This case is an appeal from an order denying Willie Mae Barker’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The question presented is whether appellant’s Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial was violated by the Commonwealth of Kentucky’s five-year delay between indictment and trial. We hоld that under the circumstances of this ease appellant was not denied this constitutional right.
Appellant was indicted for the murder of Orlena Denton, one of two elderly persons who were beaten to death on September 15, 1958, and trial was originally set for October 21 of that year. Thе Commonwealth obtained 16 continuances which postponed the trial until October 9, 1963. During this entire five year period, appellant was reрresented by counsel. For about nine months after indictment, appellant was incarcerated; but from June 4, 1959, until his conviction in 1963, he was free on $5,000 bail.
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Initially, the delay was occasioned by the Commonwealth’s desire that the prosecution of appellant’s alleged accomplice, Silas Manning, be first concluded. Apparently, the prosecution considered Manning’s testimony essential to the prosecution of Barkеr. As counsel testified, Manning would have invoked his privilege against self-incrimination if he had been called to testify against Barker because he had not yet been tried and convicted of the two murders for which both had been indicted. Manning was eventually convicted of the two murders in separate trials concluded in March and December, 1962. Previous trials had resulted twice in hung juries and twice in reversals by the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Manning v. Commonwealth,
On February 12, 1963, appellant for the first time made objection to the delay of his trial and moved to dismiss the charges against him. The motion was denied, and shortly thereafter, on March 19, 1963, the Commonwealth asked for аnd was granted a further continuance because of the illness of a material witness, Sheriff McKinney, who had investigated the Denton murders. Appellant was tried and convicted by a jury in October, 1963, in the first term of court after the Sheriff recovered.
Barker’s conviction was affirmed by the Kentucky Court of Appeals, despite his claim that he had been denied his right to a speedy trial. Barker v. Commonwealth,
Whether delay between indictment and trial viоlates the constitutional right to a speedy trial depends upon the circumstances of each case. Dickey v. Florida,
We regard this motion to dismiss as a demand for a speedy trial,
1
but it is clear that the time before the motion was mаde should not be counted as part of the period of delay in determining whether the right was violated. United States v. Lustman,
The “demand rule”
2
provides that unless a defendant makes some attempt to resist postponement by the prosecution or demands immediate trial, he waives his Sixth Amendment right. United States v. Jones,
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United States v. Maxwell,
The rationale behind the demand rule is that the right to a speedy trial is intended to serve “as a shield for the defendant’s protection but not as a sword for his escape.” United States v. Maxwell,
Although a few recent cases and articles have suggested abandonment of the demand rule,
3
numerous courts have recently reaffirmed the rationale and vitality of this doctrine and have specifically refused to repudiate it.
See, e. g.,
United States v. Perez,
More significantly, appellant has shown no prejudice resulting from this delay. There is no claim that during this eight-month period (or before) any witnesses became unavailable. Although appellant claims that certain defense witnesses’ memories faded over the years, this assertion is not substantiated by the record. Appellant’s witnesses testified with conviction and, in comparison with their testimony in the earlier
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Manning trials, without apparent mnemonic loss. Under these circumstances, aрpellant is not entitled to a discharge from custody. United States v. Ewell,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. It would serve nо good purpose to require defendant to file a formal demand for a speedy trial under these circumstances. The motion to dismiss madе here is sufficient to meet the strict requirements of the “demand rule”.
Cf.
United States v. Maxwell,
.
See generally
Annot.,
. Dickey v. Florida,
Second, the Supreme Court in recent decisions has been moving toward a position that constitutional rights cannot be waived unknowingly or inarticulately. The demand rule, which interprets inactiоn as waiver, is in conflict with this trend.
See
Annot.,
supra
note 2; Dickey v. Florida,
. See Annot., supra, note 2, and accompanying text.
. The unavailability of a key witness is usually held to be a valid reason for delay.
See, e. g.,
United States ex rel. Von Cseh v. Fay,
