Utah Supreme Court

Can speculative prejudice support a speedy trial violation in Utah? State v. Hintze Explained

2025 UT 3
No. 20221057
March 13, 2025
Reversed

Summary

Chad Hintze, a registered sex offender, was charged in March 2018 for violating registry conditions by being in a public park in 2016, but the State failed to prosecute the case for two years. Hintze learned of the charge in March 2020 and claimed the delay prevented his parole, but the district court found his prejudice claim speculative and denied his motion to dismiss.

Analysis

In State v. Hintze, the Utah Supreme Court addressed whether a defendant’s speculative claim of prejudice can support dismissal for a Sixth Amendment speedy trial violation. The court’s analysis provides important guidance on how Utah courts should evaluate the prejudice prong of the Barker v. Wingo four-factor test.

Background and Facts

Chad Hintze, a registered sex offender, was charged in March 2018 with violating his registry conditions by being present in a public park in 2016. However, the State failed to prosecute the case for two years due to negligence. Hintze only learned of the pending charge in March 2020 while serving a prison sentence for an unrelated offense. He claimed the delay prejudiced him by preventing his parole, as he had completed a required sex-offender treatment program and anticipated being released. The district court rejected his motion to dismiss, finding his prejudice claim speculative.

Key Legal Issues

The primary issue was whether Hintze’s Sixth Amendment speedy trial right was violated under the four-factor Barker test: (1) length of delay, (2) reason for delay, (3) defendant’s assertion of the right, and (4) prejudice to the defendant. The court also addressed what standard should apply when evaluating speculative prejudice claims and rejected the court of appeals’ adoption of a “reasonable probability of prejudice” threshold.

Court’s Analysis and Holding

The Utah Supreme Court reversed, holding that the two-year delay did not constitute a speedy trial violation. While the first two Barker factors weighed in Hintze’s favor due to the lengthy delay and State negligence, the court found the third factor neutral because Hintze was unaware of the charges during the delay. Critically, the court rejected Hintze’s prejudice claim as too speculative, noting the absence of evidence that he would actually have been granted parole. The court declined to adopt a rigid “reasonable probability” standard for prejudice, instead viewing prejudice as existing along a spectrum where more speculative claims receive less weight.

Practice Implications

This decision clarifies that Utah courts will not dismiss cases based on speculative prejudice claims alone, even when other Barker factors favor the defendant. Practitioners must develop concrete evidence of actual prejudice rather than hypothetical scenarios about what might have occurred. The court’s flexible approach to prejudice assessment emphasizes that the strength and certainty of the evidence matters more than meeting a specific threshold. For speedy trial claims to succeed without extraordinary delay, defendants need substantial proof of actual harm from prosecutorial delay.

Original Opinion

Link to Original Case

Case Details

Case Name

State v. Hintze

Citation

2025 UT 3

Court

Utah Supreme Court

Case Number

No. 20221057

Date Decided

March 13, 2025

Outcome

Reversed

Holding

The State’s two-year delay in prosecuting a sex offender registry violation, caused by negligence but without extraordinary circumstances or strong evidence of prejudice, did not violate the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial.

Standard of Review

Correctness for questions of law

Practice Tip

When arguing speedy trial violations, develop concrete evidence of actual prejudice rather than relying on speculation about what might have happened but for the delay.

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