With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". procedural due process claim based upon the lack of notice and a hearing before the limitations period was suspended. See United States v. Bischel, 61 F.3d 1429, 1434-35 (9th Cir. 1995) (rejecting a due process challenge to § 3292 where the defendant failed to locate the source of any right to a fixed period of limitations); United States v. King, No. 98-CR-91A, 2000 WL 362026, at 21 (W.D.N.Y. Mar. 24, 2000) (“As § 3292 is a legislative modification of all federal criminal statutes of limitations and itself subject to strict limitations, ... there is no basis to find that a subject or target of a grand jury proceeding must be granted an opportunity to be heard on an application for suspension of the applicable statute.”); see also United States v. Haug, 21 F.R.D. 22, 25 (N.D.Ohio 1957) (<HOLDING>). Because § 3292 applications must be made

A: holding that if the reason the victim cannot testify at trial is that the accused murdered her then the accused should be deemed to have forfeited the confrontation right even though the act with which the accused is charged is the same as the one by which he allegedly rendered the witness unavailable
B: holding that an accused may not complain if the statute of limitations is extended so long as the period of time originally provided therein had not run at the time of such extension because an accused does not acquire any vested right in a statute of limitations until it has operated to bar the prosecution of the offense with which he has been charged
C: holding that a sealed indictment handed down before statute of limitations has run is valid even if it is not unsealed until after the limitations period has expired
D: holding statute that extended statute of limitations for certain criminal sexual conduct could not be applied retroactively to a prosecution commenced after the limitations statute in effect at the time of the alleged offense had expired
B.