CHERYL R. ZWART, Magistrate Judge.
The indictment against Defendant arises from a traffic stop of a vehicle he was driving on December 4, 2015. At the time of the stop, a canine sniff was conducted and the dog allegedly indicated to the odor of narcotics. The vehicle was searched and officers found large amounts of United States currency and other evidence of illegal drug activity. Defendant filed a motion to suppress, (
Defendant now moves to continue the hearing because a new attorney has reviewed the case and entered an appearance, that attorney cannot attend the hearing as currently scheduled, and Defendant wants to file an additional motion to suppress challenging the canine sniff conducted at the time of the traffic stop. (
The deadline for filing pretrial motions was initially set for July 5, 2016. (
Under Rule 45 (b)(1) of the Federal Criminal Rules:
Fed. R. Crim. P. 45(b)(1).
Defendant's pending motion to continue is not limited to moving the evidentiary hearing set for December 1, 2016: It seeks to permit an otherwise untimely motion to suppress the canine sniff. As to continuing the deadline for filing pretrial motions, the motion to continue was not timely filed: It was not filed before September 6, 2016, the court-ordered deadline for filing motions to suppress, and there is no showing of excusable neglect. Fed. R. Crim. P. 45(b)(1).
Even if Defendant's motion to continue was timely filed, the court may extend the deadline only upon a showing of "good cause." Fed. R. Crim. P. 45(b)(1). The primary and threshold measure of good cause is the movant's diligence in attempting to meet the deadlines set within a court's order.
Defendant is not asking for leave to challenge evidence just recently received from the government. He is moving to file a new motion to suppress which challenges the canine sniff Defendant personally witnessed nearly a year ago. Defendant has known from the outset of this case that the canine sniff allegedly provided the probable cause for searching his vehicle. Long before the September 6, 2016 deadline for filing pretrial motions, Defendant possessed the facts necessary to prompt an investigation, and to investigate and challenge the canine sniff. He has failed to show due diligence in attempting to meet the court-ordered pretrial motion deadline, and has therefore failed to show "good cause" to extend that deadline.
Defendant is also moving to continue the suppression hearing due to the unavailability of his additional attorney, who entered an appearance only three days ago. It is unclear when that attorney accepted this case, and whether she accepted this case knowing she is unable to attend the suppression hearing already scheduled in this court. Moreover, Defendant remains represented by Nebraska counsel who can represent Defendant's interests at the hearing.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that Defendant's motion to continue, (
That said, Defendant is not the only party to this lawsuit. The public also has an interest in speedy disposition of criminal cases. And with Defendant's stated need to conduct additional discovery and further investigate possible experts to support his new suppression claims, the public's interest in prompt resolution of this case would certainly be undermined if the court grants Defendant another continuance and sets a new pretrial motion deadline.
Finally, the court's scheduling order deadlines provide for the orderly disposition of all cases. Disruption of that scheduling by one party impacts not only the court's schedule, but can negatively impact others appearing before this forum.