JENNIFER A. DORSEY, District Judge.
The Government alleges that Defendant Jeremy Halgat and other members of the Vagos Motorcycle Group were caught in a sting operation in which they provided armed security for the transfer of 10 kilograms of cocaine. See Doc. 101 at 2-3. On June 19, 2013, Halgat and his codefendants were indicted on charges of conspiracy to possess with intent to deliver a controlled substance (Count 1), and using and carrying a firearm in connection with the Count 1 charges (Count 2). Doc. 1. Trial was originally scheduled for August 20, 2013. Doc. 22. On August 2, 2013, the parties entered a Joint Discovery Agreement ("JDA") that set the expert-disclosure deadline 30 days before trial. Doc. 33. The deadline for filing pretrial motions was October 31, 2013. Docs. 50 at 3-4; 72 at 10-11; 82 at 3; 104 at 2.
Between December 28, 2013, and January 14, 2014, Halgat filed a flurry of documents consisting of motions in limine (Docs. 82, 83, 88, 101, 104), subpoenas (Docs. 91, 92, 93, 94), and discovery motions (Docs. 86, 89, 102, 103, 111). These filings were resolved in several orders. Docs. 115, 122, 134, 142.
Defendant Halgat now moves to reconsider the Court's Order re: Various Pretrial Motions in part, claiming that the Court clearly erred when it (1) ruled that all motions in limine filed after the October 31, 2013, pretrial motion deadline were untimely because motions in limine do not qualify as "pretrial motions," and (2) found that the government had timely disclosed Manual Garza as an expert witness. Doc. 153 at 1-4. Unpersuaded by Halgat's arguments, the Court denies the motion for reconsideration.
Motions for reconsideration are not expressly authorized by the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, but trial courts in this district have customarily treated such motions as motions to alter or amend under Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 59(e).
As his first argument, Halgat contends that a motion in limine is not a "pretrial motion" bound by the October 31, 2013, deadline in the JDA. Doc. 153 at 3-4. Thus, he contends, the Court erred in ruling that Halgat's in limine motions were fatally late. Id. at 4. Halgat then lists the types of motions that must be made "before trial" pursuant to both Fed. R. Crim. Proc. 12(b)(3) and Local Rule 12-1, and notes that a motion "in limine" is not among them. See id. Halgat then refers the Court to Luce v. United States, a Supreme Court case that remarked in a footnote that in limine motions are properly defined as "any motion, whether made before or during trial, to exclude anticipated prejudicial evidence before the evidence is actually offered,"
Courts in this district interpret Luce to hold that a ruling on in limine motions "is entirely within the discretion of the Court,"
Moreover, it is difficult for the Court to square Halgat's terminological quibbles with the definition of "in limine" he advances—as such motions are designed as a broadly applicable trial-management tool to limit testimony or evidence in a particular area. The Court's exercise of its inherent authority to manage the trial by limiting pretrial filings did not occur in a vacuum; the decision to set firm and comprehensive pretrial motion deadlines was a deliberate reaction to the rash of eleventh-hour court filings made in this particular case—of which Halgat was the principal offender. The pattern of late filings was cogently illustrated by Magistrate Judge Leen in her Order on four of Halgat's additional pretrial motions:
Doc. 142 at 3. In light of the history of this case, it was not clear error for the Court to exercise its discretion to manage the course of this case by placing a deadline on written pretrial motions of all types. The Court declines Halgat's request to retract the ruling that motions in limine are pretrial motions subject to the JDA's hard October 31, 2013 filing deadline.
Halgat also argues that the Court clearly erred by failing to recognize that the expert disclosure deadline had expired by the time the government disclosed Manuel Garza as an expert on December 8-9, 2013. Doc. 153 at 5. In calculating this deadline, the Court distinguished the nature of the expertwitness disclosure deadline (which set the deadline not on a date certain but 30 days before trial) from other date-specific pretrial deadlines, reasoning that the former "was not a date certain; it was a freefloating target dependent entirely on the trial date," which was part of the JDA Halgat represented was "a binding agreement that must be followed by the parties in this case." Id. at 7. The Court found that because trial was then scheduled for January 14, 2014, the December 8-9 Garza expert disclosures were timely. Id.
Halgat now takes umbrage with this distinction, but identifies no governing principle—from statute, rule, or case law—demonstrating that this distinction and interpretation of the JDA language was a clearly erroneous exercise of the Court's broad trial-management powers. Halgat also claims that allowing Garza to testify would be manifestly unjust because, "if the expert is not allowed to testify, the Government is unable to prove the elements of both of the crimes charged in the Indictment." Doc. 153 at 5-6. This bald claim makes no attempt to contextualize Garza's testimony inside the evidentiary matrix of this case or even explain what criminal "elements" Garza's testimony is necessary to establish. It is insufficient to advance Halgat's position. Given that Rule 59(e) relief is characterized as "extraordinary," the Court need not rummage around for either legal arguments Halgat chose not to make or evidence Halgat chose not to present. The motion for reconsideration is denied.
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