current proposed Order embody the precise type of prosecutorial harassment that Congress sought to obviate by enacting Rule 48(a). 11
I. Upholding the role of the executive and judicial branches
Without equivocation, the Fifth Circuit has stated that the “Executive remains .... the first and presumptively the best judge of whether a pending prosecution should be terminated.”
Cowan,
In
Cowan,
the Fifth Circuit found that the district court abused its discretion by denying the Government’s Rule 48(a) motion to dismiss.
Cowan,
Finding so few similarities between the facts of the instant case and the facts in
Cowan,
this Court looks to the Fifth Circuit’s ruling in
Salinas
for guidance.
See Salinas,
In the instant case, the Government posits that dismissal is being sought to refer the case “to the Southern District of Texas where venue lies.” Court Order, Oct. 31, 2001 at Ex. A. To support this action, the Government propounds that “it cannot prove venue under the Superceding Indictment against [Djefendant Sotelo” in the Western District of Texas. Gov’t Br. in Resp. to Ct.’s Order Concerning Order of Dismissal (“Gov’t Brief’) 5. Specifically, the Government argues that under the Second Superceding Indictment, Defendant Sotelo now faces only “substantive counts of harboring aliens, transporting aliens, and misprison [sic] of a felony, which occurred solely within the Southern District of Texas.” Id. (emphasis added).
The Government makes this claim despite the language of the Superseding Indictment itself, which unambiguously states in Count One that Defendant Sotelo is charged with harboring aliens “in the Western District of Texas and elsewhere.” Second Superceding Indictment 1. Count Three also charges Defendant Sotelo with misprison of a felony “in the Western District of Texas and elsewhere,” while Count Two charges Defendant Sotelo with the transportation of aliens
only
“in the Western District of Texas.
Id.
at 2. If the Government has now assumed the position that venue cannot be proven against Defendant Sotelo, the Court fails to understand why the matter was recently brought before a Grand Jury of the West
The Court cannot ignore the fact that the Government has already had more than three years to develop its case against Defendant Sotelo. Strikingly, at no point until the Government proffered its proposed Order, less than two months after the Court denied the Government’s attempt to sever Defendant Sotelo from the consolidated defendants,
12
and on the eve of Defendant Sotelo’s second trial before the Court, has the Government stated that venue cannot be proven against him. Perhaps most importantly, the Government’s sudden admission of improper venue has not prompted the Government to seek dismissal of the indictment against Defendant Sotelo
with prejudice.
To the contrary, the Government has plainly communicated its intent to refer the case to the Southern District of Texas for further prosecution. Court Order, Oct. 31, 2007 at Ex. A. This only serves to highlight the Fifth Circuit’s holding that “[i]t is precisely because a dismissal under Rule 48(a) does not bar a subsequent prosecution that the rule requires the consent of the court.”
U.S. v. Davis,
Were the Court to allow the Government to engage in such conduct, the Court would be sanctioning the Fifth Circuit’s own definition of prosecutorial harassment as outlined in
Salinas
— the “charging, dismissing, and subsequently commencing another prosecution at a
different time or place
deemed more favorable to the prosecution.”
Salinas,
2. Lack of a motion or opposition thereto
Fifth Circuit case law concerning Rule 48(a) has often focused on the presence of a criminal defendant’s opposition to a Government motion to dismiss an indictment.
See Hamm,
In Hamm, the Fifth Circuit decided a conflict between a trial judge and the Government over “the right of the Government to dismiss indictments against defendants who, after having pleaded guilty to criminal charges, cooperated with the Government in the prosecution of the leaders of a large drug-smuggling conspiracy.” Id. at 625. Faced with the plea agreements entered into by the defendants and the Government, the district judge declared that he would not be bound by the agreements, denied the Government’s motion to dismiss the indictments, refused to permit the defendants to withdraw their pleas, and sentenced them to terms of imprisonment. Id. at 627-28. Faced with defendants who consented to the dismissal of the indictments against them, the Hamm court ruled that district courts could not deny Government motions to dismiss in such instances “except in those extraordinary cases where it appears the prosecutor is motivated by considerations clearly contrary to the manifest public interest.” Id. at 628 (citations omitted). By crafting this holding, the court felt that Rule 48(a) could be construed as preserving “the essential judicial function of protecting the public interest in the evenhanded administration of criminal justice without encroaching on the primary duty of the Executive to take care that the laws are faithfully executed.” Id. Finding “no evidence that the prosecutor was motivated by any considerations other than his evaluation of the public interest,” the court reversed the district court. Id. at 630.
In
Welbom,
the Fifth Circuit faced another instance where the Government moved to dismiss an indictment without prejudice.
See Welborn,
In vacating the district court’s ruling, the
Welbom
court fashioned two distinct Rule 48(a) holdings.
Id.
at 984. First, the court held that “if a defendant, without justification, does not contest dismissal,] the presumption of good faith permits the court to dismiss without prejudice and the defendant waives his right to later object to the government’s motives.”
Id.
Next, the court held that where a “a defendant contests dismissal and the district court errs by not requiring the prosecution to furnish more than a conclusory reason to support its motion, the dismissal must be treated as though it were with prejudice.”
Id.
The court tempered this holding by stating that this dismissal with prejudice would only attach “where the prosecution fails to offer sufficient justification for seeking dismissal when it reindicts or the
These cases offer guidance on the issue under review in two respects. First, the Court notes that the elevated scrutiny outlined in
Hamm
does not translate to the current case. Because this case does not represent one of the “extremely limited circumstances” or “extraordinary cases” where the Court seeks to deny a motion to dismiss over a defendant’s consent, the court may act to vindicate Defendant So-telo’s rights without making a finding that the Government’s actions “clearly indicate a ‘betrayal of the public interest.’ ”
See Hamm,
Next, the
Welbom
court instructs that the Government must “furnish more than a conclusory reason to support its motion.”
Id.
This holding proves particularly striking in the instant case, since the Government initially entered neither a motion nor any rationale for the dismissal beyond the conclusory statement that venue now lies in a different district. Court Order, Oct. 31, 2007 at Ex. A. Had the Government filed this proposed Order as a motion to dismiss with the Clerk of Court, not only would Defendant Sotelo have been notified, but his contest to the dismissal would have mandated that the Court treat the conclusory motion to dismiss as a motion to dismiss
with prejudice. See Welbom,
3. Fulfilling the courts’ primary duty to protect criminal defendants from prosecutorial harassment
The genius of the United States Constitution remains its allocation of powers between three coordinate branches of government, with each possessing the power to check the others’ actions without the additional latitude to overcome the others’ legitimate, constitutional prerogatives. Rule 48(a), limited as it may be, represents one way in which the district courts may check abuses of the Executive.
See Co-wan,
To carry out its primary duty to protect Defendant Sotelo from prosecutorial harassment, the Court must deny the Government’s proposed Order to Dismiss. Despite the presumption in a Rule 48(a) motion for dismissal that the Government has acted in good faith, the presumption may be rebutted by a showing of bad faith, or “when the motion to dismiss contravenes the public interest because it is not in good faith.”
Salinas,
Each of the elements of prosecutorial harassment has been presented in this case.
See id.
The Government has already charged,
16
dismissed, and refiled another indictment
17
against Defendant So-telo. The Second Superceding Indictment, handed down on August 1, 2007,
18
came on the heels of a nearly eight-week mistrial which produced a trial transcript of over 5,000 pages. Now, after the expenditure of tremendous judicial resources in the Western District of Texas, and in spite of a Grand Jury’s delivery of a Second Su-perceding Indictment against Defendant Sotelo based on charges occurring in the Western District, the Government now claims that it “cannot prove venue” against him in this district. Gov’t Brief 5. As a result, the Government would have the Court refer the case to the “Southern District of Texas where venue lies.” Court Order, Oct. 31, 2001 at Ex. A. By making this request of the Court, the Government has patently and incontrovertibly engaged in each component of the Fifth Circuit’s definition of bad faith. Namely, the Government has charged, dismissed, and recharged, with the hopes of procuring the Court’s leave now to dismiss the Second Superceding Indictment in order to further prosecute Defendant Sotelo in the Southern District of Texas.
See Salinas,
II. CONCLUSION
For the reasons contained herein, and acting under the discretion invested in the trial courts by the Supreme Court and Congress through Rule 48(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the Court hereby DENIES the Government’s proposed “Order of Dismissal” as to Defendant Roland Sotelo.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. See infra, note 2.
. More recent decisions of the circuit courts affirm the proposition that the judicial protection of the defendant forms the bedrock of the power vested in the district courts by Rule 48(a). In 2000, the Third Circuit incorporated the Fifth Circuit’s rule that "Rule 48(a) is primarily intended to protect a defendant from prosecutorial harassment.”
In re Richards,
.In a particularly salient footnote, the Salinas court explained the public interest test thus:
Most of the cases talk in terms of the public interest test, i.e., whether the prosecutor's decision to terminate the prosecution was “clearly contrary to the manifest public interest.'' The public interest standard evolved due to the fact that many courts have interpreted the rule as protecting the public interest as well as the defendant’s interest. Technically speaking, this opinion does not have to discuss the "public interest’’ standard because the facts in the instant case indicate that the dismissal was for the purpose of harassing Salinas. "It has frequently been observed that if the prosecutor is motivated by a desire to harass the defendant, leave [to dismiss the indictment] should be withheld.” This Court need not distinguish the "prosecuto-rial harassment” case from the "public interest” case since the basis of the public interest test is the motivation underlying the Government's motion to dismiss. It is obvious that the public interest is not served by harassing a defendant.
Salinas,693 F.2d at 351 n. 15 (internal citations omitted).
. The Government filed its first Indictment against Defendant Sotelo on September 30, 2004. Doc. No. 3.
. Court documents reflect that the trial of Defendant Sotelo began on January 22, 2007 and the mistrial of Defendant Sotelo was entered on March 20, 2007. Doc No. 121; 177.
. Doc. No. 196.
. Doc. No. 207.
. Doc. No. 189.
. In its proposed "Order of Dismissal,” the Government plainly states that the case against Defendant Sotelo "is being referred to the Southern District of Texas where venue lies.” Court Order, Oct. 31, 2001 at Ex. A. This clearly evinces the Government's desire to further prosecute Defendant Sotelo.
.
Cowan,
. See infra, note 2.
. Doc. No. 353.
.
Cowan,
.See infra, note 2.
. Doc. No. 213.
. Doc. No. 3.
. Doc. No. 189.
. Id.
