We will hear argument next in case 14, 14, 57, Betterman v. Montana. Mr. Rowley? Mr. Chief Justice, and may I please the Court. The Speedy Trial Clause applies to a criminal prosecution through its culmination in sentencing. It is not cut off when the defendant pleads or is found guilty. The Court has said that the clause guarantees an early and proper disposition of a criminal charge. And that guarantee applies to the guilt stage of a prosecution when most defendants plead guilty into the sentencing stage, which may be the only place in a criminal prosecution today when a defendant actually mounts a defense. Does the Federal Speedy Trial Act not not a constitutional provision but the legislation? Does that cover sentencing or is that limited to trial? Your Honor, my understanding is that it is limited to trial. The Court has recognized specific interests that are protected by the Speedy Trial Clause, and those interests apply not just to presumptively innocent defendants as the State and the United States suggest, but some of them apply specifically to guilty defendants. In Barker, for instance, the Court notes that one of the interests that are protected by this clause, that is protected by this clause, is the interest in rehabilitation and that a prolonged period of detention in jail can affect a defendant's rehabilitation. Well, that's specific to a guilty defendant. And in Smith V. Hoey, the Court noted that even though the defendant had been incarcerated in Federal prison, that that defendant could still be prejudiced by a prolonged delay in the State prosecution that followed because it could affect his ability to seek a concurrent sentence, that interest also is specific to a guilty defendant. So this sharp line between the guilt stage of a prosecution and the criminal, and the sentencing stage of a prosecution isn't supported by this Court's Speedy Trial Presidency. What do you do with the all of our Speedy Trial decisions say there's only one remedy, and that is case over. The dismissal is the only appropriate remedy. But you're not arguing that I understand, with respect to sentencing. Yes, Your Honor. You are arguing. No, we were not arguing that. So it's different. The Speedy Trial requirement says if you don't comply with the Constitution of Provision dismissal, but you're saying sentencing is not the same as trial. To that extent, the remedy is different. Your Honor, at the guilt stage of the prosecution, the outcomes are binary
. So the defendant is either adjudicated guilty or the charges are dismissed or the defendant is acquitted. So there's two possible outcomes at the guilt stage, guilt or innocence. At sentencing, the situation is quite different. There's greater opportunity for tailoring, which is what the Court requires, her Morrison, and there may be a greater need for tailoring because the defendant has been adjudicated guilty. So in the sentencing context where courts have wide discretion, where there's a range of possible sentences, where there's a range of possible outcomes, tailoring, there's greater opportunity for tailoring and sentencing. So what would the remedy be in a case like this? Your Honor, we submit that a proper remedy in a case like this would be to reduce Mr. Benjamin's sentence by the period of delay in the Montana Supreme Court concluded that the period of unjustified delay here was 14 months. Well, he was serving under another sentence. He was serving sentence for another crime. Yes, Your Honor. So he got time-served credit on the prior sentence that he was serving. But that period of delay, the 14 months, was not credited to his sentence on the bail-jumping sentence, which is the sentence that's at issue here. And we submit that a proportionate remedy, an appropriate remedy, would be to reduce that sentence by the period during which he was denied access to rehabilitation programs and suffered the anxiety that is detailed in his affidavit, and that that would be a way to go. The lower courts have applied that sort of remedy to sentencing delays. And another possible outcome, in another case, would be simply to vacate the remaining portion of the defendant's sentence. But here we submit that a tailored remedy would be just reducing his sentence by the period. What do you make of the fact that the Sixth Amendment says that the accused shall enjoy the right to a speed and public trial by an impartial jury? Your Honor, the impartial jury clause doesn't cut off or limit the word trial. We know that because the Court has recognized that the public trial right might apply at a suppression hearing, and there's no jury convened at a suppression hearing. The Court concluded that in Waller. So the impartial jury clause applies to the portions of a criminal prosecution. The stages of a prosecution were a jury is actually in the panel. And if you go back to the purpose of an impartial jury clause which was to prevent jurors from offering evidence against the defendant, it makes good sense that it would apply to the stages of a criminal prosecution where a jury is convened. Mr. Raleigh, if we were to disagree with you and say that there's no Sixth Amendment right, and there was only a due process right. Have you waived any argument that you meet the due process standard? We haven't included that
. We didn't include that in the question presented, Your Honor. And the Montana Supreme Court rejected that challenge. It applied a due process test and concluded that under a due process analysis, Mr. Betterman wouldn't be entitled to relief. And that gets to an important point here because- Well, I understand that. So you're admitting you're giving up that its analysis under the due process clause might have been wrong? Your Honor, we are not advancing that claim here. And so there is a significant difference we submit between the due process analysis. And the Barker test that this Court has applied under the Sixth Amendment speedy trial right. And that is that under a Barker analysis, prejudice may be presumed, and Barker also addresses specific forms of prejudice that may flow from a delay in a criminal prosecution. The Lovasco test that is applied under a due process analysis does not address some of those specific questions. I agree, but why do you think Lovasco applies at all? Meaning that's to pre-indipement away where we were creating an exception and saying generally you have the state has the period of a- of statute of limitations to bring in action. Your Honor, if that- If that want to cut them off from having that right, you need to show actual prejudice. Your Honor, that's the test that the Montana Supreme Court applied below. It is the test that other courts that have rejected the Sixth Amendment's speedy trial right application and sentencing. They have pivoted to the due process test in Lovasco. And that test creates a significant burden. For example, Mr. Rally, just to continue in this line of questioning, there's another case that we have which dealt with civil forfeitures, which is the $8,850 in U.S. currency case, where it said, well, we're going to do a due process analysis, but we're going to take the borrker factors as our test for that due process analysis. So I think one of the questions that Justice Sotomayor is asking is why wouldn't that be equally appropriate here? In other words, even if, and I'm not saying that this is right, but even if there's- this is- falls within the due process box rather than the Sixth Amendment box that there's still a further question as to whether the Lovasco approach is right or whether this U.S. currency approach is right. Your Honor, that's what the Montana Supreme Court attempted to do. So it essentially modified the Lovasco test and tried to draw on borrker principles in applying it
. But if you compare the result in this case to say the result in the Birkett case, where the Court analyzed the specific forms of prejudice that are at issue in a pretrial or pre-setting delay situation, and if you don't- and if you presume prejudice or require the State prosecution to robot articulated prejudice, particularized prejudice that's been articulated by the defendant, the Court there found a violation and the Court here despite modifying the Lovasco did not find a violation. And so the test is still inadequately protective. Kagan, I guess I'm not just not sure what you mean by this, because in this other case, the Civil War for Trakesh, we just said we're going to apply the four factors of Barker. And if that were the result of the due process approach, I mean, it just wouldn't make any difference which box it was in. That would certainly be true, Your Honor, but that's not what the Montana Supreme Court here did. So it didn't apply all the factors in Barker. It didn't apply Barker in a straightforward fashion because it approached prejudice the same way that Lovasco did. It required the defendant to make an affirmative showing of prejudice. It required that that showing be substantial. That's different from the Barker test. And we submit also that given the specificity of this right, that it's enumerated in the Sixth Amendment, that it would not be appropriate for the Court to shunt that interest, that set of interest that are enumerated in the Sixth Amendment into the due process test, that the better approaches to do what the lower courts have done, which is to take the Barker framework, which already exists and apply it in straightforward fashion to a delay at Seton Center. But you're not asking us to do it in a straightforward fashion. That's what Justice Ginsburg asked you because you're giving up the Barker remedy. Your Honor, the lower courts in applying Barker to the Seton St. context have fixed more tailored remedies in recognition of the fact that there may be a difference between a delay at the guilt stage and a delay at Seton St because the now the defendant has been convicted. And so the lower courts in applying Barker have done this. They have tailored remedies. They have applied remedies that leave the conviction standing and try to fix some proportionate remedy for the delay at the seton. So why don't you think that they've done the same thing under the due process close, recognizing that it is unfair to undo a conviction merely for sentencing delay because you're no longer presumed innocent, you're now guilty. The key, yes, Your Honor. Why isn't the due process tested being applied, that modification? Your Honor, the reason why the due process test as it's been applied by the lower courts doesn't do the job is because they continue to require an affirmative showing a prejudice. So they don't presume prejudice, which may be significant. Washington, the case out of the Fifth Circuit that we cite, illustrates this point because the court there didn't presume prejudice. And as the court explained in Doggett, it may be important to presume prejudice because it is sometimes hard to show the effect of a delay on the defendant's defense or other forms of prejudice. And so even the courts that have applied Lavasco and have modified it still don't presume prejudice, still don't require the prosecution to make a showing in response to articulated prejudice
. They just apply Lavasco and require an affirmative showing of substantial prejudice. So even this modified version that you see in the Montana Supreme Court's opinion below, we submit as inadequate and also not appropriate because there is this enumerated right in the Sixth Amendment and shouldn't be shunted into the Court. When you say prejudice should be presumed, do you mean it should be presumed conclusively? Could it be rebutted? Yes, Your Honor. It could be rebutted. And indeed, in a case like this where the defendant has articulated specific forms of prejudice, I was denied access to rehabilitation programs. I suffered anxiety. The State ought to be able to come in and rebut that presumption. Now here, despite those specific forms of prejudice being set out in the motion to dismiss that Mr. Benjamin filed, the State did not offer that evidence. The first evidence that we saw was in the briefing on the merits in this Court. So the State did have the opportunity to make a showing and it didn't do that. When you say that the remedy should be tailored, tailored to what? What is the Court supposed to do in your view? Select a punishment that is appropriate to deter the State from doing this again, or select a remedy that in some way undoes the damage or the prejudice that's been done to the defendant. Your Honor, Morrison speaks to this and it requires that the Court fix a remedy that is tailored to the injury suffered from the constitutional violation. Okay. Well, then in that situation, I don't know why reducing the sentence by the length of the unconstitutional delay, the supposedly unconstitutional delay, undoes the damage that's been done by the delay. Your Honor, it's a proportionate remedy because the defendant was denied. Mr. Benjamin was denied access to these rehabilitation programs that aren't only good in themselves as bark or recognize, but that also bear on his prospects for parole, on his case for parole or early release. And so the fact that he was denied access to them for a significant period of time, bears on his ability to try to win early release. And this Court has recognized that any amount of time for the defendant has to spend in prison as a result of a sixth amendment violation is cognizable. And so we submit that it is proportionately tailored, even if the fit isn't perfect. When Justice Ginsburg asked you about the Federal Speedy Trial Act, and you said that does not cover sentencing, but there are provisions of Montana law that do cover sentencing. Why didn't you seek relief under those? Your Honor, there are Montana statutes that require sentencing in place within a reasonable amount of time and for close unreasonable delay. But we have been unable to find a case where the defendant was actually able to win some kind of relief on the basis of those statutes. As the Montana Supreme Court decision below reflects, the Court's view there was that those statutes incorporate due process principles
. And so it would be due process principles that provided the relief, and we haven't found any case that gives any free standing, independent relief on the basis of those statutes. If you look at the rule 32 cases, because did you bring a claim under those statutes? We did not, Your Honor. We did not. We did not. We would be appropriate for the government to respond. Yes, there are these disadvantages, but he had certain advantages too from being in jail. He was closer to his family. He was closer to his counsel to confer more easily with counsel. Isn't it, when we have to consider the plus as well as the disadvantages? Certainly, Your Honor, if the prosecution offered that kind of evidence, he would weigh in the balance, and Barker itself discussed the statutes. It notes that the speedy trial clause is unusual in that delay in some instances may benefit the defendant, but here, where Mr. Betterman has submitted an affidavit and also in the initial motion detailed the prejudice that he suffered from this delay, inability to access these programs that he was ordered to complete as part of the suspended portion of his sentence that under Montana regulations would bear directly on his case for parole, the prejudice is palpable. It resonates strongly with Barker itself and with Smith Vihui, where the Court noted that even if you're incarcerated on a prior charge, you may yet suffer prejudice as a result of delay in a subsequent prosecution. So back to Justice Sotomayor's question about Lovasco and about the difference between these two tests, we submit that if you compare the outcome here and compare the outcome in Barker, Barker can involve the defendant who advanced a very similar theory of prejudice. The theory was he was denied access to rehabilitation programs and that he suffered anxiety. The defendant testified to that effect and the third circuit concluded that in the absence of contrary evidence that that was enough to show a Sixth Amendment violation, whereas in the court in the decision below, the Montana Supreme Court placed the burden squarely on Mr. Betterman to make an affirmative showing of substantial prejudice. So even though he submitted this avid david that detailed the prejudice, the Montana Supreme Court deemed it speculative. My problem is with this use of language, prejudice is prejudice. And they seem to be arguing that substantial prejudice means something like actual damages. You could point to something that I've actually been damaged by either having served longer than the sentence itself, so mentally imposed or something else like that. But why are you even taking on the substantial damage definition? Why aren't you just arguing that prejudice is prejudice? Well, it is, Your Honor, but Lavasco actually uses the word action. So the Lavasco test that was applied by the Montana. You're still in the Lavasco test. Yeah. I mean, if the court, that's the court that the due process test that the court has applied
. Now, if the court were to say that the Barker test, including the way that Barker approaches prejudice, could be actionable under the due process clause, that would be a different story, but simply not the way that lower courts have examined it. That would effectively give a defendant sixth amendment relief under the due process clause. But that is not what the Montana Supreme Court did, Your Honor, and that is not the way that it applied. And that's not the way you're arguing the case. Well, Your Honor, we didn't preserve a due process challenge. Our challenge is solely under the sixth amendment. It's set forward in the question presented, and indeed in the lower courts, we pressed a sixth amendment right. But to Your Honor's question, if the court were to take that sixth amendment analysis and drop it in the due process context, the defendant would certainly get the same relief. But we submit that just given that the right is enumerated in the sixth amendment, that it oughted, that the relief ought to be granted under that clause and not sent it into due process. There are no further questions. I'd like to reserve a balance in my time. Thank you, counsel. General Schoengert? Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court. The Speed trial clause does not include sentencing delay, because its purpose is to protect a presumptively innocent defendant from the harms associated with a criminal charge. That purpose is consistent with the taxed in history of the clause. It's consistent with the remedy that this Court has said must apply to speedy trial violations. And importantly, it leaves defendants with other means of challenging unjustified sentencing delay without requiring the Court to modify both the test and the remedy for a speedy trial violation. The speed trial clause is unique amongst six-minute rights, because it goes to the heart of the government's authority to try a presumptively innocent defendant at all. If the government unjustifiably delays, it may forfeit the right, which is why this missile is the remedy. Sentencing delay doesn't impact the validity of trial. It doesn't impact the authority of the government to bring a definitive trial. And after conviction, none of the interests that are supported by the Speed trial clause apply, for example, there can be no anxiety over public accusation because the accusation has been confirmed. At the moment of conviction, a defendant's liberty is justly deprived, because, and that's why bail is presumptively unavailable at that point. When in your view, let's say we, with you that speedy trial, isn't the right rubric
. When would a delay in sentencing amount to a due practice violation? I think if a defendant could show prejudice, for example, if he was not able to present mitigating evidence at sentencing because of the passage of time he lost witness, that may be one example. If he's serving a, if he's awaiting sentencing for a time longer than the maximum sentence for the charge, that would be another example. But you would not count factors of the time that were raised here. That is, I could have gotten into a drug treatment program in the penitentiary. It would have been unavailable. You would not have proved that. That's right, Justice Ginsburg. And the reason why it's a two speculative basis. You know, it's speculative whether a rehabilitation program's parole would have been available. I, and whether the defendant would have taken advantage of it. I mean, this case is a good example of that. It's not in the record because it happened after the Montana Supreme Court's decision. But the petitioner was offered parole in March of 2014, conditioned on that he would fill a rehabilitation program. He started the rehabilitation program and 16 days later he quit, quit it. So his parole was rescinded. And that's, that's the sort of speculative basis. I think it's too speculative a basis to give a remedy. But the defendant's always able to file a man and misclaim if he's, if he's, the sentence is harming him. He can first ask to be sentenced. The defendant, in this case, didn't mention it until nine months into the progress process. There may be some real differences between the pretrial context and the precentencing context. But one which seems quite similar is the potential of delay to impair the defense. So I guess I would like you to address that because, you know, as the petitioner is point out, in most cases these days, most of the actual adjudication of contested issues goes on in sentencing, rather than at the trial stage, given that we don't have very many trials anymore. And certainly Barker and certainly Doggett made it very clear that this was an important interest in thinking about this speedy trial right. That's just a kick in a few points
. First of all, I would say that, you know, that danger is equally at issue in pre-indipement delay, delay involving interlocutory appeal, which in the court held was not included in the speedy trial analysis in Loud Hawk v. United States. Second, so that can be remedied by due process, even if it's a similar interest. Second, there's a sense of. Sonsink Lavasco really talks about a whole different set of considerations in the pre-trial context, which simply don't apply once the indictment, once the accusation has been made. Perhaps not, but I think it would apply in the interlocutory appeal context, or even appeal and recentencing. I mean, those same considerations would be at issue. The delay could impact our retrial, if there was a retrial ordered on remand, in a case. And those are interested that due process cause can remedy. But the other point is that sentencing is different. I mean, the same rules don't apply, and usually the same facts that aren't in issue. I mean, given the ubiquity of plea agreements, so often the real action is in the plea bargaining anyway, and the prosecutor in the defendant agree on a sentence or a range of sentence, and then that's implemented by the judge. Well, sometimes, but there may also be real factual disputes. It might be about the amount of loss. It might be about the amount of drug quantity. It might be about prior bad acts. It might be about a whole range of things, which are the kinds of things that we actually typically think of as contested issues at trial. That's true. I would argue that the due process provides adequate remedy in that situation, but there is a different standard, too. I mean, the rules of evidence don't apply. The confrontation clause doesn't apply. There's no burden approved facts beyond reasonable doubt. So it is a different type of proceeding, and an argument is that due process can remedy any prejudice that happens in the delay. That's the problem. How do you prove, I mean, let's take an indeterminate sentence, more or less like this one, where you have the possibility of a sentence between zero and ten years
. How does a judge know whether if the defendant is brought before him at year eight, eight and a half, nine? How does a judge know that if the defendant had been brought to him at year five, he would have given him a six-year sentence instead of an eight. Don't you think that there is a lot of pressure on the judge if the defendant's hearing is delayed for eight years to say time serve? That really don't you think there is prejudice in the fact that an unexplained delay caused by the State? More likely than not had some sort of effect on the sentence. Well, I think in that case, the defendant should. If it's that lengthy of a delay, he should ask to be sentenced. And like I said, he can always file a manimous petition in that context. Well, this defendant asked to be sentenced faster. He was told that there were other issues the court was dealing with. So a couple of the months were not his fault, clearly not his fault. It was an administrative fault. That's true. There was not all the delay was his fault. But he didn't mention anything about wanting to be sentenced until nine months into that process. When he filed a, well, that may go to the issue of whether under a barker analysis or any analysis, he should be heard to complain about the delay. But I still not quite sure why your definition of substantial prejudice or actual prejudice should be the controlling one. I think the courts have, even the court, lower courts that have applied the speed trial clause to sentencing delay. The tent circuit, for example, and Presby's Sullivan, they assume that it applies on the one hand based on Paul, of course, decision in Pollard. But then on the other, they recognize that the interests don't apply. And they recognize that in order to fashion a remedy and a post-conviction setting, the defendant has to show prejudice. In addition, it takes into account that the balance has shifted. The person is no longer accused but convicted in his presumption of innocence. It's his advantage. The assume that there is a prompt trial, then a very substantial delay in sentencing. And then there is an appeal. And the appeal results in new trial. Does the speedy trial act then apply when the defendant says that my second trial was delayed? Are there cases on that? I don't think so
. I think generally when courts lower courts are applying delay in the appellate context, recentencing context, they apply due process. And I can't think of that. Because if that delay were attributable to the State, it seems to me there be a speedy trial act violation in that connection. It may be. And lower courts, when they're looking at appellate delay or delay in recentencing, I mean, it's a pretty similar test as far as the speedy trial clause is concerned when courts are applying it, presensing. Because it requires showing a prejudice and it evaluates the government's reasons for the delay. But you're not aware of any cases of the kind that I've indicated where the speedy trial act then clicks in for the second prosecution. I'm not aware of any cases. Under Montana law can a defendant who suffers inordinate delay in sentencing and then get relief. Certainly, there are rules on delay, prohibiting delay, just like there are in most states, if not every state, and under the federal rules, there's specific procedures that put in the way. But Mr. Rowley indicated there are rules there, but no defendants have had the benefit of getting their sentence as short because of those. Well, I'm not aware of any defendants, press and claims, any reported decisions on those decisions, those claims one way or the other. But it definitely always has that option, and especially under mandamus. And I think at that point, fashion and remedy just for delay, I think it's difficult because my friend mentioned 14 years, but the delay, I mean, 14 months, the delay really wasn't 14 months of unjustified delay. Like I said, he didn't make his claim until nine months, but before that there's always going to be some delay in the sentence. But what didn't did say that the delay was principally caused by the court's institutional problems? It was. There were the court took a while to decide post-conviction motions, and it was institutional delay. I don't disagree with that. But my point is that there's always going to be some delay in the process. And so to figure out what the remedy would be simply by including the entire 14 months, I think, would be a windfall of the defendant, especially in this case where he's, he was receiving credit on his sentence for a- Is that typical? Is it typical for a sentencing court to give credit for time served? Yes, it's, in fact, it's statutory. Is there any way they can do that when you have an indeterminate range? Sentences zero to ten? Is there any way they can do that? And they say it should be zero to nine in this case because of the delay? I'm not sure. I mean, I think Judge could do that. I mean, in his, in the petitioner's first conviction on domestic assault, he was awarded 53 days of credit for against his sentence, and the court specifically stated on the record that he took into account and applied that against his sentence. Do you think the courts are, the judges are incapable of making determinations of a remedy? Certainly not. No, I think, and I think under due process, you know, that's the advantage of due process. Of course, can fashion remedy to target the specific prejudice, and I think they're well equipped to do that. Where did it come from? The Parker versus Wingo prejudice is supposed to be assumed. I was just looking at the case. It doesn't say that. In fact, they analyze prejudice. That's right. The court is only presumed prejudice. I'm aware of it in one case, dog it, and the dog it. You did, we held that. You held that, but it was two things. Extraordinary delay. It was an eight and a half year delay between when a person was indicted and when they were brought to trial. And then it was all, the court said there was no justifiable reason for that delay. You know, my question is, you're, your brother, counsels say that Parker versus Wingo, if it applied, would presume prejudice. So I've just been looking at that. And in the case itself, it doesn't presume prejudice. It does neither. It analyzes whether there was or was not prejudice. So I want to know where that requirement of presumed prejudice comes from. The first factor in Parker is to analyze what? I know the four factors. I have them in front of me. Yes. So that's the presumed prejudice factor. It gets you to the test
. No, I think, and I think under due process, you know, that's the advantage of due process. Of course, can fashion remedy to target the specific prejudice, and I think they're well equipped to do that. Where did it come from? The Parker versus Wingo prejudice is supposed to be assumed. I was just looking at the case. It doesn't say that. In fact, they analyze prejudice. That's right. The court is only presumed prejudice. I'm aware of it in one case, dog it, and the dog it. You did, we held that. You held that, but it was two things. Extraordinary delay. It was an eight and a half year delay between when a person was indicted and when they were brought to trial. And then it was all, the court said there was no justifiable reason for that delay. You know, my question is, you're, your brother, counsels say that Parker versus Wingo, if it applied, would presume prejudice. So I've just been looking at that. And in the case itself, it doesn't presume prejudice. It does neither. It analyzes whether there was or was not prejudice. So I want to know where that requirement of presumed prejudice comes from. The first factor in Parker is to analyze what? I know the four factors. I have them in front of me. Yes. So that's the presumed prejudice factor. It gets you to the test. So it triggers the test. I think my friend is referring to the dog at case, though. That's in his brief besides dog it as sort of this, at some point, if the delay is so excessive, and I take it that he's not arguing with me. So here it is. I mean, obviously it's a 20 year delay. The person won't even remember who he was going to call, and all the witnesses will be gone and so forth. So I think it's fair to say there was prejudice in such a case if that's what it's about. And so if it isn't presumed all the time, do you have any objection as he apparently does not have any objection? To our saying, you're right. It's the due process clause. Now, in applying the due process clause, two, cases where the sentencing has been unduly delayed, or that is the claim, the Court should apply the factors as set out in Barca versus Wingo. And there's a couple of problems with that. One, Barca was specifically designed to take into account pre-trial interest in this BD trial clause. And in the case that Justice Kagan mentioned the forfeiture case, that was a pre-adjudication case, so it fit in that context. So applying Barca, of course, have done it, applied it. So that was a forfeiture case. Correct. And that's a penalty after ajudication. The forfeiture doesn't start until someone's been found. I think it was a pre-basically property was taken before. Whatever the case is, I'd like to get an answer to my question. It says the court should balance for factors. Length of delay, the reason before delay, the defendant's assertion of right and prejudice to the defendant. Now, if I quote that sentence and say, those are the factors that should be taken into account under the due process clause, do you have any objection to that? Prejudice needs to take the forefront in that analysis. I mean, I should just reverse the forfeiture. Well, the problem with Barca is that it holds that, I mean, in the postconviction setting, is that none of the factors are necessary
. So it triggers the test. I think my friend is referring to the dog at case, though. That's in his brief besides dog it as sort of this, at some point, if the delay is so excessive, and I take it that he's not arguing with me. So here it is. I mean, obviously it's a 20 year delay. The person won't even remember who he was going to call, and all the witnesses will be gone and so forth. So I think it's fair to say there was prejudice in such a case if that's what it's about. And so if it isn't presumed all the time, do you have any objection as he apparently does not have any objection? To our saying, you're right. It's the due process clause. Now, in applying the due process clause, two, cases where the sentencing has been unduly delayed, or that is the claim, the Court should apply the factors as set out in Barca versus Wingo. And there's a couple of problems with that. One, Barca was specifically designed to take into account pre-trial interest in this BD trial clause. And in the case that Justice Kagan mentioned the forfeiture case, that was a pre-adjudication case, so it fit in that context. So applying Barca, of course, have done it, applied it. So that was a forfeiture case. Correct. And that's a penalty after ajudication. The forfeiture doesn't start until someone's been found. I think it was a pre-basically property was taken before. Whatever the case is, I'd like to get an answer to my question. It says the court should balance for factors. Length of delay, the reason before delay, the defendant's assertion of right and prejudice to the defendant. Now, if I quote that sentence and say, those are the factors that should be taken into account under the due process clause, do you have any objection to that? Prejudice needs to take the forefront in that analysis. I mean, I should just reverse the forfeiture. Well, the problem with Barca is that it holds that, I mean, in the postconviction setting, is that none of the factors are necessary. So prejudice doesn't necessarily have to be shown in Barca. Lower courts have modified that and said, in the postconviction setting, you have a different, it has to show prejudice. And the test that lower courts use, the bar, the modified Barca test, looks a lot like LaVosca, in fact, and say it's indistinguishable because prejudice. And prejudice is the key to the answer to your question, Justice Breyer, that in the postconviction setting, that's what's necessary. It also, to my friend's point that the petitioner made claims of prejudice, I point the court to join appendix 66 and 68, where he made his claim of prejudice in the space of a couple of paragraphs. And this sort of illustrates the problem the State has in rebutting claims of prejudice that aren't substantiated. He didn't file his affidavit, which was still fairly bare, but at least more substantiated until three months after he filed his motion and the motion was denied, as a motion to reconsider. So I think defendants in this context have to come forward with some showing of prejudice. Well, that might present some challenges, but there are also challenges on the other side. It's often hard to show that people have forgotten things. That's the, you know, they've forgotten them. So unless there's something like a witness dying, it's very difficult to make the kind of showing that you're suggesting. And that's why Barker, you know, left things flexible and said, you know, in most cases we're really are going to look at prejudice, we're going to see what you have to say for yourself. In some extreme cases, we're not going to do that. So again, I guess I'm back with Justice Breyer's question. He said, yes, this is a different context, but why don't all the same considerations apply? The Court has never presumed prejudice except in the extreme. I wasn't suggesting presumed prejudice, just because Barker doesn't suggest presumed prejudice. As you say, the difference that Barker has with respect to your test is simply that Barker says it's not always necessary to show prejudice that there are extreme circumstances in which we'll just take that for granted. I don't think that takes into consideration the change that happens at conviction. I mean, it's a substantial change. The interest of the Society take the forefront. And to give, I think it gives the defendant a windfall if he can come to court and say, you know, this delay is prejudiced me, but I'm not really going to think. Well, but if you think that a very significant part of this rule has to do with impairment of the ability to defend yourself, and if you think that that kind of consideration applies just as well at the sentencing phase as it does at the conviction stage, maybe in most cases more so, given that most of the action these days takes place in the sentencing phase, I guess I just wouldn't see why there's any need for a different rule, especially given the level of flexibility that Barker gives. It's not like Barker says we're presuming prejudicinal circumstances. Barker is saying prejudice is one of the four factors
. So prejudice doesn't necessarily have to be shown in Barca. Lower courts have modified that and said, in the postconviction setting, you have a different, it has to show prejudice. And the test that lower courts use, the bar, the modified Barca test, looks a lot like LaVosca, in fact, and say it's indistinguishable because prejudice. And prejudice is the key to the answer to your question, Justice Breyer, that in the postconviction setting, that's what's necessary. It also, to my friend's point that the petitioner made claims of prejudice, I point the court to join appendix 66 and 68, where he made his claim of prejudice in the space of a couple of paragraphs. And this sort of illustrates the problem the State has in rebutting claims of prejudice that aren't substantiated. He didn't file his affidavit, which was still fairly bare, but at least more substantiated until three months after he filed his motion and the motion was denied, as a motion to reconsider. So I think defendants in this context have to come forward with some showing of prejudice. Well, that might present some challenges, but there are also challenges on the other side. It's often hard to show that people have forgotten things. That's the, you know, they've forgotten them. So unless there's something like a witness dying, it's very difficult to make the kind of showing that you're suggesting. And that's why Barker, you know, left things flexible and said, you know, in most cases we're really are going to look at prejudice, we're going to see what you have to say for yourself. In some extreme cases, we're not going to do that. So again, I guess I'm back with Justice Breyer's question. He said, yes, this is a different context, but why don't all the same considerations apply? The Court has never presumed prejudice except in the extreme. I wasn't suggesting presumed prejudice, just because Barker doesn't suggest presumed prejudice. As you say, the difference that Barker has with respect to your test is simply that Barker says it's not always necessary to show prejudice that there are extreme circumstances in which we'll just take that for granted. I don't think that takes into consideration the change that happens at conviction. I mean, it's a substantial change. The interest of the Society take the forefront. And to give, I think it gives the defendant a windfall if he can come to court and say, you know, this delay is prejudiced me, but I'm not really going to think. Well, but if you think that a very significant part of this rule has to do with impairment of the ability to defend yourself, and if you think that that kind of consideration applies just as well at the sentencing phase as it does at the conviction stage, maybe in most cases more so, given that most of the action these days takes place in the sentencing phase, I guess I just wouldn't see why there's any need for a different rule, especially given the level of flexibility that Barker gives. It's not like Barker says we're presuming prejudicinal circumstances. Barker is saying prejudice is one of the four factors. It's a very important one, and usually we'll expect people to come in with some kind of show-it, except for in extreme cases when not. I think it comes down to remedy. I mean, the remedy for a speed trial violation is dismissal. And so in the post-conviction- Well, that's what we said in Barker when we were talking about a pretrial case, but the remedy in this case would be different. Right, but it'd be more difficult. If the defendant doesn't have to show prejudice, I'm not sure what the court would remedy. And that's one of the reasons that prejudice should be required, because there's got to be something that the court is actually remedy. And even in the speed trial cases, the court's usually required some showing. And when it comes to the determination of facts that are relevant at sentencing, that does not take place exclusively, or probably even not, it doesn't take place primarily at the time when the sentence is pronounced. Isn't that correct? It takes place during the preparation of the pre-sentence report, at least in the federal system. Is that true in Montana as well? May I answer you? Yes, yes, Justice Slydo, that's exactly right. Most of the facts are analyzed through that pre-sentence report, and the sentencing hearings at that point are pretty drab affair, because most of the facts have been resolved. Thank you, counsel. Is Anders? Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the court, to go right to Justice Keynes' concern about the possibility that a defendant's defense at sentencing could be impaired, we think the due process analysis is adequate to address that. And we think that's so because although the defendant has to show prejudice, the prejudice standard should essentially be the same one that applies in cases of other violations of constitutional rights that may affect the defendant's ability to defend at sentencing. And that is the defendant should have to show that there is a reasonable probability that the result would have been different. The outcome would have been different. That is the same standard that's used in cases of Brady violations of ineffective assistance of counsel. It's one that doesn't require the defendant to show by preponderance that he would have received a different sentence or anything like that. He just has to show that he suffered prejudice that when you take all the evidence into account, it puts the outcome in a different way. And how do you see that it's different from what goes on under the Barker analysis? Well, I think under Barker the court does allow for prejudice to be presumed in some cases. So the defendant does not have to show, make any kind of concrete or particularized showing a prejudice. We think that in the case of sentencing, prejudice and sentencing, this is a defendant should have to show some concrete effect, some concrete effect. But I take it that we have said that that's the case where the delay is super long
. It's a very important one, and usually we'll expect people to come in with some kind of show-it, except for in extreme cases when not. I think it comes down to remedy. I mean, the remedy for a speed trial violation is dismissal. And so in the post-conviction- Well, that's what we said in Barker when we were talking about a pretrial case, but the remedy in this case would be different. Right, but it'd be more difficult. If the defendant doesn't have to show prejudice, I'm not sure what the court would remedy. And that's one of the reasons that prejudice should be required, because there's got to be something that the court is actually remedy. And even in the speed trial cases, the court's usually required some showing. And when it comes to the determination of facts that are relevant at sentencing, that does not take place exclusively, or probably even not, it doesn't take place primarily at the time when the sentence is pronounced. Isn't that correct? It takes place during the preparation of the pre-sentence report, at least in the federal system. Is that true in Montana as well? May I answer you? Yes, yes, Justice Slydo, that's exactly right. Most of the facts are analyzed through that pre-sentence report, and the sentencing hearings at that point are pretty drab affair, because most of the facts have been resolved. Thank you, counsel. Is Anders? Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the court, to go right to Justice Keynes' concern about the possibility that a defendant's defense at sentencing could be impaired, we think the due process analysis is adequate to address that. And we think that's so because although the defendant has to show prejudice, the prejudice standard should essentially be the same one that applies in cases of other violations of constitutional rights that may affect the defendant's ability to defend at sentencing. And that is the defendant should have to show that there is a reasonable probability that the result would have been different. The outcome would have been different. That is the same standard that's used in cases of Brady violations of ineffective assistance of counsel. It's one that doesn't require the defendant to show by preponderance that he would have received a different sentence or anything like that. He just has to show that he suffered prejudice that when you take all the evidence into account, it puts the outcome in a different way. And how do you see that it's different from what goes on under the Barker analysis? Well, I think under Barker the court does allow for prejudice to be presumed in some cases. So the defendant does not have to show, make any kind of concrete or particularized showing a prejudice. We think that in the case of sentencing, prejudice and sentencing, this is a defendant should have to show some concrete effect, some concrete effect. But I take it that we have said that that's the case where the delay is super long. So take a delay of eight or ten years. And why is it in that very extreme circumstance that the defendant should make, that the defendant should have to make any particularized showing? Well, I think the defendant may well be able to make a particular right showing in that case. But I think there are two primary reasons that it's just not appropriate in any case for prejudice to be presumed at sentencing. And the first one of those is that I think the constitutional rule has to take into account the wide range of sentencing proceedings here. So when we're talking about pre-trial delay, I think all trials involve historical facts that in theory could be affected, could be prejudiced by delay. That's not the case of all sentencing hearings. There are fully discretionary systems where historical facts would not have as great an effect. There are sentencing that turn mostly on the present characterization because they're not historical facts. So I think prejudice should not be presumed in any case, but in a situation where the defendant actually will be affected, the process analysis is tailored enough to allow him to have relief in that situation. And I think the second reason it's not appropriate ever to presume prejudice at sentencing is that the conviction changes everything. Once a defendant has been convicted, there's a strong societal interest in giving him an appropriate sentence. And so to give him a remedy for pre-sentencing delay, I think it involves generally the remedy is going to involve lowering what would otherwise be an appropriate sentence. So in that context, I think it's appropriate to require the defendant to show some actual injury in order to justify the societal cost of lowering an otherwise appropriate sentence. In the federal system do the judges typically give credit for time served? They do. Yes. You're a rule will apply to capital cases as well. Well, I think capital cases may be different. I think the court has said that in some context, for instance, double jeopardy, the capital sentencing essentially in some respects an extension of the trial. So in that situation, you may say the same thing with respect to speedy trial claims as well. But I'm sorry. Could you say a little bit more than that? You would say because the penalty phase really is a trial? I think there are some respects in which you treat the penalty phase as an extension of the trial. Yes. I think, finally, the other reason that it's not appropriate to presume a prejudice that sentencing is that in the pre-indipement context, for us, the court has said that the core interests of the speedy trial laws aren't implicated. And therefore, even though that kind of delay, pre-erest delay, may have the same sort of effects on the trial that are, you know, prejudice that is hard to articulate, that that's a choice. And the defendant is at liberty in pre-indipement delay
. So take a delay of eight or ten years. And why is it in that very extreme circumstance that the defendant should make, that the defendant should have to make any particularized showing? Well, I think the defendant may well be able to make a particular right showing in that case. But I think there are two primary reasons that it's just not appropriate in any case for prejudice to be presumed at sentencing. And the first one of those is that I think the constitutional rule has to take into account the wide range of sentencing proceedings here. So when we're talking about pre-trial delay, I think all trials involve historical facts that in theory could be affected, could be prejudiced by delay. That's not the case of all sentencing hearings. There are fully discretionary systems where historical facts would not have as great an effect. There are sentencing that turn mostly on the present characterization because they're not historical facts. So I think prejudice should not be presumed in any case, but in a situation where the defendant actually will be affected, the process analysis is tailored enough to allow him to have relief in that situation. And I think the second reason it's not appropriate ever to presume prejudice at sentencing is that the conviction changes everything. Once a defendant has been convicted, there's a strong societal interest in giving him an appropriate sentence. And so to give him a remedy for pre-sentencing delay, I think it involves generally the remedy is going to involve lowering what would otherwise be an appropriate sentence. So in that context, I think it's appropriate to require the defendant to show some actual injury in order to justify the societal cost of lowering an otherwise appropriate sentence. In the federal system do the judges typically give credit for time served? They do. Yes. You're a rule will apply to capital cases as well. Well, I think capital cases may be different. I think the court has said that in some context, for instance, double jeopardy, the capital sentencing essentially in some respects an extension of the trial. So in that situation, you may say the same thing with respect to speedy trial claims as well. But I'm sorry. Could you say a little bit more than that? You would say because the penalty phase really is a trial? I think there are some respects in which you treat the penalty phase as an extension of the trial. Yes. I think, finally, the other reason that it's not appropriate to presume a prejudice that sentencing is that in the pre-indipement context, for us, the court has said that the core interests of the speedy trial laws aren't implicated. And therefore, even though that kind of delay, pre-erest delay, may have the same sort of effects on the trial that are, you know, prejudice that is hard to articulate, that that's a choice. And the defendant is at liberty in pre-indipement delay. That's right. And that's why the core concerns of the speedy trial laws aren't implicated in that scenario that the speedy trial clause isn't implicated because the defendant's liberty interest hasn't been restrained by the indictment. But a similar thing happens after conviction. At that point, the defendant doesn't have a cognizable liberty interest, a cognizable interest in avoiding the determinants that can be imposed on him as a result of the conviction and as an incident of the sentence. If we take out the presumed prejudice, which is not part of Parker analysis, it just defines prejudice. How would using the Parker standard and saying no presumed prejudice, you have to prove some prejudice? How would that change the analysis? Well, I think there's one other difference, I think, in the two approaches, aside from the presumed prejudice, and that is what counts as cognizable prejudice. So I think in the due process context, the court said in Marion that the type of prejudice we're concerned about is actual prejudice to the defense of a criminal case. That's for the pre-trial. Right. But what that, we think what that means in the sentencing context is that the defendant should have to show a concrete effect on his defense at sentencing. In other words, the probability that the result would have been different or, you know, that he's been serving longer time than he should have been. But I think it also means that things like, like, you know, access to rehabilitation programs, anxiety, that those would not be independently cognizable as prejudice under the due process inquiry. Do you think that if a defendant was writing to a judge every week saying, I'm anxious, I really need to know what my sentence is and the judge ignores it for a period of time, that that defendant still has to prove something more. Let's not the facts of this case. There was no complaint for nine months and whatever treatment the defendant started started for anxiety started well before any time had elapsed in this sentence. But you don't think that defendant is entitled to any consideration by a trial court? Well, that we should be barring a trial court from considering that? Two points with respect to that. I mean, certainly, if a defendant is asking for sentencing and the court is ignoring that, that would be inappropriate. The defendant would obviously have other remedies, I think, at that point, after requesting sentence, perhaps mandamus, perhaps a habeas petition. But if all, if the only prejudice that he's claiming is anxiety, then yes, I do think that that would not be cognizable under due process. And I think that's really because once a defendant has been convicted, he can, he now can be sentenced. He can be subject to the practical deprivations that are an incident of sentence. And I think that after he's been sentenced, of course, he doesn't have an interest in not being anxious that kind of thing. And so I think it would be very odd to say that he has a, a sentencing delay related interest in that kind of claim that could be the basis for a constitutional violation of that. I mean, Sanders, I'm sorry. One of the things that strikes me is odd about your argument is that you are suggesting that a remedy would be appropriate in certain circumstances
. That's right. And that's why the core concerns of the speedy trial laws aren't implicated in that scenario that the speedy trial clause isn't implicated because the defendant's liberty interest hasn't been restrained by the indictment. But a similar thing happens after conviction. At that point, the defendant doesn't have a cognizable liberty interest, a cognizable interest in avoiding the determinants that can be imposed on him as a result of the conviction and as an incident of the sentence. If we take out the presumed prejudice, which is not part of Parker analysis, it just defines prejudice. How would using the Parker standard and saying no presumed prejudice, you have to prove some prejudice? How would that change the analysis? Well, I think there's one other difference, I think, in the two approaches, aside from the presumed prejudice, and that is what counts as cognizable prejudice. So I think in the due process context, the court said in Marion that the type of prejudice we're concerned about is actual prejudice to the defense of a criminal case. That's for the pre-trial. Right. But what that, we think what that means in the sentencing context is that the defendant should have to show a concrete effect on his defense at sentencing. In other words, the probability that the result would have been different or, you know, that he's been serving longer time than he should have been. But I think it also means that things like, like, you know, access to rehabilitation programs, anxiety, that those would not be independently cognizable as prejudice under the due process inquiry. Do you think that if a defendant was writing to a judge every week saying, I'm anxious, I really need to know what my sentence is and the judge ignores it for a period of time, that that defendant still has to prove something more. Let's not the facts of this case. There was no complaint for nine months and whatever treatment the defendant started started for anxiety started well before any time had elapsed in this sentence. But you don't think that defendant is entitled to any consideration by a trial court? Well, that we should be barring a trial court from considering that? Two points with respect to that. I mean, certainly, if a defendant is asking for sentencing and the court is ignoring that, that would be inappropriate. The defendant would obviously have other remedies, I think, at that point, after requesting sentence, perhaps mandamus, perhaps a habeas petition. But if all, if the only prejudice that he's claiming is anxiety, then yes, I do think that that would not be cognizable under due process. And I think that's really because once a defendant has been convicted, he can, he now can be sentenced. He can be subject to the practical deprivations that are an incident of sentence. And I think that after he's been sentenced, of course, he doesn't have an interest in not being anxious that kind of thing. And so I think it would be very odd to say that he has a, a sentencing delay related interest in that kind of claim that could be the basis for a constitutional violation of that. I mean, Sanders, I'm sorry. One of the things that strikes me is odd about your argument is that you are suggesting that a remedy would be appropriate in certain circumstances. You just want to put this under the due process clause. And what's odd is that, as you say, that in this post-conviction context, the defendant has been deprived of any liberty interest. And yet the due process clause talks about a deprivation of liberty, but the defendant no longer has a liberty interest. So it seems a very odd place to park this right and this remedy that due process clause in this context. It seems much more natural that you would do it under the speedy trial clause on the assumption, on the view that the trial has to do with both the adjudication of guilt and the determination of the proper sentence. Well, two points with respect to that. I think if the Court were to say to use the standard that we proposed, so essentially the no presumed prejudice, only certain things are cognizable as prejudice and the remedy would not always be vacuature of the conviction, then I think we probably wouldn't have a practical objection to calling that speedy trial clause, right? What we're concerned about is the substantive standard and the remedy. But I do think after a defendant has been convicted, the societal interests have shifted, and that's why it's appropriate, I think, to apply due process. The defendant has a liberty interest in the length of his sentence. He has a due process interest in a fundamentally fair sentencing proceeding. And so we think due process nicely captures that interest that the defendant has. And so the Court has said before, before arrest, before the speedy trial kicks in due process applies and it provides a right. And we think that after the defendant no longer has the interest protected by the speedy trial clause, due process can again provide the proper approach. There are no further questions. Thank you, counsel. Raul, you have ten minutes remaining. The standard for prejudice articulated by the United States shows well why due process protections are ill-suited to the specific interests protected by the speedy trial right. The United States suggested that the defendant would have to show that the outcome would have been different. Consistent with Lovasco, the only form of prejudice that would be cognizable under that test is an effect on the defendant's defense at sentence. But as Barker illustrates and Smith-Vee-Huey also illustrates, there are other forms of prejudice that are specific to the speedy trial clause that may apply to a defendant. And indeed, may apply to a defendant even after they've been convicted. So, for example, in Smith-Vee-Huey, the defendant had already been incarcerated on a prior federal charge. That defendant's liberty interests were already impinged and yet the court noted that the delay from the follow-on prosecution could still prejudice him. So, this notion that you would apply the due process test or the Lovasco test and require a showing, an affirmative showing, that a defendant would have had a different outcome at sentencing, but for the delay, really highlights why due process is an inadequately suited. Justice Kagan's question points to another anomaly in the test that has been proposed by the government because of this focus on liberty interests
. You just want to put this under the due process clause. And what's odd is that, as you say, that in this post-conviction context, the defendant has been deprived of any liberty interest. And yet the due process clause talks about a deprivation of liberty, but the defendant no longer has a liberty interest. So it seems a very odd place to park this right and this remedy that due process clause in this context. It seems much more natural that you would do it under the speedy trial clause on the assumption, on the view that the trial has to do with both the adjudication of guilt and the determination of the proper sentence. Well, two points with respect to that. I think if the Court were to say to use the standard that we proposed, so essentially the no presumed prejudice, only certain things are cognizable as prejudice and the remedy would not always be vacuature of the conviction, then I think we probably wouldn't have a practical objection to calling that speedy trial clause, right? What we're concerned about is the substantive standard and the remedy. But I do think after a defendant has been convicted, the societal interests have shifted, and that's why it's appropriate, I think, to apply due process. The defendant has a liberty interest in the length of his sentence. He has a due process interest in a fundamentally fair sentencing proceeding. And so we think due process nicely captures that interest that the defendant has. And so the Court has said before, before arrest, before the speedy trial kicks in due process applies and it provides a right. And we think that after the defendant no longer has the interest protected by the speedy trial clause, due process can again provide the proper approach. There are no further questions. Thank you, counsel. Raul, you have ten minutes remaining. The standard for prejudice articulated by the United States shows well why due process protections are ill-suited to the specific interests protected by the speedy trial right. The United States suggested that the defendant would have to show that the outcome would have been different. Consistent with Lovasco, the only form of prejudice that would be cognizable under that test is an effect on the defendant's defense at sentence. But as Barker illustrates and Smith-Vee-Huey also illustrates, there are other forms of prejudice that are specific to the speedy trial clause that may apply to a defendant. And indeed, may apply to a defendant even after they've been convicted. So, for example, in Smith-Vee-Huey, the defendant had already been incarcerated on a prior federal charge. That defendant's liberty interests were already impinged and yet the court noted that the delay from the follow-on prosecution could still prejudice him. So, this notion that you would apply the due process test or the Lovasco test and require a showing, an affirmative showing, that a defendant would have had a different outcome at sentencing, but for the delay, really highlights why due process is an inadequately suited. Justice Kagan's question points to another anomaly in the test that has been proposed by the government because of this focus on liberty interests. And in Smith-Vee-Huey, the defendant already said that it is not liberty. It's not incorporated under the 14th Amendment anyway. Yes, Your Honor. But- The stick the amendment applies only to the Federal Government. And it's only because of the 14th Amendment liberty that applies to the State. So, liberty is involved. Yes, Your Honor. But the position that the State of Montana and the United States have taken is that at sentencing, once a defendant has been convicted, they don't have a specific liberty interest of the kind that was recognized in Barker and the kind that was recognized in Smith-Vee-Huey. And that is the interest in rehabilitation and accessing rehabilitation programs that could be affected by a delay in a prosecution. So, as in, his liberty is certainly affected. He's in jail. So, he's sitting there in jail. Tell him you're free. I don't think he believes it. And- And then the question is, is at some point his being in jail a deprivation of his liberty without due process? Because the due process clause would require application of sentencing under- and when it's not due process when say Barker, Vee-Vingo, or some violation is violent. But I don't see a problem. Liberty. Well, Your Honor, the point is simply that the speedy trial test that the court articulated Barker is better suited to the specific forms of prejudice that are at issue in this case because it addresses this concern with even a defendant who's been guilty accessing rehabilitation programs, or the anxiety that that defendant may feel at the sentencing stage, and this gets to another point that the United States may. And that is that the conviction changes everything because the concerns that the court articulated in Barker may be yet more significant at the sentencing stage given that most convictions today result from guilty pleas. And so, the fact that a defendant, their defense may be impaired by a delay in criminal proceedings, may be more significant at the sentencing stage because it may be the only place where the defendant challenges an upward adjustment or contests facts. The fact that the defendant may need to access rehabilitation programs may be more of a pronounced at sentencing because the defendant's already been convicted. They're going to serve time and they want to get access to the programs that they'll need to get parole as soon as possible. So, we submit that Barker is the appropriate test, that if the court agrees that Barker is the appropriate framework, that the proper right to ground that analysis in is the sixth amendment and not the due process clause. And that is particularly so because of the antecedents of the due process clause, which apply not just to the guilt stage of the prosecution, but also to sentencing. And why? Because at common law and at the time of the framing, sentencing and the jury verdict were so closely bound
. And in Smith-Vee-Huey, the defendant already said that it is not liberty. It's not incorporated under the 14th Amendment anyway. Yes, Your Honor. But- The stick the amendment applies only to the Federal Government. And it's only because of the 14th Amendment liberty that applies to the State. So, liberty is involved. Yes, Your Honor. But the position that the State of Montana and the United States have taken is that at sentencing, once a defendant has been convicted, they don't have a specific liberty interest of the kind that was recognized in Barker and the kind that was recognized in Smith-Vee-Huey. And that is the interest in rehabilitation and accessing rehabilitation programs that could be affected by a delay in a prosecution. So, as in, his liberty is certainly affected. He's in jail. So, he's sitting there in jail. Tell him you're free. I don't think he believes it. And- And then the question is, is at some point his being in jail a deprivation of his liberty without due process? Because the due process clause would require application of sentencing under- and when it's not due process when say Barker, Vee-Vingo, or some violation is violent. But I don't see a problem. Liberty. Well, Your Honor, the point is simply that the speedy trial test that the court articulated Barker is better suited to the specific forms of prejudice that are at issue in this case because it addresses this concern with even a defendant who's been guilty accessing rehabilitation programs, or the anxiety that that defendant may feel at the sentencing stage, and this gets to another point that the United States may. And that is that the conviction changes everything because the concerns that the court articulated in Barker may be yet more significant at the sentencing stage given that most convictions today result from guilty pleas. And so, the fact that a defendant, their defense may be impaired by a delay in criminal proceedings, may be more significant at the sentencing stage because it may be the only place where the defendant challenges an upward adjustment or contests facts. The fact that the defendant may need to access rehabilitation programs may be more of a pronounced at sentencing because the defendant's already been convicted. They're going to serve time and they want to get access to the programs that they'll need to get parole as soon as possible. So, we submit that Barker is the appropriate test, that if the court agrees that Barker is the appropriate framework, that the proper right to ground that analysis in is the sixth amendment and not the due process clause. And that is particularly so because of the antecedents of the due process clause, which apply not just to the guilt stage of the prosecution, but also to sentencing. And why? Because at common law and at the time of the framing, sentencing and the jury verdict were so closely bound. And the right is rooted in this practice of circuit justices writing into the countryside and resolving cases, not just presiding over jury trials, but resolving cases. They had the power to hear and decide those cases. Their jurisdiction was from the beginning of the prosecution through the end. So, we think that sixth amendment is the appropriate basis for this right. Well, at the time of the adoption of the sixth amendment, we weren't post trial, but presentencing delays fairly common. Your Honor, the Stevens treatise says that at the time of a common law that sentencing took place usually, not always, usually, because- Usually, soon they're at. But not always. That's right, Your Honor. But as a general rule, the sentencing did take place soon after the jury issued its verdict and oftentimes immediately. And the cases that we catalog in our appendix illustrate that point. But it's not just that, as the Court has recognized, the sentence was usually automatic. It flowed from the jury verdict and so forth. That's just not true as a historical matter. Well, it's not true as a historical matter. If you look at the first criminal provisions that were enacted by Congress, they called for a range of sentences, and the sentencing judge had to select within that range. Justice Lee, I'm talking about the early 18th century, not when you say that. It was automatic. Your Honor, I'm referring to the observations that this Court has made in the apprendy line of cases. And it is the early part of the 18th century because the Court has noted, I'm sorry, in the early part of the 19th century because as the Court has noted, states started to adopt statutes that gave sentencing courts more discretion. But certainly at common law, certainly at the time of the founding, the Court noted that typically the verdict dictated the sentence. And so this right that was created. Well, that just isn't true. We don't have the right to change history. It isn't true. The first, if you look at the very first criminal provisions that were enacted by Congress, the first Congress they were not, it was not determinate sentence
. Your Honor, for many crimes, serious crimes at common law, and even for some that today, we would consider not so serious. Usually the penalty was death. And so there was this close relationship, the Court has called it a close relationship between the verdict and sentencing. And we submit that that together with the way that the process was consulted, what's conducted, shows that the right was created to cover the whole proceeding through the imposition or pronouncement of sentence. There are no further questions. Thank you, counsel. The case is submitted