United States v. Rodriguez

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 6, 2023
DocketCriminal No. 2019-0224
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Rodriguez (United States v. Rodriguez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Rodriguez, (D.D.C. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

v. Criminal Action No. 19-224 (TJK) LAZARO VITON RODRIGUEZ et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM ORDER

A grand jury indicted Defendants in June 2019 for participating in an international drug-

importation conspiracy. But Defendant Cesar Gomez Almonte was not arrested until December

2020, and Defendant Lazaro Viton Rodriguez not until January 2022. Although they rely on dif-

ferent legal theories, they each now move to dismiss the indictment based on prearrest delay. The

Court has reviewed written and live testimony explaining those delays. Because the delays were

justified by legitimate law-enforcement objectives and constraints—and not caused by the govern-

ment’s negligence or bad faith—the Court will deny their motions.

I. Background

A. Procedural History

This is not Almonte’s first motion on the subject. About a year after his arrest, he moved

to dismiss the indictment, claiming that the 18-month prearrest delay violated his Sixth Amend-

ment right to a speedy trial. ECF No. 60. The Court denied that motion. It reasoned that, although

a delay of more than a year is presumptively prejudicial, the government had proffered a valid

basis for the delay and that Almonte had neither asserted his speedy-trial rights since his arrest nor

articulated specific prejudice.

After Rodriguez was arrested, he discussed the possibility of resolving the case by guilty

plea with the government for about eleven months. See ECF No. 113 at 2; ECF No. 117 at 3. Ultimately, he decided to proceed to trial. ECF No. 117 at 3. In December 2022, he notified the

Court that he would move to dismiss the indictment because of the prearrest delay, and the Court

set a briefing schedule. See Min. Entry of Dec. 23, 2022. He now argues that the roughly 30-

month gap between the indictment and his arrest violated his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy

trial. ECF No. 121.

Around the same time, Almonte again moved to dismiss the indictment. He claims that

the government’s proffered explanation in response to his first such motion was knowingly false.

ECF No. 135 at 5. Thus, he asks the Court to dismiss the indictment under its supervisory authority

to sanction prosecutorial misconduct. See id. at 5–6.

Defendants requested an evidentiary hearing. ECF Nos. 133, 144. The Court granted that

request because “motions to dismiss on speedy-trial grounds are typically resolved after an evi-

dentiary hearing” and Defendants’ motions “arise from overlapping facts.” Min. Entry of Apr.

26, 2023 (quotation omitted). It directed the government to explain the prearrest delays with evi-

dence, either written or live. Id. In response, the government submitted declarations by David

Warner, an Associate Director at the Office of International Affairs, ECF No. 148-3, and Miguel

Herrera, Jr., a Special Agent with Homeland Security Investigations (“HSI”)—the lead case agent,

ECF No. 148-4. It also submitted emails contemporaneously sent to and by Special Agent Herrera

and other HSI agents, plus other various documents. See ECF No. 148-5–148-17.

The parties addressed those submissions at the evidentiary hearing. Defendants also called

Special Agent Herrera to testify. After the hearing, the parties submitted further briefing on the

evidence developed in the record. See ECF Nos. 152, 153, 158, 159, 164.

B. Findings of Fact

After considering all the evidence, including the content of Special Agent Herrera’s live

testimony and his demeanor while testifying, the Court finds these facts:

2 Rodriguez is a citizen of Cuba. Almonte is a citizen of the Dominican Republic. In June

2019, both men lived in the Dominican Republic.

Special Agent Herrera has worked for HSI since 1998 investigating offenses including nar-

cotics smuggling and money laundering. In June 2019, he was investigating a drug-trafficking

organization allegedly operating out of the Dominican Republic. He had developed evidence that

Rodriguez and Almonte were members of that drug-trafficking organization. He also had evidence

that Luca Finocchiarrio, a citizen of Italy then residing in the Dominican Republic, was a member

of the same drug-trafficking organization. Finocchiarrio was the investigation’s main target. Spe-

cial Agent Herrera originally intended to seek the simultaneous arrests of Rodriguez, Almonte,

and Finocchiarrio. He preferred to do that because he believed, based on his investigation, that

they were co-conspirators, and, in his experience, when one co-conspirator is arrested, others are

likely to flee or attempt to destroy evidence.

A grand jury indicted Rodriguez and Almonte on June 28, 2019. But as for Finocchiarrio,

Special Agent Herrera decided to wait to seek an indictment until he had compiled more evidence

against him. At that time, Special Agent Herrera did not yet attempt to have Rodriguez or Almonte

arrested, extradited, or removed from the Dominican Republic. Besides the more generalized rea-

sons to think Finocchiarrio might flee if one of his associates was arrested, Special Agent Herrera

thought Finocchiarrio had strong ties to Italy (and other countries) and so he believed Finocchiarrio

could easily slip out of the Dominican Republic.

By March 2020, Special Agent Herrera was still working toward an indictment of Finoc-

chiarrio, but his investigation was impeded by the COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, he learned

for the first time that the Italian government was investigating Finocchiarrio and that Italian law-

enforcement agents intended to arrest him. That same month, Special Agent Herrera came to

3 understand that Italian law-enforcement agents intended to issue, at some point in the future, an

Interpol Red Notice for Finocchiarrio. 1 As it turned out, Italian law-enforcement agents had al-

ready issued an active Red Notice for Finocchiarrio at least as early as June 2019.

On June 3, 2020, Finocchiarrio was removed from the Dominican Republic to Italy and

arrested. The same day, Special Agent Herrera learned for the first time that Italian law-enforce-

ment agents had already issued an active Red Notice for Finocchiarrio and that he had been re-

moved to Italy. On June 5, 2020, another HSI agent confirmed for Special Agent Herrera that

Italian law-enforcement agents had arrested Finocchiarrio upon his arrival. The same day, Special

Agent Herrera began planning the arrests of Rodriguez and Almonte.

The United States and the Dominican Republic are parties to a bilateral extradition treaty.

Under that treaty, the United States must submit extradition requests through formal diplomatic

channels. From initiation to extradition, that process often takes longer than 13 months and can

take as long as two years. An alternative to the extradition process exists for noncitizens of the

Dominican Republic: The Dominican Republic may remove the noncitizen from the country via

the United States, which gives U.S. law-enforcement officers an opportunity to arrest the suspect.

U.S. law-enforcement officers decided to ask the Dominican Republic to remove Rodriguez from

the country via the United States. That procedure was unavailable for Almonte because he is a

citizen of the Dominican Republic. Because they expected extradition proceedings to take longer

than removal proceedings, U.S.

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