ERIC F. MELGREN, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on the Government's Motion to Toll Speedy Trial (Doc. 35) under the Speedy Trial Act. The Government contends that under 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(B) the speedy trial clock should be tolled while Defendant Marcus Funches is in custody awaiting criminal proceedings on other charges in Arizona state court. The Court agrees that the speedy trial clock must be tolled under the statute and grants the Government's motion.
On February 13, 2014, a federal grand jury indicted Marcus Funches on four counts related to making and passing counterfeit obligations of the United States. The charges stem from offenses that occurred on or about December 27, 2013, in the District of Kansas. Funches was arrested in Chicago and was arraigned in the District of Kansas on March 18, 2014. Funches was granted pretrial release.
Funches later was charged in the Maricopa County, Arizona Superior Court with offenses that occurred there in December 2013. Funches was arrested again May 6, 2014, in Chicago and has remained in custody on the Arizona charges since that date. His next court appearance in Arizona is scheduled for July 11, 2014. The Government has filed this Motion to Toll Speedy Trial.
The Speedy Trial Act requires that the trial of an indicted defendant must start within 70 days after the indictment or arraignment, whichever occurs later.
The Government has moved to toll the time for speedy trial under 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(B) because Funches is in custody for similar state charges in Arizona. Funches has been in custody since May 6, 2014, and his next Arizona court appearance is July 11, 2014. The Government argues that the time that Funches has been in Arizona custody should be excluded from the 70-day time limit of the Speedy Trial Act. Funches opposes the motion, arguing that the language of the statute excludes only the time he is actually on trial. He adds that any other time he spends awaiting trial should not be excluded unless the Government shows that it has made an unsuccessful effort to obtain his presence for trial before this Court.
Here, the question is whether a "delay resulting from trial" includes only the time of trial—jury selection to verdict—or whether it also includes pretrial detention and trial preparation. The Tenth Circuit has not addressed the issue. The weight of authority from other jurisdictions indicates that the exclusion of the delay resulting from trial with respect to other charges is not limited to the period during which the defendant is actually on trial.
For example, the Fourth and Sixth Circuits have held that the time from a defendant's arrest until sentencing is excludable.
Funches' argument against tolling the speedy trial clock relies on a 1975 concurring opinion from the Second Circuit that reasoned that only the time that a defendant is actually on trial should be excluded from a similar speedy trial calculation based on circuit rules—unless the government has made reasonable efforts to secure the defendant's presence.
This district, in Judge Rogers' unpublished order in United States v. Morris, has followed the majority view to conclude that the "exclusion applies to the entire other prosecution, not just the presentation of evidence before a jury or judge."
This Court agrees with the majority view and the rationale previously expressed in this district. It is clear that Funches faces other charges in Arizona and is the subject of criminal proceedings leading to trial there. As a result, those proceedings necessarily have caused a delay in trial and trial preparations in this district. The Court finds that the statutory requirements are met and that the speedy trial clock must be tolled. Accordingly, the Court finds that the speedy trial clock is tolled from May 6, 2014—when Funches was arrested on the Arizona charges— until the Arizona proceedings have concluded.