Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
PER CURIAM.
Bernardo Lloyd ("Appellant") was speeding and zig-zagging through traffic on the Baltimore-Washington National Parkway ("Parkway") when his Lexus sedan struck the back of a pickup truck being driven by Juan Lopez Sanchez. The truck flipped and careened off the Parkway. Sanchez died at the scene. On June 25, 2012, a grand jury indicted Appellant for involuntary manslaughter. He was not arrested until 15 months later, on September 23, 2013. Eventually, his case proceeded to trial and a jury found him guilty. Appellant maintains that the 15-month delay between indictment and arrest violated his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. He also argues that an expert witness was improperly allowed to testify at trial as to the cause of the accident, and he maintains he was entitled to a sentence reduction because he accepted responsibility for his offense.
We affirm Appellant's conviction and sentence. His Sixth Amendment rights were not violated because the 15-month delay between his indictment and his arrest was not extraordinary and did not impair his defense. We also find ample support for the district court's decision to allow an experienced accident reconstructionist to testify, consistently with the opinion of another expert, about the cause of the accident. And, given Appellant's testimony at trial, during which he did not accept responsibility for the accident but, rather, testified that he was not driving recklessly, we have no quarrel with the district court's decision not to impose a more lenient sentence.
On January 31, 2012, Appellant rear-ended Sanchez's pickup truck. The front end of Appellant's vehicle underrode the pickup with enough force that material from the car's bumper was wrapped around the truck's rear axle. Sanchez's truck flipped off the road. Sanchez was killed.
Police took statements from witnesses at the scene, made measurements of the wreckage, photographed the crash site, and then impounded the two vehicles. About six months later, on June 25, 2012, a grand jury in the District of Maryland issued an indictment charging Appellant with, among other things, involuntary manslaughter in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1112(a).
The ensuing three-day trial focused on the cause of the accident. The evidence showed Appellant was speeding prior to the collision. He testified that he saw a car rapidly approaching in his rearview mirror and, thinking it might be a police cruiser, moved into the right-hand lane. The car, a Nissan, sped by; Appellant pulled in behind the Nissan and hit the gas. At that point, according to Appellant, he was driving fast enough to pass the other cars in the right-hand lane, but not as fast as the Nissan, which quickly disappeared into the distance.
At some point, though, Appellant caught up with the Nissan. Both cars zig-zagged around another driver, Joseph McCann, in short succession: the Nissan passed on McCann's left, straddling two lanes; Appellant's Lexus then zipped by on the right, driving partially on the shoulder. And Appellant himself testified that, shortly before the accident, he saw the Nissan behind him in his side-view mirror.
McCann estimated that Appellant and the driver of the Nissan were traveling over 100 miles per hour. David Feser, an off-duty police officer trained in speed detection, was also on the road that day and testified as a fact witness. He estimated Appellant's Lexus was traveling 90 to 100 miles per hour, characterized Appellant's driving as reckless, and thought it likely the car would be involved in an accident. Unfortunately, he was right.
Two experts testified for the Government. Corporal Charles Russell, an experienced accident reconstructionist, analyzed data from the Lexus' airbag control module, examined photographs and measurements taken at the scene, and reviewed witness statements about the crash. From this information, he extrapolated that Appellant was driving approximately 100 miles per hour before the crash and saw no evidence that Sanchez's actions contributed to the wreck. As a result, Corporal Russell opined, over Appellant's objection, that the single likely cause of the accident was "the excessive speed of the Lexus." J.A. 252.
Officer Ken Bentivegna of the United States Park Police ("Park Police") also testified as an expert. He was present at and documented the crash scene, and also examined the vehicles in a Park Police impound lot at some point after they were removed from the roadway. He reached no specific conclusion about Appellant's speed, but he saw nothing in pictures of the tire marks and other impressions on the road that indicated aggressive pre-impact braking by either Appellant or Sanchez. Therefore, he concluded, "[T]he operator of the Lexus was going too fast to control his vehicle, failed to brake appropriately to avoid the collision and was driving in a reckless manner which is what led to the collision between the Lexus and" Sanchez's pickup truck. S.J.A. 446.
Appellant, for his part, claimed that he rounded a bend in the Parkway and moved into the far-right lane. As he did so, he observed Sanchez's truck also move "suddenly" into that lane, so Appellant began to drift back into the center lane. J.A. 307. He says he then saw the Nissan in his side-view mirror "pushing its way into the center lane,"
The jury was thus presented with two relatively straightforward theories of the case: In the Government's view, the evidence indicated that Appellant's reckless speed caused him to rear-end Sanchez's truck. Appellant allowed that he was speeding, but denied driving recklessly and maintained he was simply unable to avoid the truck when Sanchez applied the brakes. The jury, which found Appellant guilty of involuntary manslaughter, evidently credited the Government's account.
At sentencing, the district court denied Appellant's request for a downward adjustment based on acceptance of responsibility and imposed a 63-month term of imprisonment. This timely appeal followed.
Appellant first challenges the district court's decision denying the motion to dismiss the indictment on speedy trial grounds. We review the district court's factual findings for clear error,
The Sixth Amendment guarantees the accused in all criminal prosecutions the right to a speedy trial.
We consider the first two factors — length and reason for the delay — together. The pertinent delay is the 15-month gap between indictment and arrest. That period of time is long enough to merit inquiry into the remaining factors, but not an "extraordinary" delay.
As for the third factor, the Government makes much of the fact that Appellant waited nearly a year after his arrest to move to dismiss the indictment. Yet there is no denying that Appellant promptly raised the issue at his arraignment.
That leaves the question of prejudice. "Negligence over a sufficiently long period can establish a general presumption that the defendant's ability to present a defense is impaired, meaning that a defendant can prevail on his claim despite not having shown specific prejudice."
Instead we consider whether the delay actually impaired Appellant's defense.
Like Appellant's expert, Corporal Russell did not examine the vehicles involved in the accident. And the information on which Corporal Russell based his opinion as to speed was likewise available to Cover, Appellant's expert. Further, Cover testified during the pre-trial hearing that "a simple speed calculation" was the sort of conclusion that could be reached by examining data from the airbag control module, even without physically inspecting the vehicles.
Nor does Cover's testimony explain how access to the vehicles would have bolstered Appellant's theory that Sanchez's braking contributed to the cause of the crash. Cover emphasized that "when you have a case of who crossed the center line or who was within their lane of travel at the time of impact, you must have a factual and scientific basis as to the point of impact and the vehicle's relationship to those lane lines, you must [inspect the damage to the actual vehicles]." J.A. 79. Fair enough. But the position of the vehicles prior to the fatal collision in this case was never seriously in dispute. Appellant did not testify that Sanchez collided with him while changing lanes. As Appellant explained, he saw Sanchez move ahead of him into his lane of travel. But, even crediting his version of events, Appellant still had time to begin to move back into the center lane, realize that option was not available to him, and drift back behind the truck before Sanchez allegedly applied his brakes.
The relevant question, then, was whether Appellant was simply traveling too fast to avoid the collision, or whether Sanchez braked too aggressively. Cross-examination of Officer Bentivegna suggested that it may have been possible to examine the pickup truck's brake filaments for evidence of braking. But Bentivegna did not rule out the possibility that the truck braked; he testified that there were no skid marks suggestive of aggressive pre-contact braking, while allowing that normal application of the brakes would not have left such marks. And Cover did not explain how examining the actual vehicles involved in the accident would have enabled him to contradict Bentivegna's observation that the tire marks left on the Parkway did not indicate that Sanchez braked aggressively prior to the crash.
At the end of the day, the Government's case turned on Corporal Russell's estimate (corroborated by other testimony) that Appellant was travelling upwards of 90 miles per hour, together with Officer Bentivegna's testimony that there was no indication Sanchez braked aggressively before impact. Cover's testimony simply does not establish how examining the wrecked vehicles would have allowed him to contradict those opinions. And Appellant's trial counsel ably pointed out the potential weaknesses in the Government's expert opinions on cross-examination. We therefore fail to see how Appellant's defense was impaired in anything more than a speculative manner, and speculative prejudice will not do.
We are thus left with an unremarkable delay, caused by the Government's negligence, to which Appellant objected, but which did not impair his defense. Under those circumstances, we agree with the district court's conclusion that Appellant's Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial was not violated.
Appellant's remaining challenges can be readily dispatched.
Appellant first argues Corporal Russell should not have been permitted to testify that "the excessive speed of the Lexus" was "the single thing" that most likely caused the accident.
Federal Rule of Evidence 702 provides that an expert qualified by "knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education" may give opinion testimony if it "will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact issue," so long as the "testimony is based on sufficient facts or data" produced by reliable principles and methods that have been reliably applied to the facts of the case.
Finally, Appellant argues the district court should have afforded him a two-level reduction in his base offense level at sentencing for three reasons: he cooperated with law enforcement at the scene of the accident and thereafter willingly gave a statement; he never denied his involvement in the accident or that he was speeding; and he went to trial only to contest the speedy trial issue and the legal issue of whether the federal involuntary manslaughter statute applied to his conduct. We review the district court's sentencing decision on this point for clear error.
Section 3E1.1 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines provides that a defendant who "clearly demonstrates acceptance of responsibility" is entitled to a two-level reduction in the calculation of his offense level.
In this case, however, the evidence supports the district court's conclusion that Appellant
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is