US v. Minkkinen: Minkkinen and his codefendant, Sambasivam, were charged with numerous counts arising from allegations that they used proprietary accounting software to produce their own rival product (it’s more complicated than that, but that’s the gist). A whistleblower complaint started the investigations (criminal and internal) in 2016, but an indictment was not returned until August 2022. In the meantime, two key witnesses died and documents relevant to the case were destroyed by third parties. The defendants moved to dismiss, arguing that the delay in bringing the indictment violated their right to due process. The district court granted that motion.
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit reversed the denial of the motion to dismiss. In order to prevail on a due process claim for delay, defendants must show actual prejudice from the delay, then the court must balance “the prejudice of the defendant with the Government’s justification for delay.” Here, the court “accepted for the sake of argument” that the delay prejudiced the defendants. Nonetheless, their due process claim failed because the Government’s reasons for the delay were not rooted in bad faith or an attempt to disadvantage the defendants. The court agreed with the district court’s findings (which the defendants did not dispute) that “the Government’s delay was the product of a ‘prolonged investigation’ untainted by any ‘improper motive.’” But Supreme Court and Fourth Circuit precedent requires more, which the defendants could not show on this record.