United States v. Nakia Adams ( 2022 )


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  •                                        PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ____________
    Nos. 19-1811 & 19-2574
    ____________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    NAKIA ADAMS, a/k/a S, a/k/a Shawn
    Appellant
    ____________
    On Appeal from the District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 5:15-cr-00580-001)
    District Judge: Hon. Jeffrey L. Schmehl
    ____________
    Argued September 8, 2021
    Before: KRAUSE, RESTREPO and BIBAS, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: May 26, 2022)
    Salvatore C. Adamo        [ARGUED]
    1866 Leithsville Road – No. 306
    Hellertown, PA 18055
    Counsel for Appellant
    Robert A. Zauzmer
    Eric A. Boden        [ARGUED]
    Eric B. Henson
    Office of United States Attorney
    615 Chestnut Street – Suite 1250
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Counsel for Appellee
    ____________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ____________
    KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.
    With the passage of the Speedy Trial Act, 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 3161
    –3174, Congress codified a defendant’s right either to
    be tried within seventy days of arraignment or indictment or to
    have all charges dismissed. But it also sought to ensure that
    the speedy trial was a fair one, so it excluded from the running
    of the so-called “speedy trial clock” certain periods of delay.
    Three are at issue in this appeal where Nakia Adams was not
    tried until nearly two years after his arraignment and now
    contends that his conviction must be vacated on Speedy Trial
    Act grounds.
    Adams argues that an open-ended continuance granted
    by the District Court did not meet the Act’s criteria for tolling
    under § 3161(h)(7)(A), that the motions in limine filed by the
    Government did not qualify for the Act’s exclusion of “delay
    resulting from any pretrial motion” under § 3161(h)(1)(D), and
    2
    that his motion for discovery did not toll the clock under
    § 3161(h)(1)(D) from its filing through its official disposition.
    Because we conclude those periods of delay were excluded, we
    reject Adams’s claim that he was tried in violation of the
    Speedy Trial Act. And because we also reject Adams’s second
    claim—that the District Court plainly erred in failing to instruct
    the jury on the “knowledge-of-status” element under Rehaif v.
    United States, 
    139 S. Ct. 2191
     (2021)—we will affirm the
    District Court as to all counts of conviction.
    I.       Background
    Following a jury trial in October 2017, Nakia Adams
    was convicted on twenty counts of a superseding indictment,
    including eight for felon-in-possession of a firearm under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1) and twelve for making false statements to
    federally licensed firearms dealers under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (a)(1)(A). These charges arose out of a straw-purchaser
    scheme, which Adams devised to illegally acquire firearms that
    he then sold or traded for drugs in Newark, New Jersey. Being
    himself a convicted felon, Adams was prohibited from legally
    possessing firearms; instead, he recruited individuals with
    clean criminal records to serve as his straw purchasers.
    The scheme ground to a halt after Adams was arraigned
    on his original indictment on December 16, 2015.1 Trial was
    1
    The original indictment included twelve counts: one
    for conspiracy under 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
    , seven for making false
    statements to federal firearms licensees under 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (a)(1)(A), and four for felon in possession of a firearm
    3
    initially scheduled for February 16, 2016, but it was
    rescheduled for May 16 after Adams moved for a continuance
    on February 4. The record from that point on is fraught with
    what the District Court later characterized as “numerous
    continuances [and] unnecessary motions,” caused by Adams’s
    “obstreperous behavior.” J.A. 29. The District Court judge
    handled these continuances and motions with commendable
    professionalism, but they nonetheless resulted in more than a
    year of delay. We focus on three sources of that delay central
    to this appeal.
    First is a continuance that the District Court sought to
    enter on May 25. Adams filed two pro se motions on April 4
    and April 25, respectively. One was to replace his defense
    counsel, and the other was for unspecified discovery materials.
    Those motions prompted the District Court to strike the May
    16, trial date and to schedule a hearing on them for May 25. At
    the hearing, however, it became apparent that the motions’
    resolution would not be straightforward. Adams explained that
    his discovery motion was motivated, in part, by his desire to
    personally review discovery materials, so the Court directed
    the parties to negotiate a stipulated protective order to
    accommodate Adams’s request without compromising
    sensitive cooperator information.
    The Court also addressed Adams’s motion for new
    counsel, explaining to him that changing attorneys several
    months into the case would “delay [his] trial” because the
    Court would need to find and appoint a “new attorney” and
    under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1). The grand jury returned a
    superseding indictment on February 2, 2016.
    4
    give Adams time to “meet with that . . . attorney.” J.A. 133.
    On more than one occasion, Adams acknowledged he
    “underst[ood]” that a new appointment would “delay [] trial,”
    but he made clear he wished nonetheless to substitute counsel.
    
    Id.
     The hearing concluded with the Court’s statement that it
    would “appoint counsel, and then schedule a future status
    hearing . . . and possibly pick a trial date at that point in time.”
    J.A. 146. Notably, the judge did not set a particular date for
    that future hearing or for trial. He also did not cite 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (h)(7)(A), which allows district courts to pause the
    speedy trial clock by entering a continuance, or state that this
    continuance would serve the “ends of justice.”
    The May 25 hearing was not the last word on Adams’s
    discovery motion, which is the next source of delay that
    concerns us. Following the hearing, the Government and
    Adams’s new counsel, who entered the case on June 1,
    negotiated a stipulated protective order that outlined the
    materials Adams was entitled to review personally. That order
    was entered on June 21,2 but over the next few weeks, Adams’s
    counsel became concerned it was potentially ambiguous.
    Thus, at a subsequent hearing on July 11, he suggested that the
    parties “present another order for the Court, just so it’s clear to
    everyone which documents [counsel was] permitted to give
    [Adams].” J.A. 152. The Court agreed and entered a clarifying
    order on July 20. On August 18, the Court denied Adams’s
    discovery motion on the ground that “he was (and still is)
    2
    The record is ambiguous on whether this protective
    order was entered on June 20 or June 21. The parties agree
    that the order was entered on June 21, and we have
    accordingly settled on that date.
    5
    represented by counsel, and therefore, not entitled to file
    motions pro se.” Supp. App. 3.
    The final delay that looms large here resulted from two
    motions in limine filed by the Government on August 17, 2016:
    a Rule 404(b) motion to introduce evidence at trial concerning
    Adams’s straw purchases and heroin trafficking; and a Rule
    609(a) motion to introduce one of his prior felony convictions,
    should Adams choose to testify. The District Court issued an
    order directing Adams to respond to those motions no later
    than September 28 and held argument on November 7. At the
    end of argument, however, the Court opted against “making a
    ruling” at that time, stating that “motions in limine[] are issues
    that continue almost up until the point of trial.” J.A. 189.
    At this point, trial was scheduled for November 30.
    Before trial could commence, however, Adams requested to
    proceed pro se, prompting the District Court to reschedule trial
    for June 12, 2017, to allow Adams to move forward without
    counsel. And trial did begin on that date. But again, it did not
    go smoothly and was cut short due to Adams’s conflict with
    his attorney. A new trial commenced several months later.
    The jury returned a guilty verdict on all twenty counts
    of the superseding indictment on October 17, 2017. And the
    evidence supporting those convictions was substantial.
    Evidence of the scheme included testimony from five straw
    purchasers, who described how Adams inquired into their
    criminal records, only recruited buyers without prior
    convictions, and typically compensated them with drugs. They
    explained how, once recruited, they bought guns at Adams’s
    direction at various federally licensed firearm dealers, and
    before each transaction, were required to fill out forms issued
    6
    by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
    (“ATF”). According to these witnesses, Adams directed them
    to lie on the forms by attesting that they were the guns’ true
    purchasers and coached them on how to respond to each
    question, including one confirming that they had no prior
    felony convictions. He also advised them that they would be
    subject to criminal background checks for the purchases made
    in Pennsylvania, which comprised the majority.
    Regarding proof of the § 922(g) felon-in-possession
    charges, Adams entered a so-called Old Chief stipulation,
    confirming the existence of his prior felony conviction, see Old
    Chief v. United States, 
    519 U.S. 172
     (1997), and the judge
    ultimately instructed the jurors on the elements of a § 922(g)
    offense as they were understood at the time, including (1) “that
    the defendant has been convicted of a felony,” (2) “that after
    this conviction the defendant knowingly possessed a firearm,”
    which merely required “the government [to] prove that the
    defendant possessed the firearm in question,” and (3) that the
    firearm was “in or affected interstate or foreign commerce.”
    J.A. 1217–20.
    On two occasions in the lead up to his conviction,
    Adams argued that he had not been brought to trial within the
    time required by the Speedy Trial Act. On November 16, 2016,
    he moved to dismiss the superseding indictment, claiming that
    his rights under the Act had been violated because his former
    counsel had moved for the February 4, 2016, continuance
    without his knowledge. The District Court denied that motion
    because the continuance was valid, regardless of whether
    Adams knew that his attorney had asked for it. In his second
    motion to dismiss, Adams again alleged a Speedy Trial Act
    7
    violation but did not offer specific arguments in support of his
    claim. That motion was likewise denied on October 17, 2017.
    Upon conviction, Adams again raised this argument in
    his motion for acquittal or alternatively for a new trial. The
    District Court denied this motion on January 16, 2019, and said
    it would not “allow Mr. Adams to use the Speedy Trial Act as
    a shield for his obstreperous behavior,” citing his “numerous
    continuances, unnecessary motions, and representation by
    three different attorneys,” as well as the “numerous delays”
    resulting from Adams “attempt[ing] to proceed pro se” after
    repeatedly firing his appointed counsel. J.A. 29–30. Because
    it viewed “all delays [as] directly attributable to Mr. Adams,”
    the District Court concluded there had been no violation of his
    right to a speedy trial, and the case proceeded to sentencing.3
    Id. at 29.
    At his sentencing hearing, Adams raised a different
    argument: that he was entitled to a new trial on the felon-in-
    possession counts in light of Rehaif v. United States, 139 S.
    3
    The District Court seems to have improperly
    analyzed Adams’s motion as an alleged violation of his
    constitutional speedy trial rights, rather than his rights under
    the Speedy Trial Act. J.A. 29. As a result, the Court did not
    count the days that had elapsed between Adams’s
    arraignment and his second trial and did not consider how
    much of that time could be excluded under the Act’s
    enumerated exceptions. Instead, it applied the four-part
    balancing framework outlined in Barker v. Wingo, 
    407 U.S. 514
     (1972), which considers (1) the length of delay, (2) the
    reason for the delay, (3) the defendant’s assertion of his right,
    and (4) the prejudice to the defendant. J.A. 29–31.
    8
    Ct. 2191 (2019). The Supreme Court had held in that case
    that 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (a)(2)’s requirement that a defendant
    “knowingly violate” § 922(g)(1) demanded proof that the
    felon had knowledge of the possession of a firearm, but also
    of his status as a felon. Id. at 2194, 2200. It clarified, in
    other words, that the mens rea for the offense requires “both
    that the defendant knew he possessed a firearm and that he
    knew he belonged to the relevant category of persons barred
    from possessing a firearm.” Id. at 2200.
    Before Rehaif, we and other Courts of Appeals had
    believed this knowledge element was limited to the knowing
    possession of a firearm, see United States v. Higdon, 
    638 F.3d 233
    , 239–40 (3d Cir. 2011), and the District Court’s jury
    instructions reflected as much.4 Adams did not object to
    those instructions at trial, but, at sentencing, he argued that
    the District Court’s failure to instruct the jury on the
    “knowledge-of-status” element required that his § 922(g)(1)
    convictions be vacated. The District Court disagreed, entered
    final judgment of conviction, and sentenced Adams to 235
    months’ imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised
    release. This appeal followed.
    II.       Jurisdiction & Standard of Review
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 3231
     because Adams was charged in an indictment alleging
    4
    The eight felon-in-possession counts in the
    superseding indictment likewise alleged only that Adams
    “knowingly possessed” firearms.
    9
    violations of federal criminal law.         We have appellate
    jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    As a general matter, we review a district court’s legal
    determinations de novo, its factual findings for clear error, and
    its decisions to grant continuances for abuse of discretion.
    United States v. Shulick, 
    18 F.4th 91
    , 100 (3d Cir. 2021). When
    a legal question was not preserved at trial, however, we review
    the district court’s ruling for plain error. Greer v. United
    States, 
    141 S. Ct. 2090
    , 2096 (2021).
    III.    Discussion
    Adams raises two claims on appeal. He first asks that
    we vacate his conviction in its entirety on the ground that he
    was not brought to trial within the time required under the
    Speedy Trial Act. In the alternative, he argues that, because
    the District Court’s failure to instruct the jury on the
    “knowledge-of-status” element constituted plain error under
    Rehaif, he is entitled to a new trial at least on the § 922(g)(1)
    counts. For the reasons set forth below, neither argument is
    persuasive.
    A. The Speedy Trial Act Claim
    Under the Speedy Trial Act, a defendant must be
    brought to trial within seventy days of the date of the
    indictment or the date on which the defendant first appeared in
    the court where the charges are pending, whichever is later. 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (c)(1). The indictment “shall be dismissed,” if
    the defendant is not tried within that time frame. 
    18 U.S.C. § 3162
    (a)(2). Strict as that rule is, it is tempered by enumerated
    exceptions, including two that are relevant here. First, a district
    10
    court may grant a continuance and toll the speedy trial clock
    by making a finding, on the record, that the “ends of justice”
    served by granting a continuance “outweigh the best interest of
    the public and the defendant in a speedy trial.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (h)(7). Second, if a party files a “pretrial motion,” the
    speedy trial clock is tolled for the “delay resulting from” that
    motion from the time of its filing until “the conclusion of the
    hearing on, or other prompt disposition of, such motion.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (h)(1)(D).
    In this case, the speedy trial clock commenced with
    Adams’s arraignment on December 16, 2015 because he did
    “not appear before a judicial officer prior to his original
    indictment, [so] his arraignment . . . constituted his initial
    appearance for Speedy Trial Act purposes.” United States v.
    Willaman, 
    437 F.3d 354
    , 357 (3d Cir. 2006); see also United
    States v. Reese, 
    917 F.3d 177
    , 181 (3d Cir. 2019). The parties
    agree that forty-five days had elapsed on the clock as of
    February 4, 2016, and Adams does not dispute the exclusion of
    all days after September 28, 2016, once he filed responses to
    the Government’s motions in limine. This appeal therefore
    centers on the 236-day period between February 4 and
    September 28.
    Certain days during that period were indisputably
    excluded, but if twenty-five days ran between those dates, then
    those days, combined with the prior forty-five, would exceed
    the seventy-day statutory cap. On the other hand, if sufficient
    days were excluded by one or more of the motions filed and
    continuances granted during that period, Adams’s Speedy Trial
    11
    Act claim must fail.5 Only three need concern us today, as the
    speedy trial clock could not have expired if the District Court
    properly entered an ends-of-justice continuance on May 25,
    2016 or if the clock was tolled by a combination of Adams’s
    April 25, 2016, discovery motion and the Government’s
    August 17, 2016, motions in limine. We address each below.
    1. Ends-of-Justice Continuance
    The Speedy Trial Act permits a district court to pause
    the speedy trial clock during “[a]ny period of delay resulting
    from [the granting of] a continuance,” but only if the court “sets
    forth, in the record of the case, either orally or in writing, its
    reasons for finding that the ends of justice served by the
    granting of [a] continuance outweigh the best interests of the
    public and the defendant in a speedy trial.” 18 U.S.C.
    5
    There is no dispute that one day elapsed on
    December 17, 2015, when no pretrial motions or
    continuances were outstanding, as did another forty-four
    between December 22, 2015 and February 4, 2016. In
    addition to the motions and continuances that we address in
    detail, the clock was tolled from December 18 through
    December 21 by Adams’s pending motion to extend time to
    file pretrial motions, by an open-ended continuance entered
    by the District Court on February 8, 2016, and by Adams’s
    motion to remove his defense counsel on April 4, 2016. The
    parties dispute when the February 8 continuance expired, but
    we need not resolve that question, as the number of days at
    issue is immaterial. They agree that the April 4 motion to
    remove his counsel tolled the clock until June 1, when the
    Court resolved the issue by appointing replacement counsel.
    12
    § 3161(h)(7)(A) (emphasis added). The District Court sought
    to enter an open-ended continuance during a hearing on May
    25, 2016, in which it considered Adams’s April 4 motion for
    new counsel and his April 25 discovery motion.
    Adams argues that the Court could not have entered a
    valid continuance without either citing the relevant statutory
    provision or invoking the words “ends of justice.” This
    argument fails because our precedent affords district courts
    significant leeway in complying with § 3161(h)(7)(A)’s
    procedural requirements.6 It is true that, if a District Court
    enters a “continuance order [that] cites the relevant provision
    of the [Speedy Trial] Act” or “states that it is for the ‘ends of
    justice,’” it streamlines our analysis: in that circumstance, the
    court need not provide factual justifications for the continuance
    at the time it is entered but can instead “supplement[] the
    record with further details” on why a continuance serves the
    “ends of justice” at a later date. Reese, 917 F.3d at 182 (citing
    United States v. Brooks, 
    697 F.2d 517
    , 521–22 (3d Cir. 1982)).
    But it is also true that a district court may enter a continuance
    without citing the Act or referencing the ends of justice “so
    long as the court explains a valid factual basis for the
    continuance on the record” and in a manner that shows the
    6
    The Supreme Court “has not elaborated on the
    timing, procedures, or substantive standards that must be
    satisfied for a district court” to enter a continuance, Reese,
    917 F.3d at 182, apart from requiring factual findings to be
    entered “by the time [the court] rules on the defendant’s
    motion to dismiss,” Zedner v. United States, 
    547 U.S. 489
    ,
    507 (2006). We have therefore found it necessary to fill in
    the gaps through our case law. See Reese, 917 F.3d at 182.
    13
    court “balanced the interests of the public and of all of the
    defendants.” Id. (citing and quoting United States v. Rivera
    Constr. Co., 
    863 F.2d 293
    , 297 (3d. Cir. 1988)). What a district
    court cannot do is exclude time through a continuance “without
    either stating the factual basis” for doing so or “using language
    that invokes” the statute. 
    Id.
     (citing United States v. Brenna,
    
    878 F.2d 117
    , 122 (3d Cir. 1989)) (emphasis added).
    During the May 25 hearing, the District Court resolved
    to appoint Adams a new attorney and asked the parties to enter
    a stipulated protective order, outlining which discovery
    materials Adams was entitled to review. Having struck the
    outstanding trial date, the Court then explained that:
    I’m going to appoint counsel, and then schedule a future
    status hearing, so that we can all get together and [] Mr.
    Adams [] and his counsel can tell us what they’ve done
    so far, what they need to do, what they want to schedule
    in the future, and possibly pick a trial date at that point
    in time . . . . Because there still are, as I see it, some
    outstanding discovery issues.
    J.A. 146.
    While the District Court did not cite the statute or use
    the “magic words,” statements on the record make clear that it
    had a “valid factual basis for the continuance” and that it
    balanced the relevant interests.7 Reese, 917 F.3d at 182. In
    7
    To ensure compliance and avoid putting convictions
    in jeopardy, some judges in the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania have employed a form of order that excludes
    14
    considering Adams’s pro se motion for new counsel, the Court
    found that there had been an “attorney[-]client breakdown,”
    J.A. 132, and that Adams could not mount a proper defense
    without new representation. It recognized that new counsel
    would be involved in resolving outstanding discovery issues
    and explicitly warned Adams that, if he moved forward with
    his request to change attorneys, “delay[ing] [his] trial” would
    be unavoidable because the Court would need to find and
    appoint a “new attorney” and give Adams time to “meet with
    that [] attorney.” J.A. 133. In response, Adams repeatedly
    acknowledged that changing his representation would cause a
    delay and that he nonetheless was requesting new counsel.
    That colloquy reflects that the District Court delayed trial to
    protect Adams’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel, which is a
    time on the basis of ends-of-justice continuances. See, e.g.,
    Order, United States v. Myers, No. 20-cr-210, ECF 85 (E.D.
    Pa. Jan. 31, 2022); Order, United States v. Brown, No. 20-cr-
    013, ECF 45 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 19, 2021); Order, United States v.
    Salerno, No. 20-cr-320, ECF 28 (E.D. Pa. July 21, 2021);
    Order, United States v. Woodley, No. 15-cr-340, ECF 12
    (E.D. Pa. Oct. 7, 2015); Order, United States v. Vargas, No.
    14-cr-652, ECF 71 (E.D. Pa. May 11, 2015); United States v.
    O’Brien, No. 15-cr-021, ECF 42 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 25, 2015);
    United States v. Broaster, No. 12-cr-533, ECF 95 (E.D. Pa.
    Jan. 29, 2013); Order, United States v. Sampson, No. 09-cr-
    250, ECF 15 (E.D. Pa. July 6, 2009); see also Sample Order
    Granting Motion for Continuance, Federal Judicial Center
    (July 27, 2021), available at
    https://fjc.dcn/sites/default/files/session/2019/Order%20Grant
    ing%20Motion%20for%20Continuance_0.pdf. Doing so
    avoids unnecessary ambiguity and needless litigation.
    15
    particularly weighty justification for a continuance,8 see
    Gideon v. Wainwright, 
    372 U.S. 335
    , 343 (1963) (“the
    assistance of counsel” in criminal trials has long been
    recognized as “one of the safeguards . . . necessary to insure
    [sic] fundamental human rights of life and liberty” (quoting
    Johnson v. Zerbst, 
    304 U.S. 458
    , 462 (1938))), and that, after
    balancing that right against Adams’s (and the public’s) interest
    in a speedy trial, the Court concluded that delaying trial was
    warranted under those circumstances.
    This record is sufficient to meet the requirements of 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (h)(7)(A) and therefore to toll the speedy trial
    clock from May 25 to November 30, i.e., the new date that the
    District Court set for trial. See Reese, 917 F.3d at 182; Rivera
    Constr. Co., 863 F.2d at 297.9 And, with this continuance in
    8
    Protecting defendants’ Sixth Amendment right to
    counsel is an especially compelling reason to delay trial, but
    similarly weighty interests may justify lengthy continuances
    in future cases.
    9
    Though not disputed by the parties, we note that the
    District Court’s decision not to specify an end date for this
    continuance poses no issue under our precedents. Open-ended
    continuances that otherwise comply with § 3161(h)(7)(A) are
    valid if they are not “unreasonably long” in light of the
    “particular circumstances of th[e] case,” including which party
    bears primary responsibility for delaying trial. United States v.
    Lattany, 
    982 F.2d 866
    , 881–82 (3d Cir. 1992). Here, the
    continuance expired on November 30, 2016, that is, the new
    trial date set by the Court. This roughly six-month delay was
    not “unreasonably long,” given the nature of the pro se motions
    16
    effect, twenty-five non-excludable days could not have elapsed
    between February 4, 2016 and September 28, 2016. This
    provides one basis to deny Adams’s Speedy Trial Act claim,
    but there is another, equally valid ground on which to do so.
    We therefore turn to our alternative holding.
    2. Pretrial Motions
    Adams’s Speedy Trial Act claim must be denied for a
    second, independent reason: the days excluded as a result of
    his April 25, 2016, pro se discovery motion in combination
    with the Government’s August 17, 2016, motions in limine.
    See United States ex rel. Caruso v. Zelinsky, 
    689 F.2d 435
    , 440
    (3d Cir. 1982) (explaining that “an alternate holding has the
    same force as a single holding; it is binding precedent”).
    Section 3161(h)(1)(D) of the Speedy Trial Act provides
    that the clock is tolled from the filing of “any pretrial motion”
    until the “conclusion of the hearing on, or other prompt
    disposition of, [that] motion.” This subsection excludes time
    in two circumstances: (1) “when a pretrial motion requires a
    hearing” and (2) when the motion “result[s] in a ‘prompt
    disposition.’” Henderson v. United States, 
    476 U.S. 321
    , 329
    (1986). The concept of “prompt disposition” in turn is
    for discovery and new counsel and the fact that Adams, in
    filing the motions, was largely responsible for postponing trial.
    Id. at 882 (holding that an open-ended continuance of over a
    year was not unreasonable because it was made necessary by
    considerable turnover in the defendant’s legal team, for which
    the defendant bore significant responsibility).
    17
    bounded by § 3161(h)(1)(H),10 “which permits an exclusion of
    [no more than] 30 days from the time a motion is actually
    ‘under advisement’ by the court.” Id.
    What this means in practice is that, if the district court
    chooses to resolve the motion without holding a hearing, the
    clock starts ticking a maximum of thirty days after it has
    “receive[d] all the papers it reasonably expects” from the
    parties. Id. Alternatively, if the court determines a hearing is
    warranted to allow for additional evidence or argument before
    taking a motion under advisement, the Speedy Trial Act
    “exclude[s] all time between the filing of and the hearing on a
    motion whether that hearing was prompt or not.” Id. at 326;
    see also Lattany, 982 F.2d at 874 (“Subsection (h)(1)[(D)] does
    not impose a reasonableness limitation on delay due to pretrial
    motions.”). In addition, because it would be illogical “to
    exclude . . . all the time prior to the hearing . . . but not the time
    during which the court remains unable to rule because it is
    awaiting the submission by counsel of additional materials,”
    the clock remains tolled up to thirty days beyond the court’s
    receipt of any post-hearing submissions that are needed to
    “proper[ly] dispos[e] of the motion.” Henderson, 
    476 U.S. at
    331–32 (allowing for the exclusion of thirty days “for the
    District Court to take [a motion] under advisement” once the
    10
    Henderson preceded amendments to the Speedy
    Trial Act in 2008, so its statutory references correspond to an
    earlier version of the Act. The provision excluding time for
    the “delay resulting from any pretrial motion” was previously
    codified at § 3161(h)(1)(F), while the subsection that
    excludes up to thirty days while a motion is “under
    advisement” was previously codified at § 3161(h)(1)(J).
    18
    Court received post-hearing supplementary filings); accord
    United States v. Graves, 
    722 F.3d 544
    , 548 n.6 (3d. Cir. 2013).
    Here, Adams claims that the District Court resolved his
    discovery motion on June 21, when it entered a protective order
    to facilitate his personal review of discovery materials, rather
    than on August 18, when it entered an order denying the
    motion. According to Adams, that protective order fully
    satisfied his request to review discovery materials himself and
    left nothing for the District Court to resolve.
    The record shows otherwise. Adams’s pro se discovery
    motion related not only to his desire for personal access to
    discovery, but also to his dissatisfaction with counsel and his
    request for “evidence not otherwise known to him” that could
    “disprov[e] his guilt, reduc[e] his punishment, or [be used to]
    impeach[] witnesses,” i.e., Brady material. Pro Se Motion for
    Discovery, United States v. Adams, No. 15-cr-580, ECF 26
    (E.D. Pa. Apr. 25, 2016). True, by June 21, the District Court
    had entered a stipulated protective order concerning the
    discovery materials. But that did not resolve the personal
    access issue, let alone Adams’s request for Brady material.
    Instead, due to new counsel’s concerns about ambiguities in
    the protective order, the District Court was required to provide
    further clarification in a second order entered on July 20.
    It was only at that point, with Adams’s demonstrated
    willingness to proceed with newly appointed counsel and to
    forego pro se status, and with the terms of his personal access
    to discovery resolved to all parties’ satisfaction, that the
    District Court had the information it needed to take the rest of
    the motion “under advisement.” And it did so promptly, ruling
    on August 18 that “[Adams] was (and still is) represented by
    19
    counsel, and therefore, not entitled to file motions pro se.”
    Supp. App. 3. As such, all time between the motion’s filing
    date and the August 18 ruling was excluded from the speedy
    trial clock. See Henderson, 
    476 U.S. at 331
    .
    The other motions with which Adams takes issue are the
    Government’s August 17, 2016, motions in limine, which he
    contends do not qualify as true “pretrial motions” within the
    meaning of § 3161(h)(1)(D). Our sister circuits are split
    concerning the speedy trial implications of motions in limine.
    The D.C. Circuit in United States v. Van Smith observed that
    motions in limine typically pertain to the admissibility of
    evidence at trial, so treating them as “pretrial motions,” i.e.,
    excluding time from whenever the motion in limine is filed
    through its resolution, could “circumvent the [] Act” altogether
    because the Government could theoretically file such motions
    “at an early stage” simply to stop the clock indefinitely. 
    530 F.3d 967
    , 971 (D.C. Cir. 2008). To avoid that risk and because
    motions in limine often do not “require the attention of the []
    court” until at or immediately before trial, the court concluded
    they were better construed as notices of the Government’s
    intent to submit evidence to the jury that do not toll the clock
    at all. Id.11
    11
    See also United States v. Taplet, 
    776 F.3d 875
    , 878
    (D.C. Cir. 2015) (“Not all motions filed pretrial count as a
    ‘pretrial motion’ under the [Speedy Trial Act],” including
    “government evidentiary filings that invoke Federal Rules of
    Evidence 404(b) and 609[.]”); United States v. Harris, 
    491 F.3d 440
    , 444 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (holding that the
    government’s evidentiary notice “was not a motion” within
    the meaning of § 3161(h)(1)(D), but the defendant’s response
    20
    By contrast, several circuits have held that, because this
    tolling provision applies to “any pretrial motion,”
    § 3161(h)(1)(D) (emphasis added), it necessarily covers
    evidentiary motions, regardless of whether they are held in
    abeyance until trial. See, e.g., United States v. Franklin, 
    148 F.3d 451
    , 456 (5th Cir. 1998) (holding that the “government’s
    motions seeking evidentiary rulings” tolled the speedy trial
    clock, even though their resolution was “deferred by the court
    until trial” and they did not “consume the court’s attention” in
    the intervening time); United States v. Bloate, 
    655 F.3d 750
    ,
    753 (8th Cir. 2011) (holding that the speedy trial clock was
    tolled by the government’s motions in limine even though the
    district court disposed of both motions on the first day of
    trial).12
    The First Circuit has taken a more nuanced approach,
    holding that whether motions in limine toll the clock depends
    on how the district court approaches them in a given case. In
    that circuit, a district court cannot “put off consideration of a[n]
    [evidentiary] motion and exclude the time during which the
    motion lies dormant,” but it “is entitled to exclude at least the
    to that motion tolled the clock because it required the trial
    court’s attention).
    12
    See also United States v. Johnson, 
    32 F.3d 304
    , 306
    (7th Cir. 1994) (holding that “the seventeen days the court
    expended in deciding the government’s motion in limine []
    were excludable”); United States v. Riley, 
    991 F.2d 120
    , 123
    (4th Cir.1993) (excluding all time from the filing of a pretrial
    evidentiary motion until its disposition, even though the
    hearing on that motion was deferred until after trial).
    21
    period of time during which it considers [whether] to treat the
    filing” as either a pretrial motion, which would fall under
    § 3161(h)(1)(D), or an evidentiary notice, which would not.
    United States v. Rojo-Alvarez, 
    944 F.2d 959
    , 966 (1st Cir.
    1991); see also United States v. Sposito, 
    106 F.3d 1042
    , 1045
    (1st Cir. 1997) (holding that the Government’s motion in
    limine tolled the speedy trial clock from its filing through its
    official disposition at trial because “there was no suggestion
    that the motion [] had been reserved until trial” or that it had
    been “relegated to dormant status for [Speedy Trial Act]
    purposes”). But importantly, absent a clear indication that the
    motion has been “reserved until trial,” the motion will be
    treated as a “pretrial motion” under the Act, excluding time
    consistent with § 3161(h)(1)(D). Sposito, 
    106 F.3d at 1045
    .
    Similarly, the Second and Ninth Circuits, respectively,
    have declined to exclude time where “a trial judge postpon[es]
    an evidentiary hearing” on the defendant’s motion “until the
    conclusion of the case in chief,” United States v. Gambino, 
    59 F.3d 353
    , 359 (2d Cir. 1995), or “put[s] off [a motion in
    limine’s] hearing . . . until after trial,” United States v.
    Springer, 
    51 F.3d 861
    , 865 (9th Cir. 1995).13 Under this
    13
    While the Ninth Circuit has limited this tolling
    exception to cases in which a “motion [in limine] is decided
    after trial” and not when it is decided “after the jury ha[s]
    been impaneled but before the presentation of evidence,” see
    United States v. George, 
    85 F.3d 1433
    , 1436 (9th Cir. 1996),
    we do not agree with that distinction. The Speedy Trial Act
    requires trial to “commence within seventy days” of the filing
    of an indictment or the defendant’s first appearance in court.
    
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (c)(1). Thus, the speedy trial clock stops
    22
    approach, if the trial judge simply “table[s]” an evidentiary
    motion for resolution at or after trial, time is not automatically
    excluded from the speedy trial clock, which should only “be
    tolled when the expenditure of judicial resources to decide the
    motion would interfere with the case expeditiously proceeding
    to trial.” Gambino, 
    59 F.3d at 359
    .
    In our circuit, the treatment of motions in limine has
    remained an open question until today.14 See United States v.
    Williams, 
    917 F.3d 195
    , 200 n.3 (3d Cir. 2019) (declining to
    reach the disputed issue of “whether the Motion In Limine
    [was] a ‘pretrial motion’ that stop[ped] the seventy-day clock
    pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (h)(1)(D)”).
    running when the defendant’s trial begins, and a district
    court’s decision to table a motion in limine for resolution after
    trial has the same speedy trial implications as reserving
    judgment until the start of trial.
    14
    In Lattany, we held that “[t]he district court properly
    excluded [] time” under the Speedy Trial Act for a variety of
    pretrial motions, including the Government’s motion in
    limine, 982 F.2d at 872–74, but the specific question of if and
    when motions in limine should be construed as evidentiary
    notices versus “pretrial motions” under § 3161(h)(1)(D) was
    not squarely presented. See Abdelfattah v. U.S. Dep’t of
    Homeland Sec., 
    488 F.3d 178
    , 185 (3d Cir. 2007) (explaining
    that a statement of law in a prior case was “dicta” because the
    earlier court had “not [been] presented with the [relevant]
    question,” such that the statement “could have been deleted
    without seriously impairing the analytical foundations of the
    holding” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    23
    We now conclude, drawing on the approaches taken in
    the First, Second, and Ninth Circuits, that it is necessary to
    distinguish between motions in limine that the district court
    actively seeks to resolve pretrial and those it decides expressly,
    or by routine practice, to hold until trial. We do so primarily
    because this distinction comports with the plain language of
    the Act, which excludes time only for the “delay resulting from
    any pretrial motion.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (h)(1)(D). As that
    phrasing indicates, the purpose of this subsection is “to exclude
    all time that is consumed in placing the trial court in a position
    to dispose of a motion.” Henderson, 
    476 U.S. at 331
    . Many
    motions in limine do require the court’s disposition pretrial,
    e.g., to confirm the admissibility or inadmissibility of evidence
    bearing on witness preparation or trial strategy. But where a
    court has no intention of resolving a motion in limine before
    trial, that motion cannot be said to “consum[e]” the court’s
    time pretrial, 
    id.,
     or to “result[]” in any pretrial delay,
    § 3161(h)(1)(D). Put differently, although § 3161(h)(1)(D)
    indeed covers “any” pretrial motion, its text and context make
    clear that a “pretrial motion” for these purposes is not simply a
    motion that is filed chronologically before trial; it is a motion
    that requires the court’s time to resolve pretrial and thereby
    delays the commencement of trial by a commensurate number
    of excludable days. See § 3161(h)(1)(D); see also Henderson,
    
    476 U.S. at
    330–32.
    At the same time, we share our sister circuits’ concern
    that “[t]here is no reliable way . . . to divine the intent of the
    district court with respect to a particular motion or its docket
    in general,” and we will not rely on mere speculation to
    “determine when a district court’s decision to put off
    consideration of a motion” means the motion has been tabled
    until trial. Sposito, 
    106 F.3d at 1045
    . We therefore hold that a
    24
    motion in limine is treated as would be any “pretrial motion”
    under § 3161(h)(1)(D) except when a district court clearly
    indicates that it is reserving judgment until trial, whether by
    stating as much or by following a regular practice of
    postponing decisions on motions in limine for trial. In sum, as
    a general matter, “motions in limine are ‘pretrial motions’ for
    the purpose of [§] 3161(h)(1)[(D)],” Sposito, 
    106 F.3d at 1044
    ,
    and, unless the district court tables their resolution until trial,
    they toll the speedy trial clock accordingly. See Gambino, 
    59 F.3d at 359
    ; Rojo-Alvarez, 
    944 F.2d at 966
    .
    Here, the Government filed two motions in limine: its
    Rule 404(b) motion to admit evidence concerning Adams’s
    distribution of heroin, his straw purchases, and his prior
    conviction for drug trafficking; and its Rule 609(a) motion for
    permission to impeach Adams with his prior convictions
    should he testify at trial. Initially, the District Court actively
    considered those motions, ordering Adams to respond to the
    Government’s “outstanding motions in limine no later than
    September 28, 2016,” and scheduling a hearing for November
    7, 2016. So, up to that point, no days ran on the speedy trial
    clock. But at the November 7 hearing, the Court announced it
    was reserving judgment because “motions in limine are issues
    that continue almost up until the point of trial.” J.A. 189. Thus,
    any pretrial delay after November 7 was not “resulting from”
    those motions, § 3161(h)(1)(D), and could not be excluded
    from the speedy trial clock on that basis.
    At issue on appeal, however, are only the days between
    February 4 and September 28, and for the reasons we have
    explained, the combination of Adams’s motion for discovery
    and the Government’s motions in limine prevents Adams from
    accumulating twenty-five non-excludable days during that
    25
    period. Accordingly, Adams cannot establish a violation of his
    rights under the Speedy Trial Act, and on this independent and
    alternate basis, we will affirm the District Court’s denial of that
    claim. See Zelinsky, 
    689 F.2d at 440
    .
    B. The Rehaif Claim
    In the event all counts are not dismissed on Speedy Trial
    Act grounds, Adams urges us to vacate at least his felon-in-
    possession convictions based on the Court’s failure to instruct
    the jury consistent with Rehaif, 
    139 S. Ct. 2191
     (2019).
    Because he did not object to the omission of “knowledge of
    status” as an element at trial, we review for plain error.15
    Adams must meet “three threshold requirements”: (1) there
    was an error; (2) that error was plain; and (3) it affected his
    “substantial rights.” Greer, 141 S. Ct. at 2096 (quoting
    15
    Adams’s related argument that the omission of the
    “knowledge-of-status” element from the indictment and jury
    instructions was structural error, requiring automatic reversal,
    is foreclosed by our precedent and that of the Supreme Court,
    which do not count Rehaif errors among the “highly
    exceptional” constitutional errors considered structural.
    Greer v. United States, 
    141 S. Ct. 2090
    , 2099–100 (2021)
    (failure to charge “knowledge of one’s felon status” or to
    instruct the jury on that element does not require automatic
    vacatur of a conviction because those errors do not “affect the
    entire framework within which the proceeding occurs.”);
    United States v. Boyd, 
    999 F.3d 171
    , 178–79 (3d Cir. 2021)
    (“[F]ailing to include [the knowledge-of-status] element in
    the jury instruction was not a structural error that requires
    automatic reversal.”).
    26
    Rosales-Mireles v. United States, 
    138 S. Ct. 1897
    , 1904–05
    (2018)). And even then, we may exercise our discretion to
    grant relief only if “the error had a serious effect on the
    fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
    
    Id.
     at 2096–97 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
    United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 734–36 (1993).
    The parties have appropriately focused their arguments
    on the third prong: whether the Rehaif error in the District
    Court’s jury instructions affected Adams’s “substantial
    rights.”16 As the Supreme Court explained in Greer, the
    relevant question is whether “there is a ‘reasonable probability’
    that [Adams] would have been acquitted” had “the District
    Court . . . correctly instructed the jury on the mens rea element
    of [his] felon-in-possession offense[s].” Greer, 141 S. Ct. at
    2097 (quoting United States v. Dominguez Benitez, 
    542 U.S. 74
    , 83 (2004)). As to that question, the Court cautioned that
    defendants face “an uphill climb” because “[i]f a person is a
    felon, he ordinarily knows he is a felon.” Id. at 2097.
    Greer, in effect, created a presumption that the
    “knowledge-of-status” element is satisfied whenever a
    § 922(g)(1) defendant is, in fact, a felon. To overcome that
    presumption, the defendant must make a “sufficient argument
    . . . on appeal that he would have presented evidence at trial
    that he did not in fact know he was a felon,” and the appellate
    16
    In this case, the first two prongs are easily satisfied.
    The District Court’s failure to instruct the jury on § 922(g)’s
    “knowledge-of-status” element was erroneous, and that error
    was plain after Rehaif. See Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 468 (1997) (“[I]t is enough that an error be ‘plain’
    at the time of appellate consideration.”).
    27
    court “must [then] determine whether the defendant has carried
    the burden of showing a ‘reasonable probability’ that the
    outcome of the district court proceeding would have been
    different” if the jury had been properly instructed after hearing
    that evidence. Id. at 2100. In making that determination, the
    appellate court is not bound to consider only what the
    government offered in evidence at the trial but can examine
    “the entire record,” including the defendant’s pre-sentence
    report. Id. at 2097–99.
    In light of Greer, Adams cannot establish plain error.
    The presumption of knowledge applies to Adams because, at
    the time he organized his straw-purchaser scheme, he had been
    convicted of four felonies in three separate prosecutions, and,
    at trial, he entered an Old Chief stipulation, acknowledging
    those prior convictions. See id. at 2098. On the trial record
    before us, he cannot overcome that presumption.
    Adams’s primary argument is that he is akin to the
    hypothetical defendant in Rehaif who might not know he is a
    felon because he was convicted of an offense “punishable by
    imprisonment for a term exceeding one year” but “sentenced
    only to probation.” 
    139 S. Ct. at 2198
     (internal quotation
    marks and alterations omitted). Because he never served more
    than 364 days in custody for any of his prior convictions, he
    contends that he similarly lacked “knowledge of status.”
    Adams, however, was not sentenced to probation; rather, he
    was charged and convicted on, not one, but four felonies and
    was sentenced to nearly a year in prison for one of them. With
    that history, it strains credulity that Adams did not know he
    was a felon. In any event, the Supreme Court’s far-flung
    hypothetical in Rehaif is not enough, without more, to
    28
    surmount the “uphill climb” necessary to overturn his felon-in-
    possession convictions. Greer, 141 S. Ct. at 2097.
    Unfortunately for Adams, what “more” there is only
    cuts the other way. The trial record makes clear that Adams
    devised his straw-purchaser scheme precisely because he knew
    he was a felon who could not lawfully possess firearms. And
    straw purchasers described how he vetted them for their clean
    criminal records, coached them on how to answer each
    question on the ATF forms (including one regarding prior
    felony convictions), and explained that they would be subject
    to criminal background checks. See, e.g., J.A. 418, 517, 613,
    653–54, 725, 876. In short, while the Supreme Court
    acknowledged that “there may be cases in which a defendant
    who is a felon can make an adequate showing on appeal . . .
    that he did not in fact know he was a felon when he possessed
    firearms,” Greer, 141 S. Ct. at 2097, this is not such a case.
    Because Adams has failed to show there is a
    “‘reasonable probability’ that he would have been acquitted” if
    the jury had been properly instructed, id, his Rehaif claim fails
    on plain error review.
    IV.    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District
    Court’s judgment entering conviction on all twenty counts of
    the superseding indictment.
    29