Commonwealth v. Dirico , 480 Mass. 491 ( 2018 )


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    SJC-12400
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   JOSEPH DIRICO.
    Middlesex.       April 2, 2018. - September 13, 2018.
    Present:    Gants, C.J., Gaziano, Lowy, Budd, Cypher,
    & Kafker, JJ.
    Constitutional Law, Speedy trial.     Practice, Criminal, Speedy
    trial, Discovery.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on September 15, 2005.
    A motion to dismiss was heard by John T. Lu, J.; the cases
    were tried before Elizabeth M. Fahey, J.; a motion for
    reconsideration of the motion to dismiss was heard by Fahey, J.;
    and a supplemental motion to reconsider the motion to dismiss,
    filed on October 28, 2015, was considered by Lu, J.
    After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial
    Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
    Rebecca Rose for the defendant.
    Jamie M. Charles, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    GANTS, C.J.    The defendant, Joseph Dirico, claims a
    violation of his rights to a speedy trial under Mass. R. Crim.
    2
    36 (b), as amended, 
    422 Mass. 1503
     (1996) (rule 36 [b]); the
    Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, as
    incorporated through the Fourteenth Amendment; and art. 11 of
    the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.   The defendant contends
    that the Commonwealth was responsible for the delay in providing
    him with the results of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) evidence
    testing, and that none of the time after he filed a motion for
    mandatory discovery should be considered excludable delay.     We
    hold that the defendant's right to a speedy trial under rule
    36 (b) was not violated.
    We conclude that the discovery the defendant characterized
    as "mandatory" was not mandatory discovery that the Commonwealth
    must automatically provide to a defendant under Mass. R. Crim.
    P. 14 (a) (1), as amended, 
    444 Mass. 1501
     (2005) (rule
    14 [a] [1]).   We also conclude that, even if it did constitute
    mandatory discovery, a defendant who does not want the speedy
    trial clock to be tolled where a scheduled event is continued
    because of the Commonwealth's delay in providing mandatory
    discovery must, under rule 14 (a) (1) (C), move to compel the
    production of that discovery or move for sanctions, which the
    defendant failed to do here.   Here, the defendant acquiesced in,
    benefited from, and was partially responsible for the vast
    majority of the delay between the filing of his motion for
    mandatory discovery and the filing of his motion to dismiss for
    3
    lack of a speedy trial:     the defendant retained an expert to
    evaluate the results of the Commonwealth's DNA testing, the
    defendant did not object to the Commonwealth's delay in
    providing the additional information regarding that testing
    ordered by the judge to be produced, and a trial date could not
    reasonably be assigned until the expert had obtained and
    evaluated that additional information.
    Finally, we conclude that a criminal defendant who moves
    for dismissal for lack of a speedy trial, claiming violation of
    his or her rights to a speedy trial under rule 36 and the United
    States and Massachusetts Constitutions, is entitled to review of
    such constitutional claims even where his or her rule 36 claim
    is denied.   A constitutional analysis of a speedy trial claim is
    separate and distinct from a rule 36 analysis, and is triggered
    when a defendant alleges "that the interval between accusation
    and trial has crossed the threshold dividing ordinary from
    'presumptively prejudicial' delay."     Commonwealth v. Butler, 
    464 Mass. 706
    , 709-710 (2013), citing Doggett v. United States, 
    505 U.S. 647
    , 651-652 (1992).    Having conducted that constitutional
    analysis, we hold that the defendant's constitutional rights to
    a speedy trial were not violated.
    Background.    On September 15, 2005, a Middlesex County
    grand jury returned indictments charging the defendant with
    three counts of statutory rape of his fifteen year old daughter
    4
    (victim), in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 23.   The defendant was
    arraigned on October 20, 2005, in the Superior Court, and
    pleaded not guilty to all three counts.
    During the course of its investigation, the police learned
    from the defendant's wife that the victim disclosed to her that
    the defendant had had sexual intercourse with the victim on the
    couch in the basement of the family home.   A police officer
    accompanied the defendant's wife into the home and seized the
    cushion cover of the couch as evidence.   Later, using a
    fluorescent light, the police located approximately seven spots
    on the cushion cover and observed signs of semen.   On May 16,
    2005, the cushion cover was brought to the State police crime
    laboratory (crime lab) for examination of possible DNA evidence.
    On July 11, 2006, the defendant's wife notified the police
    that the victim had found a framed photograph of the victim on
    which, according to the victim, the defendant had ejaculated
    numerous times during masturbation and then handed to the
    victim.   A police inspector examined the framed photograph with
    a fluorescent light and an orange filter, and observed signs of
    bodily fluids on the frame.   This item was submitted to the
    crime lab on July 21, 2006, for DNA testing.
    On September 7, 2006, a judge ordered the defendant to
    provide his saliva on a buccal swab.   On December 13, 2006, the
    record indicates that the prosecutor provided the defendant with
    5
    a "DNA Affidavit" from a crime lab case manager of forensic
    biology, which was dated January 9, 2006.   The record does not
    reflect the content of this affidavit, but one can infer that it
    did not include a DNA examination of the framed photograph and
    that it did not compare the defendant's DNA to any DNA that
    might have been located on the cushion cover.
    On May 23, 2007, the Commonwealth provided additional DNA
    discovery to the defendant,1 and defense counsel informed the
    prosecutor that the defendant would be retaining an expert to
    review the DNA findings.   On June 22, 2007, the defendant filed
    a motion for funds for a DNA expert and a motion for "mandatory
    discovery."   The latter motion sought an order that the
    Commonwealth provide copies of "all [electronic data] regarding
    the DNA testing," "all electronic files related to the case,
    reported or not," and the "Standard Operating Manual" used by
    the laboratory analysts who conducted the DNA testing.     The
    judge allowed both motions on that same day.    But he did not
    issue an order to Orchid Cellmark, the private laboratory that
    the Commonwealth had used to conduct the DNA testing, directing
    the production of the records, until September 4, 2007.2    On
    1 The record does not reflect the content of that
    deoxyribonucleic acid discovery.
    2 The precise date on which the Commonwealth submitted
    evidence samples to Orchid Cellmark for analysis is unclear from
    the record.
    6
    September 10, 2007, the Commonwealth provided the defendant with
    the supplemental discovery that the defendant had requested.
    On August 6, 2007, a status review was held, and the case
    was continued until September 4, 2007, to give defense counsel
    more time to provide the Commonwealth with the name and
    curriculum vitae of its defense expert.   A status review was
    held on September 4, 2007, but the case was continued at the
    suggestion of the court (without any objection by the defendant)
    until October 11, 2007.   At that October 11 status conference,
    the defendant had yet to provide the Commonwealth with the
    required reciprocal discovery regarding his defense expert; this
    was provided to the Commonwealth on October 23, 2007.
    Late in December, 2007, the defendant sent a report to the
    Commonwealth that "included a notation about missing discovery
    material."   The Commonwealth represents that it promptly
    telephoned defense counsel and initiated written communications
    in an effort to clarify what discovery was missing.
    Nevertheless, it took until January 30, 2008, for the
    Commonwealth to receive clarification that the defendant did not
    have the results of the Y-chromosome short tandem repeat method
    (Y-STR) testing, which is male-specific DNA testing.    On March
    6, 2008, shortly after receiving the Y-STR results from Orchid
    Cellmark, the Commonwealth provided the defendant with them.
    7
    With this production, the defendant had the results of all of
    the DNA testing in the case.
    The DNA analysis of the couch cushion and framed photograph
    found DNA only in epithelial cells commonly found on the surface
    of human skin.   The results of the Y-STR testing demonstrated
    that the defendant "could not be excluded as the donor of any of
    the DNA profiles obtained from any of the epithelial [cell]
    fractions of the cushion cuttings."     The results of the Y-STR
    testing demonstrated that the defendant's DNA "matched" the DNA
    profile from an epithelial fraction of the framed photograph.
    One of the cushion cover samples yielded "a possible [DNA]
    mixture, indicating the possible presence of an unidentified
    individual."   No DNA from semen was reported to be found on
    either item that was tested.
    On May 20, 2008, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss
    for lack of a speedy trial, claiming that the delay in bringing
    his case to trial violated rule 36 (b), the Sixth Amendment, and
    art. 11.   The judge calculated what he found to be the
    excludable delay, reached a "preliminary" finding of fact that
    no more than 258 days attributable to the Commonwealth had
    elapsed between the date of arraignment and the date of the
    filing of the motion to dismiss, and accordingly denied the
    defendant's motion without prejudice.
    8
    The defendant's first trial began on September 30, 2008,
    and, as a result of a hung jury, ended in a mistrial on October
    8, 2008.   On February 17, 2009, the defendant's second trial
    commenced before a different judge, and the jury found the
    defendant guilty on all three counts of statutory rape.    The
    Appeals Court affirmed his convictions in an unpublished
    memorandum and order pursuant to its rule 1:28.    See
    Commonwealth v. Dirico, 
    79 Mass. App. Ct. 1130
     (2011).
    On November 26, 2012, the defendant, representing himself,
    moved for reconsideration of the denial of his motion to dismiss
    for lack of a speedy trial, and the judge who had presided over
    his second trial denied the motion, concluding that the
    defendant had waived this claim by not seeking reconsideration
    before appeal and by not raising it on appeal.    The defendant
    appealed, and the appeal was stayed by the Appeals Court to
    allow him, after the appointment of counsel, to renew his motion
    to dismiss for lack of a speedy trial.
    On October 28, 2015, the defendant, now represented by
    counsel, filed a supplemental motion to reconsider the denial of
    the motion to dismiss, arguing that his rights to a speedy trial
    under rule 36 (b), the United States Constitution, and the
    Massachusetts Declaration of Rights had been violated by the
    denial of his motion to dismiss before his first trial.    The
    judge who had originally denied that motion issued new findings
    9
    of fact and denied the motion to reconsider, this time finding
    that, after considering the excludable delay, only ninety-seven
    days that were attributable to the Commonwealth had elapsed
    between the date of arraignment and the date of the filing of
    the motion to dismiss.   The judge noted that, on June 22, 2007,
    another judge had allowed the defendant's "Motion for Mandatory
    Discovery," where the defendant moved for discovery of various
    data, files, and documents relating to DNA testing, but that
    these items of discovery were not produced in full to the
    defendant until March 6, 2008.   The judge declined to count any
    portion of this DNA discovery delay as elapsed time attributable
    to the Commonwealth because the defendant had not filed a motion
    to compel this discovery or a motion for sanctions pursuant to
    rule 14.
    The defendant appealed, and the Appeals Court affirmed the
    denial of the defendant's motion for reconsideration in an
    unpublished memorandum and order pursuant to its rule 1:28.     See
    Commonwealth v. Dirico, 
    91 Mass. App. Ct. 1116
     (2017).   We
    granted the defendant's application for further appellate
    review.
    Discussion.   In reviewing a defendant's speedy trial claim
    on appeal, we accept the judge's findings of fact absent clear
    error where the judge's findings rest on his or her evaluation
    of the credibility of a witness testifying at an evidentiary
    10
    hearing, or where the judge's findings rest on his or her memory
    of events from presiding over the proceedings.    See Barry v.
    Commonwealth, 
    390 Mass. 285
    , 289 (1983).    We then "make an
    independent determination of the correctness of the judge's
    application of constitutional principles to the facts as found."
    Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    440 Mass. 642
    , 646 (2004), quoting
    Commonwealth v. Mercado, 
    422 Mass. 367
    , 369 (1996).     But "[w]e
    are in as good a position as the judge below to decide whether
    the time limits imposed by the rule have run" where the judge's
    findings, as here, rest solely on the docket, the clerk's
    minutes, and additional evidence in the record.   See
    Commonwealth v. Denehy, 
    466 Mass. 723
    , 730 (2014), quoting
    Barry, 
    supra.
       See Commonwealth v. Roman, 
    470 Mass. 85
    , 93
    (2014) ("For purposes of a rule 36 calculation . . . , the
    docket and the clerk's log are prima facie evidence of the facts
    recorded therein").3
    1.   Rule 36.   Rule 36 is a "[case] management tool,
    designed to assist the trial courts in administering their
    dockets."   Barry, 
    390 Mass. at 295-296
    , quoting Reporters' Notes
    to Mass. R. Crim. P. 36, Mass. Ann. Laws, Rules of Criminal
    Procedure, at 525 (1979).   It also "creates a means through
    3 In Commonwealth v. Taylor, 
    469 Mass. 516
    , 524 (2014), we
    declared, "On appeal, we consider whether the judge abused his
    discretion in assessing the defendant's speedy trial claims."
    We no longer believe this to be the correct standard of review.
    11
    which [criminal] defendants who desire a speedy trial can secure
    one."    Id. at 296.   Under rule 36, "a criminal defendant who is
    not brought to trial within one year of the date of arraignment
    is presumptively entitled to dismissal of the charges unless the
    Commonwealth justifies the delay."     Commonwealth v. Spaulding,
    
    411 Mass. 503
    , 504 (1992).4     See Mass. R. Crim. P.
    36 (b) (1) (C), (D).     Dismissal under rule 36 is with prejudice.
    Commonwealth v. Lauria, 
    411 Mass. 63
    , 71 (1991).
    Here, the defendant has established a prima facie violation
    of rule 36, because 943 days elapsed between his arraignment on
    October 20, 2005, and the filing of his motion to dismiss for
    lack of a speedy trial on May 20, 2008.      The burden therefore
    shifts to the Commonwealth to justify the delay.        See Spaulding,
    
    411 Mass. at 504
    .      Subtracting twelve months (i.e., 365 days)
    from this period leaves 578 days that the Commonwealth has the
    burden to show were excludable.5
    4 Rule 36 provides that "a defendant shall be tried within
    twelve months after the return day in the court in which the
    case is awaiting trial." Mass. R. Crim. P. 36 (b) (1) (C), as
    amended 
    422 Mass. 1503
     (1996). The return day is "the day upon
    which a defendant is ordered by summons to first appear or, if
    under arrest, does first appear before a court to answer to the
    charges against him, whichever is earlier." Mass. R. Crim. P.
    2 (b) (15), as amended, 
    397 Mass. 1226
     (1986). Here, where the
    defendant was under arrest, the return day is the date of
    arraignment, October 20, 2005. See 
    id.
    5 In making our calculations, we adhere to rule 36 (b) (3),
    which provides: "In computing any time limit other than an
    excluded period, the day of the act or event which causes a
    12
    The defendant contends that the Commonwealth cannot meet
    this burden because the 333 days that elapsed between the filing
    of his motion for mandatory discovery on June 22, 2007, and the
    filing of his motion to dismiss on May 20, 2008, should not be
    deemed excludable delay in that this delay resulted from the
    Commonwealth's failure to timely provide the defendant with
    mandatory DNA discovery.6
    There are two separate ways in which the Commonwealth can
    meet its burden of justifying a delay, thereby excluding it from
    the speedy trial calculation under rule 36.   The first way is to
    show that the delay falls within one of the "excluded periods"
    specifically enumerated under rule 36 (b) (2).   Such periods
    include, for example, "delay[s] resulting from hearings on
    pretrial motions" and "delay[s] . . . during which any
    proceeding concerning the defendant is actually under
    designated period of time to begin to run shall not be included.
    Computation of an excluded period shall include both the first
    and the last day of the excludable act or event." However,
    "[i]f there are excludable periods of delay which overlap, a day
    is excluded only once." Barry v. Commonwealth, 
    390 Mass. 285
    ,
    292 (1983).
    6 The Appeals Court noted that, "[a]t oral argument, defense
    counsel agreed that our resolution of the [333 days between the
    filing of the defendant's motion for mandatory discovery and the
    filing of his motion to dismiss] is outcome-determinative. The
    defendant's rule 36 speedy trial claim rises or falls on the
    attribution of the [333-day delay] to the Commonwealth." See
    Commonwealth v. Dirico, 
    91 Mass. App. Ct. 1116
     (2017). Although
    the defendant no longer makes this concession on appeal, we may
    take note of his earlier statements before the Appeals Court.
    13
    advisement."   Mass. R. Crim. P. 36 (b) (2) (A) (v), (vii).    Also
    excludable is "[a]ny period of delay resulting from a
    continuance granted by a judge . . . , if the judge granted the
    continuance on the basis of his findings that the ends of
    justice served by taking such action outweighed the best
    interests of the public and the defendant in a speedy trial."
    Mass. R. Crim. P. 36 (b) (2) (F).7
    The second way that the Commonwealth can justify a delay is
    provided not by any provision in rule 36, but by the common law.
    Under the common law, a defendant is not entitled to dismissal
    if he or she acquiesced in, was responsible for, or benefited
    from the delay.   See Barry, 
    390 Mass. at 295
    .   A defendant is
    held to have acquiesced in a delay if he or she "agreed to a
    7 The judge may exclude a period of delay under rule
    36 (b) (2) (F) only if "the judge sets forth in the record of
    the case, either orally or in writing, his reasons for finding
    that the ends of justice served by the granting of the
    continuance outweigh the best interests of the public and the
    defendant in a speedy trial." Mass. R. Crim. P. 36 (b) (2) (F).
    See Commonwealth v. Davis, 
    91 Mass. App. Ct. 631
    , 637 n.11
    (2017) (rule 36 [b] [2] [F] finding "need not be explicit, but
    may be implied from the record"). As a reviewing court, we are
    not in a position to characterize a continuance as an "ends of
    justice" exception under rule 36 (b) (2) (F) where the motion
    judge did not explicitly or implicitly make the requisite
    finding. See Reporter's Notes to Mass. R. Crim. P.
    36 (b) (2) (F), Massachusetts Rules of Court, Rules of Criminal
    Procedure, at 212 (Thomson Reuters 2018) ("It is implicit that
    [b][2][F] does not countenance an after-the-fact appraisal of
    the causes of delay by a reviewing court; in order to be
    excluded, the delay must have been the subject of a formal
    continuance. This does not, of course, preclude the appellate
    court from considering whether the grant or denial of a
    continuance constituted an abuse of discretion").
    14
    continuance . . . or has not entered an objection to delay."
    Id. at 298.   Thus, in several cases, we have excluded time under
    rule 36 based on the defendant's failure to object to a delay.
    See, e.g., Roman, 470 Mass. at 93 (time excluded where defendant
    failed to object to continuance); Denehy, 466 Mass. at 731-732
    (same); Lauria, 
    411 Mass. at 68-69
     (same); Commonwealth v.
    Farris, 
    390 Mass. 300
    , 305 (1983) (same).    In doing so, we have
    emphasized that rule 36 imposes obligations on all parties, and
    that it is the obligation of criminal defendants to "press their
    case through the criminal justice system."      Lauria, 
    supra at 68
    ,
    quoting Barry, 
    supra at 297
    .   We have required defendants to
    object to delays in order to preserve their rights under rule 36
    because we recognize that otherwise, "the public interest . . .
    [may] be thwarted by those defense counsel who decide that delay
    is the best defense tactic."   Barry, supra.8
    Delay arising from forensic testing at a laboratory, such
    as the analysis of DNA found at a crime scene, is not an
    enumerated category of delay under rule 36 (b) (2).
    Accordingly, there is no automatic excludable delay for the time
    8  The determination whether a defendant acquiesced in, was
    responsible for, or benefited from a delay is often
    retrospective, and accordingly requires "a thorough examination
    of the record." Reporter's Notes to Mass. R. Crim. P.
    36 (b) (2), supra at 210. We note that in order to avoid these
    difficult retrospective determinations on an often slim record,
    judges should, where possible, make contemporaneous findings
    whether time should be excluded under rule 36 (b) (2) (F).
    15
    period between when a sample is sent to a laboratory for
    analysis and when a laboratory report is completed.   Cf. Barry,
    390 Mass. at 292 ("once [the Commonwealth] establishes that an
    act or event triggers an excludable period of time [under rule
    36 (b) (2)], the exclusion of the period is automatic").     But
    excludable delay may arise from forensic testing where a
    scheduled court event is continued because the forensic testing
    has yet to be completed and the scheduled event cannot
    reasonably be held until the parties obtain the testing results.
    For instance, where a final pretrial conference needs to be
    continued because the parties have yet to receive a forensic
    report from the laboratory, the period of delay arising from the
    continuance can be excluded pursuant to rule 36 (b) (2) (F) if
    the judge finds that "the ends of justice served by the granting
    of the continuance outweigh the best interests of the public and
    the defendant in a speedy trial."   Where a judge grants a
    continuance to allow more time for forensic testing without
    making a rule 36 (b) (2) (F) finding, the delay arising from the
    continuance may also be excludable if the defendant acquiesced
    in the delay by agreeing to, or failing to object to, a
    continuance, if the defendant was responsible for the delay (by
    asking for the forensic testing, or otherwise being the reason
    for the continuance), or if the delay has benefited the
    defendant.   See Commonwealth v. Rodgers, 
    448 Mass. 538
    , 542-543
    16
    (2007) (delay of 239 days resulting from continuances caused by
    delay in completion of Commonwealth's forensic DNA testing was
    excluded under speedy trial rule, where Commonwealth presented
    evidence that, "at each of the Commonwealth's requested
    postponements of status conferences on the subject, the
    defendant agreed to postponements to specific future dates," and
    there was "no evidence to suggest that the Commonwealth misled
    the defense as to the progress [or lack thereof] in testing, and
    the defendant was always free to insist that a scheduled status
    conference go forward so that the delay in testing could be
    explained to the judge" [footnote omitted]).
    The results of the DNA samples submitted for forensic
    testing in this case had the potential to be significant to both
    the prosecution and the defense.   If DNA from the defendant's
    semen were identified on the cushion cover or on the framed
    photograph, it would have provided powerful corroboration of the
    victim's account of the sexual assaults.   If DNA from the
    defendant's semen were not identified on either item, its
    absence might have undercut the victim's credibility.
    The parties were scheduled to be assigned a trial date on
    May 23, 2007, but a trial date could not be set because, on that
    date, the prosecutor provided defense counsel with additional
    DNA discovery and defense counsel informed the prosecutor that
    the defendant intended to retain an expert to review the DNA
    17
    findings.   The discovery motion the defendant filed on June 22,
    2007 -- seeking the production of electronic data and files
    regarding the DNA testing, and the laboratory's standard
    operating manual -- appears to have been intended to assist the
    defendant's DNA expert in his review, because the defendant
    moved that same day for funds to retain such an expert.      The
    defendant did not provide the prosecutor with the name and
    curriculum vitae of the defense expert until October 23, 2007,
    and the defense expert apparently was still engaged in the
    forensic review in late December, 2007, when defense counsel
    notified the prosecutor that discovery was missing, without
    specifying precisely what discovery was missing.   A final
    pretrial conference scheduled for January 14, 2008, was not
    held, and the jury trial scheduled for January 28, 2008, was
    postponed; the docket does not reflect whether a new trial date
    was scheduled at that time.   Clarification that the results of
    Y-STR testing were missing from the discovery furnished to
    defense counsel did not occur until January 30, 2008, and these
    additional results were provided to the defendant on March 6,
    2008, which was the date of a scheduled pretrial conference.       A
    final pretrial conference was held on May 8, 2008, and trial was
    scheduled for June 9, 2008, but this trial date was continued
    after the defendant moved on May 20, 2008, to dismiss for lack
    of a speedy trial.
    18
    The time period between May 23, 2007, when the hearing was
    held for assignment of a trial date, and May 8, 2008, when a
    trial date appears to have been finally assigned at the final
    pretrial conference, is an excludable delay of 352 days because
    the defendant simultaneously acquiesced in, benefited from, and
    was partially responsible for the delay.   A trial date could not
    reasonably be assigned until the defendant's expert had
    completed his review of the results of the forensic testing.
    With these 352 days of excludable delay added to the 349 days
    preceding May 23, 2007, which are also excludable, and one day
    of overlap subtracted, see the table set forth in the Appendix,
    the Commonwealth has met its burden by demonstrating a total of
    700 days of excludable delay (well beyond the 578 days of
    excludable delay it needed to avoid running afoul of rule 36).
    The defendant challenges the conclusion that the
    Commonwealth has met its burden here by contending that he
    sought mandatory discovery on June 22, 2007, and that, as
    articulated in Taylor, 469 Mass. at 527, "[a] defendant should
    not be required to choose between the right to mandatory
    discovery and the right to a speedy trial."   The defendant is
    correct that, in Taylor, we recognized that where the
    Commonwealth had failed to furnish a defendant with mandatory
    discovery, it would be unfair to require the defendant to decide
    between forgoing that discovery or moving to compel that
    19
    discovery if the filing of the motion to compel would produce
    automatic excludable delay under rule 36 (b) (2) (A).      See id.
    at 526-527.   To protect a defendant from this dilemma, we
    declared that where a defendant, pursuant to rule
    14 (a) (1) (C), moves to compel the production of mandatory
    discovery or seeks sanctions for its nondisclosure, the time it
    takes to resolve the motion "shall not be excluded automatically
    from the ultimate speedy trial calculation."    Id. at 527-528.
    Instead, the judge is to assess whether "the ends of justice
    served" by excluding the time outweigh "the best interests of
    the public and the defendant in a speedy trial."    Id. at 528,
    quoting Mass. R. Crim. P. 36 (b) (2) (F).     We also declared that
    the same principle applies where a defendant agrees to a
    continuance only because the defendant has yet to be given
    mandatory discovery.     See id. at 525.
    But the defendant here cannot benefit from our holding in
    Taylor for three reasons.    First, the discovery he sought on
    June 22, 2007, was not mandatory discovery.    Mass. R. Crim. P.
    14 (a) (1) identifies categories of "mandatory discovery" that
    the prosecutor must provide to a defendant as "automatic
    discovery," including "[a]ny facts of an exculpatory nature,"
    and "[m]aterial and relevant . . . reports of . . . scientific
    tests or experiments."    Mass. R. Crim. P. 14 (a) (1) (A) (iii),
    (vii).   "Because rule 14 was intended to facilitate the
    20
    automatic production of mandatory discovery 'without the need
    for motions or argument,' . . . and because the Commonwealth's
    obligation to produce is ongoing, . . . the defendant need not
    request any mandatory discovery items."   Taylor, 469 Mass. at
    521, quoting Reporter's Notes (Revised, 2004) to Rule 14,
    Massachusetts Rules of Court, Rules of Criminal Procedure, at
    179 (Thomson Reuters 2014).   But the defendant here did not seek
    "reports of . . . scientific tests"; instead, he sought all of
    the electronic data used to prepare the reports, all of the
    electronic files related to the case (whether reported or not),
    and the laboratory's standard operating manual.   The disclosure
    of these items of discovery might prove beneficial to an expert
    who is retained to analyze a DNA report and may properly be
    ordered to be disclosed, but the Commonwealth is not
    automatically required under rule 14 (a) (1) to disclose these
    items in the course of mandatory discovery unless they are
    exculpatory (which the defendant does not contend they are).
    Second, even if the discovery that the defendant had
    requested constituted mandatory discovery, the defendant failed
    to move pursuant to rule 14 (a) (1) (C) to compel its production
    or to seek sanctions for its nondisclosure.   "[A] defendant
    seeking both to preserve his speedy trial rights and to obtain
    items of missing mandatory discovery must file a motion for
    sanctions or to compel pursuant to rule 14 (a) (1) (C)."
    21
    Taylor, supra at 527-528. "[A] defendant may not 'sit by
    passively,' then later invoke rule 36."   Id. at 527, quoting
    Commonwealth v. Bourdon, 
    71 Mass. App. Ct. 420
    , 426 (2008).
    Rather, a defendant must "take proactive steps to alert the
    court and the prosecution" that the Commonwealth has violated
    its mandatory discovery obligations.   See Taylor, supra.9
    Third, even if this were mandatory discovery, and even if
    we construed the defendant's motion dated June 22, 2007, as a
    rule 14 motion to compel, the judge allowed the motion on the
    same day it was filed.   Therefore, were we to decline to
    automatically exclude the "time it takes to resolve the rule
    14 (a) (1) (C) motion" under rule 36 (b) (2), see Taylor, supra
    at 528, the defendant would only gain one day under rule 36.
    The report of the scientific test regarding the results of
    the Y-STR testing would fall within the rubric of mandatory
    discovery, but the defendant never moved to compel its
    production or to seek sanctions for its nondisclosure.
    Therefore, even if the defendant had agreed to continue the
    9  Because the defendant did not file a motion pursuant to
    Mass. R. Crim. P. 14, as appearing in 
    442 Mass. 1518
     (2004), we
    need not reach the issue whether the rule announced in Taylor
    should apply retroactively to the defendant. See Commonwealth
    v. Taylor, 
    469 Mass. 516
    , 528 n.17 (2014) ("We note, as did the
    judge hearing the rule 36 motion, that the defendant in this
    case never pressed any remedies pursuant to rule 14 in an effort
    to address the missing mandatory discovery. Even under the rule
    we announce today, therefore, the defendant's motion to dismiss
    on speedy trial grounds would not have been successful").
    22
    final pretrial conference solely because he had yet to receive
    this mandatory discovery, he failed to do what was necessary to
    "sound the rule 36 'crisis call' and fulfil his . . .
    obligations under the rule."   Taylor, supra at 526.
    Where a defendant contends that he or she is being denied
    the right to a speedy trial because of excessive delays in the
    completion of forensic testing and the production of a
    scientific report, a defendant must move to compel the
    production of that scientific report or move for sanctions
    pursuant to rule 14 (a) (1) (C).   A defendant is also encouraged
    to bring a rule 14 (a) (1) (C) motion when he or she anticipates
    that undue delay in the completion of forensic testing will
    necessitate the continuance of a scheduled event, or when undue
    delay has caused a continuance and the defendant seeks to
    prevent the need for a further continuance.   Bringing this type
    of motion alerts the judge that the defendant is actively
    contesting the delay, rather than sitting by passively.     See
    Taylor, supra at 527-528.   Where the delay necessitates the
    continuance of a scheduled event, a judge faced with a rule
    14 (a) (1) (C) motion must evaluate whether "the Commonwealth
    [can] demonstrate[] that its delayed production was not due to
    wilful noncompliance or a lack of due diligence," which may
    render it "appropriate for the speedy trial clock to be tolled,"
    and for appropriate findings to be made by the judge that the
    23
    continuance serves the "ends of justice" as required under rule
    36 (b) (2) (F).   See Taylor, supra at 528.   A judge might
    otherwise resolve a rule 14 (a) (1) (C) motion by ordering that
    the forensic testing, including the production of the scientific
    report, be expedited to avoid the need for a continuance or a
    further continuance.   See id.
    Here, because the 352 days between May 23, 2007, and May 8,
    2008, gave the defendant time to prepare his DNA expert for
    trial, and because the defendant never filed a motion to compel
    discovery or for sanctions under rule 14 (a) (1) (C), the
    defendant simultaneously acquiesced in, benefited from, and was
    partially responsible for the delay.   Consequently, we hold that
    the defendant's right to a speedy trial under rule 36 (b) was
    not violated.
    2.   Constitutional right to a speedy trial.   The defendant
    also argues that his constitutional rights to a speedy trial
    under the Sixth Amendment and art. 11 have been violated by the
    pretrial delay.   We note at the outset that rule 36 is "a rule
    of case management" and, accordingly, "is wholly separate from
    [a defendant's] constitutional right to a speedy trial."
    Lauria, 411 Mass. at 67.   See Barry, 
    390 Mass. at 295-296
     (rule
    36 "creates a means through which [criminal] defendants who
    desire a speedy trial can secure one," but "the opportunity
    conferred by the rule is not a fundamental constitutional right,
    24
    or even a right created by statute").   Consequently, even where,
    as here, we conclude that there has been no violation of rule
    36, a defendant who claims that his or her constitutional rights
    to a speedy trial have been violated is entitled to review of
    that claim.   See Commonwealth v. Lanigan, 
    419 Mass. 15
    , 17-24
    (1994) (concluding that defendant's constitutional rights to
    speedy trial were not violated after rejecting defendant's rule
    36 claim); Commonwealth v. Vasquez, 
    55 Mass. App. Ct. 523
    , 529-
    530 (2002) (same).   See also Commonwealth v. Levin, 
    390 Mass. 857
    , 858 n.2 (1984) (declining to analyze constitutional right
    separately "[b]ecause the parties agree that rule 36 provides
    protection at least as great as the constitutional rights to
    speedy trial").10
    Both the Sixth Amendment, incorporated through the
    Fourteenth Amendment, and art. 11 guarantee criminal defendants
    10We note that Mass. R. Crim. P. 36 (c) provides that even
    where a defendant is not entitled to dismissal under rule 36 (b)
    because fewer than twelve months of nonexcludable delay have
    elapsed since arraignment, a defendant is still entitled to
    dismissal, upon motion, "where the judge after an examination
    and consideration of all attendant circumstances determines
    that: (1) the conduct of the prosecuting attorney in bringing
    the defendant to trial has been unreasonably lacking in
    diligence and (2) this conduct on the part of the prosecuting
    attorney has resulted in prejudice to the defendant." Rule
    36 (c) "is a statement of the fundamental constitutional
    guarantee" and "puts the constitutional standard into manageable
    operational terms." See Reporter's Notes to Mass. R. Crim. P.
    36 (c), supra at 213. Although rule 36 (c) derives from the
    constitutional guarantee of a speedy trial, a defendant may seek
    dismissal under rule 36 (c) without making a separate
    constitutional speedy trial claim.
    25
    the right to a speedy trial.    We interpret art. 11 through the
    lens of Sixth Amendment analysis.    See Commonwealth v. Butler,
    
    464 Mass. 706
    , 709 n.5 (2013) ("Although we ultimately decide
    this case pursuant to art. 11 . . . , we cite Federal cases that
    interpret the Sixth Amendment . . . because the analysis is
    analogous").     The burden is on the defendant to demonstrate
    prejudicial delay sufficient to warrant dismissal of the
    indictments against him.     See Commonwealth v. Gilbert, 
    366 Mass. 18
    , 22 (1974).
    Although a defendant who fails to prove a rule 36 (b)
    violation faces an uphill battle in proving a violation of his
    or her constitutional rights to a speedy trial, the analysis is
    somewhat different.     One difference is that the speedy trial
    clock for a constitutional analysis does not begin at the time
    of arraignment.    Under art. 11, it begins to run upon the
    issuance of a criminal complaint, see Butler, 464 Mass. at 712
    ("a defendant's right to a speedy trial, at least under art. 11,
    attaches when a criminal complaint issues"), and under the Sixth
    Amendment, it begins to run at the time of indictment.     See
    Butler v. Mitchell, 
    815 F.3d 87
    , 89 (1st Cir. 2016), cert.
    denied sub nom. Butler v. Murphy, 
    137 S. Ct. 1064
     (2017) ("Under
    the Sixth Amendment . . . , the speedy-trial right attached, and
    the count began, not when the complaint was issued, but when the
    . . . indictment was announced").     "[T]o trigger a speedy trial
    26
    analysis, an accused must allege that the interval between
    accusation and trial has crossed the threshold dividing ordinary
    from 'presumptively prejudicial' delay."     Butler, supra at 709-
    710, citing Doggett v. United States, 
    505 U.S. 647
    , 651-652
    (1992).   The burden of establishing "presumptively prejudicial
    delay" is relatively modest -- "[d]epending on the nature of the
    charges, the lower courts have generally found postaccusation
    delay 'presumptively prejudicial' at least as it approaches one
    year."    Doggett, 
    supra
     at 652 n.1.   See Commonwealth v. Boyd,
    
    367 Mass. 169
    , 179-180 (1975) (delay of fourteen months enough
    to "trigger some concern").    Here, the defendant's criminal
    complaint was issued on May 10, 2005, the indictment was
    announced on September 15, 2005, and he filed his motion to
    dismiss for lack of a speedy trial on May 20, 2008; this delay
    between 2005 and 2008 is more than sufficient to establish
    "presumptively prejudicial delay."11
    11Because the defendant here is appealing from the denial
    of his motion to reconsider his earlier motion to dismiss for
    lack of a speedy trial, the speedy trial clock tolls at the time
    the defendant filed his motion to dismiss for lack of a speedy
    trial (just as it did for the rule 36 analysis). Had the
    defendant moved for a new trial following his convictions and
    claimed a constitutional violation of his right to a speedy
    trial, the speedy trial clock would have tolled on the date when
    his first trial commenced. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Butler,
    
    464 Mass. 706
    , 707, 714 (2013) (defendant appealed from order
    denying motion for new trial, and speedy trial clock tolled on
    first day of defendant's trial for purposes of constitutional
    speedy trial analysis).
    27
    Where a defendant has "established presumptive prejudice,"
    we apply the four-factor test articulated in Barker v. Wingo,
    
    407 U.S. 514
    , 530-531 (1972), to evaluate whether the
    defendant's constitutional right to a speedy trial has been
    violated.   See Butler, 464 Mass. at 710, citing Doggett, 
    505 U.S. at 651-652
    .   Under the Barker test, a reviewing court
    weighs the length of the delay, the reason for the delay, the
    defendant's assertion of his right to a speedy trial, and
    prejudice to the defendant.   See Barker, 
    supra at 530
    .
    Here, the length of the delay was substantial, but there is
    no evidence (and no claim by the defendant) that the
    Commonwealth was deliberately attempting to delay the trial for
    the purpose of hindering the defense.   See Commonwealth v.
    Wallace, 
    472 Mass. 56
    , 61 (2015) ("Weighing most heavily against
    the government are deliberate attempts at delay").    Where, as
    earlier noted, the trial was delayed in part by the delay in
    obtaining all of the forensic testing results, the worst that
    can be said is that the Commonwealth was negligent in failing to
    more promptly obtain those results.   "Although 'our toleration
    of . . . negligence varies inversely with its protractedness,'
    . . . negligence is obviously to be weighed more lightly than a
    deliberate intent to harm the accused's defense."    Butler, 464
    Mass. at 716, quoting Doggett, 
    505 U.S. at 657
    .     Because there
    is no evidence here of "intentional delay or bad faith on the
    28
    part of the Commonwealth," the second prong of the Barker test
    weighs only lightly against the Commonwealth.    See Butler,
    supra.
    The defendant's assertion of his speedy trial rights were
    notably absent from the record, and a defendant's "failure to
    assert the right will make it difficult for a defendant to prove
    that he was denied a speedy trial."     Wallace, 472 Mass. at 66,
    quoting Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 532
    .   "If the defendant were truly
    concerned that the passage of time would undermine his ability
    to defend himself, common sense dictates that he would have
    pressed for a speedy trial."   Gilbert, 
    366 Mass. at 23
    .   Because
    the record reflects that the defendant was responsible for,
    benefited from, and acquiesced in the vast majority of the delay
    in bringing him to trial, the third prong of the Barker test
    weighs heavily against the defendant.    See Butler, 464 Mass. at
    717.12
    Prejudice to the defendant "should be assessed in the light
    of the interests of defendants which the speedy trial right was
    12We note that the constitutional analysis of this third
    prong of the test in Barker v. Wingo, 
    407 U.S. 514
    , 530-531
    (1972), differs slightly from the rule 36 analysis. A
    defendant's acquiescence in delay will render the delay
    excludable under rule 36 (b) and, therefore, might prove fatal
    to a rule 36 speedy trial claim. But under a constitutional
    analysis, "the failure by the defendants to assert their speedy
    trial right is not a waiver of the right itself but simply a
    factor to be weighed," albeit an important factor. See
    Commonwealth v. Wallace, 
    472 Mass. 56
    , 68 (2015).
    29
    designed to protect," which include the interests "(i) to
    prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize
    anxiety and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the
    possibility that the defense will be impaired."     Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 532
    .   "[A]lthough the defendant is not entirely absolved
    of responsibility to present some particularized prejudice at
    this stage of the analysis, he is entitled to some degree of
    presumptive prejudice that the Commonwealth can rebut with
    evidence that any delay left the defendant's 'ability to defend
    himself unimpaired.'"    Butler, 464 Mass. at 717, quoting
    Doggett, 
    505 U.S. at
    658 n.4.
    Here, the defendant was released on pretrial probation at
    his arraignment on October 20, 2005, his bail was revoked on
    July 11, 2006, and he was placed in custody when he did not make
    bail.   But he eventually made bail on July 19, 2006, and was
    released from custody.   There is nothing in the docket to
    suggest that he was returned to custody before his first trial
    commenced on September 30, 2008.     Where he spent only eight days
    in custody, the defendant did not suffer prejudice from
    oppressive pretrial incarceration.    We recognize that, "even if
    an accused is not incarcerated prior to trial, he is still
    disadvantaged by restraints on his liberty and by living under a
    cloud of anxiety, suspicion, and often hostility."     Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 533
    .   Although we do not minimize the hardships the
    30
    defendant suffered pending trial,13 they do not rise to the level
    of prejudice that would justify a dismissal on constitutional
    speedy trial grounds.     See, e.g., United States v. Carpenter,
    
    781 F.3d 599
    , 615 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    136 S. Ct. 196
    (2015) (although defendant "argues convincingly that he has
    suffered great stress throughout the proceedings, he does not
    demonstrate why his anxiety was greater than that suffered by
    many other defendants, other than that it continued longer").
    The potential impairment of a defense from delay is the
    "most serious" concern when evaluating whether the defendant was
    prejudiced, "because the inability of a defendant adequately to
    prepare his case skews the fairness of the entire system."
    Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 532
    .    But nothing in the record before us
    suggests that the delay in bringing the defendant to trial
    precluded him from advancing his best defense or otherwise
    prejudiced his defense.    See Commonwealth v. Beckett, 
    373 Mass. 329
    , 334 (1977) ("There was no claim that any witness was
    unavailable, nor any proof that any witness, potentially helpful
    to the defendant, had forgotten significant facts").
    13The defendant claimed that the allegations against him
    and the delay in bringing him to trial "forced" him to move out
    of his home and to move to Arizona, led to his resignation from
    his job, contributed to his severe panic attacks and heart
    catheterization, and resulted in his receipt of "angry and
    taunting" messages from family and friends.
    31
    In conclusion, although the delay between the issuance of
    the defendant's criminal complaint (or, under the Sixth
    Amendment, the announcement of the indictment) and the filing of
    his motion to dismiss for lack of a speedy trial was certainly
    troubling in its length, the four Barker factors, "applied in
    their totality," do not establish that the defendant's
    constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated under either
    the Sixth Amendment or art. 11.   See Butler, 464 Mass. at 719.
    We therefore hold that the defendant's rights to a speedy trial
    under the United States and Massachusetts Constitutions were not
    violated.   See Beckett, 
    373 Mass. at 335
     ("Considering the lack
    of prejudice to the defendant and her failure to assert her
    right to a speedy trial for over four years after her
    indictment, we conclude that, in spite of the inordinate delay,
    the defendant was not denied her constitutional rights in the
    circumstances").
    Conclusion.    For the reasons stated, we affirm the denial
    of the defendant's motion to reconsider the denial of his motion
    to dismiss for lack of a speedy trial.
    So ordered.
    Appendix.
    Under rule 36, the Commonwealth bears the burden of showing
    that, of the 943 days between the defendant's arraignment and
    the filing of his motion to dismiss, 578 days should be
    excluded.   As explained above, the 352 days between May 23,
    2007, and May 8, 2008, are excluded because the defendant
    simultaneously acquiesced in, benefited from, and was partially
    responsible for the delay.   The following table looks to the
    time period prior to May 23, 2007, to determine whether the
    Commonwealth can justify the remaining 226 days.   We conclude
    that the Commonwealth has satisfied its burden by demonstrating
    that 349 days of excludable delay preceded May 23, 2007, for a
    total of 700 days of excludable delay.1
    Events                 No. days   Explanation
    excluded
    October 20, 2005       0          Included. Commonwealth does
    (arraignment) --                  not contest this.
    January 9, 2006
    (pretrial
    conference)
    January 9, 2006        0          Included. Pretrial conference
    (pretrial                         held as scheduled. Defendant
    conference) -- March              did not acquiesce to delay by
    15, 2006 (scheduled               failing to object to motion
    1 Adding up the days of excludable delay in the table
    results in a total of 362 days. But because a day is excluded
    only once where excludable periods of delay overlap, see Barry
    v. Commonwealth, 
    390 Mass. 285
    , 292 (1983), thirteen days of
    overlap must be subtracted from the 362, resulting in 349 days
    of excludable delay. One day of overlap must also be subtracted
    when adding the 349 days of excludable delay preceding May 23,
    2007, to the 352 days of excludable delay following May 23,
    2007. The result is a total of 700 days of excludable delay.
    2
    Events                 No. days   Explanation
    excluded
    motion hearing)                   hearing that was scheduled at
    arraignment. Commonwealth did
    not demonstrate that this
    period ought to be excluded.
    March 15, 2006         0          Included. Motion hearing was
    (scheduled motion                 "not reached by Court," and
    hearing) -- April                 does not appear to have been
    19, 2006 (scheduled               rescheduled. Defendant did not
    status conference)                acquiesce to this delay by
    failing to object to next
    scheduled event, a status
    conference, which was scheduled
    at arraignment. Commonwealth
    did not demonstrate that this
    period ought to be excluded.
    April 19, 2006         21         Excluded. Status conference
    (scheduled status                 continued at joint request of
    conference) –- May                parties and rescheduled to May
    9, 2006 (scheduled                9, 2006.
    status conference)
    May 9, 2006            29         Excluded. Status conference
    (scheduled status                 continued at joint request of
    conference) -- June               parties and rescheduled to June
    6, 2006 (status                   6, 2006.
    conference)
    June 6, 2006 (status   0          Included. Status conference
    conference) -- June               held as scheduled. Defendant
    13, 2006 (scheduled               did not acquiesce to delay by
    suppression hearing)              failing to object to next
    scheduled event, a suppression
    hearing.
    June 13, 2006          0          Included. Suppression hearing
    (scheduled                        not held because defendant
    suppression hearing)              filed no motions to suppress.
    -- June 26, 2006                  Defendant did not acquiesce to
    (scheduled status                 delay by failing to object to
    conference)                       next scheduled event, a status
    conference.
    3
    Events                 No. days   Explanation
    excluded
    June 26, 2006          0          Included. Status conference
    (scheduled status                 not held for unknown reasons.
    conference) -- July               Commonwealth does not claim
    10, 2006 (scheduled               this time to be excludable.
    status conference)
    July 10, 2006          30         Excluded. Status conference
    (scheduled status                 not held at the request of
    conference) --                    defendant.
    August 8, 2006
    (scheduled final
    pretrial conference)
    August 8, 2006         31         Excluded. Final pretrial
    (scheduled final                  conference not held at request
    pretrial conference)              of defendant.
    -- September 7, 2006
    (hearing on "misc.
    matters")
    September 7, 2006      0          Included. Hearing held as
    (hearing on "misc.                scheduled. Defendant did not
    matters") --                      acquiesce to delay by failing
    September 26, 2006                to object to next scheduled
    (scheduled trial                  event, the trial date, which
    date)                             was scheduled at arraignment.
    Commonwealth did not
    demonstrate that this period
    ought to be excluded.
    September 26, 2006     25         Excluded. Trial date was
    (scheduled trial                  postponed at request of both
    date) -- October 20,              parties.
    2006 (scheduled
    discovery hearing)
    October 20, 2006       4          Excluded. Discovery hearing
    (scheduled discovery              continued at request of
    hearing) -- October               defendant and rescheduled to
    23, 2006 (discovery               October 23, 2006.
    hearing)
    4
    Events                 No. days   Explanation
    excluded
    October 23, 2006       10         Excluded. On October 23, 2006,
    (discovery hearing)               parties executed new tracking
    -- November 1, 2006               order because defendant was
    (pretrial                         appointed new counsel. This
    conference)                       set forth November 1, 2006, as
    a scheduled pretrial conference
    date; December 7, 2006, as a
    date for hearing on
    nonevidentiary motions to
    dismiss; and May 8, 2007, as a
    proposed trial date. Defendant
    was partially responsible for,
    and benefited from, this delay.
    November 1, 2006       22         Excluded. On November 1, 2006,
    (pretrial                         parties executed a second
    conference) --                    pretrial conference report,
    November 22, 2006                 requiring that defendant's new
    (scheduled hearing                counsel be provided with same
    on "misc. matters")               discovery that had been
    provided to defendant's prior
    counsel by November 22, 2006.
    Defendant was partially
    responsible for, and benefited
    from, this delay.
    November 22, 2006      16         Excluded. Hearing not held at
    (scheduled hearing                request of defendant.
    on "misc. matters")               Defendant was partially
    -- December 7, 2006               responsible for, and benefited
    (scheduled discovery              from, this delay because of
    hearing)                          appointment of new counsel.
    December 7, 2006       50         Excluded. Discovery hearing
    (scheduled discovery              was not held, without objection
    hearing) -- January               from defendant, and discovery
    25, 2007 (discovery               hearing was rescheduled for
    hearing)                          January 25, 2007. Defendant
    was partially responsible for,
    and benefited from, this delay.
    5
    Events                 No. days   Explanation
    excluded
    January 25, 2007       40         Excluded. Defendant was
    (discovery hearing)               partially responsible for, and
    -- March 5, 2007                  benefited from, this delay
    (status conference)               because of appointment of new
    counsel.
    March 5, 2007          2          Excluded. Defendant was
    (status conference)               partially responsible for, and
    -- March 6, 2007                  benefited from, this delay
    (hearing on "misc.                because of appointment of new
    matters")                         counsel.
    March 6, 2007          14         Excluded. Defendant was
    (hearing on "misc.                partially responsible for, and
    matters") -- March                benefited from, this delay
    19, 2007 (scheduled               because of appointment of new
    suppression hearing)              counsel.
    March 19, 2007         30         Excluded. Defendant requested
    (scheduled                        that a scheduled suppression
    suppression hearing)              hearing be continued until
    -- April 17, 2007                 April 17, 2007; the record does
    (final pretrial                   not indicate whether this
    conference)                       hearing was held thereafter.
    Defendant was partially
    responsible for, and benefited
    from, this delay.
    April 17, 2007         22         Excluded. Parties filed a
    (final pretrial                   joint motion to continue and
    conference) -- May                convert then-scheduled trial
    8, 2007 (scheduled                date of May 8, 2007, into a
    trial date)                       status date because defendant
    wanted to afford his expert
    more time to review the DNA
    testing data. Defendant was
    partially responsible for, and
    benefited from, this delay.
    May 8, 2007            16         Excluded. Parties jointly
    (scheduled trial                  requested a continuance until
    date) -- May 23,                  May 23, 2007.
    2007 (hearing for
    trial assignment
    date)
    6
    TOTAL: 349 days of excludable delay (thirteen days of overlap
    subtracted from 362)